— I t' s h o t — b u t y o u d o n 't h a v e to be C r im e c e n t r a l S v ih ih g r 1BQBD V Pa g e 1 0 I n s id e it a m in — h ave y o u h ad y o u r d o se? Pa g e 16 Pa g e 19 Classifieds.............................. page 26 Comife^alMi ..page 25 ,.p3ge 16 Police Repwtfl Crossword....... ..page 12 Horoscopes . I BailM 27 Opinion ....... ■•page- 4 CCopyright:StalePress. 1997 . -.Tempe;Aezoria- v ‘ ~ T u e s d a y , J u n e 2 4 ,1 9 9 7 A n In d e p e n d e n t S u m m e r W ee k ly *""**"r-' ’»*'*'(* V o l. 81 N o. 71 W*&>. ; r ^Roughly ). percent but th at doesn't stop t ,,* Î W 8 f c , ■ ¡ S1 ite « I I *> m um Pag^14 I.tna OA 1007 S nippets Regents set to consider approval o f new ASU parking Ifaen mo 1,660 new poking «paces being proposed at the Bostd o f Regents meetings on Thursday. in an uaderg round parking structore at die Tempe Center. The other 160 spaces would he bu3t at die current site of die tennis courts between Raton Walk and Nomutl Drive. The estim ated cost for the underground project is $15,006,000. That would be ftmded through bond sales and would be repaid by Parking and Transit services, with revenues from decal and hourly visitor sales. The parking between Normal Drive and Palm walk would be funded with existing parking reserve funds ($1.6 million) and $200,000 in funds from Parking and Transit Services funds. It incorporates a plan to replace the cur­ rent six tennis courts with six new fenced and lighted courts on the toof o f the puking structure. These projects are designed to ease parking problems for Grady Gammage Auditorium and Nelson Fine Arts C en ter, as' w ell as th e M em orial U nion, Student Recreation Center, and the ASU Bookstore. Two lightning-caused wildfires contained TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Firefighters were in the mopup stages today on two lightning-caused wildfires in southern Arizona that began Friday night and covered a combined 800 acres One 640-acre fire occurred in the Mustang Mountains between Sonoita and Whetstone, said State Land Department spokesman Cliff Pearlberg. The other lire is burning near Keystone Peak, west of Green Valley and northeast of Arivaca. The la n d Department estimated Sunday lhat die blaze had grown to about 650 acres in size, but Pearlberg said today the fire actually was only about 160 acres. Eight aircraft: and 140 firefighters on die ground con­ tained the Keystone Park blaze by Sunday night. Homes and expensive telecommunications antennas and equipment at the top of the peak were not damaged. Five state agencies and 50 personnel contained the Mustang Mountain blaze, which authorities said was allowed to burn for range improvement purposes. keted under the brand names “ Vita” and “ Mr. Hummus.” There are also dips and salads in 8- and 16ounce clear plastic packages under the “ Cedar’s” label, processed at the Piaistow plant, the FDA said. CAMS* VERDE, Ariz. (AP) — A Phoenix msm has been lulled in a diving accident at the Verde River, authorities said Monday. Claude Reginald Lawler, 45, was standing about 20 feet above the river near the Child’s Power Plant and dove into water that was only 2 1/2-feet deep Saturday night, said spokesman Curt Milam of the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office. Lawler suffered fatal injuries and was pulled from the water by his nephew and friend. can call the FDA at 1-800-332-4010. FDA renews recall and warning about hum* b u is dips . WASHINGTON (AP) — The government has renewed a warning that dips, salads and some other products made in a New Hampshire food plant may be contaminated with bacteria that cause serious and even fatal infections. The Food and Drug Administration announced Friday it was reissuing a warning about hummus dips and salads produced by Cedar's Mediterranean Foods, Inc. at 0 » firm’s Piaistow, N.H., plant. The FDA is renewing its initial warning from June 12 because “ the firm’s recall efforts to date have not ade­ quately removed all potentially affected products from the market." The agency said on Friday that Cedar’s hummus dips and garden lentil and tabbouleh salads were still being offered for sale in stores and some retail dealers have riot been notified by Cedar of the recall. But David Law, a spokesman for Cedar’s, said that as of Monday, “ the product is notion the shelf at any store.” Law said the Piaistow plant has shut down; and Cedar’s Start enjoying some of tomorrow's advantages today with the ASU Alumni Association Student achievements with: « Ike wdy credit card S s l i e i u l r S i i year pride in atniwling ASU. « * liae af Credit up la $2£00. For unexpected expenses or a wed-deserved evening of entertainment • Inmediale Cash Aw ihM ily. Obtain cash, up to your available credit line at hundreds id thousands of locations worldwide. • No A—eat Fee. » Credit Cud Cob Advance Checks. Perfect for whenever a check is more convenient • H Mew CsMa— r TQ riartiaa. Just a simple toll-free phone call away. Mere Travel Bahtod Besslits Thao Any Othnf Credit Card • • • • Included in the recall are Cedar’s dips and salads mar­ Phoenix man k illed in diving accident on Verde River Visa* It is the only credit card that distinguishes you as a student of ASU and recognizes your m plans to resume production later from another plant. and salsa dips, baba ghannouj and grape leave products ■ Eager to earn credit? • A Pim S ta te P ress Up to StSUNK Common Carrier Travtl Accident Insurance on charged fares* Up to StSHOOSupplemental Auto Rental CoMttton Coverage. Emergency Cash and Airline tickets up to your available credit line. Up to SSjOOOSupplemental Lost Checked Luggage Protection. CALL TODAY! 24 hours a day, 7 days a week 1-800-847-7378 TTY u s e rs , c a ll: 1 -8 0 0 -9 3 3 -6 2 6 2 . B e t u n t o u m p r io r it y c o d e H Y S G w h e n y o u c a fl. There are costs associated vrth the use of this credo card You may contact die issuer and administrator of this program. MBNA, to request specific information about the costs by cadmg 1-80W47-7378or wrung to PO Bo* 19)20. Wilmington. D E19850 •Certain restrictions apply to tfiese and other benefits described m the benefits brochures sent soon after your account is opened MBNA America ts a federally registered service mart: of MBNA America Bank. NAVisa is a federally registered service m artot V i»U S A ihc. used pursuant to license *997 MBNA America Bsdt N A - ** TOG 1-352-97 TO G-SAFOT Consumers with questions on this recall and warning Air Force links alleged ‘alien’ sightings to test dummies WASHINGTON (AP) — In a report meant to close the door on a long-running UFO mystery, the Air Force said space aliens allegedly sighted in the New Mexico desert in the 1940s were actually dummies used in high-altitude parachute drops Philip Klass, publisher of a UFO skeptics newsletter, said the Air Force, concluded that reports of alien bodies at a crash site near Roswell, N.M.. in 1947 were actually mistaken recollections of dummies used in Air Force drops in the 1950s. Klass said he saw the report, which is being officially released on Tuesday. Air Force public affairs officers refused to discuss its contents in advance, although word of the conclusions circulated widely in the network of UFO buffs. ' Karl Pflock, a LIFO researcher who does not believe the Roswell incident involved either a spacecraft or alien ■ bodies, said Monday he had not read the report. He ques­ tioned the Air Force's theory, however, that those who claimed to have seen the crash debris and die alien bodies could have mixed up the crash, which was in 1947. with dummy parachute tests that took place as much as a decade later. P ag e 3 Tuesday, June 24,1997 S tate P ress Two Marines accused o f Oregon rape and assault B y A my C orneliussen A ssociated P ress PORTLAND, Ore. — It was a trip geared to motivate 130 Marine recruits, many still in high school, with a day of white-water rafting on the Deschutes River, followed by a night in a U S. Forest Service campground. But from the datkness, a recruit on securi­ ty watch heard cries for help. He awoke three adult Marine escorts and they found a hysterical man who, once he calmed down, said he and a female friend camping about a half-m ile away were attacked and the woman was raped by two men. Those men — Marine sergeants who work in Portland-area recruiting offices — are charged with kidnapping, assault and rape. Sgt. Rudolph Jackson, 29, of Gresham, a Marine recruit administrator, and Sgt. Clinton Allan Bergmann, 24, of Vancouver, Wash., a recruiter, were held pending arraignment Monday afternoon, Jackson’s superiors were unaware that, since moving to the Portland area from Georgia about two years ago, he has been convicted of attempted auto theft, and has an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court to face charges of stealing a car and possessing a stolen car. Jackson remains on probation. Because the weekend attack did not hap­ pen on a military base, the military is waiting until civilian police, prosecutors and courts resol ve the case before taking jurisdiction. But when the Marines found the beaten man in a primitive portion of the Clear Lake Campground, they quickly identified the accused sergeants and kept them separated and under watch until Wasco County sher­ iffs deputies arrived about an hour and a half later. Marine officials are fiercely guarding the privacy of the young recruits -4- most of them 8 * Wf „ „ „ w 17 or 18 years old, with about 15 females among the group. But they do not believe the incident would have any impact on the young men and women who will ship out sometime over the next year. The males head to San Diego, while the women will go to Paris Island, South Carolina. “ This is a very isolated incident. What we’re looking at here, this is two individuals that acted on their own,” said Lt. Jeffrey Sammons, spokesman for 12th Marine Corps District, who flew up from San Diego. “ The positive image that the Marine Corps por­ trays will definitely outweigh any of die neg­ ativity that this has. . ■ “ You can’t hold 174,000 people in the Marine Corps responsible for the actions of two individuals who acted on their own,” Sammons said. The trip started Friday morning with bus­ loads of recruits and 21 adult Marine escorts heading east out o f Portland, across the Cascade Range to central O regon’s Deschutes River. They formed lines and practiced a few drills before the eight-member raft teams hit the river about noon for a four-hour trip. The recruit pool meets monthly, with recreational events scheduled once or twice a year. Along with motivating the recruits, raft­ ing is intended to develop teamwork. At about 4 p.m. Friday, the buses — with Jackson behind one of the steering wheels — turned towards Mount Hood, Oregon’s tallest peak, and headed up U.S. Highway 26 to the Clear Lake Campground in the Mount Hood National Forest The vehicles headed for a primitive por­ tion of the Campground that lacked the bath­ rooms, individual campsites and picnic tables of the main campground. The recruits put up the tents they brought along, and a generator was set up to light the area all night for secu­ B ergm an Marine Sgt. Rudolph Jackso n , 29, of I O ra , is one o f two M arines charged rape, a ssa u lt and kidnapping of a ■ Saturday, Ju n e 21,1997 in M l Hood J a ck so n Forest rity. Come evening, seven o f the M arine escorts were released from their duties for the day. Jackson and Bergmann were part of that group. They and some of the other Marines went to a campsite about a half-mile away where two relatives of a Marine were staying. Somewhere between that campsite and the M arine bivouac was where Henry Thompson, 33, and his 23-year-old woman friend pitched their tent late Friday in the dark. Thompson initially gave several inter­ views after tiie incident, but he said Monday prosecutors have asked him not to comment because it could jeopardize their case. Thompson said he and his friend sat around a campfire with several Marines, who told them they were “ the safest people on E arth” because o f the nearby Marine encampment. Thompson said he and the woman retumed to their tent after the Marines started drinking heavily, but Col. Ottavio Milano, commander of the Marine Corps Recruiting Division in San Diego, denied there was any alcohol inside die Marine encampent. Later, a noise awoke Thompson and he was confronted by a man he identified as Jackson pointing a flashlight in his eyes. “ Before I could say anything, they had the tape around my eyes, my face, my nose ... Jackson was saying ‘Shoot ’em, just shoot ’em,” ’ Thompson said Saturday night. Thompson said Jackson beat him severe­ ly, covered his eyes with thick, green tape and taped him to a tree, while another man dragged the woman into the bushes. He said he heard the woman scream “ No, no, no!” Then someone cut him loose, and “ Jackson was saying ‘Let’s just take them down to the river and throw them in ’” He said he rah away screaming. The recruit who heard his cries awoke three Marine escorts who went to help Thompson. Pa s t a ) ss NI f P js g o n & Morningstar WELL, WIKE UDRAFT The Best Pizza &Beer Specials In Town! 'Where A SU goes for pizza' WEDEUVER TANK UP TUESDAY 7 -8 pm 7508 -1 0 pm $ 4 0 0 avW OTto § Richardson 5 9 0V ^ ■ inton Allan Bwgm ann, 24. of is one of two Marinos eharg 10-1 a m $2 . 