S ports W o r l d / N a t io n U nited S tates N military plane ew m an reveals secret to ASU's upset o f CAUSES GONDOLA TO CRASH Page 3 S tanford Page 13 ©Copyright. State Press, 1998 Tempe, Arizona v . A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily V o l.8 3 N o .1 2 W e d n e s d a y , F e b ru a ry 4 ,1 9 9 8 B ew a r e o f C y b e r D ev ils ASU large target for computer hackers B y T imothy T ait S tate P ress While the Internet has made it easier for hackers to break into computer systems and steal or destroy data, state funding to fight the cyber crooks has dropped. Computer hacking receives little attention from lavymákers because it’s not a crime most people come face-to-face with on a daily basis. Politicians are more willing to bolster funding of the enforcement of violent crimes like murder and assault, law enforcement officials say. .r./.':'; .V Funding and resources to fig h t hackers is low er today than in the 1980s. A lthough the C ounty Attorney’s Office and the D epartm ent o f Public hacking in Arizona. Safety crime lab are recog­ nized for their achieve­ It’s a combination ments in fighting comput­ er-based criminals, there of the universities are fewer investigators and and the high-tech­ less money available to fig h t such crim es. And nology industry com puter-related crimes located here that are on the rise. But there is a force makes it attractive standing between the hack­ to seri cus nization per day is permitted. j« « jr n*)d through yoga in the MU Graham Entries must contain the fu» name of the R o o m 2 1 8 at?p .m .7 . ‘ Club or organization, à description of the * Language & Literature PoparM M M i event, date, time and tee M address of the An intormational meeting about the.tyummer k>cation. Aii requests ara sut^ect to ediSt« 1998S»udy program. inQuébac, C a n a d z M for oontani, Spara and clarity, incompfete or be heid In the LLC Room 133 at 3:40 p.m. ite^leerrtrtes MÍttbedbKraRfed. !*. * * MUAB Special Event Committee — A . t h e Today Section is a daily calendar of meeUng will ^ oor : events prMad a s a senara to tea ASM c a t e Conference Rooih 1A at 4:30 p .m i;.; ; > ? ] munity. Requests are accepted on :-^O m ega Delta f ^ W » 5 P t e e formal con», first-served basis » id a r e printed a s interview tei' space permits. Also, see the rush table set up outside the • Alpha Kappa PM <•*- For rush intern»- MUallday. tion, visit tea BAC Desm’s Patio during tee * PM Alpha Detta The P te ia w frtesrday. or m eat a t Cluck-U Chicken a t 6:30 nity w i have tables set up Northwest Of tee p ai. , MU hoto 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. A f “ 'j B | • Alpha Phi Omega — An informational » Pi Sigma Epatton -^- ftetional business meeting wW be held in the MU Boren 209 at fraternity is hokiÑhg rush esente in tefi MU 5:30 p.m. and tables a il be set up «A tete ' Room 212W at 6 p.m. Professional dress tee MUdurtog tee dey. required. “ • American Indian Institute — » Reinbow AHtojgto-y M ite P u to g Workshop on how to art reading «me, H ow to Find tee Important Prints «teen Reading,* will take piace in th e American Indiami institute Conference Room at 11.30 a.m. ' • Applying Anthropology Lecture Series — A facture on museum anthropoiogy, presented by P e te r W elsh, will take place In tee Cowden Building Room 132 at 1:40 p.m. • Clenched Flower Faction — A poetry reading, *My Life a s a Chocolate Bunny,” wBt be held on th e North sid e of th e Life Sciences Tower at 8:30 pjm. owner of the Spaghetti Company. wMI be speakingin pm . *“* '•> *v . .a n * Red, White A B ide -«^W om en’s Republican Club generte méteihQ t e ^ held ih tee W J Boren 204 tei 3:15 p.m. • Student Alumni Aesocletion — A generai meeting will be heid ih te e MU; at sáópite* Check tiramonitòis'll ttte^píítor the exact room. . *. * J€,". »Society of Phyelca S tu d e n te — A generai meeting a # be held to discuss the Physics Olympics in the Physical Sciences . »Communication Student Association Center F-wing Room 462 at 4 p.m. J | | | ' — The first meeting of the year arili take ■ • Young Democrats —- Vifiidt£yed place in the MU Coconino Room at 3:30 Screaming Libera (WilsGÈLJotoWitg will p.m. Communication majors and non-majors take place at the Cteffee Plahtation on Mfll are welcome. * Avenue at 3 p.m. ' ' , fro m pa ge 1. you leave your computer on, it’s like leaving your wallet open. Anyone has access to-your files.” Tracking the Hack Hackers who are nabbed by authorities can have their equipment seized, be placed on pro­ bation or receive jail time. It all depends on the seriousness of the hack, if there was dam­ age done or if it was simply a prank. Thackeray said most hackers, when caught, admit what they have been doing and plead guilty because the evidence against them is overwhelming. But when computer criminals are arrested, investigators usually find more evidence linking them to a web of computer crimes, which range from fraud to trespassing. Catching them, however, is the tough part. In a second, a hacker can be in and out of a system, leaving little evidence. Thackeray said there are too few cops trained to investigate computer crimes. The few officers that do specialize in computer crime are bogged down by child pornography cases. Funding and training are on the rise, but still fall short of the attention hacking received in the 1980s, Thackeray said, adding she was recruited by the County Attorney’s office in 1986. “W e don’t have enough equipm ent or training. Police management still isn’t with it as to what’s happening out there,” she said. It’s not just ASU. All university systems that are desirable by hackers because they are open systems, and easily accessable. “ These systems were not designed to lie fortresses. They were designed for students and faculty,” Thackeray said. “ The average Joe Blow didn’t have access.” The Internet changed that In the 1970s and ‘80s, when hacking start­ ed to flourish as a weekend hobby for Some computer enthusiasts, systems were tightly controlled and difficult to get in to. Simply getting access to a system was often the biggest challenge for hackers. M ost hacks cam e from in side a com pany or school, Thackeray said, and it was easy to trace. W ith the increasing popularity o f the Internet, hacking is easier to do and harder for investigators to track. Today, hackers are m ostly m ales, but females and minorities are starting to join the ranks, and range in age from elem entary school to senior citizens. Some do it on pur­ pose, others are unsure what they are doing: “Hacking had been a low level thing until now,” Thackeray said. “The Internet has made it easier for hackers to get into systems and pass that information to other hackers. A lot of them act like gangs in how they operate.” A simple Net search shows thousands of hacking-related sites, all with information on weak points in systems and tools of tee hack­ ing trade. “From the beginning, part of the problem with hacking is that it is an automated crime,” Thackeray said, adding that she worked her first hacking case in 1973 while still in law school. “A hundred people will brag and oth­ ers will follow that like a cookbook. That’s Why we had a spike in hacking all of a sud­ den.” Reasons for hacking range from sport to grudge. Some like the thrill of breaking into sys­ tems and leaving their mark, like those that changed the Justice Department’s home ,page to the “Department of Injustice.” Those hack­ ers generally go unprosecuted. But the cyber crooks who steal data, including company secrets or intellectual property, can be prose­ cuted. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said last week that hackers are quickly becoming the modem terrorists who have the power to bring the country to its knees. While the threat from computer crooks is real, most computer users make it easy for hackers to gain access. T urn to H ack er, pa ge 11. Student HealthAnnounces FREE \ m c o to H EACH KIT CONTAINS: • Advil (A ches/Pains/Fever) • R obitussin DM (Coughs) • Sudadtrin (Decongestant) • H alls (Cough Drops) • Kleenex • Instant Soup • Herbal Tea • Cold and Flu [Pamphlet. 9 • D isposable Therm om eter HELPING YOU A CH IEV E ACADEM IC S U C C E S S THROUGHjjpOOD HEA§FH.*ji r fre ¥ c o Yd ~RTt 1 TO THE F IR ST 500 PEOPLE WITH TH IS COUPON • EXPIRES 2/13/96 I A SU STU D EN T H EA LTH ¡PHARMACY ^ OPEN MWF8:30-5:00 TTH 9-5 CLOSED DAILY 12:30-1#) 9 Sree Ti*: G a r a g e | LOCATEDat ATpalu PALMwalk WALK*1 & located UNIVERSITY BRIDGE | I Defails: cy«fMaMcv/^y0 fcs-sici TREE/ '< sk£ + \ A $ A $ U _______W o rld / N STATE PRESS J ation Wednesday, February 4,1997 U .S. m ilitary plane cuts gondola line in Italy; 20 dead TRENTO, Italy (AP) — A U.S. military plane on a lowlevel training flight over the snowy Alps sliced through a cable-ear line, sending a gondola full of skiers crashing hundreds of feet to the ground. At least 20 people inside the car died. The car was flattened by the 240-to-300-foot drop. It "opened up like a cardboard box,” one police official said, and bodies were in pieces. Officials at the U.S. air base in Aviano in northern Italy, where the Marine EA-6B Prowler was based, said all lowlevel missions by U.S. military aircraft in Italy have been suspended. ■ y;v ;.. V . President Clinton, on a visit to New Mexico, issued a statement saying he was “deeply saddened” by the accident and that the United States will cooperate fully w ith the Italian government to find out what happened. The pilot and his three-member crew returned safely to Aviano, 60 miles east of the resort, said Brig. Gen. Tim Peppe, commander of the base's resident 31st fighter wing. The plane sustained minor tail damage. Peppe, speaking at a news conference at Aviano, did not speculate on a cause, though he discounted engine trouble. RAI state television showed the Crushed wreckage of the yellow cable car resting on the snow below its route. The cable trailed off like a twisted thread, but officials would not Say how far from the car the cable had been cut. The line's other gondola was heading down at the time and the accident left it stuck and dangling. Rescuers pulled out its operator, the only person aboard. In Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the pilot “was apparently unaware that he had struck a cable or injured anyone.” Base officials said American pilots fly dozens o f training missions over Italy every day. The plane is a surveillance aircraft attached to the NATO force overseeing the Bosnian peace. . The accident occurred at 3:15 p.m. local tim e under sunny skies at a ski resort in the Val di Fassa area of the Dolomite Mountains near Trento. The cable car was travel­ ing from the tow n o f C avalese, 80 m iles northeast of Trento, to the top of Cermis mountain, site o f a popular local ski resort. The cabin had ju st begun its ascent from the base at Cavalese, at an altitude of about 3,000 feet, and was head­ in g to w a rd a m id -s ta tio n w hen it fe ll, said A le ssia Dezugliana, an employee o f the Alpe Cermis ski area. “You couldn't guess the shape of the car anymore,” said Andrea Russo, a police official who arrived at the scene an hour after the accident. Wave watchers A police officer inspects the sm ashed car of the Mt. Cermis cable car line Tuesday, whose cables were severed by a EA-6B Prowler U.S. Marine jet. According to officials, at least 20 people plunged to their death In the accident which occured at a ski resort in the Dolomites mountains near Cavalese, in northern Italy. One of the victims was the car's Italian operator. The rest were skiers, at least six of them German, said police Officer Robert Caváda in Cavalese. RAI said two victims were Hungarian, and two were Poles. The scene was near the spot where a 1976 accident on the same gondola lift killed 42 people. The accident was blamed on operator error. “Compared to the 1976 accident, this was even wforse,” Russo said. “Then you could at least see the dead bodies. Now, they were all tom apart.” The resort in the lower-level Dolomites tends to attract locals and families, unlike the more fashionáble ski spots like C ortina d’Ampezzo or Courmayeur, though it does have a foreign clientele. Phone lines at nearby hotels were jam m ed with calls from worried relatives o f vacationers. The pilot was remaining on the base, said spokeswoman Campaign finance suspect gives in to FBI B y M ichael J. S niffen Associated P ress M khM l CauMahVAraoelalMl Ri m * W ave-w atchers peer over th e railing of th e M anhattan B each, C alif., pier a s th e late a fte rn o o n tid e ro lls In Tuesday. Southern Californians experienced som e mild rains with more on the way. Capt. Tracy O'Grady-Walsh. “It's definitely fair to say he is concerned for all the fam­ ilies ... involved in this,” she said. “I'm sure if he had the opportunity he would express his deepest sympathy for them.” ) O 'G rady-W alsh said the plane's squadron, based in Cherry Point, N.C., had an excellent safety record, with no accidents dating back to 1984 during 60,000 total flight hours. The accident drew an immediate political response in Italy. The Communist Refoundation party, which traditionally opposes the American military presence and supplies the government a majority in Parliament, renewed its call to close the Aviano base. Other leftists parties demanded an end to U.S. military flights over inhabited areas, and pun­ ishment for the pilot. W ASHINGTON — In a surprise b re a k th r o u g h in th e c a m p a ig n fin an ce in v e stig atio n , D em ocratic fund-raiser Yah Lin “Charlie” Trie, a defendant who fled to China, flew here Tuesday and surrendered to the FBI, the Justice Department said. T rie a r r iv e d at D u lle s International A irport in the Virginia suburbs o f the capital at 4:30 p.m. EST Tuesday afternoon on a flight from Paris. The Justice Department sa id th a t, u n d e r an a g re e m e n t betw een T rie and the departm ent's cam paign fin an ce task force, Trie surrendered there to FBI agents. Clad in a brown tweed jacket and electric blue tie, T rie was brought b e fo re U .S . M a g is tr a te J u d g e T h eresa B uchanan in A lex an d ria, V a., w h ere he w as re le a se d on a $ 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 p e rs o n a l re c o g n iz a n c e b o n d . H e ag reed to tu rn o v e r his passport and the deeds to two prop­ erties in Little Rock, Ark. Trie also prom ised to confine his tr a v e l to W a s h in g to n , V irg in ia Beach, Va., and Little Rock, as part o f th e a g re e m e n t A s s is ta n t U .S . A ttorney K athleen K ahoe said the governm ent had negotiated with his lawyers. The Justice D epartm ent provided few o th er d etails o f its agreem ent with Trie, but a senior Justice offi­ cial cautioned against assuming that T rie had agreed to cooperate w ith investigators. “It's not at all unusual for defen­ dants to come back and face charges rath er than spend th eir life on the ru n ,” one o fficial said. T rie could have returned with the intention o f standing trial or negotiating a deal with prosecutors or even with a ten­ tative deal in hand, officials said. R e p u b lic a n s in C o n g re ss, w ho have b een c a stig a tin g the Ju stic e D e p a rtm e n t fo r a lack o f v isib le p ro g ress in the cam p aig n fin an ce investigation, rushed to applaud the Trie surrender. “I a p p la u d th e J u s tic e Department