ASASU b ill would yank concert cash Like a.. . B y K ara Shirk S tate P ress Throngs of shoppers flocked to the grand opening of the Arizona Mills Mall on Thursday morning. Tempe’s newest mall, which took just 15 months to build, lies at the intersection of Baseline Road and Interstate 10. : A perceived lack of interest in Associated Students of ASU concerts has spurred new legislation that would take the $15,000 concert budget and give the money to college councils and campus clubs and organizations. Sen. Andrew Leftburg, College of Business, is drafting a bill to be introduced at the Dec. 2 ASASU senate meeting. “The question comes down to what benefits us academi­ cally and scholastically, which is why we’re here,” Leftburg said. “If we did away with concerts, would the University change? No. If we did away with campus clubs and organi­ zations or college councils it would.” A utum n N ess, ASASU activ ities vice president, heads the department that organizes campus concerts and other events. “I wish he (Leftburg) could understand what the job of this office is,” Ness said. ‘The job of this office is tp build ^com m unity on campus. To make this more than jusC going to class- and going home.: He doesn’t see the importance of it I don’t think.” ; Campus clubs and organizations and college councils are • budgeted money annually. College councils have spent less than a quarter of the money they are allotted for the year and $10,000 is left in campus clubs and organizations, Ness said. T urn to A SASU, pag e 2. ASU professor helps instruct teachers on geography B y G enoa S iboed -C o h n S tate P ress In his 28 years at ASU, Malcolm Comeaux has put his name chi the map with students. Now, he is reaching out to Arizona teachers. Comeaux, a professor of geography, is raising teaching standards in A rizona schools through the efforts of the Arizona Geographic Alliance. The organization con­ sists of 2,100 members, devoted to instruct­ ing teachers on educating elementary and secondary students in geography. “This is a U.S.-wide project which is Working to improve geographic education in geographic education. grades K through “ ttfe are tgtuning teachers not Instructional materials 12,” Comeaux said. “This program is only /osteography education, such as maps as well as newsletters are also training teachers to train other teachers.” hut also to she)\v the potential o f provided by National The program was majoring m geography and jabs Geographic to mem­ bers of the Arizona instituted in 1992, in the f i e | ; forming a relation­ Geographic Alliance. — M alcolnsCom eaM , ship between the “The model National Geographic ASU geogrqjmy profi^sor. developed by the Society and the state National Geographic of Arizona. The National Geographic Society is the best way to get to children,” he said. ‘To provides $50,000 annually to hold conferences get to children, we have to get to teachers.” and a summer institute, gearing teachers for The alliance also is working to promote future careers in geography, he added. “We are training teachers not only for geography education, but also to show the potential of majoring in geography and jobs in the field,” Comeaux said. Arizona was the last of the 50 states to institute the program, but Comeaux said the A rizona G eographic A lliance has become one of the best in the nation. “There is much more involvement by teachers and in their growth professionally,” he said. “These teachers are actively and aggressively growing professionally in geoT urn to C om eaux , page 2 . City Council, DTC members argue over free parking spaces By T im B axter State P ress The usually sm ooth-running relationship between Tempe government and the Downtown Tcmpe Community stalled Thursday as the two looked for parking spaces. At a special joint meeting between the DTC and City Council, tempers sometimes flared as council members sought tree parking for people on city hall business and DTC members claimed there simply are not enough parking spaces. Eventually, the DTC agreed to study the issue, and get back to the council in “a timely manner,” probably 30 days. Concerns were also raised over council oversight of the DTC, and what should happen when DTC has different goals than the city. “At what point does the city have veto power over the DTC?” Mayor Neil Giuliano asked. The DTC, Inc. was created in 1993 as a business improvement district for the downtown area and is support­ ed by a special assessment of members. Council member Carol Smith said there needs to be a mechanism to resolve issues between the two groups. “When we have to talk about it like this, it’s already become a major issue,” she said. “Every one of us expressed concern from day one about access to parking,” she added. Council member Linda Spears was even more emphatic. “Parking to me is one of the areas of distrust with the DTC,” she said. “The fact that the DTC thinks it doesn’t have a role in tourism bothers me a whole lot.” Constituents have a right to free parking, Council mem­ ber Ben Arredondo said. “The bottom line is, parking is a partnership,” he said. “I would expect in any partnership to have a say. That’s the bottom line — delivery of free parking downtown.” Development downtown has caused parking downtown to dwindle from approximately 1,100 spaces a few years ago to less than 500 now . Metered parking was put in primarily to rèduce the num­ ber of students parking all day, and to create more turnover in business customers. But everyone seems to agree that there just isn’t enough parking to go around. DTC member Gayle Shanks, owner of Changing Hands Bookstore, said the city has juggled the numbers in the master plan to make it appear there were enough spaces. “We add 2,000 square feet of retail, but those very same parking spaces are suddenly enough,” she said, adding that the city should not be asking for parking for city hall cus­ tomers; it should be seeking parking for everyone. Giuliano said the city was experiencing “growing pains.” : Although more spaces will be included in upcoming America West and Seventh Street and Myrtle develop-, ments, it would not be enough. “We will still need to address parking,” Giuliano said. Page 2 State P ress Friday, November 21,1997 ASASU__ Wmm C o n t in u e d fro m page 1. .Campus -clubs and organizations dar of events printed as a service to may subm it w ritten entries to the the ASU community. Requests are State Press in the basement of the accepted on a flfst-come, first-served Matthews Center. Requests will not basis and are printed^s space permits. be taken over the phone or via fax. |§ F o v r W a d s C o m o ta u iity v '”*' Deadline for requests is noon the Meeting regarding preservation Of day before publication and entries ctdhtte day at 6 p.m. in OcotiUo Hall will not be accepted more than three UmojaLounge, C-wing second notar. w orking days before publication. • Geology Department Geo Club — 1 Only one entry per organization per Fall mineral and fossil sale from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in front of Bateman day is permitted. E n tries m ust c o n ta in th e fu ll Physical Sciences F-wing. name of the club or organization, a • Phi Alpha Delta (Pre-law fraterni­ description o f the event, date, time ty) —• Pie-law day at 10 a.m. in the and the full address of the location. MU VantanU room. AH requests are subject to editing « Buddhist Association a t A1SU — fo r c o n te n t, sp ace and c larity . Mindfulness meditation and discus­ Incomplete or illegible entries will sion “How to live without feàt and w orry,” at 7 p.m. in MU Cochise be discarded. «. ■* The Today Section is a daily calen- West, room 212. ' “That’s fine if he wants to take concert programming that we’ve been working on all year,” Ness said. “Then he’s going to have to explain that to the senate: The best I can do is go to senate and show what’s hap­ pened and what will happen. I’ve been defending this event all year but I really need student support.” Sen. Drew Feth, Engineering College, said he sees merit in Leftburg’s legislation. “It has nothing to do w ith A utum n Ness,” Feth said “It has to do with past his­ tory. We lost $40,000 last year. That tells me we need to do something to change something. I’m not in favor of supporting a concert that’s going to benefit 200 people when we go to a school of 40,000.” Audrey Church, vice president of student affairs, saidLshe supports Ness in her efforts to save her budget and her department. “I support the notion that college ,coun­ cils need money but 1 don’t think its right to take money from a budget in the middle of the year when I realize the activities depart­ ment has plans for the money,” Church said. “I know Vice President Ness, one of her biggest goals was concerts for the stu­ dents and she has a big spring concert planned and I totally support her on that.” Sen. Kevin Molloy, Honors College, said he is concerned with the image the legisla­ tion projects. “I’m weary of how taking money from her budget is going to look,” Molloy said. “I think it’s going to look like punishment. I think that ASASU funds a lot of things right now as far as college councils and stuff like that, and we still don’t have a good reputa­ tion for the most part.” Leftburg said he doubts the legislation will pass. “I’d love for it to, but she’s (Autumn) going to get up and make a sob story,” he said. “But at least the senators whose name is on it can say at least we tried. I hope, it does pass.” Comeaux C o n t in u ed fro m page 1. graphic education.” Puerto Rico, Guam and Canada also are providing geographic, instruction for their teachers through the alliance. . The two-week summer institute, held at ASU, covers content geography and pro­ vides training from teachers at other insti­ tutes. Fall and spring conferences are also held to continue training of teacher consul­ tants, instructors who in turn help teachers in geography education. AlAGAZl KC E v H U R S e He said the alliance has also increased the involvement of ASU teachers in geography. “Twenty-four teachers, residents on the ASU campus, participate in the summer institute, which includes one week in north­ ern Arizona,” he said. C om eaux was recently honored for teaching at the college and university level by the National Council for Geographic Education. He was one of five professors to win the award this year. STATE P ress ONLINE — http://news.vpsa.asu.edu 25t h An nu a l is pleased to announce the opening of their clinic specializing in: Pulliam Journalism Fellowships Pediatric Medicine - Susan Brallier, D.O. At*. • Graduating college seniors are invited to apj)ly for the 25th annual Pulliam Journalism Fellowships. Ten-week summer internships will be awarded to 20 journalism or liberal arts majors in the August 1997June 1998 graduating classes. Winners will receive a $5,000 stipend and will work at either The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News or The Arizona Republic. Application postmark deadline is March 1, 1998. For complete information, write: Russell B. Pulliam Pulliam Fellowship Director The Indianapolis News P.O. Box 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 GUMBY’S PIZZA GUMBY’S CONE CRAZY XL f I6**J DRUNKEN STUPOR 14* LARGE CHEESE PIZZA AND 14 ’ LARGE POKEY ST1X JUST CHEESE PIZZA for $9.99 afforDOUBLES 2 PIZZAS WITH 2 TOPPINGS 2 SMALL..... $7 .99 2 Medium— .$9 .9 9 2 LARGE..... $ 1 1 .9 9 2 XL (1 6 ” J..3 1 2 .9 9 2 GIANT...... $ 1 7.99 BONUS BUYS 1 w/ any purchase 10 ” STIX........$2.99 10 WINGS..— $3.99 12" STIX...__$3.99 14 ” STIX.».....$4.99 I 4 PEPP ROLLS.33.00 izza www.numbyspizza.com 9 2 1 -F A S T 921-3278 HOURS Sun-Thurs lla.m.-2:30a.m. Fri-Sun lla.m.-3:30a.m. WE ACCEPT HC. VISA DISCOVER AND PERSONAL CHECKS ON DELIVERY WITH PROPER 1.0. $4.99 CAMPUS SPECIAL 20” GIANT CHEESE PIZZA FOR $ 7 .9 9 IMU only M ASU n n w SS.99 off cimpus CREATE YOUR OWN SPECIAL 12 2 ITEMFIZH 12’ POKEY STI*. 12 WINGS. I KPT sousMtnwrersiMcoke Obstetrics and Gynecology - Elizabeth Claxton, M.D. Ate Internal Medicine - David Wisinger, M.D. and Maricela Moffitt, M.D. Hematology/Oncology - Michael Lobell, M.D. and Kaye Linke, M.D. 1492 S. Mill, Suite 307 Tempe, AZ 85281 968-4200 Scheduling n o w for appointm ents beginning D ecem ber I. Participating w ith m any m ajor health plans. 