W o r l d / N a t io n S ports C a r d in a l s T W O STUDEN TS K ILLED AT U n iv e r s it y o f M prepare fo r C in d e r e l l a ic h ig a n Hues Pa g e 1 3 Pa g e 3 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright, StatePresp,1997 Tempe, Arizona An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 82 No. 21 Wednesday, September 24,1997 P olice arrest 2 Tem pe teen s as rape suspects B y B rian Anderson S tate P ress Two Tempe High School students were arrested M onday night in connection with the rape o f two ASU students last week, Tem pe and ASU police reported Tuesday. Lee Henry Cornier, 17, and Derrick Ray Wood, 16, were arrested after victim accounts and witness > descriptions pointed the two-agency investigation to Tempe High School; said Sgt. Toby Dyas, Tempe police spokesman. “There was one witness who said one of the individ­ uals might have gone to Tempe High School,” Dyas said. “By going through yearbooks and talking to teach? ers, it narrowed the focus down to the people that we’re looking at here.” He said the victims identified the suspects in a police lineup. ASU Police Chief Lanny Standridge said the investi­ gation further focused on Tempe High School after a number of calls were received in response to an ASU police flier printed after the on-campus assault. Dyas said Cornier was under surveillance when he was arrested for trespassing at about 5:30 p.m. at a warehouse near Broadway and McClintock Roads. He later allegedly admitted to both attacks during police interrogation. - " ''*" Wood was arrested about 7:30 p.m. at his home and allegedly admitted involvement in the residence hall assault, Dyas said. Police served search warrants at both of the youths’ homes and removed items including a billfold, items of personal clothing, credit cards, a checkbook and some ASU Policé Chief Lanny Standridge, left, Dyas, a spokesm an fo r Tem pe Police, answ er questions at a receipts with the victim ’s signature from Cornier’s press conference Tuesday. The tw o announced they had col­ house, Standridge said. laborated on the arrest o f tw o suspects charged with the rape Barb Thomas, a spokeswoman for the Tempe Union o f tw o ASU students. High School District, said she could not comment on a knock at her dorm-room door. the suspects’ academic record or divulge other informa­ Cornier faces two counts o f attem pted murder, tion relating to the case. two counts of sexual assault, two counts of kidnap­ Wood faces charges of attempted murder, sexual ping, armed robbery and burglary for both the Sept. assault, kidnapping and burglary for the Sept. 16 16 attack and a Sept. 15 off-campus incident. In that attack of a student in a residence hall on the south case, a student was raped, beaten and slashed with side of campus. The victim was choked into a semi­ T u r n t o R ape A rrests , pa g e 2 . conscious state, beaten and raped after she answered mÿm&0çasts uerncK n ay w oo a $4 m illion bill for Title IX upgrade B y G inger Scott State P ress Brad Lm y/SlEtei Pie ir r issfsnw i Deben Braga w id the rest of tb» women’s softball team will raw) fee baneflti of TWetX as ASU adds backed ssatina restrooms, concession sms« and player tactor rooms to thascAbaE fofa. ASU will spend up to $4 million this year to upgrade two sports facilities to meet gender equity standards as the dead­ line for this year’s Tide IX compliance form approaches. Tide IX, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, began in 1972 as an effort to reach gender equity in intercollegiate athletics. ASU is required to submit a com­ pliance form to die Office of Civil Rights every Oct. 15. ASU only falls short in the facility upgrade area, said Sandy Hatfield-Clubb, assistant athletic director o f stu­ dent services. The necessary upgrades include the rebuilding o f the women’s softball stadium and the construction of a soccer stadium. “We have already put money into upgrading those facili­ ties,” Hatfield-Clubb said. “They will be built at the current facility sites.” Softball head coach Linda Wells said it’s about time the field is upgraded. “What it (the softball field) really needs is fan and player amenities,” Wells said: -“It needs to have the ability to accommodate a crowd”. She said the needed additions to the softball stadium include backed seating for fans, restrooms, concession areas and player locker rooms. To be in compliance with Title IX, a university must meet the following three standards: • offer equal opportunities for both men and women to participate on an athletic team. • offer equal amounts of financial assistance to men and women athletes. • maintain equal standards in facilities and other areas of university athletics. Hatfield-Clubb said ASU more than meets the equal financial assistance requirement. ; “We actually give our women more money,” HatfieldClubb said. “The NCAA permits more scholarships on the women’s side. The reasoning is that men’s sport’s teams have more walk-ons. The scholarships are to encourage more participation by women»” According to the Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act, ASU shells out $1.7 million for 330 male athletes and $1 million for 142 female athletes each year, llu s breaks down to an average of about $5,200 per male athlete and $7,000 per female athlete. “ASU is working really hard to be in compliance with Title. IX,” said Jill DeMichele, assistant athletic director of academic service». DeMichele said when she became an assistant athletic director in 1987 she was the only female in the administration, but now the senior associate is a female and four of the assistant athletic directors are female. “As far as role models and opportunities for women in athletics go, ASU has done an excellent job,” DeMichele T u r n t o T rrtE I X , pa g e 2. .v ijj State P ress Wednesday, September 24,1997 P age 2 R ape arrests _ T oday C o n t in u e d • College Republicans —- General meeting will be held 3:30 p.m. in Yuma Room. Everyone welcome. »Career Services— ‘Çompteting the Puzzle” workshop will be held 1Ô to l l a.m. in room Ç-363 o f the C areer Development Center, located in the Student Services building. • C areer Services “Behavioral Interviewing” work­ shop wilt be held 1 to 3 p.m. in room 222 of the MU. • A.W .A.R.E. — Panel discussion o n availability of women's programming on campus will be held 12 to 1 p.m. in the Hopi Room o f the MU. ; • E ckankar — “Creativity and Imagination Useful Tools“: A'discussion will be held 12 pan, in the Graham Rcmmof theJMÙ, ; . ■ ■■■;.. *■ • Alpha Mu Gamma — Foreign language honors society will hold an informational table 10:40 a.m. to 12:40 p.m. in front of the Language and Literature Building. • Clenched Flower Faction — Poetry reading will be held 8:30 pan. on the north side of the Life Sciences building. ' • ASASU concerts — Safety Orange is the featured band 12 pan. at Palo Verde Beach. • ASASU United Positivity — Promotional party wilth DJs will be held 11 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. • ASASU— Register to vote 12:30 p.m. in front of the MU. • 4X N ativ e A m eric an A rc h ite c tu re a n d D esign Students — Meeting will be held 6 p.m. in the American Indian Institute conference room. • Wild-eyed Screaming Liberals— Mass transit is the topic of discussion 3:30 pan. at Coffee Plantation on Mill Ave. • Learning Resource Center — Study skills and network­ ing workshop will be held 3 p.m. in room 209 of die MU. • R.AJP.E. (Rape Awareness Prevention and Education)— Meeting will be held 4 p.m. in room 202 of the MU. • Aslan Business Leaders Association — General meeting will be held 4:30 p.m. in the Santa Cruz room of the MU. • Women’s Lesbian and B isexual Discussion G roup — peer-facilitated open discussion will be held 5 pan. in room 331 of the Student Services building. • MUAB — Culture and arts committee will meet 3 p.m. in the MUAB offices on the third floor of the MU • ASASU Homecoming Committee ’97 — Volunteers are needed for the Sun Devil Luau during the week of homecoming. Meeting is 6:30 p.m. on the second floor of the MU. Check monitors for room number, ¡¡¡¡il WiiÊHt 1 B 1 1 1 28 ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡8 5 ■... mhùk»J-Ju ........................................ .................. ........ .......................... Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over die phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publica­ tion and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitSed. ■ Entries must contain the fuH name o f the club or orga­ nization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address o f die location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events print­ ed as « service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-saved basis and are print­ ed as space permits. • Counselor Training C en ter — Counseling for ASU students, friends and family is provided by graduate stu­ dents in Pavne Hall, room 402. For more information or to set up an appointment, call 965-5067. • Kundalini Yoga dub — Free yoga class 7 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays in the Coconino Room of the MU. • C om m unication S tu d e n t A ssociation — Weekly meeting 3:30 in Architecture Building room 62. • Arizona Horizon Project solar car team — The solar car will be on display 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tyler Mall, in front Of the Physical Science F-wing, • National Organization for Women — Take Back the Day Rally protesting violence against women will be held 11 30 a.m to 1 p.m on the north side of the MU • MUAB O pinions F orum — A panel o f representa­ tives from varying' student organizations for Hispanic h erita g e m onth w ill h e in th e M U P rogram m ing Lounge at • Rainbow Alliance — Gay movjfe night p.m. in thePinal Room of il • Alleluia Lutheran Student Ministry — ‘Table Talk", free dinner and fellowship will be 5:30 p m at 1034 S Mill Ave, across from the ASU music bidding • MUAB Special Events committee — Weekly meeting will be held 4 p.m in conference room 1A. • Red, White and Blue Republican Women— First meet­ ing of the semester will be 2:45 p.m. in room 206 of the MU fr o m pa ge 1. scissors after a man walked through her unlocked apart­ m ent door at the Q uadrangles A partm ents. 1255 E. University Drive. At present, there is no link between the two most recent attacks and six others, that have occurred over the past two months around the ASU area, Dyas said. After questioning, the youths were transported to the Southeast Juvenile Detention Center to await transfer to an adult court. À spokeswoman for the detention center said the sus­ pects will be autom atically transferred to adult court because of the severity of thé charges. Standridge said Wood has been arrested twice before at ASU — once for criminal damage and once for the misuse of an automobile. Dyas said he did not immediately know if Cornier had a criminal background. Students and all community inhabitants should not become complacent in light of the arrests, Standridge said . “Although we feel a sense of relief right now, this is not the time to let down our guard,” he said, adding he was not sure if recently-im posed security m easures would be suspended. A phone call to Residential Life was not returned Tuesday. This was the first time ASU and Tempe police have worked closely to investigate a crime, Standridge said. “We joined together and produced what would be an excellent example of interagency cooperation that resulted in a positive outcome,” he said. T itle IX __ ____ C o n t in u e d fr o m pa ge 1. said. “We really have come a long way.” ASU has always made efforts to comply with Title IX, Hatfield-Clubb said. “In 1993, the Office of Civil Rights came in and said ASU was one o f the best programs in the country in regards to Title IX,” she said. “ASU is doing an excellent job. Gender equity is really very complex and needs to be in the forefront of our thought when dealing with intercol­ legiate athletics.” 3 DAY T E N T SA LE Sept. 26th-27th & 28th ONLY Special Sale Hours: 9am to 6pm Dally :w r 1 J B icycles S tartin g a t O n ly , / r i f A LL $ 1 6 9 . ffi 1997 M O D ELS REDUCED Th« Chadwicks Phig Newton Rock Lobster Carvin Jones TO SELL - SAVE NOW , SAVE BIG $$ G IA N T from an UPLAND to M CM 990 80’s Retro F IS H E R from W ahoo to Joshua X O inside Martini Ranch T R E K 800 sp t to Y-Bikes PARTS • CLOTHING • ACCESSORIES G re a tly Reduced to S e ll 10% t o 50% O ff R eg. P ric e s FREE: Water bottle for just stopping by. I10MENICS CYCLING Student Discounts w ith I.D. Open 7 days a week Layaway • Financing (OAC) NFL FOOTBALL EVERY SUNDA Y A T lOAM MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL A T 5:30PM $1 DRAFTS • $5 PITCHERS University i 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 1004 S. M ill Ave., Tempe NCAA FOOTBALL EVERY SATURDA Y A T 9:00AM ^ H 10th Street Apache LAYAWAY TIL X-MAS Sorry n o rain checks. Prices g o o d on ly on instock item s. NEVER A COVER A s A lw a y s D o n ’t F o r g e t . . : $1 D o m e s t i c D r a f t s b e f o r e 9 p m 7295 E. Stetson Dr., Scottsdale 9 7 0 -0 5 0 0 W orld/N ation State P ress P a »;e 3 Wednesday, September 24,1997 Serbia gears fo r m ore isolationism B y A n n e T h o m pso n A sso cia ted P ress Warren Zinn, The Michigan Dally Newa/AP Photo An undentified neighbor o f U niversity o f M ichigan senior Tam ara W illiam s and Kevin N elson h o ld s h is head Tuesday o utside a u niversity housing com plex. A police o fficer shot Nelson to death a fte r he refused to stop stabbing W illiam s o utside th e ir cam ­ pus apartm ent, authorities said. The wom an la te r died in surgery. “T his w as not th e firs t tim e th ey fo u g h t,” th e neighbor said. “I have seen Tam ara bruised a couple o f tim es.” Two killed at U niversity o f M ichigan B y K elly L. A nderson A ssociated P ress ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A man who was stabbing his student girlfriend on the University of Michigan campus today was shot by a school police officer, and both died in surgery, authorities said. The officer, responding to 911 calls, drove into a cam­ pus parking lot shortly after midnight' and fired when the man refused to obey his order to stop his attack on the woman, campus public safety director Leo Heatley said. The woman was identified as Tamara Williams, a 20year-old senior. Her k iller was identified as Kevin Nejson, 26, who lived with Williams but was not affili­ ated with the university. Nelson was convicted of a domestic assault on Williams in 1995, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. Williams’ 2 1/2-year-old daughter was asleep in the apartment and was placed in protective custody, Heatley said. He did not give her name. W illiam s and N elson both died in surgery at the University of Michigan Medical Center. Campus police got several calls of an attack in progress at 12:17 a.m., Heatley said. Nelson started stabbing Williams in their apartment, Heatley said. “She was able to get to a neighbor’s home and knock on the window,” Heatley saidv The officer, whose identity was not released, found Williams lying on the ground, with Nelson repeatedly stab­ bing her, Heatley said. A resident of the complex said she heard at least two gunshots. “It was just like that: Bang! Bang!” Marlys Deen told The Ann Arbor News. She had heard people arguing in the parking lot and then heard someone shout: “She’s dead. Get the police. She’s dead.” The university has about 35,000 students on two cam­ puses in Ann Arbor, which is about 35 miles west of Detroit. It also has campuses in Flint and Dearborn. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Serbia’s elections have forced the party of Slobodan Milosevic, Yugoslavia’s omnipotent leader, to face sharing power — and with a partner likely to drive the nation further into isolationism. N ear-com plete parliam entary results announced T uesday by the state election com m ission put the Socialists in first place, but short of the majority needed to control the legislature outright. They were trailed by the Radical Party, the Socialists’ likely partner for a coalition. In third place Was the m oderate Serbian Renewal Movement. The Renewal Movement was the only party in the pro-democracy opposition that did not boycott the elec­ tions.Its showing came despite virtually no coverage in the powerful state-run media, Which is controlled by M ilosevic. The m edia did pay some attention to his sometime allies, the Radicals, because they attack the democrats. The opposition’s allegation of media bias was upheld by international election observers. The opposition also complained that the Socialists had redrawn election dis­ tricts to help ensure a victory. Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj, also a presiden­ tial candidate, preaches a “Serbia for Serbs” ideolology that eclipses even the extrem e views the Socialists propagated during the bloody breakup of the former, larger Yugoslavia. Although Milosevic has since tempered his national­ ism to placate the international community and stay in power, his Socialists and the Radicals have cooperated before when it was politically convenient. In the p re s id e n tia l race, S eselj w ill ch a lle n g e Milosevic protege Zoran Li lie in a runoff. Neither won the necessary 51 percent for a first-round Victory, but Lilic is the likely victor for the second round on Oct. 5. The Socialists have wider support than the Radicals, and Opposition supporters may stand behind Lilic, see­ ing him as the lesser evil. Lilic is the former president of Yugoslavia, of which S erb ia is th e m a in -re p u b lic , p a rtn e re d by tin y M onten eg ro . In Ju ly , he and M ilo sev ic b a sic a lly swapped jobs, a move that Lilic’s presidential victory would secure. Because the Serbian Constitution barred Milosevic from a third term as Serbia’s president, he engineered his new appointment in July through the Sdcialist-dominated. parliament. ‘ Tribute to Diana Gore, Russians sign deal to convert nuclear power plants said it makes a major con­ in both the United States and R ussia,” hits U.S. shelves MOSCOW — Vice President A1 Gore Chernomyrdin, Gore said. tribution to world nuclear nonproliferation. B y L ynn B erry A ssociated P ress B y M atthew Fordahl A ssociated P ress LOS ANGELES — Never to be heard live again, Elton John’s tribute to Princess Diana was grabbed off store shelves Tuesday by customers who began lining up before midnight to buy “ Candle in the Wind 1997,” At Tower Records in Hollywood, fans bought more than 500 copies of the single in 90 minutes just after midnight, said store cleric Skip Clary. Tower closed and reopened at 8 a.m. By afternoon die store had sold about 900 of the 2,500 copies it had ordered. “It’s a tribute to her,” said customer Joyce Tobe. “It’s mostly because of that, and the money is going to charity. That’s another reason.” In Ohio, most stores sold out as cus­ tomers stood in long lines. “It’s an absolute giant,” said Bob Giglio of Arc Distributing, a Cincinnati company that distributed 30,000 cassettes and CDs. “A lot of my customers have sold out and have come back today.” Proceeds from the compact disc and cas­ sette, both being sold for $2.99, are being donated to The Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Fund. The Recording Industry Association of America certified the single as eight times platinum in its first day of release in the United States, said A&M Records, John’s label. Platinum status is given to records that have sold 1 million copies. signed a long-sought deal with Russia on T u esd ay to c o n v e rt th ree n u c le a r Weapons plants to civilian use, a move seen as a significant step away from the nuclear legacy of the Cold War. Besides putting an end to plutonium-pro­ ducing reactors in Russia, the agreement places a capon U.S. and Russian stockpiles of nuclear weapons-grade plutonium. The Clinton adm inistration has been pushing for die accord for years, part of U.S. efforts to ensure that Moscow safeguards and reduces its vast nuclear stockpile. “It’s so historic. It’s so important for world peace,” Said U.S. Energy Secretary Federico Pena, who took part in the discus­ sions with Gore. The agreement would convert Russia’s three rem aining plutonium -producing plants in Siberia to production o f urani­ um fo r civ ilia n pow er p lants. It also would prohibit Russia from using recent­ ly p ro d u c ed p lu to n iu m in n u clea r weapons. The plant conversions, to begin in 2000, will take place with technical assistance and money from Washington. All other former plutonium-producing reactors in botn coun­ tries must remain closed. ^ Gore, who signed the agreement with R ussian Prim e M inister V iktor “ I ’m v e ry p le a s e d to a n n o u n c e th a t after m uch h ard w o rk w e to o k an im p o r­ ta n t, p e r h a p s e v e n h is t o r ic , s te p th is w eek w hen w e rea ch ed ag reem en t to h alt p ro d u ctio n o f W eapons-grade p lu to n iu m Preventing the spread of nuclear weapons technology topped a long list of issues that Gore worked on for two days with Chernomyrdin, during die latest session of the Gore-Chemomyrdin commission. U .S. Vice President A l G ore and R ussian Prim e M inister V ikto r C hernom yrdin,, rig h t, shake hands and exchange signed docum ents in “Bor”, the Russian governm ent m ansion 25 m iles south o f M oscow Tuesday. G ore, w ho is holding a series o f m eeting^ th is w eek w ith Russian Prim e M inister, said he had tackled Chernom yrdin on US o il investm ents and a strategic nuclear arm s treaty th a t aw aits Russian ratification . Opinion State P ress Wednesday, September 24,1997 P age 4 £Q “Eaftorial C Suspects caught, but danger remains Although it appears the police have found the men responsible fo r the tw o sexual assaults last week, perhaps the women o f ASU should not be so quick to breath a sigh o f relief. Yes. it is true th at 17-year-old Lee H enry Cornier and 16-year-old Derrick Ray W ood have been arrested and, allegedly, both admitted their responsibility' during questioning. It is also true that police said the tw o rape victim s positively identified the suspects in a lineup. However, this doesn’t m ean that all is well and good here on ASU cam pus o r in the surrounding Tempe area. Tempe Police SgL Toby Dyas said that currently, them is no link between these tw o incidences and foe other six assaults which have taken place in or around ASU in the past two months, including the August murder o f ASU student Fiona Yu. I f th a t’s th e case, it m eans th ere are m ore assailants out there we need to b e looking out for. A pathy is a problem in m any w ays on this cam pus. I t’s sad that it takes tragedy to m ake p eo p le aw are and start taking action. We stu­ dents o f ASU, m en and women alike, should not be lulled into a false sense o f security because tw o m en are behind bars N or should anyone slide back into an apathetic, uncaring state where safety is not a m ajor concern and Tempe is once again known as “Crim e-free Tempe.” If anything, people should be learning from this experience and take personal safety to heart. This means people should continue to lock their doors and windows, use or install peepholes in doors, use die Safety Escort Service or have someone you trust u ulk you home, and most importantly, not put your­ self in a situation that is uncomfortable. Statistics show foe majority o f rapes that occur a t A S U are acquaintance-related, not strangerrelated as th ese tw o w ere. A cquaintance rape involves som eone yon know — not necessarily someone you know well, but not a total stranger either. Women and m en need to take personal responsibility for their actions, and consider the situations in which they are putting themselves. Statistics have also show n that m any sexual assa u lts tak e p lace w hen one o r bo th peo p le were under the influence o f alcohol. Booze has also been linked to violent behavior, especially in m en. C onsidering the num ber o f A SU stu ­ dents — even college students in general who co n sider drinking the m ain form o f entertain­ m ent — the stage is set for violent acts such as rape to occur. It may sound cliche, but rape is an act o f vio­ lence, not an act o f sex. There is no excuse for scum bags who use physical aggression against another person in such a violent and life-chang­ ing way. B ut hopefully we w ill take from this e x p e rie n c e the im p o rtan ce o f bo th p erso n al responsibility and community awareness. Take a deep breath — and think about it. --------------------------------------------- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ---------- fs G fr P 1997 Radierter Pcd-BuM n Co., LLC Ed Facher S piriate facheW pattiuleiin.com INS targets crucial part o f econ om y T h e lin e a t m y lo c a l RIAN F ilib e rto ’s M exican re sta u ­ POLICOFF rant last w eek w as halfw ay around the block. I love cam e Columnist a sa d a b u rr ito s as m u ch as anybody, but I had to get back to class. I settled for a $.99 W hopper at B urger King (outside the M U, o f course). W hen I picked up the paper that evening, 1 stumbled upon the reason I was denied my south-ofth e - b o r d e r c r a v in g . T h e Im m ig ra tio n an d N aturalization Service raided F iliberto’s throughout the Valley, putting almost 200 illegal immigrants out o f work and leaving me burrito-less. Years ag o , I h eld em p lo y m en t at a lo cal fastfood ch ain — they too w ere victim s o f th e IN S. F irst the sto re w as clo sed , p rim arily b ecau se the m an ag e r and I c o u ld n ’t run it alo n e. W ith in the w eek, it reopened w ith a full crew o f legal em p lo y ­ ees. T he new em p lo y ees receiv ed fa r m ore co m ­ p e n sa tio n th a n th e p rio r o n e s. B eca u se o f th e ir superior ability, you ask? Hardly. T h e re p la c e m e n ts w ere slow , lazy, in e ffic ie n t an d o h , h o w th e y c o m p la in e d . “ 1 a in ’t w a s h in ’ dishes, th at’s w om en’s w ork,” said one. ' “Sw eep the floor? You sw eep the dam ned floor! I ’m too good for this jo b !” said another. T hey p u n ch e d in ea rly and sat aro u n d fo r the first 15 m inutes o f th e ir shift. T hey pun ch ed out after consum ing the burgers and fries they d id n ’t pay for. A fter a few days o f constant w hining and an e n to u ra g e o f c o m p la in ts fro m c u s to m e rs , I turned in m y resignation. A m onth later the im m i­ grant w orkers w ere re-hired. T he point is, w hy are we spending our tax d o l­ lars to rem ove w orkers from positions w here they are sorely needed? I’ve heard people say th at our so u th e rn n eig h b o rs are ta k in g o u r jo b s fro m us. T he fact is they are taking the jo b s that w e w ould n e v e r d o . T h e y w o rk h a r d e r fo r le s s m o n e y at m enial positions w e have no desire to obtain. Has ■ anyone out there lost th eir jo b to a m igrant w orker? E ven in the fast-fo o d industry, w e E nglish speakers s ta n d up fro n t in th e a ir-c o n d itio n in g a n d re la y orders, w hile o u r H ispanic co unterparts rem ain in the hot, greasy kitchen. H as anyone changed th eir m ajo r because th eir field o f choice w as flooded by im m ig ra n t w o rk e rs ? Is th e re re a lly a n y o n e o u t th ere w ho w ould like to do strenuous, m anual labor in the searing A rizona sun b u t can ’t find the w ork? I have posed these questions to business majors in hopes o f restoring m y faith as to the reasoning behind these laws; in retort, I’ve heard mum bling about bot­ tom lines and inflation. The real bottom line is that these hard working people are helping to maintain our high standard o f living. W hat w ould happen to the cost o f everything from food to construction if every­ thing was done by Am ericans? I suspect w e’d se e th e $10 com bo meal! I am not saying th at A m ericans are lazy, but on average, w e h av e becom e used to a level o f living and w orking that is relativ ely pam pered. Isn ’t this co u n try ab o u t h ard w o rk , p u llin g y o u rse lf up by y o u r ow n bo o t strap s?'W e seem to have forgotten. M illio n s o f c itiz e n s are ta k in g a d v a n ta g e o f th e w elfare sy stem ; I c a n ’t see den y in g liv elih o o d to people w ith fam ilies w ho w ant to w ork, b u t happen to hail from a country w here it is alm ost im p o ssi­ ble to m ake a living. , I have m any H ispanic friends w ho are w ell-ed u ­ cated people. U nable to m ake a living as a p ro fes­ sional in y o u r native land, here, y o u ’re ju s t trying to find som e w ay to earn enough to feed your fam i­ lies. H ere yo u are at th e lo w est ec o n o m ic lev el. You w ork long, hard days fo r little com pensation. You have a car th a t’s days aw ay from the ju n k heap and a hom e th at is m uch too sm all for your fam ily. H ow does it feel to know that w e w ant to take all th at aw ay from you? Brian Policoff is a ju n io r studying English and can be reached a t blackie@ m ap2.asu.edu. RAY STERN, Editor PERCY EDNAUNO JR., Managing Editor Lang, E.B. McGovern. CARYL SUEMICALIZIO................................ Night Editor COLUMNISTS: Brian Ary, Scott Bennett, Roes Erie, Aislinn JENNIFER NETHERBY.................................................. City Editor Fahy, LE. Hardee. Brian Policoff, Marie Pollock; George D. CADONNA PEYTON. . . . . . . . . -Aast. City Editor Rose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, MATT MORGAN..................... .....................Opinion Editor Steve Stein, Matthias Walterscheidt, Angela Yeager. JODI BAFUNDO........................................................ .NewsEditor C A R T O O N ISTS: Todd Brenneman, Brian Fairrington, PAT SHANNAHAN............................ ...Photo Editor David Gould, Jonathan Inge RANDY JON ES............................................................ .Sports Editor PRODUCTION: Jeff Cima, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischED ODEVEN............................................ Asst. Sports Editor Risley, Alyson Hurt, John Kestner, Eric Paulson, Wendy DEANNA D ARR...... ,__ Magnzine Editor Luney, Sara Pike, Hub Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks. Christy Camp, R E P O R T E R S : B rian A nderson, Tim B axter, C hris David Goodwin, Jonathan Negletti, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren, Passamano, Ginger Scott, Kara Shite, Genoa Sibold-Cohn, Tara Kathy Welsh, Robyn Wilson. Teichgraeber. C L A S S IF IE D S : K ale D esiò: K ayce O sw a ld , L isa SPO R T S R EPO RTERS: Josh DeFamio, Lori Haro. Matt Parhiala, Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. Paulson. COPY EDITO RS: Christi Foist, Lorie Roberts. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, PH O T O G R A P H E R S : Paui Besing, Jeremy Hein, Brad decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: RAY STERN PERCY EDNAUNO JR. MATT MORGAN JODI BAFUNDO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor State Press Phone N umbers In fo rm a tio n .................9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N e w sro o m .................. 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe. Ariz. 85287-1502. We dp not answer questions o f à general nature. M a g a zin e .................... 9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ C lassified s................... 