for getting him back to this country and am hopeful it will lead to explanations o f other foreign c o n tr ib u tio n s an d w h o w as involved,” said Rep. Dan Burton, RInd., who said he would like to call T rie b e fo re the H ouse com m ittee that he chairs as soon as the Justice Departm ent agrees. A lo n g tim e frien d o f P resid en t Clinton, Trie and an associate were charged last T hursday w ith giving and arranging illegal political con­ tr ib u tio n s to th e D e m o c ra tic N ational C om m ittee to buy access to Clinton and other top officials. The long-anticipated first indict­ ment from the Justice Department's cam p aig n fin a n c e task fo rc e also charged Trie, a form er L ittle Rock, Ark., restaurateur, with obstructing ju stice by ordering an em ployee to destroy docum ents subpoenaed last year by a federal grand jury and by th e S en ate G o v ern m en tal A ffa irs Cômmittee. The 15-count indictm ent against T rie, 49, and his business associate, Y uan Pei “A n tonio” P an, 50, was re le a se d T h u rsd a y a fte r o ffic ia ls m uffed an effo rt to keep it sealed b e c a u s e b o th d e fe n d a n ts w ere believed to be out o f the country. Trie, bom in Taiwan and a natu­ ralized U.S. citizen, was thought to be in China. Attorney General Janet Reno had asked the Chinese justice m inister for cooperation in the cam ­ paign finance investigation, but no help had been forthcom ing, Justice officials said Thursday. B etw een his perso n al c o n trib u ­ tio n s and the m oney he so licited , T rie w as c re d ite d w ith b rin g in g more than $600,000 to the DNC, the Justice D epartm ent said. The grand ju ry said much o f it came from for­ e ig n s o u rc e s o r w as o b ta in e d through “straw” or “conduit” contri­ butions. O p in io n Wednesday, February 4,1998 "Edito rial C lin to n , Symington credibility destroyed ; Trusting politicians is about as wise as expectiBgJgjj Recent events certainly make that dear. Former Gov. Fife Symington will go to jail until his appeal is successful. The net seems to be tightening around President Bill Ginton in the Monica Lewinsky case. What are and human beings, to think? People wiU always disappoint i®. We wifl always disap|»n)t ourselves and odie|jjgj So bow do you judge a person? D o you staunchly ignore die flaws, as Americans have done with Clinton for most of bis presidency? tto you eternally condemn a gee-son a id see notitingbuttheflaws — as Ariasiaiis a ssn eager to do with Symington? Or do yen attempt to see the whole person, good and bad together? The latter is the most sound, but also the most difficult. We like to delineate people in black and white. Christopher Columbus used to be depicted as a virtual saint; now he’s a pariah in the aimals of histety. Is ft possible that he’s nei­ ther saint nor sinner, but a man who both achieved great things for die world and caused great suffering for many people? History books will probably never portray him with such balance. Neither is Symington likely to be remembered as a gov­ ernor who did a lot for th e state o f Arizona but also deceived people about his finances and wort to jail. He might claim remorse and beg for forgiveness, but it seems unlikely that people wffl give him a second d a n te when this is all behind him. We’ll refuse to believe that a gen­ uine turnaround is possible. We’ll believe that he is just ‘ claiming” to be sony. The imminent execution of pickax killer Karla Faye Tucker, scheduled Tuesday nij^ft, raises a similar issue. Tucker, a deaflh-row inmate in Texas, said she became; a Christian during her years m prison. That, coupled with the fact that she’s a woman, raised controversy about the e®* cudon. Qfooiase, many people doubt her conversion. After all, we like to think of people narrowly - - you once committed a brutal murder (or a terrible crime) there­ fore you could never change for the better or turn your life around. Occasionally we A) actually tty to see the good with the bad, but we still accord different weights to differ­ ent actions. If a person has done something bad enough, itt our minds, he or she could never make up for that. Not even canonization would suffice. “Sorry, but you blew your chance,” we say, comfortable in our own possession erf that lost chance. But maybe we’ve done something too horrible to ever overcome. What do we do about that? What makes our lives meanftigfui? If there is a God, how would God judge us? Would we be good enough? Could the difference between heaven and hell come down to somethiBg as simple as lying or not lying in ft particular situation? | | | j Of course, that could be an irrelevancy. We think that we’re food enough We’re sure dial politicians aren’t That still doesn’t give us something concrete to trust in. People, toe, education — they ah fad us at some r. What -do you do when who or wbat n Proposal threatens smokers’ freedom don’t understand when a career-minded, publicly elected offi­ Smoking like a burning burger k a-ARK cial dictates that the same bar owner can’t participate in the free on a barbecue, I shuffled aside to J^POLLOCK market unless he enforces' special laws directed only at him and spare the approaching pedestrians his clientele. the unhealthy smoke spewing out Columnist My idea of good music doesn’t supersede someone else’s of my puffing portal. Nonetheless, right to play what they like. As long as I can’t hear it in my an inebriated young lady began swatting at the air like she was being attacked by Tabasco-filled home, my freedom is protected. And if you don’t like opera, what are you doing working in mosquitoes. Still flailing, she suggested I “get my ass to the parking lot” an opera house? “Why should white collar workers have workplace protec­ if I wanted to smoke. Politely, I noted that the fumes of her Ktions from smoking,” Cheuvront asked in an Arizona Republic Mart perfume could well instigate a visit by a U.N. inspection article, “while people just eking out a living in the restaurant team. Granted, lung cancer trumps the tears w~„jed by Perfume de and bar business are forced to work in an unhealthy environ­ Para But how far must one go to placate people who can only ment?” They don’t. They can work someplace else. sleep soundly if they’ve had a good day dictating other’s If we are not a part of Sheriff Joe’s chain gang, we are free behavior? Not everyone wants to live in a Disneyland-style to work anywhere that will world. I try diligently to thwart _ _ = = _ =_ =_===_ = _ _ _ hire us. If 1 were afraid of the carcinogenic fumes of my — cave-ins, 1 wouldn’t work in tobacco from reaching tender No One i^fimposing” their smoke on bar a mine. If all I know is how noses. I don’t smoke in cars. I to mine, I’d learn a new avoid, to the best of my ability, workers and patrons; they are imposing trade. It may be a struggle, others who are not pleased by it on themselves. I f a person works or but thousands of people do the smell of fine tobacco. I do it. R ather than trying to what it takes to get along. shops in an ice-cream factot^M iefW S improve someone else, they But Rep. Ken Cheuvront, improvç themselves. Lots of D-central Phoenix, feels it’s not going to get cold. _________ ¿ _______ folks have tried the alterna­ enough. He feels it’s n e c e s s a r y __________ ____________— tive, “improving” others. to im pose yet another BigThey were going to improve others even if it killed them, and it Brother intrusion into the rights of Arizona residents. • Cheuvront is sponsoring a proposal that mimics the healthi- usually did. Besides, most bartenders and waitresses I know aren’t er-than-thou law that took effect Jan. 1 in California. The bean“ e k in g ” o n t a living. They work in bars and restaurants because sprout state now bans smoking in restaurants, bars and most they choose to and they like it. They also take home a lot more other indoor workplaces. weekly pay and tips than a cashier sucking car exhaust at a gas Indoor workplaces, all right. But restaurants and, excuse me, station. This truth doesn’t seem to matter to Cheuvront and bars? Wake up and smell the stogie, Ken. The town of Mesa other dictators of morality. No one is “imposing” their smoke already bans smoking in bars. What happens if the citizens on bar workers and patrons; they are imposing it on themselves. repeal that law? Would the desires of the state and moralistic If a person works or shops in an ice-creám factory, they’re legislative representatives override the voters in Mesa? And isn’t it a little hypocritical to complain about the smoke when going to get cold. We, elected citizens, like Cheuvront to legislate laws that one is downing a martini? Or perhaps that’s the real goal — protect our freedoms, not to ordain what we should be. That’s prohibition. the Supreme Court’s job. Since he’s so worried about smoke I really don’t believe that an ordinance prohibiting a current­ floating into the lungs of his fellow citizens, he should consider ly lawful activity on private property is in the public’s best r i d in g a bike to work instead o f leaving a trail o f carbon interest. I understand when the owner of a private business declares that l need shoes and a shirt in order to enter. His store, monoxide and hot air inhis wake. M ark Pollock is a senior studying journalism and history. his rules. If I don’t like it, I’D shop someplace else. However, I PERCY EDNALINO, Editor JODI BAFUNDO, Managing Editor CARYÎ -S1ÍF M ^ A 1 ....................Night Editor K A R A SHIRR ; p n w p F nfïF.i i . ; .........Opinion Editor FOIST ......... ...... f lR A n I .ÀNG ... .............. ........ ...Sports Editor MATT PAULSON............. ...... .... ...Asst. Sports Editor RANDY JONES................... VIVI STENBERG .. ....................... MagazineEditor REPORTERS: Ally Asher (Cultural Diversity), Monica Aguirre (ASASU), Becky Bevins (General Assignment), A islinn Fahy (City of Tempe), Kristen Hatcher (Administration), Cadonna Peyton (Police), Tim Tail (General Assignment), Dave W oodfill (General Assignment), Karen Yamada (ABOR). SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Flanagan (Track & Field), Lori Haro (Baseball). Jason Joseph (Swimming & Diving), Cario Meroaldo (Genoa! Assignment), Scott Lewis (Wrestling) COPY EDITORS: Lone Roberts, Susan Schimmel. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Scott Samplin, Jeremy Weiss. COLUMNISTS: Brian Ary, Scott Bennett, Scott Bracken, Michelle Craig, Ross Eide, J.E. Hardee, Amber Knuth, Gregor A. McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, A.D. Niver, Brian Poiieoff, George D, Rose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Steve Stein, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge, Hyasmin Omana, Gentry Smith;Charles Wes|ey. PRODUCTION: L Adrianna Garcia, Steven Garza, Alyson Hurt, Wayne Nelson, Eric Paulson, Sara Pike, Jennifer Swinford, Hub Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, Sharan Gill, David Goodwin, Mike Knievel, Monika Konat, Jessica Maduk, Jonathan Negtetti, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. CLASSIFIEDS: Kate Desk), Jeanette Ptoium, Joy 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 Editor JODI BAFUNDO Managing Editor GINGER SCOTT Opinion Editor CHRIST! FOIST News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The Store Press is tile only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper ate not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. . _________ State Press Phone N umbers Inform ation..............9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N ew sro o m .............. ,9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 Magazine.................965-1695 A dvertising.............. 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 Classifieds .965-6735 http://newssvpsa.asu.edu ____ ______ O p i n i o n __________ STATE P ress L etters ________ to the Wednesday, February 4, 1998 E ditor Presidency ruined by scandals E-MAIL THE EDITOR: SINJIN@IMAP2.ASU.EDU answered is, “how much will it cost us to M o r e n e w s o n r e n ta l c o d e s enforce code?” Do we want a city govern­ I have spoken with Aislinn Fahy about articles she published in the S ta te P ress about the new housing codé. She and I have differing viewpoints on the primary issues o f the newly approved rental housing code. In the interest o f opening these issues to public scrutiny, particularly to the ASU stu­ dent body who will be directly impacted by them, I offer the following comments for further examination. Fahy’s report was well written, but failed to point out the pertinent ramifications of this code fo r students and other renters. Landlords will, by necessity, pass the cost of improvements on to future tenants. This means a significant number of students liv­ ing off campus will be forced into living arrangements and conditions that will not provide them with the benefits they present­ ly enjoy. Those students currently walking or biking to campus will be forced to find alternative methods of transportation, due to longer commutes to campus. It will be more difficult to drive to school because of the increased traffic congestion resulting from this ordinance. Shared-living arrange­ ments will undoubtedly be considered as an option because increased rent costs. Landlords can face fines of up to $2,000 per day for housing violations, according to the code. Ultimately, these fines will create an atmosphere in which landlords may be forced to forfeit property to the city to avoid foreclosure due to excessive fines. This practice seems to be a modem version of “block busting,” and has generated many costly lawsuits in other cities. As mentioned in the Fahy’s article, The Arizona Residential Landlord and Tenant Act does provide a remedy for tenants liv­ ing in substandard housing. As a citizen and landlord, I wonder why we need the rental housing code. A critic a l questio n to be ment that micromanages private enterprises and even your private life, up to and includ­ ing m easuring the num ber o f gallons o f water coming out o f your faucet? This Housing Rental Code is not a stu­ dent-friendly code. Not voting and making yourself heard will cost you money and the freedom to liv e your life on yo u r own terms. To do less is to forfeit many of the other opportunities you enjoy by attending ASU. A place to get introduced to all this in fo rm atio n is to v isit my w eb site at www.bankonbank.org and become aware of this issue and the other candidates in the upcoming election. If you are eligible to vote in Tempe, I urge you to participate in the electoral process. The primary for the Tempe City Council election is March 10. Rich Bank Candidate for Tempe City Council Preachers, take ’em or leave ’em Upon reading the letters to the editor in Monday’s issue, I found the two on the mall preachers quite interesting. I have seen them o u t th ere m yself, b u t m issed the Cluck-U Chicken saving the day. This is my opinion on the infamous preachers — let them do what they want. If you don’t lik e th em , k eep w alk in g . H ave a n ice friendly debate with them it you want. You have to give them credit thoUgh, for having the balls to preach in front of all the frater­ nities and sororities. It has been my experi­ ence that frat boys can be very opinionated and very brutal. Despite this, I whole heat­ edly agree with Jose Galino. Let