11™ ANNUAL P R O F E S S IO N A L L E A D E R S H IP C O N F E R E N C E N o v e m b e r 2 1 - 2 2 ,1 9 9 7 aamers: Improving Leadership Through InterculturalAwareness” -CONFERENCEKICK-OFF* • Friday, Nov. 21 • Join us for our Corporate Showcase! Student Services Bldg: 6:00-800pm ♦WORKSHOPSESSIONSANDFASHIONSHOW* • Saturday , Nov. 22 Deans Patio: 8:00am Registration CHOOSE 2 FOR $9.99 CHOOSE JF0R $ 13 .9 9 VESVOUCM CMOSE THEMNC ITEMS • Free & Open to All ASU Students. _____ W orld/N ation______ STATE P ress Friday, November 21, 1997 :. P age 3 Egypt vows to tighten security at historical sites By A nne T hom pson Associated P ress CAIRO, Egypt Sri The Great Pyramids rest on a sweep­ ing desert plain, open to just about everyone — picnicking families, sightseeing schoolchildren and the hundreds of thousands of foreigners who flock to Egypt every year to marvel at the nation’s greatest attraction. In the middle sits the Sphinx, named for its resemblance to a mythical monster who killed those who failed to answer an impossible riddle. Now, Egyptian leaders face another riddle, perhaps equally impossible: How do you make such wonders safe from terror attacks? Monday’s massacre of 58 tourists at a pharaonic tomb has inspired a drastic shakeup of Egypt’s security forces, with President Hosni Mubarak vowing To tighten protection at archaeological sites. He appointed a committee Thursday to immediately review current safety measures, with the goal of drafting a new security plan for tourist areas. He replaced the interior minister, responsible for die nation’s police, as well as the police chief in Luxor, the southern city where the massacre took place. But securing the tombs and temples of Egypt will be no mean feat. Most of these sights are massive and in the mid­ dle of the desert, where visitors are vulnerable and intruders can approach unexpected. The pyramid plateau, for example, juts up from a chaotic Cairo Suburb and stretches put into waves of rocks and sand, making it accessible from the desert by foot, camel or horse, despite the guarded entrance. Short of building an enormous fence around the 250acre area, or patrolling it with helicopters, the only obvious solution seems to be posting: lots of police. Even that might not keep out a determined attacker, and it would certainly alter the experience of touring one of the Seven Wonders of the World. “You can’t have hundreds»of security guards surround­ ing every place,” said Aileen McGinnis, a tour guide from Seattle whose charges were about the only foreigners at the pyramids Thursday afternoon. Her group was in the Luxor area Monday when six mili- A ssociated P ress As the Sphinx and a pyramid are seen in the background, presidential security guards stand at heightened alert in Git», Egypt. Monday’s massacre of 58 tourists at a pharaonic tomb inspired a drastic shakeup of Egypt’s security forces, with President Hosni Mubarak vowing to tighten protection at archaeological sites. tants stormed the nearby Temple of Hatshcpsut. The men walked calmly up to the two policemen at the gate and shot them, then turned their guns on hundreds of tourists visiting the 3,400-year-old temple. After the slaughter, McGinnis said, her group agreed to go ahead and visit the Hatshepsut temple the next day. They hired an armed guard to accompany them, but didn’t go inside, she said, “out of respect for the dead.” W itnesses p u t Ryder truck at lake where bom b was built B y Sandy S hore A ssociated P ress DENVER — A Ryder truck and a dark pickup were parked at a Kansas park near Terry Nichols’ home the day prosecutors say Nichols and Timothy McVeigh built the bomb that destroyed the Oklahoma City federal building, two witnesses testified Thursday. Neither man saw anyone around the two trucks, and neither identified the pickup as Nichols’ 1984 dark blue GMC truck. Richard Wahl and Robert Nelson testi­ fied they saw die bright yellow Ryder truck and the pickup tucked in a cul de sac along a gravel road at Geary State Fishing; Lake, 16 m iles from N ichols’ hom etow n of Hcrington, Kan., on April 18, 1995 — the day before the bombing. “I was very apprehensive ... there should have been somebody there, somebody fish­ ing. It shouldn’t have been a Ryder truck,” said Wahl, who testified he saw the vehicles about 9 am. as he arrived for a day of fish­ ing with his son. “I slowed down and came to a stop and looked for a place to turn around in case it got ugly.” Nelson noticed the trucks about 1 1 /2 hours earlier as he drove to work at the Junction C ity, K an., body shop were McVeigh picked up the rented truck the day before.' Nelson said he was curious and drove a few feet down the road, but “I couldn’t see nothing because of the trees and the hill. So I just turned around and left.” In all, he said, he saw the trucks for about 10 seconds. Nelson said he notified FBI agents about the sighting 10 days after the bombing after Ryder officials* interviewed Elliott’s Body Shop employees about McVeigh’s rental. Wahl called the FBI after seeing a televised broadcast asking for information about a Ryder truck. The two witnesses used light pens to pin­ point the trucks’ location on a map. Nichols sat rigidly at-the defense table. Prosecutors have alleged Nichols and McVeigh met at the park and mixed racing fuel, 4,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate fertilizer and blasting caps, packing the mixture into 55-gallon blue-and-white plas­ tic barrels inside the Ryder truck*. Defense attorneys say McVeigh bor­ rowed Nichols’ pickup that morning and Nichols was at Fort Riley, Kan., acquiring surplus equipment for his business. The April 19, 1995, bom bing o f the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building killed 168 people. Finding killers top priority for Jerusalem security chiefs B y D afna L inzer A ssociated P ress A m o c I H iI Praoo Palestinian children walk past soldiers Thursday, guarding an area of the Old City where a shooting occurad early Thursday. JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered his security chiefs Thursday to make their top pri­ ority finding the attackers of two Jewish seminary students who were shot in an ambush in the Old City’s Muslim Quarter. Authorities suspected Palestinian militants- were behind the early morning shooting, which killed one student and seriously wounded the other Thursday. “We cannot accept .. an attack in the Old City, in the heart of the capital of Israel,” the prime minister said. A spokesman for the Jewish seminary that the students attended suggested it would retaliate by pushing Jewish set­ tlement in Arab east Jerusalem. “The Arabs will pay for the attack for many years to come,” Ateret Cohanim spokesman Matti Dan promised. The students were ambushed shortly after midnight Wednesday as they walked through a narrow alley in the Muslim Quarter on the way to their dormitory. ; One or more gunmen crouching behind a low wall in the aljey opened fire with Kalashnikov assault rifles, felling one student with a shot to the. leg, police said. The attackers shot 26-year-old Gabriel Hirschberg, a Hungarian immigrant, six more times as he lay on the ground, killing him. Three more bullets hit the second student, who managed to run hundreds of feet to a group o f Israeli border police­ man guarding the home qf Infrastructure Minister Ariel Sharon. The student, seriously wounded, was hospitalized. At one point, pdlice said it appeared there been only one gunman, but said later there may have been more. While there was no claim of responsibility, Netanyahu said the shooters “appear to be professional killers.” After an emergency Cabinet meeting on the attack, Netanyahu ordered a pew police post and beefed-up patrols in the Old City. Police stopped passers-by in the Muslim Quarter to check their identities, and detained several residents. Israel’s Channel 2 TV said police were also investigating whether members of the Palestinian police were involved. A teret Cohanim sem inary — p artially funded by American millionaire Irving Moskowitz has been lead­ ing a campaign to settle Jews in Arab neighborhoods of east Jerusalem, which Palestinians hope to one day see as the capital of a Palestinian state. “Our enemies seem committed to carrying out” a holy war, Ateret Cohanim executive director Yossi Baumol said Thursday. “ If they know every terrorism act will be responded with by expanding the Jewish presence here maybe they would stop their attacks.” Jerusalem Mayor E^ud Olmert, a senior member of Netanyahu’s ruling Likud Party, demanded that Israel respond to the attack by suspending peace talks with the Palestinians, which had resumed only in September after months of crisis. The Old City, a flashpoint of Israeli-Arab violence, lies in east Jerusalem, which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast War and later annexed. _________ Opinion _________ P age 4 » _____________ _________ .ih p z press Friday, November 21,1997 _____ . : . '■ STATE PRESS | £ oos & JDravos B r a v o — To the A rizona M ills mall, for providing more places for a s to spend our measly paychecks. The Christm as shopping season draws near. Oh, the horror! The hor­ ror! The h o rro r o f C h ristm as sh o p p in g . Hey, today is payday for some o f us, and shopping ranks high am ong o u r fav o rite things to do here in the pig pen we call the newsroom. We ... must ... buy ... Sing and Snore Ernies. B o o — To the traffic that will accompany the Arizona M ills’ opening. G ridlock? Not really , but clo se en o u g h . T h in k d riv in g down the 202 loop during rush hour is bad? W ait’ll you get a load o f the traffic around the M ills during the heart o f the shopping season. B r a v o — To the campus group Promise of Progress, for their work in helping AfricanA m erican m ales succeed. I t’s nice to see groups like POP give back to the eorrynunity by m e n to rin g an d a d v isin g A fric a n American m ales. Hats o ff to POP founder Aaron Celious, B o o — To Nike, fo r th eir alleged use o f sw eatsh o p la b o r c o n d itio n s. S u re, ASU could use an endorsement by a major com­ pany to elevate our athletic programs to the next level. But not at the cost o f lives. B r a v o — To th e Iow a se a m stre ss w ho gave birth W ednesday to septuplets. The in fan ts are ju s t the second set know n to be born alive. Taking care o f one infant is tough enough. Taking care o f fo u r boys an d th r e e g ir l s w ill be e v e n to u g h e r. B obbi M cC aughey, th e m o th er, h as h er w ork c u t o u t fo r h er. You g o , g irl. We d o n ’t e n v y y o u one b it. A nd w e d o n ’t change diapers. Yuck. B o o — To the two alleged counterfeiters w h o w e re a r r e s te d in M a n z a n iia H a ll. U sin g a co m p u te r to; p rin t b o g u s $2Qs?t O ne o f suspects said m aking th e faux $20s w as e a s ie r th an w o rk in g . A boot, to th e head fo r Both o f you. f t's ju s t lik e fresh ­ men. W hat’s next, ordering pizza in class a la J e f f Spicoli? B r a v o — To the Arizona Diam ondbacks. The D -Backs drafted w isely in T uesday’s expansion draft. We hope this season that D-Backs No. 1 pick Brian Anderson plays the way he did in the World Series. The DB a c k s tra d e d w e ll, to o . C e n te r f ie ld e r D evon W h ite? We lik e it. S h o rtsto p ja y B elt? D itto . T he Tam pa B ay D ev il R ays w en t fo r o ffen se. T h e D -B acks w en t fo r defense. Good pitching beats good hitting. We’ll take it. »•¡SEL t r u ^ & u u t io n Chatterboxes disrupt classrooms a tte m p t to m ak e th e m s e lv e s a n d e v e ry o n e e ls e I would like to ask every ecky believe that it is the professor’s inability to teach that s tu d e n t at A SU o n e v ery BREVINS is a t fa u lt fo r th e ir p o o r ac ad em ic p erfo rm an c e. large favor: Please stop talk­ P erh ap s th e se -stu d e n ts’ p o o r p erfo rm an ces re su lt ing in class. Guest Columnist from the stream-of-consciousness, verbal-vom it thing If I hear one more “Oh my God, nooo way” or “ ...and then do you know what he that they spew forth during lecture. 