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 ty, staff or student body. A d v e rtis in g .............. ..9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu _________ O pinion _________ STATE P ress _____________________________ _____ ! Wednesday, September 24, 1997 ~ P age 5 ■ The false advertisement o f class titles: names often mislead department, though the whole idea o f a W hilst slam­ ARK w om en’s studies program is as confus­ m in g dow n POLLOCK in g as a c o a c h e a rn in g m ore th an a w in g s an d tenured professor. W ill exploring the w atching fo o t­ Columnist wispy world o f fem inism qualify your ball on TV with my neighbor, Boh, the topic of Women’s average Joe or Jilly to counsel abused Studies cam e up. Really. W ith enough wom en or babe-battering bad boys? If w ing ja m clin g ing to the sides o f his this class and others like it were called m outh to pass for a cheap hooker, Bob w h a t th e y re a lly are, I w o n d e r how to ld m e ab out bad m am a jam as from many people (without core-requirement recent history who have made names for handcuffs on) would enroll in them? Anyhow, sitting in one o f these mys­ themselves in this testosterone world. He le a rn e d a b o u t th e s e g re a t g a ls at a tery classes the first day is like peeling women-in-contcmporary-society class in a b an a n a and d isc o v e rin g c h o c o la te a school o u tsid e the PC in flu en ce o f pudding — it’s not what you expect and ASU. “I took a class at ASU w ith the you can’t put it back. . While on the subject o f false advertis­ sam e nam e,” I com plained, “but all I heard about w as m y in stru cto r’s new ing, w hat’s up with this TA thing? If I knew b efo reh a n d th at, u n d e r c o u rse grandkid and feminism.” While it’s true that the class turned out instructors,“ s ta ff’ really m eant “in se­ tp be so m ew h at e n te rta in in g , I w as cure chimp,” I would have taken a class enlightened about a very focused and spe­ taught by a happy, well-paid professor cific part o f women in history. It was not a with a Ph.D., at a community college. I class about the opposite gender’s under­ didn’t cough up the cash so some unem­ reported role in contemporary society. It ployed caffeine abuser can place their sm arter-than-thou, fat beer butt at the was a class on the history of feminism. M isrepresenting class topics is not front o f the class, preten d in g th e y ’re c o n f in e d to th e W o m e n ’s S tu d ie s q u a lifie d to teac h m e. I f they w ere, M Canadian deals with serious issues I must take issue with Scott Bennett’s col• Bennett further states that Canadians watch umn of Sept 22. Bennett greatly exaggerates vast amounts of hockey on cable. I would hardand overly generalizes in support of flimsy ly call the Detroit/Colorado/Philadelphia game premises. As a Canadian citizen, I have a cer- of the week on ESPN a vast amount of hockey, tain duty to set the record straight on a number This is roughly equivalent to saying there is a of points. vast amount of college football on the Notre * Bennett asserts that there are seven brands Dame Broadcasting Company (NBC). of syrup at the local grocery store. I would There is a point, however, on which Bennett imagine that no less than five of these are cheap a id I agree. Serious consideration should be fructose knockoffs. Purveyors of these lesser given to the plan to erect a wall along the goods would not know a maple tree from A1 Canadian-American border. However, behind Gore (although in fairness, neither would many our side of the wall, instead of alligators, eels, Canadians). and goats, we will simply fill our moat with • He claims that Phoenix has a profes- American beer. sional hockey team. I was at the CoyotesIa n L y ttle Ducks preseason game. I saw no evidence D octoral Program to support this claim. M echanical E ngineering e -m ail th e ed ito r: ju z lm o @ im a p l .asu .ed u they’d be professors, not unemployed. I paid for a Mercedes, not a motor scooter. S peaking o f gettin g What you pay for, professors need to be reminded that the main reason they get a state check each Week is because they’ve been in a classroom , not at an open b ar/educational conference. I usually get penal­ ized in some m anner or form if I miss a class. If a professor misses a class due to the life o r death importance o f their attendance at the “E ducation in Vegas S y m p o siu m ,” w e ’re a ll su p p o se d to bow down and be thankful that a person o f their educational importance took'the tim e to stop by in the first place. Yo, grant-boy. If I pay a m asseuse for an h o u r ’s w o rth o f g o o d r u b b in ’, I ’m expecting six-and-zero m inutes o f it. If she leaves early, I get a refund and she gets a good spanking. Suffering the m ost visible effects o f this deceptive atm osphere, w hich can consum e an entire college career, are com puter science majors. I once made the mistake o f asking one o f these com ­ puter geeks what the difference between a copy and an image Was: “An im age duplicates everything on a hard drive,” he said. “O h ,” said I. “ So it m akes a copy o f it? ” “No,” said he. “It makes an image!” “B ut aren’t duplicates and copies the same thing?” “Yes, but they’re not images.” “B ut you said an im age is a dupli­ cate. If that’s true, can I copy it?” You don’t need m uch RAM to figure o u t w here th at co n v e rsatio n w ent. It ended when I asked why he called him ­ self a “system s m anager” instead o f a “com puter m echanic.” I re c o m m e n d th a t th e c a m p u s enforce a truth-in-content policy con­ cerning class titles and reveal the true id e n titie s o f th o se w e are p a y in g to teach us. It m ight save some confused soul w ith a “w om en in contem porary com puters” degree some jail time if his boss asks for an “im age” o f his expense acco u n t fo r the “F em inism and H ard Drives” conference in Hawaii. M ark Pollock is a senior studying jo u r­ nalism and can be reached at marke@ asu.edu. S ad n ess fe lt in u n m e rite d ste re o ty p e Upon reading Scott Bennett’s Sept 22 article regarding Canadians, 1 was truly sad­ dened. I am, to say the least, shocked that these perceptions of our northern neighbor still find thar way to the maids and hearts of my peas. Never be&xe have 1 seen saeh an Ugly people. I fear that Barnett’s closest relation­ ship to Canadians is the last time he watched “Strange Brew,” A s someone who has lived and played in Canada, I can fell you that this article cannot possibly be farther from die troth. From my experiences, tí» only way tin t Canadians migft» ly. dHjfap«» ■ selves is ja their greater kindness t and strangers alike. During Canada, 1 found it not una greeted with a kind “Hello” who, in all likeliness, will never ? This is something that cannot be f inside our borders. While granted, they do enjoy a hearty game of hockey now and aggat and might sound a bit different from us, they are not inferior. If we were to look at this same scenario fiom another point of view, l think that we might all learn something. I refer to oar invasion of not only our neigh­ bors, hut the world. Americans have put tin oiisifiB txuntries to ^ b e like i us” than any other group I know. Coming from a country that uses more resources per capita titan any other in the world, I do not think we haw a right to criticize. My only hope is that Bennett was using his illegahCanadian scenario as a parable to make us more aware o f the differences in I how we tea t our he was (or even if totfas end, 1 | learn to be those with whom If, indeed, t) using his article can all use it to is our kindness to share the planet J e ff A ppleton S en io r E lectrica l E n gin eerin g ‘A n t i - C a n a d i a n ’ w r itin g in c lu d e s ‘m o r o n ic g e n e r a liz a tio n s ’ W hile reading such a m assive heap o f absolutely m oronic generalizations, one tends to assum e that no educated hum an co uld w rite such w eak-m inded garbage seriously. B ut alas, this seem s to be the case, and so I m ust reply. In co n trast to this sophom ore journalist, I w ill t r y to m a k e s e n s e , f r e e o f hideous stereotypes. W ith all the p roblem s that face our tro u b led g lobal village as we near the m ille n n iu m , S co tt B e n n e tt seem s to b e u n u s u a lly a n g e re d by th e sy ru p a is le a t S a fe w a y . A p p a r e n tly , th e C an ad ia n s, w ho a ll flo o d ed at n ig h t acro ss th e b o rd e r on fo o t and in the b a c k o f tru c k s (to e sc a p e th e c ru e l d ic ta to rs h ip , th e n o n se n sic a l m etric system , th e h o rrib le scenery and the d r e a d f u l M e d i c a r e s y s te m ) , h a v e m alicio u sly co n sp ired tb p u t not one, n o t tw o, b u t sev en types o f syrup on the sh elv es at Safew ay. (P raise Jesus th a t B e n n e tt d id n o t g o o v e r to the s p rin g -w a te r a is le o r the b acon se c ­ tio n ). T h e se sam e ille g a l ty ran ts, as th e y s it on th e ir c o u c h e s w a tc h in g h o ck e y 24-7 an d c o lle c tin g w e lfare (do illeg al aliens re ally g et w elfare, Scott?) in the land o f the free, accord­ ing to B ennett, are refusing to learn a new language. I was not aw are that the plethora o f C a n a d ia n c o u c h - p o ta to e s h a d th is option. O f w hat new language are we speaking? B roken E nglish? E bonies? S outhern D raw l? S panish? l am b af­ fled by this. A m ericans speak a b a s­ ta r d iz e d E n g lis h , an E n g lis h th a t cam e from England (stop me if I am w ro n g h e r e ) . C a n a d ia n s s p e a k an E nglish that is arguably closer to the original form . S hould we say “y ’all” m o re o f te n so th a t S c o tt w ill fe e l rig h t a t h o m e in th e sy ru p a is le a t S afew ay? N o, we should not. Instead, Scott has devised a brilliant plan. W e w ill take the A m erican tax dollars —• that w ere previously used to p u rc h a s e s n a c k s fo r th o s e C a n u c k leec h es w ho on ly w atch cable. — to fu n d a m a ssiv e m e d ie v a l w a ll, o n e m eter thick and eight m eters high, in betw een our countries. T hen, add a big m oat, som e m an-eating anim als, and a fu ll s ta ff o f sn ip e rs w h o h a v e b een c o m m a n d e d “ s h o o t to k i l l . ” G o o d p la n ! A c c o r d in g to S c o tt, “ E v e r y A m erican secretly agrees.” D oes this m ean every A m erican believes that the l o n g e s t u n p r o te c te d b o r d e r in th e w o rld sh o u ld b e n a ile d sh u t, w a te r­ proofed and electrified? (I am going to g o out on a lim b here by saying that this statem ent is false.) H eck, w ith this w orld-renow ned “Puritan w ork ethic,” I w ill b et S co tt co u ld e re c t th e w all him self in record time. T his is the brain w ork o f an o bvi­ o u s ly b r illia n t j o u r n a l i s t w h o se e s t h i s c r i s i s a s a d a r k tim e f o r o u r n a tio n . S c o u r in g a g a in a n d a g a in through his article, I failed to disco v ­ e r the true m otivation fo r this anger. I do no t believe that this m uch em otion could arise from the arrival o f a ho ck ­ e y te a m b e f o r e a b a s e b a l l te a m . P o s s ib ly , in f u t u r e a n ti- C a n a d ia n w ritin g s , w o u ld yo u p le a se in c lu d e the real root o f y o u r anger? T his p ar­ t i c u l a r w r itin g w a s to ó w a rm a n d fuzzy. P rejudice like this spaw ns only fro m m o n u m e n ta l ig n o ra n c e , an d I w ould love to read m ore o f that. A fter graduation, ch eck w ith th e N eo-N azi Press o f A m erica, o r th e KKK , o r Pat B u c h a n a n (h e w ill b e at th e u n em ­ plo y ed -fascist help cen ter). T here, lit­ e ra tu re w ith a fla v o r lik e y o u r ow n w ill b e w e lc o m e d w ith o p e n arm s. U n fo rtu n ately , th e ag en cy fo r strip searching in n o cen t pedestrians in the C h an d ler P o lic e D ep artm en t are not y et accepting applications. I have n o t revealed i f I am afflicted w ith th e “ m a l a i s e ” o f b e in g C an ad ia n , b ec au se th a t is irre le v a n t to th e argum ent. B ut, I am a little less p ro u d to liv e in th e lan d o f th e free a n d th e h o m e o f th e B o rg — y o u have been assim ilated. Eh? S k ye F o rrest S en io r B ro a d ca stin g State P ress WpHnpsHav. Spntem her 2 4 . 1997 P o l ic e R e p o r t The A SU police reported the follow ing incidents on Tuesday: • A student reported that someone broke into her room and removed personal property. • A student was injured just west of McAllister Avenue. She was transported to a local hospital. • A bicycle was impounded for safekeeping by the ASU Police. • A student reported that she lost one key belonging to die University. • A student reported that someone removed her bicycle By M att K elley Associated P ress PHOENIX — Carolanne Hermanex says her ex-husband was arrested four times for abusing her, but he manipulated the system and ended up spending only a few days in jail. State law needs to be changed to make abusers more accountable for their actions — especially when they abuse again after being convicted, Hermanex told state law­ makers Tuesday. “No arrest and no sentence is better than a sentence that is not followed through, because it gives the offender the idea that th ey ’ve gotten away with som ething,” Hermanex told a committee created to study from the north side of the Cowden Family Resources build­ ing where it was locked up. • A student reported that someone removed the front wheel from her mountain bike at the Farmer Education building. • A student reported that someone removed her backpack and its contents from the Hayden Library. • A student and a man not associated with ASU were arrest­ ed, cited and released for trespassing at Mariposa Hall. • A man not associated with ASU reported that someone removed his bicycle from the Language and Literature building where it was locked up. possible changes to Arizona’s domestic vio­ lence laws. Hermanex and other victims’ advocates said Arizona laws often allow abusers to collect a dozen or more misdemeanor con­ victions without serving any serious jail time. “Some of these guys, 180 days in jail doesn’t mean much to them,” said John Pombier, who prosecutes domestic violence cases in Phoenix. Pombier told the panel that Tuesday morning in municipal court, a domestic vio­ lence victim watched as a drunk driver got 30 days in jail, a prostitute got 15 days in jail and her abuser, who had previous con­ victions, walked free with a suspended sen­ State P ress O pinions Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. U N IV ER SITY & F O R E S T W BlackJackPizza* BETTER PIZZA BETTER PRICE K-LARGE PIZZA order by item number GS2 A'O COUPOA'S A'EC ESSA R]/! FREE D E L I V E R] / 8 1 8 W. Broadw ay Rd X • A student became sick at Life Sciences C-wing. She was transported to a local hospital. • A student reported that someone removed bicycle parts from his bicycle at Engineering G-wing where it was locked up. • A student reported that someone removed his bicycle from the northeast side of die MU where it was locked up. • A student reported that someone removed her backpack from the Law Library. Tempe police logs were not immediately available. Compiled by S tate P ress reporter Brian Anderson. tence. “Explaining th at to th at victim was impossible,” Pombier said. The legislative panel was formed after lawmakers rejected a bill earlier this year to toughen penalties for domestic abuse cases. The bill would have made the third domes­ tic violence offense within five years a felony and required either jail time or a treatm ent program for first and second offenses. Lawmakers worried about the costs of such program s and the fact that many abusers fail to attend court-ordered treat­ ment sessions already. “The problem is, the loop is never closed,” said state Sen. John Kaites, R- Glendale, a former Maricopa County prose­ cutor. “There doesn’t seem to be account­ ability for failure to comply with the orders of the court.” Victims’ advocates agreed, adding that treatment programs are often ineffective without the threat of jail for repeat offenses. The justice system also is so swamped with domestic violence cases that even big cities like Phoenix cannot focus on first-tim e offenders. “We focus on the most egregious cases. This is an individual that all we can do is send him to jail,” Pombier said. “That vic­ tim has already suffered too much. It would be better if we could get to the first-time offenders.” Page 7 Wednesday, September 24,1997 S tate P ress ASU asking for $270 m illion for repairs, general costs B y T ara T eic h g r a e b e r S tate P ress ASU is requesting nearly $270 m illion in funding from the state for building renewal and general operat­ ing costs for the 1999 fiscal year. The Arizona Board of Regents will vote this week on the 1999 funding request for Arizona’s universities that will be subm itted to state legislators and Gov. Jane Dee Hull in October. ASU wants $10.5 million for building repair pro­ jects and alm ost $260 m illion for general operating costs. The am ount request was based on a form ula using projected enrollment numbers for this term. With enrollment higher than predicted, the request­ ed amount is likely to rise, said Alan Carroll, director of University fiscal planning and analysis. However, getting the necessary