I n s id e W o rld / N House c o n s id e r s ...20 Comic»—. . ................ ...16 . CroMwtwd______ . . . . . ...14 M 'U \V , ; I believe that Prime Minister Begin has been exonets; «ted by history. Credit Begin, who tootothe measure o f Saddam long before the United States realized that Iraq under Saddam is a rogue state. Negotiating with Saddam has not brought solutions in the past, and there seems lit­ tle promise that appeasing him will work in the future. Frank S a cktonisaprtfessorem eritus^lhe School o f Public Affairs and can be reached at frank.sackton@asu.edu via e-mail, . > ! OuQTABLES To me the Presidency and the Vice Presidency were not prizes to be won b u ta duty to be done. — Gerald R. Ford, A Time to Heal, 1979 ü h ' yEPwgjK.- j •— i SSmSamiM gas ■ . % '< '•e. 965-6861 E x p r e s s y o u r o p in io n s o r u s c o o i s to r y L 965-6881 Page 6 S t a t e P r e ss W ednesday, M atch 4 ,1 9 9 8 tX & E P * £ s_ r E v e r y T O F Y O U R h u r s d a y O N M SPM T H E F L IP -S ID E S tate P ress B ooks M a g a z im N ew sp ap G r e e tin g "A G ourm et F east For The Mind" P h o n e 9 6 7 -1 1 1 1 F ax Best if used by 3-4-97. 9 6 7 -1 1 4 5 IN T E M P E C F N T F R .A T U N IV E R S IT Y Ä M IL L - R IG H T N E X T T O C A M P U S A S H J E W IS H S T U D E N T S |J § OÜWMTSOA4ETALEHTU. W EU TRAIN YOU TO TEACH I AND PAY* YOU TO LEARN! | 1; Beginning August 17, stud/ Judaism, Child Devebpment and Educational Methods 2 1 /2 hours a week while teaching your o v 4 3 d o s s in a lcKX3Ì T © ligious s c h o o l. JnteresfëdftjlMimeASU om Jei^cduates, send resume iW uding aOTciemic a n d Jewish background, G R E A T S U M M E R J O B S !!! C a m p C o u n se lo r P o sitio n s a v a ila b le in W estern M a ssa ch u se tts O n C a m p u s In te rv ie w s - T h u r s d a y & F rid a y M a rc h 5th & 6 th - 1 0 am -4 p m - M e m o ria l U n io n M E N : H o h o k a m R o o m #208 W O M E N : H a v a s p u p a in R o o m #208d Counselor positions for talented and energetic students offering top salaries are open NOW for male find female applicants w ho w ould like to be a part of Gamp Mah-Kee-Nac for boys or Cam p Danbee for girls. Excellent Salary, Room, Board & Travel are included along w ith the opportunity to w ork w ith great kids this summer. Specialist needed in: Team Sports: Roller Hockey Baseball Soccer Basketball Tennis & Golf Gymnastics Figure Skating Archery & Riflery Cycling N ature/Pioneering Photography Radio Station Rocketry W oodworking Arte & Crafts Ropes & Climbing Swim Instruction Water Skiing Sailing W indsurfing Kayaking Canoeing Y earbook/N ew spaper Positions ru n June 20th • A ugust 19th, 1998 "N O APPOINTM ENT NECESSARY!!’" ~ C a ll 1-800-7 5 3 -9 1 1 8 (m e n ) o r 1 -8 0 0 -3 9 2 -3 7 5 2 ( w o m e n ) fo r m o r e in fo r m a tio n . C h e c k o u t o u r w e b site: w w w .c a m p m k n .c o m S t a t e P ress Pag[e 7 W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 M entorship program pairs business students w ith industry contacts B y K a r en Y a m a d a S tate P ress v , Business students James Fimbrez and Kim Duncan are taking steps to get the most out of their college experience through a College of Business mentorship program. Students like Fimbrez and Duncan are seeking out profession­ al advice from business leaders like Joseph Losada. a budget ana­ lyst with Blue Cross/Blue Shield, and Joanne Francoeur. a senior administrator with Microchip Technology of Chandler, through the mentorship program. “Clearly die most important principle of our student outreach program is connections,” said Charles Sankey, program coordi­ nator for College o f Business academic access programs. “Connections with a community that includes faculty, staff, busi­ ness leaders aid others interested in helping students get through the business program.” Mentors are recruited by Sankey and Araxi Hovhannessian, an academic adviser in the program, through newspaper announcements and word of mouth. Then, a screening is con­ ducted to match the mentor’s background and experience with $ Sankey added, “For positive pairings, both mentors and mentees are committed and bring energy to the relationship and to the program.” Francoeur, who mentors Duncan, said her primary goal is encouragement T motivate her to not give up; that she will succeed by perse­ vering,” Francouer said. Dimean, a senior who started school in 1980 and will be grad­ uating in June, said Francouer also helps her with her people skills. “A lot of times there are tilings that I know I need to work on,” Duncan said. “Like developing patience. I wear my emo­ tions on my sleeve and she’s helping me to be more professional. “After graduation I’m going to become a mentor myself. There’s a lot of first-generation kids, especially minorities, who are craning through college and don’t know anything about what to expect A lot of times their parents don’t know either- You can get so easily caught up in the system raid become lost in it If f had a mentor when I first came to school, I maybe would not have made the choices and gone the way that I did.” 199/month T h e m the educational goals or areas of interest of the student ‘There are 22 pairs working now,” said Hovhannessian. “We have seven students waiting for a mentor now and 40 or so potential mentors needing screening. “ The mentors are encouraged to make mentoring businessrelated. Resume help, interviewing skills, job search — anything to help students land better jobs or that first job.” Fimbrez, a junior in the pre-business program, said the experi­ ence for him has been outstanding. T t gives education a whole different dimension,” he said. ‘It gives me the opportunity to meet people jn my field, listen to the toms, phrases and the actual language of the business.” Fimbrez and mentor LoSada try to talk to each other at least twice a month. “Joe is arranging for me to come down to his work to shadow him on die job,” Fimbrez said. T just want to absorb everything he knows. I think it’s important that I learn that way.” Hovhannessian said mentors are craning from all parts of die Valley to participate in the program, and possess all sorts of employment backgrounds. a k e o n ly it it w a e a s ie r t o y o u r y w e c o u ld is i f w e d r o v e h o u s e . 