ili Üi 1V INSIDI: i \ \ 11 S po rts W o r l d / N a t io n I n d o n e s ia n s c o k w i t h S u n D e v il s B eaver AFTERMATH OF CATASTROPHES .... 12 ... .6 •l$ j 1 OpifiâôÔA.«.-......»..*.*;**Police Report_______ Sports .................. J....13 Comics.................. .. Crossword................. Horoscopes....... esc ape trap P ag e 1 3 P ag e 3 UofA billboard ads w on’t spark ASU to do same B y C hris P assamano S tate P ress With large blue-and-white billboards looming over the Valley along Interstate 10. UofA*&new promotional cam­ paign has crept into ASU’s backyard. But ASU officials said they don’t feel the need to recip­ rocate by touting the University’s prowess in Wildcat coun­ try. They don't even have such an advertising campaign in the Valley. “We don’t have any plans to do this type of PR cam ­ paign," said ASU President Lattie Coor. “We really feel that everybody should be judged on what they do and we get out into the community and- do it. We put a lot o f time in with the community.” Coor said that to his knowledge, ASU has never run any billboards. “ASU West has run placards on the sides of buses,” he said. “But (ASU) Main has not done anything like that.” ASU has its own way of dealing with publicity and promot­ ing the University to the state, said Provost Milton Glick. “We think that it’s important that the state knows who we are,” Glick said. “But we like to do things a little differently.” Some of the different methods the University uses to get the word out are working with the community rather than advertising to it. . “We do worry about how the community thinks about us, so we do things like meet with media representatives on a regular basis,” Glick said. “We have sneaker tours, where people can come and have lunch with students and faculty and learn first­ hand what goes on at ASU. We like to invite people to campus to see we’re improving.” . • ASU officials like to bring prospective students to the campus and let them decide what’s good and what’s bad, Glick added. With the University’s enrollment at its highest in the school’s 112-year history, ASU officials feel that their method of public relations is working. There are no plans to change anything, anytime soon. T urn t o ASU, pag e 2. Rescue w ins student award B y G inger S cott S tate P ress E.B. McGovern/State Press D an a G o o d g e, a p re -n u rs in g s tu d e n t, w o n th e C a rn e g ie H ero A w ard fo r s a v in g a y o u n g g irl w h o w a s b e in g a tta c k e d b y d o g s . \ B y G enoa S ibold -C o h n State P ress More than 70 pounds of plutonium being launched, on a Cold-War-era Titan missile being launched this month does not pose a significant threat if it explodes, ASU professors said. N A SA ’s C assini space probe w ill be launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida on Oct. 15 on a mission to Saturn. The probe uses plutonium-238 as fuel to power its equip­ ment.. Opposition to the probe has emerged because o f the pos­ sibility that the rocket could explode while still in Earth’s atmosphere. If this happened, critics say the radioactive plutonium — considered to be the most deadly substance known could rain from the skies, leading to lung cancer for people all over the globe. When Dana Goodge emerged from her shower on Aug. 16, 1996, she didn’t know the day’s events would lead to an heroic national honor. Goodge, an ASU nursing student, has been h o n o red by the T u cso n Fire Department, and several clubs and school districts since she rescued Selina Stevens, a 9 -y ear-o ld T ucson g irl, from being attacked by two dogs. The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission of Pittsburgh announced on Sept. IM jhat Goodge would be one of 19 people in the United States and Canada to be honored for heroism. She will be receiving a medal along with $3,OCX) within the next month. “It’s weird that people still remember me,” the 34-year-old said of the attention she is still receiving a year after the incident. While showering that fateful morning, Goodge, the mother of two, heard screams from outside her window. Worried her oldest daughter may be in some kind of trouble she threvy on some underclothes and a short robe and ran out the door. “1 saw these two dogs pulling this little girl,” Goodge said. “They were tearing at her like a rag doll.” She b eg an to k ick the d o g s in an attempt to get them off of the little girl, but the dogs kept coming back, more fero­ cious each time. “ W h en I n o tic e d th a t th e d o g s w eren ’t grow ling at m e, I ju m p ed on her,” Goodge said. Goodge was bit on both of her legs while shielding the girl with her own body. Once she had the chance, she grabbed the little girl and ran for the nearest shelter. Peter A. Wehinger, ASU research professor o f physics and astronomy, said the chances are a million to one that the probe would explode. Even if it did, the explosion would occur over.the ocean. H e said th a t ra d io a c tiv e p o w er p la n ts h av e been launched into space before this mission. Twenty-three of the 26 missions were successful, Wehinger Said. “You have to have some other kind of power source,” he said. “In terms o f risks and hazards, there are far more or. Earth that are more hazardous. The hazards from smoking and nicotine are far more damaging than these things are.” Wehinger said the plutonium encased in the cylinder is so structurally sound that if a pow er plant fell info the Pacific Ocean it could escape an explosion. “There’s a great deal of effort that has gone to shield the Both Goodge and Stevens were taken to the hospital for their injuries. Stevens received six hours of surgery. “As I walked into the trauma room, the girl was on the trauma board,” Goodge said. “I looked over at her and she said ‘thank you for saving my life.’” ' Goodge said she still has nightmares about the attack. Randy Ogden, battalion chief for the Tucson Fire D epartm ent, was there the morning of Goodge’s heroic act. “She stepped forward and saved this little girl’s life,” he said. “She’s a committed per­ son who’s willing to take a risk for other people. That’s hard to come by in this day and age. I can’t think of anyone who could better represent the Carnegie Award and what it stands for.” . When Douglas Martin, general manager for a Tucson radio station, heard of Goodge’s story and her desire to .get back in school and become a trauma nurse, he said he wanted to help her dream come true. “She did the right thing when nobody else was looking,” he said. “This is the kind of thing we should promote.” M artin s|tid he contacted newspapers across the nation and spread the word of Goodge’s act. “Strangers were sending me money,” Goodge said. “I was able to move down here (Tempe) with my daughters and get back into school.” Goodge said she hopes to get into the professional nursing program in the fall and graduate by 2000. “I always wanted to be a trauma nurse, but this incident allowed me to know that I could do it,” she said. radioactive plutonium that is used in the power plants. It’s secure in the sense that such power plants withstand the explosion,” he*said. W ehinger said opponents to the p robe’s launch are unaware o f the hazards and success rates of similar mis­ sions. The Galileo mission to Jupiter had the same hard­ w are and com parable pow er size to the C assini probe, Wehinger said. Christoph Hanterman, a political scientist with the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation in Santa Barbara, California, said that NASA’s risk evaluations are too low, considering three of the 26 missions launched were unsuccessful. Hanterman said NASA has underestimated howmany peo­ ple could become stricken with fatal lung cancer in a mishap. T urn to C assini probe, page 2. S tate P ress Monday, September 29, 1997 Page 2 ASU T oday C ontinued Campus e la te and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f the M atthew s C enter. Requests will not be taken over the phone o r via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of fee club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and darity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-co m e, first-se rv e d b a sis and are printed as space permits. • Counselor Training Center— Counseling for ASU students, friends and family is pro­ vided by graduate students in Payne Hall, room 402. For more information or to set up an appointment, call 965-5067. • M U AB Special Events Committee — L u n c h tim e b a n d s p e c ia l fe a tu rin g Cousins o f the W ise will be held 11:30 a.m. in the MU Programming Lounge. • E n g in e e r in g C o lle g e C o u n c il — E A S C C S em in ar N o. 4. D r. V in cen t P iz z ic o n i w i l l 't a l k a b o u t em e rg in g biotechnologies for the 21st century 4:30 p.m. in PSH 151. • ACMES — Lecture by guest speaker Valentin Grobner will be held 3 p.m. in ART 246. • C oalition for Justice and Peace Weekly meeting will be held 12 p.m. in the Yavapai Room of the MU. • C ircle K Internationa) G eneral meeting to discuss upcoming service pro­ jects and events will be held 4:30 p.m. in the Gila Room o f the MU. • L iberal A rts and Sciences C ollege Council —• General meeting will be held 5 p.m. in the Hopi Room o f the MU. • ASU Phttosophjr C M »— Meeting wtH be held 1 p.m. in the Gila Room of the MU. • G olden K ey N ation al H onor Society — General meeting 3:30 p.m. in McClintock Hall study lounge. • MUAB G allery C o m m ittee— M ee tin g w ill be h e ld 1:40 p .m . in Conference Room 1A of the MU. •' ASASU C ounseling and H ealth Advisory Committee — Meeting will be held 7 p jn . in the ASASU officesm Ihe MU. » Sun Devil Triathlon team — Meeting 8 p.m . in the SRC classroom . Anyone interested is welcome to attend. For more information, call 610-8289. • Japanese Student O rganization — General meeting will be held 5 p.m. in th e C o p p e r R oom o f th e M U . Refreshments will be. served. • Arizona M ills — New mall will host a jo b fair today from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the MU. • S tu d e n t H ea lth C en ter/M en ta l Health Dept. — Students wanting sup­ port to stay drug and alcohol-free are w e lc o m e t o j o i n a w e e k ly g ro u p W ed n esd ay s from 1:15 to 2:45 p.m . For more inform ation, to join, o r for an appointm ent, call 965-4726. Are you prean avid ER vj interested in from page The UofA, which has had below-average enrollm ent, w ill continue to run a large a d v e rtisin g c am p aig n , said U ofA spokeswoman Sharon Kha. “Expect to start seeing newspaper ads along with the billboards,” Kha said. Kha added UofA has always run billboards, but they have always been designed around the sports and fine arts programs. Now they are promoting academics, she said. W hether this prom otional blitz was a reaction to ASU’s growing popularity and ability to attract the state’s best students is something that neither Glick nor Coor want­ ed to speculate on. “I don’t know all the reasons for their new cam paign,” Glick said. “But I think that competition is good for everybody.” ' C a s s in i p r o b e C ontinued from page 1. He said the p lu to n iu m p o w er pack could be replaced by solar panels to oper­ ate the instruments. “If Cassini would be redesigned right now, it could use solar panels,” Hanterman said. “In past missions, NASA didn’t want to wait to use solar panels.” Ronald Greeley, ASU regents professor o f geology, said solar panels do not have the capacity to power the probe’s instru­ m ents because o f the lack o f sunlight at Saturn’s distance. “ This is a mission that is going to Saturn and it can’t work (with solar panels),” he said. “There isn’t enough energy to power the instruments.” Hanterman said although the scientific community claims an explosion is unlikely, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and ally­ ing organizations are concerned about the dangers of the carcinogenic plutonium. “It is a bit of a controversial issue, but n o t w ith in th e sc ie n tific c o m m u n ity ,” Hanterman said. The Nuclear Peace Foundation is run­ n in g a le tte r - w r itin g c a m p a ig n to President Clinton urging NASA to launch the probe at a later date and with differ­ ent equipm ent on board. “Rockets do explode, but even if there were explosions these hazards would not exist,” Greeley said. Come work for us! The State Press is seeking an additional general assignment reporter for the Fall 1997' semester. This is a great experience for anyone interested in pursuing a career in journalism. Applicant should be a competent writer familiar with Associated Press style and able to find good stray ideas without a lot of prodding. Experience is preferred, but not required. Applications can be picked up and turned in at the State Press office, located in the base­ ment of Matthew’s Center. Don’t forget to include clips of any stories you’ve written. Deadline: Sept. 30,199? CO O m CO The Counseling and Health Advisory Coi o f your student government (ASASU), is students to be a part o f its Community Action Team. 1. fiTFlY Ti lots to Do in the HU Check these out! o> COUSINS OF THE WISE MU Programming Lounge W e: work towards finding solutions to health-related problems around the FILM * Gain great knowledge o f the health field * M eet positive and enthusiastic people o OPINIONS FORUM DPS: Campus Safety Issues * H elp solve problem s * Get involved in your student government Come to our meeting tonight 7:00 pm 3rd floor MU ASASU C o a m c lliig i Heaitk C o m m ittee Questions? Call Patricia @ 965-3161 ^ Of em ail ppozo95@ im ap2.asu.edu Cellist Andrew Hamby MU Gallery COME- * D evelop leadership skills A d v is o ry CULTURE S ARTS ■ o c o m m u n ity . You: FORUM CO I wm m m o CD WEDNESDAY 7 PM POETRY READING with piano music and refreshments provided â GALLERY 'en SPECIAL EVENTS M e m o r ia l U n io n A c t iv it ie s B o a r d in t h e M e m o r ia l U n io n 3 r d F lo o r ________W STATE P ress o r ld ____________________ _________ ___________ B y Steven K. P aulson A ssociated P ress DENVER — The trial of Terry Nichols gets underway today with the search for jurors unaffected by the tears and testimony of the first Oklahoma City bombing trial, which ended with his co-defendant sentenced to death. Defense attorney Michael Tigar was turned down when he argued it was no longer possible to find an impartial jury in Colorado. U S. District Judge Richard Matsch said it would be dif­ ficult to find anyone, anywhere who hadn’t heard details about the bombing case. D espite the difficu lty o f finding an im partial ju ry , defense attorney Scott Robinson said many people still don’t know his client. “In reality, N ichols’ role in the bom bing is largely unknown to the great unwashed public,” Robinson said. And prosecutors have been able to keep the most damag­ /N a t io n ________ Monday, September 29, 1997 ing information about Nichols — his own 9 1/2-hour state­ ment after he turned himself in to police — mostly secret. Time magazine says in its Oct. 6 issue that it obtained an official summary of that interrogation, and that some o f his statements were “apparently false and contradictory.” Attorneys and M atsch w ill select the panel o f jurors from a pool o f 500 prospects. The process is expected to last two weeks to a month, officials said. The prospective jurors already have filled out a lengthy questionnaire; their responses are sealed. Nichols was indicted two years ago on charges of conspir­ acy, use of a weapon of mass destruction, bombing federal property and murdering eight federal law