funds rarely occurs, and prospects under a new governor are unclear at this point, campus officials and regents said! “W e ra re ly e x p e rie n c e fu ll fu n d in g fro m th e L egislature,” said Jeiinus B urton, vice president of administrative services. The three state universities received little more than 40 percent of requested funding for this year’s budget and will receive only half of their request for 1998. But with a robust state economy, hopes arefiigh. “We are hoping that we get a little more of our fair share that the great economy of Arizona is enjoying,” said Rudy Campbell, ABOR president. Assuming funding needs will not be completely met again, Burton said building renewal projects have been prioritized according to urgency. Elevator maintenance is first on the list for aging campus build­ ings, with general classroom renovations a close sec­ ond, Burton said. “We try to pick the most highly-used buildings (for repair),” he said, but added that every building has a need. University officials will ask for $9.13 m illion for repairs on the main campus alone. ASU officials have also raised the amount of fund­ ing needed for general university operations largely because o f increased student enrollm ent, said Gaye Murphy, assistant director of University fiscal plan­ ning and analysis. Enrollm ent increased by slightly more than 1,000 students this term and University officials predict an additional 2,000 full-time students by 1999, she said. The requested money will help hire more faculty, o ffe r a d d itio n a l c o m p u te r su p p o rt, and p ro v id e in cre ased ad v isem en t and o th er stu d en t serv ic es, Murphy said. All in all, the regents will ask the state to fund Arizona’s three universities with $32 million for build­ ing renewal and $746 million for general funds, '“O ur hopes aren ’t real high (o f getting the full amount), but we’ll do the best we can,” Campbell said. A stereo system capable o f drowning out the sound of the engine. W hat were w e thinking of? Not only is it bordering on insanity, but it's also true. W eVe done exactly that with our new Music Edition Volkswagens. Now the beautiful Germ an engineered growl o f both the G olf and je tta can now be horrificiy overpowered by the dexterous musical stylings of an 8 speaker stereo system and a 6 disc CD changer. The alloy wheels and custom cloth interior you can use without restraint. The driving excitem ent of both cars is there for no other reason than to do your sweet bidding. But we b eg you, in the nam e of all creatures big an d small, please be gentle when you turn up the tunes. _ . . Drivers wanted.111 Visit our web site at www.vw.com $225ym onlh. 24 month lease. a 2 ) ■ y Required at lease signing and includes refundable security deposit. # © # $ ■ 24 month ctosederto tease offered to qualilted customers by VW Credit, Inc. Itwouflhipattldpallng dfkjie fcM o n lh lW sy tot/$&395.44. Supplies limited, must lake d e fra y by September 30.1997. Rate based on $16.73000 Manufacturer's S u g g e s te ^ ^ iW ^ tb cd ^ with Sspeed manual iranenisston. air conditioning, AM/FM Stereo Cassette with 6dtoc CD changer qnd freight. Requires dealer contributor» which oquld effect final negotiated transaction. Price excludes other options, dealer charges, license, registration and taxes lessee responsible tor insurance. A t lease end. lessee respond«? for $0 !0/m ie over 24,000 miles, tor dam ge and excessive we®. Purchase option at lease end for $10,205,30. Dealers set actual prices. See d e alerfordelate © 1997 Volkswagen Berge Volkswagen 1515 W. Broadway Mesa 833-6001 Biddulph Volkswagen 4611 W. Glendale Ave. Glendale 934-5211 Chapman Volkswagen 6601 i. McDowell Road Scottsdale • 94 9-76 00 Camelback Volkswagen 1499 E. Camelback Road , , Phoenix 265-6600 State P ress Wednesday, September 24,1997 P age 8 Technical expertise AirFoCce, Mafirte flights sidelined -H to 'reaffirmSafeA TUCSON (AP) — Training flight units at OavisMonthan Air Force Base and the Toma Marian Air -Corps S tat ion have focused"on safety' procedures with their planes and pilots sidelined. I ..? The pause is p art Of a national stand-dow n ord ered after a series o f intHfidT a ir crlsh e sv Missions at Luke Air Force Base wilt stop on Friday, as will those of activated Arizona Air National guard units. A 24-hour break in training flights was ordered this week for the Air Force, Navy and Army by Defense Secretary William Cohen for a “period of reflection.” V* The A h Force left the scheduling o f the standdown to its various commands, Davis-Monthan was ordered to halt its flights Monday. Four squadrons of Marine AV-8B Harriers sta­ tioned at Yuma also were inactive Monday, along with a squadron of so-called aggressor F-5s. Davis-Monthan’s aircraft include A-lOs. and C130s. The base has two training squadrons and one combat-ready squadron o f A -Jfl attack fighters, much of the latter on deployment to Kuwait h all, six squadrons were affected by the stand-down, E.B. McGovern/State Press C arl Anderson has w orked fo r ASU Engineer Technical/Lab Services fo r m ore than 33 years- H e w orks w ith engineering students to m ake th e p arts they design. v said. Eight squadrons o f F-16s at Luke AFB near Gkatgaie will he grounded as will various support units, public affairs officer Capt. Stacey Cotton saidlast week:. T he A rizona A ir N ational G u a rd 's three squadrons of F*16s also will stand down oo Friday, said spokesman Maj. Chuck Roque, hi addition, he said, the National Guard has asked that all Air M fiu tffh u d o ris d w u irid in m d itriiq u a d q of their next drill. Roque said the uah wW do sd C k i Feds charge food chain w ith h irin g illegals PHOENIX (AP) — The federal gov­ ernment has filed diarges against the ownoand 17 managers of an area fast-food chain for allegedly luring illegal immigrants and attempting to hide tiiem from investigators. Agents from the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service rounded up 191 ille­ gal immigrants Sept 17 when they raided s that aren't part of training are not affected by the stand-dqwifc ' .. ‘ ■ ■- ■ ■ ■ ■ 15 Rliberto’s Mexican Food restaurants. Charges were filed Friday. Those charged, including owner Filiberto Tenorio-Quintero, appeared Monday before a U.S. magistrate, but no pleas were entered. All 18 woe freed on their own recognizance. Another hearing was set for Thursday. Anthony Zuniga, the attorney for Tenorio-Quintero, declined to comment on the case. “My client and the others are good business owners,” he said Most of those rounded up have been deported to Mexico, but 31 illegal workers remain in federal custody as material witnesses. ' W hen catastrophe hits from out of the blue, w ell help get things back to normal. University & Rural The Cornerstone The true test of any auto and hom e coverage is the 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 m oment ytm need to file a daim . Mon - F ri 9 A M -9 P M SATURDAY SAM -6 P M SUNDAY IS A M -5 P M California Casualty, your auto and hom e insurance plan, is an excellent choice offering 24-hour claims assistance, on and off-road towing and guaranteed repair facilities. 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That includes night vision goggles and portable radios programmed to Border Patrol frequencies. It also includes gunfire. “The problem here is that (smugglers) are taking more extreme measures to protect their cargo,” said Cochise County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Carol Capas. A Cochise County deputy learned the hard way last spring when two trucks he was chas­ ing split up. As the officer followed the first one south, the other truck doubled back. Its driver slipped up behind the deputy and fired at least IS shots. The deputy was unhurt, but both trucks escaped. “Only a few short years ago, armed encounters with drug smugglers were rare,” Cochise County Sheriff Larry Dever said in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in July. “When intercepted, smugglers would gener­ ally just abandon their load and attempt to flee back south. Today, armed resistance is expect­ ed, and violence associated with all aspects of the business has increased dramatically.” The result has been 17 armed encounters so far this year along Cochise County’s 83-mile border with Mexico, against only seven aimed encounters last year. Authorities see signs that traffic into Arizona, long nicknamed “Cocaine alley,” has increased. U.S. Customs doubled its cocaine seizures in fiscal 199?, confiscating more than 7 tons of the narcotic. And with a month left in its fiscal year, the U.S. Border Patrol has seized more than 150^000 pounds of marijuana— an increase of 30,000 pounds over fiscal 1996. Meanwhile, the Border Patrol in southern Arizona has grown to 900 agents, up from 689 10 months ago. “It’s causing frustration on the part of the smugglers that it’s a lot harder for diem to get across, especially if they’re trying to use the more-traveled (smuggling) routes,” said Rob Daniels, patrol spokesman in Tucson. “There’s no question about the fact they’re getting more sophisticated,” Daniels said. “It’s a classic situation of those with the money from smuggling from illegal ventures have access to whatever they can get off the black market” Dever held the same view in July. “We have been witnessing increasingly sophisticated planning and training associated with the smuggling trade,” Dever told the Senate panel. “It is clear that these plans now include military movements and the use of force for protection. “This has been the accepted standard south of the border for a long time but not previously evident in our part of the country,” he added. “We believe such tactical operations will now become the norm.” There’s an additional risk. Mexican officials say they are concerned the thousands of illegal immigrants crossing the border may be confused with armed drug smugglers. S tate P ress You don't have to stand in line to get it. CROSSWORD X o o ■T V 0 a 3 A a Ho N 1n V 3 O No by THOMAS JOSEPH V w ri V H 1 T 1 V d ■ N i s 1 V d ACRO SS 2 Mimic a 3 H is 1 3 a V 0 1 Croquet 3 Deceit 3 n 0 A 1 X d 3 N j_ need 4 '— Ws 1 a 1 V 1 3 i entertain 7 H airstyle o N d 3 X V d1 u d o 11 Each you* a 3 a N 3 3jId V o 5 Canyon 12 Farm 3 O H NOw concern sound 1 i 3 H 1 3 3 1 6 Prom 13 Grow F N goer 3 O3 1 d V cuspids d O y o 7 Play start to UNI VI 1 X 3 1 T V w 14 Color 8 Writer 15 Madison dish only follower Engels 21 Follow 17 Sidewalk 3 6*— La 9 Director Douce* eatery 22 Like the Howard Capitol 37 Cacao 20 Ceased TO Choose holder 23 Bobby of 16 Examine 24 Page of music 38 Some again the NHL 25 Suffer 17 Baby’s 24 Perm 40 Numéro — 30R ang 41 Low ailment State 33 Symbol of sound 18 Sports coach slowness 42 Museum site 26 Island 35 For men fill 19 Chinese souvenir 27 Ventilate 1 4 '■ 5 2 3 6 8 9 10 28 Belief il 29 In a 12 bungling 13 manner i 15 u 31 Pool need 32 Academy 17 18 1» 20 21 22 attendee 33 Lose 23 25 34 S tolen bit 26 27 2. 37 Bucket 1 39 Emotional 29 3° 31 wound l 43 Formerly 32 ■ 3 3 ^ 44 Musical 34 35 36 key 45 Colored 37 36 39 40 41 42 46 Clumsy 43 fellow ” (602)49 ■ 11 ] DO W N 1 Porch item J 45 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it; AXYDLBAAXR is L ON G PEL L OW O ne lette r stan d s fo r an o th e r. In th is sam ple A is used for th e th ree L's, X for th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e len g th an d form ation o f th e w ords are all h in ts. Each day th e code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE 10-1 X KD Q X D Z KS Q F X D D V N D O S E D Q Z S Q I TZKDOA X D LOD LOD T Q ODLJJU D V N D O S E D Q Z S Q I T Q T H O A DJ RD A . — TA PLO X SJ G D Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PUSH RIGHT TO THE EXTREME AND IT BECOMES WRONG; PRESS ALL THE JUICE FROM AN ORANGE AND IT BECOMES BITTER.—BALTASAR GRACIAN C 1907 try King Future* Syndicate, Inc. O c t. f mmm Sneaker P im p s 967-1234 S tate P ress Wednesday. SeDtember 24.1997 Congress chastizes lake draining WASHINGTON (AP) — As envi­ ronmental ideas go, it is one of the big g est and boldest: D rain Lake Powell, a 252-square-mile manmade lake on the C olorado R iver that attracts 2.5 million tourists a year, as a way to protect the Grand Canyon’s ecosystem. While the brainstorm of the Sierra Club received a congressional hearing Tuesday, lawmakers were anything but supportive. They called it “silly” and “m onum entally dum b” and prom ised one after another that it would get nowhere if they had any­ thing to say. And the Clinton administration said it has no plans even to consider paying for an environmental impact review. The cost of draining the lake, one of the most popular recreation sites in the federal park system, could be in the hundreds o f m illions o f dollars, although adm inistration officials declined even to speculate. “It would be expensive,” said Eluid M artinez, head o f the Interior Department’s Bureau of Reclamation, after the hearing, where he had called the proposal “unrealistic.” Last November, the board of direc­ tors of the 600,000-member Sierra Club caught even other environmental groups off guard when it unanimously called for draining Lake Powell, the country’s second largest manmade lake created 20 years ago by the con­ struction of the Glen Canyon Dam. It took years to till the lake and ho one would speculate how long it might take to drain i t “Sometime ideas are hard to look at ... hard to sw allo w ,” said Adam Werbach, the Sierra Club’s 24-year- [s p e c ia l s t u d e n t old president, calling the proposal to drain the lake “an amazing restoration project” that he believes the public would support. , The dam upriver from the Grand Canyon was built in the 1950s to help harness the unpredictable Colorado River and to generate electricity. But the massive lake created behind the 710-foot dam also has become a recre­ ational success, attracting 2.5 million Visitors annually, including nearly 2 million that camp overnight, second only to Y osem ite N ational Park. Visitors pump $500 million a year into the local economy. But conservationist David Brower, a Sierra Club board member and at 84 one of the organization’s icons, argues the lake serves only to hide one of n atu re’s treasures — the scenic redrock cliffs and canyons of the Glen Canyon itself. Brower, now head o f the Earth Island Institute in San Francisco, was the Sierra Club’s executive director when the Glen Canyon dam was built in the 1950s and has said he regrets not opposing it more vigorously. What’s at stake, Werbach told the lawmakers Tuesday, “is the restoration of one of the most special places on Earth — Glen Canyon — for our fam­ ilies and our future.” In addition, Werbach argued the Glen Canyon dam is a continuing threat to the ecosystem of the Grand Canyon downstream and threatens the extinction of several endangered fish that are not accustomed to the cold water coming from the lake. C ritics o f the plan m aintained Tuesday that draining the lake would jeo p ard ize w ater supplies in six f a r e s Southw estern states — especially. Arizona and Utah — and raise water costs as far away as Los Angeles. And the environment could suffer as well, they argued. Sediment at the bottom of the lake —; some toxic — could be swept up by winds or cause sever air pollution, and the canyon itself would be left with a ring of salt much like a bathtub ring, that would be there for centuries. And while some endangered species would be helped, others m ight be put in greater jeopardy. “C learly, there are endangered species that w ould becom e m ore endangered if the lake were drained,” Said Denis Galvin, deputy director of the National Park Service, although adding that some species of currently endangered fish might benefit. The waters o f Lake Powell and the surrounding area in southern Utah have attracted more than 275 bird species and the area has become home to a growing number of bald eagles, Which are threatened. The lake also is home to the largest population in the lower 48 states of endangered pere­ grine falcons. Larry Tarp, chairman of Friends of Lake Powell, a group formed recently in Page, A riz., near the lake, to counter the Sierra Club effort, said draining the lake would result in both environmental and economic devasta­ tion in the area. People living there “will oppose until their deaths” any attempts to destroy the lake, he said. “Any discussion of this issue brings disbelief,” said Rep. James Hansen, RUtah, who called Tuesday’s hearing. He called the Siefra Club proposal an attempt “to turn back the clock.” ! Round trip from Phoenix LONDON,,.....................488 PARIS__ ...