1 know th at som e of you are saying “Yeah, right did?” I am going to kill someone. The truth is, I don’t know what “he” did and neither does anyone else sit­ on,” but it may be you I am describing; you may be ting in the general vicinity. Thè only question in my o n e o f th o se ta lk in g in c la s s . T ak e a lo n g , h ard m ind is w hat 1 m issed o f the p ro fe sso r’s lecture, inward look and ask yourself if you could be th e one 'thanks to the m ilitary-style debriefing you have been using the classroom o r lecture hall as a sort of arena for social interaction; carrying on with your friend. Here are a few things I ’m su re th e re a re that you may want to ask other, more appropriate y o u rs e lf : H av e I e v e r and far less distracting p la c e s you co u ld d is ­ •dgve all pay a lot o f money to hear the been shushed in class by a p ro f e s s o r o r a n o th e r c u ss to p ic s o f su ch p r o fe s s o ff^ l us what is going to be on student? Have I ever sat earth-shattering propor­ tions. I feel bad that all the next exam. I would also like to walk dow n in class, and then e v e ry o n e s ittin g in the o f us try in g to do the general .vicinity moves as sc h o o l th in g a re d i s ­ away from class learning a little bit more turbing you, but take it fa r a w a y as p o s s ib le ? . than the outcom e o f ^Ju^ SkewttBfttv9* Have I ever w alked into outside. class late arid fe lt com ­ The other part of this football scores. fortable squealing out my ill-m a n n ere d beh av io r f r ie n d ’s n am e th a t I is that people talking in wanted to sit next to? If full voice during class are also the students asking stupid questions at the you answered yes to any of these questions, you may end of class or before a test. I know that stupid ques­ have a problem. The bottom line is that we all pay a lot of money tions aren’t supposed to exist, but the ones posed by these m enaces to classroom learning have pushed to hear the professor tell us what is going to be on the next exam. I would also like to walk away from class beyond the envelope. For exam ple, questions such as: “W hat chapters le a r n in g a l i t t l e b it m o re th a n th e o u tc o m e o f does the next test cover?” and my all-tim e favorite, “Judgm ent Day” football scores. So, if you make sitting in class painful and fruit­ “Is this class graded on any kind o f a curve?” are q u ite sim ply a w aste o f tim e and the an sw ers to less with endless drivel, please don’t bother showing which are probably included on your syllabus. up.. The other — and by far most annoying and inher­ Becky Bevins is a ju n io r studying journalism and can en t — q u ality o f in -cla ss talk ers is the type w ho be reached at aztec92@ asu.edu. B h lH M M I S STATE PRESS TAFF PERCY EDNALINO JR., Editor CARYL SUE M I C A L I Z I O . E d i t o r JENNIFER NETHERBY . . Editor CADONNA PEYTON . .Asst! C ity Editor MATT _Editor JODI BAFUNDO......... .................. .............„...^News Editor PAT SHANNAHAN..... Editor RANDY JONES Editor ED ÖDEVEN.;..,;.v....,.....,i.;,.....;.............Asst. Sports Editor DEANNA P A R R ............. .......MjgaZHie Editor REPO RTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Sharan K. Gill, Stacy Mann, Ginger Scott, Kara Shire, Genoa SibokFCohn, TaraTeichgjaebei;e SPORTS REPO RTERS: Josh DeFamio, Lori Haro, Scott Lewis, Matt Paulson, COPY ED ITORS: Christi Foist, Lone Roberts. P H 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. Haidee, Brian faticoff, M ark Pollock, George D. Rose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steve Stein, Matthias Walterscheidt, Angela Yeager. C A RTO O N ISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Todd Brenxieman, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge PRODUCTION: Jeff Chua, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischRisley, Alyson Hurt, John Kestner, Eric Paulson, Wendy Luney, Sara Pike, Hub Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, David Goodwin, Jonathan Negretti, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. C L A S S IF IE D S : K ate D esio , Jea n e tte P lo iu m , J o y Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: PERCY EDNALINO JR. MATT MORGAN JODI BAFUNDO Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona Stale University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation...... ........965-7572 N ew sroom ................ 965-2292 M agazine................ .965-1695 A dvertising........ ...... 965-6555 Classifieds..................965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu _________ Opinion STATE P ress Friday, November 21, 1997 _____ P age 5 Congressional bill w ill re-establish balance o f power U When this OSHÜA country was SOI.OVOSKOY founded, the concept of politi­ Columnist cal accountabili­ ty was understood to be a necessary check on government to prevent tyranny, Instilled in the Constitution are principles of separa­ tion of powers and representative democra­ cy the foundation on which the comerr stones of justice, dom estic tranquillity, common defense and the general welfare of all Americans were laid! For the first 150 years of our constitu­ tional republic, political accountability was honored and the C onstitution was obeyed. However, around the time of the New D eal, th ese p rin cip les w ere pu t aside. A rtic le I, . sec tio n 1 o f the Constitution states, “All legislative pow­ e rs herein granted shall be vested in a C ongress of the U nited States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives." This simple statement and the separation of powers clause pro­ tect the people from a tyrannical govern­ ment by limiting all legislative responsi­ bility to the Congress. Yet, Congress has allowed its author­ ity to be delegated to the office of the p re s id e n t. C le v e rly , the e x e c u tiv e branch has been silent as more power has been given to it, resulting in law­ m aking by unaccountable executivebranch employees. But what about the judicial branch? Is it not the responsibility of the courts to cry foul when the Constitution is violated? Current lawmakers state that until the early 1930s, the courts were very clear that the delegation of authority was unacceptable. Then, in 1935, the court ceaSBtrffc nullify this unconstitutional act of .government. To add injury to insult, the majority of Americans, then and today, do not realize that this basic check on government has slipped into the abyss of good intentions “for the good of the people” — or as mod­ ern social architects would say, “for the good of the children.” The result is that we are like the proverbial frog in a pot of water that over time is boiled alive. F o rtu n ately , there are m em bers of. Congress who see the steam rising and hear the cries of those who are feeling the heat. In the 105th C o n g ress, the Congressional Responsibility Act (H.R. 1036) and its companion legislation in the Senate (S. 433) have been in tro ­ duced to stop the “regulation w ithout representation.” A cco rd in g to C o n g ressm an J.D . Hayworth, U. S. Representative for the 6th District of Arizona and chairman of the Constitutional Caucus, “Democracy requires that people be bound only by those laws enacted by lawm akers they e le c t.” On Sept. 25, H ayw orth stated before the Subcommittee on Commercial and Adm inistrative Law: “In 1996, the Federal R egister published 3,208 pro­ posed rules — in essence, laws — that encompassed 15,369 pages of text. By contrast, Congress did not even propose, le t alone vote on, th is m any b ills. A c co rd in g to the S m all B u sin ess Administration, the cost of these regula­ tions is $677 billion and is expected to rise to $709 billion by 1999.” In 1996, before the same subcommit­ tee, Hayworth stated, “ ...a handful of broadly written laws [have] spawned an alphabet soup of governm ent agencies and an overwhelming regulatory burden that undermines the very idea of repre­ sentative government.” The problem is clear: “When Congress d eleg a tes its pow er to th e ex ecu tiv e branch,” Hayworth said, “the people have no re c o u rse , b ecau se th e e x e cu tiv ebranch employees that craft these rules and regulations are unelected and unac­ countable." The solution is not as clear. This bill, H.R. 1036, will reestablish the constitu­ tional authority of the Congress by bring­ ing in to law the co m p lian ce o f both C ongress and the executive branch to Article I, section 1 of the Constitution — this is good. H o w ev er, w ith the m ajo rity o f A m erican s a slee p at the w h eel, th is attempt to liberate the people from tyran­ ny could be in vain. Joshua Solovskoy is a senior studying political science and can be reached at Solovskoy@msn.com. L etters to the E ditor E-M A IL T H E E D IT O R : jU Z lM O @ I M A P l.A S U .E D U State Press didn’t give credit where credit was due In the Nov. 12 issue of the State Press, you fail to mention the source you bor­ rowed the copy on page 26 from. As the author o f the copy, originally found on pages 217-218 of the Sun Devil Spark 19961997 yearbook, I feel you should have at least given credit to the original source of these captions. -r_, T ; : ■ Even paraphrased copy, as you should be familiar with, needs to include the original source of the information. This copy wasn’t even paraphrased — only a few words were altered from the original source. As “professional” journalists, I am sur­ prised you wouldn’t research and write your own captions, especially for an event so well rem em bered as last y e a r’s game against Nebraska. But even when you’re too lazy to do your own work, you should at least credit those who did it for you. . Brian Dell’Ergo Sophomore Undeclared Nike editorial wrong, skirts controversial sweatshop issue In the Nov. 19 editorial, “Sign with Nike,” many key points were brought up — all of them being wrong. How can the State Press publish such an ignorant piece of work? For starters, it mentions the lack of ASU attire (compared to UofA) in local sporting-good stores. I don’t know where you’re shopping, but ASU fever has spread like the plague in the past year. I see ASU apparel all over the place, as well as UofA stuff. However, that’s what comes with the territory when your school wins- a national championship. Another point is that image is everything, and if ASU were to sign this contract, it would be followed by “national respect,” which is “something ASU athletic programs lack and sorely need.” This is the most asinine comment I have ever heard. Has our mighty paper sunken to pathetic lows? If you’re a shallow per­ son, image equals respect; but respect on the field is earned by one’s actions — not attire. Do you think if Checscball State University (with their Nike contract) came to play ASU in foot­ ball, Ryan Kealy and Pat Tillman would respect them more? The biggest point was, the editor completely sidestepping the issue at hand. Nike’s use of sweatshops was brought to our attention a few times, but the editor failed to mention what is happening in these-places: working 12-hour days, six days a week for pennies an hour and being subjected to toxic glue without knowing the effects of the fumes. The poor ventilation in these factories only adds to the problems, but to make things worse, workers are beat with a shoe if they don’t meet the quota. I wonder if they’re beat with an “Air Jordan?” In the closing paragraph, it states, “We’re not heartless ... we just want ASU’s athletic programs to have a little national respect.” Now you tell me what’s more important — looking good on the field or taking a stand? Vince Enriquez Sophomore Political Science via e-m ail Nike statistics propagandize; opposing the deal helps no one “ASU, let’s get real; no, no Nike deal!” This was the popular chant I heard on the north side of the MU on Wednesday. The organized protest was in response to a possi­ ble deal between Nike and the ASU athletic department. Many were protesting ASU’s support of a corporation which supposedly uses child slave labor to extract overwhelm­ ing profits because o f corporate greed. Underneath all the heightened propaganda being spread around campus, however, there* is an alarming amount of evidence and argu­ ment being overlooked or com pletely ignored in support of the Nike-ASU deal. A popular argument against the jobs Nike provides in Asia are the seemingly low wages workers earn. The anti-Nike statistics which say workers in Indonesia, Vietnam and China are paid $2.46. $1.60, $1.75 per day, respectively, demand further inquiry. The cost of living, income per capi­ ta, and overall GDP of these countries w ould help explain the relatively low