W o r ld / N a t io n Iraq standoff DIVIDES DIPLOMATS Page 3 S ports W restling showdown: No. 4 ASU vs. No. 2 Iowa Page 13 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright, State Press, 1998 ' Tempe, Arizona Voi. 83 No. 14 Friday, February 6,1998 An Independent Morning Daily ASU changes p o licy on Internet sex B y T im o t h y T a it S t a t e P r ess - ’ ' S tudents are w aiting in long lines on cam pus and pornography is to blame. Lines at the Computing Commons and other campus computing sites are stretching out because o f students wasting time on non-academic Internet s ite s , lik e th o se p ro m o tin g pornography or hate messages, officials say. “It’s a big problem. A sig­ Net fo r non­ nificant amount o f time is spent surfing the N et fo r non-aca­ academic dem ic re a s o n s ,” said Bob Nelson, director o f com puter reasons Some o f technology centérs. “Some o f the sites students the sites students are visiting are questionable as to academic are visiting are endeavors.” questionable as S tudents are allow ed full aceess-Tty the in téraer for aca­ to academic demic-related purposes. While the University doesn’t log or block ,questionable sites, s t u - . dents âfé paying th ep rice with Tempe firefighters use a high power fan to clear smoke out of Ruby Tuesdays restaurant on Mill and University, R e fe rto long lines and big waits,. , sto ry , pag e 8. , *• „ %. A student employee familiar w ith com puting site policies said workers are powerless to enforce thé Computing regu­ lations. , ’ “We aren’t allowed to police porno or games anymore,” the worker said, asking that his name not be used. “People are basically allowed to do whatever they want, and we can’t do anything about it.” ■ P i ...... . jü KÈl In the past, students who abused the policy were asked Laboratory, based at Caltech and under contract to NASA. B y C h r is K a h n to leave so someone waiting could use the computer. At a From campus, scientists could receive information from meeting this Week information technology administrators S t a t e P ress In the future, spacecraft orbiting different planets could instruments they’re operating. Depending on the type of facili­ changed that policy, the student worker said. be operated from a control room on the ASU campus, giv­ ty, it’s possible that they could also determine how efficiently “Now they can do anything they want: play games during ing researchers direct control over instruments they created die craft is performing and maneuver it into differentj)6sitions. finals, pom surf, hack. TTieie is nothing we can do,” he said. The main reason why project officials think a universityand allowing students to contribute to the operation. N elson said no policy change has been m ade to his “There is no other university that would have the kind of run mission operation facility would be accepted is because knowledge. He said education, letting students know about capability that we’re talking about for planetary spacecraft,” NASA, which has adopted a new approach erf “faster, bet­ the policy and what constitutes a violation, is preferred over said Patrick Burkhart, director o f research development in ter, cheaper” space missions, can no longer spend huge . throwing offenders out. Violators o f the policy can have their computing privilèges revoked, although that’s rare, the office o f the provost and contributor to the proposal. amounts of money to maintain its spacecraft. V Nelson said. “We would be the first to actually control a spacecraft out­ This means that a partnership between universities and sub­ The department is considering reminding students o f the side of earth orbit.” sidiaries of NASA, such as JPL, will increase in the future, said The facility would control spacecraft by using an array G lenn Cunningham , project m anager o f M ars Surveyor policy every time they log onto a campus computer. The message would stipulate that computers be used only for o f huge antennas called the “deep space network,” which Operations at die Jet Propulsion Laboratory. T urn to C omputers, page 2. T urn t o S pace , page 2. are o p erated aro u n d the w orld by the Je t P ro p u lsio n Sparky in space? it’s possible Campus-controlled stellar missions planned for future Proposed ‘whistle blower’ bill draws staff support B y K r is t e n H a t c h e r S t a t e P r ess University employees blowing the whis­ tle on their employers are fighting for jus­ tice in settling their grievances. In Arizona, state employees who accuse th e ir e m p lo y e rs o f w ro n g -d o in g s, also called “whistle blowing”, are handled by an independent state board. H ow ever, ASU employees’ claims are handled within the University, and some claim that is unfair. “That procedure that ASU does or has in place does not work,” said Tim Feavel, an ASU employee who filed a claim against the U n iv e rs ity fo r v io la tio n o f th e Americans with Disabilities Act. their procedures A bill currently don’t w ork, and in the House, spon­ must have a fune- their procedures so re d by Rep. fo r someone who fall into the fox M arilyn Jarrett, Rguarding the hen C oolidge, appeals wronger ho u se,” F eavel the current Arizona said. .“T h ey ’re sta tu te to in clu d e ASU university em ploy­ înfjpittie CJor having — ASU President employees police ees in th e s ta te ’s ASU employees.” grievance process. ; ‘ Feavel said when he was looking for advice Nine individuals, including employees from the three state universities, some com­ at the beginning of his Case, an ASU employee m unity colleges and private citizens, will told Feaval that if he wanted anything done, he speak in support of the bill at the state legis­ would have to go off campus. “ASU enacts the policy to their own ben­ lature T uesday. “I’m going to mainly concentrate on that efit, not the employees’,” Feavel said, 19 Feavel said it’s a basic human right to have access to justice outside the body that’s perse­ cuting individuals in the first place. He said he has been treated unfairly by the University. “I want to support this bill so it doesn’t happen to anyone else,” he said, “but it’s also a cry for help— is there anyone out there who can help me?” ASU President Lattie Coor encouraged the University faculty not to support the bill. W h ile the n u m b er o f cases at the University is quite small, the issues are han­ dled by independent groups. The University also has ombudsmen, who can often resolve . T urn to W histle, page 11. St a t e P ress Friday, F ebruary 6 ,1 9 9 8 P age 2 Com puters IT q p a y C ontinued C a n p B s iU b ia d a in d fa K n v R b ’ mit written enines to the State Press « t i r e basement of the Ma&iews Center. Requests will not betaken ova- the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the before pt&hcatiqn and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. O nly one entry per organization per day is permitted. ' Eritries must contain the full name of the club o r organization, % 4etaS0&g0kv0&it\ event, 4 m time and the full address o f the location. A H requests are subject t o editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-co m e, first-se rv e d b a sis a n d a re printed as space permits. • J M tlS ip iia IS'— AttendtheBen ien?y le c tu re *. a t QfMfcwatge,. Auditorium at 7 p jn ., followed fey a prili^ p lecep iH m at 8:30 p.m « Japanese Student Organization < J S O > - ~ A general meeting will take kplgee in ¡fee M D GBa jtoott. a t tt3 0 p>m. Anyone is welcome! • j • PHI Alpha. ptu4aw : fraternity will be holding a general meet- j ing at a new location. Life Sciences A163 at 4 p.m. Everyone is welcome. • R eligious Studies C lub -»'fire f ir s t m e e tin g w ill, f e c 'h e id in th e Engineering Center A371 at 2 p.m. • Students for a Free Tibet — Ai i general m eeting and planning for next week’s visit by Drepung monks w ill fee held in the MU • American Indian Council — a p.m. Feel free to briggii lunch. *J ■. g e n e ra l m e e tin g w ill be h e ld in th e • Young D em ocrats — A general American Indian Institute at noon. m eeting w ill fee held in the M U Yuma • ASASU Presents Ben & Jerry— Room 211 at 3 p.m. * • < The ice cream guys will be giving a onehour lecture, “Radical Business Philosophy, - S a tu r d a y ’s E v en ts: initiation Social Responsibility, and Free Ice Cream,” • A lpha Phi O m ega will take place in the M U Room 219 a t in Gammage Auditorium at 7 p.m. • Asian VOICE! •*- An introductory . 5:30 p.m. Semi-formal attire requited. meeting will take place at the fountain between S u n d a y ’s E v e n ts; (he MU and Hayden library at 4 p.m. • College Bible Fellowship — A general meeting and Bible study will be held in the MU Coconino Room 224 at 7 p.m. Everyone is welcome. • Counselor Training C enter — Free counseling is available for ASU stu­ dents, faculty and staff. The cost is $10 for part-time, $35 for non-ASU people; session are unlimited. The canter is locat­ ed in Payne Hall Room 402. • B udd hist A ssociation ^ enhanced awareness, inner pedee and harmony through ineditation offered in tire M U Navajo RoQm 2 f9 at 10:30 am . Non-Buddhists are welcome. » M en’s L acrosse — T h e o p e n in g game of the thirtieth anniversary season vsu Colorado School of Mines will take place on the ASU Bandfield, Sixth Street and Rural Road, at 11 a m Admission is tree. D e v e lo p m e n t o f from page 1. a c a d e m ics, N elso n sa id , and c o u ld be implemented in the future. “W hen you reg ister, you receiv e an acceptable use policy,” Nelson said. “In the fu tu re , each tim e you log on, you w ould receiv e a p o licy sta te m e n t as a friendly rem inder th at these are scarce resources that should be used for academ ­ ic purposes only.” The University, however, isn’t consider­ ing blocking sites that promote pornography or have no clear academic purpose. Nelson said First Amendment concerns have kept inform ation technology steering clear of declaring any sites off-limits. For now, the lines will remain because of the violation of the usage policy, the student worker said. “If someone is offended, or a student is wasting time on non-academic sites, we are powerless,” he said. “ That’s not fair.” Space C ontinued from page 1. Instead of paying professionals, a univer­ sity could employ student volunteers and staff at a much lower cost. The University would also pick up the ad m in istra tiv e and m ain ten an ce c o sts, which come with a mission operations facil­ ity. This would add up to an investment of at least $1 million, said Burkhart, although a definite amount can not be set until JPL has agreed on the proposal. University officials expect to get a response from JPL in March or April of this year. U ntil then, NASA w ill probably give other institutions a chance to solicit bids for the project, s^id Cunningham, as well as determine how cost effective building a new facility and training new staff w ill be in comparison to keeping operations at JPL. For ASU, the 12th largest contractor to JPL and contributor to the M ars G lobal Surveyor, Pathfinder and Galileo missions, it makes sense to have a mission control facility on campus. “T h e k in d and n u m b er o f re se a rc h opportunities this could bring w ould be great, not only for research, but also for the students and greater community,” said Jim Klemaszewski, a senior research specialist with the Galileo mission. In past missions, scientists had to travel to c o n tro l fa c ilitie s lik e th e JP L in Pasadena, Calif., to receive and send infor­ m atio n to th e ir in stru m e n ts. A lth o u g h research ers recen tly have b e e n able to access information from JPL through a spe­ cial Internet link, a campus-based mission operation facility would benefit university researchers by giving them a larger amount o f access and control. And since formal missions on spacecraft like the Global Surveyor last only about two years, but the instrum ents continue to be functional for several years after, students would be able to take over the operation, g a in in g e x p e rie n c e m a n ip u la tin g and retrieving data. There currently isn’t a place that actually trains students in spacecraft mission control operations, B urkhart said, so A SU could become an excellent place for training peo­ ple to do tiiis kind of work. Other possible projects include letting ele­ mentary school students plan their .own obser­ vation of Mars, using the instruments on a spacecraft for a period of a few months. Reg. ‘219” FREE W IT H EVERY N E W S m a ll B o ttle Lifetime W arranty - F rame & F ork W ith E v e ry 1 Y ear A djustm ents - Brakes & D eraileur C a g e P u rc h a s e 3 0 - D ay W heel T ru in g 'Y our C o l l e g ia t e B ik e S h o p ' O pen 7 days 2 0 1 0 S. Rural, T empe 968-8011 LAYAWAY r I I ■ .0 0 G I I M i n im u m p u r c h a s e | *25.00 p e r c o u p o n I L a b o r & S a le it e m s e x c lu d e d ZIA ASU MEMORIAL UNION (LOWER LEVEL) 727 • USED (8733) ___^ ____ 2 / 2 8 / 9 8 1 0 6 3 9 N . 