8 0 P I T C H E R S eo Bud Light • Coors Light Four Peaks Pale Ale $4.68 98e Pitchers of Soda THURSDAY Phig Newton 7 0 * D R A F T S * 2 .8 0 P IT C H E R S Coors Light • Bud Light FRIDAY M IC R O B R E W The Chadwicks oz. WEDNESDAY * 2 . 8 0 P I T C H E R S 60 oz Coors Light • Bud Light * Four Peaks Pale Ale $4.68 3-6pm N IG H T Pete’s Wicked Ales * 4 . 6 8 .. Carvin Jones ■ l Rock Lobster The G reatest 80 s retro S2-00 T° P Shelf Bourbons & T.00 Domestic Drafts (Until 11 PM) NEVER A COVER A s A lw a y s... Don't Fo rg et... $1 D o m estic D rafts before 9 pm 7295 E. Stetson Dr.f Scottsdale 970-0500 1301 E. University Betw een Rural R M cClintock CREDITCARDSGOODONDELIVERY 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 m m Page 4 S tate P ress Tuesday, June 24, 1997 .New tobacco deal just one more wagf for Americans to shun their responsibility MÊ Sm oking k ills. Wei AY know that. In the post 15 STERN yean — in the U.S;?fllqttd . cigarettes have killed I ü |« r i B d à f m ore p eople than the Jewish Holocaust. There’s a war on smoking right saw , similar to the war on drags but more effective because it focuses on education and users aren't treated like criminals. The latest shot in this war is a plan worked out last week by 40 states’ attorney generals, including our own hard-working Grant Woods. Though the plan will be diluted considerably by Congress and the President, the message it sends is the same one we already know: Smoking kitb. Smokers are addicted to the drug nicotine, which nukes it difficult for them to stop, but not impossible. | The m e o f backsliding for aspiring tobacco quitters i addicts, but quitis higher than for recovering! ANTI-SMOKING LEGISLATION I Mias I nearly F rie n d , fo e or U F O ? F ife s a jo k e , a n d h e needs to go my sett-prom ise. A m onth later, f f T(bought, and this (hue no tntmfo g k w tte i f * „If you smoke, yon can quit, too. Anyone can quit., s why die government ha» no business foreto cough up $360 billion ¡unfits over the next 25 years, ta w ree • sick. Only. .•tit!'...v,¿■■VnY ’¿fiil» »»trad*— tills ill»'» , CRemicai-tauen sixioice imo tne~ I not be risking lung damage. ■ is exactly the kind-of me^happy atafaw f fluff Americana usually hate- ft’s the McDonald’s coffee ew e o n a grand scale. X o g o n ih lity for ourselves? What’s that?. ■, _ _ G rant W oods c a lle d the new plan a ^ i s t e d e npyawtemfy to saw the lives o f millions o f people,” but in fact (fie same nuffions of people can save them­ selves. They can quit smoking. ■ There are systems already ip place that would “T B j in citizens. Insurance corndrop a client who smoked, o r a rate equivalent to the expected future health care costs. Taxes could be levied nation­ wide to directly fund the costs of those who get can­ cer from passi ve smoke. Students under 18 caught smoking could be kicked out o f school: Hospitals could re-prioritize their resources so that people who choose not to destroy their lungs could be ensured bets» service than those who do. Unfortunately, this new multi-state tobacco plan won't he watered down enough* Some kind o f pay­ ment wifi be extracted from the industry, aad once again, laying the blame on someone else w ill be shown as the right way tQ do things. J t 's . « * ten. m to figure out where this attitude wifi k u d Americans, in forcing the government to elves, we inadvertently chip antlsMr. « i His chief of staff — former COTT S ta te P resser Jay H eller — W ALTERS wears rubber alien masks. His Opinion Editor former chief financial officer fails to “make the connection” between net profit and loss (even though it’s his jo b to crunch numbers). His former secretary claims she can’t type or tell the difference between millions and thousands. And his wife has enough money to finance his political aspirations, shady business ventures and lawyer’s bills, yet fails to put up the cash to keep her man from jilting his investors and going bankrupt. He doesn’t keep very good company, but, hey, at least Fife has a sense of humor. Our beleaguered, red-faced governor has boldly gone where no state politician has taken us before, and that’s hard to believe considering the company we’ve dealt with in the past (sadly, Evan Mecham’s gubernatorial stint is looking pretty good these days). But after Gov. J. Fife Sym ington I l l ’s m isguided attem pt at UFO hum or Thursday, Arizonans have to be asking themselves when his trip to the outer limits of political debauchery is going to end. Like the series of Star Trek movie sequels, Symington just doesn’t seem to understand when a good thing has grown stale. What’s going on inside our governor’s head, anyway? Sure, under normal circum stances the alien spoof Symington and his crew conjured up last week was fairly humorous. Playing on the wave of UFO mania induced by a mysterious triangle of lights over the Valley March 13, the governor treated John Q, Public to alien intrigue. Symington’s straight-faced, official demeanor in playing out his joke was good enough to convince News Channel 3 (KTVK-TV) to broadcast his alien revelation live; it was even produced well enough to coax national news mogul CNN to show up. After all, nothing quite compares to a r STATE ----------PRESS 3 taff SCOTT WALTERS,.:.Opinion Editor DEANNA DARR.... .Entertainment Editor LORI •.•♦•••^•••••••«••••Photo Editor REPORTERS: Christiana Moore, Jeff Morris, Chris Passamano, Kara Shhe, David Woodfill. CO N TRIBU TO R S: Jonathan Inge, Niclas Lindh, Mark Pollock, E.B. McGovern, Lisa Goettsche, David Ruffulo, Alissa Zapattea. COLUM NISTS: Sieve Forsbprg, Matthias Walterscheidt. CA RTOO NISTS: Michael C urran, Brian Faimngton, Jonathan Inge. PRODUCTION: Amber Carr, Jeff Chua, Joe Gonad, Adrianna Garcia. juicy alien-encounter story, especially when it’s from the mouth of a man facing a 22-count federal indictment on fraud (hmm, maybe this was the first clue that the only thing that ever spews from Fife’s lips is fiction, science or otherwise). “This just goes to show you guys are entirely too seri­ ous,” Symington told the media. Fife’s message to the local new bureaus was intended to show that he’s not all bad, and the media needs to lighten up. Obviously, serious inquiries on a daily basis into the governor’s business prob­ lems and political actions can be very taxing on a man’s reputation. Symington’s underlying purpose, of course, was to shoo public attention away from bis embarrassing court proceed­ ings. Always image conscious, Symington knows the best way to escape the media’s fire is to blow a lot of smoke. If you’re the Gov and you only get bad publicity, why not air skin-cancer commercials that portray you as soft, sensitive, loveable, and human? Why not don a hardhat and explore one of Arizona’s new caves, news media in tow? Why not hold a fake news conference? But Symington is no Jerry Seinfeld. He’s no Orson Welles either. The only war of the worlds he should be, concerned with these days is the conflict between his realestate accounting records and the reality of his investors’ empty pockets. . Fife’s timing needs improvement. It’s doubtful he ever told his lenders that his career as a real-estate tycoon was a practical joke, too. And as it turns out. the only sure thing about his career as governor is that he’s willing to let it end in a comedy of errors. But the show’s over. We’ve had enough. Thank goodness the final joke’s on Fife. Scott Walters is a senior studying journalism and can be reached at mode2joy@asu.edu. RAY STERN, Editor SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, David Goodwin, Jess Rankin, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh, Robyn Wilson. CLASSIFIEDS: Vicki Carroll, Joy Thompson. The State Press is published Tuesdays during the summer sessions, except holidays and exam peri­ ods, 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 exclu­ sively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The hews and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h one N um bers Information.............................965-7572 Newsroom............................... 965-2292 Magazine................................. 965-1695 Advertising...... .i..................... 965-6555 Classifieds....... ........... ...........965-6735 http://neyvs.vpsa.asu.edu -- O p in io n State P ress Tuesday, Juné 24,1997 Pag[e 5 New recruits get state payoff, returning students get Top Ramen I was opening my m ail the ARK other day. POLLOCK Nothing unusu­ Guest Columnist al C able b ill, electric bill $30,000 bill for student loans. $30,000? What the hell? Where did the money go? It’s not like I splurge on the finer things in life. I take spring breaks off with my feet in the bathtub ajid a day-old newspaper in hand. I only buy discount (I prefer to think of it as aged) meat at the grocery store and have long ago ripped the thermostat for my air conditioner off the wall. In a state that supposedly makes it as cheap as possible for residents to achieve higher learning, I sure do owe a lot of money to people I’ll never meet. Why, I ask, is it so damn expensive to attend an in­ state school? I’m supposed to be getting an education not a payment plan. Where are the funds that are supposed to prevent me from ending up in debt? I tossed the bills in the “someday to be paid” pile and, as if from God, received an answer to my questions. On the front page of the Arizona Republic were two smiling dweebs with money stuffed in their pockets. Well, maybe not yet in their pockets, but it will be when school begins this fall. These two chums were winners in the bidding war among ASU, NAU and the UofA for the state’s top high-school gradu­ ates. The tuition pay-offs come from tax dollars partially collected from studentworker checks. While returning students are struggling to make ends meet to afford going to class, our universities-would rather pay new stu­ M dents to join the fold. ASU is enticing the top 5 percent of Arizona high-school graduates with free tuition plus $1,000 (presumably for the necessities of college life, such as rent for a closet that doubles as a one-bedroom apart­ ment and Top Ramen). Students who grad­ uate in the top 15 percent of their class automatically qualify for a $750 grant at ASU. UofA has a similar deal, offering full tuition waivers and -— like Joe Camel — going after students before they graduate from high school. NAU isn’t taking any chances in these cola, er, college wars, either. The university is writing checks that will pay the tuition, residency, books and other fees for any National Merit Scholarship finalist. In all, the state’s universities will spend millions of bucks (ASU received $2.2 mil­ lion) to keep students in Arizona. Why? Instead of paying for students to enroll here, why not pay for returning students to stay enrolled? It’s more important to gradu­ ate people than to enroll them. Our great schools should concentrate more on helping those who need financial assistance just to stay in school and out of debt. If the state wants to spend money help­ ing students live, how about helping out returning students by offering to pay their rent until they receive their bachelor’s degree? Pell grants are nice, but usually pay only the cost o f tuition and a couple of books. At the community-college level, the grants leave enough left over to live off of if you have a part-time job. Unfortunately, once at the university N e e d a job? Sorry, y o u p a s s e d th e te st Have you ever TEV E been told that FO RSBERG you are too smart Guest Columnist fo r your own good? Recently, an East Coast town denied a police position to an applicant. Big deal —people are turned down for such positions all the time. The reason, however, caught a lot of people by surprise. The police candidate did not do poorly on die officer’s test. On the contrary, he did very well. Too well, in fact. The town turned him down for a police-officer job on the grounds that he was too smart. All the obvious jokes about law-enforce­ ment aside, this points to a trend that has gone largely unnoticed in the public eye. Namely, the tendency o f businesses — always seeking to optimize profits — to hire only from a narrowly-defined niche of candidates. It may not be good enough to be “better” than all the other candidates for a jo b because you may end up being overqualified instead. The reasoning by the police department is simple. Why hire someone who later might be able to get a better job? It makes economic sense to pass on the most highly qualified candidates. Businesses have been practicing varia­ tions of this theme for quite some time. A number o f years ago, I read a story in a business magazine about a man who was making a good deal o f money consulting businesses on who not to hire. For example, he analyzed the results of a sewing compa­ ny which showed the workers who tended to stay on die job longest and produced the highest profits were not the ones featured in the typical “employee of the month” adver­ IS tisement What the manufacturer wanted was sin­ gle mothers, over 30 years old, obese, in poverty and who didn’t own a car. These people, the consultant said, were the most likely to stay on the job the longest and complain the least. The employer was sued for discrimina­ tion because it isn’t prudent to ask prospec­ tive em ployees how much money they have. H ie question, “Do you own a car?” was ruled to be too close to asking about a person’s financial worth. The consultant ultimately earned his money by telling the employer that instead he should ask, “Do you fide the bus 10 times a day?” Students at ASU often rim into a similar problem . Social-science graduates, for example, are often told that if they want teaching positions, they should not get advanced degrees. Those with higher status will be passed over for jobs presumably because prior owners of such degrees have demanded pay raises. What can be done? We can amble along pretending to be just like everyone else. But then you fall into the trap of not being able to get a better job because you me so busy trying to pretend you are barely qualified for the one you have. This is especially true when good entry-level jobs are so hard to get. Damned if you do, dam ned if you don’t. Hopefully, however, there is still room in the world for people who aren’t com­ pletely clueless. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history and can be reached at aufsjQasu.edu. FRESHMANWELCOME TO ASU level, tuition triples. The deal I got upon The Financial Aid office, with their coming to ASU didn’t seem so bad at the promise of enough funds to get me through time. The Pell grant paid for my tuition and to a degree, left me in the pit of my college books, and my remaining “financial need” . career trapped by circling student-loan buz­ was covered by work-study checks. zards. “ASU m ust love me very m uch,” I Many students have held full-time jobs naively thought. Yeah, right. As long as I and gone to school, but why should they only had to pay for 12 credit hours worth of have to? If the state has money to give classes with no additional class fees and away, why not ensure that more needy Stu­ didn’t mind eating tuna/shredded-wheat dents have food, a place to live and time to casserole everyday. Once I caught on that achieve good grades? 12 credit hours per semester is only full We need m ore graduates, not more time if I want my nephews to graduate .freshman, before I do, I started taking IS to 20 credit Mark E. Pollock is a senior studying jour­ hours. I no longer had time to earn a whop­ n alism and can .b e reached a t ping $5.25 an hour. marke@asu.edu. Equal education beats affirm ative action On Ju n e O SH U A 14, President SO LO V SK Y Clinton deliv­ Guest Columnist ered the com­ m encem ent " address at the University of California, San Diego. In his speech, Clinton chal­ lenged Americans “to break down the barriers in our lives, our m inds, our hearts” concerning racial inequality. True, there are barriers that need to be brought down, but are these barriers real­ ly in our hearts and minds or are they just part of our social “village?” The President’s speech kicked off a year-long campaign involving “honest dialogue and concerted action,” which would help “lift the heavy burden of race from our children’s future.” Critics have applauded the President for his effort to take “a good first step.” However, Clinton’s effort is lacking thanks to his lack of economic considera­ tions. Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., told The Associated Press that “unless we look at this whole race issue from an econom ic standpoint, I think we are going to continue to have problems with race in this country. White people who are not economically successful are like­ ly to blam e blacks, and A fricanAmericans feel they have been left out Of the economic system.” It is fitting that Clinton began his legacy as “the mender of the breach” at the University of California, for it was there that the California state legislature installed the tenets of the California Civil Rights Initiative. This progressive legis­ lation did away with affirmative action and quotas in state-run institutions. Critics of the initiative have stated that last yearis drop in minority enrollment at J C alifo rn ia u n iv ersities is evidence enough to repeal the initiative. Jumping on the bandwagon, Clinton stated in his speech, “for those that oppose affirma­ tive action, come up with an alternative.” W ith the help o f House M ajority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, I offer up an alternative to affirmative action: Let’s do away with the current system and give people the freedom to choose a better education before college. The declining minority enrollment is a “mis­ diagnosis,” Armey said. “C alling for quotas in college admissions is simply passing the buck. We can’t expect any-, one to survive 12 years in substandard (public) schools and then excel in col; lege.” ■ The cu rren t system should be revamped by eliminating the chief educa­ tor, the Department of Education, and then equalize prim ary and secondary schools. The Supreme Court’s decision in Brown V. the Board of Education, in Topeka, Kan., includes equal facilities, faculty, materials and intangibles at pub­ lic schools: Once there is a level playing field for all students, those who want to excel in college will be able to regardless of their race, social standing or geogra­ phy. In the long run, those that rise up outof the yoke of minority status would have the means to provide for their children and end tins diabolical cycle Of bad race relations embedded in poor education. Joshua Solovskoy is a senior studying political science and can be contacted, a t solovskoy@msn.com. Page 6 State Press Tuesday, June 24,1997 Study shows welfare reform putting moms in market By R ichard C ole A ssociated P ress SAN FRANCISCO — Welfare reform appears to be achieving one of its intended effects — pushing more mothers into the labor market, a Federal Reserve Bank offi­ cial said Monday. The bank’s western district, headquar­ tered in San Francisco, looked at changes in the labor force and compared it to the Aid to Fam ilies W ith D ependent C hildren caseloads. “ There has been an increase in labor force participation by women with families, and we know there has been an decrease in AFDC rolls,” said Joe Mattey, editor of the bank’s Western Economic Developments newsletter. Welfare reform “ appears to have the effect intended by Congress,’’ he said. The study by researcher Mary Daly found an unusual increase in the number of people entering the work force starting in Septem ber 1996 — when the w elfare reform law known as the Personal Responsibility Act went into effect. After years of flat numbers, the total per­ centage of Americans working or looking for work jumped by 0.6 percent to a record 67.25 percent in March and April of 1997. The number of women maintaining fam­ ilies who entered the labor market skyrock­ eted — from 8 million to 8.5 million in that period, or 16 percent. At the same time, the nation’s AFDC rolls shrank by 640,000, Mattey said, not V ip e r g u ilty in p lo t t o m a k e e x p lo s iv e s By P atrick G raham Associated P ress PHOENIX — A federal jury Monday convicted a mem­ ber of the Viper Team of a conspiracy charge stemming from the militia group’s desert exercises Utilizing powerful explosives. The federal jury deliberated nearly two days before con­ victing Charles Knight of conspiracy to make or possess unregistered destructive devices, an offense carrying up to five years in prison. Knight said anti-government talk by Viper Team mem­ bers amounted to nothing more than “ macho chest-beat­ ing.” He said desert exercises that included explosives made from ammonium nitrate were for members’ amuse­ ment and weren’t part of a plan to commit terrorism. But prosecutors, relying on testimony from a state agent who infiltrated the group, said the evidence showed Knight was a co-conspirator in the manufacturing and possession of bombs. Knight turned beet red when the verdict was announced,: then sobbed with relatives after jurors left the courtroom. He later turned to reporters and said, “ I’m slapped but I’m not dead.” Knight was one of 12 members of the Phoenix-based militia arrested last year. At the time, federal investigators said the arrests had headed off a major act of terrorism aim ed at blow ing up federal buildings in Phoenix. However, the Vipers were charged only with weapons and explosives violations. Ten Viper members, including Knight’s wife, Donna Williams, pleaded guilty to weapons charges and were sen­ tenced earlier this year. One other member, Christopher Floyd, is awaiting trial. Jurors got the case Thursday, took Friday o ff and resumed Monday. At mid-afternoon, they returned to say they were deadlocked. U.S. District Judge Earl Carroll ordered them to continue deliberations, and they returned with a verdict within 90 minutes. Knight and his attorney, Ivan Abrams, argued the Viper Team was more like a Boy Scout troop than a militia, play­ acting the roles of militia members but never intending to cause harm. Prosecutors, meanwhile, supported their case by show­ ing grenade bodies, a piece of metal with a hole blown in it, machine guns and dismantled explosive rockets. Holding up a rocket launcher and deactivated grenades, Assistant U.S. Attorney Tom Hannis last week said the Viper Team wasn’t just playing. He quoted Knight as saying, “ The enemy of my govern­ ment is my friend.” “ Does that sound like peoplethat didn’t mean to harm anyone?” he said last Wednesday in his closing argument. John Schultz, an Arizona Game and Fish Department investigator who infiltrated the group, provided the key tes­ timony against Knight. He detailed militia meetings and exercises, which included homemade explosives. One exercise the agent witnessed included detonations of several explosives made from ammonium nitrate. That left a 5-foot-deep crater in die desert, Schultz said. When Knight took the stand last week, he told jurors that the group’s experiments with explosives were merely entertainment. The Vipers* actions and some members’ anti-governm ent talk amounted to nothing more than “ macho chest-beating,” he said. However, he when cross-examined that he had once told the group it had great potential for “ death and destruction.” His sentencing was scheduled for Sept. 8. far from the 500,000 increase. “ It’s not necessarily .welfare recipients, but if you look at the caseload figures and the number of ÂFDC recipients ... it likely accounts for a portion of it,” Mattey said. H eidi H artm ann, d irec to r o f the Washington-based Institute for Women’s Policy Research, viewed the numbers with caution. She said the changes could simply be a combination of a recovering economy and long-term trends that have developed over decades. “ Women are increasing their labor force participation every year, except in reces­ sions,” she said. “ Another long-term trend is that especially mothers are (increasing participation), and another long-term trend is that the poor are increasing their partici­ pation,” Hartmann said. On the other hand, she said, there is little question that the focus on welfare reform is having some effect. “ Everyone is saying ‘You’ve got to work, you’ve got to work,’ and that could have had an impact on women’s choices,” Hartmann said. Cliff Johnson, a senior fellow with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said the explanation may be more in the econo­ my than in welfare policy. A study by the Council o f Economic Advisors of decreases in welfare rolls from 1993-96 found that the lion’s share was due to th e recovery, with only 21 percent attributed to policy changes, Johnson said. T R I B E C A Scottsdale & McDowell (Southwest Corner) 2 4 H o u r I n fo r m a t io n 4 2 3 - 8 4 9 9 TUESDAY Latin Ladies' Night w/ 103.9 FM. $1 Any Drink for Ladies til Midnight $1.50 Longnecks for Everyone ■ ... WEDNESDAY ... All Ages 8 :00- 12:30 Best of House Top 40 Hip Hop FRIDAY 2 FOR 1 ANY DRINK TIL 11 PM. Top 40 Modern House com ing soon... SATURDAY $1 Drinks for Ladies All Night N O COVER fo r L a d ie s 9 :3 0 - EXCLUSIVE HOST 1997 VENUS SWIMWEAR MODEL SEARCH O V E R S 1 5 ,0 0 0 IN P R IZ E S ! Information: 423-0650 1 0 :3 0 Ev ery Frid ay & S a tu rd a y ‘til 4AM 18 & o v e r U,S. MALE EVERY THÜRS., FRI. & SAT. 7 :3 0 - 9 :3 0 , RSVP 9 4 4 - 7 2 1 1 **** 0 W f* » I*<»»>WK* P+P&*0 9* P ag e 7 Tuesday» June 24,1997 Sta te P ress lilllliilM |K 4jf | l 11 ^ ijpj H jk | mm SP O R T S C L U B S America's Premier Fitness Centers Ahwatukee Chandler Phoenix Tempe 829-0622 863-3830 496-8805 MoonValley 945-8118 345-8944 Scottsdale 995-1234 i f f Arrowhead/Glendale 547-9425 i S ta te P ress Tuesday, June 24,1997 F r ee w h eelin ’ The Samaritan Suns, a member of the National Wheelchair Basketball Association, practices on the courts of the Student Recreation Center. The team is sponsored by the Phoenix Suns, America West Airlines and Samaritari Health Services. (Above right) A teammate helps player Tom Czam eck! fix one of his w heels. In seconds he w as back on the court and in the game, (Lower Left) Corbin Bew retreats from the game with a few friends who Carry h is extra w heels. (Above) Sharon Miller, who is married to one of her team mates, protects the ball from her opponents while looking for a spot to push through. 