enforcement offi­ cers in the line of duty, all punishable by the death penalty. Timothy McVeigh was convicted of the same charges. Nichols’ attorneys say he didn’t know about the bomb­ ing ahead of time and cooperated with investigators after he turned himself in. And they say he was home at Herington, ______________ Kan., when the bomb went off at the Alfred P. M urrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995, killing 168 people and injuring more than 500 others. The explosion occurred on the second anniversary o f the government’s deadly siege at the Branch Davidian com ­ pound in W aco, Texas, in which about 80 people died. Prosecutors have said McVeigh and Nichols planned the bombing to avenge those deaths. According to Time, Nichols said M cVeigh was much more “hyped” about Waco than he was. Prosecutors say Nichols played a key role, acquiring ammonium nitrate fertilizer and other bomb components, robbing a firearms dealer to finance the purchase of a rac­ ing fuel and the getaway car, and helping McVeigh steal explosives from a quarry. They also say Nichols helped McVeigh stash the get­ away car in Oklahoma City three days before the blast. Sem blance o f norm ality returning after Italy quake B y V a n ia G r a n d i A sso c ia ted P ress Domanico StkwUis/AP Photo V o lu n te e rs M a rc h fo r p ie c e s o f fre s c o e s a m id th e d e b ris fro m th e c o lla p s e d v a u lt o f th e S t F ran cis B a s ilic a o f A s s is i, b a ckg ro u n d , S a tu rd ay. T h e v a u lt, p a in te d b y G io tto a n d C lm ab u e, co l­ lap sed e a rly F rid a y w h en a m a jo r ea rth q u a k e s tru c k c e n tra l Ita ly . T h e s c a ffo ld in g s o n th e B a s ilic a fa c a d e «»ere in s ta lle d b e fo re th e q u a k e a s p a rt o f a n o n g o in g re s to ra tio n e ffo rt. ASSISI, Italy — A few tourist buses pulled in. The people who live here, their c h u rc h e s d a m a g e d , w e n t to o u td o o r M a sse s. A nd th e F ra n c is c a n o rd e r ordained a new brother. Three days after a pair of earthquakes jo lted central Italy, Sunday brought the first signs of people struggling to return to normal life. Thousands in the U m bria and Marche regions had to spend a second night out of their homes, many in tents and campers. D isa ste r re lie f o ffic ia ls said 5;000 p eo p le w ere h o m e le ss, and sp ace fo r m o re th a n tw ic e th a t w as p ro v id e d because many houses suffered some kind of damage. A handful o f hill towns was alm ost com pletely razed by the quakes, which killed 10 people. The governm ent raised $465 m illion in aid for the affected areas. “Even though in this moment my soul is divided betw een jo y and suffering, I in v ite all o f you to rejo ice in life and have h o p e ,” B ish o p S erg io G o re tti o f A ssisi told 200 people in a parking lot full o f tents. Goretti ordained a young Filipino brother. In F abriano, 25 m iles aw ay, B ishop L u ig i S c u p p a to ld w o rs h ip e rs in th e tow n’s public gardens: “We are alive and for this we thank the Lord.” One o f the w orst hit churches was die B asilica o f St. Francis o f A ssisi, where plunging sections o f ceiling killed four peo­ ple during the second o f two quakes Friday. T h e v ic tim s , a F ra n c is c a n f r ia r , a novice o f the order and two technicians, w ere in a group in sp ectin g dam age to frescoes from the earlier jo lt when they were killed. The second jo lt com pletely destroyed frescoes by early master Cimabue and fol­ lowers of the Italian master Giotto. A cycle depicting the life of St. Francis, attributed by many to Giotto, suffered cracks, and a 3foot fissure opened in the bell tower. The family o f one o f the technicians, Bruno B runacci, 40. was angry that he was called to inspect the basilica when it had been closed to the public, and was considering legal action. “If they didn’t let tourists enter, why the tech n ician s? W hy w ith o u t p re c a u ­ tions and w ithout first verifying safety conditions?” Brunacci’s sister Antonella w as quoted by the La Stam pa daily o f Turin as saying. B ru n acci and the o th e r te c h n ic ia n , C la u d io B u g ia n te lla , 4 5 , w ere b u ried Sunday in Assisi. A few tourists braved the continuing m inor aftershocks. “W e knew about the earthquake, but we decided to come anyway,” said Tony A n n in g , 67, a re tire d p ro fe s s o r fro m Bristol, England, who traveled here with a group o f 46 others. “Assisi was to be the highlight o f our trip. W e would have loved to do the basili­ ca, but it will have to be on our next v isit” Some souvenir stores, bars and hotels reopened their doors Sunday. M ost ow n­ ers reported only m inor dam age to their b u ild in g s, saying they clo sed a day or tw o o u t o f fe a r o f o th e r trem ors m ore than anything else. Mass funeral set for unidentified in Indonesia’s worst airplane crash B y A li Kotarumalos A ssociated P ress in a string o f d isasters to h it the country in recent days. M ED A N , In d o n esia — H eartbroken r e la tiv e s ro a m e d a m o n g c o f f in s an d cloaked body parts in a ju n g le m orgue Sunday, trying to find loved ones killed in I n d o n e s ia ’s w o rst a ir c ra sh b e fo re unidentified victims are buried in graves with no names. N early 50 b odies, m u tilated beyond recognition, were readied for a mass funeral Monday.jn a cemetery that already memorializés plane crash victims. Authorities said 187 victims had been identified. AH 234 people aboard, including four Am ericans, were killed when the Garuda Airlines Airbus A3000B-4 slammed into the jungle near haze-shrouded M edan airport Friday afternoon. The crash was one All bodies had been recovered from the ju n g le undergrow th and m ud, M aj. G en. R izal N urdin told the A ssociated Press latç Sunday. He said soldiers contin u e d s e a rc h in g fo r th e f lig h t d a ta recorders, which could explain why the plane went down during its approach to the Sumatra island airport, Visibility-reducing smog caused by hundreds o f forest and brush fires on Indonesia is one of the possible causes being investigated, although an airport official said the plane had been on instrument approach for the main runway. The fires were purposely set to clear land and timber, but have since ra£edriut o f control. W e a rin g s u rg ic a l m asks to s h ie ld th e m s e lv e s fro m th e s te n c h , In d o n e s ia n re s c u e w o rk e rs c a rry a c o ffin c o n ta in in g th e b o d y o f a n a ir c ra s h v ic tim a t a h o s p ita l in M e d an , n o rth e rn S u m a tra , S u n d ay- R e la tiv e s o f v ic tim s o f F rid a y ’s G a ru d a a irb u s c ra s h , w h ic h In v e s tig a to rs a re try in g to d e te rm in e w a s c a u s e d b y th e th ic k h a z e , w e re a b le to fly to M e d an to Id e n tify th e b o d ie s o f th e ir lo v e d o n e s w h en th e a irp o rt o p e n e d to d a y . T w o h u n d re d a n d th irty fo u r p e o p le w e re k ille d In th e c ra s h . ■ O Page 4 B " Su r P ie & ~ - - p in io n Monday, September 29, 1997 STATE PRESS > " oitonal Mission risk sky-higji It’s a doom sday scenario w ith strong Hollywood overtones. A N A SA space mission goes awry, spreading a poi­ sonous substance throughout the earth’s atmosphere. Five billion people are affected, with upwards o f 40 million dying outright from (he exposure. I - C ritic s o f th e C a ssin i. N A SA 's la te st S aturn probe — scheduled to launch Oct. 15 — say this scenario is not science fiction. T hey’re right. T he risk factor on this mission is unbelievably high. For fuel, the probe carries more than 70 pounds o f one o f the w orld’s m ost toxic substances, pluto­ nium -238. A launch-pad explosion could send a cloud o f radioactive gas floating over parts o f Florida. An explosion over Africa could send glowing particles raining down over that continent. But that’s not all. The worst-case scenario, and, not surprisingly, the one critics want us to focus on, is the one where 5 bil­ lion people are supposedly effected. T hough the C assini is going to the outer solar system , it will first sw ing in tow ard Venus for a . gravity-assisted boost, then shoot straight toward Earth for another gravity boost before heading out to the Ringed Planet. That’s right— once it leaves our atmosphere, we’re not done with it. h ’s coming back in August 1999 for a second try at dousing the planet with plutonium. A fter zoom ing from Venus, it will com e within a few hundred m iles o f Earth. In space, a few hun­ dred m iles is nothing. If it com es too close, it will bum up. In that sce­ nario, nearly everyone on Earth w ill inhale a tiny dose o f plutonium , critics charge. NA SA has launched dozens o f nuclear reactors through th e atm osphere, but th e y ’ve never tried anything like this. They say the chances o f som e­ thing going wrong on the flyby are small, and few if any, people would die if Cassini accidently reen­ ters Earth’s atmosphere. L et’s hope they’re right. C ertain ly , so m e risk s a re ac c e p tab le w hen it com es to space exploration, because the knowledge gathered greatly enriches the hum an race in practi­ cal as w ell a s spiritual term s. One good example is die Galileo spacecraft, which lifted o ff for Jupiter in October 1989 with a load o f plutonium in its reactors. Inform ation recorded by the G alileo w ill help answ er som e o f those Big Q uestions: W hat is the solar system ? W hat is a planet, and why do they look like they do? Is there life beyond Earth? W hen and if Cassini gets to Saturn, it too will d isco v er things no o n e ev er tho u g h t of, and the know ledge it returns wiH be priceless. B u t is th a t k n o w le d g e w o rth h u m an liv e s ? NASA scientists say it is. but they are risking other people’s lives, s o t their own. Odds are nothing bad will happen — this time. But clearly, the time has come to rethink sending nuclear material through our atmosphere N A SA should n ev er try anything this risky to innoceBt people again. s STATE PRESS TAFF Use ASASU, student voice wisely G et a grip, A SU . P ick your E. battles w isely and you w o n ’t HARDEE be m ade a fool. T u esday’s paper trum peted Columnist A S A S U ’s triu m p h in g ettin g th e h o u rs o f o p e ra tio n e x te n d e d a t th e C o m p u tin g C om m ons. Jo sh C arr, A S A S U e x ecu tiv e Vice p re si­ dent, com m ented th at the m ove to ex ten d hours w as an “e x cellen t ex am p le” o f th e p o w e r o f th e stu d en t voice. B u t w hat kind o f success can there be in listen ­ ing to a voice th at’s hollow ? W hy listen to the com ­ plaints o f students w ho never u sed the com puters in the C om m ons during those hours in the first place? I s h o u ld k n o w ; I w o r k e d th e la te s h if t in th e C om m ons fo r the last tw o sem esters. P art o f m y jo b w as tallying up the n u m ber o f stu­ d e n ts u sin g th e c o m p u te rs o r w a itin g in lin e e a c h hour. A n d d o you know how m any people w ere in the sites betw een 3 a.m . and 7 a.m . o n average? O ffhand, I ’d say ab o u t 30. N o, n o t ev en that, because at least h a lf o f th o se 30 w ere eith er asleep at th eir desks, surf­ ing p o m o r chatting on IR C . T h e students w ho w ere a c tu ally u sin g th e site fo r ac a d e m ic p u rp o se s w ere either those w ho w aited until the very last m in u te to fin is h th e ir a ssig n m e n ts (a n d th e n e x p e c te d m e to explain to th em w h at a com puter w as), o r they w ere those brave souls w ho needed th e M acs fo r the long hours th at rendering takes. W hy should one p art o f A SU have to scram ble fo r funds and em ployees fo r stu d en ts they know d o n ’t use th e co m p u ters w isely now , a n d c e rta in ly w o n ’t use them in the dark o f night? S tu d en ts sh o u ld b e p e rsu a d in g A S A S U to ap p ly th eir voice and increase hours at tim es students really n eed th e m an d w ill re a lly u se th em . C a se in point: W h y h a s n ’t a n y o n e th o u g h t o f S a tu rd a y ? O n ly the C o m m o n s is o p en th a t day. W o u ld n ’t it be easier— an d m o re a c c e ssib le to stu d en ts — fo r In fo rm atio n T echnology to g et the o th er com puting sites open on S aturday? C learly m ore students w ill use a resource w h e n th e y ’re a w a k e ra th e r th a n w h en fig h tin g o ff sle e p on an all-night cram session. Josh C arr and the rest o f A SA SU have a good idea in p ro p o sin g 2 4 -h o u r o p e ra tio n d u rin g fin a ls w eek. T h a t, a t le a s t, is a tim e w h e n The s ite s d o se e an increase in activity. B u t still, 24 hours o f service is riot a solution fo r a student population that fran k ly d o e sn ’t ta k e th e tim e to le a rn a b o u t th e ir re so u rc e s o r u se them effectively. T here are fiv e open-access com puting sites on cam ­ p u s (plus tw o th at d o uble as classroom s). F iv e sites w ith hours b etter titan those o f H ayden Library. M ost, if not all o f these sites, w ere overhauled o v er the sum ­ m er. T h e y w e re e q u ip p e d w ith m o re c o m p u te r s , in c re a se d m em o ry a n d th e la te st so ftw a re , a ll o n a budget, it m ust be rem em bered, that is n ev er fulfilled w hen th e state doles o u t m oney fo r universities. O ne site, B A C 16, w as com pletely rem odeled to increase student capacity and com fort. Yet h o w m any students actually know w here these o th e r sites are? H ow m any think o f u sing th ese sites during non-peak hours (som ething p o sted at each site) in stead o f w aiting in line? H ow m any actually tak e the tim e to learn w h at program s are available, and ho w to use them , before th eir assignm ents are due? Very few. So, to m e, the issue is n o t hours as m uch as prep a­ ratio n . S tudents need to take a greater responsibility fo r them selves an d . th eir education. I f A S A S U w ants to b e effective, it should n o t only listen to student con­ cerns, b u t analyze th e situation and use a little co m ­ m on sense w hile applying political pressure, I s e r i o u s l y d o u b t th a t w h e n th e C o m p u tin g C om m ons is once again open 24 hours it w ill see a significant increase in usage from 3 a.m . to 7 a.m . B ut i f you w an t to prove m e w rong, go right ahead. I ’ll be happily asleep. J.E . H ardee is a g ra d u a te stu d e n t in h u m a n ities a n d ca n b e rea ch ed a t j.e.h a rd ee@ a su .ed u . RAY STERN, Editor PERCY EDNALINO JR., Managing Editor CARYL SUE M I C A L I Z I O . . . . . E d i t o r JENNIFER NETHERBY......... CADONNA PEYTON........... .. MATT MORGAN........ JODIBAFUNDO.................... PAT SHANNAHAN....... RANDY JO N E S.... .. . ED ODEVEN.......... ........ DEANNA D ARR......................... R EPO R TER S: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Stacy Mann, Chris Passamano, Ginger Scott, Kara Shire, Genoa SiboldCohn, Tara Teichgraeber. . SPO R TS REPORTERS:- Josh DeFamio, Lori Haro, Scott Lewis, Matt Paulson. COPY ED ITO RS: Christi Foist, Lorie Roberts. PH O T O G R A PH E R S: Paul Besing, Jeremy Hein, Brad Lang, E.B. McGovern. COLUMNISTS: Brian Ary, Scott Bennett, Ross Eide, Aislinn Fahy, J.E. Hardee, Brian Policoff, Marie Pollock, George D. Rose Si., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steve Stein, Matthias Walterscheidt, Angela Yeager. C A R T O O N IST S : Todd Brenneman, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge PRODUCTION: Jeff Chua, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischRisley, Alyson Hurt, John Kestner, Eric Paulson, Weridy Luney, Sara Pike, Hub Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, David Goodwin, Jonathan Negretti, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh, Robyn Wilson. C L A S S IF IE D S : K ate D esio, L isa P arhiala, Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. ^ Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: RAY STERN PERCY EDNALINO JR. MATT MORGAN JODIBAFUNDO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State P rêts is published Monday through Friday during die aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do : not answer questions of a general nature. H ie State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on th e ASU campus, The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o ne N um bers Information...............965-7572 Newsroom ................ 965-2292 M agazine................ .965-1695 Advertising........... .. .965-6555 C lassifieds................. 965-6735 h t tp : //n e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u O S tate P ress p in io n Page 5 Monday, September 2 9,1997 Proposal to drain Lake Powell should be seriously considered To all o f m y EORGE D . frie n d s and ROSE, SR. a ss o c ia te s w h o a re c o n s e rv a ­ Columnist tiv e , I w ill b e c o n sid e re d a lib e ra l lu n atic fo r w h at I am a b o u t to say. S o m e o f th e se sam e p e o p le w ill a c c u se m e o f b e in g so m e k in d o f tre e-h u g g in g h ip p ie, b u t th a t’s life . A ll o f th is a n g u is h b e c a u s e th e S ierra C lu b sugg ested L ak e P o w ell be d r a in e d . M y f e e lin g is , m a y b e th e y should drain it. O ops. T h e S i e r r a C l u b ’s p r o p o s a l h a s stirred u p public reactio n s I’m sure w ill polarize public opinion fo r m any years to c o m e a s th e d e b a te u n fo ld s. T h e re are a n u m b er o f com pelling argum ents on b o th sid es o f th e issu e ; so m e e c o ­ nom ic, som e ecological. A c lic h d d id e o lo g y f r o m s e v e r a l d e c a d e s ag o (a n d I su sp e c t fo r m u ch lo n g e r) w as: g et a ll y o u c a n , c a n all y o u g et, sit o n th e lid a n d p o iso n th e re s t. It w a s a fa ir ly s e lfis h p h ilo s o ­ p h y , o n e r e f le c te d to o o f te n in o u r so c ie ty a n d b u sin e ss c o n c e rn s. W h ile m a n y o f to d a y ’s b u s in e s s e s a re lo o k ­ in g t o b e m o r e e n v i r o n m e n t a l l y f r ie n d ly , m a n y m o re a re n o t. T h e ir G Q: c o n c e p t is p r o f i t a t a n y c o s t. T h e b u s in e sse s a t L ak e P o w ell (in c lu d in g re a l-e s ta te d e v e lo p e rs ) h a v e g o t th e irs. S o w h y c h a n g e th in g s? W h e n th e G le n C a n y o n D a m w as firs t c o n c e iv e d , it w as p a rt o f a g ran d p la n to w a te r th e d e se rt an d m ak e it a v e r i t a b l e G a r d e n o f E d e n . P e o p le c o u ld r a is e c ro p s f o r a g ro w in g n a t io n a n d l i v e l ik e n e v e r b e f o r e . T h e y w o u ld h e lp c re a te a d e se rt so c i­ ety, flu sh w ith w a te r o f u n p re c e d e n t­ e d s iz e a n d s c o p e . T h e ir in te n tio n s w e re g o o d , b u t th e y d id n o t re a liz e th e lo n g -term im p a c t o f th e ir a c tio n s. Today the C olorado R iver no longer reaches the ocean. It filters into a large expanse o f sand that blocks the flow o f n u trie n ts to th e sea. M arin e n u rse rie s are declining under the pressures o f sus­ tain ed fishing and lack o f nutrient-rich sedim ents th at prev io u sly w ere carried b y th e C o lo ra d o , It m a rk s o n e o f th e m o re im m e d ia te e ffe c ts o f to o m a n y dam s on this river. B u t th ere’s m ore. T h e C o lo r a d o ’s tr ib u ta r y s y s te m h a s a f a ir ly h ig h s a lt c o n te n t. T h is w a te r is u se d to irrig a te . T h e re sid u a l s a lts a re p o is o n in g th e so il. In so m e a re a s , w e c a n n o lo n g e r g ro w c ro p s uotaSCes. . . “This is a case where we fe lt being responsive to the students was really a priority. ” — A S U P rovost M ilto n G lick, referring to a U niversity decision to keep the C om puting C om m ons open 24 hours Police’s swift action protects all This letter is in response to the column titled, “We deserve equal protection under law,” in the Sept, 23 edition o f the Stare P ress. J.E . H ard ee's article grabbed my attention when he questioned the overall worth or value of certain citizens in compari­ son to others. Does he not realize that when a trained police officer puts on his badge in die morning his life should be valued more than ah everyday civilian? Police officers risk their lives every day o f the week, in every city, to protect (he citizens o f this country. Police officers should be respected and admired for the heroic work that they perform to keep us safe. The example used in the article, in regards to the swiftness of police action for fellow officers in compari­ son to everyday citizens is absurd. O f course more police officers are going to respond to an officer in need faster than a routine civil­ ian situation. The reasons behind this fact are clear. W hen a situation arises where a police officer needs assistance, the logical response would be to send out a team o f officers con­ sisting o f multiple units. It’s a question o f battle tactics, and not one suggesting that law enforcement officials are partial to pro­ tecting “their homies.” A police officer’s job is to enforce the law — to protect and serve the people. If we, as a society, devalue the practices o f our public defenders as a result o f opinions rather than facts, then we have stripped the authority and trust that these officers require to do their jobs successfully. This would leave the responsibility of community and citizen pro­ tection to w hom (sic)? Obviously, society itself would be left with this responsibility. Imagine the consequences o f this frightening thought. The only words to describe this the­ o retical w orld w ould be “an archy” and “chaos.” In the end, our discontent with these protection organizations m ay harm society more than any criminal could possi­ bly attempt to achieve. Let me just remind you that the only bar­ rier we, as a society, have between law-abid­ ing and law-breaking citizens is the same people H ardee apparently has a problem with. Regardless o f your personal opinion, we rely on die police department on a daily basis to keep our rights secure and protected equally under the law. Jason Lay Sophom ore Ju stice Studies Political cartoon in poor taste I sea a re g u la r re a d e r o f th e S ta te P ress, a n d I m ust say that I w as a bit d isap p o in ted in M o n d ay ’s (Sept. 2 2 ) p o litical cartoon. T he recent incidents invo lv in g sexual assau lt o n d ie A S U cam p u s are a tragedy an d in n o w ay shcadd b e p o k e d fu s at. A lthough ■ he 4a the least to say that the I waa in poor taste. I have always nHInrtii w ere supposed to be b in a r -a ous, they are meant to bring light to a situation. Is it possible to find a single thing remotely hum orous about the raping o f tw o A S U students? I think n o t There simply is n o need for su c h a poor attem pt a t humor. T here m ust be m il­ lions o f otiier events happening in the worid today that could h e o f m ore interb e so em el? W b a tifitfl d u e to th e in c r e a s e d s a lin ity o f th e so il. T h is is a p ro b le m th a t w ill o n ly in c re a se w ith tim e. O ne o f th e S ierra C lu b ’s ch arg es is th a t L ak e P o w e ll lo se s 7 5 0 ,0 0 0 acrefeet o f w ater to evaporation. (A n acrefo o t is th e am o u n t o f w a te r n eed ed to c o v e r an acre to a d ep th o f o n e foot). A n o th e r is th a t it lo s e s to o m u c h to absorption into th e sandstone structures th at fo rm its b asin . I sp o k e w ith Ju lie S tro m b erg , P h.D ., an e x p e rt o n riv ers and riparian zones, about this. I to ld h e r I th o u g h t re c h a rg in g th e a q u if e r w a s s u p p o s e d to b e a g o o d thing. She said the w ater is in the w rong place fo r its best use. O nce the dam is back-filled w ith Silt, there w ould not be econom ically feasible m eans to ex tract a n d tra n s p o rt th e w ater. S o m u c h fo r that argum ent. She said the natural flow o f the river w o u ld c r e a te n ic h e e c o s y s te m s a n d h a b ita ts co n d u c iv e fo r se v e ra l e n d a n ­ g e re d s p e c ie s , I w o n d e re d a b o u t th e bald eagles th at now freq u en t P o w ell’s s h o re s . W h a t h a p p e n s to th e m ? T h e issu e su rro u n d in g th e se m in o r sp ecies d o e s n ’t b o t h e r me. a s m u c h a s th e decrease in m arine fisheries upon w hich so m an y p eo p le are d ep en d en t. W e’re talking ab o u t m illio n s o f people being im p a c te d — n o t j u s t P a g e , A r i z . ’s 8,000-plus residents. N ow th at w e are finally realizing the lo n g - te r m e f f e c ts o f o u r s y s te m o f dam s, w e need to really decide w hether o r n o t o u r short-term interests are w orth it. T he reality is th at w ith o v er fo u r m il­ lion visitors annually investing m illions o f d o lla rs in to P a g e ’s lo c a l eco n o m y , it’s n o t going to happen. T h e is s u e s a re c o m p le x a n d w ill re q u ire a g re a t d e a l o f a tte n tio n . T h o u g h to so m e p e o p le it m ay seem r id ic u lo u s , th e p r o p o s a l w ill c re a te v a lu a b le d ia lo g u e . I f n o th in g e lse , it w ill c a u s e u s to lo o k f u r t h e r in to a lte rn a tiv e s th a t w ill a llo w us to e x ist o n th is p la n e t in a s u s ta in a b le m a n ­ ner. W e c a n lo o k fo r lo n g -te rm s o lu ­ tio n s th a t w ill b e n e fit u s an d c o m in g g e n e r a tio n s . D e s p ite th is d ia lo g u e a n d a w a r e n e s s , so m e w ill s till say , “P ro fits a t any c o s t.” I say, “You tell that to yo u r children.” G eorge D . R o se Sr. is a se n io r stu d yin g p u b lic rela tio n s a n d ca n be rea ch ed a t w ritest907@ aol. com . Late-night wait still long despite extended hours at Commons A fter reading the headline in today’s S ta te P re ss, I w en t to th e C o m p u tin g C om m ons w ith a rek in d led faith in the system: T he return to 24-hour access will be a blessing to m e and m any others who use the Com m ons at all hours o f the night (when the access is easy, the parking even easier). B ut wait, the “PC” line is longer than ever! It seems the network is “over­ loaded” from too m any users trying to log on! Funny, it w asn’t even a m onth ago that a C C em ployee told- m e the cutbacks in a v a ila b ility w e re d u e to “ in s u ffic ie n t demand” for 24-hour computing. Next, the story w as lack o f funds due to the increase in the federal m inim um w age. L et’s see, two em ployees for four hours (3 a m . to 7 a m .) daily times a 30-cent increase in the m inim um w age equals: $2.40 per day! It seems like a state with a surplus in excess o f $100 m illion should b e able to scrape up that kind o f change. A nd now the net­ w ork is failing due to “excess dem and.” The worst thing about this whole m ess is th e e v il g le a m in th e e y e s o f th e C C e m p lo y e e s as th e y e x a c t th e ty p e o f revenge d ream ed o f by so m any m in i­ m um -w age em ployees by shutting dow n computers desperately needed by students. A nd still the line grow s longer... N athan T. H oward Senior Psychology e-mail the editor juz1 mo@imap1 .asu.edu I üH WÊIIÊÊ.IUI mmm® «£.âK'V.' § | Rape not subject o f comedy This statement is in response to the car­ toon that appeared in the ASU State Press on S ep t. 22. A s re p re se n ta tiv e s o f th e Associated Students o f ASU Counseling and H ealth A d v iso ry C o m m ittee (A S A S U CHAC), we are appalled and repulsed by the recent cartoon depicting “learning the three R ’s ... reading, writing ... and rape.” For all the readers who missed this edition, the car­ toon is blatantly implying that learning rape (as a victim) is chi our academic curriculum! As a student body advocacy team that is highly concerned about the health, safety and total well-being o f our fellow students, we cannot believe that something so crude was actually published in “our” school newspaper! What is the purpose o f the ASU State Press'! We think it should be to inform a id enlighten the ASU student body, not to degrade its read­ ers arti insuh their intelligence. Were the cartoonist and editors not aware o f the depth and impact that the two recent rapes m our community had oirtite specific individuals and population in general? It seems to us that the cartoonist has a warped sense o f humor and the State Press is even worse off to engage in such a display of irre­ sponsibility as to disregard the commitment that it assumingly has as the voice o f ASU! T h is c a rto o n m in im iz e s th e se re c e n t tragedies and seems to completely overlook their serious impact on our community. In light o f what has recently occurred and the affect it has had on the ASU community as a whole, this cartoon was outright taste­ less, Did the State Press think that any per­ son who has ever been raped, not to mention tiie tw o wom en attacked recently, would appreciate this cartoon? We recommend that the State P ress use b e tte r ju d g m e n t in th e f u tu re w h en addressing such serious issues. ASASU-CHAC Community Action Team Lisa Karczewski, director “ Yolanda M ancha . Lisa-Diane Joseph State Press Monday, September 2 9,1997 P age 6 A B O R O K s facu lty raises B y T ara T eichg raeber State P ress The A rizona Board o f Regents reluc­ tantly approved a plan to raise some fac­ ulty salaries as much as five percent. Regents and university adm inistrators w ere u n h a p p y w ith g u id e lin e s se t by state legislators that allowed only faculty who teach a minimum o f six hours in the classroom to qualify for the pay raise. “The plan was a com prom ise between where the universities w ould've been and w h e re th e J o in t L e g is la tiv e B u d g e t C o m m ittee w o u ld ’ve b e e n ,” said ASU Provost Milton Glick, who helped devel­ op the teaching incentive plan (TIP) with other state university provosts. G lick said he would have liked a plan that included rew ard for hours taught in and out o f the classroom and quality o f work. T he JLBC submitted a statem ent, read at T h u rsd ay ’s ABOR m eeting, w arning reg en ts they d isapproved o f rew arding f a c u lty a c tiv itie s o u ts id e c la s s ro o m teaching. “To say th at the rew ard a p ro fesso r deserves should only depend on the-num­ ber o f hours in the classroom to me says that fundam ental research is not a core p a rt o f te a c h in g ,” sa id L isa G rah am K eegan, state su p erin ten d en t o f public schools and ex-officio ABOR member. University officials and regents agreed scholarly research is a faculty activity d e s e rv in g as m u ch re c o g n itio n an d reward as classroom teaching. G lick said u n iv e rsity fu n d s Will be re a llo c a te d to rew ard facu lty w ho are highly m eritorious but did not m eet pay raise qualifications set by state legisla­ tors. However, their raise likely will not be as large, he said. “A lthough no one is happy w ith the result, we think this is a result we can live w ith,” G lick told the board. “It rec­ ognizes the legitim ate d irectio n o f the le g is la tu r e ,..b u t a lso re c o g n iz e s o u r responsibility to rew ard m erit within the assigned responsibilities.” R e g e n t K u rt D