___.... ..........498 498 MANCHESTER .......430 FRANKFORT.... 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Visa and Discover on Delivery! 9 2 1 -F A S T P ress C la s s if ie d s They're on-line too! http:// news.vpsa.asu.edu State P ress Pag*:e 11 Wednesday) September 24,1997 FBI to add Mexican drug trafficker to Most Wanted list B y M ichael J . S niffen A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — With a sealed indictment iri hand, U.S. officials are preparing to put one of M exico’s alleged drug kingpins on the FBI’s most-wanted list and offer a $2 million reward for his capture, law enforce­ ment officials said Tuesday. Ramon Arellano Felix, 33, the head of security for a gang run by five brothers, is named in a sealed federal indictment charging drug conspiracy, those officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The charges might be made public on Wednesday around the time the FBI adds him to its list of 10 mostwanted fugitives. The Arellano Felix gang, headed by Ram on’s 43year-old brother Benjamin, controls the smuggling of tons of cocaine and marijuana and large quantities of heroin and methamphetamines into California from the area around Tijuana, Mexico. U.S. officials believe the group may account for 40 percent of the cocaine entering this country. .The $2 m illion rew ard to be posted by the State Department for the capture and conviction o f Ramon Arellano Felix is similar to rewards, posted in previous cases for foreign suspects. Those $2 million rewards are credited with attrac^ng^ tips that helped U.S. agents capture two major fugitives in Pakistan: Mir Aimal Kansi, apprehended this summer bn charges of gunning down ClA employees outside the agency’s headquarters, and Rarnzi Yousef, arrested in 1995 on charges related to the W orld Trade C enter bombing. Ramon Arellano Felix is considered the most violent of the brothers in the gang and coordinates the recruit­ ment o f its well-armed and well-trained guards and the command of armed operations, U.S. officials said. On Aug. 6, 1993, the U.S. Marshals Service issued an extradition warrant in San Diego for Ramon for alleged weapons violations. He also is wanted in Mexico for complicity in the May 1993 assassination of Cardinal Ju an Jesu s P o sad as O cam po, the a rc h b ish o p o f Guadalajara, and other charges. His brother Benjamin was indicted in San Diego on May 2, 1989, on drug conspiracy, smuggling, money laundering and racketeering charges and is the subject of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration fugitive war­ rant. The DEA said in August th at the gang’s security force, commanded by Ramon, has been responsible for assassinating rival drug traffickers and several senior Mexican law enforcement officials, including Ernesto Ibarra Santés, head of the federal ju d icial police in Tijuana, and Daniel Beruben Jaime, commandante of the National Institute to Combat Drugs. Official announcement o f the indictment has been held up by witness protection issues, officials told The Los Angeles Times. A few U.S. informants or relatives have been wounded or killed on both sides of the border during the course of a key San Diego case against two alleged Arellano Felix gunmen. There was no official comment from the DEA, the FBI or the Justice Department. A riz o n a n s p re p a re fo r th e p o te n tia l w ra th o f H u rr ic a n e N o r a B y A rthur H . R oth stein * A ssociated P ress TUCSON — H urricane Ñ ora headed on a track Tuesday expected to carry its remains across much of Arizona by week’s end, and some residents scurried to stockpile water, food, flashlights and sandbags. R eg ard less o f the h u rric a n e ’s u ltim a te p ath , Arizonans braced for a spinoff of heavy thunderstorms — and possible flooding. National W eather Service meteorologists said the southern two-thirds of Arizona probably could see 2 to 4 inches of rain over a 24- to 36hour period, possibly starting some time Wednesday and continuing into Friday. They expect the hurricane to diminish in intensity to a tropical storm or depression if it comes across Baja California, with winds of 30 to 50 mph and higher gusts. Gov, Jane Hull was briefed Tuesday afternoon on the hu rrican e’s status and called a m eeting for 10 a.m. W ednesday with the State Em ergency M anagem ent Council to reassess the situation. , “We are waiting to see what unfolds in the next 12 to 24 hours,” press secretary Francie Noyes said. Among Hull’s options are implementing the state emergency preparedness plan or declaring a state o f emergency, Noyes said. “Our people are really concerned, really worried,” said Ora Harn. mayor o f the town o f Maraña, where three people drowned when the normally dry Santa Cruz R iver flooded in 1983, and w here m o re ,flo o d in g occurred in 1993. , Officials have reinforced the banks of the river, which flows from south to north, for several miles north of State Press T ucson. B ut the rein fo rcem en t ends several m iles upstream o f the older section of Maraña, adding to the flooding worries. “What really concerns me more this time than last is all the development up in the foothills and the city,” said Joe Parsons, whose Maraña ranch was under 14 feet of water in 1983. The increased development means even more water will be draining toward Maraña, he said. In Yuma, “People are starting to get worried, edgy,” said Cristina Herrera, the city’s acting director of emer­ gency management. Yuma is “known as the W est’s ‘Hurricane Alley” ’ because it is only 70 miles north of the warm-water Gulf of California, Herrera said. “So storms can get a last quick fix of warm water before hitting land.” It has happened several times before, most recently in 1978, the last of three straight years of damaging tropi­ cal storms, when ex-Hurricane Ñorma caused flooding. Others included Joanne in 1972, Kathryn in 1963 and a cyclone in 1954 that triggered five days of thunder­ storms and local flooding in southern Arizona. Herrera said Tuesday some fire stations in Yuma ran out o f burlap sandbags being distributed for free, with close to 1,000 given out already. Marvin Shogren, National Weather Service meteorol­ ogist in charge in Tucson, said one com puter model placed Nora’s expected track through western Arizona, just east o f Yuma, by late Thursday morning. But he said some advance rain was anticipated late Tuesday. He also warned that the model could be off as much as 200 miles for the storm’s path, and that not all areas would receive a 2- to 4-inch drencjiing. Still, the rain “could likely impact most of the major rivers in the southern half of the state that are dry right now,” and smaller streambeds and washes were likely to flood, he said. The Graham County Sheriff’s Office issued a flood warning for areas along the Gila River for the next 24 to 48 hours and particularly north o f S afford, Thatcher, Pima, Solomonville and Fort Thomas. In W e llto n , o ffic ia ls o f th e W ellto n -M o h aw k Irrigation District do not anticipate a repeat of Gila River flooding that occurred in 1993. “This storm, we’re going to get some flooding on the washes, but that tends to be spasmodic — here today and gone tomorrow,” district manager Clyde Gould Raid. Though the path might take the storm through or near Gila Bend, there was no sense of panic there, or Ajo. Nor in WiUcox, where some 1,600 sandbags and sand to fill them have been placed at three locations. Cochise County Emergency Services Coordinator Bob Bobar said sand and sandbags have been placed at rural fire stations. H ardw are store operators in Ajo, G ila Bend and Yuma said they had not received any calls from people looking for sandbags. In Tucson, emergency services co-coordinator Mike Walsh suggested using two or three kitchen trash bags to make inexpensive sandbags. The m etropolitan area should keep up fairly normal operations if the predicted rains arrive, though there will be some localized flood­ ing in streets and washes, he said. T h e o n ly fr e e th in g a t A SU . W EDNESDAY LUNCH SPECIAL 11AM-2PM Home of the ' 'K iller“ Calzone 8 9 4 -M A M A FR EE " KILLER" CALZONES D A Y T IM E CAM PUS D E L IV E R Y $10 Minimum D elivery 1 0 6 E . U n iv e r s ity D r. I block East o f M ill A ve. If then's any dunce you or foui||artner may have contracted die HIVvirus or other sexually Uaipnitted disease, find out for sure. Call us for confidential tes^ng, counseling and options. on University Come Experience WÉMËâmmmÈ l i l l i i WIÊÊÈÊÈÊÈ, University Dr. w ism m rn 1250£. 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Two of them on the road, and two of them at home.” The B uccaneers start has been so im pressive that experts are already talking about the team ’s Oct. 5th matchup with division rival and Super Bowl champion Green Bay. Many- see the Cardinals as a mere pest the Buccaneers must deal with in the path to that match-up. Tobin, however, is unconcerned about the lack of respect his l -2 team receives. “I think that goes with the territory,” Tobin said. “If we were 3-0 they’d be talking about the Cardinals. You earn the respect that you get, and the only way to do that is by winning. Not by being close.” This is not the first time Tobin and the Cardinals have been faced with this situation. While the rest of the country was focused on the Washington Redskins impending battle with the Philadelphia Eagles, the Cardinals quietly went to the nation’s capital and defeated the Cinderella Redskins 37-34. D o u b l e T r o u b l e in t h e B a c k f ie l d Tampa Bay’s rookie sensation Warrick Dunn had been wreaking havoc with his ability to break big runs. Jimmy Johnson and the Miami Dolphins kept Dunn in check, holding the Florida State product to 17 yards on 11 carries. What the Dolphins didn’t count on was the presence of second-year fullback Mike Alstott. T urn to C a r d in a l s , pag e 14. Vois’ M anning still the man to beat for Heisman Trophy B y R ichard R osenblatt A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s Leaf has the No. 15 Cougars at 3-0, com pleting 59 o f 106 passes for 1,038 This time, a loss to Florida may not fin­ yards, 10 TDs and four interceptions. ish Peyton Manning’s chances of winning Banks leads the nation in rushing with the Heisman Trophy . 644 yards on 67 carries. He has 11 touch­ W hile the G ators w ere beating downs •— 10 rushing — for the No. 11 Tennessee 33-20 for the fifth year in a Hawkeyes. Couch was 24 of 32 for 334 yards and a row, Manning did little to deter Heisman voters; completing 29 of 51 passes for 353 school-record seven TDs in a 49-7 rout of Indiana. For the season, the sophomore is yards, three TDs and two interceptions. One of the interceptions was returned 99 of 143 for 1,081 yards, 15 TDs and two for an 89-yard score by Tony George, but interceptions in three games. Marshall’s Randy Moss is still around. Manning did not get much help from his offensive line or funning backs, who had He has 25 catches for 544 yards — a 21.76-yard average — and nine TDs. all of 45 yards. Manning, whose Heisman chances van­ NEHLEN’S NOT BITING: West Virginia coach Eton Nehlen plead­ ished against the Gators last season with four first-half interceptions in a 35-29 loss, ed ignorance when informed Miami may is 83 of 138 for 1,004 yards and 10 TDs in no longer be the master of its domain. Asked his feelings about the Hurricanes three games. In the past few weeks, some new faces having lost four of their last five games at have entered the race, replacing preseason the Orange Bowl, where they once won 58 candidates such as Curtis Enis of Penn in a row, Nehlen said: “How would I know S tate, Ron D ayne o f W isconsin and anything about their mystique? I know any Donovan McNabb of Syracuse. Stepping time you play Miami in the Orange Bowl up are Washington State quarterback Ryan you better buckle up your helmets and play Leaf, Iowa running back Tavian Banks and like the devil, that I know. Is it gone? I Kentucky quarterback Tim Couch. have no idea.” Nehlen is I -7 against Miami and 0-4 at the O range B ow l. The team s , p lay Saturday. TH E 200 CLUB: Florida State’s Bobby Bowden is the eighth D ivision I-A coach to win 200 games at one school. The others are: Joe Patemo (Penn State, 292); Tom Osborne (N ebraska, 245); Amos A lonzo Stagg (Chicago, 244); Bear Bryant (Alabama, . 232); LaV ell E dw ards (B YU, 228); W oody H ayes (O hio S tate, 205); and Vince Dooley (Georgia, 201), QUOTING: “We’re ready for the Big Ten.” — Iowa running back T avian B anks a fte r the Hawkeyes outscored three nonconference opponents 183-36. The victim s w ere Northern Iowa, Tulsa and Iowa State. “I don’t think there was ever a point in the game that they honestly felt threat­ ened.” — Notre Dame coach Bob Davie about Michigan State after a 23-7 loss to the Spartans. EXTRA POINTS: Georgia (3-0) is off to its best start since 1988, and top running b ack R obert Edwards (800 yards in ‘96) has barely played because of a sprained ankle. He’ll be back next week against M ississippi State, but the Bulldogs still have to play No. 1 Florida, No. 8 Auburn and No. 10 Tennessee. ... No. 6 Michigan (2-0) may run N otre Dame (1-2) into subm ission S aturday. L ast w eek ag ain st Baylor," Anthony Thomas (122 yards) and Chris Howard (112) became the first Wolverine duo to each top 100 yards since 1994, when Tyrone W heatley and Tshim anga Biakabutka did it against Purdue. ... Iowa linebacker Vernon Rollins is out for the season with a tom ligament in his left knee. ... Colorado State was shut out (24-0 by Air Force) for the first time since 1983, a span of 157 games. ... No. 7 Ohio State had 70 yards rushing, 152 under its average and lowest output in four years, in a 28-20 win over Arizona. ... It was, worse for Notre Dame, held to 61 yards on the ground — its lowest total since 1985 —- in a 23-7 loss to Michigan State, ... Bob Davie’s 1-2 start is the same way Lou Holtz beagn at Notre Dame in 1986. The Irish went 5-6 that sea­ son, and Davie may be hard-pressed to match the mark with upcoming road games against Michigan, Stanford and LSU. Nike Hoop-it-Up offers students chance to flash b-ball skills B y Sc o tt L ewis S pecial t o th e State P ress During die weekend of Oct. 4-5, the 1997 Nike Hoop-itUp, with over 350 teams already signed up, will hit the streets of Patriots Square Park in downtown Phoenix. Whether you’re a ‘T op Gun” who has played basketball in college or professionally, a “Couch Potato” whose idea of exercise is getting out of your love seat to call the pizza man, or someone “Older Ilian Dirt” who needs a six-pack of Geritol just to get through the day, there are levels of play for everyone who enters. In its fifth year in Arizona, Hoop-it-Up is the largest 3on-3 basketball tournament in the state. This year, for the first time, there will be a referee on every court. In addition, there will be special events held throughout the entire weekend, like the Michael Jordan Experience— an interac­ tive series of basketball skills competitions, featuring lifesize cutouts of the legendary Chicago Bulls guard— the Nike 10-foot Slam Jam, Nike youth skills session, Gatorade slam dunk. Baby Ruth Turbohoops and the electronic Hot Shot basketball kids slam dunk. There will be also a $25,000 competition, sponsored by Southwest Airlines, for anyone who can hit a shot from beyond half-court, nearly three-fourths the length of a regu­ lation-sized basketball court. “Hoop-it-Up is a fantastic event,” said Drew Wathey, program director of Hoop-it-Up. “Over 12 city blocks in the surrounding area will be closed down. W e’ll chalk up à 40-by-40 court on the pavement and the bas­ ketball courts will be on the streets.” The deadline for registration has been extended to Sept. 29 until 5 p.m.. Entry forms are available at alL Valley Foot Locker stores, partici­ pating Jack in the Box restaurants, Boys