me walk to class in peace. Katie Shrode Sophomore Pre-Business L e t ter s P o l ic y _______ ____________ The Slate Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual .errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press: front desk in the basement of the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, Box 871502, Arizona . State University, Tempc Ari/.., 85287-1502. No faxes, please. ' F o r us to truly look at a presidency and ju d g e w hether o r n o t it w as good o r bad, som e am ount o f tim e has to p a s s b e c a u s e th e in d iv id u a l b ia s e s o f th e tim e h a v e p a sse d a n d th e a d m in istra tio n c a n re a lty be lo o k e d at o b jectiv ely . U sually th a t len g th o f tim e is about ten to fifteen years, so currently w e are re-evaluating th e C arter and Reagan years. C urrently w e are in the C lin to n years, w hich you should all know , an d if you d o n ’t know that, then p lease cro ss the nearest b o rd er and leave o u r co u n ­ try. T be A m erican people are arguing back an d forth on the topic o f w hether o r not P resident C lin to n is a good president. As l stated earlier, it is h ard for us to determ ine that presently; how ever, I feet th at w hen w e look b ack at his eig h t years - o r m aybe less — w e w ill see one o f the w orst, scandal-ridden presidencies o f th is century. W hy do I feel th is w ay ? W ell, le t’s lo o k at th e track reco rd o f P resident C lin to n . C u rren tly he is go in g th ro u g h th e fig h t o f h is p o litic a l life in th e M onica L ew insky sex scandal, w hich is n o t bis first sex scandal, by the way. H e and h is w ife H illary deny th at th is affair ev er happened. (S ound fam iliar?) W e sim ply cannot believe h im anym ore. In 1992. w hen C lin to n w as running fo r president, a young lady nam ed G en n ifer F low ers claim ed to have had an a ffa ir w ith him . A t th at tim e, C lin to n claim ed this w as all a fab ricatio n by F lo w ers. H o w ev er, h e recen tly ad m itted in a sw orn d e p o sitio n th at he did indeed have an affair w ith her. So C linton basically tied to the A m erican pu b ­ lic to becom e president. O ne w ill probably say, “W ell, all p o liticians lie.” D oes th at m ake it right? I am not trying to show you one situation w here C linton lied and say, “W ell he is a bad president because o f this one thing.” N o. Instead, I am trying to show you a disturbing pattern o f events w hich you can hopefully look at and draw yo u r ow n conclusion. L ike the old adage adm onishes, “W here there is sm oke, th ere is usually fire.” D uring 1992, Bill and H illary w ent on 6 0 M in u tes. H illary m ade the now fam ous statem ent, “1 am n o t like som e Tam m y W ynette song, ju s t standing by m y m an.” She w ent on to say th a t she believes in her husband and respects him . H ow ever, during th e past six years, a ll she has done is stand by her m an. T his p ast w eek she w ent on The Today Show and suggested th a t this cu rrent sex scandal is a right-w ing conspiracy. Is th at w hat she has been reduced to? H illary, an intelligent, sharp w om an o f th e 90s, has been reduced to lying fo r h e r h u sb an d , w ho h as ad m itte d to c h e a tin g on h er. B u t you re a lly c a n n o t blam e her. I f you fo ught fo r som ething all y o u r life and finally achieved it, y o u w ould n o t let anything take it aw ay. “ A lso, la st w eek, C lin to n gave h is S tate o f th e U nion address, an d reach ed h is, hig h est ap proval ratin g ever. C lin to n w as h ack iu h is ti8d fo rm ju s t aa p i w as o n th e 1996 cam paign trail. H e u s e d h is am azing p u b lic-speaking sk ills to g iv e u s the im pression h e is g o ing to do som ething. H e u sed p o litic a l buzz | w ords like, “education,” “h ealth care,” and “21st century” to p la y on o a r em o ­ tions an d c lo u d o u r in tellectu al state. T h e perfect-exam ple o f this is his op en ­ in g statem ent, “T he S tate o f the U nion is G O O D .” W ell whttt do we, ex p ect him to say , th e tru th ? L ik e th e 1996 cam p aig n prom ises; th e p ro m ises and p o litical sound bites th at cam e o u t o f the State o f th e U nion w ill n o t be fu l­ filled, b u t the p resid en t w ill give th e appearance o f attem pting th e ir com ple­ tion before ultim ately blam ing th e rig h t-w in g elem en t le w th e ir failure. A fter reading this, you w ill e ith er be thinking “E xactly,” o r “T his person is a clo sed -m in d ed , sm all-m inded in d iv id u al, w ho can n o t see the greatn ess o f pow er and sexual relations w ith interns,” You should, th in k fa r y o u rself and look at all the signs o f a bad adm inistration. T hey are all there. In an age o f intense m edia scrutiny, w e have elected a president -— tw ice —- w ho has and can survive any scandal that com es o u t o f his past o r present. T here are only m ore scandals o n the horizon. H e w ill stay in office and continue to do nothing until h is term is over, and fo r th e next ten years, w e w ill feel good ab o u t h is adm inistration. D uring this tim e, his supporters w ill co n tin u e to. go to ridiculous lengths to defend him . T hen, th e truth w ill com e out fo r us all to see. W e w ill look back at a terrible and em barrassing presidency ju s t as w e are seeing the truth about the K ennedy years now . R o ss E id e is a se n io r stu d y in g m a rketin g a n d can b e rea ch ed a t sid e ® a su .ed u via e-m a il. The Grinch has stolen Christmas and Santa Claus is dead 1 hate to be the bearer of bad news —- OK, I love to be the bearer o f bad news — but I feel it is my duty as a journalist to inform the ASU communi­ ty that Christmas as we know it will never be the same again. It is time to put the stockings in the attic, bum the mistletoe, finish off the egg nog and rum, eat your own cookies and milk and set those poor reindeer free. Boys and girls, Santa Claus is dead. I assure you this is no joke. I do not dabble in falsities, just the facts ma’am. You might think, “Here is some sportswriting Jew who is just trying to get even because Hanukkah Harry and his Hanukkah bush aren’t nearly as cool as jolly old St. Nick and his Douglas Fir Christmas tree.” You might even think I’m just tired of feeling like Kyle from South Park because my friends don’t let me eat Christmas snow, either. But let the truth be known — as proud of my culture as I am — I have never even had a bar mitzvah. In fact — and my grandfather is prob­ ably turning in his grave as I write these words — I have celebrated more Christmases than Hanukkahs. I would not steer my fellow Sun Devils astray on news of this magnitude. Santa Claus, and I’m sure this will come as a surprise to longtim e Santa Claus follow ers, lived in Tucson. No word on whether he was a Wildcats fan. On Jan. 25, Santa Claus died of cardiac arrest. He was 85. We will all miss him. While in computer-science class that 1 was browsing the obituary section of the Arizona Republic, doing my daily search for dead exgirlfriends, when I came across the passing of Santa, a.k.a. Dayton C. pouts. Fouts had been making public appearances as Santa Claus since 1937. He was recognized in the 1998 Guinness Book of Records for the world’s longest run as the fat guy with the flowing white beard and rosy cheeks who represents Christmas for mil­ lions all Over the world. In July, Fouts was honored at the annual Father Christmas convention in Copenhagen, Denmark for his tenure as Santa. Fouts’ last public appearance as Santa Claus was on Dec. 14 at a Tucson Boys Chorus concert. Those in attendance undoubtedly had no idea that this would be the last time they would ever see Santa Claus. After all, death can never be pre­ dicted. In a world filled with so much pain and tragedy, Is there any greater loss than that of St. Nick? Even us Jews feel the pain. I can only imagine the heartbreak of Christians around the universe. Let’s all take a moment of silence to remember the man, myth, the legend. Oh well, there is always Hanukkah Harry and those eight crazy nights. Scott Lewis is a junior studying journalism and can be reached at cubie@imap4.asu.edu via email. State P ress Wednesday, February 4, 1998 Page 6 Senate panel endorses vote on ending racial preferences B y M att Kelley A ssociated P ress PHOENIX — After nearly three hours o f im passio n ed debate, a Senate panel e n d o rse d a plan T u esd ay to h o ld a statewide vote on eliminating racial prefer­ ences in state employment, education and contracting. “We are not going to have a colorblind society if governm ent is allow ed to dis­ crim inate,” the m easure’s sponsor, Sen. S co tt B undgaard, R -G lendale, to ld the committee. Bundgaard’s proposal would amend the Arizona Constitution to prohibit discrimi­ nation or preferential treatm ent based on race, sex, oolor, ethnicity or national origin by state, county or local governm ents. Arizona voters would have to approve the amendment, which is nearly identical to C alifornia’s anti-preference Proposition 209. passed in 1996. Opponents o f the m easure, including civil-rights leaders and presidents o f all three state universities, called it unneces­ sary and divisive. State and local govern­ ments and schools in Arizona do not have racial quotas, they said. “If you are qualified for admission to our universities, you will be admitted," said ASU president Lattie Coor. “We do not choose among individuals on the basis of race.” ;J \ Affirmative-action supporters said state efforts to level the playing field for minori­ ties have not led to a plague of lawsuits or p ro b lem s w ith d isc rim in a tio n ag ain st whites. ’ _ “I have never seen this as fixing a prob­ lem," responded the panel’s chairman. Sen. Tom Patterson, R-Phoenix. “I see this as stating a principle, and the principle is I i ii equality before the law.” Racial minorities have been equal before the law for only about three decades, and programs to encourage their involvement in the economy and society are still needed, affirmative-action supporters replied. “If not for the advocates of affirmative action supporting me and believing in me, I would not be able to contribute to society,” said Sophia Cleland, a Lakota Indian study­ ing biochemistry at ASU. Bundgaard told the panel he had a large box full o f documentation of state and local racial-preference programs in Arizona, but admitted he did not give copies of any of it to com m ittee members. He also claimed many supporters o f his proposal did not show up at the hearing “for fear of retribu­ tion.” _ Bundgaard. Larson and one other person spoke in fav o r o f the b ill; 15 speakers opposed it. Sen. Joe L o p ez, D -P h o en ix , said Bundgaard and other backers of the propos- ^ al could not point to specific problems with Arizona programs. Lopez said that made him suspect that prejudice played a role in the proposal. j “I think the support was influenced more by xenophobes than by anything else ... 1 do believe that these kinds of legislation are racially motivated,” Lopez said. Such comments left Republican support­ ers o f the measure bristling. Sen. Rusty Bowers, R-Mesa, held up an autographed picture that Jackie Robinson, the first black man to play major league baseball, that had been given to Bowers’ father, a college teaazmmatc. “My support for this bill is based on rea­ son, that we should not discrim in ate,” Bowers said. - i i l i n n ENGINEERING STUDENTS SALES/MARKETING STUDENTS I I ' ' ■ INTERN PROGRAMS NOW AVAILABLE! R o ckw ell Tom orrow’s technology is some­ thing that frames all our thinking at today's Rockwell Autom ation. Because if you only focus on today's technology, you'll end up tol^lly out of the competitive picture a few years from now. Zoom in on us. W e're looking for the visionaries, dreamers and jinopTstop j e ^ ^ ^ ^ t^ e R w h o are chanaina the way the w orld controls things - from roller co asted and Broadway shows to pharmaceutical production and food processing. Join the people of today's Rockwell and get a close-up view o f tomorrow. S ee Rockw ell Autom ation at: A rizona State University O n-C am pu s Presentation: February 16,1998 O n-C am pu s Interview: February 17,1998 C h e c k your placem ent office fo r locations. C heck o u t o u r w e b s ite a t w w w .ra .ro c k w e ll.c o m /c a re e rs/c o lle g e Together, creating a better working world. 4L* R o c k w e ll Automation ® d o Allen-Bradley T a k e o n a n Ê M K IE U ra SOFTWARElisi g e t h e f ir s t s t e p in c r e d ib le c a r e e r j o u r n e y . Aerotek, a nationally recognized leader in the contract ser­ vices industry, is actively recruiting a diverse community of college graduates. Contract services is a thriving industry that has been spurred ,by global competition and rapid technologi­ cal change. It's no wonder contract services has grown to a ^ $100-billion-a-year industry! And Aerotek is leading the way— since 1983, we've been the fastest-growing contract services firm in the U.S. A llied T u b e & C o n d u it, an industry leader in Fire Protection, Electrical, Building and Mechanical Tube products, and part < Tyco In te rn a tio n a l, L td ,, a 12 billion dollar company with more than 75,000 employees in. ■ countries, is currently seeking 2nd through 4 th year : w ho are interested in gaining valuable hands-on work experience through participation in student intern or co-op programs now being offered in o u r Phoenix location. We are looking for college students in the following disciplines: Hundreds of graduates have launched their careers as sales recruiters, "selling" the market's top professionals on working for Aerotek.. then selling them on providing their services to our Fortune 500 clients such as Motorola, IBM, AT&T, Lockheed Martin, and Sprint Our sales recruiters interview, market and develop client relations. And Aerotek will make sure you have the tools you need to succeed. Our Sales Recruiters enjoy: • M echanical E ngineering • S a le s/M a rk etin g C o m m unications • A great salary plus bonuses and comprehensive benefits • Career planning to support advancement into sales and management All positions will start February, 1998 and can be individually tailored to fit your current class schedule, from 15 to 40 hours per week! Why not take advantage o f this program and obtain • professional m anufacturing experience to enhance and com plem ent your studies! All candidates should submit their resume to: A llan G ardner, D irector o f H um an Resources Allied T ube & C onduit k 2525 N 2 7 th Avenue ■ l. Phoenix, AZ 85009 • Opportunities nationwide-130 branch offices across North America W e w ill b e o n c a m p u s M a r c h 9 th a t 6 p m t o h o s t a n in f o r m a t io n S e s s io n in M e m o r ia l U n io n , R o o m 224. 