3 2 N D ST 8 0 7 W . IN D IA N S C H O O L 4 8 2 -3 1 1 9 2 4 1 -0 3 1 3 2 5 1 0 W . T H U N D E R B IR D 8 6 6 -7 8 6 7 1 0 5 W . U N IV E R S IT Y T E M P E 8 2 9 -1 9 6 7 ________ W St a t e P ress _____________ orld ■ /N a t io n Friday, February 6, ¿ 9 9 8 Page 3 Diplomats, countries divided over Iraqi resolution By Leo n Barkho A s s o c ia t e d P ress BAGHDAD, Iraq - Diplomatic attempts to solve the Iraq crisis picked up speed Thursday, while China and France registered strong new opposition to an American military strike. Russian President Boris Yeltsin declared that “we shall not allow” an American attack. Diplomats from Russia, France, Turkey and the Arab League - as well as an envoy of PLO leader Yasser Arafat : - pressed Iraq to compromise on U.N. demands to inspect “sensitive sites,” including President Saddam Hussein’s palaces, to head off a threatened U.S. strike. Thus far, varying forms of compromise offers reported­ ly discussed have not provided a way out of the crisis. The United States and Britain, virtually alone among major powers in advocating for the use of force, insist on the longstanding U.N. demand of unfettered access to all sites. “We have stood together ... before in the face of tyran­ ny,” Prime Minister Tony Blair said after a Washington meeting With President Clinton. “Today, in the face of the threat from Saddam Hussein, we must stand together once more. We want a diplomatic solution to the crisis, but the success or failure of diploma­ cy rests on Saddam. If he fails to respond, then he knows that the threat of force is there, and it is real.” S h o rtly b efo re B la ir’s co m m en ts, th e USS Independence accompanied by a submarine and four other American ships, sailed into the Persian Gulf. A nother 2.000 Marines on Navy ships with infantry and combat aircraft aboard were heading tow ard the g u lf to jo in 24.000 American forces. Iraq has been sparring fo r w eeks w ith the U nited Nations over weapons inspections. It has barred members o f the U.N. Special C om m ission, w hich oversees the in sp ectio n s, from certain s ite s in c lu d in g S a d d a m 's A Kuwaiti couple seats by the beach near Kuwait’s Shuwaikh Port on Wednesday. Many Kuwaitis are hoping Iraq w ill capitulate to U.S. demands fo r peacefully ending the standoff over weapons inspectors. p a la c e s, on g rou n d s they w o u ld in frin g e on Iraq i sovereignty. Chinese Foreign M inister Qian Qichen, speaking on envoy that the Iraqis had closed ranks and are ready to The Security Council has said that punishing economic state-run television, also said he told Secretary of State confront the aggression” from the United States. sanctions, imposed after Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Madeleine Albright that any military strike could make The agency said the Iraqi leader also met with Arab which led to the Persian Gulf War, will not be lifted until matters worse. League Secretary-General Esmat Abdel-Meguid foe a secthe commission certifies it has destroyed its weapons of The Iraqi Parliament, meanwhile, held an emergency ond day. Abdel-Meguid was quoted as telling Saddam he mass destruction. Iraq claims it has done so. session Thursday but refrained from action, with lawmak- would “exert all efforts to reach a peaceful solution.” Since M arch 1996, inspectors have visited 63 sites ers saying they will give diplomacy a chance to resolve the S hortly a fte r the m eetin g , INA said Saddam had where they believed the Iraqis were hiding contraband. crisis. ordered the release of all Arab prisoners jailed in Iraq “no Inspectors were delayed from entering 38 of the sites and Saddam d isc u sse d th e c ris is w ith h is ru lin g matter what the crime.” flatly denied access to 14 others in the name of national No reason was given for the amnesty, but it appeared to security. be a m ove to encourage A rab nations to continue to Yeltsin, directing unusually critical remarks at Clinton an American air strike. n “We must not allow a strike by force, oppose for the second straight day, renewed warnings that U.S. British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, trying to line up bombing raids against Iraq could spark a world war. an A m erican strike. I to ld Clinton support for a strike during visits to Saudi A rabia and “We must not allow a strike by force, an American about it: No, we shall not a ll& W thef & ■ Ku wait sa.d “there are some interesting proposals there strike. I told Clinton about it: No, we shall not allow that,” liS siS although they do not match up to our requirement of full Yeltsin said in Moscow, compliance.” Vl It w a s n ’t c le a r how R u ssia in te n d s to b lo ck an ->Jibris Yeltsin Cook, speaking in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, said no American attack. Yeltsin aides ruled out Russian retalia­ # . * compromise can be made on the inspections issue: “If the tion, and although Russia has veto power in the U.N. Russian président U.N. inspection regime is going to work, it mu$t be unconSecurity Council, the United States has said it doesn’t r ■ 1 — " " ditional.” require further council approval to attack Iraq. Revolutionary Command Council, the official Iraqi News Bill R ichardson, the A m erican am bassador to the French Foreign M inister Hubert Vedrine made clear Agency said. It gave no details, other than to say he out- United Nations, has talked up the American line on three that France will not join in any U.S.-led strike on Iraq lined the mediation efforts. continents in six days, stopping Thursday in Brazil. The now, telling Europe 1 radio that diplomatic means to pres­ The Iraqi president also met with Palestinian Public A m ericans say they have the support o f other nations sure Baghdad remain. An airstrike, he said, “would not Works Minister Azzam Ahmed, who had been dispatched Richardson has visited: Sweden, Slovenia, Kenya, Gabon resolve the problems.” by Arafat. INA said “Saddam reassured the Palestinian and Gambia. B o m b e d a b o rtio n c lin ic re o p e n s ; G a y b a rs re m a in a le r t A gray Nissan pickup truck registered to Rudolph was seen near the clinic after the Jan. BIRMINGHAM, Ala - One week after it 29 blast Authorities want to know if the truck was bom bed,'an abortion clinic reopened driver was the same man seen leaving the area Thursday as authorities looked for evidence at in a wig. a North Carolina mobile home and warned The Army o f God, the same group that gay bars in the area to guard against becoming claimed responsibility for bombings of an a target. abortion clinic and gay bar in Atlanta about a Investigators swarmed the streets around year ago, has claimed in a letter that it also the New W oman All W omen Clinic as it bombed the Birmingham clinic, reopened a week after a guard was killed and a Wary of the Atlanta nightclub blast, which nurse seriously injured. A gents handed occurred about a month after the clinic explomotorists leaflets bearing a photograph of a sion there, Birmingham police have warned North Carolina man being sought as a witness gay bars and gay-related service agencies to be in die explosion. careful. , ; C linic ow ner D iane D erzis said tw o “They’ve told them to clean up around patients showed up within minutes of die door their buildings, to make sure things aren’t just being unlocked. lying around,” said David White, Birmingham “It just shows the determination of women coordinator of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance who want an abortion,” D eras said. of Alabama. Detectives searched a second day at a Agents also said they are still trying toconMaible, N.C., mobile home that was the last tact a man who anonymously phoned a tip line known address of Eric Robert Rudolph, whom after the explosion with what could be imporauthorities say is wanted only for questioning. tant information. B y J ay R eeves A sso c ia ted P ress AP Photo/Birm ingham Post-Herald, W illiam Luther Two unidentified women hug outside the New Woman All Women Health Care Clinic Thursday, one week after a bomb exploded in front of the building, killing a Birmingham police officer and injuring a clinic nurse. The clinic reopened Tuesday, but Thursday was to be the day they resume abortions. Opinion S t a t e P r ess Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 P age 4 (Boos STBRvos B ra v o —*■To investigator Kenneth' Starr, for refusing to give Monica Lewinsky immunity ia exchange for fa £3; :*0 D iscover the state of your union said. “There has been a 21-percent drop in speeding tickets issued since these vans have been in operation.” In Tempe, a person who is ticketed by photo radar can go to the police department to view the picture before the case goes to court. The cameras that take pictures o f speed­ ers won’t snap unless someone is traveling at 11 mph or higher over the posted limit. According to Barrett, there have been more than 10,000 citations issued since April 1997, and there have been only 298 hearings to date. “Very few people actually try and fight it,” he said. “What can you really do when we have a photo o f you vir­ tually caught in the act?” Tempe started using photo radar last April in response to continual complaints from the community on the speeding problem. Barrett said red-light cam eras are used significantly more as you head into the center of the city, and a number of violators have been recorded at Broadway and Rural Roads. The cameras, at Broadway and Rural Roads, and Southern Avenue and McClintock Drive, record about 500 photos a month. R ed -lig h t v io latio n s have in creased 14 p ercen t at Broadway and Rural Roads between April and November, but there has been a 25-percent drop in violations at Southern Avenue and McClintock Drive. 