5t/H rid in g y o u r b ik e to s c h o o l? Maybe it’s tim e you applied for an auto loan from Federal C redit W ith a low percentage special discount opportunities, be out of wheels and into sportin’ no time. Pedal to a branch near you call us! H ere’s how you & your room m ate can earn $225 p e r week* If you and your roommate(s) are trying to figure out how you'll pay the rent, we have the answer. Beginning August 18, we need two people to deliver the daily State Press. The positions require two people who are dependable and have a commitment to excellence in all that they do. Responsibilities include delivering the paper to approximately 115 sites on and off campus, including MCC. A delivery truck is provided. The job begins at 5:00am and ends by 8:30am or 9:00am, barring no unforeseen problems. If you and your roommate(s) would like to commit-to a semester of delivering the papers every weekday, without exception, come to the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center and fill out an application. Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge or Gwen Lawrenz at 965-6555. You do the math* DesertScHocis 433-7000 All ASU students are eligible to join * Depending on income and credit history, a co-signer may be required for loon requests. It’s a great way to pay the rent. Page 9 State P ress Tuesday, June 24,1997 *!^,^ ,w|.'-i11 x^y’T', '''^ ' \ ^Vy ''4"I ^ ;■•^ ^+ M M HBBM BM i HU Featuring T H ftlA V E Five Decades of . Rock & Roll EVERY WEDNESDAY *2 M iller Lite or MGD 1— □C < * Q CO B jB jj R SSH h WM 2 fo r 1 J Prinks 'til ! _ M IT C H No C o ver La d ie s' rtll Q C o ! N o C o ver M m eà S ZD CO LU 1^ < * ■ fo r WM a A li N ife mmmtmm imæm Q M ETR O T U E S D A Y S N O ■, / • ’ ISBi C O V ER w/ any College I.D. ALL NIGHT ^ ^ |H K a a m ss ] ALL NIG NEWMUSIC FORMAT: RETRO 80'STOP 40 Club 411 Sports Bar • Dance Club 411 S. Mill • 966-2020 Tuesday, June 24,1997 S t a t e P r ess Dehydration in desert heat avoidable w ith lots o f H20 advised students to “consciously think about drinking water.” Merely drinking water until the thirst is gone is not enough, she said. “When we’re thirsty, we’re already 1 percent dehydrated,” M oses said. “We don’t drink enough water in response to thirst to rehydrate our bodies completely.” Some ASU students are taking the nec­ essary precautions. Yesenia Ramirez, who carries a bottle of water with her on campus, estimated she drinks about three liters per day. , Those who are physically active need to drink even more. The A m erican C ollege o f Sports M edicine recom m ends drinking eight ounces of water 30 minutes prior to any workout. Another tip is to get on a scale before and after workouts in order to moni­ tor water loss. Though students usually drink enough, Moses felt that many of them have miscon­ ceptions about what fluids are the best. While water and juices are touted as the best way to replenish lost fluids, Moses said caffeinated and alcoholic drinks dehy­ drate the body even more. Some Students “don’t understand that caffeine and alcohol don’t help. They will make matters worse,” she said. B y M atthew M organ State P ress The summer months provide many ASU students with an opportunity to get ahead in classes. But when temperatures reach well into the 100s on a daily basis, the heat can present the danger of dehydration. Karen Moses, ASU’s assistant director of health education and wellness, said even the slightest loss of water can affect the body. With a loss of 2 percent, people may experience a decrease in endurance or pro­ ductivity, she said. A 4 percent or 5 percent decrease can make a person lethargic or agitated, and anything over 10 percent can be considered serious or even life-threaten­ ing. “We see an average o f three-to-four people visit the emergency room every day w ith sym ptom s o f d eh y d ratio n ,” said Nancy Mucha, a registered nurse at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. Mucha added that ASU students visit the emergency room with dehydration “all the time.” Often, people are unable to really tell the extent o f their dehydration, she said. Mucha recommended that people who are not feeling well should see a doctor and get their vital signs like blood pressure changes and fluid levels checked. To avoid a trip to the hospital, Moses T h in k in g A b o u t G r a d S c h o o l? “Now I know,” sa y s Doreen Maura, graduate student in educational media and com puters refer­ ring to her short stint in the hospital when she suffered from severe dehydration. Yo u'll n e v e r k n o w U nless y o u read your H O R O SCO PE. In the CLASSIFIED section. T h e n t h in k a b o u t T h e P r in c e to n R e v ie w Get Out Of Thé BEAT And On To The [ME! • Sm all C lasses • D ynam ic Instructors • Up to D ate M aterials • Free Individual Tutoring • Great R esults C all today for a F R E E practice test • 1ST PERSON PAYS ADMISSION • 2ND PERSON SKATES FREE • S kate RENTAL EXTRA O c ea n sid e Ic e A ren a • 941-0944 1520 N. McC lintock, T empe « E xpires 8/15/97 967-1480 r— “ You want fries with that?” THE PRINCETON REVIEW w w w .rcview .com Em GTD T taf. k* 1* 1 Scary words first thing in the morning. For the same money, you can have a fresh-baked bagel with your choice of ten different cream cheeses. You deserve a ... well, you know what we mean P lu s : Gourmet Cream Ch eeses • Deli S andwiches E spresso and Gourmet Co ffees B reakfast E n trees • Pa str ies • J uices U K D e l iv e r y id ASU• 921 1628 E. Southern (Tempe) (Northwest of Comer of Southern * McClintock) 491-4222 A l l S um m er L ong E arly/L ato B ir d D eals O U / 0 DISCOUNT IO * « S . T er r a ® * pm -6pm IOpm-Close R p . T rm pbA Z O f c o t ’M i • H a m -1 Ipv 6880 E 14a Linda (Scottsdale) 661-5222 1229 S . Power Rd. (Mesa) 641-3222 * r i l i l 1/1/ OFF Ic e d M o c h a , C a p p u c c in o , L a tte , o r Ita lia n S o d a w ith t h i s a ct t h r o u g h J u l y 8 , 1 9 9 7 St a t e P r ess IS TI C CAFE ft Hosted by ¿YGMIES gHAEL CALLAHAN J b ia ls 8-11 pm Spe£ $1.25 Whistler Lager, am lack Tusk & Ale Mother’s P criafl 99« Bud & Bud Uq aitTbottles $2 Off Southwestern rille Entrees £, 8 pm - n prn LATE NITE SPECIALS: $2 OFF Gourm et Pizzas It $2 Red Hook; Red Hook Hefeweisen & M ichelob Hef weisen bottles . $2.50 for any of our 15 Bourbons 1 HONEYBUCKETj TACO TUESDAYS E V E R Y SU N D A Y i N IG H T $2 OFF Rolled neos All Menu Item s & $2 Any Longneck 7-11 pm $2 FAT TIRES $ 1 .5 0 B u d & B u d Light i 5-11 p m F A T T IR E F R ID A Y S $2 FAT TIRE AMBER ALEf & SUNSHINE WHEAT 6-10 p 2-4-1 Quesadillas n am-óf $1.25 Bud & Bud Lights 2-8 pm 2 - 4 - 1 L U N C H E S l l am -2 pm C o m e try us out an d we will win you over Great Service & Larger Portions.” with sp e cia l guests THE DYGMIES LAST SHOW with sp e cia l guests THE PISTOLEROS C h am p ag n e Toast at M idnight $1.25 Bud & Bud Lights 2-8 pm 7 pm -10 pm Specials: $2 Shots of Hussongs Tequila & $2 Long Island Ice Teas KITCHEN OPEN 11 am- Midnight • FREE Pool & Darts Daily 3 2 3 1 S. MILL AYE NE CORNER OF MILL & SOUTHERN 3 0 3 -0 2 2 3 Page 12 Tuesday, June 24,1997 Sta te P ress Kiosk w ill make m useum info fun B y E l b e W illiams State P ress The ASU Art Museum is will be putting the finishing touches on an interactive kiosk that provides informational material to its audiences. Phase II of “Dancing Horses,” a project started in the spring of 1997 by some architectural students, is now in the works after receiving funds from a general operating support grant given by the Institute o f Museum Services, The museum is located in the Nelson Fine Art Center at the cor­ ner of 10th St. and Mill Avenue. “We were trying to provide more access (of information) to the muse­ um,” said Steve Speck, computer specialist arid developer for the project. “I had originally thought of having just a touch screen available to the pub­ lic, but then the students came up with this idea.” The kiosk, a dual-sided 4-foot-by-8-foot screen, Centered in the lobby, has the museum’s web page encased with in moving images of past and present exhibitions, This artistic information system will now be joined by other video footage placed through out the museum. A computer that accesses the museum’s website is available for guests to browse, displaying information about the museum, gallery exhibitions and local artists, The project responds to new ways of understanding, called “learner-cen­ tered learning,” and is usually related to games, said museum officials. The plan for phase H, according to Speck, is to have very small video cameras placed at various spots in the museum showing imagery in tightly focused 18-inch patterns on walls or pools of light on floors. “When you walk Up to it, (the image) disappears,” he said. “The idea is to entice you.” , 1 Creators of “Dancing Horses” hope that the fading images will lure guests to other exhibits in the museum. The game has been designed as a fun way to promote traffic and explore the museum, which, because of a difficult floor plan, can be disorientating to the 60,000 visitors who visit annually. “We have a flight of stairs that goes nowhere. It’s very confusing,” Speck said. A 3-D map is in the progress of being developed and will be available as a locating device on the museum’s web page when it is completed. SOUTHPACIFIC SPECIALS Win a FREETICKET (BryMiadaflrtwi on Air New Zoatand to tho soonmcvkwtth « m itav t BACKPACK DOWN UNDER Australia packages frre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1000 CEYSEBS & GLACIERS New Zealand packages ■ frtm...................... . . . $1165 AIR ONLY TO AUCKLAND from..................................... $769 '%fy Vade East htiDdmg • A mate student reported Ôtai ins computer was stolen Soni his dorm room. » A fee was reponed at Cholla Hall and is curteoty under compiledby State Press reporterDavid WoodfiU Free Concerts in the MU! EVERY TUESDAY AT 12 NOON During Summer Sessions ! LARGE 16' PIZZA 1 M EDIUM i r P IZ Z A 1 ¡ htím*7 " ¡«Sr PIZZA *7" r™T£~ J This Week, Tuesday, June 24 » IC K - U P 1 A Bar and Grill in Tempe with Balls. V a lle y C h a m M b e r u s ic ia n s O v e r 5 0 D iff e re n t B e e rs • F u ll G r ill & M e n u 21 P o o l T a b le s 2 S a t e l l i t e D is h e s • 11 T e le v is io n s to watch your favorite sports S a tu rd a v & Sunday T o u rn a m e n ts M E M O R IA L U N IO N L O W E R L E V E L P R O G R A M M IN G L O U N G E Tuesday, June 24 • 12 Noon • Bring Your Lunch! Open 7 Days • Ham - 4am Fresh sandwiches, burgers & finder food 'til 3am 829-7344 1301 P. I m\ersit \ Dr., Iempi*. \ Z js t Public Events Presented by ASU Public Events and Sponsored by Summer Sessions P age 17 Tuesday, June 24,1997 S tate P ress Computers giving ASU artists new canvas for creations M m Sm m Lori Cain/State Press Jam es White, a senior faculty member and sculptor sits beside an enlarged scanned image of h is finger print. B y D avid R uffulo S tate P ress Computers and other technology are replacing paint­ brushes and sculptor’s tools as a means of artistic creation. “It’s just another way in order to create art work,” said Barbara Eschbach, director of the Computing Commons Gallery. The gallery often emphasizes art work from the science and engineering departments as well as the fine arts depart­ ments. To devdop the art forms, scientists use mathemati­ cal formulas as the “mold” for three-dimensional models that will later be constructed with computer-guided tools. One artist, James White, a senior faculty member and sculptor at the ASU School of Art, took a photo of his fin­ gerprint and scanned it into a computer database. White then used a computer-guided tool —• a “hot wire” pro­ grammed to make horizontal and vertical movements — to make a pattern on a huge Styrofoam sheet. “It’s like an Etch-A-Sketch,” White said. Using the fingerprint pattern, he made a sculpture that looks like a desert filled with sand dunes. The art professor describes his piece as a way of dealing with identity. “The fingeiprint is the best way to describe your identity that I can think of,” White said. “With the sand, this work shows how temporary your identity can be. It can be wiped away by the winds.” Using computers, White also created an artwork called “Vehicle”, which is basically a car made of aluminum-iron shaped like a fingerprint. White designed the piece using a plasma cutter — a device similar to a torch used to cut metal. Other types of artwork featured at the gallery are comput­ er-woven textiles made by Janet Taylor, an ASU art pro­ fessor. Titled “Computer Woven Yardage”, the artwork was pro­ duced by a computeivguided loom which gives the artist a sneak preview of the future design, thus saving many hours of setup. The art galley will be open through June 26 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. Cam pus C o rn er • Beer & Soda •Photo Developing •Health 8, Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill 712 S. College (College & U n iversity) 967-4049 (A cro ss from Coffee Plantation) 2 LOCATIONS 858-0567 (beer only at Coliege S t. store) ' fF O U N T A IN D R IN K F O R T Y -F O U R Ï-Ü O Z. n tcday only Presort «upon to cashler priorto sate I 6/24/97 S H IR T antodayonly ! ;; Dooß Open 7 PM 6/25/97 EES A N Y w/Fhe Stumbles s iz e ¡F O U N T A IN D R IN K ft Ik ; ,^ .