1998 Je lta G L When you lease a 1998 Volkswagen, you get a lot more than a car. You also get our 2 ye a r/2 4 ,0 0 0 mile no-charge scheduled maintenance; 24 hour Roadside Assistance; 10 y e a r/100,000 mile limited powertrain warranty*, and tons of extras, like dual airbags, an anti-theft alarm system, keyless remote entry, air conditioning and an Á M /F M stereo cassette player with an 8 speaker sound system. But you have to go to your local Volkswagen dealer to get one. After all, it's not like we're Fuller Brush D f iv O r S W Q iltO C l™ men. www.vw.com or call 1-800-444-8987 $ 1 99 "/ m o n th . 2 4 m o n th le a s e . * $ 1 ,5 4 7 .8 3 required a t lease signing; includes refundable security deposit; excludes tax, title and other options and d e a le r charges. * Lease offered to qualified customer by Volksw agen C red it through participating dealers. Supplies lim ited, must take delivery b y M a rc h 3 1 ,1 9 9 8 . R ate based on $ 1 6 ,4 4 0 .0 0 M SRP fo r a 1 9 9 8 je tta GL w ith 5-speed m anual transmission. Premium Stereo, a ir conditioning and freight. Requires d e a le r contribution w hich could affect, fin al negotiated transaction. Lessee responsible fo r insurance. M a y b e some fin an cial obligations a t lease end. Dealers set actual prices. N o C harg e Scheduled M aintenance fo r 2 years or 2 4 ,0 0 0 miles, w hichever comes first. See d e a le r fo r details. © 1 9 9 8 Volksw agen. Swge Vefcswogen 1515 W , Broadway Mata 833-0001 BiddulphVolkswagen 4611 W . Glendale Ava. Glandolo 9345211 Chapman Volkswagon 6601 L McDowell Road Scottsdale 9497600 Camelback Volkswagen 1499 E. Camelback Road Phoenix 2656600 St a t e P ress W ed n esd a y , M arch 4, 1 9 9 8 Page 8 b ig. big technology. Intelligent test programming environments. High speed digital instruments. Next generation superchips. And more. Teradyne is your source for innovation, quality and leadership in Automatic Test Equipment, complex connection systems and telecom­ munications and software test. Ò ur ability to bring the most exciting products to market started more than 40 years ago with the introduction of the first automatic diode tester. Since then, we've continued to set the standard with products such as the first tester with tester-per-pin archi: tecture, the industry's first million-dollar tester and the world's largest most complex backplane. And all the while continuing our excellence in innovation recognized by the R & D 100 award for the revolutionary tester device docking system: big CUStOmCrS. While we can't possibly name them all, we help today's leading electronics companies deliver their products to a fastevólving market: Whether it’s automotive electronics, cellular phones, PCs, or computer networks, Teradyne is the power behind the products. Wfete a worldwide presence working in partnership with all the big names. big possibilities. To an engineering or business grad, Teradyne represents the opportunity to gain real involvement on real projects from day one. As soon as you join us* you will benefit from an informal culture where creativity and teamwork prevail. W hether your specialty is Software, Hardware, Mechanical, or Application Engineering or Business. Teradyne perfectly suits your background. We have exciting opportunities in all our locations from California to Boston, and even internationally. ; not-so-big name To find out more about Teradyne, sec us on campus Or send your resume to : Teradyne, 4he.,'. Attn: University Relations, 321 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 0211Ô. Ô r e-mail: joan ,oday@teradyne.com An equal opportunity em ployer.. WE'RE C O M IN G TO YOUR CAMPUS S O O N ! See your placement office for details. w w w ..t e r a d y n e . c o m Boston, MA • Nashua, NH • Deerfield, IL • Agoura Hills, CA • San Jose, CA • W alnut Creek, CA • Dublin, Ireland • Kumamoto, Japan Paid Political Advertisement ASU Students; Faculty, and Staff M ................................................ N a m llu t ll M a rc h 6 th ::: ■* C it y H a ll a r t h a T a m p a P u b lic l i b r a r y “ ’“‘T T ----- — J ä > Ä * » * * fo ru voS^ 4pM M o ^ d SeC° n d % *diR urajXfii0^ Friday ocks awayfr _ l H o w e v eT/ PublicL ik *1**0,eirM o t (Weekdavs ? ys) at 3500 “i^ »se i gth b-o r*h .G W»years. » ... ° are^ y' ^ 4* s*° n*e fr»o mt aej of*,e ^s « f*e . Send a message that Proven Leadership will keep Advancing Tempe. T h a n k s f o r y o u r lo y a l s u p p o r t. w Ia s k * * y 0 fo s e rv ic e „ ^y o rN e a a ^ 2074.East Balboa, Tempo, Arizona 85286 • Paid for by Giuliano for Mayor Committee of '98 i Virginia Tinsley and Rudy Campbell, Co-Chairs - Ken Lassen, Treasurer Visit the O nline C am paign at http://w w w .giuliano.org S t a t e P r ess Page .9 W ednesday,M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 ASU-FAA partnership could change construction industry B y C h r is K a h n S t a t e P r e ss A S U ’s Perform ance Based Research Group and the Federal A viation A dm inistration set up ground rules, Tuesday, for a partnership that will bring as much as $1 mil­ lion to the University over the next five years and revolution­ ize the way construction projects are done. The Performance Specifications and Performance Based Procurement System (PBPS), developed at ASU by Dean Kashiwagi, assistant professor at the Del E. Web School of Construction, rates contractors and the systems they provide based on hundreds o f criteria, such as how quickly they do their job and the overall quality. ASU essentially will act like a consultant to institutions like the FAA that have construction jobs to do. PBPS can find the best contractor for the job, Kashiwagi said, depend­ ing on what job is requested. This eliminates a lot of production hours spent doing the same thing, said Manoj Pandei, faculty research associate with Performance Based Research Group. PBPS can do in one month what would normally take six. This technology, which ASU has been developing for six years, will change how engineering is done in the future, Kashiwagi said. Because it’s so quick, PBPS will replace the engineers who do the same