and Girls Clubs, YMCA’s and park and recreation centers. Team entry fees are $96 for a three or four person squad (su b stitu tio n s are allowed), $108 for ‘Top Gun” com­ petitors. Hoop-it-Up will supply each participant with a tshirt and a gym bag for entering. Each team will play a minimum of three games. ASU sophomores Brian Deuchar and Bryan Taute have entered the Hoop-it-Up tournament.in the “Competitive” division. The two Scottsdale residents play at least twice a week in the Student Recreation Center. According to Deuchar, who played on bis high school team, Hoop-it-Up is “the only way to feel like you’re playing for something important.” “I like the three-on-three game better,” said Deuchar, who has played in the Fiesta Bowl 3-on-3 tourna­ ment: “You have to pass more, you get to set picks and you get the ball more. “The referee will also make a huge difference because people won’t want to kill the ref for making a call. Usually people are like ‘no, no, no. That’s not a foul.’” Taute has also played in a threeon-three tournament, the Shoot-theBall Classic in Chicago. For Taute, being around the other basketball players and watching their skills is as much a part of the thrill as the game itself; “It’s fun just to hang out and watch, and play, players T urn to H o o p - it -U p . pa ge IS . State P ress Wednesday, September 24, 1997 P age 14 Fiesta Bowl acquires younger cousin in Tucson B y M el R eisner A ssociated P ress In a move unprecedented among college football’s compet­ itive bowl oiganizers, the foundation behind the Fiesta Bowl signed a letter of intent to acquire Tucson’s Copper Bowl on Tuesday. The NCAA and other groups still must approve the Arizona Sports Foundation’s plans to take over the liabilities and assets of die Copper Bowl. The ASF, parent organization of the Fiesta Bowl, hopes to wrap up that part of the transac­ tion by Nov. 15. The Copper Bowl is scheduled for Dec, 27 and the Fiesta Bowl, which has been played on New Year’s Day or Jan. 2 for 17 straight years, will take place Dec. 31 to accommodate Bowl Alliance scheduling. Two games under one banner should mean greater appeal to advertisers and teams, help the struggling junior bowl find a title sponsor and translate into $100 million in annual econom­ ic impact, said Fiesta Bowl executive director John Junker. After losing the support of former title sponsor Weiser Lock, the Copper Bowl offered Utah and Wisconsin a total of $2 million to play last Dec. 27, and still needed a $73,683 from the Tucson City Councfl to pay its bills. By contrast, the Fiesta paid a record $27.2 million to Nebraska and Florida to play in its Jan. 2, 1996, national championship game. “What this does is. almost instantaneously give us credibility through the industry,” Copper Bowl director Howard Gibson said. “Now we can realize the experience and clout and con­ tacts the Fiesta Bowl has, not only in the areas of sponsors and corporate relations, but in television and conferences.” He said the Copper Bowl Foundation would have been able to stage the 1997 game, but acknowledged that its future beyond that was unclear. “We’ve evaluated nearly every available option and are convinced that the Arizona Sports Foundation relationship gives the Copper Bowl the resources it needs to realize its potential,” Howard Volin, a CBF board member, said in a statement. “The move will afford the Copper Bowl some very exciting marketing and operational opportunities.” Volin, Junker, Gibson and ASF president Charles Thompson held an earlier news conference in Tucson to dis­ cuss what they said was a unique agreement. ‘Today’s announcement, we think, is historic,” Thompson said. “It’s something no other bowl has ever done.” Control of the Copper Bowl will remain in Tucson, he promised. “The Copper Bowl will stand apart from the Fiesta Bowl and will be produced and operated by Tucsonans,” Thompson said. “The Copper Bowl had strong appeal to us, and we intend to ensure that it reflects that special identity.” The ASF sponsors other Tucson events, including the three-day Fiesta Bowl Basketball Classic with Arizona as the host team since 1985. It begins the day after the Copper Bowl. While the Fiesta Bowl grew stronger this decade, going with Tostitos as a title sponsor in 1995 and becoming a charter member of the alliance, the Copper Bowl began on a shoestring in 1989 and never was robust. Played in Arizona Stadium, which held 59,920 for the largest crowd in its history (Sun Devil Stadium, site of the Fiesta, holds 15.000 more), the bowl was modest in its goals and its attraction to teams. Offensive Rookie of the Year has become expendable. And with the Cardinals sputtering running game, it’s possible Rhett could be traveling to the desert very soon. Although Tobin did not deny any of the rumors, he refused to acknowledge any of them either. “Errict Rhett is a good football player, and right now be’s got no place to play,” Tobin said. “They’re handing the ball to Dunn, and they’re handing the ball to Alstott. But (Rhett) is still a member of their football team. I’ve got no real comment on Errict Rhett, he’s a member of the Tampa Bay team, and a very productive member.” If the Cardinals were to obtain Rhett, the team wold most likely have to cut one of its backup running backs. Kevin Bouie has carried the ball eight times this year, while LeShon Johnson has not carried at all. T r o u b l e W it h T akeaw ays The Cardinals defense has come up big in keeping the opponents out of the end zone. In the past two games, Arizona has faced two of the premier touchdown scorers in the league, but were able to keep Dallas’ Emmitt Smith and Washington’s Terry Allen out of the end zone. However, the defense has generated only three turnovers — two interceptions and one fumble recovery - - in the first three games, a fact that troubles Tobin. “You’ve got to be able to take the ball away from the other teams if you’re going to be a dominating defense,” Tobin said. “Y ou’ve got to give your offense more turnovers than that. If there’s one telling statistic in the NFL, it’s the turnover ratio.” Middle linebacker Ronald McKinnon has accounted for 67 percent of the takeaways, picking off a Gus Frerotte pass and recovering a fumble against Dallas. Comerback Aeneas W illiams intercepted a Jeff Blake pass in the opener, accounting for the Cardinals other interception. Cardinals C o n t in u e d fro m Tage 13. The former Purdue Boilermaker rumbled for 94 yards on 18 carries and also caught two short touchdown passes from quarterback Trent Dilfer. The duo gives opposing coaches and defensive coordi­ nators all sorts of fits. “They certainly give you a variety,” Tobin said. “Alstott is probably as punishing a back as there is in the league. (He) can find a bole, and if there is no hole, well, (he’ll) run over you. And Dunn gives you more darting ability. Where Alstott is going to probably four, five, or six-yard you to death ... Dunn is liable to 30 or 40-yard you to death.” R u m b l in g s A b o u t R h e t t Rumors suggest that the Cardinals may want to save an extra seat on the plane for its charter out of Tampa. That’s because the team may be accompanied by disgruntled Buccaneers back Errict Rhett. With the emergence of Dunn and Alstott, the 1994 NFC e-mail the sports editor* PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR edfan@asu.edu F r e e P ►MCAT ►LSAT ►GRE ►GMAT r a c t i c e TEST P r ep a r e V for L IF T -O F F If you re going to graduate school, chances,arc you’ll have to take a qualifying exam. Wouldn’t it be great to know what score you’re going to get before it really counts? Take a FREE practice test at The Princeton Review, proctored and timed just like the real thing. You won’t get a sales pitch—you’ll get a diagnostic analysis designed to hejp you focus on your strengths and weaknesses. Practice tests are available Monday through Saturday. Call or send an email to reserve a time! wwW.revicw.com info.phoenix@review.com M H»r>iMinaievI»a*MW 1C S T ! FI FTH Æ PRINCETON REVIEW OUTLET F eatu ring in n o va tive ap pro ache s to re ta ilin g an d S aks F ifth A venue fa sh io n a t O F F 5TH p rice s, w e o ffe r an e xc itin g en viro nm en t fo r a w ide v a rie ty o f a m b itio u s in d ivid u a ls. Learn ab ou t th e te rrific o p p o rtu n itie s a va ila b le a t o u r Tem pe sto re : • • • • I F ly in g F o r tr e ss ! A V E N U E • Home S elling S pecialist • Shoe S elling S pecialists • Loss P revention D etectives C ustom er Service A ssociates • M w r' change tar GAME' S elling Associates R eceiving A ssociates F itting Room A ssociates C a s h ie rs ' W e offer excellent salaries, com prehensive benefits, and an environm ent tha t’s conductive to career advancem ent. Join us in taking retailin g into the 21st century. Apply in person, call or fax, Monday - Friday, 9AM-6PM at: Peter Piper Plaza, 1813 East Baseline Road, Suite 103 & 104, Tempe, AZ 85283. Phone: (602)831-6393; Fax: (602)631-6468. W e w ill respond to qualified candidates only. W e are an equal opportunity em ployer. / “k im U r r C T U 111 / •q TCV C U IV IIIN U T E M PE ! Id ALE. CORNER Rural & University 829-7473 State P ress P ag e 15 Wednesday, September 24, 1997 Snyder suspends B row n, S m ith From Staff Reports C ornerbacks P h illip Brow n and André Smith were suspended for one game after a run in with the law last weekend, Sun Devil head coach Bruce Snyder announced Tuesday. The two ju n io rs were arrested at about 2:30 a.m. Sunday m orning by ASU police tor underage possession and consumption o f alcohol. The incident occured at 701 Alpha Drive,. Snyder said Brown and Smith will not accompany the team to Eugen, Ore., this week, but they will be relegated to scout team duties. C arolina H urricanes m ascot has seizure GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — The Carolina Hurricanes’ mascot had a seizure inside an ice-resurfacing machine moments before his scheduled debut Tuesday night. Phil Madrcn, 32, dressed in a hog costume, had the seizure while laying inside the Zamboni machine waiting for his big entrance before the NHL team ’s exhibition game against Detroit, team spokesman Chris Brown said. The lights were dimmed at the Greensboro Coliseum as the mascot was about to be unveiled. As the Zamboni’s front was opened, Madren’s legs were kicking and then he laid motionless. The crowd of 7,079 thought it was part of the act and hooted and hollered waiting for the hog’s entrance. After several minutes, the Zamboni driver got off his seat and went to see what was wrong with Madrcn. He quickly hopped back on his seat and backed the Zamboni off the ice and behind a black curtain. The announcer said it was a sneak preview and that the mascot would be back as the crowd booed. That never happened as Madien, who also plays Monty the Lion for the minor-league Carolina Monarchs, was taken to Wesley Long Hospital, where nursing supervisor Maxine Routh said he was being observed in die emer­ gency room. Hoop-it-Up weekend is the $25,000 shot. Having been in attendance at a previous long-shot competition, he has a game plan that he intends to follow through on. “I was at the. Chicago (Bulls) game when the fan hit a full-court length shot to win a million dollars,” said Taute, with a grin on his face. “I studied his shot. I have visual­ ized it over and over. “That $25,000 is mine,” : H oop-it-U p C o n t in u e d from p a g e 13. you normally don’t get to see,” he said. “It’s the only place you can play in front o f a crowd. And nowadays, it’s one of the few ways I can still play competitively.” But T au te’s m ain o b jectiv e for the LIM ITED BEEPERS fo r FREE O F F E R Bring in your old, working beeper and get a new M o t o r o l a P ro n to F IX ** *Reconditioned beepers, activation fee and service subscription required. W hile supplies last. “ Activation a n d service subscription required. Hed^if|whmy,well eve*Are»i*t freeMoths ofwin m LWhatok we*iris?Stopbyoaeofo*rslim today. 38 th St. & Thomas Phoenix 957-8718 I 43rd Ave. & Indian Sihool Phoenix 269-7287 131 f. Southern Ave. Tempe 929-0784 Page 16 State P ress Wednesday, September 24,1997 Is interim coach Newman the man for ASU hoops? Ex-assistant will right sinking ship ; S h o rt-term fix ju st w on’t cu t it Monday morning I was asking myself ‘Where is the new head men’s basketball coach?’ Well, obviously I got my answer later that afternoon as former assistant Eton Newman was named interim coach. Good thing too. When Bill Frieder “resigned” as head coach of the ASU men’s basketball team on Sept. 10, ath le tic d ire c to r K evin White promised quick action. He said a , new man would be in place seven to 10 days later. Well, it took 13 days for Mr. White, as Plan A was junked for Plan B. 'Plan A definitely was more desirable, but also nearly impossible. White wanted a top-teir coach to drop everything and come to Tempe with less than a month to prepare before practices begin on Oct. 15. Plan B was to hire Newman for a year and find his man later. Newman is liked by the players, knows the system and will hopefully keep some of the potential recruits which ex-head man Frieder was attempting to lure to ASU. It also gets the Sun Devils a leader. One that was despertly needed Many will look at his 20-114 record a Cal-State Sacramento and ask how ASU i s , better off with Newman as coach. , First, the Hornets made the jump from Division II to Division I under his tutalege. Not exactly a breeding ground for wins. He had to play ball under opponets' terms. This man knows how to tackle a challenge. Second, w hile an assistant at Washington State (1988-92), serving as recruiting coordinator, he helped the; Cougars go from perrenial losers to six straight winning seasons. That’s a good thing. Potential recruits were flocking away from Tempe faster than a ball hit off of Yankees’ hurler Hideke Irabu.. ' ■ Last week, Phoenix phenom Richard Jefferson from Moon Valley High School said that Utah coach Rick Majerus’ taking his feet out of the running for the Sun Devils’ job meant losing him and a plethora of others who wbre to follow. J e ffe rs o n chose UofA. The Wildcats topped his short list of Hasn’t ASU been in this P o in t s i tu a ti o n Asst. Sports Editor Ed Odeven s c h o o l s . Would that be so if we had had a coach in place before, any coach? Daily things seem to get worse. Bill Walton’s son, Luke, committed to UofA on before? When a hot shot named Bill Frieder was lured f Sports Editor ed my d eci­ sion was all the players § and coaches I met during my visit,” Walton told the Associated Press. ‘’They’re so nice, and so very much together. The whole atmosphere was impressive.1’ “So very much together”. W ords to describe the Wildcat program, but net the Sun Devils’. Take a look at the facts — The Wildcats just won the NCAA Championship. Lute Olson signs a contract extension. UofA is a poster child for stability. ASU’s program deserves to be on the back of a milk carton. Hiring Newman gives ASU a start. It allow s a postive to be made out of an extremely negative situation. No,.he is not Merlin. He won’t wave a magic wand and fix the ailing Sun Devils im m ediately. H ow ever, Newm an w ill steady the sinking ship and allow White to scower the U.S. in search of his man. Will it be Majerus? Who knows, but when the decision is made one thing is for sure — Don Newman will leave it in much better shape than Bill Frieder dig, Sports editor Randy Jones can be reached via e-mail at edfan@asu.edu r o m Washington State and most recently at Cal State-Sacramento (1992-97) where he guided the Hornets to a 20-114 record. Newman’s promotion to interim head coach Monday was greeted by a unanimous approval from the Sun Devil players. Everyone it seems, including Frieder, is glad to see Newman at the helm. So what’s the problem? A lot if you ask me. Newman’s hiring is only a temporary situ­ ation. There are problems, especially lack of fan support and quality recruiting, that can’t be solved immediately. Marquee players don’t commit to schools with interim coaches. They commit to pro­ grams that have stability and a winning tradi­ tion. A perfect exam ple of this would Richard Jefferson’s verbal commitment to the UofA. The senior forward from Phoenix’s Moon Valley High is the best high school player in the state. But he’ll become a Wildcat, not a Sun Devil. And many other top hoop stars will depart the Valley of The Sun to play college ball. Lately, the only tradition this team has had it’s problems, especially off the court. Which leads us to a few real concerns that don’t involve shoe contracts or talk shows. Will Newman still be around in a year? Will ASU be able to get any great recruits for next year? (Probably not.) Will they be able to get any good recruits? (It’s hard to say, especially without a defini­ tive game plan by White). Yeah, it's been said that Majerus may take the ASU job next season. Maybe he won’t. Coaches entertain job offers left and right, but they don’t always take them.. And who’s to say that ASU will be able to get a premier coach next season? ASU needed to sign somebody now who can attem pt to return the program to respectability. The longer White waits, the longer it will take to rebuild this struggling program. He needed to hire someone without an interim label. Someone other than Don Newman. M ichigan in 1989 he took over for inter­ im coach Bob Schermerhom who took over for Steven Patterson. The Sun D evils’ bas­ ketball p ro­ gram was one of the worst in thePac-10. And when Bill Frieder ended his eight-year reign as bas­ ketball boss, the program was back where it started. During the past two weeks, ASU athletic director Kevin White contemplated that the future of the program should be headed by a big-name coach. But that plan backfired, at least temporarily, when Rick Majerus decid­ ed to stay put in Utah. Instead, the program will be run by Don Newman. . It’s understandable that since the search for a new coach started on the eve of Midnight Madness, White really did not have a lot of options. But, will a lesser-known coach be able to get the job done any better? I doubt it. New nan isn’t being put in a win-win situation. It will take time (several years) for the to return to respectability. Given the circ stances—taking over a team that was 2-16 in 1996— it looks like 1997-98 dll be a negative experience. However, Newman has gained recogni­ Ed Odeven can be reached via e-mail at tion and respect because of his ability to relate to the players during coaching stints at starks4three@asu.edu. C ount» Point Classifieds N otice to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Mar* Trivia... 