wages. Simply put, a sack of potatoes in China might cost 10 cents, versus $5 in the U.S. Scaring people with ill-explained statistics to harbor hatred toward a corpora­ tion should not be allowed. Further, considering the overall poverty of these countries, not to mention the recent downfall of all Asian markets, it is under­ standable why children would want to work for an established company like Nike to help themselves and their families Out of poverty. Sure, ASU could reject the Nike deal, helping to discourage jobs in these Asian countries and providing even less people with a way to escape poverty. On the other hand, this would help the hidden agendas of organized unions in the United States who want jobs taken away from im poverished children, handed to overpaid American workers and increasing the prices of Nike products significantly. O ther sta tistic s from the anti-N ike coalition point to the cost of $100 for Nike shoes, which take $6 to make and $70 to advertise. This leaves $24 in marginal profit, not net profit. The statistics failed to list the many other costs included: tar­ iffs, d istrib u tio n , in v estm en t in machines/equipment, dividend payments to shareholders, federal income taxes, etc. CEO Phillip Knight is the sixth-richest man in America for a reason — he directs a m u ltib illio n -d o lla r com pany w ith expanding global markets and is responsi­ ble to millions of employees and share­ holders. Unfortunately, jealousy is all too easy of a trap for those who want to find fault with corporate America and try to explain the economic “phenomenon” that occurs in a capitalistic market. From the “Join the Teamster today” pro­ paganda to the student who proudly told me she skipped class to come to the protest, students’ misdirected anger over impover­ ished nations and child labor needs to be redirected. Rejecting the Nike deal will help neither the children in need of money to escape poverty nor ASU’s quest for stronger pri­ vate financial support. For many poor peo­ ple, the choice is Nike employment with decent wages or the ugly world of poverty. No doubt stories of beatings are alarming to hear and indeed very real in some cir­ cumstances. But opponents need to realize that one of the best ways to help impover­ ished nations is by expanding capitalistic ventures to promote free trade to free peo­ ple from the tyranny of their communistic, dictatorial and corrupt governments. The freeing of people from dependency on gov­ ernments, education, knowledge and the ability to increase the standard of living (especially Asian countries) give poor chil­ dren and families the real power to change the situation. If opponents still cling to anti-N ike beliefs, then they should at least realize that the real power to influence Nike lies in the hands of consumers — those who makes thousands of “deals” every day which far outweigh a $1 million advertising contract. * Sean Goerss Freshman Business, Honors program via e-m ail State P ress Friday, November 21; 1997 P age 6 P H IS H SLIP STITCH AND PASS C ity R eport • Arizona Mills Mall has opened, and 16 m illion visitors are expected in the first year, It would seem most of them aretrying to get there the first week, tying up the mail’s gazillion parking spaces, Those ever-thoughtful folks in Tempe's transit department have begun bus service from downtown Tempe and ASU, straight -to the mail’s front door. Dubbed Route 56, thè buses run every 50 minutes. Enjoy the ride, -cause once inside the m all, it’s more fun than a barrel of money-crazed monkeys. • The Downtown Tempe Community is Toping to steal a little of the mega-mall’s hunder with a new marketing scheme of heir own — gift certificates; More than 75 businesses in downtown Tempe have agreed to accept the certificates, which are sold in $5 incrém ents and can be ordered by phone (954-5105) or at DTC’s offices at 398 S. Mill Ave., Suite 210, during normal business hours. • As part of their continuing effort to stem the tide of auto theft in the city, the Tem pe P olice D epartm ent has begun posting 150 crim e-prevention signs in city arid apartm ent parking lo ts . Each sign reads: “C rim e prevention heeds attention: hide your valuables, lock your doors, take your keys and use a visible anti-theft deterrent.” C om piled by S ta te P r e ss Tem pe reporter Tim Baxter. Phlsh Uva In Hamburg, Germany In 1997 Include* several unreleased concert favorites THE REPLACEMENTS P olice R eport \ The ASU police reported the following • A man not associated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for disorderly incidents on Thursday: • A man not associated with ASU was conduct at Stabler’s Market in the Tempe atrested. cited and released for driving Center. with a suspended license and exhibition of • A woman not associated w ith ASU reported that someone removed per cellu­ speed at Mill Avenue and Curry Road. • A man not associated with ASU Was lar phone from the Anthropology building. arrested for drunk driving at Mill Avenue • A University em ployee reported that Someone recklessly burned newspapers on and Third Street. » A student re p o rted that Someone the northwest side of the Life Science removed “personal items” from a room in building. E-wing. It was not immediately known if they were quality State Press Palo Verde Main, • A student reported that someone vandal­ newspapers. R eal S tories From the State Press ized her vehicle while it was parked in Lot Police Scanner: 35. : • A stu d ent reported that som eone • A worq^n reportedly deposited a slew of removed his bike from Palo Verde Main, empty bank envelopes into an automatic teller machine, then demanded the money where it was locked up. « A stu d en t re p o rted that som eone that was supposedly in the envelopes. rem oved her bike from the Farm er Guess that doesn’t really work after all. Today’s photo radar locations are: Education building where it, too, was • Rural Road, between University Drive locked up. • A woman not asso ciated w ith ASU and Curry Road, reported that someone removed a ring • University, between Mill Avenue and Hardy Drive. from the ASU Bookstore. • Another student reported that someone • Baseline Road, between Kyrene Road removed hex bike from -Hayden Library, and Hardy Drive! ' ’ ’ !r~ • Rural Road, between Broadway Road where it was locked up. • A University employee reported that' and Southern Avenue. someone damaged a crapper in the Student • McClintock Drive, between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue. Health Center. C om piled by S t a t e P r e s s rep o rter • A stu d ent re p o rted th at som eone Brian Anderson. removed property from Sonora Center. FEATURING: Achin'To Be « Skyway Left O f The Dial n tV L e lA J U E » m in t h u m M i t |H G reat selection of study guides to help you score better A lo t more than just textbooks! 966-6226 704 S. College Ultiversify features. "JAMES BONO THEME (MOBY'S RE-VERSION)1 "GO (WITH MUSIC FROM TWIN PEAKS)" T he S a m a r it a n I n s t i t u t e of R e p r o d u c t iv e M e d ic in e ¡C FROM THF l.ATF SHOW T H E moral Seeking healthy womenfront 21-34yearjofage who are will­ ing to Undergo ontrum Jtinwtafian and donate their egge Id Z IP w ^ S U [ LOCATI D 9 1 9 9 3 I I . I . 2 S 1 9 ft i r IIS I IN IN THE LOWER LEVEL (11 F THE M r 3 2 N ft 3 T 0 P 1 1 E ft 9 9 9 ft I ft W . T N U N D I ft 1 1 3 f t MEMORI AL 4 A I I I I IN S C I O 01 UNIS E l S I T V . TIM P E - U N I O N ] 3 2 - 8 1 1 9 3 2 N D S T » 8 ft ft - 7 8 ft 7 Z 4 1-0 313 I 2 9 - 19 6 7 S ta te P ress Friday, November 21,1997 I ANy DRINK IN THE HOUSE WELL DRINKS ‘TIL CLOSE FRI. A F T E R H O U R S T I L 1 0:30 FRI. Speeders in C olorado tow n can d o n a te fines to n eed y B y J en n ife r M ears A sso c ia ted P ress C A ST L E R O C K , C olo — T oni B ohrer was outraged when she got a pricey ticket for speeding. But her anger lifted when she entered the tiny police station here and saw a banner proclaim­ ing “Santa’s Second Chance.” The unique program allows Bohrer, and hundreds of other traffic violators appearing in court this holiday season, to ■donate traffic fines to the needy. “1 think w e’re overcharged anyway for traffic violations,” Bohrer said. “At least it’s going to a good cause. It makes it easier to pay the fine.” This is the first year for thè progranì, which directs revenue from traffic cita­ tions into the community instead of the city’s operating budget. Traffic offend­ ers who appear in court in N ovem ber and December can make a check out to the S alvation A rm y, or they can buyg ifts, in the am ount o f their fines, to donate. \ “I always felt that Castle Rock was a Very ca rin g c o m m u n ity ,’’ said T erry Williams, the citizen who spent months convincing city leaders to approve the program. “With this; the traffic offend­ ers are not only giving back to the com­ munity, but they are a ls o m aking sure that children in the community who are in need do get gifts this holiday season.” There is a $6,000 cap on donations; w hen fin e s to ta l m ore than th a t the remainder goes into the city’s budget. M ayor Don Jones said the financial impact of the program on the operating budget o f this grow ing com m unity of 15,000 is minimal. “I t ’s so m e th in g th a t is d iffe re n t an d U nique an d it’s a w ay fo r sp read in g the c h e e r o f th e seaso n in a u n iq u e k in d o f w ay ,” he said. Tuesday night, dozens of drivers sat shoulder to shoulder in the small Castle Rock police station, holding their traffic summonses and a green piece of paper explaining their goodwill option. “I d idn’t even know about it,” said Hanako Bailey, 20, scanning the green paper as she stood in line to pay the court cashier. “W hat the heck, I ’ll be paying the money anyway. You might as well put your money toward something.” AT ASU... 18 & OVER Don’t Drive to Scottsdale. Walk to Club Eclipse TH U R SD A Y F R ID A Y & SA T U R D A Y ¡IN THK r G a r d ™ I O FQ O D D 'ndJVDL 5,000 Pulsating Lights, Thunder Sound System & Lighted Dance Floor! The only place for AFTER HOURS in Tempe just happens to be the HOTTEST night club at ASU... Club Eclipse! W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E F R O M C A M P U S ! I, U B MARNERBROS,presents iMALP.lSOfmution iniwiciitiomutii SILVERPICTURES KEVINSPACE)' JOHNCUSACK "MIDNIGHTINTHEGARDENOf GOODANDEVIL" LENNIENIEHAU!) ARNOLDSTIEFEL . ANITAZU( KERMAN . . T0MR0Û.EER JOHNLEEHANCOCK . ■ -JOHNBERENDT , UA"CLINTEASTAVOOD — . — — —— 1‘ w w w . g o o d a n d e v i l. c o m Starts Friday November 21st ^ Comics S ta te P ress Friday, November 21,1997 Page 8 T rials & T ribulations Ÿ0UR APPLICATION IS SPOTLESS, IMMACULATE. spill ir, c o u ñ '. t a l k '. WHAT DARK DEMONS CAST TUBR OMINOOS SHADOWS OPON VOOl? B y Jo n a t h a n In g e Q DO THIS ONE 6>IRL'S HOMEWORK FOR HER mt OHM/GODI 1J y It’s, dav-DAY! J 0K A * Jo cular Parable £ J B c i l L A * W « A è l£ C o M lc eARueA. THIS W e rt T H A T > - AiApe u c m r o F "/ scan ' A W À tó w e » . C B fc " A N D M U H A M M F t» - • Ul 50 w e 'o 1-IKE TOTAKB So me of 'ion fceA&ees r AMP WùHTLY s o ! f t is o u r THBAB TSoe OFFflvSC' u h f a i A For us. a t t h c TO A c o m ic , td A fc e rn u /y t/ By C arrie L. Behrens The D in D Day stands for Day. WOULD THIS CtlRl'S HUME be n m m ? OKAY S nacks T H IS M O M E N T to m a k e . LIGHT ©FVGESUS., MOSES, p ic k T H E A U P P H A . 