thing by conventional means. Thé FAA and ASU originally decided to work together last Deceinber, and FAA representatives came to campus today to discuss how University researchers and FAA offi­ cials will work together in the future. “This is a big adjustment because it's not how research is usually done,” Kashiwagi said. Instead of having a large amount of time to test how PBPS will work, the system will be used directly in industry. “This partnership w ill help the FAA save tim e and money,'' said Michelle Turner, contracting officer for the FAA. Previously, when an airport needed to build new roofs, or a new construction tower, they always gave the cheapest contractor the jo b . But the government has learned that cheapest isn’t always the best option, said Turner, and ASU has technology that would help them maximize quality for the lowest {»ice. Showcase to educate disabled about technological resources B y D a v id W S t a te P ress oodhll ASU’s Disability Resources is presenting a showcase of state-of-the-art learning technolo­ gy for disabled students today at the Matthews Colter lobby. “(The presentation) will have both technolo­ gy available at ASU, or will have technology that exemplifies ours here," said Richard Jones, assistant director of Disability Resources. Jones said the University lacks in some areas of technology available to disabled stu­ dents, particularly the hearing and visually impaired. The technology will be presented by 12 companies from around the Valley from 10 ajn. to 3 p m The program was coordinated by former ASU student David Carey. Carey originally came up with tire idea last year because he said he wanted disabled students to know what was available to them through the University. ‘1 wanted to give students a chance to see some of tiie latest technology that is available that they may not know about,” Carey said. Carey said that it isn’t easy for disabled stu­ dents to find out what kinds of technology they can access in school or in the work force. O v e r 1 ,0 0 0 P h o e n i x C h e c k D a ily A r e a U se d C a rs & F o r O n lin e T r u c k s A r e O n lin e ! S p e c ia ls ! St a t e P ress C rosswords Go ahead ... do them in ink. rC A M P .U S n l C o r n e r -I 7 1 2 S . C o lleg e 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e xt to College S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S . M ill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 across fro m C offee Plantation Everyday Low Price *3.99 SPONSORED BY STUDENT HEALTH/BACCHUS • WHOLESALE ADVOCATING MODERATION (WAM) • SRC • RHA • ICA • ACTIVE COMMUNITY SERVICE PROGRAM • RESIDENTIAL LIFE • GREEK LIFE • CHAC M ARCH 4 & 5 10am - 2pm on HAYDEN LAWN DJ W HAT A GREAT W AY TO BEGIN YO U R SAFE SPRING BREAK! 2 4 exp o su re DOUBLE PRINTS PLEASE JOIN US FOR THESE EVENTS: • FIELD SO BRIETY TESTING • LEARN ABOUT ALCOHOL AND DRUB PREVENTIO N •A L L ABOUT WATER SAFETY • SU RVIVIN G TH E OUTDOO RS • SUN SAFETY • EXER CISING AT YO UR PACE • TRAVEL SAFETY TIPS •R A P E PREVENTIO N • ROLLOVER SIMULATOR • DPS BIKE SAFETY • BOUNCE •A S U INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS • SCUBA GEAR DEMONSTRATION • ALTERNATIVE SPRING BREAK AC TIVITIES C o lo r C -4 1 P ro c e s s B e s t P ric e in T o w n ¡v > WHOLESALERS ADVOCATING MODERATION D ESKN AIED DRIVER PROGRAM n it», ricicli. ÇrrcuJ AJvtfc. *' Vic« £eoi>(«. 1 P aris $237 London $251 Frankfurt $263 Athens $343 f-AN-y AMI 1/7 Rf MASHkfIN RI ¡»IMIIAM .< fAMiV IN) VOI INH 111)1 IAXIS. Ri SIMILI MAS AMY. Council Travel (19$: Council *#n Jnirr uni tonal Kducalioiial f.uhioinr Ask your server how you can be a designated d river > Balboa Cafe • Bandersnatch Brew Pub * Beeloes Cafe & Underground Bar • Calypso • Chili’s Grid & Bar • Crocodile’s • Fat Tuesday • Gibson's • Hooters > Islands • Long Wongs • M ill Avenue Beer Company • Mill Avenue Cue O ub • Mill Landing • Owl’s Nest • The Paradise Tempo Bar & Grill • Ruby Tuesday »Timber Wotl • Uno Pizzeria • The Vine * Z ig g /s s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils sidentiai Life AM • it Health mWm Ê ÊÊasmÊÊÊKmm m i BACCHUS • ASU Greek Life Tempe Police A a J S R C p S ip B l HighProgram' 130 E. University Or., Suite A Tempe (602) 966-3544 HT P a jre lO S t a t e P r e ss W ednesday, M atch 4 ,1 9 9 6 P olice R eport tion at ASU Police. • An em ployee rep o rted th at som eone unlaw fully entered an office at W ilson H all and rem oved a CD ROM and an external drive. • A student was contacted at Palo Verde East, where he had become ill. He was treated at the scene and released without any further treatm ent.' • A student repotted that someone crimi­ nally damaged his vehicle at Area 63. The ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesdayt • A man not associated w ith ASU was arrested for aggravated DUI at Fifth Street and Mill Avenue. He was booked into the Madison Street Jail. • A woman not associated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for displaying a suspended license plate, and for failing to provide proof of financial responsibility at University Drive and Dorsey Lane. The license plate was impounded for destruc­ The Tempe police reported the follow ­ ing incidents Tuesday: • A 27-y ear-o ld m an w as arrested fo r endangerm ent, disorderly conduct and criminal damage. The man jumped into a moving vehicle, then punched and broke the rear window. He preceded to grab the neck of the driver, endangering the pas­ sengers. He also was yelling and scream­ ing, which disturbed people in the area. He sustained minor injuries and was treat­ ed a t T em pe St. L u k es. H e w as th en booked and held to see a judge. Today’s photo radar locations are: • Rural Road, between Rio Salado Rpad and University Drive • University Drive, between Rural Road and McClintock Drive. • W arner Road, between Hardy and Priest drives • R ural Road, betw een B roadw ay Road and Southern Avenue C om piled by S ta te P ress rep o rter Cadonna Peyton New Zealand playwrights sue The Full Monty for plagiarism By John Horn Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A day before Oscar ballots were mailed and two weeks before the video release of The Full Monty, two New Zealand