av is c a lle d th e p lan “ p o o r p u b lic p o lic y ,” b u t s u g g e s te d regents approve it anyway because it was consistent with legislators guidelines. University adm inistrators agreed. “W e’re still pleased that the legisla­ ture gave us salary m oney,” G lick said “This is the third year in a row that facul­ ty r e c e iv e d p ay r a is e s , b u t w e s till haven’t closed the gap o f our peers.” A BO R approves budget requests, stadium facilities B y T ara T eichgraeber S tate P ress A t the A rizona Board o f Regents monthly m eeting Thursday and Friday in Flagstaff, regents approved the following agenda items relating to ASU: • The University was granted project initiation approval to build stadium facili­ ties for women’s softball and soccer in order to meet Title IX compliance codes. Softball field construction will consist o f 1,500 seats, locker room facilities for both home and visiting teams, concession stands and a press box. Soccer facilities will include 1,000 permanent seats, locker room facilities, and public restrooms. • ASU budget requests for fiscal year 1999, including capital improvement and general operating costs, w ere approved by regents. The proposed budget for A rizona’s three universities will be submitted to the state Legislature for final • Review and discussion about how to measure faculty work as related to deter­ mining pay increases resulted in regents requesting university administrators to meet with focus groups and report again in October. Both regents and university officials are distraught about state legislators' unwillingness to reward faculty for activities other than classroom teaching. In order to better communicate to legislators the value o f faculty work on all levels, ABOR has undertaken efforts to define more accurately what constitutes faculty work and how those activities should be measured. S tate P r ess n MEXICAN FOOD Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week B rin g in g Fine Food and Friends Together Since 1963 M am a Rosa's T ra d itio n a l Sonoran M exican Food Recipes s A re S im p ly the Best! Standard 3x Color VO U B Lr Prints 24 Exp. Custom 4x Color "DOUBIÆ"Prints 24 Exp. Featuring New Selections to Enhance Your Health}/ Lifestyle Fabulous Fajitas -Beef • Shrimp • Chicken $ J9 9 $£ 99 4 8 P rin ts ' ■ CamaronRancheraandDiablo(Shrimp) ■ SavoryBlackBeans ■ SteamingSidesofFreshVegetables I IncredibleFishTacos FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS 4 8 P rin ts N O W 2 LO CATIO N S T O SERVE YOU! CAMPUS c o r n e r o n M ia 609 S o u th M ill A v e n u e (4 0 2 ) 8 5 8 -0 5 4 7 CAMPUS CORNER 7 I2 S o u th C o lle g e (4 0 2 ) 9 4 7 -4 9 4 0 CROSSWORD b y TH O M A S JO S E P H ACRO SS 4 0 C o lla r p a rt 4 1 O rg . 1 E scape DOW N c o m p a rt1 S t. — m erits (L o n d o n 5 F a s t fly e rs c a th e d ra l) 9 In th e 2 N ot vicin ity s q u a re 11 K itc h en 3 D an gadget A ykro yd 1 3 S to m ac h film WOO 4 T a k e to 1 4 F o o lis h c o u rt 15 H eap 5 L ik e 1 6 G iv e s in ch o rizo s 1 8 S tu d e n t's 6 Rational unex­ 172 PRICE DINNER (C-41 Procmma 110, 126, Dime O 35m m FuH Franta Film») With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 10-7-97. I Mesa * 2023 W. Guadalupe I (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 s -T e m p o H appy H our ! B u ffe t 960W.University 4-7 p.m . Monday-Friday 9 6 6 -0 8 5 2 . (N ortheast C o m e r U niversity & Hardy) H£H „"r p e c te d w in te r v a c a tio n 2 0 R in k s tu ff 2 1 In e x p e ri­ enced 2 2 P esky in s e c t 2 3 June h o n o re e 2 4 C h in e s e pooch 2 5 E q u al 2 7 A lic e ’s hu b b y 2 9 D eed 3 0 G o lfe r F re d 3 2 M enaces 3 4 H a v e life 3 5 C a r p a rts 3 6 O rla n d o a ttra c tio n 3 8 P a ris d iv id e r »»P ool w o rk e r 7 D an A ykro yd film 8 N e w Y o rk la k e N S S V Q N 3 X s X O O d 3 y V S 3 d H, d T m 9 n X V N a O 1 s a a 33 N V N H 3 y V X S o A V X iM 3 N ï 3 s oO 3 S a S X V 3 y X n 0 y 3 V y a V a d N 3 3 y A V a M O 0 i0 1 5 d i n s a s H H X O V 3 d o o ■ Ïo o S T n V d so u n d s 2 7 N onsense 2 8 W a d in g b ird s 3 0 B a s e b a ll's S te n g e l 3 1 A s s a il 3 3 W rite r F e tte r 3 7 S c h . o rg . 1 0 B a rte re d 1 2 F ix a dock 1 7 F ire 1 9 D on 2 2 S w a llo w so u n d 2 4 R e s p ite s 2 5 R o u te s 26C ave 5 1 2 \3 V 9 11 ” 14 13 ; 15 16 17 ■ 19 18 _ ■ 1 2■4 23 ■ ■ 25 ■ 27 30 29 _ ■ 33 32 35 ■ 38 * ■ 40 N O 1 g 6 71 1 8 ■ 12 20 ; 28 31 3■7 34 *' DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One tetter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O’s, etc. Single tetters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code tetters are different. 10-3 CRYPTOQUOTE M K -M G D C DGVMGAL TJ D G VZ Q C Q W S M W UZQ C, V D SM VZ NM YMV YMVL Q G M Q W U E LV Q W V . — M X . . N ZX M Y esterday's C ryptoq u ote: FACING IT— ALWAYS FACING IT—THAT’S THE WAY TO GET THROUGH. FACE IT.,THAT'S ENOUGH FOR ANY MAN.—JOSEPH CONRAD . e 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. State Press Page 7 Monday, September 2 9,1997 P olice R eport The ASU police reported the following incidents on Friday and Saturday: •A man not associated w ith A SU was arrested and released fo r theft at L ot 27. •Som eone rem oved an unstated am ount o f m oney from the Radio Shack in the Tem pe C enter. •An em ployee reported that som eone unlaw fully entered his Vehicle While parked in Structure Three and p urloined the in-dash cassette player. •A student reported that she received harassing and annoying e-m ail on her com puter at 725 E. A delphi D rive. •A p air o f bolt cutters w ere im pounded as found prop­ erty. •A m ale not associated with ASU was contacted at Tem pe C enter, w here he had sustained an injury. He was transported to a local hospital. •A m an reported that persons unknow n dam aged his vehicle w hile it was parked at 725 E A delphi D rive. •A man reported that som eone rem oved an ASU lock set at 350 E. U niversity Drive. •A m ale not associated with ASU was arrested on an outstanding w arrant from the M esa Police D epartm ent. Subject was not able to post bond and was turned over to the M esa Police D epartm ent. •A student reported that som e vandal(s) dam aged his vehicle tire w hile parked in A rea 59. •A student reported that som eone ripped o ff his cellu ­ lar phone from the C lassroom O ffice Building. •ASU DPS recovered a stolen vehicle at Area T hree near G am m age A uditorium . ' •A man not associated with ASU w as arrested, cited and released for unlaw ful use o f a license at 900 S. M yrtle St. The report did not specify w hether the license was for fishing, hunting, m arriage, or driving. •A student reported that persons unknow n dam aged his car in parking structure 5. • A student was contacted at the Band Practice Field, where she had becom e ill. She was transported to a local hospital. •A student reported th at som eone perm anently bor­ row ed the rear tire from her bicycle a t the Law Library. •A man not associated with ASU has som ething to brag about to his friends arid fam ily after being arrest­ ed, cited arid released for shoplifting at Tow er R ecords, T em pe Center. •A mab unaffiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for not stopping at a posted stop sign, having no proof o f insurance or required headlights at M cA llister A venue and T yler Street. •A student was contacted at'S o n o ra H all, where he had becom e ill. He was transported to a local hospital. Compiled by State Press Editor Ray Stern. ALLIANCE SEMICONDUCTOR R v .^ ' 1[ A u K U S a p p a H E f Be a High Performer in High-Performance Products m p s il o n ■.. JOIN THE RANKS OF RONALD REAGAN, ELVIS PRESLEY, CHARLES WALGREEN AND MARIO LOPEZ At Alliance Semiconductor, outstanding performance is a way o f life. You’ll see it in our 1997 Silicon Valley Technology Fast 50 Award. We were recognized as the 8th fastest growing company out o f 50 based on out revenue growth over the past 5 years. You’ll spot it in our high-speed DRAMs, our High-Performance Promotion MMUI accelerators, our SEAM and Flash or our developing single-chip systems. You’ll enjoy it in a team of outstanding professionals in a very technologically smart organization, located in the heart of Silicon Valley, San Jose, CA, Perform up to your expectations in a company that does the .same.' W e are a fabless sem iconductor com pany W e do not hire Chem ical Engineers or Process Engineers. A pply for one o f these opportunities: Product^ Test, Design and Software Engineers at A lliance Sem iconductor’s open interview session on October 3, 1997. A lliance offers a com prehensive, com petitive com pensation and benefits package. Equal Opportunity Employer. X RUSH EVENTS Tuesday through Saturday Come see our table by the M.U. F O R M O R E IN F O C A L L : H u g o o r H o w a rd 7 7 4 -0 0 6 3 ALLIANCE SEMICONDUCTOR 3099 North First St., San Jose, CA. 95134 www.alsc.cóm Fax:(408)383-4999 Learning a Semester of Physics in One Night? ; about what resources and services are available on and off H H j J campus. ■;# ;i& ■ ■ UNIVERSMTYPOLICE 96!5-3456 When you want to ireport a sexual assault. ■ w êm ÈÈÊiÊÈÊÈÊÊ CRIME: REPORT 9615-TIPS When you have information that can assist the police. * \ Ï k ,sajMÊÎ 1 ’/ C y ' V / ,VV'" ,'h ' ''■« "r WBÊÊÊi- id [mÊm 1' r ' ' '' . i>- -v* i ■if■I •.i This ad sponsored by Student Advocacy, Student Health, Counseling and Consultation and University Police Services. I êm ë*> S ' -W ‘'Jjjj ■ Monday, September 29,1997 State P ress z SET YOUR o TICKETS < z < ÛL l uÜ) I I So, you’re a Todd M cFarlane fan. Or maybe you just love good animation. W hatever your pleasure, get FREE tickets to see the original series of SPAWN! Just stop by the classified advertising offices of the State Press in Matthews Center basement between 9 and 5 to pick up a pair of tickets! O ffe r good w h ile supply lasts. nESDir, SEPTEMBER30 6PM MBCINEMA FREESTUFF GIVENAWAY ATTIE EVENT! . Pafcle future! See the Japanese animation The Ghost inthe Shelf at SPM. Press «MWHHTlIHra GiTO filmcommittee m i t h 's FOOD & DRUG CEN TERS^“ ^ ONE-HOUR PHOTO PROCESSING WELCOMES ASU STUDENTS AND FACULTY Show your ASU ID card w h en lea v in g any roll o f C41 35MM, 110 or 126 color print film for o n e hour p ro cessin g , and receiv e a sec o n d s e t o f 4 x 6 p rin ts FREE! This offer is available exclusively at these Smith’s locations: • • • • 3255 2075 4505 4735 South Rural Rd. N. Alm a School Rd. E. Thom as Rd. E. Ray Rd. 829-7799 821-6800 952-1288 940-2303 VISIT OUR WEB PAGE AT www.smithsfoodanddrug.com Page 9 Arizonans added $ 1 million in soft money to ‘ 96 election PHOENIX (AP) — M ore than $1 m il­ lion in'unlim ited-and unregulated dona­ tions to national parties flow ed out o f Arizona in the 1996 election cycle, dou­ b lin g s im ila r C o n trib u tio n s tw o years’ earlier. These so-called soft money contribu­ tions are the focus o f congressional hear­ ings alleg in g w rongdoing in the 1996 election. The co n trib u tio n s, Which are exem pted from federal lim its, will take cen ter stag e this w eek w hen C ongress debates legislation banning them. One of the b ill’s chief sponsors, Sen. John M cCain said the political system is aw ash in big-buck donations “given in exchange for special considerations that are seldom accorded the voter who can­ not afford to donate huge sums to politi­ cal parties.” “ It is o sten sib ly for the p u rp o se o f party-building, but in reality it is used to ad v an ce th e c a m p a ig n s o f in d iv id u a l candidates,” said M cCain, R-Ariz. F e d e ra l e le c tio n re c o rd s show th a t soft money contributions have exploded in A riz o n a and n a tio n w id e . In 1994, A rizona donations added up to $427,169 but were over $1 m illion in 1996. N a tio n a lly , th e c o n trib u tio n s w en t from $86 m illion in 1992 to $262 m il­ lion in 1996, C om m on C ause told The A rizo n a R epublic. An analysis by the nonpartisan Center fo r R esponsive Politics ranked A rizona 2 9 th in 1 9 9 6 s o f t m o n e y d o n a tio n s am ong the 50 states and the D istrict o f Columbia. M ost o f the A rizona m oney w ent to R epublicans, but the largest single con­ tr ib u tio n , $ 1 5 0 ,0 0 0 , w e n t to th e D em o cratic N atio n al C om m ittee from the Sm itty’s superm arket chain. T h e C a lif o r n ia - b a s e d Y u c a ip a Com panies, which owned Sm itty’s until la s t y e a r, a ls o g a v e h e a v ily to th e R e p u b lic a n s th ro u g h s u b s id ia rie s in o th e r sta te s, said Y u caip a spokesm an Darius Anderson. H e s a id th e c h a in g a v e to th e Democrats because they asked. “I ’m sure if the Republicans had gone a h e a d an d r e q u e s te d (m o n e y ), th e re w ould hâve been serious consideration given,” he said. “But there w asn’t a seri­ ous request m ade.” The Phoenix-based Dial Corp, which has since split into two com panies, gave $ 8 5 ,0 0 0 to th e R e p u b lic a n N a tio n a l Com m ittee fund for state and local can­ didates. B ill P e ltie r, a sp o k e sm a n fo r D ial spinoff V iad, said, the com pany w anted to be a “visible corporate citizen,” but he also acknow ledged that D ial w anted to win the contract to stage the Republican N ational Convention. “That did not w ork,” he said. “We got th e D em o cratic N atio n al; C o n v en tio n , and we didn’t give them any money, so I don’t know what to m ake o f that.” S om e co m p an ies, like A ztar C o rp ., gave to both parties. T he P h o en ix-based casin o com pany spread $25,000 betw een both p o litical parties, which spokesm ah Joe Cole said w as p a r t o f th e c o m p a n y ’ s o n g o in g effort to keep a voice in W ashington for the gambling industry. U nder federal law, donations to can­ didates by individuals and corporations are restricted, but the soft m oney loop­ h o le a llo w s u n f e tte r e d d o n a tio n s to political parties. - P a g;e 10 State Press Monday, September 2 9,1997 13 M esa restaurants w in exem ptions from sm oking ban B y P atrick G raham Assooated P ress ? MESA —- Don’t ask Thatcher Jones, owner of Sidekick’s Steakhouse on Mesa’s outskirts, what he dtinks of the city’s yearold public smoking ban. He shakes he head in disgust and complains about “overbear­ ing” city officials and community “do-gooders” who he says have cost his business some $300,000 in lost revenue and forced him to looker for buyers. • “I almost lost my business,” he said, saying that gross sales dropped 60 percent the first week after the ban took effect last July. “It’s been hard to get those customers back.” Customers are coming back to Sidekick’s. And they’re coming bade to smoke. Jones is one of 12 restaurant owners who have been able to prove to Mesa’s building inspector that they will go out of business unless the voter-approved smoking ban is relaxed for them. Last December the City Council approved easing the smoking ban by allowing restaurants to apply for a hardship exemption. Owners mast show a 15 percent drop in revenue over four months compared with die year before. In the nine months that the exemption has been on the books, Mesa’s building inspector office hasn’t been swamped with requests, said Jeff Welker, die office’s development services coor­ E « « S U IN E T dinator. He said of the 13 businesses that have approached the dty, all have had their requests granted. Because only a handful of busi­ nesses have sought the hardship exemption, that would suggest the law isn’t affecting the vast majority of Mesa eateries, Welker said. In Arizona, no one has ever seriously studied die impact o f such