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Tim es Kolbe Corp 800.642.2822 “Student Appreciation Day” P h o e n ix In t e r n a t io n a l R a c e w a y CRUISE I f You Have Received a 2 -Y e a r o r 4 -Y e a r D e g re e in the Last 2 Years SU P EmSRSCNBTIDIK BV E CHALLENGE B u e ll O n A n y T ic k e t : With Proper Student ID, One Ticket Offer per ID S u n d ay, F e b ru a ry r 1 5 ,1 9 9 8 You W ill Receive a 2 o r 4 -Y e a r D e g r e e in the N e xt 6 M onths... YOU’RE APPROVED! C O L L E G E G R A D P R O G R A M C a ll F o r D e ta ils ' Some restrictions apply. VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT: brownandbrowiMom Se Habla Espanol Superbikes • Pro Thunder 750cc SuperSports • 250cc Grand Prix 600cc SuperSports • Formula Xtreme Daytona 500 Tailgate Party. Live On Big Screen TV For information call 252-2227 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL IM i n i 's STORES & ZIA RECORDS OR CHARGE BV PHONE 503-5555 Phoenix. . in te rn a tio n a l a ce w a y' 115th Avenue &Baseline Page 10 S t a t e P ress Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 The A SU p o lice reported the fo llo w in g incidents on Thursday: • A man not associated with ASU was arrested on an outstand­ ing warrant from ASU Police. He posted bond and was released. • A student reported that someone removed one key belonging An employée reported that someone attempted to steal his • A male student was contacted at Physical Education west, where he had sustained an injury. He was transported to a local hospital. • A student was arrested, cited and released for possession of marijuana, possession of illegal drug paraphernalia and posses­ fit# sion of an altered license at Manzanita Hall. The Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents on Thursday: • A groundskeeper at the Rio Salado Golf Course, 1490 E. Weber Drive, found a device on the property. The device was taken to the manager, who then contacted the Tempe Police Department. Bomb technicians responded, and ordered ail cuation of the building and surrounding area. H ie device was removed to a sandtrap where it was rendered safe. The was found. The device : fusing system. It was apable of functioning and probably would have except for failure of the crude timer. • A 20-year-old intentionally pointed a laser light at police officers and juvenile prisoners in a parking lot at 120 E. Fifth St. on Jan. 20, The officers believed the red dot generated by the laser Wits being used as a sighting device for a firearm and took cover in the parking lot. The officers and the juvenile stayed in the lot until another officer on the eighth floor of The Towers, 525 S. Forest Avenue, contacted the suspect The case was submitted for review at Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. A complaint for three counts of aggravated assault was just approved by the county attorney’s office. • A 50-year-old woman was arrested for assault, assault with a knife and criminal damage. The woman attempted to choke her husband, then held a knife in her hand, threatening him. She was arrested and transported to Tempe City Jail. • A 36-year-old woman took $20 froth a man, at 1750 S. Price Road, after agreeing to complete a “hand job” on him. At the scene, she admitted to agreeing to perform fellatio on him for $40. The woman had no identification and was arrested and booked into Tempe City Jail for prostitution. Compiled by State Press reporter Cadonna Peyton D irect from th e H ow ard Stem Show Outpost Recording Artist 21 * ®v#r do«'* N ig h t C lu b K IN G located at McDuflyV 5th & ASH « 966-8200 ‘V an evening of Reggae S A M U E L I_ SH A R O N D U S T IN MUSIC 21 & Over Doors 8:00 pm 7 7 c x a y ^ ii , peg W o rid n e w s . H O F F M A N C a r to o n s . S C IE N T IS T S A N A L IE N H A VE IN T E L L IG E N C E TO K IL L D IS C O V E R E D U N D E R U S TH E S E A W A IT IN G S ta te n e w s. A LL. C la s s ifie d a d s. S p o rts . C o u p o n s. A S U n ew s. C ro ssw o rd p u z z le s . W e e k ly m a g ­ a z in e . T h e a te r a d s . P o lic e R e p o rt. C o m ic s tr ip s . H e lp w a n te d a d s . L e tte rs to th e e d ito r. Mt a t u it i. Daily horoscopes. C ity & c o u n ty FROM T H E B E S T S E L L IN G A U T H O R P F ‘J U R A S S IC PARK’ A N D ‘T H E LO ST W O R L D ’ n ew s. 'p e c i a l A p a r tm e n t TE R R O R CAN FILL A NY SPACE. Cultural A BARRY LEVINSON FILM WARNER BROS, presents a BALTIMORE PICTURE5/C0NSTANK production in association with PUNCH PRODUCTIONS, INC. DUSTIN HOFFMAN 5HAR0N STONE SAMUEL UACK50N "SPHERE" PETER COYOTE UEV SCHREIBER ’“¿ELLIOT GOLDENTHAL SOS PETER GIULIANO “*™“KURT WIMMER — sSTEPHEN HAUSER and PAUL ATTANASIO «Si¿MICHAEL CRICHTON ä “ ^MICHAEL CRICHTON ANDREW WALD T8SKSBARRY LEVINSON Soundtrack Albumon Varese Sarabande CDs OPENS AVM' m‘ tSS!Sl!3 S S £ i WWwSPHERE-thanOVieCOm FEBRUARY 13 -otsbr activities. I t s fr e e . S ta Te P ress State P ress Page 11 Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 W histle C ontinued 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 I P a r t t i m ë e m p l o y e e s f o r til« ? f o l l o w i n g p o s i t i o n s : I 1Bk p v l Sa m *» S r a r o i# W e a r e f l e x i b l e w i t h h o a r s a n d d a y s . :i) :iSÎC a n d id a te s m u s t p o s s e s s a v a lid d r iv e r s lic e n s e ~ P l e a s e e o n ta e t K e lly D . D a v is a t 6 7 S .0 0 1 S You 1 / Üá 1 rvufiHT AS io£u_ Get . Some THik¡6, Foie YouR. § » ___^ £ \^TKousle:S. ? 3; ~ — n —r y . Au % £ « a v) \ 11 a V (ft) ' % s Í ! sr s I a Death Row Frogs last wish Customer Satisfaction Is Our # 1 Priority! \ m A un PARTS State P r e ss 1848 E. University Drive • Tempe • 968-7282 (East of McClintock on University) Hours: M-F 7 a.m.-6 p.m. * Sat. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. • Sun. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Ron HornadayJr. #16 DieCastTruck 99 15-Pc CD Holder, or TQuaker State ■9 30-Pc Cassette RolperJ * * Choke M otor Oil $ 0 9 9 ! «* Offn Expins 2/15/91 M otor O il ! NAPA Ofhr Expires 2/15/91 tt EA. 4-Pc Spring Clamp Pack $K 99 SET Share in th e GLODY o f v ic to ­ ry an d th e AGONY of defeat. 1 | | S £ joHer Expires2/15/98 Werjxpires 2/I5/9Í 4NAPAB OfferExpiras 2/15/98 S ports Page 13 Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 St a t e P ress Sun D evils face ‘biff one’ affainst N o. 2 B y S c o t t L e w is S t a t e P ress It is the “big one.” It is the wrestling match that has been circled on the calendar by every ASU grappler, coach and fan alike since the begin­ ning o f the 1997-98 season. It is being billed as "Pack the U A C” night and will be televised on FoxAZ. . It is th e d e fe n d in g NCAA N atio n al Champion No. 2 Iowa Hawkeyes heading into the University Activity Center to face the No. 4 Sun Devils on at 3 p.m. Sunday. “They are the perennial power in colle­ giate wrestling for over two decades,” ASU head coach Lee Roy S m ith said o f the Hawkeyes. “They represent a relentless, aggresive style. They are very physical and very explosive. They bring a tremendous challenge for us in this dual meet.” In the past, it is a challenge that the Sun Devils have been unable to handle. To put into perspective the mastery that Iowa has maintained over ASU, during the last 15 years the AFC has won more Super Bowls (2) than the Sun Devils have won dual meets (1) against the Hawkeyes. In fact, dating back to their first-ever meeting in 1978-79, ASU has managed just one vic­ tory and one tie in 17 dual meets. But the Sun Devils aren’t alone in their futility. Since Dan Gable took over as coach in 1977, the Hawkeyes have won 16 NCAA national championships. Gable, who went into semi-retirement after last year’s cham­ pionship, has led Iowa to 22 straight Big Ten titles. Gable has coached 37 NCAA cham pions and 137 A ll-A m ericans. The H aw keyes won nine consecutive NCAA championships from 1978-86, equaling the longest stretch o f n atio n al title s in any sport, set by Yale golf and USC track. “They’ve always had a few more horses Tracy Brown, shown tossing his Oregon opponent to the mat In last week’s dual meet, and the rest of the Sun Devils hope to send second-ranked Iowa crashing to the ground on Sunday, when the Hawkeyes meets ASU on Sunday at 3 p.m.. The event is being billed as “Pack the UAC” and will be televised on FoxAZ. than the rest o f the teams in the country,” Smith said. “I can’t think of any collegiate dynasties that compare to Iowa wrestling. Over 90 percent of it has been under Dan Gable. His accomplishments can’t be com­ pared. But he’s not there right now, it’s the post-Gable era.” But while the legend has moved on, the legacy rem ains. The 1998 Jim Zaleskycoached Hawkeyes, led by three defending NCAA champions -— Mark Ironside (134 p o u n d s), Joe W illiam s (1 6 7 ) and L ee Fullhart (190) — and one form er NCAA champion — Jeff McGinncss (142) -— are stocked, locked and loaded fo r another national title run. W ith nine o f their ten starting wrestlers nationally ranked, Iowa’s im m ediate future is once again looking bright. If the Sun Devils have their way, howev­ er, their trip to Tempe will be anything but sunny. “ I think they look down on as,” said T urn to I owa , page 16. M ens hoops improves to .500 in Pac-10 B y M a tt P a u lso n S t a t e P ress S cott Sam plin/State Press Senior guard Jerem y Veal (21) knifes a pass as Washington S tate's Leif Nelson (54) and Carlos Daniel converge. Veal scored a gam e-high 20 points in the Sun Devils’ 82-68 win Thursday at the UAC. S u n D e v il W e e k e n d Baseball vs. Florida State T a riffili 7:00 at Packard SticBum Saturday 1:00 Sunday 1:00 p jÚ . /¿ ' The improbable run continues. The ASU men’s basketball team moved one game clos­ er to the possibility o f post-season play Thursday night in front of 6,032 fans at the University Activity Center win­ ning its 15th game o f the season 82-68 over Washington State. Sun Devil interim head coach Don Newman said he’s proud to see his team so close to accomplishing early sea­ son goals. “The most important thing is that now we’re sitting at 15 wins with eight more gam es to go,” he said. “Now every time we line up, we’re lining up to attain goals we set earlier. The first goal at hand is going to be solidifying a winning season. That can happen the next time we hit the floor, and I think that’s a big accom plishm ent for this team.” Senior guard Jeremy Veal scored 20 points to lead all players, forward Mike Batiste notched his fifth doubledouble o f the season with 14 points and 11 rebounds and guard Ahlon Lewis added 10 assists to pace ASU. Batiste said it was the team’s defensive play on Cougar forward Carlo Daniel, who scored a career-high 28 points when the two teams met on Jan. 11, that was the differ­ ence. “We threw double teams at him,” Batiste said of Daniel who was limited to 13 points total and only one in the sec­ ond half. “I’m pretty sure all his confidence was gone with his team down. On the free throw line, he was telling me, ‘It’s hard to be the man if I don’t get any help.’ So I knew as long as we contained him, we had the ball game won.” Leading by only three, 41-38, with 17 minutes remain­ ing in the game, ASU went on a 31-9 run over the next 11 minutes expanding its lead to 72-47. Cougar head coach Mike Eastman said his team was just unable to convert. “We couldn’t make shots tonight,” Eastman said. “I think we had some of our best looks o f the season. We just simply couldn’t hit the shots.” The Cougars’ (8-13, 1-9 Pac-10) .362 shooting percent­ age (25-69) was their lowest o f the season. ASU on the other hand was 28 of 58 from the field (.483) and 6 of 16 from three-point land. In the first half, ASU (15-8, 5-5) twice built a sevenpoint lead but only led by four, 34-30, at halftime. Newman said the problem was that the team was fight­ ing itself. “Early in the first half, we certainly caused some (of our own) turnovers,” he said. “One thing we talked about at half is getting back to Sun Devil basketball. The guys (eventually) made some shot, they relaxed, wound up playing like we practiced and we were able to pull away from the Cougars.” ASU committed only three turnovers in the second half, compared to 11 in the first. A fter the game, the Sun Devil players, who refer to themselves as a family and not a team, wrote the word “fam-ly” on the board. “W e’re making sure they’re is no T in team- so we’re trying to keep as focused as possible,” Veal said. “W e’re going to play as one. W e’re going to win as one. That’s our new motto.” T urn to H oofs , page S p o rts _ _ _ _ _ MM*f la s k it t if l VI&sMwBton .. ys. Z '.;",O g W restling vs. Iowa Sunday j | | ^ P | H P v P x ^ Saturday 8:30 p.m . at the U A C ;'-"; m ’- ' . 