playwrights sued the makers of the English male stripper comedy for plagiarism. Anthony McCarten and Stephen Sinclair said in the fed­ eral lawsuit filed Monday that the movie was “strikingly similar” to their 1987 play Ladies Night. The premise, setting in the economically strapped north of England and seven scenes were drawn from the play, the copyright infringement lawsuit said. Among the scènes lifted is one in w hich the play’s rC A IW PU S-i 1C o r n e r J fledgling strippers are presented with “very fancy Gstrings.” One of the characters in the play is chubby and decides not to participate. “I didn’t see anything in (the movie) that was original,” the playwrights’ attorney, Donald Engel, said Tuesday. Bert Fields, a lawyer for producer 20th Century Fox, said nothing was copied and the makers of The Full Monty saw none of the play ’s 300 England performances. If there are any similarities, they involve ideas beyond the reach of copyright law, he said, “The basic similarity is the general idea of unemployed men becoming male strippers.... There’s been every sort of male stripper show and article that you can ever imagine,” Fields said. The controversy couldn’t have come at a worse time for the low-budget blockbuster that earned four Academy Award nominations. Oscar ballots were mailed Tuesday and winners will be announced March 23. “The timing is very unfortunate,” Fields said. “It’s an underdog picture and it’s a shame to have it hurt by some­ thing like this.” Such law suits rarely succeed: O ne against Steven Spielberg’s Amistad was recently dropped and the makers of Twister were cleared in another. Fields said the Amistad suit hurt its Oscar chances because it was filed just before the movie opened. PEA CE CO 7 1 2 S . C o lleg e 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C ollege S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S . M ill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 A Monday, Tuesday and^ ~a March 2 ,3 a^ h I n f o r m a t i o n B q tq fth A / ■/ ' ' j "4.v across fro m Coffee Plantation : f'/ Everyday Low Price G e ttin g , Çady Mall, Monday-Wednesday) *3,99 Wednesda 3:0' Vi ■ •,.../** ' ja r n M y --j^ ^ h c > w in ^ 4 ^ S t^ Ç ^ lv â n d ” I 1 Memorial Union,*! 2 4 exp o su re DOUBLE PRINTS For more information, call ( 8 0 0 ) 4 2 4 -8 5 8 0 . extension 1 s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils or on ca m pus cal I (602) 965-7994, Ag. (3ldg„ Room 144 C o lo r C -4 1 P ro c e s s B e s t P ric e in T o w n M ANAG EM ENT/SALES TR A IN IN G H ig h B lo o d f w The U N IV E R S ITY O F SA N D IEG O , offers an intensive A B A A pproved post g rad u ate 14 week LA W YER’S A S SISTA N T PR O G RA M . This Program will enable you to put your education to work as a skilled m em ber of the legal team . A representative will be on campus Thursday March 5,1998 11:00 am -1:00 pm Memorial Union - Room 224 ASU i&> University o f& m D ieg p Lawyer’s Assistant Program 5996 Alcali Park San Dlago, CA 92110-9492 (612) 260-4579 The next course. The most im portant course. And A Great Teacher To Boot! A s graduation approaches, you hare some serious choices to make- oVchoices which can detennine which direction your life will take. Make the smart choice by choosing Enterprise to give you the foundation for a suc­ cessful career in business. Our business philosophy has always been centered on providing solid skills training in all areas of business management to eager and motivated college graduates, allowing you to run your branch the way you want to. You see, our business grows if you do, and we realize that your inherent enthusiasm and sensibilities coupled with real life business training can spell true career satisfaction for you. And, a quick career track can mean excellent financial reward. The potential ousts to earn $35*55K within 3 years and more asyou Drogress. As you can probably guess, this is no easy course... it takes hard wont, dedication to task and the foresight to see your goaL If you believe this is the path you’d like to take, schedule an interview through Career Services. We will be conducting interviews on campus all day March 10th. If interested, but unable to inter­ view on the scheduled day, please call Erin Williams at 804-0700.es. 557. mty Op- to participate in a research study involving investigational m edication for the treatm ent o f high b lood pressure. Éligible participants may receive: ■ Free physical ■ Free study medication (602) 804-0700 Ext. 557 (602)954-6811 Currant Address Currant Phone# You m ay b e eligible E n t e r p r i s e ro n fic i An ejnni opportunityemployer For more information, please call: 6 0 2 -8 7 6 -8 0 8 4 ^ClinicalStudies $ ■ " S g s" " * 1 z ° N A 2034 E u t Southern, Suite P Tempe, Arizona 85282 St a t e P ress Page 11 Tuesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 Seco n d slayin g w orries gay rights activists PH O E N IX (A P) —- A second m an has been killed because his assailants believed he w as gay, police say — a fact th at has gay and lesbian activists alarmed. P olice say th at R obert H ernandez, 36, was shot to d e a th in th è p a rk in g lo t o f an a p a rtm e n t com plex Saturday nig h t w hen a teen-ager pulled out a gun and fired, hittin g him in the chest. T h e new s ab o u t th e m o tiv a tio n fo r th e shooting c a m e M o n d a y , j u s t a s n a tio n a l s t a t i s t i c s w e re released show ing a slight increase in the num ber o f g ay-related crim es. T he C om m unity U nited A gainst V iolence found in 1996 th ere w ere 2,445 reported instances in the 14 areas across the country, including Phoenix, that tract such Crimes. T h a t w as a 2 p ercen t rise from 2,339 incidents rep o rted in 1995. H e rn a n d e z ’s d e a th co m es less than tw o m onths after another man was bludgeoned to death in w hat is believed to be an anti-gay attack. T h e b o d y o f T h o m a s M o ffa tt, 7 1 , w as fo u n d sprawling partially out o f his car on Jan. 10. M offatt, w ho had been in an adult bookstore earli­ er in the evening, was thought to have been targeted by an ti-g ay peo p le w ho m o n ito r the co m in g s and goings at such stores. No arrests have been