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S ports P age_9 Friday, November 21,1997 S tate P ress W om en’s hoops squad loses debut to Gauchos B y R andy J ones State P ress P a u l B e s in g rS ta te P re ss Freshman Ebony Edwards scored IS points in her Sun Devil regular season debut oh Thursday. The ASU women’s basketball team opened up with a 92-83 loss to the University'df Cal State Santa Barbara Thursday at the UAC. A different ASU women’s basketball team took the court against the University of Cal State Santa Barbara last night. This one rebounded hard, especially off the offensive glass, it pressed well and shot the ball much better than it did all last year and during the preseason. However, the “new” Sun Devils were put away by the Gauchos, 92-83 Thursday night at the University Activity Center. Bulk senior guards Ramecka Lowe and Stephanie Freeman said there was no com­ paring the 1997 Sun Devils with the ‘96 ver­ sion, which finished the season a dismal 919 overall and 3-15 in the Pac-10. ‘T o compare this team to last years’, we just won’t do it,” both said after the game. - “We have that expectation of each other that we are going to leave everything on the court, and I’m not so sure that I can say that about last years’ team,” Freeman added. Head coach Charli Turner Thome said her team was maybe too gung-ho at times, and that got them into trouble. “My pre-game talk with this team was emphasizing being aggressive, and we were aggressive,” Turner Thome said. “We were probably the more aggressive team. ... I think we just have to realize that that doesn’t mean foul. Obviously we put them on the ffee-throw line a little bit too much.” Early foul trouble put the Sun Devils at a marked disadvantage during the second half. Starting center Rachel Holt and point guard Rechelle Lang got their third fouls within the half s’ second minute. It didn’t help that the Gauchos were in the penalty the last 14 minutes of the half. So instead of the run-and-gun of the first half, thus began the slow walk of the free- throw shooter to the line. UCSB went 20 of 23 from the charity stripe during those 14 minutes. In the same period of time ASU went only 6 of 14. Despite this ASU was able to cut a 12point Gaucho lead to seven (73-66) with 5:40 remaining in the game. But two costly turnovers in the next minute by Lowe ended the comeback. From there UCSB went on a 15-4 run which put ASU away for good. “There was a stretch where they (UCSB) kicked it in and put us aw ay,” Turner Thorne said. “That’s something we’ll be doing real soon.” UCSB coach Mark French was impressed with the young Sun Devils’ efforts. “They shoot the ball extremely well (44 percent for the game),” he said. “Charli’s got them going in the right direction. They are young (like us) and have some growing up to do.” Lost in the loss was the tremendous regular season debut of freshman guard E bony E dw ards. The C h andler High School product scored 18 points in just 20 minutes of play. She also only turned the ball over one time. Turner Thorne was pleased with the play o f her three guards. A long w ith Edwards, Freeman scored 18 points, while Lowe tallied a double-double with 10 points and 10 assists. “Obviously with Steph and Eb scoring 18 points and MeeJca with a double-double, that’s great output from our guards,” she said. “That kept us in the game and gave us a chance to win. That’s really exciting to see.” Leading the way for the Gauchos was freshman forward/guard Erin Buescher. She lit up the Sun Devils for 29 points and 13 rebounds. Volleyball squad hopes to end season holding broom in hands B y L ori H aro State P ress The 1997 ASU volleyball season wraps up this weekend as the Sun Devils take on No. 25 UCLA tonight and No. 7 USC Saturday at the University Activity Center. Both games begin at 7 p.m. The goals for these last two conference games is sim­ ple: sweep. “W e'd be very, very happy with a split,” head coach Patti Snyder-Park said. “We want to sweep though, we want to end the season with a winning record. It’s our court, it’s our home and it’s our last opportunity to say we were a good team this year and 1 think the only way we’re going to feel that is if we can sweep.” The first time these teams met, it was ASU that got swept losing to the Bruins and Trojans 3-0 in both matches. Now that ASU’s record stands at 13-14, 4-12 Pac-10, it is down to this weekend's final conference action to make or break their season as far as coming out on top. “With (it being) everybody’s last weekend of the season I think people are going to play out of their minds,” senior outside hitter Terri Cox said. “We’ve had some good things happening on our side.” The matches should be a battle though, especially against UCLA. The Sun Devils lost to the Bruins in three close matches 13-15, 9-15, 14-16 earlier this season. Snyder-Park believes that this time around ASU should definitely be able to pull out the win. “We really feel confident against UCLA, I think we match up well with them,” Snyder-Park said. “1 think we’re a faster-paced team.” The Bruins are currently 12-11, 7-9 and stand in sixth place in the Pac-10. Leaders for UCLA include Kara Milling who is averaging 5.77 kills per game (kpg) and 2.74 digs per game (dpg) and Tanisha Larkin contributing 3.57 kpg and 3.00 dpg. Snyder-Park said that USC will present the bigger chal­ lenge as the Trojans are 20-4, 12-5 good for second in the Pac-10. Jennifer Kessy leads USC with 4.26 kpg and 3.28 dpg, while Jasmipa Marinkovic adds 4.36 kpg and 1.53 blocks per game (bpg). On the Sun Devils’ side, ASU is intact and ready for the two California teams. Sophomore setter Jolynn Faatulu is back to set and the only athlete injured now is senior mid­ dle blocker Kirstin Mattson. In last Saturday’s match against Oregon Mattson went down with an ankle injury. She is listed as questionable for this weekend’s matches. However, Mattson said that she will definitely play and is looking forward to the rematch. “I think if everybody pulls together we can definitely beat UCLA,” Mattson said. “Against USC we just have to play really well. They’re obviously the better team, but hopefully we’ll all play together and maybe pull out a match.” ":,v- Swimmers head to Nebraska B y J ason J oseph S pecial t o the State P ress The No. 11 ASU men’s swimming team looks to end its two-meet losing streak with two meets in Nebraska this weekend. The Sun Devil will swim in the 1997 Nike Sprint Classic which begins today in Lincoln, Neb., and they will also compete in the Husker Invitational on Saturday and Sunday. Teams competing in both meets include Iowa, Toledo, Kenyon and the host No. 13 Nebraska. The Sun De vils come off a tough loss to No. 5 USC last weekend 167.5- 132.5. “We had eight or nine opportunities and we converted on maybe two,” ASU men’s assistant coach Sean Farrell. “ We could have beat them [USC} if we had taken advantage of those opportunities.” The Sun Devils are 0-2 on the young season but hope to use this meet as a momentum builder. “ This meet is definitely going to be a good indicator of where we are as a team,” senior tri- captain Robert Delgado said. “ I think the emphasis this weekend is to improve on our times and to reach our personal bests.” Last year the Sun Devils placed second in the Classic, falling to the hometown Huskers 47-44. The Sun Devils will only send half of its squad to this meet while the rest of the team stays in Tempo to train in preparation for the U.S. Open, which takes place Dec. 4-6. “W e‘ve been training really hard,” said Farrell. “The guys are starting to feel the effects of it now.” The Sun Devils will not send any divers to the competition. W om en The No. 23 ASU women’s swimming team, coming off a tough home loss to No. 2 USC last Saturday, hosts the 1997 Sun Devil Classic today and tomorrow at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. Both meets begin at 10:30 a.m. “ The swimmers that did well last week­ end are looking to fine tune themselves to get T urn to S plash , pag e 10. Junior Guillermo Diaz de Leon (foreground) and the No. 11 ASU men’s swimming team will travel to Lincoln, Neb., to compete in the prestigious Nike Sprint Classic on Friday and the University of Nebraska-hosted Husker Invitational on Saturday and Sunday. The women’s team w ill host the Sun Devil Classic at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center this weekend. Page 10 Friday, November 21, 1997 Sta te P ress ASU men’s hoops wants to claw Cats, gain respect Bv M att P aulson State P ress Sun Devil Michael Batiste slams home two of his game-high 36 points W ednesday night in ASU’s 107-88 victory over Wagner in the first round of the Preseason NIT, ASU w ill face the host Cincinatti Bearcats at 10 tonight in second-round tourney action. The ASU men’s basketball team will be playing for an opportunity to gain national respect and a trip to New York tonight at 10 when it entertains the Cincinnati Bearcats in second-round action o f the Preseason Chase NIT. The contest, being played in Cincinnati’s Shoemaker Center, will be televised on ESPN; The winner will move into Wednesday’s semifinal round of the NIT to face either UNLV or Kansas at Madison Squaré Garden. Sun Devil forward Mike Batiste said playing on national television gives ASU (2-0) even more incentive to perform well. “We’ve got to play well because I don’t want to get any calls from my friends back home telling me how bad we played,” he said. “I’ve got to represent.” On paper, the two team appear to match up fairly well. The Bearcats’ (1-0) tallest players are 6-foot-8 Kenyon Martin and 6-7 Bobby Brannen. ASU will counter with Bobby Lazor, 6-9, and Batiste, 6-8. Martin (15 points, 14 rebounds), Brannen (24, 15) and Batiste (36, 20) all recorded career highs in points and rebounds in their last game. In the first round o f the NIT, the B earcats defeated D etro it 76-66 Wednesday evening while ASU walked oyer Wagner 107-88 die same night Sun D evil interim head coach Don Newman said his squad should see contin­ ued success with his big men. “In one-on-one, I’ll put my money on Bobby and Mike every time,” Newman .'said,: The Sun Devils will have to overcome Cincinnati’s intense defensive pressure, full-court trapping and home crowd, how­ ever, to move on. Knowing these facts, Newman said he is still optimistic. “W e’re going to be at th eir place,” Newman said. “It’s going to be an interest­ ing arena full of hype. Those guys are going to full-court pressure (us). I f we handle the pressure they put up for 40 minutes and really show that we can attack it with confi­ dence, good things are going to happen.” Newman added no changes in his game plan will be made. “We’re going to be pretty consistent in what we do. We have to be sharp on defense and just play smarter. Smarter on offense and defense,” he said. Bearcat head coach Bob Huggins said he knows very little about ASU. “Arizona State is a challenge to prepare for,” he Said. “They’ve got a brand new coaching staff and we have no idea what they might do. We know they can score some points from the results of their first two games. It will be up to our defense to come up with another great effort in order for us to have success in Friday’s game.” ASU guard Reggie Hester will be in the rotation for the first time all season after serving a four-game suspension imposed by the University . Newman said being at full strength for the first time alt year will be a plus. It will be good to have another live body on the floor,” he said. N otes fro m dow ntow n •ASU is 1-1 all time against Cincinnati. The Bearcats won the inaugural contest at home 76-74 on Dec. 11, 1972. The Sun Devils took the rematch played on Dec. 17, 1973 in Tempe, 88-78 . •The co n test w ill be played in the NCAA'S experimental four 10-minute peri­ ods format Splash_________ __ Cards look ahead, C^NItNUED FKOM PAGE 9 . even better,” ASU women’s assistant coach Asher Green said. “The others that did not swim at their potential will also look to improve.” Teams competing this weekend include Purdue, Virginia and NAU. “We should be stronger, but there may be some surprises,” sophomore Amanda Clegg said. “ There will be some good swimmers out here.” The Sun Devils come into this weekend with a 4-1 record and hope to add another *W’ in the win column. “We’re at our peak right now," Green said. “There are some good teams here dial will challenge us to get better.” The Sun Devils will try to fill in some spaces in the breast­ stroke and sprint freestyle events. “In the sprints, after our top girls, we have some trouble finding speed,” said Green. “In our breaststroke events, we have great swimmers that have come down with recent health problems.” The Sun Devils’ next meet comes* in two weeks at the US. Open in Indianapolis. “ We really feel confident,” Freshman Lauren Morelli said. “We all support each other and it seems like everybody is behind us.” Pac-10 All-Academic From Staff R eports The Pac-10 Conference announced its All-Academic team for football, volleyball and women’s soccer on Wednesday. In football Zach Romero,a graduate student with a 3.67 grade point average, linebacker Pat Tilman and defensive back Damien Richardson, both seniors, made it for the Sun Devils. Tillman has a 3.82 GPA in maketing and is a two-time selec­ tion, while Richardson, majoring in Biomedical Engineering (3.26 GPA), is a three-time honoree. Named honorable mention were wide receiver Brian Forth, offensive lineman Glen Gable, linebacker Paul Reynolds, ftillback Kevin Tommasini and linebacker Stephen Trejo. Named All-Academic for women’s soccer were midfielder Kerri Kulak and defender Kim Wagner. Kulak has a 3.84 GPA in finance, while Wagner owns a 3.62 GPA in special education. Making honorable mention were forward Sarah Blaska (3.28 in elementary education), Sharon Gillis (3.68, undecided) and Aisha Thomas (3.36, undecided). The women’s volleyball squad was represented by Laura Hibsman with a 3.36 GPA in nursing. build m om entum By J osh D e Famio State P ress On A u p . 