1 W omen's Basketball at W ashington Saturday 2:00 p.m. in Pullman, Wash. G ym n astics v s. O regon S tate . ■ ; Tonight 7:30 at the UAC 14. Page 14 State Press Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 N o. 6 ASU looks to make up for past losses to FSU By L o r i H a r o S t a t e P ress The ASU baseball team lost two of three games to Florida State last season at the Seminóles' Dick Howser Stadium. The ASU baseball team lost two of three games to Florida State in 1995, the last time the Seminóles played at Packard Stadium. The ASU baseball team has only five wins to Florida State’s 14 in the teams' all-time series. However, this years' edition Of ASU baseball is hoping to make up for those losses this weekend when the Seminóles come back to Tempe. The No. 6 Sun Devils take on the No. 25 Seminóles tonight at 7, and Saturday and Sunday at 1 p.m. The Sun Devils remain undefeated at 8-0, after winning all three of their games in the Louisville Slugger Classic and sweeping a five-game road trip against Hawaii-Hilo. Florida State is 1-2, after losing to both Notre Dame and Tennessee in the' ACC Baseball Blast last weekend. The Seminóles went 50-17 last season making it to the champi­ onship game of their NCAA regional, before losing to Auburn. And Florida State has continued to take more losses. This season’s team returns only four o f eight starters. The Seminóles return without the powerful bats of outfielders J.D. Drew and Jeremy Morris and top-pitcher Randy Choate: losses that have been especially damaging. However, FSU head coach Mike Martin, believes that this series should be one of the best. "I think the series is great for college baseball, it’s been real good for both programs,” Martin said. “There is no question that it's a big challenge for us. We’ve got a very young, inexperienced ball club and we know that Arizona State is if not the top, certainly one of the top two teams in the country.” ' -- ,i’ : ASU head coach Pat Murphy and several of the players also expect this to be a tough series. “You really can’t underestimate or overestimate your opponents,” third baseman Andrew Beinbrink said. “You really just have to prepare yourself as best we can as a team and get ready to battle for three games.” Murphy also believes that young or not, Florida State tra- A t Packard S tadium No. 25 FSU (1-2) No. 6 ASU (8-0) O n T he M ound Probablestartersfarthis weekend’s series Today 7 p.m. Sat. 1p.m. Sun. S un D evil U pdate: S eminóles U pdate: Florida State holds a 14-5 lead in the all-time series between the two ball clubs. The Seminóles took two-out-of-three games from ASU when the teams last met in 1997 ... The Seminóles return four of eight starters this season ... Head coach Mike Martin is on the way to reaching 1,000 victories, Martin needs only 30 more wins |& for the m ilestone ... The Seminóles have been ranked in Collegiate Baseball for 137 consecutive weeks ... The last time the team wasn’t ranked was May 2, 1988.... Florida State’s lone win came against Ohio State ... Zach Diaz was the winning pitcher. \ - co m p iled b y L ó r i H a ro A drianna G arcia/S tate Press ditionally has top-caliber ball clubs. “It’ll be a great series, it’s what baseball is all about,” Murphy said. “There is great talent on both sides. They’ve lost some of their offense, but there is no team that has been to Omaha more times in this decade than Florida State, they just reload.” The probable starting pitching rotation has junior lefty Ryan Mills on the mound tonight, left-hander Phill Lowery Saturday and sophom ore right-hander Jay G ehrke on Sunday. Lowery, Mills and Gehrke all have two wins. C.J. Call has one win. The Sun Devils played a doubleheader last Saturday in which Gehrke threw a complete game and allowed only two-hits. Call got the win in the second game. C ontinued from page 13. W om en's B asketball Men’s Basketball WSU (68) ASU (79) ASU (82) W hite 2-5 0-0 4, Freeman 6-8 6-10 19. Holt 7-8 6-8 20, Tom 2-5 0-1 5, Lowe 1-3 2-5 4, Newman 4-4 0-0 9, Sand 6-11 Ö-0 13, Steed 2-3 0-0 5, McDanal 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 30 48 14-24 79. Halftim e — ASU 43, WSU 28. Fouled out — Kunze, Nyseth. Rebounds — ASU 29 (Sand 7), WSU (Evans, Nyseth 5) 28. Assists — ASU 20 (Lowe 8). WSU 10 (Nyseth 3). Three-point goals — ASU 5-11 (Freeman, Tom, Newman. Steed, Sand). WSU 3-17 (D ietel 2). Total fouls — ASU 14, WSU 22. A — 454. C a m o that was a long time ago, but to have your dad die at this stage, and learning about it today, that just shows what kind o f man he is. Today the team bonded and I think that helped the team come clos­ er in a way.“ Despite the win, the atmosphere in the locker room afterward wasn’t all that energetic. Earlier in the day, forward Urit Kelly was informed o f the death o f his father, Aziel. A ziel K elly, 55, a police officer in N assau, B aham as passed aw ay after b attling a K idney infection, Urit Kelly said. “I’m dedicating the rest of the season to him,” said K elly , w ho h a d n ’t seen his fa th e r since August. Kelly finished the game with seven points and three rebounds in 15 minutes. Veal said the passing has made the Sun Devils an even tighter group. “It shows a lot of guts to come out and play a game when you’ve gone through a tragedy like he has,” Veal said. “I had to deal with my m6m dying, WSU (70) Dietel 7-13 6-7 22, Evans 3-6 2-2 8, Kunze 4-6 0-0 8, Lamb 4-5 2-3 11, Nyseth 1-3 0-0 2, Harrod 5-5 3-4 13, Smith 0-2 0-0 0. Kerns 2-9 2-7 6. Volkman 0-3 0 -1 0 , Quinton 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 26-53 15-24 70. C Call, Chuck Crumpton and Richy Leon combined to pitch a one-hitter. Florida State’s probable starting pitchers arc junior Chris Chavez today, sophomore Wes Crawford Saturday and freshman Chris Ginn on Sunday. “Pitching has done very well, I think w e’ve shown already that after eight games, we’re pretty deep,” Mills said. “I think the biggest, not shock, but biggest surprise is that the fteshman have been able to come in and do a really good job. They’ve been fearless out there, they’ve just gone out there an pitched like they know how, I think that has been real key for us.” “I think we’re anxious to get some good competition in here and to see what we’re made of.” H oops Ioane made 30 solo tackles, 21 assists and 1J quarterback sack s: ’ ASU signed 21 football recruits ; last season. He^w$s selected fustteam all-Region and first-team allon National S ittin g Day. Junior Ioane becam e No. 22* Westem States Football League. § | “I ’m very sexycited J p r luiB ,” ASU announced on Thursday- The 6-foot-5, 285-pounder from Snow Snow Junior College head coach Junior College in U tah signed a K eith U p eresa said in a phone letter o f intent to study and play conversation ’iliUTsday afternoon. “It’s a great opportunity for Mm, football. Io an e (p ro n o u n c e d B e-o b - H e ’s alw ay s fe lt g o o d a b o u t WAH-nay) is die third junior col­ Arizona State.” Uperesa said Ioane has the abili­ lege defensive tackle to sign with the Sun Devils this season, joining ty toimmediately be aP ac-lO starlj “He’s an impact player that can Erik Flow ers o f T rinity V alley Junior College in Athens, Texas p lay a n y w h ere in th a t c o n fe r­ and Jawell Samilton of Southwest ence,” he said. “Ability-wise, he’s C o m m u n ity C o lle g e ih L os very explosive. It’s very difficult to stop him.” Angeles. r p n •With his first assist of the night, Lewis moved into second place all-tim e in school history for assists in a single season. Lewis who had 200 com­ ing into the night, now only needs 24 to surpass Marcell Capers who set the mark with 233 in 1995. •A SU w ho w on the e a rlie r m eeting 86-85, recorded their first sweep of the Cougars since the 1991-92 season. ■ •The last time ASU as at or above ,500 in con­ ference play this late in the season was the 1994-95 campaign when they went 12-6. Daniel 5-10 3-5 13, Slotem aker 1-9 0-0 2, Nelson 3-9 3-4 9, Pengelly 1-8 4-5 6, Kazadi 5-8 3-5 14, Hutchens 1-2 0-0 2, Mensah-Bonsu 2-6 2-4 6, Crosby 5-12 0-0 12, Stewart 2-5 0-0 5. Totals 25-69 15-23 68. ■' ■ ' Lazor 2-5 6-9 10, House 5-10 0-0 11, Veal 5-13 8-8 20, Batiste 6-10 2-5 14. Lewis 3-7 2-2 10, Jones 0-0, 0-0 0, DuBois 1 -i 0-0 3, Patton 3-6 0-0 6, Smith 0-01-2 1, Kelly 3-6 1-2 7. Totals 28-58 20-28 82. Halftim e — ASU 34. WSU 30. Fouled out — none. Rebounds — ASU 36 (Batiste 12), WSU 46 (Daniel 12). Assists — ASU 19 (Lewis 10), WSU 14 (Pengelly 7). Three-point goals — ASU 6-16 (Veal, Lewis 2), WSU 3-14 (Crosby 2). Total fouls — ASU 17, WSU 21. Attendance — 6,032. u e N otes from downtown s Beer & Soda Photo Developing Health & Beauty Aids r K EY ST O N E 12 PK . CAN S ■ 34 " E x p ire s 2 - 8 - 9 8 NUNC YOUR I.D.S • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST 609 S. Mill (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 Beer only at College Ave. C00RSLIGHT $ ■ Vs.: $$&j£feekend. Tom Dillon and Bob Eger will provide play-by-play and color commentary respectively. The Sun Devils are coming off a five game sweep of the University of Hawaii-Hilo at Hawaii... Juniors Ryan Mills and Phill Lowery (both 2-0) have been the team’s hottest pitcheis. Mills leads the team in strikeouts with 18. The Sun Devil pitch­ ing staff has a 1.06 ERA and has only allowed eight runs through eight games ... Offensively ASU is lead by outfielders Mikel Moreno and Willie Bloomquist. In 36 at-bats Moreno has IS hits, 12 RBI, a home run and is hitting at a .417 clip, Bloomquist also has 15 hits, 10 RBI and is batting .517 ...The Sun Devils have outscored their oppo­ nents 91-12 through eight games. By Ed O d ev en S p e c ia l t o t h e St a t e P ress «ICEHOUSE vs. (2-0) o r C .J. C all (1-0) 1 p.m. C hris C havez (0-1) W es C raw ford (0-0) C hris G inn (0-0) vs. 2-0) Note: KM VP 860 AM will broaden ASU inks Ioane; No. 22 in class 712 S. College (College & University) 967-4049 S) t io o lA s E x p ire s 2 - 8 - 9 8 BRING YOUR I.D.s • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Expires 2-8-98 37 BRING YOUR LD.s • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST FREE DOUBLES 24 EXPO SU RE COLOR PRINT s399 See store for details Page Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 St a t e P ress 15 N o. 11 Sun D evils look to hand Beavers first loss By R andy J ones St a t e P ress The No. 11 ASU women’s gym nastics team looks to knock No. 14 Oregon State from the ranks o f the unbeaten tonight at the U niversity A ctiv ity C enter. A ction starts at 7:30. The Sun Devils (9-1, 2-1) are coming off a solid performance at Cal, taking first in a quad-meet with a score of 191.575. OSU (4-0, 2-0 Pac-10) is led by current Pac-10 Gymnast o f the Week junior Megan Murphy. The junior won the all-around last week­ end (38.95) in leading the Beavers to an upset victory over then No. 14 Washington. ASU head coach John Spini said the Sun Devils need to continue -— and build upon •— the consistency o f last weeks’ meet in Cal, in which the squad hit 22 of 24 sets. “This is a big m eet for us m entally,” Spini said. “To com e in and overcom e some of the problems we’ve been having with some o f the new skills in the code, the confidence level that the team ’s been on and where they are going.” Oregon State represents the second con­ secutive home match for