m ade in the case. In the H ernandez slaying, police arrested 15-yearold Arm en Harutiunian, “The suspect believed that M r. H ernandez was a hom osexual and that was the reason for the attack,” said D etective M ike M cCullough. H o w e v e r, M c C u llo u g h sa id , a u th o ritie s d o n ’t know w hether his death and that o f M offatt are related. A ctivists were w orried nonetheless. “I t ’s very scary i f gay m en are b ein g ta rg e te d , especially if gang-bangers are going after them ,” said B ill M c D o n a ld , a b o a rd m e m b e r o f th e A riz o n a Hum an R ights Fund. “T his is the type o f thing that should put the gay and lesbian com m unity on alert.” D ianne Post, an area civil-rights law yer, said she was concerned by the second fatal attack. Post pointed out that an A rizona State U niversity W est pro fesso r had an ti-S em itic and an ti-gay slurs painted on her car, which was parked on cam pus, on Jan. 28. “I ’m not surprised at any o f th is,” P o st said. “ It starts with the voices o f hatred being loud and clear on talk radio. W hen you dem onize groups like gays and lesbians, other people find it OK to do things like this.” _ BROADWAY'S SMASH-HIT March 3 Gammage Auditorium Tickets available at Gammage Box Office and all Dillard's outlets. Groups of 20 or more call (602)965-6678. Charge by phone: 9 6 5 -3 4 3 4 ^ ™ There are Tew guarantees ...we're one of them. You are going to be pleased with your score improvement - whether it is 8, 10 or 15 points we'll work with you for free until the April 1999 MCAT. * ) W i t h o v e r 4 0 0 0 p a g e s oF r e v i e w m a t e r i a l a n d p r a c t i c e p a s ­ STUDENTRUSH» s a g e s , y o u c a n b e s u r e t h a t y o u a r e g e ttin g t h e m o s t e x te n s iv e 50%off Tuesday, Wednesdayaid Thursday night only with a student I.D. at the GammageBoxOffice. a n d c o m p l e t e M CA T m a t e r i a l s o n t h e m a r k e t . O n ly the best instructors teach ou r courses. N o t only d o they have impressive M C AT scores, but they have all passed rigorous h irin g & tra in in g process. Presented by ASU Public Events & PACE Theatrical Group, Inc. AHtickets subjectto conveniencecharges. Dates subjectto changewithout notice. The ASH P r in c e t o n R e v ie w P ublic E vents PHOTOS BY 105GREENFIELD 602/967-1480 ” Grammy-Winning Original W B Cast Recording Available on Q g wsmokeyjowcate.com thu tk w w w .re v ie w .c o fn Hit Pñncek»Irnew is notaffiato! withPrixston Uaiwsiy orITS. •••„. MartiniRanch Bikini Blowout Scottsdale's only all fem ale band 25% - 50% SHIRLEYS TEMPLE a n d m o re o ff J u s tin drinks for ladies til 11pm T im e f o r S p r in g B re a k . THE • J a m a ic a n • M o s s im o • B o d y G lo v e • C a l P ro lin e • B ik in i J o e • C osm o • C o o rs • B u d w e is e r • B ody w ave • B a re A s s e ts ... m a n y adwicks Dr. Funken (JaD RockLo Direct from Las Vegas T he G rea test m o re Bo urbon & B lues W h e re to g e t th e th in g s y o u B â sé r- textbooks • used & new ASU clothing k backpacks art, engineering k school supplies greeting cards and gifts small household appliances 1015 South Rural Road at Lemon 4- Tempe, AZ 85281 4 894-4400 « UMVERsmr Motv-Thur. 730-700 fVi. 7JO&OQ S a t 10*30-5:00 Sun. 12flQ-5flQ • No m atter w here you bought your book», w e ll buy them bade • $2.00 TOP SHELF BOURBONS • $1.00 DOMESTIC DRAFTS (UNTIL 11PM) 7295 E. S te ts o n Dr., S c o tts d a le 970-0500 I S t a t e P r e ss W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 P a g e 12 Taking Tylenol w ith blood th in n er could be dangerous B y B renda C. C oleman A ssociated P ress CHICAGO — People who often take T y le n o l o r any o th e r fo rm o f acetaminophen along with a widely used blood-thinning drug may raise their risk of deadly internal bleeding, researchers say. . The study confirms a hazard that has been known for decades but has been lit­ tle appreciated by patients and even doc­ tors. Frequent doses of acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, increase the blood-thinning effect of warfarin, a drug used to prevent strokes and heart attacks, r e s e a r c h e r s w a rn e d in W e d n e s d a y ’s J o u rn a l o f th e A m e ric a n M e d ic a l Association. “W hile acetam inophen generally is a very safe drug for pain and fever,” peo­ ple on warfarin who take acetaminophen for at least seven days in a row should be closely watched for bleeding, said the study’s lead author, Dr. Elaine Hylek of M assachusetts General Hospital. W arfarin, also known as Coumadin, is taken by m illions of people with a heart condition called atrial fibrillation to pre­ vent the form atio n o f blood clo ts that could cause strokes. It is also taken to prevent clots around replacem ent heart valves and to dissolve clots in the legs or lungs. ... People taking w arfarin often choose acetam inophen for everyday pain relief in the m istaken belief that it will not thin their blood further, the researchers said. Aspirin is known to thin the blood, and b o th a s p ir in an d ib u p ro fe n , a n o th e r w idely used pain reliever, can dam age the stomach lining. W arfarin ’s effects can be altered by many things — illn ess, other m edica­ tions, even certain foods — so treatment involves a delicate balance: Too little b lo o d -th in n in g can cau se a c lo t th at could trav el to the b rain and cause a stroke; too much thinning can lead to deadly internal bleeding. Patients on long-term warfarin treat­ ment usually get a m onthly blood test called an INR, or international norm al­ ized ratio, that measures blood thinness. The researchers surveyed 289 patients w ithin 24 hours after they had gotten IN R te s ts at M a ssa c h u se tts G e n e ra l Hospital during regular outpatient visits. Among the patients, 93 had INRs greater than 6, a level associated with increased bleeding risk. O f the remainder, 196 had INRs in an optimum range o f 2 to 3. Those who took the equivalent of at least fo u r re g u la r-stre n g th (325 m il­ ligram ) acetam inophen tablets per day for seven days or longer had a tenfold increase in the likelihood of an INR of 6 or more. • The risk dropped with lower dosages, and