laws on revenues and profits of restaurants. Backers of smoking restrictions cate results of a 1994 University of California, San Francisco, study that concluded that smoke-fiee restaurant ordi­ nances have not affected sales. It has been less than a month since Bill Bafalukos learned his eatery, Daiby’s Restaurant and Coffee Shop, would be allowed to open a smoking section, the only part of the restaurant he said is regularly packed. “I’d say 85 percent of my customers sit over there,” Bafalukos said, gesturing to an expanse of booths and tables. “We’re doing better now, as word spreads. I’m getting my regular customers bade” Jeanne Bums, a one-time Daiby’s regular, sat at a booth on a recent afternoon, sipping iced tea, reading a book and enjoying a cigarette. ‘It’s kind of nice to have a place to relax like tins,” Bums said, adding that she and her husband take their business to Apache Junction, where diners can smoke freely. : v e r y S IX T IM E S M W K h u r s d a y T G R O O M I N G Mesa is one of hundreds of dties and small towns nationwide that have sought to restrict smoking in public places like bars, bowling alleys and restaurants to reduce nonsmokers’ exposure to secondhand smoke. Recently, Flagstaff voters have approved an anti-smoking law less restrictive titan Mesa’s law. Restaurant-bar combinations are exempt from the ordinance if the bar area is separate from the restaurant area. Sierra Vista officials this year mulled over putting a similar law to the votes, but haven’t taken any action yet Mesa’s law got some company in August Volets in Corvallis, Ore., approved a similar ordinance banning smoking in bats and restaurants. And like in Mesa, the owners are furious and predict­ ing the worst But Mesa’s law, even with the hardship exemption, is still one of the toughest around, said Gary Auxier, a senior vice president with the Viiginia-based National Smokers Alliance. ‘It’s the pewter child for smoking bans.” Auxier said most dties and towns have smoking restrictions, but usually bars arid restaurants are either exempted or are required to have designated smoking areas. Auxier said the law was much more restrictive before dty offi­ cials amended it to permit smoking in any bar that makes 50 per­ cent or more of its gross annual revenue from alcohol sales. $ 1 1 95 I I he Co m plete S e r ie s N O T FO R T H E W E A K * A D U L T C O N T E N T * S E X * V IO L E N C E Wash & Cut First time clients only H U M A N H A I R S S T U D IO 9 66 -5 4 62 Located in The Arches Plaza M-TH 9-8 Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-5 (Reg. '18.00 Men, '21.00 Women) Long Hair S2 Higher • Styling S2 Higher Expires 10/20/97 $5 off 'm Perm , C o lo r o r W eave $60 and up ; 1 è f Expires 10/20/97 In G r a d u a te S clio o l? \ N eed M oney? T o d d M c F arjlane’s 'J1R NETWORK EVENT THEATER® http:/Avww.hbo.com/spawn © 1997 Home Box OHIce. adivision ot Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. All rights reserved. HBO is a registered service mark of Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. W ell, you may not be able to uae it to buy a car for your shiny alumni license plate, hut if you’re involved in tk e s is , d is s e r ta tio n , or any other form of W h e n : T u e s d a y , s e p te m b e r w h e r e r e s e a r c h / c r e a tiv e a c t iv it y , the A S A S U Graduate Research Support O ffice ha* money for you. Two level» of fiandit»^ avaiUhler How: w h y : M e m o r ia l U n io n 3 0 th a t 6 :0 0 pm C in e m a J u s t S h o w .U p . . . I t s F R E E ! : C u z y o u ’ r e n o t a f r a id o f t h e d a r k w h a t : T h e r e w il l N e e d I n f o ?: p h o n e 9 6 5 -6 8 2 2 b e f r e e s t u f f g iv e n a w a y mm p^fl Terminal (diiwertation/thesis): up to $ 2 0 0 0 S e a t in g w l im it e d , a r r iv e e a r l y t o s n a g a s e a t . Independent Research-* up to $ 7 5 0 Muté be fut! time Graduate Stwkmt in year o f funding P r o p o s a l d e a d lin e is O i t o k e r 17, 1997 Applicatjom uui ke picked up at tke Associated Students oi ÀSU iront desk (MU 3rd floor). For more info, e-mail Wendy Berry a t ceramic @ im ap2.aKu.edu D O U B L E F E A T U R E ! After SPAWN, stick around to S ee the Japanese animation, “The Ghost in the Shell” at 8pm. Com Page 12 A c r o s s ic s S tate P ress Monday, September 2 0 , 1997 t h e B y G entry S mith H a ll S nacks B y Carrie L. Behrens PjLAH PiAH T h e h u m a n n o s e c a n id e n tify o v e r 1 0 0 0 d iffe re n t o d o rs. JO C U LA R P a r a b l e B O T H E R 'S BO OK STO RE " Y O U R C O LL E G E B O O K S T O R E " ROSH HASHANAH YOM KIPPUR begin m Wednesdays: October I«! flu jjrjfiq h ffL imi hr Jewish Student Center OR Cady MaU. mffigbHiMday call HUM at: 967-7563. m a n located at: 1012 S. Mül Are. BY D A V ID G O U LD T y p ic a l S t u d e n t s » y t o d o Brenneman State Press P a g e l3 M onday September 2 9 ,1 9 9 7 D efense comes through again as ASU escapes 13-10 Hatcher. The OSU defensive back dashed 76 yards to tie the game at 7 with 9:36 left F or thé second straight gam e, A SU ’s in the second quarter. “It was a miscommunication between the defense kept it close. And for the Second straight game ASU’s receiver (Kenny M itchell) and m yself,” offense could’ve used a large dose — of Kealy said. “I thought the receiver would come back outside but I threw it inside. It caffeine or adrenaline, that is. T hé.No, 25 Sun Devils scored a touch­ was a badly thrown ball.” ' On ASU’s next possession, Kealy again down on the game’s opening drive (redshirt freshman quarterback Ryan Kealy’s roll turned it over. He was intercepted by Beaver out. 14-yard play-action pass to tight end Larry Bumpus at the ASU 47 on a thirdMatt Cercone) to take a 7-0 lead with 10:55 and-11. The turnover set up Jose Cortez’s 41-yard field goal to give OSU its only lead, remaining in the first quarter. But those were the only points ASU’s 10-7 with 5:07 to go in the first half. offense would generate for nearly 42 min­ Senior Steve Campbell replaced Kealy utes, until senior kicker Robert Nycz booted for three series late in the second quarter. a game-tying 34-yard field goal with 8:47 The yanking didn’t anger Kealy, instead, it allowed him to collect his thoughts. remaining in the third quarter. N ycz k ick ed th e g am e -w in n in g 32“Y ou’ve got to play through the hard yarder with 9:58 left in regulation to give times, “ he said. “I haven’t been able to get ASU a 13-10 victory over host OSU at the job done. The offense is going to have Parker Stadium Saturday before 25,873 to start rolling.” fans. " Which is something the Beavers’ offense was unable to do, while being shut out in ASU improved to 3-1. OSU fell to 1-2. OSU first-year coach Mike Riley said the second stanza. the loss was disheartening. ASU’s defense held OSU to just 20 net "There was no sugar-coating it. This was yards, rushing and effectively irritated ath­ hard on the t e a m h e said. letic QB Tim Alexander (17 of 41 for 193 Said Sun Devil tailback J.R. Redmond: yards and three INT’s, two to Pat Tillman) “My hat is o ff to OSU. They were out all afternoon. there today hitting and running and cover­ OSU appeared to be approaching good ing. They gave us a heck of a game. They enough field position to attempt a gamedid a good job defensively, they didn't roll tying field goal with just 1:04 remaining— over and they didn't lay down.” but Beaver backers were instead greeted by ASU head coach Bruce Snyder praised a Cherry picking. The Beavers, who began their drive at the the Beavers' intensity. “I was really impressed by OSU and the OSU 30, had advanced the ASU 42. Then, jo b M ike R iley and his sta ff are doing ASU redshirt freshman J’Juan Cherry, start­ (there),” said Snyder, whose team has now ing in place o f an injured Jason Simmons, won e ig h t straig h t P ac-1 0 road gam es. stepped in front of Alexander’s ill-advised "They're really playing hard and I like their pass, grabbed it and ran 27 yards. ASU ran schem es. The OSU kids gave us all we out the clock to seal the victory. wanted and outplayed us in some areas.” S n y d er w as esp e c ia lly pleased w ith Snyder added that the offense is strug­ Cherry’s maturity as the game progressed. gling right now. “The m ost encouraging thing that we “We are just enough out o f sync right saw was the fact that he was playing better now that it’s eliminating points. We just got from a technique standpoint and a funda­ to keep coaching them. It’s coming. W e’re mental standpoint in the fourth quarter than close. I think we are close to having a he w as in the f irs t,” S n y d er said. “He rhythm. But if it’s not a penalty, something im p ro v ed in th at g am e. He ste a d ily just jumps up and bites us (like a Beaver).” improved and he was better. That is really In his first Pac-10 start, Kealy completed encouraging.” 14 of 24 passes attempts for 194 yards and N o t e s : a TD. However, his two interceptions were ASU’s 14 penalties for 116 yards was costly. Facing a third-and-5 at the OSU 27, inexcusable, Snyder said. He did, however, Kealy was picked o ff by B eaver Armon p in p o in t w h at the N o. 1 cau se o f the B y E d O deven State P ress A sso cia te d P ress O reg o n S ta te B e a v e rs ' d e fe n s iv e b a c k s A rm o n H a tc h e r (1 5 ) a n d B u s te r E la h e e (2 1 ) tra p S un D e v il re c e iv e r K en n y M itc h e ll’s p a th to th e fo o tb a ll. T h e S u n D e v ils le ft P a rk e r S tad iu m w ith a 1 3 -1 0 v ic to ry S a tu rd a y . squad’s superabundance of miscues is. “Rhythm comes from everybody doing their job to a certain level every snap,” he said Sunday. “We are not getting that right now. “ As for the five defensive holding penal­ By M att P aulson State P ress Pat Shannahan/State Press S e n io r lin e b a c k e r P a t T illm a n (4 2 ) le d A S U ’s s tiflin g d e fe n s iv e e ffo rt S atu rd ay in th e ir 1 3 10 w in o v e r O reg o n S ta te . T illm a n h a d tw o in te rc e p tio n s a n d tw o s a cks o n th e d a y. As ASU head coach Bruce Snyder has pointed out frequently, the statistic he’s most proud of this season is “the defense versus the score.” ASU’s defense has yielded a mere two touch­ downs in four games and is allowing opponents 8.5 points per game. In Saturday’s 13-10 victory over Oregon State, no one was more responsible in forcing this trend to continue than senior linebacker Pat Tillman. Considered the best defensive player on the team, Tillman erupted for six tackles (five unassisted), two interceptions and two sacks for a loss of 15 yards. The defense limited the Beavers’ offense to a field goal. Tillman acknowledged that this fact was again die k ey ..... „ 1 ‘They played a good game,” Tillman said, “but it’s pretty tough to win when you only score three points and that’s all our defense gave diem. Snyder said afterwards that the team rewarded him for his valient effort. “He had a really good game,” Snyder said. “(He’s) vety active. He’s one of the team leaders, verbally at times but definitely by his actions. We named him our Player of the Game.” Tillman’s first interception came early in the second quarter with ASU leading 7-0. His second and most important pick came later in the same ties, Snyder had this to say. “I’ve been in this business for a very long time. I don’t think I’ve had five defen­ sive holding penalties called (against us) in T urn to C lose shave, page 14. quarter with Oregon State driving. Looking to extend their 10-7 lead, the Beavers had the ball on their own 46 with 10 seconds left in the half. After two incomplete passes, OSU quarterback Tim, Alexender dropped back once again. Tillman read the play perfectly and returned the ball to midfield. The sudden change in momentum gave ASU a chance to tie the game. However, Robert Nycz missed a 57-yard field goal as time ran out Tillman said he couldn’t take full responsibility for his caused turnovers. “They threw the ball there, and 1 was able to catch them,” Tillman said. “Interceptions are as much luck as anything else.” Tillman’s first sack was also in the second quarter and prevented the Beavers from scoring a touchdown. On third-and-five on the ASU 13, Tillman slammed Alexander from behind for a loss of seven. OSU settled for its only offensive points. Last year, Tillman led the team with four inter­ ceptions, and now has six for his career. It was the first time in his college career that Tillman had had two picks in one game. Tillman again leads the team in interceptions with two. He is also No. 1 in sacks with three for minus-22 yards. He is tied with fellow senior linebacker Paul Reynolds for the team lead in tackles with 29. Along with strong safety Damien Richardson, he is No. 1 solo tackles with 14. P a g el4 S tate P ress Monday, September 29, 1997 Sun D ev il soccer squad scores sp lit over w eekend B y Ra n d y J ones State P ress Jerem y H e in/S tate P ress Fighting the flu and two highly-regarded squads, the ASU women’s soccer team came away battered and little bruised after splitting this weekend’s games. On Sunday, the Sun Devils (6-2, 1-0 Pac-10) had many an opportunity to come away with at least a tie versus New Mexico (8-1), but the Lobos went home victorious with a 3-1 victory. “New Mexico played well, (and) we didn’t play bad,” head coach Terri Patraw said. “Basically they got up 2-0 pretty quickly on us in the first half. We missed some great opportunities in the first half, then finally wc finished one off with about five minutes left in the half.” In the second half, down 2-1, ASU looked to be in posi­ tion for the equalizer. Freshman midfielder Erin McGinnis got open inside the Lobos’ penalty box for an apparent shot on goal. However, a New Mexico defender blasted McGinnis to the turf for a blatant penalty, which should have garnered a penalty kick However, the referee made no call and play resumed. At that point in the half, it seemed the Sun Devils were beginning to take over the game. Patraw said that “the momentum was starting to go our way,” at the time of the possible penalty kick, and that it would have been a “good opportunity to tie it up.” Less than two minutes later, Lobos’ All-American can­ didate Laurie Hegedom blasted one by Sun Devil keeper Erin Reinke from 20 yards out. The shot was so hard, Patraw told Reinke that if she had made the save “you would have flown into the goal with the ball.” Patraw complimented the tough play o f Reinke. The S o p h o m o re fo rw a rd S a ra h B las ka a tte m p ts to m a n u e v e r th ro u g h tw o N ew M e xico d e fe n d e rs d u rin g S u n d ay’s a c tio n a t S u n D e v il S o c c e r F ie ld . A S U lo s t to th e L o b o s, 3 -1 , b u t d e fe a te d C re ig h to n 5 -0 o n F rid a y . T urn to Soccer split , page 16. Sun Devil spikers loose five-set heartbreaker to No. 16 UofA B y Lori H aro S tate P ress The ASU volleyball team took Friday night’s match to five games, but dropped to 9-5 overall, 0-3 Pac-10 after the No. 16 UofA handed them their third straight Pac10 loss. The Sun Devils started the m atch out right, winning the first two games, 15-7, 159. In the third game the Wildcats came back winning 15-2. In the fourth game ASU was up 14-8 until the UofA took over winning 16-14, they finished the match winning the last game, 15-9. : “Arizona did not play well in the first two gam es and we had pressure on us,” head coach Patti Snyder-Park said. “They put pressure on us and we couldn’t han­ dle it.” Senior middle blocker Kirstin Mattson agrees that there was pressure, but even so, she said that letting the fourth game go just should not