the Sun Devils who have a new coach, as Tanya Chaplin takes over the reigns in Corvallis. Spini said that’s added incentive for the opponent. “O ur first two hom e meets have been against those guys — some people who really want to knock us off,” he said. “It’s a nice feather in their cap to come in her and knock us off. What we (the coaches) want to do is let our team know that they are coming in undefeated and very motivated.” Sophomore Elizabeth McNabb said ASU will be ready for a fired up OSU squad. “Last year they were pretty good, really clean,” said M cNabh, who has garnered first place on floor in two straight meets. “They were tight gymnasts. They beat us last year. 1 think that if we just work as hard as we do each meet we’ll be there.” V aulting has been, expectedly, a low- scoring event for both squads. The NCAA introduced a new scoring table this season, which devalued many vaults by one-tenth of a point. ASU is currently not ranked among the top 25 on the vault, while OSU is No. 18. Spini said ASU may even start out with a few 10.0 starting values for this meet. “The vaults are going good,” Spini Said. “You m ight see a couple o f 10.0s, you might not. We are looking a Amy Shelton and Carie Courtney. To let loose with their two 10.0s.” One event where the Sun Devils seem to have a decided advantage is on floor exer­ cise. ASU ow ns the No. 7 best average score at 48.667, while the Beavers are not ranked. Chaplin said her floor team, while lack­ ing experience should do fine. “Crowds have come to expect exciting things from Oregon State’s floor team,” she said. “We have been working very hard at finding new and exciting m usic.... We defi­ nitely have a diverse group of routines this year.” The feature attraction o f the night will probably be the balance beam as both teams possess top-flight beam squads. Both have three returning All-Americans on the event, including NCAA Champion Elizabeth Reid for ASU. “1 think with beam and floor we are real­ ly strong,” McNabb said. “I would say they are probably our strongest events, confi­ dence-w ise, but we have confidence in e v e ry e v e n t. I d o n ’t th in k w h ere (th e teams’) are ranked matters. We just have to go out there and do the job as a team.” F rom the floor : •OSU leads the all-time series between the two schools 12-7. • 1997 marked the first time in 11 years that the Beavers did not qualify for the NCAA Championship. •The first 1,000 children in attendance will receive a free poster of the ASU gym­ nastics team. mwmmimm Brad Lang/Stafo Pro«« Senior Carle Courtney and the rest of the No. 11 ASU women’s gymnastics team look to end the winning ways of th e undefeated Oregon State Beavers tonight at the UAC. The meet is sched­ uled to begin at 7:30. New Records On Hellcat The P i e t a s t e r s " L i l l i s * The G a d j i t s "A.t Rase" The © S l a c k e r s " R e d i ig h t " H e p c a t "Right On Time" D r o p k i c k Murphys "Do Or Die" U .3 . Bom bs »7ar B irth " ïto fo n ù S jK § fjk fa ß fo ö 3 je § tk n c m 3 Jackso n I % H o le , order by item number SP2 P h o e n ix F e b ru ary 3 th Chance, to Tin An E x c l u s iv e ^HELLCAT _7EoPA: Z ia , Tem pe, Side Item: Ben & Jerrys Ice Cream • Fresh Salads • Wings! Wings! Hot ■ Mild • BBO Tuecon R ockaw ay« M e sa S t r ic ly Z ip s A n m i I *rr UrEN LATE CD, S e T u sco n SGn • Thurs 11am - 2 am fri-Satiiam-2:30am U n iv e r s it y « T u sco n S a s t s id e T o x ic FREE DELIVER)/ Re c o r d s « P h o e n ix Ranch« T u sco n M A - 1» muta «Mbs 8 1 8 W . Broadw ay Rd . Page 16 State Press Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 A uthor finds joy in dreams o f C asey on the M at The despised Hawkeyes closed their eyes and pondered what was at stake. But the enemy was startled as there went up a muffled roar, Like die beating of a storm wave on the California shore, It was the oth er night, after beginning my preview of Sunday’s ASU-Iowa wrestling showdown, that I was enjoying my nightly reading of Ernest Thayer’s famous “Casey at the Bat” poem. A fter falling asleep into deep REM, I woke up in the middle of the night drenched in a cold sweat. As my hands trembled I grabbed a pen and jotted down this poetic (chaotic?) dream that had awoken me from the land of the sleeping. Without further ado, I bring you “Casey on the M at” When it pounded through “A” mountain and recoiled upon die flat It rumbled through the valley as Casey Strand stepped to the m at From die upper section of the arena there rose a lusty yell, “They’re in the House of Heat now, Sun Devils give ’em hell!” The outlook wasn’t brilliant for Arizona State; It was die Sun Devils vs. the Hawkeyes on February 8. They were ranked second in the country and ASU was fourth best But for 10 years in a row, Iowa had put the Devils’ dreams to rest This year there was hope, however, for the Sun Devils were stacked; So the students filled the seats to “Pack the UAC.” For ASU had Kawamura, Shawn Ford and the mighty Quinn, And the Hawkeyes sat melancholy knowing they couldn’t win. With Brown, “Spider” Blackford and Matt Suter too, Iowa knew it had no hope against this wrecking crew. And the multitude in attendance knew the chance was great For ASU to relive die championship year of 1988. When Aaron Simpson took his seat followed by Joe Micela and Jake, But Iowa was ready and its weaknesses were few, And soon the hated Hawkeyes had taken the lead three matches to two. After “Spider,” with his legs like arms, wrapped up his helpless foe, Suter did the same as Iowa took a fatal trip through half of ‘Murderers’ Row.” With the undefeated Simpson waiting in die wings, The jubilant Sun Devils started sizing up their rings. But before ASU could break its curse, one barrier lied ahead, Iowa had the best 167-pounder in the land prepared to fill the Devils with dread. The Sun Devils did riot despair, however, for their man was no slouch, Arid those Watching at home on FOXAZ started rising from the couch. Back in Tempe the throng was thrilled and not a person sat, A hush came over the crowd as Casey advanced to the m at There was ease in Casey’s manner as he stepped into his place; There was pride in Casey’s bearing and a smile lit Casey’s face. But his smile quickly became a sneer and the Crowd was awed Within minutes of the start, Casey had been taken down, And news of his struggle quickly filled the town. Cries from the crowd came raining down from the seats way up above, “Come on ref, he’s choking Casey. Show our boy some love!” The first period went into the second and the second into the third, With Casey gasping on the mat not a sound was heard. But defiance flashed in Casey’s eye and his face grew stem and cold, his teeth were clenched and his muscles strained as Casey broke the hold. Time was surely running out, and he needed something more. He hit a perfect duck-under and took the Hawkeye to the floor. Coach Smith yelled “let him go!” one more takedown was needed; Casey circled around the mat as the masses begged and pleaded. They yelled ‘Come on Casey, take him down. There’s only 10 seconds left,” Casey knew his time was now as he took orie last deep breath. He shot on the leg and cinched it tight, but the, Hawkeye wouldn’t fall, It looked like Casey’s time was up as his opponent tried to stall. But with all his might, Casey flung the Hawkeye to the mat, When the whistle blew, there was Casey on top and his oppo­ nent lying flat And in Tempe men are laughing and little children shout, But there is no joy in Iowa— Casey has won out. Scott Lewis can be reached at cubie@imap4.asu.edu Mens swimming and diving team wins Iowa C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e . 13. A S U h eav y w e ig h t Jo e M icela, w ho w ill face lO th-ranked W es Hand. “They think we’re a bunch of pretty boys from Arizona. But I think w e’re going to surprise them. Everyone is physically and mental­ ly prepared for this match.” T he h eart o f the Sun D evils lineup lies in the 150-, 158-, 167and 177-weight classes, with fresh­ man Steve B lackford, senior M att S uter, ju n io r C asey S tran d and senior Aaron Simpson, respective­ ly. Against an opponent the caliber, of Iowa, however, victory is never guaranteed. Particularly for Strand, w ho w ill face th e u n d e fe a te d Williams. Simpson’s match against 16thranked Paul Jenn is no walk-over either, but the 1997 All-American is brimming with confidence. “I ’m more than ready, I can’t wait,” said Simpson, undefeated in 16 d u al m eets th is se a so n . “Without Gable, I don’t think Iowa is the team of the past. No one can fill Gable’s shoes.” On Sunday the talking will be by that, No stranger in the crowd could doubt ‘twas Casey on the mat. F r o m St a f f R e p o r t s done on the mat and, with seven nationally ranked wrestlers of their own, the Sun Devils will be look­ ing to make a name for itself in the c o lle g ia te ran k s. W ith a lm o st e v e ry w eig h t c la ss so ev en ly paired, don’t be surprised if the first two matches set the tone for the afternoon. “We go into this with a great deal o f confidence,” Smith said. “ I ’m co n fid en t in o u r physical p re p a ra tio n and o u r te c h n ic a l preparation. W e’ve got good game p lan s dow n. W hen the w h istle blows, we’ll be ready to compete. “W e’re approaching this with the expectation that we are going to do the unexpected.” After 17 dual meets with unde­ sirable results, a victory would be a n y th in g b u t e x p e c te d . W hich doesn’t seem to bother Simpson in the least. “W e’re as good as any, w e’re just the underdog, the dark horse,” Simpson said. “W e’re the team of the fu tu re a n d the fu ture starts now.” T he N o. 13 A SU m e n ’s swimming and diving team won its second-straight dual meet and its fourth overall, defeating the BYU Cougars 227-116 yesterday in Provo, Utah. Freshman Matt Carter set the stan d ard , re c o rd in g a p a ir o f first-place finishes in the 1000 freestyle (9:40.87) and the 500 freestyle (4:38.49). For Carter it was the second time in the last th ree m eets th at he to o k first place in the 500 free. Also posting first-place fin­ ishes for the Sun D evils were ju n io r F ran cisco S anchez (50 No. 4 ASU vs No. 2 Iowa tentative matchups I t s — #11 M ichael Kawamura <18-12) vs #8 Enc Juergens 136 — #10 Shawn Ford (5-3) vs #6 Douo Schwab (17-7) 134 — #13 Quinn Foster (17-6) vs #1Mark Ironside (22-0) 142— Tiacy Brown (20-9) vs #2 Jeff McGinness (22-2) 156 — #5 Steve Blackford (22-3) vs #15 Kasey G illis (7-5) or Jam ie H eidt (14-4) 158 — #5 M att S uter (20-6) vs Gabe McMahan (17-8) or Ben Uker (5-8) 167 — #6 Casey Strand (20-6) vs #1 Joe W illiam s (21-0) 1 7 7 — 42 Aaron Simpson (24-2) vs #16 Paul Jenn (15-7) 18 0— Jake Herman (11-14) vs # 3 Lae FuHhart (19-2) H O T Joe M icela (13-12) vs #10 Wes Hand (17-5) fre e sty le , 2 0 .3 5 ), so p h o m o re Adam W olfenberg ( 200 butter­ fly, 1:54,dS) and senior Craig Hutchison( 100 freestyle, 45.13). The Sun Devils, now 4-4 on the year, travel to Salt Lake City today for a meet against the Utah U tes in hopes o f sw eeping the state. U N C routs Duke, 97-73 CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Antawn Jam ison got North Carolina the lead and Ed Cota made sure it didn’t get away. Jamison scored 23 of his 35 points in the first half as the second-ranked Tar Heels took a 16-point halftime lead and Cota came up big down the stretch when No. 1 Duke closed within four points. North Carolina won the showdown of the nation’s top two teams 97-73 Thursday night, the sixth time in as many appearances it has won a 1 vs. 2 matchup. The Tar Heels (23-1, 9-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) seemed to have things under