| I s Presentcoupontocashiarpriortosate ^ . j®7®7j| Page 18 S tate P ress Tuesday, June 24, 1997 Each State P ress provides your daily requirements of 11 ESSENTIALVITAMINS AND MINERALS. CUSTOMER APPRECIATION WEEK! LA R G II CHEESE CARRY-0 500 p e r t o p p in g CARRY-OUT 11 AM -11 PM * 500 32 oz. COKE, DIET COKE, SPRITE CARRY-OUT ONLY 1 2 Liter $1.99 6 Fade $2.29 A S U S B E S T P IZ Z A ... A S U ’S B E S T P R I C E ! r ASU Calls Domino’s • 968-5555 1996'Donano*! Pizza. Inc Coupon not vaM with . I I I I* D E LIV ER Y I SUN DEVIL SPECIAL LARGE ONE ITEM PIZZA 1996 Domino's» Pizia. Inc. poupon noi valid with 1996 Domino s Pizza Inc Coupon not valid with . D E LIV ER Y ^ TW O MEDIUM PIZZAS f 1 I WITH TW O TOPPINGS , f 2 AND TW O LARGE COKES11 I I 1 ■ H M M fI n sAad ia u a w ò Anta A *u * s s a id A »u o l^ b id iiiia M iz w nati v o i e s « A e d ¿ a u ve n ti » » D A z w a A w u j s e o i J d A |u o b w i^ xr i s a fe s s A w d la iu o is n D A zw a A u u j s a o t id - M. IÖ • I λ i 1 II li «M flM M * e » s a m if I rI T W O LARGE ONE T O PPIN G PIZZA S I II Ì C D E LIV ER Y n A iu o il CARRY-OUT 11 AM-11 PM, DELIVERY 11 AM-1 AM, SUN.-THURS., 11 AM-2 AM ERI SAT. L o c a l b a n d B y J eff M orris S tate P ress The road to being discovered by main­ stream rock and roll is long and tedious for a local band. Vitamin has begun their journey. V itam in is N ick Scropos, 27, bass, Dan L a n c e lo t, 31, drum s and Tim Anthonise, 29, the band’s lead singer and guitarist, all who have lived in the Valley for most of their lives. A little over six months ago when the band formed, they found the chemistry all three musicians had been searching for — a group dynam ic that called for lots of fun. “We were ready to give it up, but we said let’s just play what we want to play and have fun, not over-stressing,” Tim said. “If the music is going to work, it will work.” T h e b a n d h a s h ad th e ir C rack a t th e lo cal scene b efo re as individuals. “AH three o f us have been through the gauntlet of Tempe’s bands,” Nick said. Tim and Dan play ed to g e th e r in a band previously back in ‘89 and ‘90 — Sole Mine — while doing several stints opening for G in B lossom s. N ick was added to the group in November. Tim describes the music they make as “jangly pop that is more aggressive with Page 19 Tuesday, June 24, 1997 State P ress h a s th e p r e s c r ip t io n lots of harmonies.” Vitamin members believe their songs are “upbeat, honest and more aggressive than hom e-grow n pop,” Tim said. “It isn’t the typical Arizona sound.” Lyrically, Tim writes the songs. They have good continuity and he said they are about everything from “love loss to rela­ tionship angst songs and even near-death experiences, (Although he wouldn’t go into detail about the incidents o f near death.) One tune th at is a b it hum orous is “Javier.” The song is about a transvestite who Nick used to work with who loved to dance. On one occasion the band paid for his cab ride to the show so that he would dance on stage during the song. They said the song is not demeaning in any way and they w elcom e Jav ier back. Vitamin is very casual on stage and say their best m elodies are “Speed of Sound” and “She Was a Good Thing.” They chose these songs because “they are the b e st co m b in a tio n o f m usic and lyrics,” according to Dan. Although Vitamin has been together for a short time, they have played exten­ sively. The band has performed at Nita’s Hideaw ay, G ibson’s and Long W ongs s u c c e s s Lori Caln/State Press Dan Lancelot, 31, started playing with Vitamin when the band formed six months ago. consistently drawing big crowds. T hey have op en ed fo r the R efreshm ents, M atthew Sw eet, D red Zeppelin and many more — good signs that their sound is catching on. A key to their success is the addictive fun they put out. “It’s important not to take it too seri­ ous,” said Tim. “If you’re too serious y o u ’re probably fucked. If you o v er­ think, you mess yourself up.” T he b a n d ’s ca m a rad e rie is deep, “W e’re like brothers, we a ll'd o n ’t like dark music and don’ t like to work jobs,” Dan said. In concert these guys are summarized pure magic. “They are a beautiful rock band,” said Jam al Ruhe, form er One m em ber and now a part of the Em ily C urtis Band. “Bands that have been playing together for years còm e in arid V itam in blows them off the stage.” Serene Dominic, w riter for the New Times, said “they are very energetic and not lethargic.” Currently, Vitamin is in the process of “incredibly serious n eg o tiatio n s w ith RCA,” according to the bands manager, C h arlie L evy. T he lab el is K n eelin g Elephant, which is a direct subsidiary of Tim A nthonise, 29, is the lead g u itarist and vo ca list for vitam in. He n a s played wnn Lancelot In other bands but the group dynam ic for th is trio is “fun.” fo r band is still in aw e th a t they m ight p o ten tially be signing a record deal. “I never believed it because the day they offered us the first deal was on April 's day,” Dan said. said all that's happening is “com­ pletely imaginary. I keep saying,-‘what the hell is going ori,* and I am always pinching myself.” However, Tim is quick to point out “there is no guarantees, only 2 percent of records actually make money.” W hile the band is o p tim istic, th ey realize there is still a long road ahead. ‘‘T hey are at th e b eg in n in g and who knows where they could go,” Levy said. “They were one out of a half-million — now they are one out of 30,000.” They realize that it takes not only luck to make their dreams happen, but a lot of help. They especially appreciate the local bars for their support and that o f their manager’s. While it has beep long awaited, Tim said “i f s totally satisfying that it occurs at this age.” It is especially sweet for these guys because, “we all know what it’s like to be on the other side of the coin,” Nick said. V itam in is re lu c ta n tly cau tio u s to jum p into anything. They have m et the sharks and have been burnt by seeing othèr bands make i t The directions they take are well thought out. On July 6, Vitamin will be heading out west to Hollywood to record their ini­ tial CD. The stroke of genius is they will be working with Brad Cook who recently h e lp e d re co rd th e Foo F ig h te rs and Counting Crows latest albums. So w hat d o es th e fu tu re h o ld for Vitamin? The first step is to make the record. They would like to play locally when they come back in 6 weeks for a short tim e as well. V itam in hopes that they will be opening soon for a major band th at w ould com plem ent th eir style o f music. And after that? Who knows. “We want to play for eons and have a great life,” Tim said. Dan summed up the bands dream of lo n g e v ity : “W e n ev e r w ant to do a reunion tour.” . You will be able to get your dose of Vitamin in the fall when they make their return to the local music scene. The CD shduld be released next winter. Page 20 S tato P ress Tuesday, June 24,1997 are between $18.50 and $38.25 for reserved seating 2>6 or $18.25 for lawn seats. Available at Ticketmaster • O ZZFEST featuring Ozzy O sbourn, Black or at D esert Sky Pavilion on the day o f the show S abbath, M arilyn M anson, P an tera, Type 6 only. N egative, F ear F actory, M achinehead and • Sonny R hodes returns for another live recording Pow erm an 5000 will be held at Blockbuster Desert session at the Rhythm Room. Sonny be jam m ing. Sky Pavilion starting at 1 p.m. Tickets are $53, $38 C<§ric€rts Doors open at 8 p.m. w ith music starting at 9 p.m. or $28 reserved or $28 general adm ission and. are with a $5 cover. available at Ticketm aster and Blockbuster Desert T u e s A a ^ ^ u rie a t • M orris Day an d d ie Tim e w ith London will be perform ing at the Electric Ballroom starting at 8 p.m. Tickets are $22 in advance and $23 on the day o f the show. Available at Ticketmaster and the Sky Pavilion. • T he H oodoo K ings will be perform ing at the ^uridacf J v rie a? Rhythm Room with no cover. Doors open at 8 p.m. • C arolyn W onderland and the Im perial M onkeys with the show starting at 9 p.m. will be perform ing at the Rhythm Room for a $4 cover. Doors open at 8 p.m. and the show starts at 9 Electric Ballroom. p.m. • G reg Piccolo will be performing at the Rhythm F rid a y J v f i t 2>7 Room for a $5 cover. Doors open at 8 p.m. with the • Sonny Rhodes will be perform ing at a live record­ show starting at 9 p.m. ing session at the Rhythm Room . D oors open at 8 • U ncle C harley will be performing at Hollywood p.m. M usic starts at 9 p.m. $5 cover, Mori'daef • Indigo G irls will be perform ing at the M esa Am phitheater starting at 7 p.m . Tickets are $22 in Alley for a $3 cover. Show starts at 9:30 p.m. ejafcurdag' W e d tits d a tf zs 50 advance or $23 on the day o f the show. Available at 2.8 D illard’s or M esa Community Center Box Office. • B etter T han E zra with E dnasw ap will be per­ • G ordon Lightfoot will perform at Phoenix forming at the Electric Ballroom at 8 p.m. Tickets Symphony Hall starting at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are are $13.50 in advance or $15 on the day o f the show available at D illard’s and the Civic Plaza Box Office and are available at Ticketm aster and the Electric for $21 in advance and $22 on the day o f the show. Ballroom. • F ace O ff starring Nicolas C age and John Travolta • T he H orton B rothers with the R am blers will be • G rand Funk R ailroad will be performing at the as a terrorist and a detective who switch personali- at the Rhythm Room for a $3 cover. Doors open at 8 Celebrity Theater starting at 8 p.m. Tickets run p.m. and the show starts at 9 p.m. $29.50 or $22 in advance or $30 or $24 on the (fay ■ties..-' . • H ercules. D isney’s latest anim ated flick takes on • K enny Chesney will be perform ing at Toolies o f the show. Available at Dillard’s or the Celebrity Greek mythology. Country starting at 8 p.m. $25 V IP reserved seating Theater Box Office. • Ulee’s G old starring Peter Fonda as a beekeeper and $15 general admission. • Q ueensryche with P ist O n will be appearing at who has to raise his tw o grandchildren. Blockbuster D esert Sky Pavilion at 8 p.m . Tickets H o w w o u ld s p e n d th e y o u lik e to w e e k e n d lo u n g in g , p o o ls id e s ip p in g w it h u m b r e lla a Pick up a copy of the Sum m er *97 Devil D eals and find out how you and a friend can win a two night, three day stay (dinners included) at the Fiesta Inn in Tem pe. It’s really a fun idea and we think you’ll d r in k s f r ie n d ? love trying to win it! Devil D e a ls are available all over cam pus near State P re ss distribution boxes and at the State P re ss in Matthews Center basem ent. Q u estio n s? C a ll 965-6555! Good luck! IN S ID E E V E R Y D E V IL D E A L S C o u p o n s Here are 32 other great reasons to pick up a copy of Devil Deals! Cluck U TCollege St. Deli ▼Dairy QueeriTGumby’s PizzaTHogi YoghTMama’a PizzaTN ik’s P izzaTPapa John’s PizzaV PopPeroni’s PizzaVRoyal TajT Sub FactoryTSchlotzsky’sT S n o O asisTSubw ayTSunny’s PizzaVSurf City Squeezed T C Luigi’s PizzaVTubby’s Grilled Su b sT Alternative Copy ShopV American 5 Star TransmissionsTChristopher Steven’s T Independent import CareT MBNA T Mr. Clutch and BrakesTSelect Auto InsuranceTTucker Bramsen TireV Video To Go ▼Oceanside Ice ArenaVShoe MilIVShirts n ThingsVTempe Bicycled Zia Records^ Loaded with money saving coupons & info! The only coupon book produced at ASU by ASU students! It’s a book you can trust. w w# « -¡I▼T■«I C ro ssw o rd s S a v in g s In fo D E A L S Page 21 Tuesday, June 24,1997 St a t e P r ess Local group takes Native Am erican culture global B y G regor M c G avin State P ress Valley band Clan/Destine is taking local sounds overseas with a unique style com­ bining Native American and rock music The five-m em ber band, which draws large crowds at local venues and regular­ ly plays dates for tribal organizations nationwide, has seen its greatest impact outside the United States. "1 g u ess i t 's m ostly in te re st in the unknown,” said lead singer Juan Sanchez. The band has drawn capacity crowds and extensive media coverage throughout Europe. At home, however, the reception is not as enthusiastic, despite almost constant bookings, radio airplay and a performance for President Clinton at ASU last fall. “We’re tying to make our way here,.but we"re actually getting a lot better repre­ sentation outside the States,” said bass player Dave Montour. Clan/Destine recently returned from a two-week engagement in Australia for the Soil of the Flame Festival, a bash featur­ ing aboriginal acts from around the globe. The group played alongside M aori, In u it, A b o rig in e and o th e r N ativ e A m erican d elegations in the show in n o rth ern Q u een slan d , bu t they w ere clearly the show-stopper. “Supposedly, there had been a sevenyear drought in the area. It hadn’t rained for the whole two weeks we were there, but when we started our first number, which is something like a rain prayer, it just started pouring,” Sanchez said. Prior to the Australian tour was a twoweek stint in Germany, where the band p lay ed n u m erous : show s aro u n d Düsseldorf. Following considerable tele­ v isio n and ra d io a irp la y , they w ere offered a contract with a German record­ ing label, “ On bo th o f th ese trip s we had to totally transform,” Sanchez said. “At dif­ ferent shows we would do different stuff due to the environment we were in.” At their first Germany appearance, key­ b o a rd ist F rank P oocha and g u ita rist Chuck H arris both “fried” their equip­ ment through the European electrical sys­ tem, the first in a series of learning expe­ riences on the trip. “It was cool to see the effect our culture had in Germany,” Montour said. “A lot of people there have never seen a Native A m erican, o th e r than on te le v isio n . T h e y ’re e x p e c tin g fe a th e rs and w ar paint.” Montour added that he has experi­ enced similar reactions at home. “I worked at the Heard M useum for eight years and a lot of the questions I got th ere w ere lik e , ‘Y o u ’re a real Indian? Where aré your feathers?’ It’s ju st in re v erse, you know ?” he said. “When we go someplace else, we bring our own ideas with us.” W ith a so u n d se lf-d e sc rib e d as “Southwest fusion with a native vibe,” the band, which incorporates traditional instruments from various native cultures, places great emphasis on the traditional aspect of its music. “It’s really the show. We put a lot of emphasis on it. At the same time, though, our influences are ju st like everybody else’s,” Montour said. “I mean, I grew up listening to AC/DC, so naturally I’m going to be influenced by that, too. All we’ve done is take those influences and incorpo­ rate them With our other influences.” D rum m er S tev e G a tlin is the on ly C au ca sia n band m em ber, th e o th ers owing th eir heritage to various tribes nationwide, art assortment which allows for an eclectic mix of musical influences', both Native American and global. “I like to express my heritage — not only to show that I’m proud and to feel proud, but also to maybe help some o f my younger brothers and sisters at the same time, to show them that there are a Valley band, Clan/Destine will scion be taking their Native American/rock m usic sound overseas. lot of Native Americans out there doing good things,” Sanchez said. Featured in C lan/D estine’s shows are Sanchez on congas and didgeridoo, and Montour on flute. In addition, the band is complemented at many shows by threetim e h o o p -d a n cin g w o rld ch am p io n Derrick Suwaima Davis with traditional and freestyle dancing. “It just adds a whole new element. It’s no longer just five guys playing music — it’s six guys doing a whole production. It just transcends the music,” Sanchez said. C lan/D estine is shopping for a new record label follow ing their one-year, o n e-reco rd in g deal w ith in d ependent la b e l C anyon R eco rd s, w hich d ea ls exclusively with Native American artists, “Hopefully, we’ll get in with a major label,” Sanchez said. “We got offered a deal from a German label that’s pretty big over there. We’re having,pur attorney check them out now, but I don’t know if we want to be in Germany all the time.” The band’s association with Canyon p ro d u ced th e ir s e lf-title d d eb u t, but Sanchez sa d they’re more than ready to return to the studio. “We have like 50 original songs that are ready to be recorded,” he said. C lan/D estine is on a short hiatus for now, with the exception of a few minor out-of-tow n shows, while keyboardist Poocha goes back to Europe with his other band; Poetic Justice. All involved see good things to come for Clan/Destine, “I think there’s a definite market for Native American music because every­ where we go, people are just so excited about our style,” Sanchez said. He likened the band’s appeal to the resurgence of other forms of traditional music worldwide. “I think we fit right in with that rush, so to speak,” he said. “I think people are sick and tired of hearing five guys play m usic and act like ‘rock sta rs .’ They want to hear music, not just nonsense ” S tate P ress S ports is hiring reporters for th e fall sem ester If interested call Randy Jones at 9 6 S -2 2 9 2 or e-mail to edfan@asu.edu CALZONE” “KILLER H o u rs: O p en D aily 11 a .m . -1 1 p .m . D A IL Y L U N C H S P E C I A L 1 Í AM - 2PM Buy 1 slice 8, a Drink, Get Another Slice of Equal or Lesser Value FREE! Spaghetti $ 3 .1 5 with salad Garlic Bread “KILLER” C A LZO N ES $ 3 .9 9 10” PIZZA w ith 2 FREE to p p in g s “H O M E M A D E ” L A SA G N A w/salad & garlic bread. Meat or Spinach $4.75 Cheese $4.25 H A PPY H O U R M o n d a y -F rtd a y 2 -5 p m & 7 - 9 :3 0 p m 8 9 4 -M A M A Thecar might cost too much. TheinsurariGgäoesu t haue to. ♦ Low down-payment ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ M onthly paym ent plan ♦ im m ediate coverage ♦ Money-saving discounts ♦ Free rate quote Call or visit your local GEICO representative for car insurance: (6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 - 0 7 6 6 F A X 8 9 4 -8 7 9 5 InaHuny? Phone Ahead!* Government Employees Insurance Co. • GEICO GeneralInsurance Co. Wshingum, DC 20076 GEICO Indemnity Co, »GEICO Casually Co. P age22 St a t e P ress Tuesday, Juñe 22,1997 Batman and Robin out of five Well, the caped crusaders are back, and this time they’re altogether kinder, nicer and generally fluffier crime fighters. This Batman, like the others, is a spectacle for the eye. With fabulous sets, creative concerts and really cool gadgets and vehicles, this movie jumps off thé screen. Unfortunately, the dialogue doesn’t offer any help. Consisting almost entirely of one-liners and clichés, the dialogue drags on, getting fairly annoying by the end of the movie. Worst o f all is Arnold Schwarzenegger who, as Mr. Freeze, only utters uncreative and pre­ dictable puns throughout the entire flick. The villains this time do make a greater combined impact than those in the last movie. While Jim Carey took command of the screen, Schwarzenegger and Uma Thurman, Poison Ivy, become equally dominating char­ acters. : My Best Friend’s Wedding ’& & & *& out o f fiv e Julianne Potter (Julia Roberts) and Michael O'N eal (Dermont Mulroney) made a pact nine years ago. If neither were married before they reached the age of 28, they would m any each other. Three weeks before Juliaone’s 28th birthday, she g ets a m essag e on h er an sw e rin g m ach in e, i t ’s Michael and he has something important to tell her Julianne calls him back and to her dism ay, he has popped the question to someone else, and worse yet he s getting married m four days character really serves a purpose, and Fox only appears on screen for maybe a minute. Another minor annoyance — there are A LOT of butt shots in this movie. From the opening sequence where the audience is shown Batman and Robin suiting-up, to the constant shots of Thurman’s barely-covered back­ side, we see a close-up of about every character’s rearend with the exception of Alfred. My major problem with this movie is the ending. The fluffy feel-good ending where everybody learns a valu­ able lesson about life has no place in a Batman movie. Overall though, even with all of the little annoyances, this movie is just basic fun. It’s one of those, curl up with a bag of popcorn and a soda and ignore the real world movies. It’s not meant to be anything terribly deep or to carry any grand message. It’s a movie to watch when you don’t have to think, so just sit back and enjoy yourself. — Deanna Darr Thurman plays a perfect Poison Ivy, evil and seduc­ tive. Her portrayal is convincing and she is able to hold her own in the presence of some big-name actors. George Clooney dons the rubber suit for the first time in this sequel, replacing Val Kilmer. While Clooney does a fair job in the role, he doesn’t have enough edginess for the part. His boyish sm ile and Soft-spoken nature make Batman seem almost playful instead of a dark avenger for justice. The movie also stars Chris O’Donnell, who returns to his role as Robin, and Alicia Silverstone as Batgirl. W hile O ’D onnell m akes m ore o f an im p act than Silverstone, who basically plays the rebellious teen O’Donnell played last time, his character isn’t as strong as it was in the last movie. One thing that really bothered me is that there seemed to be two characters just thrown in for the hell of it. Namely, Elle Macpherson as Bruce Wayne’s girlfriend of the hour and Vivica Fox, from Independence Day, as Ms. B. Haven, an ice princess after Mr. Freeze. Neither His perform ance is light-hearted and gay (in more than one sense o f the word). George steals every scene he’s in, and Everett’s com edic abilities are wonderful: The scene where George first meets Kimmy is hilarious. George adds his own personal touch to the deception Julianne has It is at that point that Julianne realizes that she’s been in love with Michael the whole time. She begins her m ission to break up the happy couple. Let the games begin. M y B est F rien d 's Wedding is a hilarious look at what happens when the man you love — who also happens to be your best friend — is marrying some- Director P.J. Hogan’s attention to detail also makes the difference. He develops the characters and their world extremely well. There are no holes in the char­ acters or the story line. My Best F riend’s Wedding is romantic comedy at its best. The question is: who ends tip with Michael? Julianne or Kimmy? The answer leaves everyone at the wedding happy. — Ofelia Madrid Julia Roberts is simply charming as the scheming Julianne. She will stop at nothing to break up Michael and his fiancee, Kimmy, even if it means breaking Kimmy’s heart. Cameron Diaz plays the naive bride to be. Unaware o f Julianne’s newfound feelings for M ichael, Kimmy asks Julianne to be the m aid o f The funniest scenes in the movie are provided by Rupert Everett who plays George, Julianne's editor. , .. MM..| _______ RETURN ■ Ë O FI Hoiyfieid rT ^ WEDNESDAY , '•'«fcr ly so n n •’if' ¿If.'- !ia- O flfffi T NO COVER FOR LADIES BEFORE 10 PM '**<»*, S A T U R D A Y . JU N E M U S T 21 Y E A R S OLD Z 8 LIVE MUSIC ON THE PATIO WTH B ■zizz ma 4 40 PM FREE FOODBUFFET 4-7 PM LIVE MUSIC . K Ü O N THE PATIO mm WWW.CUHUO.COM „D O W N T O W N L e m P e ANY SHOE PURCHASE AT REGULAR PRICE DOWNTOWN TEMPE IS THE PUCE TO BE. DOWNTOWN TEMPE T H E S H O E M IL L 3 9 8 S. M I L L • 9 6 6 -3 1 3 9 IS T H EP U C EW B L E xpirés 8-31-97 Join us for 9 9 Days of Summer fe, HAPPY HOUR M onday - Friday 4 -8 IOC WINGS ALL DAY - ALL NIGHT • IOC WINGS ALL DAY - ALL NIGHT • •• • JL o 1 30 E. U n iv e rs ity Dr. S u ite A, T e m p e Tel: 6 0 2 -966-3544 O p e n Sat. I l a m r 3 p i n b e tw e e n 4 /5 -6 /2 8 . W e 're n o w o p e n S at: fro m 2 t o 4 | w v Mr l 'C I 1 Mr ~1H0 IN TTV ' AVQ 11V SDNIAA >01 • -LHOIN T 1V - AVQ 11V SDNI/W >01 SIZZLIN’ SUMMER SALE PRICES ON OVER 2,000 BICYCLES! DownTown Tem pe G i ! O O M I N G C M H V M A N $ 0 0 0 S OFF ! 966-5462 1 L o c a te d in th e A rc h e s N o z a 1 * i 1 g g> If f t . . . M -T h 9 -8 M 9 -6 9 -5 Sat l - J — ■ ■ University pEAR^oP m Bud Light & C oors Light Drafts ° Kamikaze’s &. Purple H ooter Shots | A ppetizer M enu gj . . . . 3 B E H 2 . CONSULT • SHAMPOO CONDITION • CUT Reg. 1 8 men/s21 women Expires 8 / 1 4 / 9 7 6 - S peed C r u is e r Reg u la r 5230 N ow s 149' S ave W SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Round trip from Phoenix AMSTERDAM_________ ...7 23 ......7 6 8 M UN ICH . .......7 2 3 LONDON ____ 655 .......8 0 8 P A R IS ....... CABO SAN LU CAS- ____ 254 PUERTO VAHARTA .......3 0 0 M EXICO C ITY ...™ ™ . ____ 287 ACAPU LCO ™ .._____ .........320 M A Z A T L A N ___ 270 GUATEM ALA.................5 3 5 ECUADOR______________ 548 CAN CÚN............................ 395 COSTA R IC A ............ 540 P E R U .....™ .........____........6 1 8 PUERTO R IC 0 ™ .™ .........5 0 8 BELIZE ......................,..™ 5 2 7 VANCOUVER__________ 181 Other Cities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL TEM PE BICYCLE 330 W. U n iv e r s it y 966-6896 D O W N TO W N 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 /ftiv Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff ' y ' Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. a ce 24 S ta te P ress Tuesday, June 24,1997 Terr 10.000 Maniacs Love Among the Ruins '¡t& ik out of five I’m sorry, it’s just not the same with out Natalie Merchant Unfortunately the high expectations that accompany die name 10,000 Maniacs in their latest CD, Love Among the Ruins, can not be met It was live years ago when the band not only lost Merchant, but their recording con­ tract as well. Back from the layoff and now with Geffen, the Maniacs have found their new front woman, Mary Ramsey, a former back up vocalist with the group. She’s asked to fill some pretty tag shoes. Although Merchant has made her depar­ ture, this could provide a fresh start for the 10.000 Maniacs. Ramsey has a charming and polished voice that still creates, in classic Maniac form, some beautiful melodic tunes. . Melodies such as “Rainy Day” and “ Love Among the Ruins” actually jump off the record as they extenuate Ramsey’s singing. Both songs have upbeat harmonies and a nice " í e composition of different in s tru m e n ts that make the soul feel good. Other tunes such as “Even with My Eyes Closed” and “More Than This” are cool tracks worth giving a chance. The sounds flow pure and effortlessly. However, while there are some pretty good songs, many of them sound so similar to past albums that the CD is a bit tired. And this album might have received good reviews if it was under a different name, except then they run the problem of being called a group that sounds like 10,000 Maniacs. Considering the catch-22, they do a relatively decent job. Big Maniac fans might be disappointed, but what can you expect now that you have 9,999 Maniacs. — JeffMorris Abra Moore Strangest Places 1/2 out of five For those of you who enjoy thoughtprovoking lyrics with enjoyable guitar beats, say hello to Abra Moore and her CD Strangest Places. Abra Moore with her radio-ready Voice, despite being a bit rough, puts out some pretty cool sounds. The first track on the disk is “Four Leaf Clover,” a