have happened. “Being 14-8 (and losing), that’s unheard of,” M attson said. “T hat’s totally mental right there. Our team is hurting.” The bright spot for the Sun Devils was senior outside hitter Terri Cox. All season Snyder-Park has commented on what a stel­ lar athlete Cox is and she proved it against the Wildcats. Cox led all players with 20 kills and 17 digs, but she cares more about how they play as a team than herself individually. “I’m not big on the win/loss thing, I just care about how we play,” Cox said. And she was not pleased at how they played, especially since she believes both teams are a lot alike. “This weekend was so frustrating, it was embarrassing,” Cox said. “They’re the epitomy o f our team, we were looking at a mir­ ror when we were playing them. I guess they just wanted it more.” Other leaders for the Sun Devils includ­ ed freshman Amanda Burbridge who had 10 kills and 15 digs. Mattson added nine kills, 11 digs, three block assists and one so lo b lo ck . S op h o m o re se tte r Jo ly n n Faatulu sprained her ankle in the fifth game, but stayed in and finished adding 48 assists. For the W ildcats, sophom ore m iddle blocker Erin Alrich led the team with a sea­ son-high 17 kills. Senior setter M ichaela Ebben added 50 assists and had a .462 hit­ tin g p e rc e n ta g e . S e n io r o u tsid e h itte r Carolyn Penfield had 15 kills and 8 digs. “Carolyn Penfield came out of nowhere and killed us,” Cox said. “In the fourth game, at game point, when 1 looked across Cardinals again find way to lose close game B y Fred G oodall A ssociated P ress TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers used to find a way to lose. Now they find a way to win. The NFC’s only unbeaten team matched its best start ever Sunday, improving to 5-0 with a come-ffom-behind 19-18 victory over the Arizona Cardinals. Trent Dilfer’s 31 -yard touchdown pass to Karl Williams with 4:48 to go wiped out an 18-12 lead the Cardinals took on Aeneas Williams’ 42-yard interception return and a 2point conversion late in the third quarter. Tampa Bay also got an 8-yard TD reception from Reidel Anthony and scored when Alshermond Singleton blocked a Jeff Feagles punt and returned it 28 yards for a first-quarter touchdown. Once one o f the most resourceful teams at letting games slip away, die Bucs have developed a knack for maintaining their poise under second-year coach Tony Dungy. “W e’ve lost so many games like this in the past,” safety John Lynch said. “I t’s hard w ork and preparation and believing you can win. You don’t just get lucky at this. You get lucky for a reason.” Arizona (1-3) had a chance tp win on the final play of the game, but Kevin Butler missed a 47-yard field goal attempt. “It’s the same old song, different dance,” Arizona coach Vince Tobin said. “W e’ve been in this situation three times, and we can’t get it done.” Fumbles undermined the Cardinals’ chances in losses to Cincinnati and Washington. Sunday, an interception gave Tampa Bay’s sputtering offense an opportunity to win the game. “I feel bad, bad for the defense. They played tough,” said Butler. “O n the kick, 1 gave it all I had, and I hit a wall. I’m supposed to execute in those situations. This is hard.” The victory was a franchise-record sixth straight for Tam pa Bay, which is 5-0 for the first tim e since 1979, when the Bucs went 10-6 on their way to an appearance in the NFC Championship game. Since losing eight of their first nine games a year ago, the perennial NFC Central doormats are 10-2 and have won eight straight at hom e. T hey head to G reen B ay next Sunday for a showdown with the champion Packers, and with the Bucs alone atop the division standings. A rizona trailed 12-0 before scoring 18 consecutive points to take control o f the game. Kent Graham threw a 21-yard TD pass to Rob Moore and Butler kicked a 37-yard field goal before Aeneas W illiams tied a team record by scoring his fifth touchdown on an interception return to put the Cardinals ahead late in the third quarter. T he m om entum sh ifted back to T am pa Bay w hen Graham overthrew M oore, who had eight receptions for 147 yards, and Lynch intercepted at the Arizona 35 with just over seven minutes remaining. Dilfer found Karl Williams crossing the middle o f the field, just ahead o f Aeneas Williams, on fourth-and-6 from the 31. The defender dived to try to break up the pass, and the receiver easily outran the pursuit to the end zone. “Once the ‘O ’ gave us the lead back,” Tampa Bay defen­ sive tackle Warren Sapp said, “I ju st looked around and told our guys, ‘We have to step on their necks.’ “ Graham completed a 37-pass to Frank Sanders to set up a 47-yard field goal attempt that Butler missed badly to the right on the final play. Butler also missed a 43-yarder early in the fourth quarter. “It’s just the same old thing. W e played good for 3 1/2 quarters,” Moore said. “It’s not a matter o f how good our team is. We just have to pull it out in the end. No one has dominated us. We just haven’t been able to put it away.” The Tampa Bay defense gave up 364 yards, but sacked Graham six times and had two interceptions. The Cardinals weren’t able to generate anything offen­ sively until late in the second quarter, when Graham used completions o f 29 yards to Moore and 17 yards to Chris Gedney to set up Arizona’s fust touchdown. Special teams were the key to the Bucs’ early scoring. the net I saw looks o f defeat, but she totally pulled her team together.” S n y d e r-P a rk a lso sa id th a t it w as Penfield who won UofA’s match for them. That is the sort o f leadership she wants on ASU’s side of the court. “There is no excuse for being up two games and 14-8, except that we can’t han­ dle pressure,” Snyder-Park said. ‘T rue lead­ ership would have stepped up.” M attson also m entioned that the team needs to find the desire to win. “W e’re back on our heels and w e’re afraid to do the things we need to do,” Mattson said. “Instead of rising to the occa­ sion, we fall flat.” ASU will continue to look for its first Pac-10 win this weekend when the team ta k e s on W ash in g to n F rid a y and Washington State Saturday. Close shave___ C ontinued f r o m pag e 13. a season, let alone in a game.” Injury report •Senior tailback Michael Martin left the game midway through the third quarter and did not return after suffering a mild concussion. He had 14 rushes for 67 yards. Snyder said Martin will do some light jogging, but probably won’t practice this week. Martin is expected to be back in action Saturday in Washington. •Redmond, who rushed for 77 yards on 18 carries and had one catch for 18 yards, twisted his ankle early and appeared to be a little less elusive than in the previ­ ous three games. Backup Marlon Farlow contributed eight rushes for 32 yards off the bench to spell Martin and Redmond B ravos to B akersfield All 13 ASU points carnè courtesy of two Bakersfield, Calif., products: Matt Cercone and Robert Nycz. •Cercone, a junior who transferred from Bakersfield Community College, scored the first TD o f his Sun Devil career on the game’s first drive. •Nycz, a 1993 graduate of Bakersfield High School, nailed two o f three field goal attempts and converted his lone point after touchdown. Facts and figures •O SU ’s 43 pass attempts were the Beavers’ most since throwing 46 times against W ashington State in the 10th game of the 1988 season. •ASU has outscored its opponents 20-0 in the first quarter this season. ASU has also outscored its oppo­ nents 31-3 in the third quarter this season. •OSU’s 20 net yards rushing was the school’s low­ est total since Nov. 11,1989 when they were held to 20 yards against visiting Washington. •ÀSU converted seven o f 19 third-dow n posses­ sions; OSU two of 14. Mnníiav ^»ntpmhpr M 1QQ7 S t a t e P r ess P itiful playing pew ter-panted Pirates pilfer punt, prevail It’s the forgot­ te n p a rt o f any NFL team. T here’s always ta lk a b o u t th e o ffe n s e . A b o u t the defense. But n ev er too m uch about the special teams. M ay b e th e re should be. Last week, two te a m s, the Jacksonville Jaguars and New York Jets,! won games when blocked field goals turned into touchdowns. This week, a special play from the spe­ cial teams gave the undefeated Tampa Bay Buccaneers a 19-18 win over the Arizona Cardinals. The Cards outplayed the Pirates o f the Pewter Pants on both offensé and defense. Arizona’s no-name backficld outrushed the B u g s ’ Mike Alstott and Warrick Dunn — widely considered the best backfield tan­ dem in the NFL — by almost 50 yards. And the m u ch -m alig n ed K ent G raham out threw Trent Dilfer, the NFC’s leading pass­ er, by 239 yards. The C ard in als d efen se w as stau n ch , holding the Bucs to under 150 yards and only six first downs. So how did the Bucs win? S p e c ia l team s. R o o k ie A lsh erm o n d Singleton blocked a Jeff Fcagles punt and returned it for a touchdown in the first quar­ ter. And punter Tommy Bamhardt complet­ ed a 25-yard fake punt to safety Tony Bouie on a fourth-and-16 play, a play that kept alive Tampa’s first scoring drive. Finally, Cardinals kicker Kevin Butler missed two field goals, one from 43 yards and one from 47 yards, eith e r o f w hich would have won the game for the Cardinals. touchdowns in four NFL seasons) were bet­ ter than the numbers showed. Many reasoned that both only performed poorly because each was a member of the Cardinals’ organization. After five weeks, Hearst and Bugcl have proven everyone wrong. B ugel’s Raiders are 2-3, having choked badly in all three losses. His team has lost one game in over­ time and the other two by one point. Even O akland’s two wins have come ag ain st p erennial cellar-d w ellers in St. Louis and Atlanta. And Hearst? He has scored two touch­ downs (one rushing, one receiving), but has managed a respectable 238 yards and 4.1 yards per carry. But he has accum ulated these numbers against four teams that lost 10 o r m ore gam es a p iece la s t seaso n . Hardly the numbers o f a guy selected third overall in the NFL draft. So blow th e B ugel. A nd c a ll in the Hearst. These guys were dead on arrival. O SH D E F A M IO S ure B ets R o o k ie lin e b a c k e r A ls h e rm o n d S in g le to n b re a k s th ro u g h to b lo c k a p u n t b y J e ff F e a g le s o f A rizo n a . A ls h e rm o n d re tu rn e d th e b a ll fo r a to u c h d o w n , g iv in g T a m p a B ay a 6 -0 le a d in its 1 9 -1 8 v ic to ry o n S u n d ay . The Buccaneers win was not pretty, but it sure was special. T he B utler lsn’t doing it When Cardinals head coach Vince Tobin kept Butler and cut rookie Scott Bentley in th e p re se a so n , h is re a so n in g w as th a t Bentley had never experienced the pressure of a game winning kick in the NFL. Butler, on the other hand has, and appar­ ently, it’s not doing much good. Besides his 47-yard miss as time expired — a kick that w asn’t even close — Butler missed a 43yardcr that would have put the Cardinals up by two scores, and a 34 -y ard er ag ainst Washington two weeks ago. M a k e tim e to g iv e y o u r s e lf c re d it! In all, Butler has missed three of his last six field goal tries. That might mean Bentley is on his way back. And Tobin shouldn’t be too worried. As a true freshman at Florida State, Bentley nailed a last minute field goal thát gave the Seminóles the national championship. J oe B ugel and G arrison H earst — M EN O R M Y T H S? The Bay Area received two new arrivals th is o ffse a so n , both fo rm e rly o f the Cardinals. And, according to the newspa­ pers, both Raider head coach Joe Bugel (2044 in fo u r seaso n s as A riz o n a ’s head coach) and Garrison Hearst (three rushing If you’re looking to make some money off the NFL this season, you might want to consider this. A fter five weeks only one NFL team has covered the spread in every game it has played. N o n e o f the u n d e fe a te d team s — Denver, Tampa Bay, or New England — are perfect in Las Vegas. Not even the surprising New York Jets, who have won three and lost two very close games — are a sure thing on versus the spread. The only guarantee thus far? The 1-3 Arizona Cardinals. Underdogs by more than a touchdown in each of their four gam es, the C ardinals have lost by three, won by three, lost by six, and lost by one. U nfortunately for Vince Tobin and company, beating the spread doesn’t get you into the playoffs. Josh DeFamio can be reached via e-m ail at rudsten@ asu.edu HEY,MEVIl FMli, Í 0TANY PLANE? STAY A T H^Y-A-E t R I £)Po/pUmA* At the State Press Classified Ad Dept. Basement of Mathews Center APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Call 965-6735 to place your classified ad APARTMENTS M A TTR ESSES - queen Set $ 125, full set $ 110, twins $89/ • set. In p la stic, free d e liv e ry . Name brands. 649-2625. RO O M S FOR RENT CLOSE TO ASU, home w/pool, share w 12 Students, $390/m o, 1st & last. 714-6431-0615 y LA PTO P PEN T. 133/case 16 m g. ram . C ol. m on., snd, Cd Rom. $1750. Scott 874-2090. IN A 3BR/ 2BA homo w/ pool. $ 2 6 0 /ih o + 1/3 u tils .. 1.5 mi. from ASU. Jarrod or Clint, 423- PEN TIU M 150 32 m eg. ram , fu lly loaded, incl. m onitor. Scott $1150. H 874-2090, f '^ 3 2 - ROOM FOR ren t Own bd & ba in fully furn. house w /garage. $400/mo + 1 /2 utils. 4 mi. from ASU, 756-1765. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BED Q U EEN c o m fo rter set, never used. C ost $550. Sell at $225. Call 756-7348, anytime. ♦ Large exercise room ♦ European cabinetry ♦ Barbecue areas ♦ Walk-in closets available ♦ Covered parking ♦ Private baicony/patio ♦ Laundry facilities ♦ Security alarm systems available Q U A D D A N G Lfô EMBASSY SUITES RESORT SCOTTStMUB ACCEPTING W ALK-IN INTERVIEW S M ; Tu, and F 8:30-10:30am or 2-4pm For the follow ing poeitions; Housepersons B anquet S et -U p Hoer/Hoerets S tewaromg Line C ook S et-u p N t . S upervisor (available 10/1/97) Need PT o r FT work. We have (he jo b fo r you. Come jo in Oils buey resort where w e offer a com petitive wage and m any benefits including health/ den tal/ life insurance, vacation/ sick tim e, free em ployee m eal, free parking, uniform s provided, plus much m ore. Please apply w ffb Human Resources 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free W orkplace i ■ --------------a 87 NISSAN Sentra 82k mi., a/c, manual trans., great college car. $2500.Call 955-2059. 94 À CURA Integra LS, 5spdy 2dr, ly i f 15000 mi, warranty!! B lack allo y s, tin t, all pw r. Show room cond. * $13,250. 661-7901 94 TOYOTA Tercel a/c, am /fin cass., 34k mi, man. trans., xlnt cond. $9250. call 955-2059 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 ™ APARTMENTS Find it 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ASU I SunDial Fund SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK Resort & Spa has the following employment opportunities: F/TFront D esk A gent Now Hiring F /t- R eservation A gent Days - 10-30 hrs/week F/T r S ecu rity O fficer (Graveyard shift) Flexible P /T - N igh t A uditor (2 nights - graveyard) Call 947-3300 or fax resume 947-6853 or pick up an application at lobby front desk. Interviewing and application hours are from 10-4, M-F Scottsdale Camelback Resort fi Spa 6302 E. C am elback Rd. Scottsdale Camelback Resort fit Spa is ar> equal opportunity employer. EASTin the Classifieds It y o u ea rn less th a n $ 2 6 ,0 0 0 * p er year, y o u m a v q u a lify to get a m o n t h ly r e n ta l d isc o u n t! C all N o w ! Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote com munity participation for individuals with developm ental disabilities. W e offer a variety o f positions working with individuals in their ow n hom es or residential settings. W e offer over 4 0 hours o f paid training and h ave an excellen t benefits plan. W e have flexible schedules with FT, PT and on-call positions available im mediately. O ur pay ranges from $ 6 .0 0 - $ 7 .0 0 DOE/EOE. Please call 431-9511 for more information 87 FORD escort GT, 77k brig, gold w/black trim, 5spd, am/fm cass. $2,400 obo 940-1056. VILLAGE S.E. Comer of University 8c Rural HELP W ANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES C A S H T O D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. 968-8118 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ; 95 FO R D A spire. V ery Well maintained. 4LK mi. A/C, new • tires, àuto., red/ gray, & a Sun Devils front plate. $6300 968-1642. ♦ Free hot water ♦ 3 pools, 2 spas COMPUTERS SCOTTSDALE, OWN room w/ lock/key & phone line. Hayden 1990 JE E P W rangler red 4x4 /Thom as. 2 room s avail. $295 97K 4-cyl alloy whls new tires + elec. & $265 + elec. Gall 675- : K enw ood CD x len t cond. 9611 eves, or ly. mess. $7950 obo 704-9806 LU X U R Y APARTM ENT FEATURES: ♦ Brass ceiling fans SOUTHW EST STL Y E sofa & loveseat, e x cellent c o n d u ca li Krista @ 961-8645 G ET SPOILED-. Tem pe whole house + own bdrm. Pool, util, . c ab le, phone, m icro incl. $325/m o. M ove in 10/1. NS, * ND, F p ref. 1311 W . L aird. 967-3930/599-3877 pgr. tse eu ttleth f°rJ ITS YOUR don•ts anfh tne ebes-t-1 MOVE... ♦ Vertical blinds with valances MATTRESS, QUEEN size, dou­ ble pillow top/ box sp rin g , 2 wks old - pd $1100, sacrifice $275.495-1974. NS FEM . to share 2 b d ./2 ba. @ Cameron Creek a.s.a.p. 7319598 Iv. msg. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ♦ Mini blinds Page 17 September 2 9,1997 $6-$7*45/hr / ■ V + Bonus Please c a ll fo r in te rv ie w 965-6754 BICYCLES GT RTS Full susp, race ready, loaded. Like new $1,000 Chad 897-1185 o f 591-6243 TRAVEL D ISC O U N T TRA V EL: C heap in your name. Q uick departrs. Buy coupons/aw ards. M ost places worldwide. 968-7283 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL $6.50 PER HR H ouse m anagers needed by C ollege o f Fine A rts. M ostly evening & weekend hour»: Re­ quired qualifications: effective in terp erso n al and com m uni­ cation skills, g o o d judgem ent, and prev io u s ex p erie n ce in a custom er-service position. T o apply, submit resume, three pro­ fessional references, and local phone number to Dean's office. C o lleg e o f F ine A rts, D ixie Gammage Hall 132. 36 HEALTHY people to keep homéopathie journal 5 w ks for $125. 274-1340 A FUN jo b w/flexible schedul­ ing can be had in o u r tuxedo Stores. Mesa, Alma Sch/SoUthern 962-1128; Scotts, C haparrâl/H aydh 947-7731; Phx, Tatum/T-bird 494-7036. ARE Y OU looking for experi­ ence i n your field? Human serv­ ices, etc—? We have ft/pt posi­ tio n s av ailab le. G all o u r jo b line 995-4862 ext. 1 ATTENDANT NEEDED for fe­ m ale, non- dem anding, em ­ ployed. C ertification not req'd. Room & board incl. Salary neg. Broadway & Rural 829-8681 A TTEN D A N TS NEED ED for dntwn. Tempe events including ASU & C ardinal games. M ust have flex, sched. Starting rate is $5.50 w / increase potential, de­ pending on perform ance. C on­ tact Lisa, 921-9920 B R .I.T .E . IN C. B ehavioral H ealth T echs, and P roviders. F/T & P/T to work w ith D .D ./ M l./ E .I c lie n ts. $6-10/hr. d.o.e. A pply a t 2920 N. 24th A ve. #2 4 Phx 85015 o r call 254-2785 x l . B E C O M E A m obile dj. W ork W eekends. W e train. D epend­ able vehicle. Call 820-8220 City of Chandler HELP W ANTEDGENERAL C A FE V IN TA G E looking for counter help, 9:30 - 3:30 daily, part-time. 968-4884. CH ILD CA RE, 2 & 4 yr. old Warm & caring. Flexbile day & evening hours. L incoln/ Scot­ tsdale Rd 948-5820. CIGAR STORE clerk, P/T, no exp nee, must work thru Christ­ mas vacation, clean cut, outgo­ ing, like sm oke, $ 6/hr. 8409080 DATA CENTER operators need­ ed. A ll sh ifts a v ail, flex, hrs 5pm -8am & w eekends. Apply to Darcòmm 3710 É. University Dr. Suite 1, Phx. DRIVER, MAINTENANCE per­ son needed part-tim e, flexible hours M -F, iio nights, o r w ee­ kends. Must have clean driving record. A pplications accepted M -F 9*5 Inside/Q ut 2716 N 68 St. Ste. 1000.994-1060 $7/hr. EXGWKNDOPP Im m ed. o p enings. M ust have car & be enthusiatic. Positions are in Peoria & Apache: Ju n c ­ tion. We wear White tennis type clothes & hold signs directing people to new hom e d e v e l­ opments on Sat. & Sun. 11am4pm $I0 /h r + bonus. Call 800343-8368 FUN PEOPLE W anted: O utgoing, e n erg etic' appointment setters for. Univer­ sal P o rtraits. $7-12/hr. C all Adam at 777-1054. LO O K IN G FO R stu d en ts to work 1 on 1 w/ autistic child in an intensive homebase program W/ a skillful use of positive re­ inforcement. Prof, training pro­ vided. U n iversity academ ic credit may be avail. Flex. hrs. G ilb e rt lo c a tio n ..G o o d $$ & great experience. Call for an in­ terview, 503-1693.' M IK E PU L O 'S S paghetti Co. Now hiring full tim e assistant m anager. S end/fax resum e to 414 S. M ill À ve. T em p e Az 85281 966-5265 Attn: Liz MOTIVATED STUDENTS F/T $ on P/T b asis, s e t ow n hrs. w orking w / #1 IN C. 500 co. seeking m otivàted individuals w / g re a t in ter personal sk ills, càll 787-9277 for apt. NEEDED EXP'D display or Xmas decorating person for Up­ co m in g h o lid a y decorating. Ask for Joel 481-0900 Ideal part-time job for studentslil Drivers needed daily Mon. through Fri. from 7am to 9am or 3pm to 5pm. 10 hours per w eek for remainder of school year. Fleet Services Aide $6/hr. Apply; City of Chandler Human Resources Division, 2 5 S. Arizona Place, Suite. 201 Chandler, AZ 8 5 225 602-78 6 -2 2 9 0 EO E /A D A L O T ATTENDANT NEEDED Experience preferred, but not required. Full tim e days (M on.F ri., 8am -6pm ) & Part tim e, evenings & weekend available. M UST have d ea n driving record and bring current copy of Driving Record when applying. Excellent benefits & working environm ent. Apply in person to: M ike Hart Big Tw o Toyota/Oldsm obile 1 3 0 1 W . Broadway - M esa G atnV aiuatite Experience DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behavioratly challenged. Earn $6.50 • $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package tro. net/-' QaeiHantbl Qan/imc 2405 E Southern Ave #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 Page 18 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDG |N E ^ ^ _ ^ NOW HIRING SPORTS MINDED B est jo b s in tow n. Paid tra in ­ ing, no sellin g . F le x ib le hrs. 5 :00pm -9 :0 0 p m . G u a ra n tee d h ourly pay. $8.88 av erag e ($280/wk). Set reservations out o f cool office! spin Scottsdale & Mésa. Call 874-0145, Lee (for interview.) Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5,921-8282 P/T HELP wntd filling, loading packaging, & capping bottled water. At least 20 hrs. week or more. N ear ASU $ 6 /h r C all Je a n n in e 453-0305 o r ' 9881804 P/T M-TH 6’9pm, $7/hi\ near ASU, survey telemarketing, no pressure presen tatio n , no exp neccessary. Call fo r interview Norm Gifford 829-3460. PART-TIME/ FULL-TIME posi­ tions for students interested in legal profession. Need profes­ sional appearance and vehicle: Call 4524826 for appi P/T RECEPTIONIST, must be available: over holiday breaks. Ico n H air A rch itex tu re, Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square. Ask for Qiariene 941-8656: PU RCHA SIN G A G EN T, nò exp. nec. Flex. hrs.. F/T òr P/T. $8.00/hr. Near ASU. 607-1100. R E C E P f iO N IST/V ET A SST,, p eo p le sk ills a m ust. No Cxp* nec. p/t M-F. 7:30am -nòòn. Contact Dr. John Clark @ 997- . 6313 fax 3714936 sto p HELP W ANTEDSALES HELPW ANTEDCLERICAL HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL COR W EST BANC a nat’IB /C lender is seeking loan officers & telem ark eters fo r its Phx. branch. Exc. comm. & ben. Fax resume, to Pat 820-2233 or call 820-2288. ADMINISTRATIVE ASST., p/t, flex. hrs. W P, A P-A R , detail o rie n te d , b u dget reporting. Send resume to: Kern & Wooley, 1201 S. Alma School Rd., Ste. 10550, Mesa, 85210. R EC EPT N EED ED fo r environm ental contruction co. 2025hrs./w k, phones, filing, typ­ ing, gen clerical please call 4311600 for appointment. & LOOK SEEKING STUDENTS for flex: p /t p o sitio n s. W ell : spoken, Neat,, casual drèss req. Hourly base bonus. À great o p p ty . to, make $ and build a perm ea^ reef after graduation..call capt. 610-2990 Sale! Oct 6 4 2 , two 7 hr shifts daily. $40 per s h ift.+ meal, call 1-800-497-9331 STUDENT MANAGERS need­ ed! Cam pus Dining has im m e­ d ia te open in g s fo r S tudent M angers to su p erv ise o p e ra ­ tio n s in oiir R esid en ce Hall facilities! If you have previous supervisory Or food service exp erien ce, ap p ly at the M U B ldg. Room #138. . EÒE M/F/D/y • -G .. Local manufacturer seeks a mar­ keting or sales m ajor for te le ­ m arketing and research work, (day/office hours), at our office in Tem pe. F a x resum e w ith q u a lific a tio n s to. S outhw est M old Inc. 894-2168 o r e-m ail to www.sales@swmtempe. STUDENT WORK! Up to $9.50. No exp. nec. Flex sched. around classes: Solid, re­ sum e exp. sch o la rsh ip opps. Conds. exist, 212-0551 TEMP FT/PT needed for Tempe vitam in co. C u sto m er service rep needed to call re ta il a c ­ counts. Inquire 967-9115 Rus­ sell P/T SALES HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL A 13-YR-OLD co. needs people for data-entry. Great $, 10 min from ASU , nice environm ent, flex ib le hours M -F. C all C o r­ nerstone 244-8720. ■ $9 PER HOUR EXEC. ANS.. Serv. (tempe) Has o p en in g s fo r p t/ operato rs $7./hr 45wpm 10 key by touch comp. exp. call 264-4000 O FFIC E A SSISTANT, perm a­ nent p /t p o sitio n , fle x ib le hours M o n -F ri, $8/hour. W P/ Word, AP/ AR, dependable car. Looking for dependable, crea­ tive person. Call 820-0309: P/T R E C EPTIO N IST. M onThiirsv 1-5 pm. $6.75/hr. C all 7364960. IKON/DLS r /Work at Night as a j§- Night Auditor •I Sj from 11p-7a. | | R elaxed W ork Environm ent. Flex hours. $ 8 -$ 1 2 /h r avg . Fiesta ton ■ 2100 S. priest . Tempe »EOE FAST in S cottsdale A ir P ark location. F A X re su m e to 9 2 2 -4 6 6 9 A tte n tio n : V ik i FT C o m e J o in t h e E x c i t e m e n t w ith t h e # 1 D e liv e r y T e a m fo r th e A S U A re a ! FT/PT FT W ith th e addition o f hot w ing s, salad s & bread sticks, this Front Desk D om ino’s is o n e o f th e top cam pus stores in th e country. FT/PT W E NEED Reservations Housekeeping FT Job L in e 804-5285 Fiesta Inn 2100 S. Priest Tempe • EOE We support a drug-free work environment. You won'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 c o m p e titiv e w a g e p a id D irectory Assistance O perators 4 2 5 0 E. C a r o d b ^ k /B Id g . K. Ste. 16 0 9 9 8 0 2 VV, Peoria (NE c o rn e r o f Peoria & 9 9 th A M Ü B b •HAIR MODELS* Needed for M atrix H air Show FREE HAIR SERVIC E! Bring a friend! 3 9 2 -4 2 4 9 1-800-282-2822, Ext. 1-3020 SERVICES C A L L 5 1 7 -0 7 8 9 Tempe Campus (602) 921-9925 C a lM -8 0 0 -B A R T E N D www.bartendingacademy.com RESTAURANTS/ BARS 6 C uJiiu f tû t futir o tu f...- 2 Ü - i Ask about our free week! 6:30am to 6pm, M-F For ages 2-6 NE Comer of College & Broadway » Tempe » 894-5338 m m RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS W OODSHED II W OODSHED I VTax SP69 One-Topping Pizza Not valid w/Cny offers Additional toppings extra NFL Sunday Ticket (ALL GREEN BAY GAMES) Pool & Darts Home of the $1.25 Shot Satellite TV (NFL) & (College) Greeks Welcome 1 2 Your Wing Order FREE Sun & Mon. 8 3 1 -W O O D C offees Á PPV ga>w& 1/2 Your W i n g O rder FRISE - S u it. A WtoQ., Jr. ' 8 4 4 -S H E D B a se lin e & Mill U niversity & D o b so n ■ Ovor-100 -Upscale M 4 SotoWtoè \ £1 '$ôi 899-3434 5 2 4 W . Broadw ay Rd. Wanta^F/^Ef pizza? Serving Tempe 831-8500 M cC lintock & S outhern Sec our ad on Thursday! te P i ^ i S 5 &on mm HELP W ANTEDGENERAL -9445 S /E com e HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL C U S T O M E R SERVICE • C O L L E C T IO N S • A U T H O R IZ A T IO N S C EN TRA L STORE O P E R A T O R S • EXPRESS C R ED IT Join the d y n a m ic team at o u r office s in T e m p e and- enjoy: FFINANCIAL ACS and CREDIT SERVICES 'H ar ' W o Show ALL N F t/. Ink* rested1in g e ttin g in on a la s t-tra c k fo r p ro m o tio n , a d va n ce m e n t and success? S tuck in a de ad-e nd job th a t s ta k in g y o u n o w Ik fast? T h en F A C S , the P hoenix area’s h o tte st n e w e m p lo y e r, w a n ts to ta lk to y o u ! I he FACS G ro u p , Inc. p ro v id e s fin a n c ia l, ere and a d m in is tra tiv e services fo r Federated D e p a rtm e n t Stores, Inc. in c lu d in g M a c v ’s, as w e ll as o th e r com panie s. Business is exc le n t so w e re lo o k in g fo r d e pend able , m o tiv a te d , se rvice -o rie n te d p e ople to jo in o u r d y n a m ic team . In o u r fast-paced e n v iro n m e a d va n ce m e n t o p p o rtu n itie s a b o u n d - in as little as 120 da vs, vo u can m o ve u p to a p o s itio n o f g re a te r re s p o n s ib ility an d re w a rd . . m 1 m ■ * »1». (o ft 4 8 th St. berw agtl B roadw ay & S o u th ern , W i,to ) ' SERVICES A s W e G ro w , S o D o Y o u ! I I I I w e e k ly , a $ 1 0 0 h ir e -o n b o o n s , p a id t r a in in g , [ f le x ib le s c h e d u lin g , a n d b e n e f its in c lu d in g a I 401(k). B Phoenix Campus (602) 957-3771 FT or PT, m ust have current auto insurance and valid drivers license. Sm all truck a mustApply in person at Action Apparel. 1415 E. .University D r., Ste. 9, Tem pe. EOE ■ 1906 E. M ain , (NW c o m e r o f M ain ^ t'G ilh p n 9 6 5 -6 7 -3 5 SCXEIN PHNIER/CDUHER Apply In Person After 11am at: 903 S. Rural Rd. • Tempe Or Call 968-5555 ups, busvjjj No. PERSONALS Classifieds Serving ASU • F/T & P /T Phone Help, Pizza M akers, Drivers • Drivers- $7-$14/hr. (including m ileage and tips) ■ » • Safe Driving Cash Bonuses • Very Flexible Hours (around your school schedule) • Late Night & Lunch Shifts Especially Needed PT NEW SUSHI BAR Contemporary Japanese restau­ rant in downtown Scottsdale is accepting applications for host­ ess & servers. G reat pay. 4235772. Call between 9am- 1pm. t&rtsáodMksL> Have Fun... Make M o n e y Meet People Better Ingredients. Better Pizza. Bellperson M IK E PU L O 'S S p ag h etti Co. 4th and M ill now h irin g ft/p t host(ess), bussers and servers. No phone calls please. m loin the Fiesta Fuhl PBX -, iêSÈÈm 1 I d f i ¡¡¡I • Bus Driver • Custodian •C lerks •S ecretaries • Special Education Teacher Assist. • Indian Education Teacher Assist. • Translater/ Interpreter-Spanish P eoria .y â . YOUCAMSIAMI BARI ENDING AT AGT 19 w C O N T IN EN T A L C A T E R IN G serv ice ; p erso n n el's dream . Work some of the most prestig­ ious parties & special events in Phx. M ust b e a tte n tiv e to de­ tail, appearance & personable. Exp a + but not nec. W e pro­ vide tra in in g . Fax. re s 2319330 attn: Rod or apply at 225 N . 32nd P i. Phx betw een 1-4 pm M-F. $8-$10/hr Professional resumes and cover letters by former personnel mgr. of Fortune 500 co. Interview & job search tech­ niques. 20% off w/student ID B a rte n d in g A c a d e m y < CARRABBA'S M AJER LE'S SPORTS G rill is c u rrently h iring all positions. Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St., Phx. ADVANTAGE RESUME SERVICE JO B OPPORTUNITIES riestnmn Night Audit T empe Classifieds WORK! m Tem pe Elementary School District has the following positions available: $HOENlX A R IZO N A A TH L ETIC club now hiring enthusiastic cafe/bar staff Apply in person 1425 W . 