control as Jamison went 9-of11 from the field in the first half as they opened a 50-34 lead. It was 64-44 with 14:45 to play when Duke (20-2, 9-1) made the run it seemed most of the record crowd of 22,050 at the Smith Center had been anticipating. The Blue Devils went on a 25-9 burst to get within 73-69 with 5:48 left. Sun Devil Club Sports M en ’s L acrosse M en ’s G ymnastics New head coach Albin Haglund, him­ self a member of C ornell's 1976 NCAA C h a m io n sh ip team , w ill lead A S U ’s lacrosse team into action starting Sunday, when they take on the Colorado School of Mines. The game will be held at the ASU Band Field at 11:00 a.m. Haglund said his team will be undergo­ ing a massive youth movement this year, with several underclassm en stepping up and taking over key positions. The team will be in its first year of competing in the W e ste rn D iv isio n L a c ro sse L eag u e Division I, up from Division II. ASU won the WCLL Division II Championship last year. The coach also noted that out o f the team ’s 13-game schedule, seven team s are ranked in the national lacrosse top25 poll. The m en’s gymnastics team will head to Provo, Utah, for its second meet o f the year this weekend to take on BYU. The team, despite the loss of all-arounder Rob Davis to injury at the first meet of the year, the Rocky Mountain Invite, is relatively healthy and ready to pick up its first win of the year. At the Rocky Mountain Invite, the Sun Devils placed seventh out of seven teams but improved by six points over last year’s first meet. M en ’s R ugby The m en’s rugby team split a pair of gam es la s t w eeked a g a in s t U ofA in Tuscon. It) the first contest, the Wildcats pounded the Devils 30-10. However, ASU rebounded in the second game to take a nailbiter, 7-6. Brian Seymour scored the try for the Sun Devils, with Alex Edelstein adding the coversion. ASU also took on national power BYU. The S u n t)ev il’s record currently stands at 1-4. They will try to improve on that fig­ ure F eb. ’13, w hen th ey tra v e l to the Golden State to take on San Diego St. W omen ’s Ice H ockey The She Devils, A SU ’s w om en’s ice hockey team, will hit die rink next year for their first ever gam e. In the m eantim e, however, the team is focusing on recruit­ ing m em bers and holding w orkouts in preparation for next year’s battles. “Given the number of interested players w ho are new to hockey, it only m akes sense to dedicate this semester to building both their skills and confidence. We are investing particular interest in the novice players w ith the intention o f engaging them in game play next fall,” said team captain and club president Suzie Lehman, who previously played for Ohio State’s Elite club team. Open to players o f all levels, the club has particularly geared this season to the development of fundamental hockey skills fo r new p la y e rs. In te rm e d ia te and advanced players will also be challenged by endurance, stick handling and agility training. The She Devils will be coached by pro­ fessional ice hockey player James Khalil. Regular practices will be held starting the week of February 16th. The second infor­ mational meeting will be held during the week of Feb. 9th. For further information, contact Lehman at 451-1901. The State Press Sports Club Sports Box is com piled by D oug Flanagan. H e can be rea ch ed a t 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 o r via e -m a il a t fla n y @imap3. asu.edu. Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement . requesting money be sent or invested, ypu may wish to investigate, the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified •section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation Of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. fite of tke )>»y... http^/www. devsearch.com/ The Web developer's search ANNOUNCEMENTS HEM P Clothing, hats, bags & body. Free catalog! 800-494TB H C www.tribrothers.cpm APARTMENTS 1 MILE from ASU, studio apt. util. in%}d. new paint & tile $550ymb. 731-3909 or 3601626 pager. 1214 E; ORANGE, Marianna Apts, l bd & 'studios, $50 off riiove-in w/ad. 966-8597. 1BD/1BA APT. Very big, nice, 2 mi- from ASU/MCC. No.dep. Take lse. $425/rho. 736^9442 HOMES FOR ~ R E N T__^=== HOUSE* 4BD/2BA with large fenced yard, 1/2 mi west of campus. $l,100/mo. Includes landscape. John 968-5658. APARTMENTS HELP WANTEDGENERAL Maine Co-Ed cam p' HELP WANTEDGENERAL P a g e 17 Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 St a t e P r ess counselors/instructors 6/17-8/23, age 20+. Contact 2807 C Delmar Drive, Columbus, OH 43209, (800}959-3177. See our web-sits www.campwekeeta.com or e-mail ua at ! W eteela1taol.com , HOMES FOR RENT • ■ * ' HOMES FOR RENT HUGE 4BD/3BA home W/D, fridge, DW, new tile, carpet, paint, avail, now. 14th & Pri­ est, ride to ASU: $1300/mo. Very clean. Joe, 922-2715 MESA, NEAR ASU. & MCC. $300/mo. + 1/3 utils, Female pref. Call 430-4723 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT A sse m b le r J o b s-$ 7 .5 0 /h r. F/T & P /T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park MESA 1 bd/lba. Cntry Club/I60. 461 W. Holmes, #131. By owner $34,900.9Í7-7694 ROOM S FOR RENT 1 MI from ASU. Private en­ trance, quiet, cable, laundry, pool, non-smoker. $350/mo. Call Donna of Paul 967-5427.... DUPLEX, 2BD/2BA, A/C, car­ port, off Scottsdale Rd, L5 mi. to ASU. $625/iho. 966-0987. COMFORTABLE HOME in S. Tempe, furnished, kitchen .priv­ ileges, cable;. $325 incl basic utils & many extras, 838-6224 PAP AGO PARK Village I, 2 bdr, 2ba, condò for rent w/d in- , eluded. 736-8111 RENTAL SHARING 4BD/2BA HOME at Southern and. Rural w/ pool and fire­ place, F/Grad student prefi Avail. Feb. 16th, $350/mo -»-utils. C a ll Lisa Marie 6923085, ROOM FOR rent. - Broadway/Rural, $276/mo. Call;7740640 or 598-1573 ‘ HOMES FOR SALE HELP WANTEDGENERAL C a m p u s C hev ro n Now HiRÌNq S k y H arbor Airport Security Heer Contractu) MOVING SALÉ Lots o f SW chairs, dinette, sofa, & tables. In good coud. 3-5 yrs. oldWill negotiate. 860-9246 AUTOMOBILES 1985 DODGE convertible 600 . turbo all power new top & in­ terior $2995 Call 657-8700 89 ACURA Integra, red, 5 spd, c/c, a/c, pw r sunroof* Noy. 98 plates, 2dr, h/b, good cond. $4100 obo. Call 808-0821 89 VW GTI, black, a/c, 5 spd, moon roof, good cond. Call Greg at 967-5145 ; 94 JEEP Wrangler, 38K mi. New tires, bikini top, excellent cond. $10,500 obo. 569-0734 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ATTEND ANTS NEEDED for dntwn Tempe events including ASU & Cardinal games. Must have flex, sched. Starting rate is $5.50 w/ increase potential, de­ pending on performance. Con­ tact Santiago; 921-9920., , BECOME A mobile DJ. Work weekends. We train. Depend; able vehicle. Call 820-8220 95 PLYMOUTH Neon, $8000 Call Kendall at 820-2064 80 HONDA ACCord LX $750, runs, needs work. 894-2150 SEIZED CARS From $ 175;. Porsches, C adil­ lacs, Chevy s:, BMW's, Cor-, vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free 1-800^218900Í) Ext. A -1676; for current listings. BICYCLES TREK 930, mountain bike W/Manitou Pro C suspension fork: $500 obo. Call 858-0508 TRAVEL 1987 PONTIAC Grand AM all power good cond. $2195 Call 657-8700 SPRING BREAK Travel. Call Melinda for the. lowest prices at 820-8016 or 838-5861 88 CONQUEST TSI, white, all Opts, immaculate, garaged, new brakes, tires, adult engineer ownd, runs great, prof, detailed monthly. $5700 obo 832-5372 HELP WONTEDGENERAL 18 vu s o h o ld u í H a ve H / S D i p l o M A / G l D M edia * Publishing N o F i l ò \ i t s i D i< u f| F ree Paid latera tor avants, W t o fffc R : CASHIER F/T Service Cashier wanted for Luxury Automobile Dealership. Tues.-Fri. 8:30am-6:00pm, Sat. 8:00am -1:00pm. Previous au­ tomotive exp; not required. Send resume to Camelback BMW via fax or mail, apply in person or call 274-1000. Fax # 264-8540.' M ailing address 1144 E. Camelback rd. Phx, AZ85Q4Ï r. CLERICAL/DQMESTIC AIDE. Looking for dependable person to work from nice home office in Ahwatukee area. Duties in­ clude light computer & house­ hold tasks, run errands, pick up mail Sc turn op lights, etc. when owners out of town. . Flex. 15-20 hrs./wk. Pis. call Melissa at 955-2424 for more, info. CORPORATE FINANCE Co. seeks dynamic & aggressive indiv. for nat'l acet. mnger (base 4com;) also seek career minded 90 S LIFESTYLE, Do you lead a 90's lifestyle? I'm looking: for . admin, asst,, (salary + bonus) W/ 5 people who want to make a ■emptr, orgnztl & comm, skills, eager ; to, learn, to join; nat'l change. Freedom, finance,' and equip, finance cp. Fax resume lots o f fun. Call now! 699443-8826 ph 443-0002 ext. 16 2278. T l iiio N A s s ìs ia n ì f UiNifoRMS S u p p lir c i / M a ìm a ì n e ò 1 A W A R D S !! WoRldwkk StctR iiy Assoc. 627 S. 4 8 * St. # 105 • Ttupe 966-0141 C u p id n e e d s y o u r h e lp , ASSEMBLER JOBS-$7.50/HR. F/T & P/T lighting & electronic assembly Work at Scottsdale Air Park. Call Teriy: 998-0325 1 W ANTED: marketing. 99-95 flex S t, Phoenix, AZ 95934 W om en a nd m en o ve r 4 0 fo r safe a nd easy visio n testing. , $ 2 0 p e t 1-h r session. C on ta ct ASU W est V ision Research Lab fo r in fo . Fax: 944-4*77 543-6324 hrs/vrk. Lettcr/resnme to DMM/UM, 9*91 S. U tk DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now hiring order takers & drivers. Drivers must have own car & in-' surance. PT/FT. Extra $$. Cali 220-0000 Press relations 8 H i a I iil i / D l m a I B i m ( ils I R A V I R om ancing th e Phone FURNITURE AUTOMOBILES E * p N i l / P aíc I í k a ¡n ¡ \ ( , Y o u m l s i bi. Apply m PffisoN Call Terry: 9 9 8 -0 3 2 5 GOV’T FORECLOSED homes from pennies 'on $1. Delin­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. YoUr area. Toll free 800-218-9000 Ext. H-1676 fof current listings. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL 3 7 O ffice rs Needed . REAL ESTATE FEM. RMTE prefd nonsmok­ ing, athletic, own bd; & ba. W/D $300/moi + phone & util. 1/2 mi. from ASU. Chris';9211178 ' ■.A>'■'. ■ MESA FIXER-UPPER, great terms, 2 bdr/ 1 ba, OWC. Call Chris 774-0700. HELP WANTEDGENERAL W .U .F S 1 )0 » . M/F RMMT, master suite, cable, phone & all utilities, It. smoker. College/Curry. $400/mo. Chris i 774-0700. ROOMMATE TO share 2bd/ 2ba Hayden Square condo. $445/ mo. Call Lauren, 894-6464 819 N. COLLEGE, #1-126, Rural & 202. 2hd w/ loft, 2ba. 1600sq ft., frplce, W/d, bi-level, comm, pool, no pets. 83GL9945 • f T /p r p n M » Alt Shihs TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE DIRECTOR . & Gounseiors wanted for a summer residential gifted/talented program; grds 512 at ASU, 6/22^7/24. Coipp. salary, rewarding work, room & brd, bach, degree req. Center for Academic Precocity 9654757 D o n 't M is s t h i s o p p o r t u n i t y ! C hoose your ow n schedule. S hifts starting as e a rly a s 6am , ending as late as m idnight EMBASSY SUITES P/T, F /T & tem p. No experience needed F irst 20 applicants receive g ift ce rtificates O ne day paid Televersity ™train in g program RESORT nsstnmn Im m ediate, on-the-spot interview s loin the Fiesta Fun! Concierge PT SGOTTSpALE ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, Tu,/and F 8:30 -1 0 :3 0 o r 2-4pm ; R eservations • PT/FT Fun, incom ing calls. No telem arketing 30% em ployee discount * * $7.00/hr. % 1-800-r LOW ERS A pply M onday-Friday, 10-7 in person a t our ce n tra l P hoenix location: 2345 E Thom as Rd. G round Floor (602) 224-4681 * Min age 16/EOE Bring SS Card or Birth C ertificate and picture • Bell Staff FT 2100 S. Priest Tempe Bqt. Set-up •S e rv e rs (S3.50/hr + tips) • B u sse rs (S5/hr + tips) Conference Center Food & Beverage Fiesta Inn I Now open the following Saturdays 9am - 1pm : January 31 February 14 February 28 FT & PT work available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. 