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Harris Prop­ erties, 829-0902. M /F TO share 3bd/2ba condo in Papago P ark, 2 m i from A SU . $350/m o. + 1/3 util. Must be clean & NS. 774-9586 UNIV RNCH 3bd 2ba w /d fp vaulted ceilings! Avail 9/16 for only $990/mo. 860-1274 HELP WANTEDGENERAL SHARE 2 bdr/2 ba apt. Prefer ndn-sm k $305/m o. C a jf 7.Í00172. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLO SE TO ASU 3BD PATIO home. 1800 sq. ft. Very nice, $1050/mo. Call Jeff, 893-1651. HOUSE FOR rent. 2 blks. from A SU. 3 bdrm /2ba. $1050/m o. (602) 540-6394 or 893-0767. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Rancho Las Palmas ten t L ivin~ Bedroom s A m enities 1 Mile from ASU 1249 E. Spence, Tem pe 8 2 9 -9 6 0 7 A lS O : Roommate M atches Service 484-3558 Sat., Sept. 2 7 ,9am-4pm Camel back Inn's Arizona Ballroom 5402 E. Lincoln Dr. Scottsdale - Starring ♦ Camelback Inn Hotel, Resort and Spa O'Mountain Shadows Resort and Gplf Course -0-Renaissance Cottonwoods Resort ♦ Scottsdale Suites ♦ Host Marriott Services For questions, directions, or more info please call 905-7959 or 596-7034 it COME JOIN OUR TEAM!!!!! MAP Mobile Communications is located south of Baseline on 48th Street just around the com er from ASU’s campus. We are currently hiring telephone receptionists for full and parttime shifts with starting tim es as early as 4am and as late as 3pm. There is no selling o r telemarketing involved. This position requires tha t you type 30 wpm, have good spelling skills, and a friendly, articulate voice. $7/hr to start w ith increases after 90 days. Benefits include: medical, dental, 401K, 2 weeks paid vacation, credit union membership, and plaid training. If you want to be a part of a great team, call Lois or Jennifer for an interview @ 431-0054. 1§ j ¡¡¡¡¡I |H | SI aB |||| H j St a t e P ress ROOMS FOR RENT RO O M S FOR RENT GET SPOILED- Tem pe whole house + own bdrm. Pool, util, cable, phone, m icro incl: $325/m o. M ove in 10/1. N S, ND, F p re f 1311 W . L aird . 967-3930/599-3877 pgr. LG RO OM in p riv a te hom e. N S, near dwtn. Phx. $260/mo. in clu d . u til., p o o l, prk in g, kitchen priv. 230-2702 IN A 3BR/ 2BA home w / pool. $ 2 6 0 /m o + l/3 u tils. 1.5 m i. from ASU. Jarrod or Clint, 4233432 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Marriott MCQUEEN/ ELLIOT- room, in h o u se, $25 0 /m o . in c l. u til, resp., n/s, m/f. Call 507-79%. RM TE SERVICE F o r stu d en ts. 800 -8 3 8 -6 3 84 www.Foommatesavice.cdm ROOM M cC lintock/ Baseline w /d, p o o l, q u ie t. $325/m o. incl. util. Call Lisa 831 -1821. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HOTELS • RESORTS • SUITES FENDER MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS has openings for: • Host or Hostess •FrortOralCledc •PBX Operator ■1■' tías I .internship position available on apart-time tesis |20hfs/wk| in its R&D Dept, in Scottsdale. Duties include supporting engineering : through tasks, solve technical problems and construct, troubleshoot and . test prototypes Looking for junior or senior status BSEE . students w ith quick ■- aptitude, problem-solving ;■■■:abilities and willingness to learn. Musical background a plus ' Contact jospehire . De Los Reyes, 909-270-1685, ext. 4021 «PUH FURNITURE c o m pu ter ^ G R EA T FU R N ITU R E Selling an 8 drawer dresser $30 & fullsize bed $100. 784-0649 Sean. CO M PA Q LA PTO P com puter for sale. 120 MHz Pentium pro­ cessor. $900.428-3408. MATTRESS, QUEEN size, dou­ b le p illo w to p / box spring, 2 w ks old - pd $1100, sacrifice $275,495-1974. L A P T O P PE N T. 133/case 16 m g. ram . C ol. m on., snd, Cd Rom. $1750. Scott 874-2090. M A T TR ESSES - queen set $125, full set $110, tw ins $89/ s e t. In p la stic , free d eliv ery . Name brands. 649-2625. SOUTH W EST STL YE sofa & lo v e se a t, e x ce lle n t cond, call Krista @ 961-8645 Classifieds _ M AC LC 4 MB color m onitor $300. Free p rin ter! C all 9499815 PEN TIU M 150 32 m eg. ram , fully loaded, in c l. m onitor. Scott $1150. H 874-2090. AUTOMOBILES HELP W ANTEDGENERAL C ity o f C h a n d le r Ideal part-time job for students!!! D rivers needed daily Mon. through Fri. from 7am to 9am or 3pm to 5pm . 10 hours per week fo r rem ainder o f school year. Fleet S ervices Aide $6/hr. Apply: C ity o f C handler Hum an Resources D ivision, 25 S. Arizona Place, S uite. 201 Chandler, AZ 85225 602-786-2290 EOE/ADA C A S H T O D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. ^ 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL BEST PART-TIME JOB IN TOWN! If you are enthusiastic, reapmaMe and dislike wearing suits to work... you II want to tintoti reading this ad! Our national rearicaang Dim la saetung Individuala Oln you to do paiM lnw premo aanh at iaori airport. Pay plu6 commiscion!! No experience neeoaaary. Great opportunity to make extra ihonoy. Call (610) 840-3181 or fax resume (610)640-3187. » • Paid Training m Offer: NowHiring Flexible Schedules Weekly Checks No Exp. N et. No Cold Calls Casual Environment Computer Dialers Unlimited Qualified Leads Weekend Availability C A LL TO D A Y TICKETS 90 HYUNDAI Excel, 2dr HB, 4 sp, 126K mi. New clutch, tires & exhaust.. No a/c o,r radio. Re­ lia b le , N eeds m in o r w ork. $1200 obo. 849-6491 eves. COYOTES HOCKEY pre-sea­ son tic k e ts, Sept'. 23 & 25, low er level center ice. Buy 1, get 1 free. Call 254-3300. ISUZU TR O O PE R II 88 New tim in g b e lt, b rak es, c a ta litic , runs great. M ust sell, call 2580684 AUTOMOBILES NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tio n vehicle. Som e w ork OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. 85 VW C A B R IO L ET, blue/grey in color, m any new parts incl top, ac & tires. Very w ell m aintained. M ust see. $3800 obo: 996-2325 89 HONDA C ivic, 4dr sedan. M aroon w / m aroon in terio r. 5sp, 9 3 K mi. New tires, very good on g as. O nly $2995. Cadi Bill, 967-8859. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 10-30 hrs/week Flexible $6 - $7.45/hr + Bonus / ban q u et\ SERVERS Make extra money, jo in our busy bqt season. Exp. req’d. Scottsdale Embassy Suites Human Resources 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Please apply M, Tu, or F between 8:30am-10:30am or 2pm-4pm Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a drugfree work force. After, business h o u rs an d w eekends, call 1^800-883-6123, ex t. 7132 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 O U T L E T S A K Featuring innovative approaches to retailing and Saks Fifth Avenue fashion at OFF 5TH prices, w e offer an exciting environm ent fo r a w ide variety of am bitious individuals. Learn about the te rrific opportunities available a t o u r T e m p e s to re : Selling Associates Receiving Associates Fitting Room Associates Cashiers We offer excellent salaries, com prehensive benefits, and an environm ent that’s conductive to career advancement. Join us in taking retailing into the 21st centuiy. Apply In parson, call or fax, Monday - Friday, 9AM-6PM at: Pater Piper Plaza, 1813 East Baseline Road, Suite 103 A 104, Tampa, AZ 85283. Phone: (602)831-6393; Fax: (602)831-«468. We w ill respond to qualified candidates only. We are an equal opportunity employer. F/T ; Front Desk Agent P /T Reservation A gent OFF 5TH IS C O M IN G TO TEMPE! F/T - Security Officer (Graveyard shift) P /T - N ight A uditor (2 nights - graveyard) Caill 947-3300 or fax resume 947-6853 or pick tip an application at lobby front desk. Interviewing and application hours are from 10-4, M-F Scottsdale Camelback Resort ft Spa 6302 E. C am elback Rd. Please call fo r interview Scottsdale Camelback Resort & Spa is an equal opportunity employer. Openings in Inbound & Outbound Telesales T h e A fterm arket C om pany is now h irin g for our Inbound & O utbound Telesales departments. Receive calls from televised Infomercials or return calls to calls to current customers qn-behalf of the client. Flexible afternoon and evening schedules great for students! Shifts available to fit your school schedule. ★ Paid Training ★ Weekly Paychecks ★ No Cold Calling ★ Full & Part Time ★ Benefits for F/T ★ Generous Commissions C a lJ 4 7 0 -2 5 0 0 A ftkrM arket HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ATTENDANT NEEDED for fe­ m ale, noil- dem anding, em ­ ployed. C ertification not req’d. Room & board incl. Salary neg. Broadway & Rural 829-8681 ATTENDANT WTD for female in Q uad ran g le A pts. M ust be 21 or over w/good driving rec. no liftin g re q . hrs fle x . T/Th EUen 968-6284. A TTEN D A N TS N EED ED fo r dntwn. Tempe events including ASU & C ardinal gam es. M ust have flex, sched. Starting rate is $5.50 w/ increase potential. de­ pending on perform ance. Con­ tact Lisa, 921-9920 RED 92 M azda MX3, 5sp, V6. A lloy w hls w / locks, cc,. a /c , am /fm cass. P w r ev ery th in g , sunroof, $8900 obo, 753-6682 BICYCLES A W ESO M E O PPO RTU N ITY , up to $400/w k, 15 hrs/w k. Flexible schedule, 966-0585 U SED BIC Y CLES startin g @ $69.00 and up. Bicycle W heel­ ers 20 10 S . Rural Rd., Tem pe, 968-8011. AZ SENATE, is hiring session pages. F/T. Jan,-A pril. Contact Tina, 542-5969. TRAVEL B .R .I.T .E . IN C .: B ehavioral H ealth T echs, and P roviders. F/T & P/T to w ork w ith D:D,/ M .I,/ E .I, c lie n ts. $6 -1 0 /hr. d .o .e . A pply a t 2920 N, 24th A ve. #24 P h x 85015 or call 254-2785 x 1. - D ISC O U N T TRA V EL: C heap in your name. Q uick departrs. Buy coupon$/aw ards. M ost places worldwide. 968-7283 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Days / 3 4 5 -9 5 0 9 • • • • W Y SE PC w / m oniter, key­ board & p rin ter. $250 obo. Call 485-90304or more info, h a s th e follow ing e m p lo y m e n t o p p o rtu n ities: • Avg. $9 - $13 plus Pr./Hr. Home Selling Specialist Shoe Selling Specialists Customer Service Associates Loss Prevention Detectives AUTOMOBILES SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK Resort & Spa • Guaranteed $8 Pr./Hr. vs. Commission • • • • COMPUTERS 86’ HON D A C ivic DX, blue, a /c , p/s, p/b, 110k, $ 1,000 899-2678, 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Dia IA me rica [s Big Money! • • • • • • • • Page 17 Wednesday, September 24, 1997 Afterm arket is located near 40tb St. between University & Brordway BA RRO'S PIZZA on B aseline and H ardy in Tem pe is hiring all positions* a vailable f/t p/t ; eves. Flex. hrs. For more info, contact Brian @820-9282. $6.50 per hour H ouse m anagers needed by C o lleg e o f F in e A rts: M ostly evening & w eekend hours. R e­ quired qualifications: effective in te rp e rso n a l and com m uni­ cation skills, gQod judgem ent, and prev io u s ex p erie n ce in a custom er-service position. To apply, submit resume, three pro­ fessional references, and local phofie number to Dean's office, C o lleg e o f F ine A rts, D ix ie Gammage Hall 132- CASINO PARTY dealers need­ ed. G ood pay, s h o rt hours FUN. If you can play, you can deal. 954-7458. CIG A R STORE clerk, P/T, no exp nec, must work thru Christ­ mas vacation, clean cut, outgo­ ing, like sm oke, $ 6/hr. 8409080 DATA CENTER operators need­ e d . A ll sh ifts av ail, flex, hrs 5pm -8am & w eekends. A pply to Darcomm 3710.E. University Dr. Suite 1, H ix, 36 HEALTH Y people to keep hom eopathic journal 5 wks for $125. 274-1340 * A FUN job w/flexible schedul­ ing can be had in o u r tuxedo stores. M esa, Alma Sch/Sputhern 962-1128; Scotts, C haparral/H aydn 947-7731; Phx, Tatum/T-bird 494-7036. A M ER IC A N V A LE T- V alets needed Fri. and/or Sat. eyes for s p ec ia l ev en ts. $ 6-10/ hr. in ­ c lu d in g tip s. 235-2636. M ust be clean cut & polite. HELP WANTEDGENERAL blue J ean position DRIVER, MAINTENANCE per­ son needed part-tim e, flexible hours M -F, no n ig h ts or w ee­ kends; M ust have clean driving record. A pplications accepted M -F 9-5 inside/O ut 2716 N 68 St. Ste. 1000. 994-1060 $7/hr. EV ANS FU R S & L e a th e rs in the Biltmore Fash. Park is look­ ing for a dependable all around w orker to handle a v ariety of task s. PT flex . hrs. C all Michelle or Randy 381-1133 FEM AIDE p t - disabled girl, $6.50 & $ 10.25/hr. M 3-6pm , T 9am -9:30pm , W 3 -9 :30pm , Th 9am-9:30pm. 423-5903 AVAILABLE!!! Citrtis T ree Grow er in Mesa seeks full-time sale s/ nursery help. Dependable, custom er oriented, ability to work alone with little direction. Horticultural experience preferred, com puter experience essential. Hourly wage: $ 7+ DOE. Contact by phone: 830-8000 or by FAX: 833-5/05 Greenfield Citrus Nursery* Inc. 2558 E. Lehi Rd. Mesa, AZ 85213 Club leader positions available, working directly with children ages 4-11. 36.53/hr. Shifts available in school-based programs between hours of 6:30am-8:30am M-F or from 2:30-6:15 each day after school (with an early start on Wednesdays from 12:30-6:15). Call 598-7308 to set-up an interview. Be sure to bring a resume and 3 recommendation letters to the interview. FULL TIME or P/T work. Hours can be arranged, custom finish­ ing & cabinet shop. 994-1221 FUN PEOPLE W anted: O utgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal P o rtra its. $7- 12/hr. C a ll Adam at 777-1054. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCT, for mobile pro. m ust have high en­ ergy and a willingness to learn new / fun w ays o f teaching, pt, $8-$ 10/hr.doe. 443-8817 This should be your ad Call 965-6735 IK O N / D L S I NEEDS DOCUMENT CODERS Must Type 50 wpm. Relaxed W ork Environment. Flex hours. $8-$12/hr avg. Scottsdale A ir Park location. FAX resume to 9 2 2 -4 6 6 9 Attention: Viki DONOR EBBS NEEDED Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2000. For m ore inform ation call 6 0 2 -8 6 0 -4 7 9 2 S ta te P ress W ednesday, September 2 4 ,1 9 9 7 Page 18 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELPWANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP W A NTED to d istrib u te phone card s. E x cellen t c o m ­ missions. Call Ray 833-6451. PRO N E SALES reps, $9/hr or $40/sale, 2 Shifts; across from ASU. 736-0034. MODELING AGENCY- state li­ censed seek in g stu d en ts fo r prom otional work. A ttractive, outgoing, & responsible. M ust have Iran s p . $ 1 0-12/hr. C on tact L o retta lOafhr2pm only. 381-3909 PHONE WORK No sales! 