14th St. Tempe F O O D S E ^ jC ^ _ Italian G rill, looking for great people to join our team. FOH & BOH positions avail. A pply in person between l-3pm, M-F. IM , NEEDS DOCUMENT CODERS M ust Typ e 50 wpm. the Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 H H ip f HELP W ANTED F O O D S |R V IC E ^ T h is s h o u ld b o y o u r a d C a ll 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 nr tor your sch. schedule? Are you customerservice orientód?| + coqim. H ave fun talk in g on thè telep h o n e te llin g p eo p le' about; o u r d isco u n t tra v e l o p ­ p o rtu n ities: C all now , 7369500, Find it $ 7/hr, flex h rs, am & pm, a r­ ound y o u r c la ss schedule. M ust type 50 wpm & be w ill­ ing to w ork w knds. C asual dress, friendly office- Located at 48th & Southern! 438-2511. HELP W ANTED- HELPW ANTEDF O O D S E R V IC ^ R E C E P T IO N IS T /C A S H IE R , FU L L o r p a rt tim e. $ 7 /h r to s tart. N eed good phone and people skills. C all Sarah 9677594. : HELP W ANTEDSALES Classifieds Please apply in person at 3205 S. Rural Rd. DATA ENTRY PT J.CREW WHSE Want to pay bills & build your future? We provide all training. $2-3K/mo. on up. Flex hrs, p/t, f/t, feu info 380-6163 press 1 R O C K & R O LL Hiringi F/Tv P/T $7/hr., all po­ sitions; Cali Jim at 894-2489. Ü St a t e P ress M on d ay, Sep tem b er 2 9 , 1997 • $7.50/hour to sta rt fo r m o st p o sitio n s C o m p le te b e n e f its fo r fu ll-tim e G e n e ro u s d is c o u n ts o n m o s t M a c y ’s p u r c h a s e s S e r v ic e & p e r f o r m a n c e a w a r d s in person Mon. - Fri, bara put tr 24 24-h -h o u r jo job b h fao tlin e ; •ositions. M ori.- 808-0008 1 888 284-3227 - - • V a r ie ty o f f u ll - tim e a n d p a r t - t i m e s h i f t s • F u lly p a id t r a i n i n g o n p h o n e a n d C R T o n lin e a p p lic a tio n s • R e c r e a tio n a n d s o c ia l a c t iv itie s ä2nd Street and Wes State P ress HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP W ANTEDCHILD CARE HELP W ANTEDCHILD CARE PROIR CASH exp. helpful/ not n e sse c . to p ro v id e frien d ly c a s t serv. as a lunch cashier at our facility. A llied Signal bid. #503, Q u ick , e ffic ie n t, and frien d ly are the m ain q u a lif. Fun atmos. to work and a great Co. to work for! Come join us at Eurfest D ining S e rv c e s. No wktids or holidays. Hrs. are 102 .M-F call Lisa at 23 \ -4280. MOTHERlS HELPER- help w/ homework, clean-up, some driv­ ing. A fter school hrs & Sats., som e ev es $ 7 /h r, approx,; 15 hrs/wk 840-9798 Males ok. PT NANNY- free room & board + h rly pay. K eep a FT class sch ed u le and liv e fo r free in beautiful home. Chinese speak­ ing p re f. C all 598-9865 after 6pm. HELP W ANTEDCHILD CARE A PART-TIM E nanny or baby­ sitter needed. A fternoons, flex, hrs Must have car. 854-2201. C H ILD C A R E needed in my home. M -F 3-6pm; 2 kids, ages 6 ,9 . D eb 675 -5 3 0 9 o r 9662263 LOCAL PRESCHOOL seeking m otivated, energetic teachers. P/T afternoons. 839-3306. SERVICES Page 19 Monday, September 29,1997 " NANNY P/T, M-F, 2:45 - 6:30 p.m. For 9 & 12 year old, n/s, female, w/reliable car to drive to activities. Ref. req. ex. pay; S. Tempe, Sonja 940-3839. P/T BABYSITTING for 2 child­ ren. Flex. hrs. N.E. Scottsdale area. Please ciall Sheri 657-0271. P/T NANNIE needed for over­ n ig h t stay s in S c o ttsd a le 2-3 nights per m onth $100./night, refs req. call 905-3156. P/T NANNY hrs/days flexible, n e ar R ay/K yrene. C are fo r 5 an d 2 y ear old boys. M ust have transp. Call 940-1412 : SERVICES INTERNSHIPS WRITING INTERN. Must have ta n sp o rta tio n , great people sk ills & jo u rn a lis tic a b ility a plu s. 20 h rs/w k, $5.50/hr. C onvince uS in w riting th a t you're the best person for this job. The Hired Pen, Inc. JO B OPPORTUNITIES INTERNSHIPS A .G . EDW A RDS Investm ent firm seeks researcher/telem arketer. Great opp. for person in­ te re sted in in v e stm en t field. Flex hrs 15-20/wk. N egotiable salary. C all from 1-4pm M -F 948-9400 UP TO $1,000 + w kly G ive out or advertise a phone #s. Lit­ tle work! C all 607,7750 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PAID INTERSHIP - Commercial R e a l E state firm seeks help 20hrs./w k C all or fax resum e Attn: Bryan M organ stern 9290444 fax: 967-4880 ATTN STUDENTS! Earn as you learn prog. Have all your exp paid w hile atten d in g school. Pay y o u r tu itio n in cash. Graduate w/a 6 fig income. Call 1-800^573-3236 Ext. 1449. SERVICES PETS GOT A dream? Are grants and loans ju st not enough? Help is available! 946-5253. ” TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING BEVERLY HILLS $$ 1 99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. L aser. A PA /M LA . Same day. D TP. N ear ASU . B rian, 9675987. Salon. Repechage, french cos­ metics. Haircuts & style, perms, manicure/ pedicure, perm anent m akeup & fa c ia ls. A day o f beauty. O pen.7 days. 2519 £• T hom as R d. 381 -1212. 10% offw /A SU I.D . M AKE UP to $2000 in one w eek! M o tiv a ted , student groups, "fraternities, sororities, etc." Needed for marketing pro­ je c t. C all D ennis @ 800-3579009 TUTORS ENGLISH TUTOR & exp. teach­ er. specialty: edit term papers. Social sciences call 838-5993 FREE PHONE cards! AH U S. calls only -19c per minute. For your free phone card call toll free 1-888-294-3294 pin #2434 or e-mail your request to gridiron@ix.netcom.com PERSONALS I NEED a ride to Colorado for T hank sg iv in g ! W ill share gas/driving, Marisa 784-8429 AD O PTIO N $2000-$5000/ WK, Not MLM, no selling, 24 hr. info. m sg. 1800-234-8949. Find it F A S T in th e C lassifieds SERVICES , FU N D R A IS IN G ^ ~ MATH TUTOR avail W ill tutor a ll classes through M ath 271. Call 779-2551 for more info. MISCELLANEOUS G H O ST W R IT IN G / SM A LL jo b s , big jo b s , m em oirs, fast service, call Helga @ 895-0842 DEVOTED 33 yr. old, married, c h ild le ss couple w ish with all th e ir h e arts to adopt a w hite newborn. Full time mother who herself was adopted as a child, understands the importance of a happy, loving home & a secure future. E xpenses paid. Plense c a l 1 Susan & D avid, 1-800661-3117. AIRTASER S elf-D efen se System : P rotect yourself from 15 feet away. Life­ tim e w arranty, S uperior stop­ ping power. Free replacement is used. W holesale price, so call today. 905-2639. HORSEBACK RIDING lessons 1 mi. from A SU. E nglish & W estern. S tu d en t rates. 9527262 H A Y D E N 'S FERRY R E V I Ë INTERNETRELATED SERVICES W SERVICES FREE DOG- Lab/Springer Span­ iel 2 yrs. old. V ery playful; house broken. 736-0839 All Writing needs. 423-3434 TUTORS TUTORS A L L HOMEPAGES ASUs Literary Magazine Coll 965-1243 for more info ACE WRITER From $75 for students W/ ASU accounts. Call 829-6246 TUTORS T U T O R S A R E We o ffe r tu to ria l fo r th e fo llo w in g classes: R egistration fo r Fall semester is g o in g on now. CALL US FOR INFORMATION. TUTORS N O T A L IK E A lg e b ra M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117 F in it e M a t h M AT 119 C a lc u l u s / P r e c a l c u lu s M A T 21 0 , M A T 27 0 , M A T 27 1, M A T 170 S t a t i s t ic s Q BA 221, PSY 23 0 P h y s ic s PHY 111, PHY 112 B u s in e s s FIN 3 0 0 , O P M 30 1 C h e m is t r y CHM 113, CHM 11 5/6 E n g in e e r in g CON 2 2 1 , CON 323 S u c c e s s fu lly H elp in g S tu d e n ts S in c e 1 9 8 0 . MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER RESEARCH INFORMATION LARG EST LIB R A R Y O F IR FO R M A TIO R !M U .S . 8 0 0 -3 5 1 -0 2 2 2 w w w . re s e a r c h -a s s is ta n c e .c o r n O r, r u s h $ 2 .0 0 to : R e s e a rc h A s s is ta n c e 1 1 3 2 2 Id a h o A v e -, # 2 0 6 -S N + L o s A n g e le s , CA 9 0 0 2 5 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Frances Drake • S tate P ress Classifieds Matthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 ALL SUBJECTS Order Catalog Today with Visa / MC or COD m om SIMON" Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 Classified Ad Order Form ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip M onday, Septem ber 29, 1997 Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Avoid credit card excesses whdn out socializing. Be con­ sistent in your dealings with others. Stay on top o f financial ’obligations, TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A void morning distrac­ tions w hile doin g dom estic ch ores. You speak with authority, and others take note. Optimism and persua­ siv e n e ss Combine to your advantage. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) A friend seems to be a bit o f a wet blanket. In business, follow your gut feelings. The ev en in g fin d s you ex cited about a promising career lead. CANCER (June 21 to July 2 2 ) The d a y ’s behind-thescenes developments are posi­ tive. Avoid financial risks, and don’t be taken in by som e­ o n e ’ s lin e. R om ance is favored after dark. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You Could be tight fisted ; h ow ever, an in vestm en t opportunity looks worth your while. Travel and social life are happily accented later in the day . VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Business talks are favored. You co m p lete a project. Y ou’re in vited som ew here special, but there are som e strings attached to that oppor­ tunity, LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Expect pleasant times in the com pany o f your friends. Romance is a plus. After dark, there’s a need to face facts squarely. Don’t put things off. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Couples make decisions about a c h ild ’s w elfare. Delays are likely in business, but a new opportunity pleases you. Accent togetherness after dark, SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec. 21) A social event could have business ramifications. New ideas improve income. It’s not a great time for shop­ ping. You and a friend have a difference of opinion. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You pick up som e­ thing unexpected for the home (»' family when out shopping, and it fits in your budget, In the coming months, you’ll be involved in humanitarian pro­ jects. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You could be joinin g a group or club. Creativity is at a peak, and com municative skills are tops. Your social life will pick up dramatically in the next few months. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Curtail a tendency to pro­ crastinate. Make the most of the here and now. You can concentrate better after dark, so tackle mental projects then. YOU BORN TODAY enjoy the pleasure of your own com­ pany and are very m uch a loner - which gives others the false impression that you are a snob. When you finally do let people in, they find you are warm and sincere and a loyal friend. Your seriou sn ess is attributable to your keen philosophical bent. You are attracted to any fie ld that allows you free rein to think and to explore your ow e psy­ che. 01997 King Features Syndicate lac. P le a s e b e s u re to c h e c k y o u r a d . M a k e s u re it re a d s e x a c tly a s y o u w ish it to a p p e a r in th e State Press, in c lu d in g p u n c tu a tio n . P le a s e c h e c k y o u r a d th e firs t d a y it a p p e a rs -th e lia b ility o f th e .S fa te Press s h a ll n o t e x c e e d th e c o s t o f th e a d a n d c re d it m a y b e g iv e n fo r th e firs t in s e rtio n o n ly . M in o r s p e llin g e rro rs d o n o t q u a lify fo r m a k e ­ g o o d s . N o re fu n d s w ill b e g iv e n , b u t if yo u n e e d to c a n c e l y o u r a d a c re d it w ill b e h e ld o n a c c o u n t fo r fu tu re a d v e rtis in g . vJ Check# a A T P rivate P arty 1 E S 3 lin e m inim um . A dd a 1 3 -c h a ra c te r bold h ea d lin e fo r th e cost o f 2 lin es. Prim par Day » C o m m ercial 1 d ay , $ 2 .6 0 p e r lin e 2 -4 d ay s, $ 1 .9 9 p e r lin e , p e r day 5 -9 d ays, $ 1 ,7 6 p e r lin e , p e r d ay 10+ d ay s, $ 1 .6 0 p e r lin e , p e r day 1 -4 d ays, $ 1 .7 0 p e r lin e , p e r d ay 5 -9 d ays, $ 1 .6 5 p e r lin e , p e r d ay 10+ days, $ 1 .4 9 p e r lin e, p e r d ay Dates vou wtbtr vo w ad to r u n : ,, D riv e d license* □ O B □§B g BankCard Number R .......................... » o f Day* ................................. T ow X ss $ Name on Card Expiration Date Sony, am cannot accept personal ads through the mail. 1 098 085 010 020 061 064 061 077 064 086 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Loet/Found 088 052 049 101 074 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-CNId O ar* 072 Help Wamed-Clerfeial 073 Help Wanted-Food Service 070 Help W anled-Genaral 071 030 040 102 107 103 135 Help Wanted-Sales Homes for Rent Home for Sale Housedeaning Instruction Insurance Internet-Related Services 130 Internet URLs 075 Mamehipe 056 076 015 120 060 045 063 048 082 090 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale MobUe Homes Motorcycles Moving & Storage Music Personal» 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bere Rooms for Rant Servioes Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 Townhomea/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomes/Condos for Sale 060 Transportation 067 Travel 108 Tutors 106 TypingW ord Processing 116 Wanted S ta te P ress Monday, September 2 9,1997 Page 2 0 State P ress Crosswords: ■ la i o ffe r. For th e c ru c iv e rb a lis t in y o u . Home o f the ’Killer" Calzone 894-MAMA Ffl££ ¡¡¿DAYTIME ,. SPINAL EXAMINATION AND X-RAYS $25 MONDAY DINNER SPECIAL 5PM-7PM Offer expires 10/2/97 I will include an orthopedic test, a neurological test, a spinal alignment check, an examination for restricted or excess motion in the spine, x-ray and aprivate consultation to discuss the results. "KILLER" CALZONES .................................................. ..... 1.... 1......................... m ....... 14oz.soda o rtira M iomemade f i l a i ice CAMPUS DELIVERY 106 E. University Dr. 1 block East o f M ill Ave. Example of good spinal structure. Example of poor spinal structure. 00 University , Come Experience ' \ The Mama 's Tradition 1I -1 ^ B é | 0 k *w s Best" ■ Twelve Danger Signals 1. Numbness in arms and hands 2. Restless nights 3. Pain between shoulders 4. Stiffness of neck 5. Nerve tension 6. Depression 7. Headaches 8. Anxiety in the chest 9. Stiffness or pain in the lower back 10. Tired hips and legs 11. Painful joints 12. Whiplash D o Y ou U n d e rs ta n d th e D a m a g in g E ffe c ts o f S u b lu x a tio n ? ■ O nly Damaged Tissue Gives You Symptoms. ■ You Can Build Disease W ith o u t Knowing It. Brain Stem C ontrol Center C l .02 (AtlaS-Axis) Healthy Nerve Pinched Nerve = Subluxation = Disease = Sym ptom s »’NEAL ClIROPRACTIC C elebrating 17 Years In Practice CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT I Personal injury, Workman's Compensation, Insurance and Cash Accepted, Most Workman's Compensation Cases Eligible For Care - Call For Details From ASU change ■ —< S o u th on R u ra l, tu rn le ft on B a selin e & go 1 /4 m ile, tu rn le ft into L ak e C o u n try V illa g e C e n te r a t W in ch ell’s an d F iresto n e T ire . Loo k for O ’N e a l C h iro p ractic neon efceQAME* 491-1242 For your convenience, call 8:30am - 6:00pm Mon.-Fri. for appointment. Ôur office is designed to keep waiting to an absolute minimum! sign on rig h t, 4 doo rs from A M C T h e a te r box o ffice. T AKE COUNTRY VltLAOR ■*“* Shopping Center *"* Dr. Richard L . O'Neal, Palmer Graduate. Team P hysician S p o rt a n d Fitn ess C o uncil W ork) O lym pic C h iro p rac tic C o m m ittee IN THE CORNERSTONE .. i ’ Rural & university 829-7473 1070 E. Baseline Rd., Tempe