no increased risk of an elevated INR was seen in patients taking six or fewer tablets per week. An expert not involved in the study said it su g g e sts th a t even th o u g h 30 years have passed since the discovery th at acetam inophen boosts the blo o d ­ thinning effect of warfarin, doctors and patients are often unaware o f the dan­ ger. : The expert, Dr. W illiam R. B ell of Jo h n s H o p k in s U n iv e rsity S ch o o l o f Medicine, said if patients must take war­ farin and acetaminophen simultaneously, their blood thinness should be measured once or tw ice a w eek and th e ir IN Rs should not exceed 4.0. From State Press cartoonists BRAINSTORM Serving Arizona Since 19 87 1505 W. University #103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 Phone:(602 )968-8585 Computer System s w w w .c ss-c o m p u te rs.c o m Microsoft Softw are Bundle Free!!! w / a n y o f t h e s e s y s te m s b n ” System < 4 NET™Home Office™ P e n t iu m ® I I w ith MMX™ • Intel 440LX Architecture '■ * .ATX 5-Bay Tower Case • 64 mb RAM, 1.44 FDD • 32X CD M ultim edia Kit • Yam aha 3D • D ual C hannel UDMA • D ual H igh Speed Serial • B i-D irectional Parallel • WD 6.4GB UDMA Hard Drive • D iam ond Fire GLPRO w /8M B II P racsssar MMX™ Technology!!! Intel 44QLX A rchitecture • ATX M id-Tower Case • 32 mb Ram, 1.44 FDD • 4.3 gb UDMA Hard Drive • D ual Enhanced UDM A • D ual H igh Speed Serial • B i-D irectional P arallel * . PCI SVGA Video Adapter • SVGA C olo r M o n ito r • : 24x CD M ultim edia Kit •' l *■ViewSonic 17* SVGA Color Monitor Yam aha 3D W avetoble Sound _ • M icrosoft PS/2 Mouse ln t. Fax/M odem w /Voice •N M B 104 Keyboard NMB 104 Keyboard S t u d e n t D is c o u n t S p e c ià l ü ! • MS W indows 9,5 on CD L w m m m M icrosoft PS/2 Mouse V 5 6 K Internal Fax/M odem MS W indows 9 5 on i CS&S Is the Valley's Premier PC. Network. Sales a n d Service SolutionI Since 1987. CSAS has bum ArUonds linesI network business systems. C om e see our giant showroom a nd tell us how we can serve you. HEWLETT* PACKARD M -F 8 A M -5 :3 0 P M & S a t 1 0 - 3 C all f o r C u sto m PC P ric in g : 968-8585 C h e c k out th is ch e a p d ate: FRO M TH E CR EATO R S CENTRAL OF “F A R Ç O Dan DiMcola, CBS O rd er yours today! A B l a zin g l y O riginal Co m ed i r m " Jo h n G oodm an Is B r il l ia n t !" |lfUL&Mdicr, NBC-TV, CHICAGO » A Terrifically frLD, One-Of-A-Kind, ^Belly Laugh Funny, i Satirical Comedy." There are three ways to reserve your copy: 1. Fax this form to 965-4706 2. Mail this form to Brainstorm Central, c/o State Press, PO Box 871502 Tempe AZ 85287-1502 3. Send an email to cartoonist@asu.edu and include your name, phone and number of copies you desire. W e’ll call you when the book is ready for distribution. acollectionofoldfavorites& newworkby StatePresscartoonists withforewordby order form» BRAINSTORM CENTRAL »order form r — — — *■■*.*■■* — — -■ ■ irto &former , Your name: - ■ : ■ ■ ;■ - ' ~__ _ StatePresscartoonist i Phone: J Mailing address:— --------v M ikeRitter J Number of copies:__x $ 5 = $ _ ___ State P ress I (add $2.95 shippingper copy if you want your I copy(s) mailed to the address above) Questions? Call Jonathan Inge at 965-2292 f □ mall book(s) to above address | a ril pick my book up at the State Press after Spring Break I □ I’ve enclosed a check for payment a bill my credit card I □ Visa a MC Amex Card*: _______ ___ I aspiration data: ■ 250 b o o ks w ill b e a vailab le fo r te le a fter S p rin g Break. a prepayment reserves your copy of this limited edition Is H il a r io u s In A M u s t -S e e J S J P erformance . Daphne Davi«, MOVIES 4r STARS R ich a rd R a y n rr, H A R P E R ’S H A Z A A lp JEFF BRIDGES JO H N GOODM AN JULIANNE M OORE STEVE BUSCEM I| JO H N TURTURRO ML mrüi niff [umiidn« « iiíkik minan iffnas jünsoooinik r uiowsxrjuannuouksievebusqmidavsaumisin mmm m w m w m m I—l"SBBnaEi^ —------- ^TCTE P ress Another great thing brought to you by your daily newspaper! mhhurui jumcuhm asaiwm p. <*> San ■ n u i " in m n iii i jhcden »u w w w .leb o w skI.co m u b See a sp e cia l scre e n in g of T h e B ig Leb ow ski Th u rsday, M arch 5 @ 7:30pm Pick up your com plim entary adm it tw o pass at the State Press in room 47 of Matthews Center. We have 75 passes &. a ton of posters to give awayl Offer good white supplies la st Movie opens Friday, March 6. P age 1 3 Tuesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P r e ss Ma Bell cracks down on phone ‘slamming,’ but not enough to satisfy the FCC s wishes B y D a v i d E . K a l is h A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss NEW YORK — AT&T Corp. on Tuesday came out swinging against the same marketing tactics it’s increasing­ ly accused of: Switching phone customers’ long-distance service without their permission. Blam ing outside sellers of its phone service for the growing “slamming” problem, the nation’s largest long-dis­ tance company said it would curtail its use of independent sales agents, restrict resellers and start a phone hotline to answer customer complaints. But while AT&T touted its “bold new initiatives” as promising to “eradicate slamming,” the company remained opposed to the most important protection federal regulators are considering: Exempting victims from long-distance phone charges made during the period of the unauthorized switch. “We think putting in an incentive for free service will unnecessarily enter another element” into the problem, said Jack McMaster, AT&T’S vice president of consumer mar­ keting. Instead, AT&T favors compensating consumers unknowingly switched for the difference between more expensive and cheaper phone rates. Still, AT&T’s plan won cautious praise from consumer groups for addressing a problem that has grown alarmingly in recent years. Intensified rivalry by carriers for long-dis­ tance customers has spurred aggressive salesmen — often at small, little-known phone companies — to sneakily sw itch m ore and more custom ers. The F ederal Communications Commission recorded 20,000 slamming complaints last year, up from 16,000 in 1996. AT&T has acknowledged that it ha^ received complaints of slamming, but says they are only a small portion of its millions of phone calls