2 miles from ASU More info: 804-5285 C la s s ifie d s W O R K ! DISCOVER THE PEO PLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! • Coffee Bar Attendant • Bussers • Front Desk For M ore • Singing Boat Driver • Singing Food Server • Many More Positions Available I n f o r m a t io n C a ll: 991-9670 E x p e rie n c e th e b e n e fits a t th e H y a tt R e g e n c y S co ttsd ale : • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) Plan • Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates A pplications are accepted M on. 9am -Noon and lu e s . 3pm -6pm ; A t the Hum an R esources O ffice 7500 E. D oubletree Ranch Rd. P lease en te r a t the w est end o f the b uilding next to th e loading dock. C ertain positions m ay require testing. H yatt supports, a drug fre e w orkplace. AA/EQ E/M /F/D/V Page 18 Friday, February 6, 1998 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL DIRECTORY INFORMATION operator, 20 wpm, Phx. area knowledge, all shifts. $7/hr. to start, 225-9699. Metro One, 120 N. 44th St. #150. Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $7-12/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054. DRIVER/ HANDYMAN needed part-time, M-F, no nights, flexi­ ble hrs. Musi have clean driv­ ing record. 15 hr/wk. $7.50/Hr. Apply at Inside/Out Show­ rooms 2716 N. 68 St.* Ste. 1000, Scottsdale, 994-1060: FEM ALE TO provide personal care assistance for ASU profes­ sional. Approx. $ 10/Kr. Call 966-5116 for information. FITNESS TRAINERS - Ladies Workout Express- is looking for qualified fitness trainers. To qualify you: need general & basic fitness background, abili­ ty, to design fitness programs for new members, excellent 1on-rl people skills. If you qual­ ify please call, 704" 1433 or fax your resume to 704-1435. Ahwatukee & Chandler locations. Full & part time work. FLOWER DESIGNERS and drivers needed. Feb. 12-14th. Call ^94-3419FUN JOB! Exc pay! $8/hr. p/t. Gymnastics instructor needed for mobile preschool program. Call Tami at 821-4640 ft»-info. FUN PEOPLE GQ/VOGUE New company seeking 5 peo­ ple who want to make a change. Fun, freedom, & finance. Call now: 055-3475 GRAPHIC ARTISTS, Empire Publishing is looking for studr ents w/IBM, Corel & Pagemaker exp. Fax resume to 807-6791 or call Hqman Resources 812- 9057; : GREAT JOBS for students. Ed­ ucational mail order company. PT or FT, 6 mins, from ASU. Cust. service $8/hr., Mac photo shop work $8/hr., AM* after­ noon, PM, shifts available, Call Courtney 438-4400 GYMNASTICS &/OR PE coach. Enthusiastic, fun coach for 3r 12 yr olds. Exp, pref., PT, $7-9/hr 955-7805. GYMNASTICS COACH want­ ed; boys & girls. Must enjoy working wi kids. Need energe­ tic inds. w/positive attitudes. MF, after 3:15 pm. + wlyids. Great pay, flex, hrs, exp. pref. but not nec. 451-1011 R e c e p tio n is t Full-time position needed for past-paced Mail O rder/H ealth-oriented Company locat­ ed in Tempe. Ideal candidate w ill have the ability to answer an eight-line phone sys­ tem, MS Office, adm inistrative filing, inven­ tory m aintenance, tracking and placing orders. Excellent com munication and orga­ nizational skills. Company offers com petitive salary & excellent benefits, Send resume to D epartm ent S311, Administaff, Inc., 19001 Crescent Springs Dr.,. Kingwood, TX 77339 or FAX to 800-750-0389. The Perfect Part Time Position If you love helping others and want something more than just a jo b , we want you! We are seeking students to work with children with developmental disabilities, helping promote community participation, recreational activities and independent living skills. We offer a vari­ ety o f part-time positions in the late afternoon and early evenings, working with children in their own homes. We offer paid training and flexible sched­ ules w ith a pay range from $7.00 $7.50 DOE/EOE. For more information contact Krista at 431 -9511. o ¿»pop oporo ibon bon boriò. Here's a healthy alternative. Excell is a major provider of phone listing information. We give you the opportmity to make extra spending money as a Directory Assistance Operator working in a casual, comfortable environment Enjoy a variety of work schedules. Be rewarded with a competitive salary and outstanding L u ll . benefits. Get the scoop by calling our 00O Job Squad for an immediate interview. -$100 Signing BonusLodAyl 24-hoar job hotline: r v r n i AGENT SERVICES 808-0008 Convenient locations • Mesa • Peoria • Phoenix • Tempe HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL GYMNASTICS INSTRUCT, for mobile prog, must have high energy and a willingness to learn new/ fun ways o f teach­ ing. pt, $7-9/hr.doe. 443-8817 P/T CUSTOMER service. Several P/T CSR' positions avail. Flex hrs. Financial serv­ ices industry. $8 + hr. Call 9987585 ext. 105 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS avail, P/T eves. $6.50+/hr. with raise guarantee. Phone exp. a -K No sales or appt. setting. Call Mark 838-4333, M-F9am-5pm. LIFEGUARD NEEDED during wkday hrs. 25-35 his./wk. Drug testing req'd. Call 952- , • 7222' V> ;-V': P/T CUSTOMER Service Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, eves & wknd 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 LIFEGUARDS/WSI NEEDED City o f Scottsdale is looking for LFjG/WSI for spring/summer. App’s being accepted. Cer­ tification classes for LFGAVSI are avail Call 994-7665. 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. MARKETING ADMIN. Asst. Explore thé world of non-profit association management & mar­ keting. Fast paced & fun. Pt po­ sition, 3 wk. days. Possibility of ft by Mây. Fax resume to Jill at 404-8900 PRODUCTION ASST. Manu­ facturing facility needs reliable PT help. Flex sched. from 73:30. Apply aj,t 510 S. 52nd St. #101 Tempe P/T ADMIN. Analyst for Real Estate finance firm. 30 hrs/wk. $8/hr. Call Debbie at 425-0795 Classifieds WORK! M ANPO W ER o WE HAVE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR • Receptionist & Com puter Skills (a ll shifts) • Word Processors MS W ord& Excel • Data Entry Operators • General O ffice Clerks Excellent pay and benefits. Various 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. Black Canyon Hwy. Find it F A S T in the Classifieds Have the summer of your life at ^prestigious coed sleepaway camp in the beautiful Pocono Mtns of Pennsylvania, 2 1 /2 hours from NYC. We're seeking counselors who can teach all Team & Individual Sports Tennis, gymnastics, Horseback Riding M t Biking Theatre, Tech Theatre, Circus, Magic, Arts &• Crafts Pioneering Climbing Tower, Water Sports Musis Danes Science, or Computers We also seek theatre directors On-cam­ pus interviews on 2/26. Contact Career Services for an appointment and application j fM * FOR U.S. POST February xo & XX USPS inbound call center tern positions available f East Valley location J jp Requires 6 nos. talk/typeexp, Most be Windows literate |m n 4:a 5*week paid training k^Scal and paid Pay $8.39/hr alter training certificate and photo LD. Bilingual + $1.00 more pw Jliifi <#gn up at 3030 N. 3rd St., i t 1' Earl and Central ~*|j| j§h.Abacus Building ^ 3 | One block south of Thomi§ For questions call 407*1441 ^ r l i e l l y S e rv lm :^M aaappBcaattee* St a t e P ress HELP W ANTEDGENERAL PT ÇASHIER PT cashier wanted fo rS c o tt. Lexus. Work afternoons til' 6pm. No exp. nee. Apply in person or mail resume to 6905 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85257, fax resume to 9901351 or call Stephanie Paine 990-7000 $9/HR! PT work/ FT pay. Reps avg'd $50(1 last wk. Great Tempe location. 517-1977, FT/PT available. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL SECRETARY FOR a busy auction gallery on Nantucket Island, Mass. May-Dèc. Rm. & salary (602) 991-4271. VIDEO STORE. Weekend evenings now available. $5.5G/hr. Corner of Scotts. & McKelps. 1 mi. N. of ASU 9895361 . v'' ' .y.;. y • . ; STUDENT WORK Up to $9.40. Flexible sched­ ules around classes. No exp. nee. Great resume builder. Na­ tional scholarship program. Conds. exist. Call 2124)551. RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fiin« outgoing, Tem­ pe. Cindy 496-0255 SWIM INSTRUCTORS for sum­ mer mobile prog. Must have high energy w/ kids 3-Î0 yrs., cpr, & WSI cert. $7-9/hr, doe 443-8817 SCÔTTSDÀLE MORTGAGE Co. looking for energetic, selfmotivated individuals. Flex, hrs. & hourly+comm. 675-7670 VALET PARKING attendants pt/ft. Must be courteous & clean cut. $7-$ 12/hr. American Valet 235-2636 ASU SunDial Fund WANTED: EXPERIENCED ar­ cheologist with a Masters in Air cheology. Position includes en­ vironmental research and writ­ ing environmental documents. Contact D. Douglas at (602) 967-1343. Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 COU RTYARD . »'Atornott Phoenix Airport Courtyard is looking for this position: N o w H ir in g Restaurant Servers $SMt o ST90 p lu s b o n u s fT /rir M ake yo u r h ou rs Please come in to apply C a ll T o d a y P h o e n ix , A Z 85034 2 6 2 1 S. 4 7 th St. 965-6754 (“T he O th e r P lace R e s ta u ra n t” at the Fiesta Inn We are currently seeking individuals fo r the follow ing positions: Come Join the Excitement with the #X Delivery Team for the ASU Area! W ith the addition of hot wings, salads & breadsticks, this Domino’s is one of the top campus stores in the country: HOSTESS/HOST 4:30pm -lO piti FOODSERVERS am or pm BUSSERS pm positions Apply in person at 2100 S. Priest Tempe WE NEED • F /T & P /T P h o n e H e lp , P iz z a M a k e rs , D riv ers • D riv e rs - $ 7 -$ 1 4 /h r. (in clu d in g m ile a g e an d tip s ) • S a fe D rivin g C a s h B o n u ses • V e ry F le x ib le H o u rs (aro u n d y o u r scho o l s c h e d u le ) W e support a drug-free work environm ent. Apply In Person After 11am at: 903 S. Rural Rd. • Tempe Or Call 968-5555 EO E As We Grow, So Do You! Interested in getting in on a fast-track for prom otion, advancem ent a n d success? Stuck in a dead­ e n d job th at's taking y o u no w h ere fast? T hen FACS, the Phoenix area's h o ttest h e w em ployer; w an ts to talk to you! The FA CS.Group, Inc. provides financial, credit a n d adm inistrative services for Federated D epartm ent Stores, Inc. including M acy's, as w ell as o th er com panies. Business-is excellent so w e're looking for d ependable, m otivated, seryice-oriented people to join o u r dynam ic team . In o u r fast-paced environm ent, ad v ancem ent o p portunities a b o u n d - in as little as 120 days, you can m ove u p to a p osition of g reater responsibility a n d rew ard. C U S T O M E R SER V IC E • C O L L E C T IO N S • A U T H O R IZ A T IO N S C E N T R A L ST O R E O P E R A T O R S • EX PR ESS C R E D IT ¡Join the dynam ic team at o u r offices in T em pe and enjoy: • $7.50/hour to start for m ost p o sitio n s * Complete benefits for full-time * Generous discounts on most Macy's purchases ‘ Service & performance awards * Variety of full-time and part-time shifts VFully paid training on phone and CRT online applications • Recreation and social activities A ll o f this plus w ith our casual dress code you can even wear shorts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. M on.-Fri. 8 a.m . - 5 p.m . at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast com er of 52nd Street a n d W est 14th Street b etw een B roadw ay R oad a n d U niversity Drive), For m ore inform ation call: ^ O O O (toll free, 2 4 hours) X “ 0 O O ” ^ S 0 t C*' “ jZ tA d / FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunity fo r ail l Page 19 Friday, February 6,1998 State P ress HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES "BUY THE Hammock." Have enough money P/T to retire in 4 years. I can show you how. $31 investm ent-refundable. Call Ed, evenings, 464-2638 Find it EAST in the Classifieds HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ISPARTY!! 