1 0 th . I n t e r v ie w s S to p by w ill C a re e r be c o n d u cte d S e r v ic e s to on s ig n M a rch up fo r in t e r v ie w s , a n d a t t e n d t h e I n fo r m a t io n S e s s io n t o le a r n a b o u t o u r e x c it i n g o p p o r t u n it ie s ! i FAX: (6 0 2 ) 2 6 9 -1 3 2 4 or (6 0 2 ) 4 8 4 -4890 Allied Tube & Conduit is an Equal Opportunity Employer Aerotek/HR 7301 P a rk w a y Or, Hanover, M D 21076 1 -800-927-8090/fax 410-579-3005 E-m ail: co ucho@ aero tek .com Page 7 Wednesday, February 4,1998 State P ress Genetics a determinant in lazy behavior of ants COMPLIMENTARY PASSES EXCLUSIVELYFORAMERICANEXPRESS' CARDMEMBERS. By C h r i s K a h n S t a t e P ress WHEN AND WHERE. F ebruary 5, 7:30 p m H arkins Center Point Thtr People frustrated with roommates who don’t clean up are not alone. Research on the social organization of insects is showing that “lazy” behavior is in fact quite common. T a tja n a P o lo n y , an A S U s e n io r in m icrobiology, has discovered that while most leaf-cutter ants spend the day busily digging holes or tending to the young, 10 to 20 percent o f the population simply sit around and do nothing. These “lazy’’ ants were thought to be a reserv e fo rc e , c o n trib u tin g only w hen extra work needed to be done. T e s tin g th is h y p o th e s is . P o lo n y rem oved h alf o f the ants in the colony, increasing the w orkload for the rem ain­ ing individuals. She said she thought it w ould force the lazy an ts to do som e­ thing, but they rem ained inactive. “T h is to ld m e th a t th e y ’re n o t a r e s e rv e f o rc e , b u t j u s t r e a lly l a z y ,” Polony said. The other ants were forced to priori­ tiz e th e ir a c tiv itie s , in c r e a s in g th e amount o f time spent on vital tasks such as taking care o f the brood or tending th e ir f u n g a l g a rd e n s , sh e: s a id . L e ss important tasks such as digging new tun­ nels or foraging for leaves were not done as much. P o lo n y ’s p r o je c t c o n tr ib u te s to A ssistant Professor o f B iology Jennifer F e w e ll’s rese a rc h on the ev o lu tio n o f social organization in insect colonies. • WHAT. C ardm em bers g e t two compli­ m entary p a s s e s to a preview screening of New Line C inem a's new film The Wedding Singer. a d a m s a n d ie r d re w b a r ry m o re h e ’s g o n n a p a rty like it's 1985! HOW. Ju st bring th e American Express* Card or Optima* Card and your student ID to the location listed below to pick up your passes. SPECIAL OFFER. Receive 2 complimentary p a sse s w hen you apply tor the American Express* or Optima* Card (at the location listed below). MORE TO COME. The Wddding Singer is o n e in a series of three major motion pictures to b e previewed oh your cam pus this year, compliments of American Express? PICK UP YOUR TICKETS HERE. t n fr o n t o f A S U B o o k sto re wm ira? WB& n Ì Entertainment F ebruary 4-5 Cards ©1997 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. “ I w as s u rp ris e d by h e r r e s u lts . I expected (the lazy ants) to increase their productivity,” Fewell said. H o w e v e r, t h i s b e h a v io r cari be explained by understanding the genetics o f insects, Fewell said. Ants are genetically pre-program m ed to prefer certain tasks over others. Some will be m ore interested in taking care of the young than digging tunnels. O thers will w ant to prepare food instead o f take Out the garbage. “ I t ’s lik e liv in g w ith a b u n c h o f friends,” Few ell said, “when thè dishes start piling up. One roommate is always going to give in and clean: them before the others. That person will usually end up being the ‘dishw asher.” ’ Roommates also wanting to be helpful w ill have to fin d o th er chores because orice th e d ish es are done, nobody else needs to perform that task. “A nd in populations w here everyone intrinsically has a preference for different jobs,” Fewell said, “genetic diversity will always result in individuals that prefer to do ju st about everything as well as “lazy” ones that w on’t w ant to do anything at all.” Specialization in both human societies an d an t co lo n ie s can be ex p la in e d by th ese analogies, but Few ell pointed out that “lazy” humans don’t have the excuse th at “la z y ” an ts have. T his is because humans are more likely to get their habits from experience than from genetics. Y o u ’r e i n v i t e d ! D G a in e s ! P r iz e s ! X In:fo! SPONSORED BY: Campus Dining by Marriott American Express Foilett’s MU Recreation ASU Mail, Services Bahama Bucks A Z Credit Union A S U Fast Copy Burger King A S U Bookstore State Press Zia Records Phuong’s Cleaners The Picture Place A SU Police Adult re-Entry Child & Family Studies Community Service Program M UAB Sports Cutters Schlotzsky’s TODAY!!! W ednesday February 4 10am to 2pm in the Memorial Union m a in le v e l, s o u th e n d OPEN HOUSE Sta t e P ress Wednesday, February 4,1998 Titanic numbers grow at box office for ‘Titanic’ 1State P ress be the nation’s No. 1 film until at least M arch 6, when W arner Bros, releases “The Fugitive” sequel “U.S. M arshals,” starring Tommy Lee LOS ANGELES — No new film appears capable o f sinking James Jones and W esley Snipes. If that film doesn’t capsize “T itanic,” it may be M arch 13’s “The Cam eron’s “T itanic,” the blockbuster predicted to lead the box-office Man in the Iron M ask” that finally emerges as the new top movie. The lists well into March and maybe even April. “This thing has built m om entum like w e’ve never seen b efo re,” only reason the 17th century dram a is expected to do w ell: It stars Gerry Rich, president of worldwide marketing for MGM, said Monday. “Titanic’s” Leonardo DiCaprio in not one, but two, roles. If DiCaprio’s new movie doesn’t bump “Titanic,” it could be in first “I d on’t see anything in the near horizon that w ill knock it o ff its place through April 3, when “Lost in Space” premieres. perch.” '■ “ .’ ; The record for consecutive weeks in the top spot is held by “Home For the seventh weekend in a row, the disaster epic was by far the nalion’s most popular film. And it’s headed for a potential worldwide Alone” at 12 weeks. It would exceed that mark if it were No. 1 through th eatrical gross o f a reco rd SI b illio n , su rp assin g all-tim e lead er March 13. Some prognosticators believe the rom antic comedy “The W edding “Jurassic Park" at $913 million. Singer" starring Drew Barrymore will topple “Titanic” over the week­ The past w eekend's returns o f $25.9 million were off just 9 percent from the film 's Dec. 19 debut weekend. A co-production of V iacom ’s end of Feb. 13-15. The problem is Oscar nominations are read Feb. 10, Paramount Pictures and News C orp.’s 20th Century Fox, “Titanic” has where "Titanic” is expected to dominate. C ounting international sales, “T itanic” has a worldwide theatrical domestic ticket sales o f $308.1 million to date, seventh on the all-time gross exceeding $608 million, even though it has not opened in some U.S. list. Made for a record $200 m illion, “T itanic” now seems certain of foreign territories and has played only a few weeks in some countries. It passing No. 2 “E.T The Extra-Terrestrial” and No. 3 “Jurassic Park” on is about to open in both China and the former Soviet Union. “This film has broken every rule and every other record,” said Jim the domestic box-office charts, which grossed a respective $399.8 mil­ Gianopulous, president o f Fox International Theatrical. He added the lion and $357.1 million. A film of “Titanic’s” popularity would typically lose about 15 per­ movie is grossing about $50 million a weekend overseas. “I don’t see cent o f its ticket sales over the next several weekends. (If the movie any record out of reach.” Much of the movie’s American patrons are repeat customers, partic­ wins the best picture Oscar on March 23, that formula won’t hold.) Yet even with that steady erosion, “Titanic” could pass “Star W ars” by mid­ ularly teen-age girls, many o f whom have seen the movie five times or more. But older professionals are still discovering the movie. summer to becam e the top domestic film o f all time. “It was so well-written and so well-filmed,” said Shaun Grady, a San Including its 1997 re-release, 1977’s “Star W ars” grossed $461 mil­ Gabriel doctor who saw the movie with his wife, Dina, in a jam -packed lion in domestic theaters. An informal survey o f Hollywood executives suggests “Titanic” may theater Sunday. “You felt like you were a passenger on the boat.” B y J o h n H orn A ssociated P ress Entertainment W riter H i g h f ib e r , LOW FAT. rCAMPUS-j L C o r n e r -1 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e 967-4049 next to College Street Deli 6 0 9 S . M ill A v e . 858-0567 across from Coffee Plantation E v e ry d a y L o w P r ic e »3,99 2 4 e x p o su re DOUBLE PRINTS see store for details Color C-41 Process Best Price in Town Check Daily ! For Online Specials! Over 1,000 Phoenix Area Used Cars & Trucks Are Online! ATH • ELECTRICAL EN G IN EER IN G • MECHANICAL EN G IN EER IN G * BUSINESS ANALYSIS TAKE TECH N O LO G Y iE J u a i ß i w ' C E ß m When something is too extreme for words, it's to the Nth degree. And that's the level of technology you'll experience a t Raytheon. Raytheon has form ed a new technological superpow er-Raytheon Systems Company, composed of four major technological giants: Raytheon Electronic Systems, Raytheon E-Systems, Raytheon Tl Systems an d Hughes Aircraft. The new Raytheon Systems Company is driving technology to the limit. And we're looking for engineers who want to push the envelope. Break new ground. Make their mark. At Raytheon, you'll take technology-and your career-to the highest possible level. You'll take it to the Nth. We'll be visiting your campus soon. Contact your Career placement office now to schedule an interview, or check out our website at www.rayjobs.com. If you are unable to meet with us, please send yoUr resume to: Raytheon Staffing, P.O. Box 655 474, MS-201, Dallas, TX 75?65 We have many exciting opportunities available and we would like to talk to you. Internet: w w w .rayjo bs.com • E-m ail: resum e@ rayjo b s.co m U .S. citizenship m ay be required. W e are an equal opportunity em ployer. R a y th e o n Ex p e c t g r e a t t h in g s P age9 Wednesday, February 4, 1998 State P ress P olice R eport The A SU police reported the follow ing incidents on Tuesday: • An employee reported that he lost two keys belonging to ASU. • A student reported that he lost one key belonging t6 ASU. • Three women not associated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for underage possession o f alcohol and misuse of a driver’s license at 615 Alpha Drive. • A student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession o f alcohol and reporting false information to police at 701 Alpha Drive. • A student reported that someone unlawfully entered his room in Sonora Center and removed assorted CDs. • A student reported that someone removed his bicycle’s front forks and brake assembly from the Student Recreation Center. • A student reported that someone rem oved her bicycle from the Goldwater Center, where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported that someone removed his bicycle from Physical Science C-wing, where it was secured with a lock. • A student was arrested on an outstanding warrant from the ASU Police Department. He was not able to post bond and was booked. • A student was contacted at the Physical Education West Building, where he had sustained an injury. Subject was transported to a local hospital by a friend. • A student reported that someone removed her bicycle tire from her bicycle, while it was parked in the bike racks out­ side the Psychology Building. • A student was contacted at the Student Recreation Center, where he had sustained an injury. Subject was transported to a local hospital by a friend. • A student reported that someone removed her wallet from the Noble Science; Building. « A man not associated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for criminal speeding at 1100 S. Mill Ave. The Tempe police reported the follow ing incident on Tuesday: • After being in Phoenix Flowershop, 735 E. Broadway Road, a man put on a pair of latex gloves and approached an em ployee. The suspect pulled out a sem i-autom atic handgun and asked for the money in the register. The regis­ ter couldn’t be opened, so he knocked it to 'th e ground, which forced the cash drawer open. The suspect then put the register drawer in a white plastic bag and confronted employees with the gun and told them not to move. The suspect fled the store and was last seen climbing over a wall. Today's photo radar locations are: R u ral R oad, b etw een B roadw ay R oad and S o u th ern Avenue. Broadway Road, between Hardy and Priest Drives. Rural Road, between University Drive and Curry Road. McClintock Drive, between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue. Compiled by State Press reporter Cadonna Peyton Law-school students to offer free tax help to ASU community B y B ecky B evins S tate P ress A SU law stu d e n ts a re v o lu n teerin g th e ir tax know -how to anyone seeking guidance in filing 1997 tax returns. Students, low -incom e fam ilies, non­ re sid e n ts and an y o n e u n ab le to affo rd professional tax help can get free advice from train ed stu d en ts Feb. 10 through April I I . T he law s tu d e n ts re c e iv e d tra in in g fro m th e a c c o u n tin g firm o f A rth u r A n d e rso n in p re p a rin g re tu rn s o f a ll kinds, including non-resident and e le c ­ tronic filing. “W e received the aw ard last year for having the best site in the country from th e A m e ric a n B a r A s s o c ia tio n ,” sa id F rankie H o, a second-year law student coordinating the effort. T rained volunteers w ill be available for w alk-in help from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. every Tuesday and W ednesday, Feb10 through A pril 11, and on Saturdays Looking for som ething to put on your coffee table that show s you’v e gotten som e class? $1 195 H ayden’s Ferry Review ASU’s Llteraiy M agazine Much cheaper, and it w on’t break when you play football in the living room. beginning M arch 28, from 9:00 a m. until noon. Services w ill not be available dur­ ing Spring Break. Those interested need to bring all W-2 and 1099 fo rm s, a copy o f la st y e a r’s return and other relevant inform ation to A rm strong H all, Room 105 at the ASU Law School. regular-*13:; Unlimited tanning s1995 403 W. University Dr. O n S a le N o w ! HAIR & TAN 829-7774 T h e S u n A u to m o tiv e G r o u p in S c o tts d a le is s e e k in g P a r t tim e e m p lo y e e s f o r th e fo llo w in g p o s itio n s : S te P P O ] 3 DAYS A S S I S T M E D IC A L R E S E A R C H You can earn $ 4 4 0 by participating in a medical research study at MDS Harris. If you are in good medical condition and meet the criteria below, call us at 2 5 4 - P A Y S to find out more. ■ ■ ■ ■ women 18 to 45 years old nonsmokers availability: three days Harris testing pays. Call 254-PAYS today! BE P A R T O F THE CURE . E3 MDS HARRIS . 