each month. Some observers agree that many problems are caused by third-party vendors who resell Service and sometimes misidentify themselves as AT&T. “It’s not usually the big companies that are the problem, it’s the small renegade companies that use the names' of these companies in their marketing,” said Jeffrey Kagan, who owns an industry consulting firm based in Atlanta. In addition to reforming its own practices, AT&T urged the FCC, the nation’s telecommunications regulator, to require an independent third party to verify whenever a cus­ tomer requests a change in service. AT&T also urged the agency to adopt rules that would com pensate carriers whose customers have been slammed and penalize the responsible carriers $1,000 for each slamming incident. El Niño eats California’s strawberries, spoils milk production B y L a r r y G erber A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss SANTA ANA, Calif. — Besides chew­ ing up the California landscape, El Niño has eaten into the strawberry crop and upset the milk industry, leaving more than $8 million worth of cows dead from recent storms. Milk producers in the giant dairy park east o f Los Angeles have lost more than 9,200 cows since Feb. 9, said Bob Feenstra, executive director of the California Milk Producers Council, based in Ontario. “The mud and the water are still standing in the corrals,” Feenstra said Tuesday, a week after the latest storm attributed to El Niño. “The cows continue to get sick and die.” The situation could eventually affect m ilk p rices, ex p erts said. The San Bernardino County dairy preserve is home to about 300,000 cows on 274 dairies, pro­ ducing about a quarter of the state’s milk. “T hey’re tired,” Feenstra said o f the stock. “When they find a place they can lie down in, they won’t get up.” Farmers have hired extra “cow pushers” to herd the cattle in and out of the bam, but the extra cleanup work has cost some farms an entire shift of staff time, he said. Farmers were planning to ship in dirt, almond shells and waste paper to soak up the w ater, but they had to be carefu l because foreign material might increase the risk of infection even more, Feenstra said. “We can only hope and pray for sun,” he said. Forecasters predicted sunny to'partly cloudy skies over most of the state for the next few days. As of Monday, California farm damage amounted to nearly $91 million and count­ ing, according to a Food and Agriculture Department report. S traw b erry g ro w ers on the O xnard plain near Ventura were swamped just at h a rv e st tim e, but m oney dam age was h ard to p in p o in t b e c a u se b e rrie s n o t ruined in the fields can be salvaged for freezing or juicing. FtATURINC LES IZ M O R E I . NEW LOCATION FOR THIS SPECIAL EVENT! CHECK IT OUT! Get 1/2 off your second dinner when you buyone at regular price! B e s t C h in e s e F o o d in T o w n W f c f c lô I S s e a lv A ï w i TAKE-OUT AND FREE DELIVERY ($15 min.) TONIGHT 5-6:30 in th e UNION BAKERY CAFE MEMORIAL UNION Culture & Arts Com mittee 965-MUAB C R E D IT t h e may d e pa r t m e n t st o r e s com pa n y P A R T -T IM E J O B O P P O R T U N IT IE S S tartin g a t $7.50 p er hour • Employee discount at all ROBINSONS-MAY stores • Casual work environment • Flexible schedule • No experience necessary • Shifts begin between the hours of 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. UNIVERSITY ' mJ < C£ ' D. OS SA a •- 8TH ST. ★ .o ■ The May Credit Service Center in Tempe handles inbound calls from our retail sales associates for assistance with customer credit purchases. Apply in person Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. ■ 3p.m. May Credit Service C enter 1615 South S2nd S treet Tempe, AZ We are located at Broadway & 52nd Street across from the Ramada Inn. “A DAM GOOD PLACE TO COME” EOE Page 14 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 Sand, no castle IN THE CORNERSTONE N.E. Corner - Rural & University T h a k s in a K h aiak ew /A sao ciated P re ss CROSSWORD ACROSS B y M ike R obinson A ssociated P ress GENEVA, 111. -“r*. An adm itted child m olester who had him self surgically castrated in hopes o f getting a lighter prison term was sentenced Tuesday to 26 years in prison for molesting two girls. He could have gotten nearly 100 years. Judge Donald Hudson noted that 30-year-old Jeffrey Morse waited “until the gates o f the penitentiary were closing in on him ” before he was castrated. Hudson also said he wanted to keep the threat of a stiff sentence as a deterrent to other child molesters. “I choose not to lose the threat o f a longer sentence and its deterrence because the defendant wants to use his body parts as a bargaining c h ip /’ the judge said. M orse, who pleaded guilty to aggravated crim inal sexual assault and three other charges, could have been sentenced to alm ost 100 years for molesting two girls, ages 8 and 12. Prosecutor Kathy Diamond Karayannis asked for a sentence of 25 to 60 years and called M orse’s castration a ploy to evoke sympathy and get a lighter sentence. “He had control over these victim s,” she said. “Do not let him get control over this court, too.” Defense attorney Paul W harton urged the judge to impose a lighter sentence, possibly even the minimum six-year term, calling Morse “the safest sex offender in the United States today.” “Jeff M orse has made him self as non-dangerous a pedophile as a pedophile can be,” he said. Morse spoke briefly before the sentencing. In a trem­ bling voice, he said be was sorry, “but I can’t go back and undo what I did.” Dr. John M ulhall, a L oyola U n iv ersity M edical C e n te r u r o lo g is t, sa id he w as s k e p tic a l a b o u t European studies showing a drastic drop in recidivism among castrated sex offenders. But did agree that cas­ tration can “dram atically” low er testosterone levels, thereby decreasing sex drive and the rate o f recidi­ vism among offenders. C o m e c h e ck out 1 1ndian prince 2 Earthbound s c re e n in g o f... M AKE A M O VIE!! birds 3 Shark features 4 Flip ingredient 5 Put away the red carpet 6 Made finer 7 Keats work 8 Four-star review 9 * — Drive by Night" 10 Ticked off 14 Snaky swimmer 18 Silenced 19 Tag numbers 20 Go down 21 Fuss 22 Badge metal 24Tacitokay 25 Addition­ ally 2 6 "You there!” 