31, the Arizona Cardinals (2-9) began their 1997 season. The 1998 season, as far as the team is concerned, has already begun. “At this point, you’re playing for next year,” wide .receiver Rob Moore said, ‘T o get some momentum. Do good things so you have something to build on.” And while die remaining five games essentially mean little more than the player’s pride and the Cardinals posi­ tion in next year’s draft, head Coach Vince Tobin sees this as a perfect opportunity to develop his young quarter­ back, rookie Jake Plummer. “I think h e’s improved every ball game that h e’s played in,” Tobin said. “There’s still things that’s being thrown at him that he doesn’t recognize, Everything dial he sees each week is new. That’s what experience is all. about. And there’s only one way to get experience, and that is too keep playing and recognizing what you’re see­ ing, and reacting to it.” Plummer will get his fifth consecutive start this Sunday, when the Cardinals complete a three-game road trip by visiting the Baltimore Raverts (4-6-1). It will be the Cardinals first visit to Baltimore since the team moved to Arizona from St. Louis. It will also mark the second straight week Plummer and the Cardinals have to deal with cold temperatures. “It’s cold for us and cold for them,” Plummer said. “It wasn’t too bad last week (in New York). We have to stick to the same thing that we’ve been doing.” The R avens w ill also m ark a bit o f a break for Plummer, Moore, and the other wideout, Frank Sanders. In two of Plummer’s starts, the team has faced a defense ranked in the top five against the pass. The Ravens offense may present a problem for the once-formidable Cardinal defense. The Cardinals, once ranked as high as sixth in total defense, now rank 20th, and take on a Ravens club ranked eighth in total offense. The o ffense is led by the rejuvenated V innie Testaverde, the No. 1 draft choice overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 10 years ago. “He was the number one draft choice coming out,” Tobin said of Testaverde. “And he was the number one draft W ide re ce iv er Frank Sanders (8 1 ) and th e 2-9 A rizona Cardinals hope to use the rest of the 1997 campaign as a positive sprinboard for the 1998 season. choice for a reason. Because he’s got tremendous physical skills. He’s 6-5 (and) he’s got a very, very strong arm.” While Tobin may have a hard time figuring out how to stop Baltimore’s quarterback, he’s not going to give too much to his own. Despite last week’s record setting 388yard performance, Tobin has said he will not expand die playbook too much for his young signal caller. “Jake still isn’t where a seasoned pro would be, or (where) a seasoned veteran quarterback would be,” Tobin said. “He’s still in the learning process, and even though he’s had some success, there’s still things that he’s not seeing, that he needs to see more quickly.” With his fifth start of the season, Plummer will have started one more game than all other rookie quarterbacks combined. P a g e 11 Friday, November 21,1997 S ta te P ress To h el I wi th dow nsiz i n g , Introducing the new Volkswagen Passat. You'll be am azed at how wonderfully a 150 hp turbo-charged 20-valve engine, anti-lock brakes, a premium stereo system, power windows and door locks, 4-lin k front suspension, an alarm system and dual front and side air bags/ fit your life. All starting at $ 2 0 ,7 5 0 / Live large. The New Passat. Drivers wanted.™ Visit our web site at www.vw.com B a rg a V o lk s w a g e n B id d u lp h V o lk s w a g e n C h a p m a n V o lk s w a g e n C a m e lb a c k V o lk s w a g e n 1 5 1 5 W. B ro a d w a y M esa (S O R ) 5 3 3 - 9 0 0 1 4 5 1 1 W . G le n d a le A ve« G le n d a le (5 0 3 )9 3 4 -5 2 1 1 5 5 0 1 E . M c D o w e ll R e a d S c o tts d a le (5 0 2 ) 9 4 9 -7 5 0 0 1 4 9 9 E. C a m e lb a c k R e a d P h o e n ix (6 0 2 )2 6 5 -6 6 0 0 * Base MSRR Price excludes taxes, registration, transportation and d eale r charges. D e aler sets, actual price. A lloy w heels a re o ptio nal. fA irb ag s a re supplem ental restraints only. Always use safety belts and seat children only in th e rear, using restraint systems ap p ro priate fo r th e ir size and ag e. © 1 9 9 7 Volksw agen. State P ress Friday, November 21, 1997 P age 12 Beavers trap No. 9 Ice Devils twice B y M att P aulson State P ress The ASU Ice Devils rode a four-game win streak into their home series with the Minot State Beavers but left dragging a two-game skid behind them. The No. 9 Ice Devils lost 5-2 Thursday night at Veterans Memorial Coliseum after dropping Wednesday’s contest 41 at Oceanside Arena. ASU is now 7-6 on the season while the No. 6 Beavers improve to 10-1. Forward Shawn Reid said the difference in the four per­ vious games arid the latter two was execution. “We expected to do a lot better,” Reid said with a deject­ ed look on his face. “We just didn’t perform. We get up and get up and get up, but then we go through lapses and that's what happened in the third period (Thursday).” . ASU and Minot State were tied 2-2 after two periods Thursday. With 13:39 remaining in the final period; the Ice Devils botched an attempt to clear the puck from their zone. A pass from defenseman Keith McElroy hit a Beaver play­ er, who then skated in for the unassisted game-winning goal.; Minot State then scored on a power play at the 5:04 mark and added an empty net goal with 52 seconds left to secure the victory. PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR Ice Devil head coach Gene Hammett said his team played hard. “It was a good game. The bounces went the wrong way,” Hammett said. “Pretty even game and we loose 5-2.1 think we played pretty well. It just got down to a matter of breaks and a couple of mistakes in the third period.” ASU fell behind I -0 in the first 18 seconds of the game. Reid put the puck between the pipes five minutes later, though, to tie die game. The Ice Devils allowed another early goal (1:17 into the period) to start the second period, but McElroy tied the game again at the 14:14 mark. Forward Matt Barclay and center Paul Goff assisted on both goals. The results were ju st as grim for th e Ice D evils Wednesday night. A goal halfway through the first period left the two schools tied 1-1 at the first intermission. In the second, however,.the Beavers attack added two points to their side of the score board in less than two minutes. A power play goal in the third finished the scoring. ASU played both games without the services of for­ wards Jeff Kennedy and Jeff Devenney who are nursing injuries. Kennedy is out with a fractured left wrist and sepa­ rated right shoulder. Devenney has a hairline fracture in his left ankle. State Press S po r ts Cardinals vs. Ravens FROM THE ANKLE UR IT STILL dopo*. FEELS LIKE FOOTBALL 1 9 9 7 P r e d ic t io n s Gams o f the Week Game o f the Week 2 USC vs UCLA Pittsburgh IS Virginia Tech 13 N.E. CORNER Rural & University IN THE CORNERSTONE e~maiithe spenti editor at ponyboy@asu.edu WSU Washington 31 28 FSU Florida 829-7473 CROSSWORD 42 28 by THOMAS JOSEPH Indiana Purdue 45 30 USC 24 UCLA 20 the alternative copy shop 915 Swlh M l Avt. • Tempe •829*7992 l êColor Southeast Com er o f M ill & University Calendars thfy visit M edically n Assisted Vifeigfit Loss Program s Now Offering New Safe and. Effective medicines to replace Phen-Fen 1:1 ' l l 1: . ' . Î i r r ^ r r ^ r r r ^ a r n a i w g $2395 Useyo u r fa v o rite snapshots to create a 12 m onth calendar w ith a d ifferen tpictu re each m onth. co p ying • b in d in g • la m in a tin g • co m p u ter re n ta ls fu ll co lor p rin t & copy • scanning * design 26 Aerial Red Mountain Fa m i ly M e d i c i n e 9 C O N V E N IE N T 8 5 4 -7 1 2 3 VALLEY LOCATIONS TEMPE office 517-9360 G r a d u a te P ro gra m M olecu lar & C ellular B iology The University o f Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, located in Seattle, W ashington, Invite you to apply to our Interdisciplinary program of graduate studies leading to the degree of Ph.D. h ttp ://w w w .m c b -s e a tU e .e d u em ail: mcbiSu.washlnglon.edu Phone: (206) 543-0253 Application Due January 2, 1998 battle 2 9 Course goal 3 2 Director’s call 3 3 ‘ G oshr 3 4 Step down 3 6 D etective created in 1925 3 7 Actor W iliam son 3 8 M eter experts 3 9 Dodge 4 0 Pocatello place 41 T elescop e part 4 2 Consum erist Ralph DOW N 1 Radio nuisance 2 Photog's needs 3 C om e forth 4 Lair 5 Superm an sym bol S T ra c k event 7 S tellar ram 8 M uppets character 9 Broadw ay backer 4 f 2 3 10 12 14 1 3 0 N V O S 3 N t Ö U © V z V N a 1 o d 0 X X n i d © u V1 XH © S V 3 U a 0 1 V V 11 Ventilation duct 1 5 S ack 17 C ard gam e 2 0 C ra z e 21 Num eric prefix 2 4 intellectual 2 5 Encase 2 7 B elly 2 8 Tightening 6 5 3 1 H 0 O N 1 d tí 8 a o 9 N V 0 1 tí 1 3 N V d 3 A 1 T V a V 3 S d XV 0 V U i_ XN 3 X S s V WV S 3 N V X 3 N 3 0 s m uscle 2 9 Discussion group 3 0 Stitt kicking 31 Puerto — 3 5 Olym pus group 3 6 M usical end 3 8 Sew ing aid 9 7 8 « Jj ■ 13 ■ 17 16 18 21 20 19 29 a V 3 H © 9 S 3 15 _ 34 3 H 1 V 3 H ■■ ■ 32 » ■ 23 35 J 39 41 25 ■ 27 31 37 24 I 28 ■ 33 ■ 36 38 40 « DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: A X Y D L BA A X R IsLONG F E L L O W One letter stands for another. 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The Phoenician Scottsdale's Premiere Resort is HIRING!! G lo ria lo a n 's COOKS R ETA IL G O LF CLER KS E x d t . C o m m . & t y p in g s k ills r e q 'd . E x p . w / m u lt i- p h o n e lin e s p r e fe r r e d . W e o ffe r EXCELLENT b e n e fits ! F o r o t h e r p o s it io n s c a ll: 423 2555 W A L K - I N IN T E R V IE W S M o n d a y , 2 :3 0 -5 :3 0 p m L o c a tio n : C h e c k w / R e ce p . C a te 6 0 0 0 E. C a m e lb a c k Rd. S c o t ts d a le , A Z EOE M / F / H / V Is hiring energetic people w illing to learn the Courmet coffee business. C all Troy 8 2 0 -7 7 7 5 fo r m ore Info, im m ediate \ ^ o p ^ n ^ A p p lic a tio n s a v a ila b le , 1 6 6 5 W . A la m e d a , T e m p e , fro m 7 :4 5 a m - 5 p m . Fax res u m e s a n d /o r a p p lic a tio n s t o ( 6 0 2 ) 7 8 4 - 3 1 8 6 . A ttn : Jan elle W o o d b y 1 1 / 2 6 / 9 7 . R espo nses m u s t b e p o s tm a rk e d b y 1 1 / 2 6 / 9 7 . E .O .E . B anquet S et -U p • S ervers ROOM AVAIL nice 2bd/ 2 story house, new carpet, fire­ place. $365 + utiIs & deposit. Call Glenn @ 921-7653. Casual/Fun W ork Place COMPUTER MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN Rio Saiado Community College Posting: # 97980027-1 Salary: $26, 20 6 a o s e s : 1 1 /2 5 /9 7 For th e following positions: B usser s • H ousepersons Gov't foreclosed homes from pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax, Repo's, REO's. Your Area. Toil Free (1)800-218-9000 Ext. H-I676 for current listings. TICKETS o u r S u n la n d R eg io n al O ffic e . C a n d id a te s EMBASSY SUITES CLOSE TO ASU, share 3BR home w/ pool, w/d, a/c. $390/mo. includes utils, except phone. 