4639 S. 36th St.. Phoenix CA Last C h a n ce to P r e p a r e f o r th e A p r ilEnrollM C A T ! Now in Kaplan’s February 7 class! Call today to enroll in the #1 MCAT prep course. KAPLAN 1 -8 0 0 - K A P - T E S T w w w .kaplan.cpm Sta t e P ress Wednesday, February 4,1998 Page 10 Sweeping bill to regulate abortion facilities’ hits snag By P aul D a v en po rt A s s o c ia t e d P ress PHOENIX — A bill to impose new re g u la tio n s on f a c ilitie s w here a b o rtio n s are p e rfo rm ed derailed Tuesday after legislators balked at the prospect o f putting doctors’ offices under state scruti­ a g e n d a by c h a irm a n M a rily n J a rre tt, a M esa R epublican and one o f the bill’s sponsors. “We d o n ’t w ant o v er-reg u la­ tion of a doctor’s office,” Jarrett said later. ny- H ospitals and outpatient c lin ­ ics where abortions afe perform ed already are subject to state regu­ la tio n , s a id L in d a P a lm e r, a D ep artm en t o f H ealth S e rv ic e s licensing adm inistrator. That means the main impact of the b ill (H B 2 1 5 2 ) w ould be to impose sim ilar regulation on doc­ tors' offices. Palm er said during a hearing by the House Government R e fo rm an d S ta te s R ig h ts Committee. “1 was afraid that was going to be the a n sw e r,” said Rep. LouAnn Preble, a Tucson Republican and abortion opponent, who said she was troubled by that prospect. The bill, sponsored by seven o th e r a b o rtio n o p p o n e n ts, then w as pulled from the co m m ittee regulate doctors’ offices, but she a c k n o w le d g e d th a t th e c o st o f doing so could be an issue. An abortion opponent who tes­ tified for the bill characterized it as a m e a s u re to p ro m o te th e Nationally, this is the most unregulated business we’ll ever find. This is not some sort o f simple surgical procedure. — D o u g S c o tt, a fo rm e r e x e « iii||fe d f t l i j j f o f A riz o n a lR ig h t t® L ife . The bill specifically included “o ffic e s” — along w ith clin ic s and hospitals — in its definition o f “abortion facilities,” but Jarrett said after the hearing she had not realized the impact. “ 1 thought M rs. Brim hall had h er d u ck s in a ro w ,” she sa id , referring to the lead sponsor, Rep. Debra Brimhall, R-Snowflake. B rim hall said the state could G E T T IN G T H E In th e p a st 3 6 h o u r s, h a v e y o u b e g u n to e x p e r ie n c e flu -lik e s y m p to m s a lo n g w ith a fe v e r o f a t le a s t 1 0 0 °F ? You m ay b e qualified to participate in a research study in your area fo r an Oral investigational m edication to treat influenza. Q ualified p articipants w ill receive a physical exam ination, close m onitoring o f th eir sym ptom s and m ay receive oral study m edication and com pensation fo r th eir tim e. health and safety o f women who undergo abortions. “ N a tio n a lly th is is th e m ost u n regulated business w e’ll ever find,” said Doug Scott, a form er e x e c u tiv e d ir e c to r o f A riz o n a Right to Life and now affiliated w ith a W ashington-based group, Life Decision International. “This is not some sort o f simple surgi­ cal procedure.” T h e re w as no te s tim o n y a g a in s t th e b ill b e fo re J a r r e tt pulled it from the agenda, but a lo b b y is t fo r an a b o rtio n -rig h ts group said later that the bill could be interpreted to mean that offices o f doctors who prescribe contra­ ceptives and m orning-after drugs all m u st be su b je c t to d e ta ile d state regulation. “All would have to come under the same standards as hospitals,” s a id B ru c e M ille r o f A riz o n a Right to Choose. P a lm e r sa id no f ig u re s are available on how many abortions are performed in doctors’ offices, but she said the p ro ced u res are perform ed by some obstetriciang y n e c o lo g ists and p ro b a b ly by some fam ily practitioners. T he b ill w as one o f se v e ra l abortion-related bills pending in the Legislature. The measure pro­ m o te d by o p p o n e n ts as th e ir strongest vehicle this session is a b ill (H B 2 3 5 3 ) to re q u ire “inform ed consent” o f women in advance o f the procedure. It has yet to be scheduled for a hearing. Enter the Sprint Long Distance Love Story Contest & you could win a Sprint FONCARD worth $500 in F R E E long-distance calls fo ra year! f getting "t h ë ’flü"? ’ I In the past 36 hours, have you begun to experience I flu-like sym ptom s such as coughing, a sore throat, I along with a fever of. at least 100°F? CALL NOW! U Z 7a * 0- *-» 8 823 * » -* • - - - - - S p o n so re d by - • Tem pe P rim ary C are A ssociates 5030 S. M ill Ave. D-12 "Sta te P ress S p r in t. C ontest details available at the S tate P re ss . ■ OSIVI f i It SAVE!" 4 SOUTH PAPRE ISLAND * STEAMBOAT u sa ssi ► ' PERFERSONKFOONGflNKSlIlfllON/KAXMlQ/lBIfilHOfSW. * rl-800-SURCHASE: wwwauinchase.com CRO SSW O RD by THOMAS JOSEPH 41 Folding money 1 Refer to DOWN 5 Rosary 1 Cut the unit roast 9 Wise 2 Paragons saying a 1 V s 1s 3 Battle 11 Cater­ z V N u V ploy pillar, e.g. A H V T V 4 Conceit 1 2 S co u fs a V a a 5 Prohibits job 6 Verdi 13 Ball’s 18W ine opera costar holder 7 Arthur’s 14 Tub 21 Uh-huh resting 15 Yard 23 Light place offering breeze 8 Stunned 17 Evokes 24 Marne, 10 Whole 19 Tacit for one 11 Falls okay 25 Ruined behind 20 Kerchiefs 27 Vienna’s kin 3 1 2 21 Yang's counter­ 11 » 9 part 22 Confis­ 13 12 cate 18 24 Penguin's 14 ” cousin 18 17 26 Peruses 29 Enjoy­ 20 ■ ment 23 30 Road “ surface 25 B 24 32 Thorough “ 30 34 Also not 29 ' 35 Kitchen 33 32 sight 36 “- - G o t a 36 35 FriendT 38 Fork parts 38 39 Hicks 40 40 Envi­ sioned ACROSS fl river 28 Unkempt one 29 Dukes 30 Primates 31 Bit of hair 33 Flat 37Um p’s call 5 6 7 e R 1 ■ i i ■” $200 H i r i n g B o n u s ■ H Over the phone. IntelliSell Corporation, a leader in the insurance telemarketing industry, is looking for people to market insurance products and services nationwide on behalf o f Fortune 1000 companies. We have inlmediate openings for people who have a clear speaking voice & good reading skills. P O S tT M S m tiM L f Outstanding Benefits: • F iE x m w o M sc m m * ruffl-time & part-timepositions • fdl-tim e at25/tr s • $600¿onusfor ¿&HAyents » Holidaypay » Heaftl insurance * $300Bonusfor P&C Ayent * Pa/Jvacation & sici, time * Casuaf- fun morienvironment STOP BY OR CALL FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY! 31 ■ ■ 1 “ 37 * 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w ork i f AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE S V Z H ZJ S L Z S C L Z Y KZLD TLW ttelliSell ■ ■■ I 28 I 27 ■ We’re looking for people with a great smile... 19 ST X F M Z J Z L B C Q Z F Z X Z L P 1 CJ ST P I T X F S M LX P Q P X CX R C S V VCJ V C J CO U FO R AT I O N Telemarketing Excellence for America (602) 252-7070 1505 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, 85004 M-F 9am - 4pm All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, or national origin. JM C S . — F Z X . T W P L HLPYIZU Y e ste r d a y 's C r y p to q u o te : SOMETIMES W HEN A W OM AN MAKES A FOOL OUT OF A MAN, ITS AN IMPROVEMENT.—ANONYMOUS P age 11 Wednesday, February 4, 1998 S tate P ress H acker State Press B est if u s e d by 2 /4 /9 8 . C o n t in u e d Win $100. AIDS has touched most everyone in some way. One of the best ways we can cope as we live with AIDS is to share our stories with others. You can share your experience by writing an essay of 500 words or more about how AIDS has affected your life and you could win $100. Submit your entry on disk or typed, double spaced, to the State Press, room 47 in Matthews Center. You can e-mail your entry to eldridge@asu.edu or mail to AIDS Essay Contest, PO Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502. All entries must be received by Friday, February 6 at noon. Questions, call 965-6741. Entries will be judged by ASU students. The winning author will receive a $100 gift certifi­ cate from the ASU Bookstore. The winning essay will be read during ASU’s AIDS Awareness Week on February 11 at 12:45 pm on Hayden Lawn. N " G Dress is casual, vaguely post-hippie: T-shirts, jeans, running shoes, Birkenstocks (or bare feel). Long hair, beards and mustaches are common. High incidence of tie-dye and intellectual or humorous slogan T-shirts (only rarely computer related; that would be too obvious). A substantial minority prefers “outdoors}” clothing — hiking boots, khakis, lumberjack or chamois shirts, and the like. Very few actually fit the National Lampoon Nerd stereotype, though it lingers on at M IT and may have been more common before 1975. These days, backpacks are more common than briefcases, and the hacker “look” is more whole-earth than whole-polyester. Hackers dress for com fort, function and minimal maintenance hassles rather than for appearance (some, perhaps unfortunately, take this to extremes and neglect personal hygiene). They have a very low tolerance of suits and other “business” attire; in fact, it is not uncom­ mon for hackers to quit a job rather than conform to a dress code. Female hackers almost never wear visible makeup, and many use none at all. — From "P rofile o f a ‘ H a c ker" fo u n d n w , Lysatar. liu.se/hackdicl. on 1968 M exican massacre explained B v M ark St e v en so n A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s MEXICO CITY — Almost 30 years after a red flare fired into Mexico City’s night skies signaled the start of a massacre of student protesters by army troops, former president Luis Echeverria was making Tuesday his first formal explanation of the 1968 killings. Echeverria, then Interior Secretary and the highest-ranking official still alive, agreed to speak before a congressional com­ mittee investigating the event that helped define a generation of Mexican intellectuals. “We don’t even know the most elemental things, like how many were killed, how many were injured, what units were involved or who gave the orders” to open fire on students in Tlatelolco square on Oct: 2, 1968, said historian Lorenzo Meyer. M ost observers say at least 300 people died in the Tlatelolco massacre, though officials claimed only about 30 died. It helped spawn a series of 1970s guerrilla movements whose leaders were convinced —- in part because o f the killings — that only an uprising could change Mexico’s longentrenched political system. In a July 1997 speech, current President Ernesto Zedillo s p o n s o re d by A 2. “ASU is no worse than any other university but you have to think that things will go wrong,” Thackeray said. “You have to take control of your own computer security.” Computers at Risk Any computer on a network or with Internet access is vul­ nerable to hackers. Some gaps in Internet software allow hackers to view files on the computer without the user know­ ing it. While some of those problems have been fixed, as with Microsoft’s ActiveX, computer crooks are always looking for new tunnels to burrow into the hard drives of users. “If you are connected to a network —- any network — you are at risk and susceptible to hacking,” Provost Lewis said. “The only safe computer is a computer that is turned off.” ASU systems could be more secure, Lewis said, but access would be limited. Finding that balance between access and security is a challenge Information Technology faces, Lewis said students should change their passwords fre­ quently, using passwords that incorporate letters arid numbers. Users should also keep an eye on their account, watching for odd activity or strange e-mails. “When a hacker gets your password, they can basically become you,” Thackeray said. “We don’t have to be paranoid but everyone has to take control of their own security.” Shareyour story q f r o m pa g e H o w to s p o t a h a c k e r, a c c o rd in g to “ T h e H a c k in g D ic tio n a ry ” f o u n d o n th e I n te r n e e O O D M A recognized the impact of the 1968 student movement; a bois­ terous break in decades of fearful conformism with thè ruling party’s traditional grip on power. “It was in 1968, perhaps the watershed o f the country’s political life, when a real public outcry began for a more demo­ cratic country, especially among young people,” Zedillo said. “Democracy began to gain a preeminent place in the national consciousness starting in 1968, We, the youth of that generation, were the ones who took the first step towards demanding full democracy,” said Zedillo, a high-school stu­ dent at the time of the killings. But previous Mexican presidents have remained largely silent on the massacre, which, occurred just weeks before Mexico hosted the 1968 Olympics. In 1993, on the 25th anniversary on die massacre, govern­ ment officials said a 30-year secrecy ban would keep files on that day’s events closed until Oct. 2,1998. But official archives appear to contain few revealing docu­ ments. Mexican presidents are allowed to keep their records when they leave office and the Mexican army apparently believes it is not covered by disclosure requirements. “Federal laws are none of our business,” said Defense Secretariat spokesman Lt. Col. Francisco Aguilar. A S U S w e a t s h ir t s N Sweatpants • T-shirts • Hats JO H N A lot more than just textbooks! a 3 L University ggJJ] 966-6226 A M E R I C A N I H E EXPaRESS 704 S. College Serving Arizona Since 1987 C o m p u te r S y s te m s 1505 W. University #103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 Phone:(602)968-8585 www.css-computers.com M ic r o s o ft S o ftw a r e B u n d le F r e e !!! Zenet™S ystem 64X™ Pentium®II Processor with MMX™ Technology!!! w/any of thèse systems Z enet™Home Office™ I ntel P in t iu m * P r o c e s s o r 300 • Intel 440LX Architecture • ATX 5-Bay Tower Case • 64 mb RAM, 1.44 FDD M H z ! • 32X CD Multimedia Kit • Dual Channel EIDE • Fast 16550A I/O • Bi-Directional Parallel • Western Digital 6.4gs Ultra HDD • ATi Xpression 3D w/4ms • Samsung 17" SVGA Color Monitor • Microsoft PS/2 Mouse • N M B 104Keyboard ST U D E N T D IS C O U N T S P E C IA L !!! • MS Windows 95 on C D -TggHgggtggggHHg/mggggmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmHmmmmmmmm • 56K Internal Fax/Modem w/MMX'* Technology!!! 512k Pipeline Cache • Intel 430VX Achitecture * 32 mb Ram, 1.44 FDD • Western Digital 3.1 gb HD • Dual Enhanced IDE * Dual High Speed Serial * Bi-Directional Parallel* PCI SVGA Video Adopter • M A G SVGA .28NI Monitor • 24x C D Multimedia Kit * Int. Fax/Modem w/Voice • NMB 104 Keyboard • w Microsoft PS/2 Mouse » MS Windows 95 on CD • I 266MHz $ 2 2 9 8 . ° ° 200MHz M 2 9 8 . 00 300MHz * 2 4 9 8 . ° ° 233MHz * 1 4 4 8 . ” Q S&S is th e V a lle y 's P re m ie r P C . N e tw o rk. S a le s a n d S e rv ic e S o lu tio n ! S in c e 1987. C S & S h o s b u llt A rlz a n c ts fjn $ st n e tw o rk b u sin e ss system s. C o m e s e e o u r g ia n t sh o w ro o m a n d te ll us h o w w e c a n se rv e you. 3Com PG 13 PARENTSSTRONGLYCAUTIONED CCOREL ß a HEWLETT* r W i n A T A ’ PACKARD L A V L T W A ^Alliance m M-F 8AM-5:30PM & S a l 10-3 Call for Custom PC Pricing: 9 6 8 - 8 5 8 5 C o m ic s Wednesday, February 4,1998 Page 12 T rials & T ribulations /< .. ... State Press B y Jo n a t h a n In g e —T--------------------- — S nacks — ------------------------- AND, F/NAUV, WttV OF COLLEGE, tiMEN I F/ffSl HOCLOSE* 7D SOLVING*THE .MEANING. OF MV BfiSTBCd? DOES 7 M S r ALUMVS LANE o n 7we m reXED sid e ? MEAT PARADIGMS OF MV CAME HERE, I MAS READY TO“SOCJt OUT THE MARKOW U F E . FIRST; UHO AM I ? OF LIFE.“ \ By Carine L. Behrens, About 100 hairs are lost from the average human head each day. MeM»l nofe.: Keep beJrtom doer Itched ■fVïos now on. Jocular P arable B y D a v id G ould HI ij-! Mb More î>fq«»S-fèi 3ü¿r+V \;s ©v*, VlW»t ti SMPflepioT, / A c r o ss r»A VIOT S c h o o l .' S H all the IN By G X VM&HT AS WfiLU NOT eY \ST THE C ofA PU T ER . $Y ST |V E o O 1 HWE To ÛET To STOt>6HT SERVJVCtS UCFotLe \T *) Too \_w e O O A A A w / t S m it h C h ic k e n - s t ic k B u g Fa c e B y Jim W odark 'nk ^ \S A ? V C À À \ N G / V o O o ■■ entry n JL B a d H aiku B y C harles W esley T BAD HAIKJU F W e s c /J r s : 7 ^ ToP 3 ... ~T~HlN6S You Don’t Wamma U )h i l s t 'D r iv in g Great idea Frank! This is easier than shooting fish in a barrel! í¡f>4flRÁ>¡iO&^T>¡íec*£622*LoeÁw»*« Customer Satisfaction Is Our #1Priority! f t m p m f i F r ie n d l y s p r in g b r e a k f e v e r F?»