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 1-800-654-3930 24 hrs. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ♦«•S cience, N u rs in g an d P re M ed M a jo rs .« « CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES HELP W ANTEDSALES HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE JOB OPPORTUNITIES 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. , PART-TIME receptionist-Tempe Firm looking for an outgoing person to answer 5 incoming lines, light typing, filing & gen office help. Please contact Glenn Craig @ 929-0282. DON & CHARLIE’S One of the valley’s busiest restaurants is hiring for host/ess. Apply in person 7501 E. Camelback Rd. Scottsdale AFTERSCHOOL Ca r e work­ ers needed for Bethany Chris­ tian School. Guadalupe/Price Rd.3-6pm, 752-8993 MODEL SEARCH! Hot New Magazine is looking for fresh new faces. For more d e ta ils; visit http://members.delphi.com/ adzcentral or e-mail us at cyberpage@usa.net SELL MAGAZINES on the phone. Easy $. Pay is extreme­ ly good. 774-9744 HELP WANTEDC L E R jC A L _ _ IMMED OPENING for data en­ try/ receptionist for a busy Scot­ tsdale tax office. Flexible hrs: starting at $ 12/hr. Call 4189141 for interview. M D S H arris, a le a d e r in th e p harm aceutical ab le fo r m o n ito rin g a c tiv itie s o f stu d y p ar­ d ata. G rea t ex p e rie n c e fo r science, nursing o r p rem ed m ajo rs. A b ility to w o rk a fle x i­ b le sched ule re q u ire d . Please a p p ly at: E3 MDS HARRIS H u m a n R esources 4639 s o u t h 36th Street PHOENIX, AZ 85040 AA/EOE 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 . BASKIN ROBBINS in Old Town Scottsdale heeds reliable cust. service help. 20-30 hrs./wk. 4237 N. Scottsdale Rd. COME JOIN the biggest party in town. Looking for fun, en­ ergetic staff to work in a busy, multi-theme sports complex & night club. We offer flex, work schedules & benefits. Door hosts,, servers, cocktail, bar­ tenders; security, line cooks, FT or PT positions avail. Apply in person @ The A ri­ zona Center @ Players between 2-5, or The Original Sports Bar between 3^-8. te s tin g in d u stry , has o p p o rtu n itie s a v a il­ ticip a n ts an d c o lle c tin g an d d o c u m en tin g HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE ' 9 - IMMEDIATE JOB OPENINGS • Drivers • Laborers • Warehouse Clerks • C ertified Forklift Drivers •Assem blers Various shifts available • Several Phoenix locations « Long and short term assignm ents • Excellent pay and benefits DOOR PERSON Wanted- pt fri & sat. nights. Apply in person at Four Peaks Brewery Compa­ ny 1340 E. 8th St. Suite 104 Tempe 303-9967 HOSTESS POSITIONS (lunch or dinner) for fíne dining res­ taurant. Apply at 3101 Éást Camelback between 2-5pm SPORTS DELI Needs team players w/ right at­ titude. Top wages + incentive. Flexible schedules, no wee­ kends, nights, or holidays. If ready to have fun call 453-0842 HELP W ANTËDCH ILD C A R E $ 6 - 7 .5 0 /H R . Preschool teacher needed, p/t, f/t. No wknds Or nights. Train­ ing avail. Children's Village Learning Center, 949-5552 @ 2339 N. Hayden Rd (N, of Mc­ Dowell) F in d t h e S t a t e . P r e s s ò ri t h e In te r n e t: h t t p : //h e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u / Apply M on-Thurs 8am -11:30am 645 E. M issouri, #260 3151 N . Black Canyon Hwy. HELP W ANTEDG ENERAL HELP W ANTEDG ENERAL OBC needs people to w ork w ith children, adoles­ cents. and young ad ults w ho are D evelopm en­ ta l^ , E m otionally, and B ehaviorally challenged. Stop searching, start at S H O R T O N C A S H m, ? Plasm a M akes a t o t o f Centsl S 1 0 /H R f N e w Donors Earn ( 8 0 For * \ V Your First Two Donations J Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive a $10 BONUS!! • Exciting in-house promotion • Ask us about career opportunities S300 S ign-on B onus Incentives: Tuition R eim bursem ent, Paid Tim e O ff, A dvancem ent P oten tial, 6 M onth R aises, Paid Training, F u ll B enefits Package SuOntitüppfícgnons DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 B ll • 2 great locations bordering M e s a /T e m p e / C h a n d le r • P /T 777-8757 1334 W e lo v e S tu d e n ts!! positions available ^ ^ C € N T E O N • NANNY NEEDED 30-40 hrs/ wk. in 32nd St/Shea area. Reli­ able transp. needed. 945-9559 INTERNSHIPS MUSIC INDUSTRY Intern­ ships: Seeking street marketing reps in Phx who love altera ative/rock music. 10-20hrs./wk. working directly w/ record stores, lifestyle stores, colleges, artists. Call 1-888-733-2687 i W OODSHED eoemfvo Broadway, Suite 1 0 2 E. NANNY MOTHER’S help need­ ed ASAP. Free room in nice Biltmore area apt. & $100/wk. in exchange for assist, w/a beautiful, playful little girl, age 7 who lovés people, life & ice skating. Will be asked to cook healthy suppers, keep things tidy & run errands as needed. Child in school from 8-5 so po­ sition is ideal for a student. Must have own car, love Child­ ren & hâve a cheerful, positive attitude, Exc. refs. & a clean driving record a must. Apt. is centrally located close to 32nd & Camelback. 15 min. to Tem­ pe. Call 553-8049 RESTAURANTS/ BARS M a r k e t in g S e r v ic e s Earn $6.50 - $8.00 pe r H our W orking W ith A dolescents LOOKING FOR p/t child care assists. Varied hrs. 20-30 hrsVwk. Call 838-4271 Kim THERAPIST NEEDED to work with 5-yr-old autistic boy. Will train. Call Tammy 704-1506. Psych & Social W ork Majors Gain Valuable Experience LOOKING FOR babysitter in my Scottsdale home, n/s, own transp. pref. education or nurs­ ing major. J5 + hrs. Call 6570897.9-5 p.m. Tempe 968-6139 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. PERSONALS VALENTINE'S Day roses. $34/dozen - only at 968-6149,8am-7pm till Sat. CHI-O HUFF Daddy — Con­ grats on being initiated. I’m so proud of you! v , Big Sis Nicki X il Amy H-1 can’t wait for you to be initiated! Get excited! v Your Big $is. HEALTH & FITNESS ARE YOU tired of being tired? Do you need a little pep before your early morning classes? For a natural solution, call Cindy' 375-1336. LOSE WEIGHT, gain energy, pay less. All natural products, help depress the appetite. Lose up to 30 lbs. 990-2302 TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING $2.50/PG, $15/RES. Proofed; Laser. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. NearASU. Brian, 967-5987. INSTRUCTION AVAIL. FOR private 6 or 12 string guitar lessons. Over 25 yrs. exp. teaching .& perform­ ing. $10/lesson. Contact 777-0402 1 ] PERSONALS «Oldest narahboftiood bar in 1 Tempe - E s t 1979 • New Times award winner • Cheap Beer & $1 25 Shots • We show all MLB. NBA. College & Suns PPV Free! • Greeks Welcome • 1/2 Your Winy Older FREE Sun & Mon j ! ! ! ! ! ! ! J 8 3 1 -W O O D Baseline &Mill ! L“ ——s s — F U N D R A IS IN G ^ BOOKS F or —j ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Frances Drake F riday, F e b ru a ry 6, 1 9 9 8 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Y ou. exchange, u n p leasan t words with a loved one early in • ’the day. However^, don’t let that color your entire outlook. The two of you soon make up, TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You’ve rolled up your sleeves and pitched in, and the project is com ing along rem arkably well. Guard against overtiring yourself, however. Set a rea^sonable pace. GLWINI (May 21 to June 20) Y ou are p u zzled b y your mate’s behavior. If you’re hon­ est with yourself, you realize how you’ve contributed to his or her insecurity. Try to rectify that. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) While your mind is on upcom­ ing weekend events, pay atten­ tio n to an im p o rtan t w ork assignm ent. If you execute it well, you could wind up with a promotion or a raise. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You demonstrate your value to big w igs. You ca n do so in such a way that it could not be construed as boastful or abra­ sive. M ake the m ost o f your communication skills. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Taking a stand with those in authority does not put you in jeopardy. Instead, you impress the bigw igs w ith your firm beliefs. Later in the day, har­ mony takes precedence. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) U nfortunately, som e energy you expend at work early in the dky is wasted. Later in the day, you are likely to start over. By d a y ’s end, y o u ’re exhausted but satisfied. SCORPIO (Oct; 23 to Nov. 21 > A loved one surpasses you with some out-of-charactef c riti­ cism. Some time; alone leads you to the conclusion that you d eserv e those sharp w ords. P lan a rom an tic evening to make amends. -• . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21)While you’re exchang­ ing social am enities with an acquaintance, avoid a tendency toward nam e-dropping. Who you; know isn’t as important as what you know. C A PR IC O R N (D ec. 22 fo Jan, 19) You feel a bit out of place at a social ou tin g . It strikes you that perhaps you’re getting a bit too old for such antics . Retiring to bed early would be a good idea. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb 18) Travel is in the stars for sin­ gles. Couples find solace in tim e spent together at home. Family life in general is accent­ ed, especially in the evening. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Once again, you’re letting your temper get in the way. Instead of harping on what amounts to ^an insignificant issue, put it aside and tend to tasks at hand. YOU BORN TODAY like to take charge in vyhatever sitúa- ; tion presents itself. You can th in k well on your feet and make wise decisions. Blessed with a creative nature, you are attracted to the culinary arts, as w ell as painting and m usic. You might build a career in the h o sp ita lity in d u stry o r at a museum or a historic site. You áre m oré co m fo rtab le in a small town than a big city . © 1998 Kiiig Features Syndicate Inc. ( 3 L i n e M in im u m ) Deadline is NOON, Wed ' j CJ C heck« _ - I I Ç j QBSElp MMHM B a n k C ard N um ber N am e. N am e o n C ard I H i, A d d re ss 4 1 1 •X* - , ... 0« ffb o n s E xp iratio n D ate * A S U ID # - ... Ju st f ill o u t this form and drop it o ff a t the Classifieds office, basement o f the Matthews Center, before the deadline - NOON, Wed., Feb. 11 Page 20 St a t e P ress Friday, February 6 ,1 9 9 8 Think Fast Work Hard Demand Success 27DAYSTILL As a leader in high-performance, leading-edge digital/analog integrated circuits, Cypress needs fast-thinking, hard working technologists who can compete at the highest levels without flinching from the challenge, Wimpact a variety of markets including data communicatiom, telecommunications, personal computer and military systems worldwide This is your chance to: S ee Us on C am pus: Information Session: February 15, 1998 ▼ MU224 ▼Coconino Room 4:00pm - 6:00pm Interviews: February 16, 1998 ▼Student Services Bldg. Career Services, 3rd Floor Sign up flow at the Career Services Center! Cypress is seeking tiie following candidates: Design Engineers ▼Product Engineers ▼Test Engineers CAD Engineers ▼ Product Marketing Engineers ▼ Applications Engineers m ¡n m For additional information On Cypress and our opportunities, check us.-'out;'k»ww.cypress.eòin.^Or, visit your C u m Planning & Placement Office. ; BALLROOM DANCING WEDNESDAY W WITH THE MERRY MAKERS 5:30- 10:30 PM CYPRESS Equal Opportunity Employer NrtlUpVA f CRAMPED ROOMS y LIN K ED TO I PSYCHOTIC BEHAVIOR O ■St CO sf pi­ co CO 00 00 00 ro o m ■c £ ■Üp -3 '-: ff) Q. cd o> X 0) G & Q. w. O O H— £Q £ •p n. 9 Q ) 82°°32oz. 4-11 PM MONSTER BEERS &L.1. 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