2nd room avail, in Jan. for $410.714-643-0615 ' C la s s ifie d s S e e k in g fu ll-tim e W o rd Processors fo r SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK REAL ESTATE 97 AZ Bar Exam Barbri review PROUD TO own, cheaper than books. Brand new, paid $525, rent. Walking distance to ASU. asking $375 obo. 451 -6445 Price thousands below apprai­ 3BR/ 2BA house w/ pool. ; sal. Recently remodeled 2 of 3 COMPUTERS Baseline & College. Nieed 1 bd w/2 full ba. Frbm $69,900. rmmate. $275/mo. 755-2183 Call G-21 El Dorado Tuan 786-^ MACINTOSH PERFORM A, i 177 ext. 127 SICK OF the Dorms? Rmmate 450 w/monitor, -keyboard, needed 2br/2ba, fully furnished mouse & modem, $600 obo; RV TRAILER - 5 min. from aptf. close to ASU. $370/mo. Macintosh Powerbk 165C, ASU, cheap rent, 400 sq. ft, . $750 obo; Style Writer II, $70 Ferfiale pfefd. Call 967-7279 a/c, & eyap. Cooler w/foara in­ f obo. All w/software & manuals. sulated roof. Partly Turn. Call 837-1421 days; 661-3846 HELP WANTEDEric, 5T 7 r0 149 lv. rasg. ■ eves, GENERAL $7,300 obo. IDA PROGRAM HELP WANTEDGENERAL RO O M S FOR RENT ROOMMATE WTD 2bd iba nr. Mill & Univ., grt neighbor- : WANTED: SOMEONE to take .hood, yr own lg bd, quiet apt. over my lease ASAP. 6 mos. $265/mo. + 1/2 util. 894-2032 left. Broadway/Rural, 2bd/lba. $645/mo. util. inci. Call 913STUDIOUS RMMTE needed for 6473 pgr. 2bd/2ba Apache Terrace lease: RO O M S FOR RENT C o m in g to C h a n d le r ♦ Free hot. water ♦ Mini t)lif>4s ♦ Large exercise room ♦. Vertical blinds with valances ♦ 3 pools, 2 spas ♦ Brass ceiling fans ♦ Barbécüe areas 4 European cabinetry ♦ Covered parking ♦ Walk-in closets available ♦ Laundry facilities ♦ Private balcony/patio ♦ Security alarm systems available PEAKS @ Papago Pk, $350 + 1/2 util. Clean, quiet, close to everything, ASAP, Shawn 275> •3512y':: y.V -A LOOKING FOR rmte* to share 2bd apt in Tempe. Male prefd either undergrad or grad stud­ ent. Call Dave (520)690-0244 don t se LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: PAPAGO PARK Village I, fum TH, avail. Dec. 13th. Private room & bath $400/mo. Fern, pref. 759-6216. WALK TO ASU, fern rmte pref, ri/s, serious student. New 3bd 3ba house w/pool. $450/mo. incld. util.’Greg 929-0988 : FLEX SCHEDULES-FT & PT 968*6383 RENTAL SHARING COMFORTABLE HOME, Turn kitchen priv., cable, poqL.fireplace. $349/mo. 649r56i2 Mitch Security Officers and Airport Security Officers Apache Terrace Apts. 991-6424 IT S YOUR M O VE... 850 S: RIVER, #1064, unfurn. 2 master suites, close to ASU. $750 Cóldweíl Banker, 371- HELP WANTEDGENERAL W rin kle F re e APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Friday S S aturday 10p m - 6am S ta rt $ 6 .7 5 S tewarding • B ell S taff R oom S ervice « C oncierge N eed PT or FT work. We are on the bus line. Corne join this b usy resort where we offer a competitive ,wage and many benefits including health/ dental/ life insurance, vacation/sick time, free em ployee meal, free parking, uniforms provided, plus much more. P lea se apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. S cottsdale Rd. S cottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace! C all 9 47 -3 3 00 o r fa x resum e 947 -6 8 53 ; o r p ick up an a p p lica tio n a t lo b b y fro n t desk. In te rvie w in g and a p p lica tio n hours are fro m 10-4, M -f Scottsdale Camelback Resort 6 3 0 2 E. C a m e lb a c k Rd. Scottsdale Cam elback Resort is o n equal o pp o rtu n ity em ployer. Customer Service - $ 7 . 5 0 - $ 8 . 2 5 A national credit company is looHing fo r CSRs. Must type 25 WPM, have knowledge o f Windows, and have excellent communication skills. This temp to hire position offers flexible hours and great benefits. Call PrideS taff a t 777-0707 iMesa/ or 955-7200 (Phx) if you are ready to go to work! Find us at www.needwork .com fo r additional listings. Must be familiar with Macintosh and IBN (Windows 95) system, Internet setup. Hardware configuration and trouUeshöoting. Software configuration and troubleshooting. Able to worit independently and m eet deadlines. 4 0 hr/w k, flexible schedule. Applications m ust be in the employment office by 5pm on the closing date. For a n application please call (602) 731r8465 ^ Page 14 Friday, November 21, 1997 AUTOMOBILES 85 NISSAN 200 SX, pik, pi, ps pi, sun roof. Reliable, runs gréai! New timing bell, new brakes. Will sell -fasti $1650 obôÇaH 966-259$ 86 MAZDA RX7, fully loaded, tu rb ò GXL.: runs great! $2000 obo; Call Shelby. 456* Í067 87 BLAZER S 10 4x4, V6< , grey, pwr options, runs great, new parts, $3300. 821-4042 87 NISSAN Màxima, all power, am/fm pass!, stin róof; ÀT, a/c, V6, $3895. Call 657-8700 88 CHEVROLET 12 passenger van: AH power. $2950; Call 657-8700 89 HONDA Civic only 86K mi. great coiid., 5spd. no a/c, so asking $3600 obo Jeff 715-: 2630 • .. 90 CHEVY Cavalier, 2dr, stan­ dard trans., beautiful car. P/S. P/B, am/fm, a/c, $2995. Call 756-8700 92 TOYOTA Célica convert. All power, auto, trans. A/C, am/fm Cass. Kat pg, 440-8257 93 DODGE Spirit, like new. All power. Driftwood, $5555.00 Call 657-8700 93 ESCORT LX, a/c, 5spd, 4dr. 98 tags, ani/fm, great cond. Must sell $3800 obo 967-2162 85 DODGE Conv. All power, new top, good cohd. $4250, trade considered. .657-8700 HELP WANTEDGENERAL 100,000 Travel questions answered in German, French. Italian,: Span­ ish, Sign Language, etc. Sky Harbor Airport FOE $8.75/hr. PT days 267-7994 x 23 ADMIN. ASSIST /LOAN coord: Good Comm, skills, will train.. Flex, hrs, Scottsdale. AZ Mort­ gage Lender, 946-3383 X23. ADMIN, ASST. Answer phones +• assist owui ers. Casual environ.* computer skills. 510 S. 52 St. #101 Tem­ pe, M-F ASU STUDENTS wanted now $8-$12/hr. ($7.60 base). If you can say "free," call me. Start now, M-F, no wknds or eves. Bill 784-2279. ATTENDANTS NEEDED Jan. 3id for female in Quadrangle Apts. Must be 21 or over w/good driving record. No lifting req. Early am/ eye. Ellen 968-6284. BRIDAL GOWN Sales. Flex, hours, salary + comijn. Bilin­ gual a +. Store hours: 11-7, MSat. 279*4933 CALL CENTER mgr. F/T, 6am2:30pm, near ASU, phone exp. required. 369-3136 CIVIL ENGINEERING: BS or MS, interested in grading, drainage* hydrology, flood control. Oppt. to work w/exp. profs. Will train, HEC 678-4625 97 SUBURBAN 4WD 5,7; DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now Dual airbags, all power, am/fm a hiring friendly order takers. tape, CD, 8 pàsshgr. Running PT/FT. Extra $$. Call 220r0000 bòard, fender flare, tow pckge, alloy whls. $30,950, 657-8700 Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 SEIZED CARS From $ 175. Porse he s , C ad i1iacs, Chevys, BM W 's, Cor-; vettes* A lso Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free 1-800-218.9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. TUTORS NEEDED places worldwide. 968-7283 If you have a desire to help High School students Succeed, we have positions available fo r graduate stu­ dents with the ability to tutor in a //fo u r (not ju st one) of the follow ing subjects: HELP WANTEDGENERAL * High S chool S panish 1-2 ★ High School Algebra 1-2 ★ High School Chem istry 1 *2 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in y:oiir name. Quick departrs. Buy .;couports/awards. M ost: $CHRJSIMAS CASH - We sell fun, toys novelties a t festi­ vals & parades, Wknd work & great cash commissions, Those interested, call 520*42Ir4778 * High School Geometry 1-2 W e offer a M o n d a y - ; T h u rs d a y s c h e d u le (must wort, ait least two full days from 2pm-9pm). Classifieds WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL FRIENDLY SALES person needed for jewlery & gift carts at Scottsdale Fashsion Square $6/hr + comm. Flex. hfs. Call Wehdi at 860-5788. KYSER COMPANY needs Warehouse person immediately $7/hr. 20hrs./wk Call Kim 9663800 during 8-3 GREAT JOBS for students. PT /FT. near ASU. Cust, serv, pur­ chasing. writing. Mac Photo­ shop work. $8/hr. 438-4400 CAMP TATIYEE for the handi­ capped is seek in g to hire an assist, director, nwrse. nursing assist, lead counselors. program directors & counselors fo r the ’98 season. May 3 1 - Aug I , Room , b o a rd & sa la ry incld. Call (602) 275-2604 for apps. PERSONAL AIDE for male quadriplegic; Must be avail, over Xmas break. Varied hrs. 1 mi: from carriptis. good pay. Must be very reliable. Call 967■ . 1223 eves. • - FUUf j OB sei ling balloons in Mall. Must like kids, be outgo­ ing, Hrly + comm. 482-7204. FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing-, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $7-ì2/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054, ^ LOTIONS & Potions hiring pt retail & warehouse positions. If you are reliable call 968-4662 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCT for mobile pro. must have high en­ ergy and a willihgness to learn new/ fun ways of teaching, pt, $8-$ 1Q/hr*doe. 443-8817 MAID BOXES Etc. looking for Xmas help, F/PT. Apply: 903 S. Rural, 9am-6pm. Must be avail, up to Dec; 25. . GYMNASTICS TEACHER and/or PE teacher. Enthusiastic, fun coach for 3-12 yr olds. Exp. pref. $7.5 Ò-$9.00/h r . 955-7805. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m ales/females needed immed. for music videos, nat’l commer­ cials, and print 941-6922. P/T CUSTOMER Service Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, eyes & wknd shifts. $6.87/hr + shift differential for eve hrs. Good customer service skills & pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 433-9500. Tempe location. Employee drug testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V. HOLIDAY WORK Up to $9.50. Flex. PT/FT schedules around classes. No exp. nec. All majors welcome. Scholarships .avail. Conds. ap­ ply. Can remain permanent after hohdaysCaU 212-0551 IMAX THEATRE is currently looking for sm iling, enthu^ siastic faces to fill hosting po­ sitions! All availabilities need­ ed. Please call 949-3100 x204 for interview. Come join our team! P/T JANITORIAL position for m anufacturing co* Flex. hrs. Apply In person at 1950, E. Rip Salado pkwy, 968-7937. KENNEL WORKER needed 'P /F time. Must be neat & de­ pendable. 7311 E. Thomas Rd., Scottsdale, 945-7692. 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 BUSSERS 11 P/T- $5.00 +ÜPS of $15-S20per shift. Accepting walk-in interviews M,Tu,&F 8:30-ioamor 2-4pm EMBASSY S U IT E S R ESO RT S C O T T SD A L E QUAD NEEDS attend. M-F, PM $7/hr. Will train. Near ASU: Dennis 968-5295. ROCK & ROLL Hiring, F/T, P/T $7/hr., all po-: sitions. Call Jim at 894-2489. ROTHER’S BOOKSTORES now accepting apps. for FT/PT Xmas vacation help. Apply in person. 625 E. Apache SPORTS MINDED 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 TEMPE MANUFACTURER of auto accessories needs cust. /TM-F serv. rep. F/T, M-F, & P 16-20hrs..Both Xmas & perm, positions avail. Also need P/T returns cleric: 12-16hrs & F/T re­ tail sales: hourly + comm. Close to ASU. 600 W 24th St. Karen, 967-2678 THE HEADQUARTERS is now accepting creative applications, inquire within. 966-6093 WALGREEN S* 925 W. Base­ line in Tempe, p/t liquor clerk & pharmacy cashier, eves & wknds. Call 820-1990. Classifieds WORK! Sylvan Learning Center 953-3070 iMMHXATE O p ENWG - AW flMSTRATlVE OJERK EXCEPT. INDIVIDUAL for m anufactured home sales, fi­ nancial analysis & admin, as­ sistant to owner. Huge earning potential. 581-1021 HELP US help you! $500$ 1,000 wkly. ÂM/PM shifts. Easy phone work. Baseline/Mill. 756-1497 HURRY! POSITIONS won’t last. Earn $400-$600/wk. P/T at Arizona Mills MalL Act quickly! Toll free 888-8550481 ThisshouldbeyouradC all 965-6735 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HOTELS • RESORTS » SUITES has openings for: • PBXOperatorP /T -A M ¿t PM • Belt Stand F/T- 4.1# Apply in person Scottsdale Marriott: A $10/HR. GUAR.! | 3 2 S ;E â Start work with us now, go home for the holidays & still have a great job when you get back! F ro n t Desk » A M Servers Reservations , •• Telephone O p e ra to r- PM C on f. Set U p- PM • Key Exped.- AM Room Service Server • Room Service C ashier Juice Bar A tte n d a n t A Spa A tte n d a n t Busser » S ing in g B oat D rive r M anager • • • • • • • HELP W ANTEDSALES A M H PM H u m a n R es o u rc e s EXPERIENCE THE BENEFITS AT THE HYATT RECENCY SCOTTSDALE ress Cleifc- F/T P R IV E A SCHOOL BUS! Get y our Holiday cash, & time off to spend it! • • • • • • P (5pm - 10pm) • Front Desk 5 00 1 N . S c o tts d a le Rd. S c o tts d a le te VALET PARKING attendants pt/ft. M ust be courteous & clean cut. Hrly wage + tips. American Valet 235-2636 A pply with JO IN THE HYATT TEAM* , If you're a good cooununicator & enthusiastic about making money call: u$cm Medical/Dental Insurance Life Insurance 401 (k) Plan Vacation/Sick Pay Tuition Reimbursement Free Uniforms Complimentary Room Rates < Dobson & Guadalupe 777-8757 Warner & .■Country Club 735-0000 T % 0 APPLY NOW! ^ Z o o L ig h ts !^ j) ^ M ARKETING SERVICES Interviews available Wed. 3pm-6pm; A t the Personnel office (w. side o f b ld g next to loading dock}. 