•arty Hard J Travel Safe. — — In r• (ú¿ds Aj KKM KM IPftRT Numbers Available! Overnight 1 8 4 8 E. U n iv e rs ity D riv e • Tem pe * 9 6 8 -7 2 8 2 Availability oe • Hard to Find Parts. ( E a s t o f M c C lin to c k o n U n iv e rs ity ) tV « * i P aris $237 London $251 San Jose, Costa Ri c a $255 Beijing $325 Fares are 1/2 round trip sased on rt f *. pu rchase, do not include taxes. RESTRICTIONS •'apply, mmAUTOMKTS Expert Advice With Over Hours: M-F 7 a.m .~6 p.m. • Sat. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. • Sun. 9 a.in .-3 p.m. r Ron NowadayJ r.*115-PcXD HoToERTàiTQuakÌr Stati #16 Die CastTruck ¡ 30-Pc Cassette Holder; pft Motor Oil 1O O " X T i» :,£r $l|99¡ if lw ii" y » i , K iOlElE : C ~~\Travel J T I ee le te re a tw a s i shki • r Educaitonal Exckaage ' 1 130 É. U n iv e rs ity Dr., S u ite A L Tempe (602) 966-3544 Off«Exftns V Fai to orders 921-0242 I k fe %> kk f> Open: ll-ll M-F;12-11Sat&Sun i Jl ! Buy 1 i Gyro G et 1 ¡ FREE 1 Hummus When you place a Valentine’s Day LO V E LINE personal ad in the State Press classified section that will be published on February 13, your ad will be judged by a panel of students for its romantic appeal. If your ad is selected, you’ll be the lucky winner of a weekend for two at Fiesta Inn! So get busy and write a romantic love line that will melt your true love...and our judges! 3D» Pi Join us for Vegas Night! k%>k Saturday, February 7th at 8:00pm at Hi I lei Ji Write a killer Valentine Love Line and you could win a weekend for two at Tempe's Fiesta Inn! A D D E A D LIN E IS N O O N WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 11 Place your ad by phone with a credit card 965-6735 or in person at the State Press in Matthews Center basement 8am to 5pm daily. Ji 3 lines of love for only $3 VISA*MASTERCAROCHECK*CASH Page 15 Wednesday, February 4, 1998 St a t e P ress S un D evil Basketball Statistics Men’s Individual Stats______________________ , ___________________ Women’s Individual Stats Name G FG-A Pet FT-A Pet Rb-Avg Pts-Avg Name G FG-A Pet FT-A Pet Rb-Avg Pts-Avg Jeremy Veal Bobby Lazor Mike Batiste Eddie House Ahlon Lewis . Jason Patton Urit Kelly Ron Dubois D’Angelo Jones Derek Smith 22 22 22 22 22 19 22 9 7 8 165-381 140-247 145-256 102-232 48-115 42-90 49-91 4-9 1-7 2-8 43.3 56.7 56.6 44.0 41.7 46.7 53 8 44.4 14.3 25.0 84-111 82-104 58-85 17-21 49-58 19-27 23-35 4-4 0-2 2-2 75.7 78.8 68.2 81.0 84.5 70.4 65.7 100.0 00.0 100.0 97- 4.4 172-7.8 169-7.7 57-2.6 82-3.7 50-2.6 78-3.5 3-0.3 3-0.4 7-0.7 447-20.3 371-16.9 354-16.1 260-11.8 156-7.1 106-5.6 121-5.5 15-1.7 3-0.4 6-0.8 Stephanie Freeman Rachel Holt Michelle Tom Kisha White Leaf Newman Kristine Sand Rameeka Lowe RechelleLang Kellie MeDanal Spring Steed 17 18 12 18 18 18 17 16 18 16 74-193 77-147 34-71 52-109 46-131 45-119 37-107 25-71 7-23 3-25 38.3 52.4 47.9 47.7 35.1 37.8 34.6 35.2 30.4 12.0 58-79 42-65 36-49 32-44 34-47 30-45 31-41 26-34 10-10 5-6 73.4 64.6 73.5 72.7 72.3 66.7 75.6 76.5 100.0 83.3 71-4.2 92-5.1 30-2.5 76-4.2 67-3.7 63-3.5 52-3.1 40-2.5 16-0.9 14-0.9 232-13.6 196-10.9 114-9.5 136-7.6 138-7.7 134-7.4 114-6.7 79-4,9 24-1.3 12-0.8 Team (14-4) 22 721-1476 48.8 344-458 75.1 824-37.5 1892-86.0 Team (8-10) 18 422-1054 40.0 315-443 71.1 651-36.2 1236-68.1 Opponents (8-14) 22 686-1522 45.1 297-448 66.3 907-41.2 1817-82.6 Opponents (10-8) 18 480-1058 45.4 265-396 66.9 714-39.7 1274-70.1 mm -® sp Containing Natural Impulses? Discover the state of your union Test instinctive realities Round trip from Phoenix COSTA RICA......... 414 PUERTO VALLARTA.298 PANAMA...............468 TOKYO___ ...___ S49 BELIZE..—................ 540 AUCKLAND............749 EL SALVADOR......... 378 GUATEMALA_____384 CABO SAN LUCAS .275 PERU,............_____618 CANCUN............... 395 COLOMBIA_______655 MANACUA..........530 MEXICO CITY ...,.350 MAZATLAN .........336 TORONTO........... 349 SYDNEY....... ........818 HONG KONG .....699 O ther Cities Available M ILL A V E N U E T R A V E L 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Castro!. "D iffe re n t f ro m IQ o r p e r ­ s o n a lity m e a s u re s , K olbe ¡provides c lu e s to a p e r ­ s o n 's n a tu r a l a d v a n ta g e s in u n d e r ta k in g p a r tic u la r ta s k s ." ■ -The Washington Post D isc o u n ts A lsö A vailable.T o Faculty ¿¿-'Staff R e s tr ic tio n s A p p ly . S u b j e c t t o A v a il a b il i t y . www.takeswo.com ' Ott CHANGE SPECIAL Castro!G T X OIL CHANGE SPECIAL *16.95 UP TO 4 QUARTS O F CASTROL GTX DRIVE HARD "REGISTER TO WIN Castro/. NBA GEAR C A LL FO R APPOINTMENT •SO M E M O D ELS SLIGH TLY HIGHER •USING A FACTORY HONDA OIL FILTER '*DOCTOR HHS i Exclusively Honda &Acura Service Where “Blue Ribbon Service” means honest, repairs at fair prices 1-10 & E llio t {Rd 7144 S. Priest, Ste #101 345-1177 2090 E . U Suite V 967-] "Kolbe can help y o u evaluate w h at you are doing, h o w you are doing, h o w yo u are doing it an d w h eth er y o u sh o u ld be d oing it at all." -The LA . Times Kolbe C o rp 800.642.2822 B.R. (before Bother’s) A.R. (after Rother’s) I! HAPPY. SHOP BOTHERS. Open 7 days 625 E. Apache 967-5445 ROTH ER£ BOOKSTORE Now Serving Glendale Community College! • 5925 W. Olive (SWConter of OH* 659 th) • 931-34* Page 16 S tate P ress Wednesday, February 4,1998 A SU takes third at PIN G By C arlo M ercaldo State P ress I . Brad Lang/State Press Back from nagging injuries during the 1997 season, junior Darren Angel placed seventh overall and led the ASU golf team to a third-place finish in th e Ping/Arizona invitational in Tucson which wrapped up on Tuesday. Newman C ontinued from page 13. his fault. “I’ve heard the scenario a couple different ways,” he said with a smile. “Thursday, we (hop a game, and we fig­ ure out a way to come back and win a big one on Saturday. W hat I m entioned was m aybe I should do my b est job (coaching) on Wednesday night and prepare this team for Thursday.” Six i s The ASU men’s golf team opened up its spring season with a strong performance in the PING/Arizona Invitational in Tucson. On Tuesday, the Sun Devils finished third in the two-day tournament with an 8-over par 860, nine strokes behind the winner UNLV and five strokes back of host UofA. Leading the way for the Sun Devils was junior Darren Angel. Back from ah injury plagued 1997 season, Angel finished seventh overall and appears to be back in his AllAmerican form of two years ago. , Freshman Paul Casey also played well for ASU, coming back from a dissapointing 4overpar round on Monday to a 2-under par 69 and a lOth-place overall finish on Tuesday. ASU head coach Randy Lein said his team put in a solid performance overall, but his squad will need to have consistently lower scores to reach the teams goals. Those goals have remained constant throughout Lein’s sixyear tenure at ASU — to win the Pac-10 Championship and to play well in the NCAA Championships at the end of the year. “I was very pleased with the way both Darren and Paul played, especially toward the, end of the day,” Lein said. “That is what we need, more players to be able to consistently put in sub-70 rounds. That’s what it’s going to take to produce wins.” While Lein was not dissapointed with the third place finish, he said the team really wanted to go down and beat the No. 1-tanked Wildcats on their home course. However, according to Lein, besides having one of the best players in the country in Rory Sabbatini (finished 2nd overall) that home course was a factor in the Wildcats strong showing in the tournament “The home course definitely played a major factor for the UofA,” Lein said. “The course did not play very long, but it was set up very-difficult for players not accustomed to it It was also very tricky with a great deal of nar­ row shots. The home team has die advantage o f knowing which clubs to use and when, because they know how the course plays.” Jumor Greg Padilla also demonstrated the great potential that the young Sun Devil squad is capable of showcasing. Padilla finished 15th overall, and closed out the tournament with a 1-over par 72. True freshman Jeff Quinney was another bright spot for ASU. He was tied for 15th after the first day, but faltered on a few holes on Tuesday and finished 36th overall. Other Sun Devils Who competed were Jin Park, who ended up 12-over par, Tim Mickclson, plus 14 and Brad Cannon at 15-over. ASU will get another shot at the UofA and many of the other teams who played in Tucson when it travels to Kona, Hawaii for the Taylor Made/Big Island tournament Feb. 11-15. W hile Stanford fully utilized their bench, playing 12 men, the Sun Devils used Urit Kelly as their only reserve. And he played only 11 o f the games 45 minutes. Newman said molding the team into one that has his. mentality has been crucial to overcoming its lack of depth. “I think at this level, you have build a program and have depth at every position,” he said. “When you don’t have a choice, then you certainly have to modify and that’s what w e’ve tried to do. W ould I like to have K ansas’s nine through 12 players. en o ug h Perhaps the most shocking element o f Saturday’s win for ASU was not in what they did but in how they did it. “It’s certainly nice to have that, but I ’ve seen different coaches substitute guys ju st to get. them playing time. I don’t necessarily believe in that. I think it’s important to condition your athletes because I think it’s important that these guys earn their m inutes on the floor. M aybe that Comes from my days o f being an athlete. I think you’re recruited to do a job and you have to condition yourself to go the distance. I never wanted to come out o f the game. I played 40 minutes and it didn’t matter. It didn’t phase me. I don’t believe in substituting just to substitute.” Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The Stiate Press cannot assume responsibility fbr the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. Foe more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. V . famous Tint Line*... My father asked me to be the fourth corner at the joy Luck'Club. APARTMENTS HOMES FOR RENT 1 MILE from ASU, studio apt. * útil, incld. new paint & tile HUGE 4BD/3BA Home W/D, $55Q/mo. 731-3969 or 360fridge, DW, new tile, carpet; ; 16261pager. paint, avail, now. 14th & Pri­ est, ride tb ASU. $1300/mo. 1014 S. FARMER, 3 blks to Very clean. Joe, 922-2715 ca'inpus, 2bd‘ apt. Pool, a/c, $600/mo. 690-3.677 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts! lbd & studios. $50 off move-in W/ad. 966-8597. LA MI RAGE A pts. Luxury 2bd/2ba avail, now. G all. for special discounts. .1/2 mi. from campus. 968-2042 This should be your ad Call 965-6735 APARTMENTS HELP WANTEDGENERAL SHyHarborAirport Security New Contractai 3 1 0fficers Needed f \ | ) \ n / P a íí I UNIV VILLAGE Apt’s Minutes From ASU The Joy Luck Club - Amy Tan LRG 4BD. w/d, d/w, a/c, ga­ rage, etc. McKellips/Scottsdale. $1050/mo. beg. Feb. 437-1048 X Bed Apt’s All Util. Incl. Fully Furnished 9*7-66*5 936 S. Terrace Tempe Yol m is i H avi íu a ¡\ ¡\ (, bi I 8 yus ou old fu H/S DiploMA / C iLD No 11 lo \ii s 7 D u u , Fui t W l OÌltrR: Hi Alili / D i m a! Bi nl I ìis HELP WANTEDGENERAL OXJRTVARD. »'Atamatt Phoenix Airport Courtyard is looking for this position: Restaurant Servers pr/rr Please come in to apply 2621 S. 47th St. Phoenix, AZ 85034 966-OI41 APARTMENTS iv e r s it y P r o p e r t ie s Studios to 2bd/2ba, som e w/utilities included. Across the street from ASU Call 9 6 6 - 9 0 0 0 0B stop by 919 E. Lemon Less than 1 Mile from ASU 1 2 4 9 E. S p en ce, T em p e 8 2 9 -9 6 0 7 Roommate Matching Service 484-3558 uns F/T & P/T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park In o . Call Terry: 998-0325 $300 Sign-on Bonus 2 great locations bordering M esa/Tem pe/ Chandler 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 W e lo v e Stu d en ts!! APARTMENTS APARTMENTS • Student Living • 1 & 2 Bedrooms • Great Amenities HELP WANTEDGENERAL | Assembler Jobs-$7.50/hr. M a r k e t in g S e r v ic e s ■ R ancho Las P a lm a s HELP WANTEDGENERAL Stop searching, start at S10/HR I li AVI I A W A Iil )S ! ! Wotrkfwrdr Securìtv Assoc:. 627 S. 48 * Si. # 105 • Ti*pe ssZ Un HELP WANTEDGENERAL R e c e p t io n is t Full-time position needed fo r past-paced M ail O rder/Health-oriented Com pany locat­ ed in Tempe. Ideal candidate w ill have the ability to answ er an eight-line phone sys­ tem, MS Office, adm inistrative filing, inven­ tory m aintenance, tracking and placing orders. Excellent com m unication and orga­ nizational skills: Com pany offers com petitive salary & excellent benefits. Send resume to Departm ent S311, Adm inistaff, Inc., 19001 Crescent Springs Dr., Kingw ood, TX X 77339 or FAX to 800-750-0389. X SHEEP PENAVAHAME 120 spacious lost ta share In ra«BL window. Mtr. Bed Includedllll linoleumfloors. Flourescent Hints, lath/ kitchen down hall! w/l 3 mints dawnin moldy hasnmnuL Cozy, almost retro. SB lor a mol ataca, call IhnJoflorsaa Commons. Saadfos 12,3,4 bdrm, foro. W/B, Hiera, Peal, Fitness. 1888-367-4340 nan S um m er C am p C o u n selo r O n-C am pus Interview s for P rem iere C am p s In M a ssac h u setts Positions for talented, energetic, arjd fun- loving students as counselors in all team sports including Roller Hockey, ati individual sports such a s Tennis & Golf, Waterfront and Pool activities, and specialty activities including art, dance, theatre, gymnastics, ~ newspaper & radio. TOP SALARIES, room, board and travel. June20th-August 19th. Enjoy a great summer that promises to be unforgettable. Call for Interview times and information: ' DANBEE (Girls):^ -800-392-3752 Interviewers will be on cam pus Thursday & Friday, March 5th.& 6th, 10am-4jjm, in the Memorial Union. Mah-Kee-Nac - Hohokam Room #208 & Danbee - Havasupai Room #208D Page 17 Wednesday, February 4,1998 State P ress RENTAL SHARING TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BD 2BA condo for rent Alemeda/Rural, community pool, new carpet & paint. $850/mo. John (650) 342-3441 DUPLEX, 2BD/2BA, A/C, car­ port, off Scottsdale Rd. 1.5 mi. to ASU. $625/mo. 966-0987. PAPAGO PARK Village. 2bd/ 2J>ft, vaulted ceilings, w/d, all modern nppls. Avail, now. $800/mo. 945-7986 HAYDEN SQUARE condo 2bd 2ba for rent, garage parking includ. Walk to ASU, 699-1111 819 N. COLLEGE, #1-126, Rural & 202. 2bd w/ loft, 2ba, 1600sq ft., frplce, w/d, bi-level, comm, pool, no pets. 830-9945 C la s s ifie d s W O R K ! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ym Æ Æ m m Part Time H ut Is Flexible Market Research Is Your Answer! Why work retail or fast food when Focus Market Research will offer you flexible shifts that will schedule around your classes? We will train you to become an experienced market research phone interviewer... this will !o6R’great on your resume! There are NO sales. We are gathering consumer opinions and offer pleasant working conditions at our Scottsdale office. > MESA, NEAR ASU & MCC. $300/mo. + 1/3 utils. Female pref. Call 430-4723 NICE 3BR house; pool, spa, w/d. Must like dogs. $275+1/3 util. & dep. Call 470-8467. PAPAGO PARK Village % 2 bdr, 2ba, condo for rent w/d in­ cluded. 