3620 E, Thom as Rd. P/T & F/T Shifts available, open 2 4 h rs/d ay . G ood study job. G ood verbal sk ills & d epend­ ability a must! Gall 224-0200 for an interview. EOE ADMINISTRATIVE ASST., p/t, flex. hrs. W P, A P-A R , detail o rien ted , b u dget reporting. Send resume to: Kern & Wooley, 1201 S. Alma School Rd., Ste. 10550, Mesa, 85210. LOOKING FOR exp'd delivery person fo r busy flo rist. M ust know Phx & Scotts. area, Truck p ro v id ed . A sk fo r lo e l 4 81V 0900 PICTU RE FR A M ER n eed ed . B ackground in art; ó r p icture fram ing exp. p ref, fle x , hrs, will train. B ills Custom Fram ­ ing 968-1771 in Tempe. STO CK Y A R D S R E ST A U ­ COWBOY CIAO is now hiring R A N T is now h irin g lunch winners. Kitchen & service pos serv ers, night; fo o d serv ers, avail. N ights & w eekends. bussers, & host/ess. A pply in Singing ta le n t a plu s. Apps avail daily 2-4pm @ Stetson & * person M -F 10am -5pm , 5001 E. W ashington. E ast o f 48th 6th ave ih dwntwn Scotts. St. 273-7378. M AJERLE'S SPORTS G rill is SWENSEN*S MESA has imme­ currently h irin g all positions. diate openings for food servers, Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St., $9 -12/hr. line cooks, bus/dish Phx. , interviews Tues - Fri 3-5 pm. 1159 E Main St @ Stapley. M IK E PU LO 'S S paghetti Co. 4th and M ill now h iring ft/pt host(ess), bussers and servers. No phone calls please. Find it E A S T in M IK E P U L O ’S Sp ag h etti C d ; NOW h iring fu ll time, assistant m anager. S en d /fax Tesume to 414 S. M ill Ave, Tem pe A z 85281 966-5265 Attn; Liz P/T RECEPTIONIST, m ust be available,O ver holiday breaks. Icón H air A rchi texture* Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square, Ask for Charlene 941-8656, MODELS NEEDED for an ex­ c itin g ,-n ew in tern atio n al hair co lo r lau n ch A11 in teres te d , please com e to our model call S.ùh, S e p t. 28 at 7;:30,, pm. L obby o f. thé H yatt. 122 N • 2nd St. Phx. . MOTIVATED STUDENTS f / t $ o n 1P/T b a sis, s e t own hrs.: w orking ;w/ #1 INC. 500 cq . seeking m otivated individuals w /g re a t iliter persona! skills, call 787-9217 for apt. NEED STUDENT for MD office, Scotts ; 12-20 hrs./wk. General office work, local errands. Miist have ow n tran sp . C a ll 9477(651 or fax resume 947-0274. NEEDED EXP'D display o r Xmàs decorating person fo r up­ com ing h o lid ay d eco ratin g . Ask for Joel 481 -0900 NOW HIRING B est jo b s in tow n. Paid tra in ­ ing, no sellin g . F lex ib le hrs. 5 ;OOpm-9:00pmJ G u aran teed hourly pay. $8.88 average ($280/wk). Set. reservations out of cool office(s) in Scottsdale & Mesa. Call 874-0145, Lee (for ■interview.) ' v "■■;V . P/T H ELP w ntd f il l., lo a d in g pack,, & capp. bottled water. At least 20 h rs./w k . N ear ÀSU $6/hr. Gaïl Jeannine 453-030$. P/T HELP wntd filling, loading packaging, & capping bottled water. At least 20 hrs 1 week or m ore. N ear ASÜ $ 6 /h r C all Jeannine 455-0305 o r 9881804 P/T M -TH 6-9pm . $7/hr. n e ar ASU, survey telem arketing, no p ié ssq ré p resen tatio n , no exp neccessaiy; C all for interview Norm Gifford 829-3460. P/T O FFICE help G en • office duties req. E xcellent p/t work f o r students. C ontact Jennifer' 253-7533 ROCK & ROLL Hiring, F/T, P/T $7/hf,, all po­ sitions. C ^ l Jim at 894-2489. HELP W ANTEDSALES J.CREW WHSE Sale! Oct 6*12. two 7 h r shifts daily. $40 per shift 4 meal, call , 1-800497-9331 PART TIME SALES Local manufacturer seeks a mar­ keting o r sales m ajor fo r télem arketing and research work. (day/Office hours), at our office in Tem pe. Fax resum e w ith q u a lific a tio n s to S o u th w est Mold Inc. 894-2168 o r e-m ail to www .sales @swmtempe. SALESPERSON NEEDED F/T òr P/T Salary based on exp., plus insurance. M ust be knowl­ edgeable, agres si ve & self mo­ tivated. A pply a t B icycle W h eelers, 2Ó1 O S. R ural Rd, Tempe, 968-8011. w il d & c r a z y W anted 5-10 people w/ a great attitude, Call-491-5136.-v HELP WANTEDGENERAL T Y N etw o rk seeks f e p s .. to. launch Digital Satellite TV. 9173851 PAY YOUR way thru college. Show p e o p le how to cook h ealthy m eals in th e ir hom es and experience a creative way to m ake m oney. P o ten tial PT earn in g s $25O-5O0/wk. T rans req. Wesly 759-1584. CadAmy F/T R E C EPTIO N IST. Im m ed opening 4 busy, sm all, Tempe law firm. Close to ASU. Fax res & re f to (602)829-1177 Sal NEW SUSHI BAR Contemporary Japanese restau­ rant in downtown Scottsdale is accepting applications for host­ ess & servers. Great pay. 4235772. Call between 9àm- Ì pm. HELP W ANTEDF O g D S E R V IC ^ CARRABBA'S Italian G rill, looking fo r great people to join our team. FOH & BOH positions avail. A pply in person between 1-3pm, M-F. CORKNCLEAVER A ccepting apps. fo r lu n c h host(ess) & lunch food server. W ill train, p/t. C oncern w / ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ a lity are im p o rtan t. A pply in person M -F 2-5p,m. or by ap p t 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. Find it F A S T in th e C lassified s /r Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote community participation for individuals with developmental disabilities. We offer a variety of positions working with individuals in their own homes or residential settings. We offer over 40 hours of paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. We have flexible schedules with FT, PT and-on-call positions available immediately. Our pay ranges from B ack to School W ork B A B Y SITT ER S & N annies, flex schedules. C ar req'd. $5.157/hr. 460-1200. C H IL D C A RE needed fo r 2 g re a t boys. M ,T ,T h,F l-3 p m . M ust have ow n tra n sp . N eed not be avail for all times to app. ref. req. N ear 44th St/Thomas. Call Franseca 840-7438. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Call # 2 1 2 - 0 5 5 1 C o n d s. e x is t HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T SITTER fo r 11 y/o. M ust have flex ;hrs, car & ref. 12-20 hrs/wk. 244-3226 or 756-0549. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES »Attention Students! • Earn While You Learn i PAY CASH FOR TUITION EMBASSY SUITES • • RESORT I'll Show You How To Turn $13.95 into * / SCOTTSDALE ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, T u .a n d F 8:30-10:30am or 2-4pm • B ussers Housepersons B anquet S et-U p Host/Hostess S tewarding Line C ook S et-up Itr. S upervisor B ellman (available 10/1/97) Need PT or FT work. We have the job for you. Come join this busy resort Where we offer a competitive wage and many benefits including health/ dental/ life insurance, vacation/ sick time, free employee meal, free parking, uniforms provided, plus much more. P lease apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace! CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE! Great Expectations, Phoenix’s largest & most successful singles service is expanding its telemarketing depart­ ment in Scottsdale. WE PROVIDE: •IT S F U N , IT S EASY & PAYS GREAT!!! • FT/PT/Day/NighV Wknd S hifts Avail You Choose! • Breaks Every Hour •2 1 -Year-Old Company NANNIES NEEDED After school & Sat. am's. Tatum & Cactus! Car req.; TUes/Thurs, 8a-5 p, som e eves. Cam elback/ 56th St. Car req. 460-1200. the Classifieds For the following positions: • U p to $ 9 . 50 • F le x ib le S c h e d u le s • R esum e B u ild e r • A ll m a jo rs w e lc o m e • S c h o la rs h ip s a v a ila b le HELP W ANTEDCHILD CARE $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 • • in less than 90 days. • • Call 935-6631 * •* <0( m1 p a ga ra No b a s y | l You w on't have to do any of these jobs at Excell Agent Services. Our customers will call you for directory assistance. You simply ask them "city and listing," Then you give them requested information. This job offers a competitive wage paid weekly, a $100 hire-on bonus, paid training, flexible scheduling, and benefits including a 401(k). • Casual Dress Allow ed! • B eautiful Office Environment in Scottsdale • Women do w ell in this job • NO SELLING!!! If you are an excellent communicator who is looking for JOB SECURITY with an extrem ely successful company, Great Expectations needs you! Directory Assistance Operators 1906 E„ (N W ■ R M áx $6.00 - $7.00 DOE/EOE. Please call 431:9511 for more information. 941-0500 4 2 ^ Í ^ | r a r a N C ,< H |B K Í R - 160 (C:amc(S£H«ÿe M rtvaej'*!* ? Tempe y m Í ! . f i t o i o n É d f f 4 8 th s t. b e t ^ S t B ru itk ra y St S o u th e rn , jâ n à tw i ■ : M ïis m ; Peckm j-pi>802 VV. P e o n a ----;v, Cuma o f Peoria & 99tfa.AtÜÜMB y g rv js c .a P i K p s ïs o n Mon. - Fri, 8am • E A R N $ 14/H O U R $ 1 0 / H 0 U R BASE P A Y 6 U A R P LU S BO N U SES! '* \lu n & .< ,ilb L -rn A sk fo r M ike HELP W ANTEDGENERAL CLZKB TAN !

A PISCES (Feb! 19 to Mar. 20) supervisor could be acting espe­ Your concentration powers are at cially bossy and is easily p r o - s a p eak and y o u ’ll acco m p lish voked. Quell a tendency to rush much o f a mental nature. A busi­ things just to get through the day . n e ss p ro p o sitio n is fu zzy and With close ties, there’s a need to requires further study. A trip to compromise. the library or a chat with an advis­ VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) er is helpful. You could be placing too much Y O U B O RN TO D A Y w o rk importance on superficial things; best if left to youf own devices. A Don’t let w ork interests slide by self starter, you’re more likely to daydreaming early in the day. A be found in an artistic or profes­ family member isn’t inclined t o sional c areer than in business. go along with one o f your ideas You have high ideals and a gen­ after dark. uine concern for communicating LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O c f 22) your ideas to others, but at times Minor strain could occur with an need to check your temperament. in-law. Home-based activities are A sense o f humor tempers what your top priority. Dealings with co u ld b e an ov erly serio u s bankers and do-it-yourself p ro­ approach to life. jects are favored. ©1997 King Features Syndicate SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov 21) Inc. Your moods have a tendency to fluctuate. Business and pleasure • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAMS 8 8 9 -3 4 3 4 H oU *E WITH TWILIGHT SLEEP Evening &. Saturday ap po intm en ts available, Scrving ASU Cajú# C h eck it o u t o n T u esd ay W ed n e sd ay, S e p te m b e r 2 4 , 1 9 9 7 • A B O R T IO N O n e-T o p p in s P iz z a COSMIC BOWLING HAS LANDED Memorial Union Recreation, 965-3642 N o a p p o in tm e n t necessary. SP69 w u h m tt lo* tumo b o u m ! S ep t. 2 , 9-1 l p m . • FREE PREGNANCY TESTING +.Tax N. 27m A ve . 997-7493 A S U B ox 8 7 1 5 0 2 T em p e, A Z 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 Fax: 9 6 5 -4 7 0 6 Classified Ad Order Form N am e A ddress ^1 Horrie Phone ; B usiness Phone C|ty, S tate Zip P lease print on e letter per box, leave a blank box betw een words. P lease be sure to check your ad. Make sure It reads exactly a s you wish H to appear in the S late Press. Including punctuation. P lease check your ad the first day It appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds wilt be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising, ■ » .C K , a * S K o , « » Q p J\ _ E 3 P riv a te P a rty 1 -4 d a y s . $ 1 .7 0 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 5 -9 d a y s , $ 1 .6 5 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 10+ d a y s , $ 1 .4 9 p e r lin e , p e r d a y ■ 3 line m inim um . A dd a 1 3 -c h a ra c te r bo ld h e a d lin e fo r th e c o s t o f 2 lin es. Detee vnu wish m i r ad to run: S S . Price par Day : i p C o m m e rc ia l 1 d a y , $ 2 ,6 0 p e r lin e 2 -4 d a y s , $ 1 .9 9 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 5 -9 d a y s , $ 1 .7 6 p e r lin e , p e r d a y 10+ d a y s , $ 1 .6 0 p e r lin e , p e r d a y .............. t a t Days ~ Tefal , ****■-■ "• 1 y ¡ y , / ' js, 1 , » 'ir '-r - h Name on Card .. j 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 066 ‘ f - 1- ? ■— Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Bopks Business Opportunities Computers Free Ldst/Found 088 052 049 1Q1 074 Fundraising Furniture G arage Sales Heattti & Fitness Help Wanted-Child Care 072 Help W anted-Clerical 073 Help W anted-Food Service 070 Help W anted-General 071 030 : 040 102 107 103 135 Help W anted-Sales Homes for Rent Home for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Internet-Related Services 130 Internet URLs 075 Internships 056 Jewelry 076 Job Opportunities 015 , Legal Notices 120 Miscellaneous 0 5 0 . Miscellaneous for Sale 045 Mobile Homes 063 Motorcycles 046 Moving 4 Storage 082 Musk: 090 Personate 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent Services Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 T o w n h o m e s /C o n d o s for Rent 041 T d w n h o m e s /C o n d o s for Sale : 060 Transportation 067 Travel. Tutors 105 Typing/Word Processing 115 Wanted 108 T S tate P ress Wednesday, September 24,1997 ^ ro n e .c c w : SWm 1? - • * '-f #& ;•>. -' •♦* C>^ .v . ” *v*^ % stili s u r f in ' the W eb? (mid) 90's! How Student life is hectic enough. Wouldn’t it be great if you could get the information you need without spending your valuable time surfing the Web? Enter the PointCast* College Network. PointCast broadcasts news and information - personalized to your interests - straight to your computer screen. By replacing uninformative ■ screen savers with breaking news, PointCast takes the work out of staying informed! You get news from, _ _ your campus, career tips and grad school information, plus up-to-theminute world, local and entertainment news from leading sources like CNN, Rolling Stone, E! Online, The New York Times and more. And best of all, it’s absolutely FREE! No download or subscription fees and no hidden costs. So sit back, relax and let PointCast simplify your life. Get PointCast free to d ay atwww.pointcast.com. PointCast College Network G e t It free! www.pointcast.com 0 1997 PointCast Incorporated PointCast is a rtgutarcd trademark and tbs PointCast logo is a trademark of PointCast incorporated. AB other names and tradamafks are properties of their respective owners. It never sleeps. occurrence of rape in our community through education & action Twenty-four hours, seven days a week, it’s wide awake. Student Health, Health Education and Wellness 965-4721 It knows when your checks have It knows a ll about cleared, when your deposits and loan payments were made, and your account. when you need to make your next rent payment. It even knows your history. It could b e in your rn n m ruuill. It could be in your room, on your computer. It could save you time, give you peace of mind, and give y OU control of your Desert Schools’ accounts. Call to atrange presentations on sexual assault and date/acquaintance rape for your group or organization Department of Public Safety 965-3456 C all to arrange presentations about public safety and sexual assault for your group or organization Rape Awareness Prevention and Education Organization 784-0816 Volunteer to promote aw areness of the nature, scope, causes and impact of rape on campus Counseling and Health Advisory Committee Community Action Team 965-3161 [ Volunteer to becom e an advocate for a healthier environ­ m ent at A SU, dealing with sexual assault and other critical health issues It is Desert Schools’ Personal Branch. Using your home computer, you can access your Desert Schools’ accounts at anytime, from anywhere. All for only $1 a month. All ASU students and faculty are eligible to join! Your iw in g i todsrady in sured up to 1100,000 NCUA MHonto C re d i Unton NtodntoRoion A U .8. Oovommont A p u cy Desert Sœoqls p cderal p ré d it |jn io n 4 3 3 -7 0 0 0 NO W -the National Organization of Women Attend the rally today outside the MU from 11:30 -1:00 to support a safe campus environment This ad sponsored by Student Advocacy, Student Health, Counseling & Consultation and University Police Services