song that hopes a little luck can bring love to the unconfident writer. “Don’t Feel Like C ryin,” one of the best songs oh the record — though it has only a few chords — has a nice melody that questions our participation in the game of love. The soft yell by Moore and steady drums really make this one good. Sweet picking of the guitar and perfect rhythm is w hat jum ps o u t o f the tune “Strangest Places.” Moore’s singing is in excellent accord with the sounds engi­ neered by the band. This deeply personal up of teen-agers and preteens, but the thing is, they sound like 15-year-olds who make nothing but fluffy cheese. Days of the New has the potential to be the teen stars o f the rock scene, mainly because they don’t sound like they’re only 17 They play the kind of grunge Silverchair only wish­ es they knew how to play, and they do it all on acousticgui- t)My$afdwlt$w V* Blue« has Kenny Wayne Shepherd and Jenny Lang. Country has Le Ann Rimes. Classical ramie has any manher of child prodigies. Bot pop and rock have never been able to produce any young Take Hanson and Silverchair, far instance. People always seem amazed « t o they hear t o e bonds are made- There is something very Alice in Chains about the band, even down to the singer. Even though the press release says Travis Meeks’ lead vocals are reminiscent of Jim Morrison and Eddie Vedder, he really sounds more like Layne Staley. Considering all the songs are acoustic, the music is heavy and dark. The lyrics are as equally dark and quite intelligent s look at life is e a s i 1 y e m p a th iz e d with. “My heads got a m ind/ said a m ind of its own/ I fin d m y self in the strangest places/ I wake up I ’ve been sleeping in somebody’s shoes.” Simple confusion for displaced logic is an inter­ esting topic that she explores. The slow b ea u tifu l p ianò in “Happiness” combined with the essence of sad rom anticism leads you to feel the pains and hurt that scar. She desires that tom orrow w ill change the burdens o f today, Abra Moore’s balance of up tempo and mellow harmonies are innovative. Moore’s Strangest Places are definite­ ly worth visiting. for a 17-year-old-lyricist. The thing that separates them from a band like Silverchair is that they don’t try to sound profound and intellectual while coming out nothing but pre­ tentious. Instead, Days of die New writes personal and cre­ ative songs that just sound smart. The only problem with the album is that sometimes the songs are kind of hard to tell apart. They’re all slow to midtempo. But each song is musically and lyrically sound. Not bad for a debut Emm four teenagers. With a little more variety, Days of the New could be really good — Alissa Zapatka r “ MIDWEEK MADNESS’“ Monday - Thursday Only fftST LARGE CHEESE PIZZA free fu g e sw ONLY In-State Checks Toppings $ 1.00 www.Rumbyspizza.coin each i c e d fe o ffe e m u dy + Tax orX-TRALARGE$5.99+ Tax 132781 921-FAST $5.00 Minimum for Delivery Offer May Expire W/0 Notice Open for Lunch Every Day at 11:00 am ‘TIL 2:30 atn Sunday thru Thursday ‘TIL 3:30 am Friday and Saturday LU BE • OIL • FILTER T i l t . r l a i O M O T I V I 2 0 3 3 W. U N IVERSITY, M ESA DOBSON A U N IVERSITY 644-1201 ONLY 3 M ILES FRO M ASU T -W B - _ WITH COUPON 1Lu bricate you r veh icle & ch a ssis 1D rain old o il 1A dd ujp to 5 q ts. o f new o il 1 In sta ll a new o il filte r 1 In clu d es a 17 p t. Inspection I m a m no M m rr” ***OAC I M M Y S NO INTEREST NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS _______ . mm • • • • • 0 8 the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob C ta M ill. COMPUTERIZED WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION 1 avenue o v a r ttS y o r e . lo reducá ouMWndng àebL PIus >1.78 Erwtrownantat fe e . $ p a lf r i Thursday Noon Bible Study • D iesel extra M oat ca rs an d lig h t tru cks >C a ll fo r appointm ent Our Tire A Service W arranties A re H onored At O ver 8,000A ffilia ted D ealers Nationwide la x 8 Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study every Thursday during the Summer Session on how Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob experienced God and how their experiences can be applied to our lives. This week we will talk about: Knowing Who We are in Christ wrm coupon C h eck Inflation O n AM Tires Com puterized Balance O n 4 Tires Fou r Tim Rotation M ost C a ra t U gh i Trucks CaM for appointment Memorial Union/Ventana/226B A ll are welcome (bring a brown bag lunch) beverages and desserts provided Christian Students Fellowship For more information call 921*7270 Thunday, June 26,12:40 -1:30 pm ___________ C o m ic s _______ ./;ç t S tate P ress Page 25 Tuesday, june 24,1997 W ÍL I BETTER PIZZA BETTER PRICE SERVING LUN CH AND DINNER 7 DAYS A WEEK Bringing Fine Food and Friends Together Since 1963 M am a R osa's Traditional Sonoran M exican Food Recipes Are Sim ply the Best! Featuring New Selections to Enhance Your Healthy Lifestyle Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp • Chicken ■Camaron Ranchera and Diablo (Shrimp) ■ Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables I Savory Black Beans I Incredible Fish Tacos LARGE PIZZA }(-LARGE PIZZA $ C 99 $¿99 order by item number GS1 FAM OUS GIAN T G O LD EN MARGARITAS AJO C 0U P 0A JS AJEC E SS A R }/! 1/2 PR ICE DINNER 7 5 W ith the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. O ffer.good after 2 p.m . E xp ire s 7-1-97. MESA 2023 W. Guadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 H appy H our TEMPE B u ffe t 960 W. University_ J " ¡¡ (Northeast Comer l 4-7 p.rn. . University & Hardy) I B Monday-Friday 966-0852 I , ^ FREE DELIVERS Side Items: Ben & Jerrys Ice Cream • Fresh Salads • Wings! Wings! Hot - Mild - 880 Classifieds Page 26 Notice to our 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 264-172) . More Trivia... Newfoundland's time zone is half an hour off of all the others. So are Iran's, bits of India's, Afghanistan's, Burma's, and Nauru's. And Some other islands, like Australia. HOMES FOR RENT LESS THAN !/2mi from ASU, 3bd, 2ba house avail immed. Huge yard, newly redone, $1350/mo. 3bd w/guest house, $1550/mo. Beautiful inside A out. 731-3969, pg 360-1626 WALK TO ASU. 4bd, 2ba, SlOOO/mo. 5bd, 2ba, $925/mo. 3bd, 2ba, $900/mo. lbd, lba, $375/mo. lbd, lba condo with w/d, $425/mo. 3bd, lba, $650/mo. 2bd, lba, $38Q/mo. Call 894-0288. 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd A studios. $50 off move-in w/Sd. 966-8597. LARGE 2. bedroom apartment. TV, cable, pool, laundry. Walk toASU. Very quiet. 966-4791. RURAL & Apache. Cortez Palms. Studios, furn. $395... Call Remax 100. Rose 8200500. ' HOMES FOR RENT 15TH A COLLEGE studio $400/njo.; lbd lba 1434 S, College $395/mp,; 3bd 2ba home at Point S:. Mtn. $1,200/mo. Call 894-0288 3 BD, $ 9 9 5 ; 4 bd, $ 1050 ; 4 bd, $ 1200 ; all have: pool, w /d. disw ash er, ac, :ete> .437 . 1048: Within 1 mi. of A S U .,.. Classifieds WORK! TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT PAPAGO PARK II- 2bd/ 2ba, lux condo, w/d, fans, 2 pools, 2 Jacuzzis, 1 mi to ASU. $750/mo; Harris Properties 8290902 QUESTA VIDA lux condo 3bd/3ba, 2 stry, vltd ceilings, sky lights, w/d, dish, micro, 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, $1100/ mo. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT TEMPE/ASU BUY for $0 down! Take over payments, FHA assum., 2bd/2ba at 151 E. Broadway (near Mill). Nice unit w/ lots of closet space, cov'd 2BR, 2BA weight room, poo), spa, v-ball. close to ASU. parking, pool, lg pvt patio. Avail, now! $590/rao. 860Must qualify $583/mo. & be . 1274 . ■„ ' y , owner occupied. *96 Mtg. Int. deduction was $5*385. Call CONDO - 2bd/2ba, W/d, pool, Sam for more info at 714-974etc. Papago II $750 - Commons 1010 or 714-729-5601 on Lemon $650 - 464-2756 or 1-800-977-0803 HAYDEN SQUARE 3bd 2ba $1250/mo. Avail, mid-July . 966-8127’ ;• ' A F A |[M |N T |_ State Press Tuesday, June 24, 1997 RENTAL SHARING HAYDEN SQUARE condo2bdr. 2ba, ¿te a t location« $1100/mo + dep. 966-8729. AVAIL 7/1, W illow Creek Apts, 2.5 mi to A S U 2bd/2ba. $315, pool/jaczi, grills, quiet, dshwsr, ceiling fans, 804-0884. . HERMOSA PL. 2bd, 2ba, close to ASU, pool, all appL, a/c, w/d, $649. 966-0987 NS, ND, senior+ female pref, $344 + 1/2 elec, for lux. apt., 966-2396. Mention Nellie's apt. PAPAGO PARK Village I, avail Aug 1st. 3bd/2ba & 2bd/2ba. Call Brent @ 496-8939. C l a s s i t ie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL OWN ROOM- w/d, dishwasher, close to campus, clean« pool, spa. $250 Lve msg 966-4580. RMMTES WANTED to share spacious 4bd, 3ba home, lg yard, newer home w/security system, w/d, NS pref. Minutes from ASU or MCC. Southern & McClintock. $350 +1/4 util. CaH Mitch, 755-8376. WANTED TWO female stud­ ents to share 3 b r bouse, bik­ ing distance to campus, $300 + 1/3 util. Must have references, no pets 784-2915 TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALgs = = = = REAL ESTATE AUTOMOBILES GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1. Delin­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free (1) 800-2189000 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. 92 ESCORT 4dr, 4spd, tinted wind., blue, reliable, & clean. 71K $5000 obo 261-9997 M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 2 NEW mtn bikes w/locks $200 ea; older TV $30; dining table $100; tall black shelves $75. Prices neg. 994-3979. FURNITURE ASU/TEMPE $0 down! Take over payments, FHA assum., 2bd/2ba at 151 E. Broadway (near Mill). Nice unit w/ lots of closet space, cov'd parking, pool, lg pvt patip. Must quali­ fy @ $583/mo. A be owner oc­ cupied. '96 Mtg. Int. deduction was $5,385. Call Sam for more info at 714-974-1010 or 714729-5601 PAPAGO PARK, Qnesta Vida, A others! 2 A 3 bdrms. Own for less than rent. Greg, Realty Executives. 966-0016. MATTRESS, QUEEN size, dou­ ble pillow top/ box spring, 2 wks old - pd $1100, sacrifice $275.495-1974. AUTOMOBILES86 SUZUKI Sanari silver, new tags, tune up, great on gas! Runs great, fun car! $1400 7304763 No calls after 8pm SEIZED CARS from $175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free 1800-218-9000 Ext. A-1676 for current listings. B ICYCLES BOB'S BICYCLE Barn inven­ tory blowout 15-25% off parts & acces. 25% o ff std tune up new & used bikes exp. 6/30/97 w/coupon. Call 894-6852 HELP WANTEDG | N HELP WANTEDGENERAL H ealthy w om en (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ m ously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy: M ust have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits an d injections involved. A c c e p te d d o n o r s c o m p e n s a te d $2000. F or m o re in fo rm a tio n call 602-860-4792 |^ $8-$10/hr Thlm s h o u l d b u y o u t a d C a ll 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ¿upe* (imme* futltof fpecudt B — Find it F A S T in the C lassified s ♦ Free hot water Mini blinds , ♦ Large exercise room Vertical blinds with valances 4 3 pools, 2 spas Brass ceiling fans / 4 Barbecue areas European cabinetry • ♦ Covered parking Walk-in closets available ♦ Laundry facilities Private balcony/patio ♦ Security alarm systems available AUTOMOBILES CASH TODAY!!! • 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 _ HELP WANTEDGENERAL S H O R T CENT C A S H ? HELP WANTEDGENERAL In s tru c to r s N e e d e d /New Donors Earn $95 For\ \Your First Threa Donations/ F/T, P/T, temp, substitute workers needed at agency tor adults w/developmental disabilities. Call 994-5704 or apply 7507 E . Osborn Road, Scottsdale. EO E • $ 1 0 0 0 Cash Drawing in June • Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive 110 on vour next donation. » $5 Bonus for all second donations of the week 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 • Tempe oÁrtá ^Aeec/ec/ 894-2250 If you have a d esire to help High S c h o o l stud ents su cceed , w e have positions availab le for graduate stud ents w ith the ability to tutor In a ll three (not ju st one) of the following su b jects: r C € N ~ r e o N i .... 1' ' " ' T a i T T . ' n . S i « Now Hiring All Positions Evenings Only il ★ High School S p an ish 1-2 * High School Algebra 1-2 ★ High School C hem istry 1-2 *5 T h e é m ir8 We offer a Monday-Thursday schedule (must work at least two full days from 1:30pm-8:30pm), à wage of $654-$1,632/month, and valuable work experience. M e lt in g P o t a fondue restaurant / Opening Mid-June Mercado Del Lago Plaza 8320 N . Hayden Rd. The Classifieds are on the Web daily in Sylvan Learning Center html! 10505 N. 69th Street, Suite 1100 Scottsdale, A z 85253 Scottsdale m 607-1799 DialAmerica =Big Mon«ifI APARTMENTS HP • Guaranteed $8 Pr./Hr. vs. Commission • Avg. $9 - $13 plus Pr./Hr. • Paid Training m LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ ♦ 4 ♦ ♦ ♦ ASST WEBMASTER, 20hr/wk. Good comm & phone skills, Solaris 2.5.1, W95/NT4, Mac, HTML, prgrming exp in Perl, tech, writing expertise. Fax re­ sume A cover to 965-9423. P la s m a M a k e s a L o t o f C e n ts ! http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ Classified%20Advertising/ Classifieds.html APARTMENTS ANSWERING SERVICE Sat. 8am -1pm. Sun 8am-6pm, phone & typing exp. req. Scot­ tsdale 947-7351. f BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. L _ _ _ _ _ For more information on Fall openings, please call 953-3070 Jä h e a Lo o H - HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/t appt. setter for E. Phx. Ins. Agency. M-Thurs., 4-8pm & oc­ casional Sat. C all Mike or Linda at 952-2707. PAPAGO PARK Village I, fum. TH, private room + bath $400/mo. Fern. pref. 759-6216. DONOR EGGS NEEDED APARTM ENTS RENTAL SHARING • A u t o r p a t e d D ia le r s W ^ U p , B o n u s te s Q U A D R A N G LE ■ •m VW VILLAGE APARTMENTS 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 S.E. Comer of University & Rural O ffe r: i/L Y Exp. Nec, ' elaxed Environment No Cold Calls D m TO D Af State P ress Page 27 Tuesday, June 24,1997 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BE IN A MOVIE Dance & gym bckgrnd pref. Ages 13-30. Call, Mid-Town Inc. Ask for Alan. 277-6962 4TH FLOOR BAR & GRILLE Year-around work RESTAURANTS/ BARS fo r the career-oriented ind ivid ual. Food Handler's card req'd for the follow ing positions in our BUSY bar fit g rille. CAMELS $r,t,i SERVERS BUSSERS BARTENDER ROOM SERVICE Come join our staff where we offer competitive . wages, uniform s, free employee meal and much m ore. Please apply in per­ son at Human Resources, 5001 N . Scottsdale Rd., M , W or F, 8:30-10:30am or 2-4pm. Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports a DrugFree W orkplace. EOE exp 6/31/97 HELP WANTEDGENERAL CUSTOMER SERVICE rep FT, PT, needed for Tempe manu­ facturer. Must be hard working, energetic, strong inter-personal skills, com puter keyboard knowledge req. $6-$6.50/hr. . Apply in person- 600 W. 24th St . T-F, 9:30-5pm or call 9672678. Over 200 Brews RESTAURANTS/ BARS 968-7880 Tuesday Rights HELP WANTEDCLERICA L HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE going to earn $500/wk. this suinmer? Local marketing com­ pany is hiring 6 people .to fill direct sales positions. Work evening hrs. promoting local video stores & restaurants.. Guaranteed $.10/hr. + . com. Equals $20+ per hr. Call Tom at 921-7755 tor $7.07/hr M-F some even­ ings req. Contact Tammie 9476353 - mo old infant care; 12-24 hrs/wk. NS; must have reliable transp. CPR certif. Ed., Fam., .or Nursing m ajor a +. North .Scotts. Call Debra998-5158. P/T CS REPS United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for all shifts including wknd. $6.87/hr plus shift differential for evening hours. Good cus­ tomer service skills & pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 4319500. Tempe location. Em­ ployee drug testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe. p/t, $6.55/hr, no exp nee. Heavy lilting req'd. 804-0300. Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex. hrs/Wk. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5,921-8282 FILM PROCESSOR & film ers/preppers needed, all /shifts avail. Apply at: 2323 E. Mag­ nolia^ Ste. 112, Phoenix. PERSONAL CARE assist, needr ed for am & pm w/quadriplegic. Wkdys & wknds. $7/hr. 966' 2059.vy ; . HOUSEHOLD PACKERS, sum­ mer work, packing co. looking for FT & PT, exp pref, will train. Good pay. 254-2150. POSITION AVAIL, for pro­ grammers & a web master. Tech­ nical exp. & creativity is a must, Web site will include the following: live video, interac­ tive chat rooms, recorded video for down load & streaming, graphic art animation, still pho­ tographs, audio & text. We o ffe r a casual working envi­ ronment, great pay & the po­ tential for long term employ­ ment w/ benefits. Fax yoiir re­ sume to us at 941-2491 or call for more info at 4254)963 STUDENT CLASSIFIED Ad­ vertising counter clerk-p/t, must be familiar with Macintosh, will train and work around your sched. See Pat, basement, Matthews Center, State Press reception desk. MA/OR BEER Co seeking pt contemporary Mkting repre­ sentative. Must have 1 yr. of school remaining. Fax resume to 829-1470 Phattest subs in Tempe N E C o rn erA p ach e T e rra c e HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL EXCELLENT TEST takers with great communication skills needed to teach SAT, LSAT, GMAT & GRE courses. $1017/hr. pt. eves. & wknds. 9671480 KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. Must be neat, dependable. 7311 E- Thomas. Scottsdale ' 945-7692, Find it FAST in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL MERRILL LYNCH Assist Fi­ nancial Consultant. Avail immed. Scotts. Seeking salesoriented person, extremely selfm otivated. Call Jasott 6078740. OFFICE ASSIST for artist w/children. Errands, light housecleaning, cooking, p/t. 838-5829. Ask for Niki Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! P u t it in the C la s s if ie d s ! SERVICES SPORTS MINDED STUDENTS PART-TIME year round, flex hrs, day shift. Data entry/customer service for small fast-paced co. Sales order data entry, answering phones & re­ sponding to customer requests for info. $7/hr. Ron 940-9220 TRADER JO E’S p/t clerks & stockpeople want­ ed- Flex hrs. & good pay. Must be enthusiastic & energetic. Scottsdale 948-9886 HELP WANTEDC y R j C A L _ _ =: SEEKING VIDEOGRAPHERS & photographers for pt posi­ tion w/ new local internet com­ pany. Ideal applicants should also have lighting & editing exp. Compensation will be based on applicant's level of exp. Potential for long term em­ ployment. Call RJO Multime­ dia, LLC at 602-425-0963 for more info. & to set up an inter­ view. CLERICAL, P/T, *20 hrs/wk, .flex h rs, 12 St. & Indian School. Fax resume to 2666179 or call 266-6110 DATA ENTRY P I’ $7/hr. flex. hrs. around your class schedule. Must type 50 wpm & be willing to work evenings & wknds. Casual dress, friendly office. Located at 48th & Southern 438-2511 Find It FAST in the Classifieds INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES SERVICES $1.50 Bud bongnecks 10? Wings 3 - 7 pm Prizes 6 - 8 pm by F ra n c e s D rake Tuesday June 24, 1997 ARIES (March 2H d April 19) F am ily and w ork in terests require your special touch. It seems your judgment arid intu­ ition are just what’s needed to solve special problems. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) M eaningful talks with loved ones are quite productive. It seem s you all agree on the direction in which you want to go. Financial matters are highlimited. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You are at your communicative best and should make the most o f it. It’s a good time to go to bigwigs and present that special work idea. Co-workers cooper­ ate. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) W hat goes on behind closed doors in business bodes well for you. A certain social duty you’ve committed to shouldn’t be shunned, despite the tempta­ tion to just stay home. You are self-confident. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) The daylight hours favor business d e a ls , p articu larly when i t co m e s to b u y in g o r selling something'. The evening hours fav o r socializing. Leisure is highlighted. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) It’s a good time to reach agree­ m en ts and m ake d eals with b u sin ess partn ers. Although you could encounter some extra duties on the job, you’re up to handling them. LIBRA (Sept 23 to O ct 22) Patience is the watchword of th e day . A lthough y o u ’re champing at the bit to spill your id eas, av o id th is. Som eone c lo s e to you is je a lo u s and could sabotage you. SCORPIO (Get 23 to Nov. 21) Gather up your self-confidence and approach som eone in authority who can help you. It’s a favorable time to ask for a ' raise or p ro m o tio n . Y our advice is sought in the evening. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec. 21) An adviser has a very useful financial tip for you but d o n ’t ju m p in rig h t away. Think carefully before making a decision. The evening favors gadding about CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Special rom antic tim e is reserved for couples, who renew their love for each other. Something in connection with your career will require extra attention early in the day. Later, enjoy yourself. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You make great strides just by using common sense. You have a new method for getting things done that is a model of efficien­ cy. Make sure others emulate it, b ut d o n ’t p resen t it in a heavy-handed manner. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Loved ones are in agreement concerning family matters, par­ ticularly when it comes to chil­ dren. That long awaited finan­ cial boon finally arrives. Make sure you use this wisely. YOU BORN TO D A Y are unable to sit still while injustice is going on. You are a crusader and a fig h te r o f w rongs, i f there’s no underdog for you to defend, you will make it a point to find a cause to embrace and campaign for it, You are a bom p o litic ia n , d iplom at, social worker or educator. You are as fiery in your persona) relation­ ships as you are about your causes. Others are easily drawn to you and are easily swept up m your enthusiasm, e 1997 King Features Syndicate Inc CLUCK-U .Now hiring p/t delivery drivers & cooks. Apply in person: 855 S. Rural Rd. M.D.I. liihariw âU EQ Im M wII Matt Near Friend»! Weekend Clane»! Call Ntwl! Fta trip»! 898-8873 INTERNSHIPS INVESTMENT FIRM has in­ ternship, flex hrs, all aspects of financial planning. 9,12-5129. Walter Clark. MADISON'S IS now accepting apps. for cocktail servers. Apply in person @ 7X08 E. Stetson Dr., Scottsdale 2-6pm BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PIZZERIA UNO Chicago Bar & Grill is now accepting apps for servers & host/hostess. Apply in person at either location: .6 9 0 S. Mill in downtown Tempe or 455 N. 3rd St. at the Arizona Center. SERVER; GOOD tips. Host/ess. $8/hr. Flex xched. Apply 9301 E. Shea #126. 860-2960 x WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings for lunch & dinner shifts. Cashier also needed. $6/hr. Sakana Sushi Bar & Teppan 5061 É. Elliot 598-0506 HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE NANNY FOR 2-yr-old & 2-moold, 18-24 hrs/wk. M ust love children & have lots of energy. CaU 224-9383. NANNY NEEDED: 3-5 eve/wk in our home. Need car. Great pay. Call 530-5095 (day) 7064033 (éve) INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES Thru Rapid A xcess Into the PROFIT MARGIN 1 Call Bryan 952-8275 2 0 1-4646 (pager) Tatti Coal $150.00 WANTED MOTHER'S Helper lite housekeeping & child care for faculty family PT. flex, hrs$7/hr. Call 967-8367 NEEDED: DRIVERS, banquet srvrs, counter help, bartenders. AM & PM. Contact Gary 2739148. Immediate openings. Pull Your Business Promo Out of the WEB TANGLE S6QB|l lattraetian Learn To S C U B ^ D iire ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE ENTREPRENEURS WANTED Learn before you start your co. Brett- M-F, 8-6 @ 340-6315. PERSONALS $ 19.99 FOR a full set of nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studio. 967-2360 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. Avoid the 'chop shops'. W iz­ zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 ADOPTION A LOVING choice, Caring fam­ ily wishes to share love, laugh­ ter^ dreams with newborn. Call Barbara 1-800-753-7755 ARTISTS & TEACHERS wish for a baby. Imagine a full time mom, devoted dad, gentle pets, and a unique loving home. Can help w/ expenses, Call Vicki & Jody 1-800-889-0886 SERVICES ELECTROLYSIS RURAL /Southern. Servicing ASU for 5 years. All methods free numb-. ing 921-1146 HEALTH & FITNESS SOUTHWEST ACCIDENT & Injury i y , W eight Loss with Fen-Phèn. Visits include medi­ cation $105 initial consult. $80- l time/mo. Call anytime MF, 9-5,602-497-9414. TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G $1.98 PG. APA/MLA Experi­ enced editor. Fast. Accuratë. Full editing, Jim: 967-2360, $1 99/PG, $15/RÉS. Proofed; APA/MLA. Same day. DTP Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 INSTRUCTION S tate P re ss Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement office: 965-6735 Sum m er C lassified Ad O rder Form ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Ñame Horne Phone Business Phone Address C ity, State Zip TEACH ABROAD Teach English overseas. TEFL Certificate Course. BA not es­ sential. Train in Prague or Puer­ to Vallarla. Teach worldwide. Job guarantee. ITC, 415-5440447, http://www.vpl.cz/ITC TUTORS MATH HELP Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Earn better grades in MAT106, 117, 119 & 210. $15/hr. Free sam ple tests. Ph. 967-3774. Web: www.miracletutoriiig.com TUTOR NEEDED for ACC322, Intermediate Accounting 2 class at ASU West. Eves or wknds. W ill pay going rate. Call Michelle a t 895-8170. COMPUTERS 133 Pentium s P le a se be sum to check yo ur a d . M ake aum it read * e xa ctly a s you w ish k to appear in the State P re ss, including punctuation. P le a se check your ad the firet d ay it appeara-the liab ility of the State P re ss sh a ll not exceed the co st o< toe ad and credit m ay be given (Of the first insertio n o n ly. M inor spoiling actors do not quality for m ake­ goods. No refunds w ill be g iven, but If you need to can cel your ad a credit w ill be held on account fo r future ad vertising. R A T E The State P re ss publishes w eakly during the sum mer. Private P afly 1-4 issu e s - $1.52 per Nne, p er day 5-9 issues - $1.40 per fine, per day Commercial 1-4 issu es - $1:82 per Hne, p er day 5-9 Issu es - $1.70 per lin e, p er day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lin es, per day. S D m » yo u w ish v o te ad to rum P d e e p a rO e y $1100 16mg QAM 25 Gigabytes 33.6 Modem 2mg PCI Video Parts & Service S o ft W E R E ST! 3* M anw o nC w d • Call ftryan Rapid Axcess ■ 95^82© 201-4646 (pa5er) www.psn.net