7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. For m ore info: 991*9670 Dudes include U ÿ jt phones. Computer data entry, Composition of letters, General support staff duties, Detail oriented, non-smoker preferred. Salary D O C . R ep o rts la District Manager, Great Tempe location. PT WORK/ FT pay, $7/hr. training pay. Reps avg'd $$00 last wk. Great Tempe location. 517-1977, FT/PT available. SUPPORT STAFF P/T Mon.-Fri , flex. hrs. Close to ASU. $7/hr. to start. Writing & verbal skills necessary. Com­ puter exp. desirable. Call Diane Drake, 921*0707 x 3404. 2415 S. Roosevelt, Tempe. Great Part-tim e work at $ 8 .9 6 /h r. 2 0 h r/w k minimum. Prive b efo re/ after classes. Paid training now. Applg at Tempe Elementary School D istrict, 3 2 0 5 S. Rural Rd. or call 350-9186; e x t 7001. C la s s ifie d s S c o tts d a le lo catio n tran sp o rtatio n HELPWANTEDGENERAL HELPWANTEDGENERAL $654-$1,632/month m ust have St a December 7“'through January 11“ The Phoenix Zoo 32 positions available $5.75/hr. Admissions » Gift Shop Food Service » Custodial 5:45 - 10:30pm Apply daily 9-4 455 N. Galvin Pkwy D r a g te s t r e q u ir e d 2 a d ju sta b le schedules: Hyatt supports a drug free Workplace. Certain positions m ay require testing. Affirmative Action Employer, EOE M /F/D/V M -F S-2 & M -F 3-9 M -F , S a -S p ■ Please le t resumes t e Cassandra ttoone CorVd Corporation 8 2 9 -8 19 1 I J o r m ad t o ifl 20 E. Utvwafty Drive, Suite 205, Tempe, AZ 85281 ■ dgrW al I t a n a tfciM l m oused c a n u n irn u y ■ ( iCdlular In partnership w iä j P rAFF SERVICES ii carrenUvttfrfog ' 1er Service Representatives f s t Á d r new mmJÊSÊâaâûo Call Center”;fo |«ÍÍ^ M Í9e. *Requirements fo il Ü R ' PT: UPS is cu rren tly h irin g loader and unloaders to w ork at the Phoenix fa c ility located a t 3150 N. 31st Ave. The fo llo w in g shifts are available: 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm 5:30 pm -1 0 :0 0 pm 10:30 pm - 2:30 am «Wiadmil >Typtag/jÉ h it' entry iKvice exp. Full &Part time positions are available. I AirTo a cb J Â É ir operates 7 days a week . between 6am and 10pm. TM . jjjiiu s build yon a stkibW I.' ^ ^ ^ p f o g t e s t in g is requiK4-». -3 m W.50 to startìl dl; Cellular is a fortua á p8Sm nai>y. Testera Staff k n j a u j f t g p d W i to their W e h a v e 2 0 A S U G ra d s w o rkin g for us a t v ario u s c a re e rs ) W e w a n t y o u to g if r. y o u ’re s m a rt, e n e rg e tic a n d c u s to m e r s e rv ic e o rie n te d . W e k n o w sch ool's y o u r priority so w e o ffe r flexible s c h e d u le s a n d shifts. W e a ré lo ca te d o n m a jo r b u s lin es in c a s e you • • • • d o n 't o w n a c a r. W e o ffe r a greato p p o rtu n ity fo r in divid uals to d e v e lo p Call a n d g ro w w h ile m ak in g e x tra m o n e y fo r s ch ool o r fun . F o r c u rre n t o p en in g s a n d fu rth e r d e ta ils , p le a s e call o u r J o b lin e @ 4 4 0 - 3 1 5 4 fo r fu rth e r deta ils . ‘„¡SKJ - estern Ey W EEO Must be 18 years of age Must be able to lift and carry 70 lbs safely Work at a consistent productive pace Will be on feet for 3-5 hours S H IF T SERVICES M/F/D/V I NO FEE j Those interested please contact your student employment office to schedule an interview to be conducted Nov. 21st. S ta te P ress HELP W ANTED- HELP WANTED£ k S 2 = = _ = HELP W ANTEDF O O D ^ R V IC E _ _ ^ O D S ^ IC E ^ A 13-YR-OLD co. needs people for data entry & cust. service. Excel exp. a +. Great $, 10 min from ASU, nice environment, flexible hours M-F. Call Cor­ nerstone 244-8720. ALL POSITIONS, now hiring.' Exp'd in fine dining apply at Roxsand Restaurant. M-F, Bilt. Fash. Pk., 2594 E. Camelback COOK WILL train PIT or P/T flex. hrs. good working envi­ ron. SE corner McClintock/Guadalupe. Spaghetti Vendors ASAP DISHWASHER min. wage to start. Days. FT/PT Cal l 252-4682 for interview HELP WANTED Deli person F/P time, flex. hrs. Experience preferred but not necessary. Apply in person C apistrano's Italian Deli 655 W . Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-9044. SA LE ^^_____ RETAIL SALES wage and com­ mission. Arizona Mills Mall. Gifts from the Heart; lv. msg. 714-570-4314 SPEND YOUR weekends at the Desert Botanical Garden; Sales­ person needed for gift shop/ Saturdays & Sundays 9-5pm . thru mid-May. 'P lease send resumes to: Joiene Pierson, De­ sert Botanical Garden, 1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phx. 85008 TURN A deep breath into gold! Invest 4-6hrs/.wk. Earn $65$250/sale. Gall Angelo: 314-3438 C Page 15 Friday, November 21,1997 ia s s r fie ld s 9 6 5 -6 7 ^3 5 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL CLERICAL ASSIST -P /T , 2025hrs/wk., some wknds. 2 yrs. bookkeeping a must. Computer literate, front office & m ultiphone exp., mature w/profèssional appear. Century 21 À.M. Realty, 831-1114, Barbara RECEPT/ CALL Coordinator, P/T, 13-15hrs/wk, weeknights & wknds. Front office & multi­ phone exp. Mature w/professional appear. Century 21 A.M. Realtyv831-111.4, Barbara HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ASAP SERVERS needed Tues.Fri. 10am-2pm, ft/pt avail. Great $. Victorian Tea Room. Call 252-4682 for interview COME JOIN the biggest party in town. Looking, for fun, en­ ergetic staff to work in a busy, multi-theme sports complex. We offer flex, schedules & benefits. Door hosts, servers, cocktail, bartenders, security, line cooks, FT or PT positions avail. Apply in . person @ The Arizona Center @ Players between 2-5. or The Original Sports Bar between 3-8. RESTAURANTS/ BARS TEMPE M INIO N PALMS HOTEL1 L o oking for te a m p la y e rs w h o d e s ire e xc e p tio n a lly p le a s a n t s u rro u n d in g s ....... Currently available: • • • • AM & PM Foòd Servers Security Aid P/T Banquet Setup Supervisor Rooms Maintenance F o r addition al o p en in g s c a ll th è JOB HOTLINE • (6 0 2 ) 8 9 4 -1 4 0 0 e x t 5 7 8 Benefits include: Competitive Pay Health Insurance Long-Term Savings Plan Apply M -F 8 a -5 p . fa x re s u m e s to 9 6 6 -5 1 4 8 6 0 E a s t Fifth S tre e t, T e m p e 8 5 2 8 1 TELE PROS NEEDED SecurityLink currently seeks Telemarketers for our expanding operations. If you are a motivated individual with top-notch communication skills, this is an opportunity to play an integral role in a thriving business. Experience is preferred, but we will train the right people. An excellent base salary plus bonuses await the successful candidates. For a Confidential interview; call Bob McCall between 8AM-5PM at 602-254-5874. An equal opportunity employer in a drugSecurityLink free environment. ham HELP W ANTED- * * * * * * * * * # £ M odel J * C o n test I * ..... a* k B ¥ k ^ i J a l b o a C a f e E very S unday .¥ k -a 8 P M -1 IP M O v e r in P -a NEED BEER inoney? We are looking for some fun people to work at either of our 2 That's A Wrap locations, Both less than 15 min, from Tempe. Good pay, great people, pis call 9410484 for application, . STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT is now for hiring cock­ tail w aitress, lunch servers, night food servers, bussers, & host/ess. Apply in person M-F, 1Oam-5pm 5001 E. Washing­ ton. East of 48th St, 273-7378. # "¥ r iz e s J ^ J * ******** ★ H APPY H O U R GREAT BAGEL and Coffee Company. Coffee time, bagel time, lunch tim e, anytime! Univ. & Forest. WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings, lunch & dinner shifts. $2.13 + tips. Cashier needed. $6/hr. Sakana Sushi Bar & Teppan. 5061 E. Elliot, 598-6506 MALONEY’S BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FREE LOST/FOUND SEEKING FEMALE operator to riin Bath & Body business in new AZ Mills Mall. Make great money.. Ask for Kelly, toll-free 888-855-0481 FOUND: GOLD chains (3) found in ladibs restroom, Ad­ m inistration Bldg. B wing. Please call Benefits office at 965-7290 for description. SPORTS INTERN . DEMITASSE Classifieds WORK! B a n n o 'f ■ Sun Devil Special! p iz z a 0 I6"X -Lar£eM opping ■ Ls 1item Pizza& 24wings ■ T I u i a $I 3 - I L S i 82*0064 I [z :i^ su 1 1 6 95 AFFORDABLE LEGAL help!! Top Rated Attorneys, 8201418, est. 25 years CAREER FAX Get that job to­ morrow we’ll fax out your re­ sume anyplace, anywhere to­ day! Our database consist of over two million personnel di­ rector’s fax numbers nation­ wide! 25 resumes faxed out just $25.00! Call: (602)241-0951 Fax (602)241-1642 CHILD CARE avail, w/ loving, Christian mom. FT/PT welcome. Meals & snacks. 973-4224 FOUND: GOLD chains (.3) found in ladies restroom, Ad­ m inistration Bldg. B wing. Please call Benefits office at 965-7290 for description. HEBREW/ ENGLISH Transla­ tion, why struggle? Write your paper in Hebrew. I will trans­ late. Fast turnarounds reason­ able rates, no job too small. Call Bracha: 497-0886 FOUND: SUNGLASSES w/tortoise shell rims. Left at Benefits Office during open enrollment. Call Benefits Office at 965-7290 -. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING F in d th e T O D A Y sectio n on p ag e 2 , o r on th e In te rn e t a t http://news.vpsa. asu.edu/ RESTAURANTS/ BARS I Æ SERVICES Great resume builder.. Local NFL event. 12/1-2/8 Resp., en­ ergetic. 280-9070 $1.50 Any Drink S E C om er ot University & Rural . EATING DISORDERS, biilemia, counseling. Confidential, licensed therapist. Insurance & sliding scale. Jinnie Grant 8970444 NEW CLUB in Scottsdale is looking for high energy cock­ tail servers* & polite door hosts. 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(aml tom + i • Ladétd, §tinifime • C ouatffc UeÀp ' $6-$7/U (eoiimam) ' Bagd-tf (mfaau) M id lami Höfa ama Hk « # « m bulinai * v in a i ó M iu k! • No Nauta *G*u£ Moots •N o CooftoOb B utt_____ __/ ( Codad EliottJnuuMj (5)4 4 Ó -7 8 2 ?/ by Frances Drake ri IL'ikl W \ Friday, N o v em b er 21, 1997 AREES (March 21 to April 19) Try not to get into a quarrel » about a work-related matter. By steering clear of controversial subjects, you can gain a clear objecti ve on your goals. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You have your hands full at times, and your home life has its hectic moments. However, noth­ ing truly disrupts what turns out to be a memorably happy day. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Rambunctious children keep you running and at tim es m ight strain your patience. However, things settle down later. The evening should be special. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) It’s not a great time to tackle a do it-y o u rself project. You would find the task more diffi­ cult than you had anticipated. Tty not to wear yourself out. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Little things going wrong or last minute details that need tending can upset you for a while. However, peace and harmony reign by day’s end. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) It’s not a good time to reach decisions about the use of joint assets. A cranky family member snaps out o f it. Enjoy festive outdoor activities. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O ct 22) Some people you deal with tend to exaggerate. Getting plans for a trip organized could prove dif­ ficult. The evening favors plea­ surable interests. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Although your business ideas are imaginative, it’s a poor time to act on them. Others could be difficult to reach; your plans might have to be put on hold. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Rather than try to get together with everyone at once, share your.social time with a ' meaningful few. Otherwise, you might feel frazzled by day’s end. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) : You crave some quiet time, as your schedule seems overloaded. A fter a hectic afternoon, the evening seems blissful. Relax with loved ones. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to R*>. 18) It’s not a great time for getting your own way. Others want to take the lead. You could be in a contem plative and nostalgic mood. Relax with a hobby in the evening. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Your intuition puts you on the right track regarding a business concern. You get helpful advice about a financial matter. Minor expenses could add up. YOU BORN TODAY are a serious person, with a strong sense of duty and responsibility. You are am bitious and work hard to achieve your goals, More universal-minded than most, you probably are interested in help­ ing those less fortunate. You can succeed in positions of authori­ ty. You need to keep bdsy to be happy. 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