736-8111 ROOMMATE TO share 2bd/ 2ba Hayden Square condo. $445/ mo. Call Lauren, 894-6464 RENTAL SHARING RO O M S FOR RENT 4BD/2BA HOME at Southern and Rural w/ pool and fire­ place, F/Grad student pref. Avail. Feb. 16th, $350/mo +utils. Call Lisa Marie 692-3085. COOL MALE to share house with 1 gm in central Phoenix historic district, off Red Line. W/D, furad. $225/mo. + 1/2 util. Must be employedv clean, smoke & drug free. No pets. 212-9331. COMFORTABLE HOME in S. Tempe, furnished, kitchen priv­ ileges, cable. $325 incl basic utils & many extras. 838-6224 ROOM FOR rent, Broadway/Rural, $276/mo. Call 7740640 or 598-1573 C la s & lfl& d s HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Data entry and other clerical positions are available: For More Information Call Dee at 874-2714 FOCUS MARKET RESEARCH Erto/ C a m p u s R e p r e s e n t a t iv e DOMINO’S PIZZA Come Join the Excitement with the #1 Delivery Team for the ASU Area! With the addition of hot wings, salads & breadsticks, this Domino’s is one of the top campus stores in the country. Phoenix Coca-Cola Bottling Company is seeking student to create sales oppor­ tunities, promotions, special events & marketing activities for Coca-Cola prod­ ucts on & around campus. Potential for FT summer employment, as well as reg­ ular employment upon graduation. Min. 15 hrs/wk. pays $75/wk plus incentive program. R esume fax 345-3082 or apply 1-10 E lliot Rd T empe, M-F» 8-4 pm EOE/AA WE NEED • F/T & P/T Phone Help, P izza M akers, Drivers • Drivers- $7-$14/hr. (including m ileage and tips) • Safe Driving C ash Bonuses • Very Flexible Hours (around your school schedule) We support a drug-free work environment. Apply In Person After 11am at: 903 S . Rural Rd. • Tempe Or Call 968-5555 EOE United States Post Office Call Center is n ow recruiting through Kelly Services USPS inbound call center positions Long term positions available immediately East Valley location Requires 6 mos. talk/type exp. Will attend a 5-week paid training session Medical and paid holidays Pay $8.39/br after training Birth certificate and photo I.D. required Bilingual + $1.00 more per hour Come sign up at 3030 N. 3rd St., Suite 1040 Earl and Central Abacus Building One block south of Thomas For questions call 407-1441 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE MESA 1 bd/lba. Gntry Club/I60. 461 W. Holmes. #131. By owner $34,900.917-7694 REAL ESTATE from pennies on $1. Delin­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free 800-218-9000 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. NOW HIRING ‘9-!15/avg. C om m unication S p ec ia lis t -A job you and your • NO SELLING • Permanent I Day/evening shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d • Women Excell • Casual Dress • Automated Dialing System • Fun Atmosphere friends will enjoy!•Professional PaidTraining/Noexpnec. •Weeklypaycheck •Resumébuilder •PromotionsWithin •Builds confidence&communications skills •E.0.E »Meetpeopleft makemoney SEE OUR RECRUITERS FEB 3rd & 5ThNEAR THE M.U. CALL TODAY 3 4 5 - 9 5 0 9 C all 947-8100 I Apply Today! 209 E. Baseline Rd. Bldg. E Ste. 1031 (Mill & Baseline) 89 ACURA Integra, red, 5 spd, e/e, a/c, pwr sunroof, Nov. 98 plates, 2dr, h/b, good cond. $4100 obo. Call 808-0821 ’95 HONDA Shadow VLX, 600cc exc. cond., cust. pipes, 9800 mi. Corbin seat. Lots of chrome, $3800 Call 303-0825 89 SUZUKI Sidekick IX, 2dr convertible, 5spd, 4x4, new tires & top. AC, am/fm, 98 tags, mint condition. 391-1232 TRAVEL 89 VW GTI, black, a/c, 5 spd, moon roof, good cond. Call Greg at 967-5145 A U T O M O B IL E ^ 91 MITSUBISHI Gallant, white, auto, cold ac, excellent cond. in/out, 79K, $6600.968-7319 1985 DODGE convertible 600 turbo all power new top & interior $2995 Call 657-8700 94 JEEP W rangler, 38K mi. New tires, bikini top, excellent cond. $10,500 obo. 569-0734 1987 PONTIAC Grand AM all power good con ADMIN. ASST. Camelback/ 19th Ave. Business de­ velopment , co. seeking exc; writing skills & positive professional. Excel & Word. Fax resume to 589-6527 ASSEMBLER JOBS-$7.50/HR. F/T & P/T lighting & electronic assembly. Work at Scottsdale Air Park. Call Terry: 998-0325 BECOME A mobile DJ, Work weekends. We train. Depend­ able vehicle. Call 820-8220 . CORPORATE FINANCE Co. seek$ dynamic & aggressive indiv. for nat'l acct. mnger (base + com.) also seek career minded admin, asst, (salary + bonus) w/ cmptr, orgnztl & Comm, skills, eager to learn, to join nat'l equip, finance co. Fax résume 443-8826 ph 443-Q002 ext. 16 . Prices starting from $379“ Includes i 5 Free meal plans plus Free drinks! Price also Includes R/T Airfare, 7 Nite Hotel Accommodation 8- Transfers. Call Amanda Today 2 7 1-4896 -orVlsit our WebSIte at: www.collegeTours.com We are immediately hiring for the following positions: • Pool Attendant •Concierge •BeUperson • Doorperson HELP WANTEDGENERAL • Spa Attendant . *PM Servers • Quest Service Agent P W m ext m o Kelly Services Have fun calling singles to invite them fo r a free tour o f our center M OTORCYCLES G O V 'T FORECLOSED homes DONOR EGGS NEEDED Never an applicant fee • EOE Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale’s leading dating service located in O ld Town Scottsdale. AUTOMOBILES Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonym ously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 chnic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors com pensated $2,000. Please apply Monday through Friday at 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd„ in the Human Resources Department, located on the North side of the Hotel facing Lincoln Dr., from 9am to 3pm. W e offer competitive wages and benefits. Business Attire required for same day interviews. EOE/Drug Free For more information call (602) 860-4792 Rositiais Available. • Excellent entry level broadcasting opportunity • Perfect for Broadcasting, Marketing and Spring Break Fever Do You Need Extra $$$? Immediate Openings in Outbound Telesales The Aftermarket Company is now hiring for our Outbound Telesales departments. Return calls to current customers on behalf of the client. Communication majors • Superb resume addition • Advancement opportunities Avg. $13/Hr rTop callers earn $20+/Hr • Professional environment • Flexible scheduling • Less than a m ile from ASU EE0 If interested, call: Flexible afternoon an d evening schedules great for students! Shifts available to fit your school schedule, ft Paid Training ft Full & Part Time ft Weekly Paychecks ft Benefits for F/T ft No Cold Calling ft Generous ft Weekend Shifts Avail. Commissions 731-6505 OwensBroadcastingCorp. Research Dept. C a l! 4 7 0 -2 5 0 0 A FT E RM A RK ET Aftermarket is located near 40th St. between University & Broadway - Page 18 Sta t e P ress Wednesday, February 4, 1998 HELPW ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED- • GENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now hiring order takers & drivers. Drivers must have own car & in­ surance. PT/FT. Extra $$. Call GENERAL OFFICE & light warehouse help needed at med­ ical supply co. in Tempe. P /T ,. 10am-2pm. M-F. $8/hr. to start. Call 784.2250,: GYMNASTICS INSTRUCT, for mobile prog, must have high energy and a willingness to learn new/ fun ways of teach­ ing. pt, $7-9/hr.doe. 443-8817 MARKETING ADMIN. Asst. Explore the world of non-profit association management & mar­ keting. Fast paced & fun. Pt po­ sition, 3 wk. days. Possibility of ft by May. Fax resume to Jill at 404-8900 POSITIONS AVAIL, imme­ diately w/stockbroker. Provid­ ing training into all aspects of financial services field. Flex, hrs. Piper Jaffery. Apply to Walter Clark: 912-5129. SCOTTSDALE MORTGAGE Co. looking for energetic, selfmotivated individuals. Flex, hrs. & hourly+comm. 675-7670 220-000Ó DIRECTOR & Counselors wanted for a summer, residential gifted/talented program, grds 512 at ASÜ, 6/22-7/24. Comp, salary, rewarding work, room & brd, bach, degree r e q ,.; C e n t e r for Academic Precocity 965• 4757 '• / DIRECTORY INFORMATION operator, 20 wpm, Phx. área knowledge, all shifts: $7/hr. to start, 225-9699, Metro One, 120 N. 44th S t #150, v DRIVER FOR light delivery $5.25/hr: + 170 a mile @ ho tax. AZ Overland Blueprint. 3301 N. 24th St. Phx. e n v ir o n m e n t a l cam ­ p a ig n jobs. Defend Arizona's wildlife & natural heritage. P/t, AZ League of .Conservation. Voters-966-5485 FEMALE TO provide personal care' assistance for ASU profes­ sional. Approx. $10/hr, Call 966-51Í 6 for information. PUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic . appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $7- L2/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS avail. P/T eves. $6.50+/hr. with raise guarantee. Phone exp. a +. No sales or appt. setting. Call Mark 838-4333, M-F 9am-5pm. GQ/VOGUE New company seeking 5 peo­ ple who want to make a change. Fun, freedom, & finance. Call now 955-3475 ; GRAPHIC DESIGNER Mkt. dept. Mac Illustrator, Photo­ shop, QuarkXpress, logos, brochures, animation/special ef­ fects, video, write/edit. Fax 589- LIFEGUARD NEEDED during wkday hrs, 25-35 hrs./wk. Drug testing req'd.. Call 952• 7222; . -V-'V 6527 GREAT JOBS for students. Ed­ ucational mail order company. P T o r FT, 6 mins, from ASU, Oust. service $8/hr,, Mac photo shop work $8/hr., AM, afternoon, PM, shifts available; Call Courthey 438-4400 l i f e g u a r d s /w s i n e e d e d City of Scottsdale is looking for L.FG/WSI for. spring/summer. App’s being accepted. Cer­ tification classes for LFQ/WSI are avail. Call 994-7665. LIONS CAMP Tatiyee for hand­ icapped children & adults is seeking to hire an RN, health asst., recreation director & coun­ selors for the 98 season, M&yG Y M NAS TI C $ &/OR P E 31 -Aug. 1, Room, board A sal­ coach. Enthusiastic, fun coach, ary provided, CrediLavail. Will for 3-12 yr olds. Exp. pref., PT, be on campus interviewing $7-9/bf; 955-7805. , 2/6/98. If interested call 2752604 GYMNASTICS COACH want­ ed, boys & girls. Must enjoy LOVE KIDS - Great P/T oppor­ working w/ kids. Need energe­ tunities a t Mesa YMCA. Rec, tic inds. w/positi ve attitudes. Mdirectors, leaders & instructors F, after 3:15 puL + w knds., needed. M on.-Fri. 10-25 Great pay, flex, hrs, exp. pref; hrs/wk. $5.62-$7:01 /hr. DOE. but not nee. 4$J - 101.1 Call Jen or Karla at 969-8166. ' ■ SHORT ON CASH? Plasma Makes a l o t of Cents! 4 New DonoreEam SSOFer Your First Two Donations I P/T CUSTOMER service. Several P/T CSR positions avail. Flex hrs. Financial serv­ ices industry. $8 + hr. Call 9987585 ext. 105 P/T CUSTOMER Service Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, eves & wkhd shifts. $6.87/hr + shift differential for eve hrs; Good customer service skills & pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 431-9500. Tempe location. Employee drug testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V PRODUCTION ASST. Manu­ facturing facility needs reliable PT help. Flex sched. from 73:30 Apply at 510 S. 52nd St. #101 Tempe $9/HR! PT work/ FT pay. Reps avg'd $500 1ast wk. Great Tempe location. 517-1977, FT/PT available: RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe. Cindy 496-0255 Classifieds WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL ^C €N T E O N 968-6139 \9 m IMMEDIATE JO B OPENINGS ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, Tu, and F 8 :30-10:30 o r 2-4pm I Now open the following Saturdays 9am - 1pm ; January 31 February 14 February 28 •Room Servine * Bqt. Set-up *Servers ($ 3 .sm r+ tip s) * B ussen (SS/hr + tips) •B ell Staff -BAKERS- FT /PT - 9pm-7am, 2pm-10pm -COUNTER- FT /PT 5am-1pm, 1pm-9pm, 4pm-10pm, 5pm -11pm, 6pm-12 am Exp helpful, w ill train, flex sched, benefits, free m eals & parking. G raveyard sh ifts $8/hr after train­ ing. Accepting applications daily from 9am -11am and 3pm-7pm. $S50to $790plus bonus Make your hours • Drivers • Laborers • Warehouse Clerks • Certified Forklift Drivers • Assemblers Find it FAST in the Classifieds Call Today V arious shifts available • Several Phoenix locations • Long arid short term assignm ents • Excellent pay and benefits 965-6754 Apply M on-Thurs 8am-11:30am 645 E . M issouri, #260 3151 N. B lack Canyon Hwy. HELP WANTEDGENERAL M DS Harris, a leader in the pharmaceutical testing industry, has opportunities avail­ able for m onitoring activities of study par­ ticipants and collecting and docum enting data. Great experience for science, nursing or premed majors. A b ility to w ork a flexi­ ble schedule required. Please apply at: H u m a n Reso u rces 4 6 3 9 S o u t h 3 6 th S t r eet P h o e n ix , a z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /EO E RESORT scernsovLE -DELI PREP- FT /PT - 5am-3pm Now H iring ^ MDS HARRIS EMBASSY SUITES S ky H arb o r T -4 N ow Hiring For: ASU SunDial Fund CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 • Tempe HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ADA) CAFE • Exciting in-house promotion EQE:foFVD STUDENT WORK Up to $9.40. Flexible sched­ ules around classes, No exp. nec. Great resume builder. Na­ tional scholarship program. Conds. exist. Call 212-0551. 9 ^ 5 -6 7 3 5 •♦♦Science, Nursing and PreMed Majors*•♦ • P/T positions available SHIPPING & LIGHT Assembly positions. FT: days or eves. PT: moms, or afternoons. Good pay, casual work environment, close to ASU. Call Erica 9672678 C l a s s i f i& d s • Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive a STO BONUS!! • Ask us about career opportunities SECRETARY FOR a busy auction gallery on Nantucket Island, Mass. May-Dec. Rm. & salary (602) 991-4271. , SB ■Tl The Perfect Part Time Position If y o u lo v e h e lp in g o th e rs an d w a n t so m e th in g m ore than ju s t a jo b , w e w ant you! We are seeking students to w ork with children with developm ental disabilities, helping prom ote community participation, recreational activities and in d ep e nd e n t living skills. We offer a vari­ ety o f p art-tim e p o s itio n s in th e late afternoon and early evenings, w orking w ith ch ild ren in their ow n homes. We offer p aid training and flexible sch e d ­ u le s w ith a p a y ran g e from $ 7 .0 0 $7.50 DOE/EOE. For m ore inform ation con tact Krista at 431-9511. ( * Pool Bar ($5/hr + tips) • Cocktail Se rve r. • Hauseperson •Dishwasher , FT & PT work available P le a s e apply with H um an R e so u rc e s, 5001 N. S c o ttsd a le Rd. S c o ttsd a le E m b a ss y S u ite s su p p o rts a D ru g -F ree W orkplace. R o m a n c in g th e P h o n e A m e r ic a ’s d is c o u n t s o u r c e fo r c o m p u t e r s , h a r d w a r e a n d s o f tw a r e Attention ASU Graduates and Students: Tempe-based Insight is a $485 million, publicly-traded telesales WQ n ee organization marketing computers, hardw are and softw are to business customers nationwide. We are seeking career-oriented professionals looking for great opportunities to join our 1000+ employees in a fast-paced and fim environment. Cupid needs your help, Don't Miss this opportunity! C h o o s e your own schedule, Shifts starting a s early a s 6am , ending a s late a s midnight I n t e r n s h ip s Immediate, on-the-spot interviews P/T, F/T & temp. N o experience needed 10 internships offered Flexible part-time hours d VOUF h @ |n l » P " B u sin ess College ^ S9.00 per hour to start S t u d e n ts First 20 applicants receive gift certificates O n e day paid Televersity "“ training program *% Fun, incom ing calls. No telemarketing 30% em ployee discount $7.00/hr. Apply M onday-Friday, 10-7 in person at our central Phoenix location: 2345 E . T h o m a s Rd. G rou n d Floor (602) 224-4681 'M in age 16/EOE Bring SS Card or Birth Certificate and picture Saan K ersh n er G a rre tt N oakes These tw o lu cky students w o n t have to w o rry a b o u t tu itio n fees th is sem ester. If yo u th in k yo u h a ve w h at it tak es, sig n u p a n d be th e next in lin e fo r an in tern sh ip a t Insightl Attn: Sales and Sales Management Applicants We're Having an On*SHt Job Fair at the Insight Headquarters and Everyone Interested is Invited &820 South Hart Avenue, Tempe, Arizona 85283 Insight offers a competitive salary, bonus plans, 401K and stock purchase plan. Apply in person M -F from 8am-5pm, FAX (602) 902-1157 (Attn: Nicol H enning), o r mail resume, please specify you arc applying for internship position. No phone calls will be accepted. Smoke-free workplace. D rug testing. EOE m /f / h / v . Visit o ur Web Site at www.innght.com HELP WANTEDGENERAL SUPPORTSTAFF P/TM on.-Pri., flex. hrs. Close to ASU. $7/hr. to start. Writing & verbal skills necessary. Con|puter exp. desirable. Call Diane Drake, 921-0707 x 3404. 2415 S. Roosevelt, Tempe. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTED- PERSONALS TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights & weekends, fun job, 947-6562. 2013 N. Scottsdale Rd. "BUY THE Hammock." Have enough money P/T to retire in 4 years. 1 can show you how. $31 investment-refundable. Call Ed, evenings, 464-2638 IMMED. OPENING for data en­ try/ receptionist for a busy Scot­ tsdale tax office. Flexible his. starting at $12/hr. Call 4189141 for interview. BARRO'S PIZZA on Baseline & Hardy is looking for a crew chief to work approx 30 hrs/wk, eves, up to $9/hr after training. Contact Brian or Tom 820-9282. LOOKING FOR p/t child care assists. Varied hrs. 20-30 hrs/wk. Call 838-4271 Kim Day roses. $34/dozen - only at 968-6149,8am-7pm till Sat. VALET PARKING attendants pt/ft. Must be courteous & clean cut. $7-$12/hr. American; Valet 235-2636 SWIM INSTRUCTORS for sum­ mer mobile prog. Must have high energy w / kids 3-10 yrs., cpr, •& WSI cert. $7-9/hr. doe 443-8817 WANTED: EXPERIENCED ar­ cheologist with a Masters in Ar­ cheology. Position includes en­ vironmental research and writ­ ing environmental documents. Contact D. Douglas at (602) 967-1343. Find it F A S T in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL Mam« Co-Ed camp ¡6/17-8/23, age 20+. ContKt jj 2807 C Oelmar Drive, || Columbus, OH 43208, (800)- j ¡ 959-3177. See our web-sit* j www.campwekeeia.com or M i u t at|jj|¡ Wekedal daol.com !!PARTY!! Come join the group! Make $7/hr + bonuses, great pay , per­ fect hours. M-F 4:30-9, Sat. 11:30-5:30 pm. Call 491-5136 FREE BOOK dlrshp, be your own boss, no inventory. Sales mat. provided. Free startup kit call T-800-654-3930 24 hrs. SELL MAGAZINES oh the phone. Easy $. Pay is extreme­ ly good.774-9744 HELP WANTEDGENERAL fjWwMciwMitrwteNä WANTED: W om en and men over 40 fo r safe and easy vision testing. $ 2 0 p e r 1-hr session. Contact A SU W est Vision Research Lab fo r info. 543-6324 C am pu s C hevro n B H ™ ® | irínú ™ | OtMas ; ■ ^ Page 19 Wednesday, February 4,1998 S t a t e P ress J o í n Th e L eac Je r ^ RECEPT./CALL COORDI­ NATOR - p/t, 13-15 hrs. wk., wk. nites & wkends. Must have front office & multi-phone exp. Mature w/professional appear. $6.50/hr. Century 21 A.M. Re­ alty 831-1114, Barbara RECEPT/ASST FOR Optical, will train. Busy optometrist of­ fice needs an enthusiastic indi­ vidual w/ xjent customer serv­ ice Skills. 25-40hrs./wk. $79/hr. CaU Dr. O’Daniel 945-9971 G r O W ÍN C , M c D o N a W ' s Í R A N c h iS E h A S E X C E I l f NT f ü l l A N d P A R T T IM E f Ê X C e U e N T Sa Ia r ÍE S , • 5 -^ cjAy W O r Ic w e e Ic plus b O N U S • HELP WANTEDCHILD CAR E ASST. MANAGER f/t, The Pic­ nic Co. 1 yr. rest. supervision exp. Shifts 11-8pm & wknds. Competetive salary & benefits, Apply w/resume to Brad after 2. 1415 E. University Dr. #101 A, Tempe, 85282 AFTERSCHOOL CARE work­ ers needed for Bethany Chris­ tian Scnool. GuadalUpe/Price Rd. 3-6pm, 752-8993 • M e ò ì c a I p lA N • CoMpREÍTENSiVE TRAÍN^^ « ^ ^^ uIaR RECOCJNÍTÍONaI JO B O PPO R TU N ITl|S_ MODEL SEARCH! Hot New Magazine is looking for fresh new faces. For more details, visit http://members.delphi.com/ adzeentra! or e-mail us at cy­ berpage @usa.net. FUNDRAISING MAKE UP to $2000 in one wk! Motivated student org. (fratematies, sororities, etc.) needed for marketing proj. Call Larry at 888-357-9700. ^ BABYSITTER NEEDED flex! hrs; Exp., ref, req’d. $6/hr. Child is 8 mos. 922-6960 MAKE UP to $2000 in 1 Week! Motivated student groups (fra­ ternities & sororities, etc.) need­ ed for marketing project. Call Dennis at 1-800-357-9009. LOOKING FOR babysitter in my Scottsdale home, n/s, own transp. pref. education or nurs­ ing major. 15 + hrs. Call 6570897.9-5 p.m. . PAid V A C A T IO N S MUSIC INDUSTRY Intern­ ships: Seeking street marketing reps in Phx who love alternat i ve/rock music. 10-20hrs./wk. working directly w/ record stores, lifestyle stores, colleges, artists. Call 1-888-733-2687 GARCIA’S 44TH St. & Camelback now hiring pt/ft food serv­ ers, cocktail; waitresses, & host/ hostess for am & pin shifts. Apply in person. HELP WANTEDFO Q D SERVICE S ÍA S T ÍC , p E O p k - O R Ì E N T E d p R o f t S S iO N A ls , p R E Í E R A b t y U / iî h p R E V io U S We o f f E R : INTERNSHIPS AVAIL. Jewelry store to offer pd. intern, to busi­ ness students, fax resume 9579959. Questions call Naomi 957-0002: EXPRESS YOGURT, p/t 9-3 m-f. Some wkds, hrs. flex. Call 404-2613 or 966-6754. RUTH’S CHRIS Steak House now hiring friendly, efficient, exp. hostess p/t, eves. $7/hr. Apply in person daily 2-4pm. 2201 E. Camelback Road O p p O R T U N Í T Í E S A V A lU b lE ¡N Ï E M p E A N d t H e E A S T V a Ü E Y , f o R E N l h U ' M A N A G E M E N T E X p E R Î E N C E I N fÀST^==SERVÌC€ R E S T A U R A N T S . INTERNSHIPS^^ BUSY DELI counter help. Off University. P/t M-F llam-5pm and 4pm-8pm. Also Sat. 7am lpm. $6.50/hr Call 967-1411 STUDENT WANTED for data processing & mise, clerical du­ ties. PT 4-8pm, M -F/ Good pay, casual work environment, close to ASU. Call Mike 967-2678. RESTAURANTS/ BARS A ssístánt M anagers VALENTINE'S C la s s if ie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 * 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS STUDENTS FULLTIME, WKNDS + BENEFITS R esidential L ead Instructor ' at group home for DO Adults $7/hr Apply 7507 E. Osborn, Scottsdale, AZ 994-5704 EOE RESTAURANTS/ BARS M oves to Thursday Oldest neighborhood bar in Tem ps - GaL 1979 New Times award winner Cheap Beer 4 $ 1.25 Shots • We show all MLB, NBA, College & Suns PPV Presi • Greeks Welcome • 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE W ed n esd ay Weekly Beer Trivia before thermometer« were invented. ’ brewer« would dip a thumb or finger into the mix to find the right temperature for adding yeast. Too cold, and the yeast ,wouldn’t glpw. Too hot, and; the yeast would die. This thumb in the beer ¡« where we get the phrase “rule of thumb." ’ . B a n d e r s n a t c h • Fifth & Fo re st 966-332 8 N ow is hiring Admin Assistant 966-8200 Flexible Hours C om er of r 5 th Ash a t McDufly’s for more information by F ra n ces Drake AWES (March 21 to April 19) A routine trip to the dentist or doctor for a checkup is long overdue, so make it a priority. A ■late-day phone call brings good financial news. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You’re in a bit of a slump and really d on’t feel up to doing much. It’s all right to let some things slide; how ever, you must tend to some other tasks.: GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) A child causes some concern early in the day. L ater, you apply yourself to your work. Evening entertainment doesn’t have to be costly to be fun. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your artistic side is showing. For the best results, utilize your talents carefully. Flighty ideas should be identified and dis­ carded. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You might be tempted to put respon­ sibilities aside and basically take the day off. First, however, you need to determine what the effects of that would b e ., VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) News you receive early in the day has you glow ing. Apparently nothing can jar you out of your sunny mood. Tty to make it an early night. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You spend the early part of the day tying up loose ends. Later, you can breathe a bit easier. A child’s evening antics try your patience. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Try not to take a loved one’s problems to heart. As you well know, he or she has a history o f histrionics. Instead, try to help put things in perspective. ' SAGITTARJUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) A simple act of gen­ erosity on your part goes a long ‘w iy. You are feeling altruistic and could get deeply involved in a humanitarian cause! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) It’s one thing to-feel good about what you’ye accomplished. It’s yet another to go around brag­ ging about it. Boastful behavior is sure to put people off. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) If you need to oilist the aid of a co-worker, don’t stand on cere­ mony. Knowing when and how to delegate is the m ark o f a good manager. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) , If you d o n ’t finish up your assignm ents during regular hours, you’ll likely wind up putting in extra hours on the job. However, you might not mind, since you’re compensated for overtime. YOU BORN TODAY are quiet and serious, even from early on in life. Blessed with a sensitive understanding of underdogs, you look for ways to improve their lot. You can be Called to help animals and peo­ ple. Y our fields o f in terest include creative writing, jour­ nalism and teaching © 1998 King Features Syndicate inc. B U R G E R S 1 9 9 5 B est MANPOWER \v / purchase of a large drink O ver 100 M enu h em s C h e a p B e e r & C h e a p S h o ts All A p p e tiz e rs o n H a p p y H r. 4 S a te llite s - 2 2 S c r e e n s Wo show ALL MLS. NBA, College P/T Telemarketing/ @241-4510 Wednesday, February 4, 1998 Timas Neighborhood Bar Call Bob Snyder ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST 2 for 1 WOODSHED II Equitable/ Axa Group 1la m - 3pm THE LADIES of Chi Omega love their 1997 fall pledge class & wish them the best of luck during this special week! Congratulations! TO MY Sister; Andrea Dieterle: Congratulations on your in i­ tiation. I am so proud of you, and I love you! Love, Allie. SERVICES PROFESSIONAL RESUMES, make sure your first impression leads to a second. For effective, professional resumes & consul­ tation call 230-2961 HEALTH & FITNESS ARE YOU tired of being tired? Do you need a little pep before your early morning classesf^or a natural solution, call Cindy 375-1336. IF YOU enjoy sales & working w/ people, this career opp. may be for you. High potential in­ come, take hold of your future: Call 265-7595 to schedule in­ terview. . 1/2 Y o u r W h ig O rd e r F R E E S u n A M on LOSE WEIGHT, gain energy, pay less.; All natural products, help depress the appetite. Lose up to 30 lbs. 990-2302 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING $2.50/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. Laser. APA/MLA. Samé day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967- ■59$7- ( D in e in o n lv ) v;- ' ' :V' 855 S. R u ra l Rd. WORDSMITH 894-2112 Now in Phoenix at 948-3433. Assistance in writing paper. Fast, dependable, reasonable. 4 Subs PPV games FREEH Not valid w/any other offer. 8 4 4 -S H E D Wednesday only U n iv e rs ity & D o b s o n SERVICES MISTY-1 am so proud of you! You are a terrific lil sis! Lots of love, Elaine LOSE WEIGHT Fast! Secret herbal formula. Rev up metabo­ lism. . 100% natural, high fiber, great tasting cookie. For info. Send $1 to Cookie Diet Plan Dept. 14 1717 S. Dorsey #2058 Tempe, AZ 85281 WOODSHED I Swing Night ATTENTION WOMEN of ASU: Sigma Kappa invites you to their informal rush parties Feb. 3-4 at 7pm. Please call Julie at 966-0093 for more information. Come see what sisterhood is allabout! T h is s h o u ld b o y o u r a d C a ll 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 SERVICES SERVICES PERSONALS FREE EMERGENCY CONTRACEPTION \W • “ M ORNING AFTER” PILL Taken w ithin 4 8 hours o f u nprotected intercourse. M edical screening necessary. WE HAVE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR • FREE PREGNANCY TESTING . No a p p o in tm en t necessary. • Receptionist & Computer Skills (all shifts) • Word Processors MS Word & Excel • Data Entry Operators • General Office Clerks • ABORTION WITH TWILIGHT SLEEP Saturday ap p o in tm en ts available. • G YN ECO LO G ICAL EXA M S Low c o st co m p lete birth control. Affordable PAP sm ears • FEM A LE N URSE PRACTITIO N ER Excellent pay and benefits. V arious Locations. Long and short-term assignm ents. Free com puter training. . Apply M on-Thurs 8am-11:30am 645 E. M issouri. #260 3151 N. B lack Canyon Hwy. FAM ILY PLANNING INSTITUTE Scottsdale/Tempe 2334 N. S cottsdale Rd A LL R e q u ir e d 945-4999 TUTO RS ARE W e offer tutorial fo r the follow ing classes: Registration fo r Spring sem ester is going on now CALL US FOR INFORMATION. G len d a le 7806 N. 27m Ave. * . 997-7493 N O T J TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS STUDENT ID A LIK E A lg e b ra M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117 F in ite M a th C a lc u lu s/P re ca lcu lu s M A T 119 M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 S ta tistics Q B A 221, PSY 230 RESUM ES Physics PHY 111, PH Y 112 Business C h e m istry FIN 300, O PM 301 E n g in eerin g CON 221, CON 323 H ave your w ork d o n e by a professional and form er fastest typist in th e ll.S.A. APA/MLA 1 -Day Service Kathy @ 2 6 2 -5 4 5 4 CH M 113, C H M 1 15 /6 S u c c e s s f u l l y H e lp in g S t u d e n t s S i n c e 1 9 8 0 . MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING 'SIMON'' • Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 TERM PAPERS the lea d er in thé rètdrl is now recru itin g io n x 0 ïéit Executive DevelopmermlpmogTaM Join the team Dillard’s offers a fast-paced, exciting opportunity in retail with a rapidly growing company, including over 270 stores» A leader in retail computer technology, Dillard’s provides comprehensive training and intern programs for qualified candidates of the Executive Development Program. The Dillard’s Phoenix Division is currently the most-rapidty expanding, division in the company with the projection o f numerous ¿ ; career opportunities opening in the division’s eight-state area» The requirements We’re looking for seniors who will be completing a bachelor’s degree in May with a G.P.A. of 3.0 ■> or better. We are also locking for graduate 'HI vy.. students completing Opportunities& JfeJ l l ll Dillard’s offers a competitive salary with the potential for rapid advancement. Benefits include: • Employee discount Retirement pías Weekly disability • Health’insurance * Paid vacation • Life insurance • Paid holidays Sick pay | j | Credit union •H R e p r e s e n ta tiv e s w ill b e on c a m p u s Recruiting interviews, Monday, February 9, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Career Development Center Intern interviews: Friday, February 13, -] 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Career Development Center Dillard's isan equal opportunity employer. r» wÈ