3 0 Depressing experience 31 Workout wear 33 Scoundrel 34End-of- vicP 36 Rough guess 38 Neighbor 39 Sandy hUI 4 0 Invites 42 Small bill 43 Historic time 7 |y . ß h 1 week initials — 3 5 “— ,vidi, 9 10 25 28 I F * 30 40 8 5 12 11 J 14 13 16 IS 17 19 IB 2 0 ' 21 24 22 27 w 30 29 41 36 t " 31 33 32 34 m 37 3S 43 42 44 1 46 46 : DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. W e d . M a rc h 4 th A M C Town & C o u n try 6 The A R IZO N A FILM S O C IE TY presents the T h e a te rs , Revolutionary 2-Day Film School $5.00 * * O n ly T im e In A riz o n a * * M a rc h 7 & 8 , 1 9 9 8 a t S t ic k a r o u n d fo r Q & A w it h E n ro ll! G ra d u a te ! . P rod uce! 3-17 T CRYPTOQUOTE D T X NITN -^ S c o tts d a le C o m m u n ity C o lle g e D ir e c t o r G e o r g e C o c h ra n e ! 1 Allude 6llks 11 Pal, to Pedro 12 The Gem State 13S plkel.ee film 15 Ninny 16 Permit 17 Needle part 18 Wagon pullers 20 Took notice 23 Kitchen girl of song 27 Fix copy 28 Region 29 Shaped (up) 31 Lingerie buy 32 Writer Lessing 34 VCRs connect to them 37 Humorist 38 Nabokov novel 41 Spike Lee film 44 Ludicrous 45 Tree part 46 Bran offering 47 Fills DOWN th e a d v a n c e a n d A c to r R o ry H 3 9 1d 3 N V N 1 N O X 3 9 M 8 A X Oa a 3 N O X ■ 1 1a 3 d n X V S 3 1 n w ! l n 8s V 3 1A j 3 3 31 1 9 N n r H v o T l o 9 1w V Ix lu lo Is M u 3 d 3 H s 3 X V s X N n H J. s n a 3 H by THOMAS JOSEPH Voluntary castration fails to spare sex offender from prison term — 26 years H ic k e n lo o p e r Mon-Wed-Sat: 10-6 Tue-Thur-Fri: 10-8 Sun: 11-5 829-7473 A B u rm e s e b o y h o is ts a b a s k e t o f s a n d o n to h is shoulder at one o f the con­ struction sites in downtown Rangoon, the Burm ese capi­ ta l, S unday. B urm ese c h il­ d re n as you ng as fiv e are c o m m o n ly s e e n h e re as workers helping the parents fe n d in g fo r th e ir fa m ily . They each earn at least 200 kyats ($1) a day. Burma was granted m em bership o f the ASEAN last year. 7 :3 0 P M NEW STORE HOURS! D ire ct! Can Now - ARIZONA FILM SO CIETY; 970-8711 BL Y Y C Z LRB H D ; X H X V FV J 1VLQ1N Z I V X S H X Q V J JV T E I V R H M IV ET X A V. ; S V B AC N I V X H RV . — D T JG NZTLX Yesterday's Cryptoquote: GENIUS IS THE ABILITY TO GO ON WHEN ORDINARY MEN SAY: THE ¡RATTLE d g ^ S T .—ROY SMITH Page IS W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P ress ZPE 0 PLEA In t e n t io n a l m is u s e o f THIS PRODUCT MAY CAUSE SERIOUS INJURY. ivs Home of the Killer" Calzone “KILLER” SPAGHETTI DINNER CALZONES with aalad & garlic bread, 14 oz. soda or draft, & homemade Italian ice S jjj^ fiS B 1^9 I College 894-MAMA ■ Forest FREE 1 block East of Mill Ave. DAYTIME on University CAMPUS _ ,_ _ DELIVERY 1 0 6 E . U n iv e r s it y D r. Myrtle Com ExperienceTheMama'sTndUhn University Dr. NA NEW YORK (AP) — An art dealer who this difficult time,” Lee said, swindled Jack Nicholson and other clients out of mòre than $2 million was sentenced . LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ned Beatty’s Tuesday to two years in prison. wife o f 17 years has filed for divorce, citing U.S. District Judge M ichael Mukasey irreconcilable differences, rejected an appeal fo r leniency, saying Dorothy Beatty is seeking joint custody Todd Michael Volpe was “living high, wide of their two children, ages 14 and 16. and handsome” while he defrauded 16 peoShe said in court papers filed Monday pie between 1991 and 1995. that she separated from the actor Jan. 1. Volpe, 48, was also ordered to pay $1.9 Beatty appeared in Deliverance, Superman million in restitution. II and N etw ork, w hich earn ed him an He pleaded guilty to fraud for selling Oscar nomination for best supporting actor, paintings, sculptures and Other art on behalf of his clients and pocketing the profit. WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A govemNicholson gave Volpe money to buy and m ent co m m issio n T u esday cam e o u t sell art. Volpe adm itted he sold several against Michael Jackson’s plans to build a items without the actor’s knowledge and $500 million amusement park at an old milkept $224,000. itary airport. The commission said offering the airport LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tommy Lee, to Jackson violates “good management.” accused of abusing his wife and baby, is M ayor M arcin Swiecicki said he will upset over a court order to stay away from appeal. City officials say the amusement his kids. park would create jobs and attract tourists. “I love and miss them very much and Poland’s defense and transportation minwant them to know how much this time istries will review the findings of the com­ away from them is killing me,” the Motley mission. Crue drummer said Monday in a statement. Jackson hopes to open the park in midLee, 35, pleaded innocent Friday to 1999. abusing his wife, form er Baywatch star Pamela Anderson Lee, and their infant son, LOS ANGELES (AP) — Frasier pooch Dylan. She filed for divorce Thursday, the Eddie will see life on the other side of the second time in their three-year marriage. tracks in his first movie. Lee won’t contest the divorce, publicist He will appear in Moose on the Loose, Hayley Sumner said. He was ordered to which begins shooting July 1, co-producer stay at least 100 yards from his family and H. M ichael H euser said. No other roles Pamela Lee’s parents. have been cast “I am completely devoted to Dylan and The $4.5 million movie is about a TV Brandon and it is extremely painful and celebrity dog who saves the life of a poor unsettling for me to be cut off from them at dog a id its owner. SIOMmmjmDehveiy ■Mama Knows Best Planning to S treak the MU? Call the S tate P ress photographers at 965-6826. Remember to plan ahead! Comics P age 16 S t a t e P r ess W ed n esd ay, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 T r ia l s & T r ib u l a t io n s RoVv YOU H SEX WITH PROFESSO« SHELLEY!? TRKT CRUSTS H ft& l B y J o n a t h a n In g e DESPITE HCT A6E, SHE HAS THE STAMINA OF A YD0M& MIHX! \ SOD» ROY, I'M LOSING ' ALL RESPECT FOR <■**>! S nacks B y C a r r ie L . B eh r e n s The smallest horse, Little Pumkin, was 14 inches tall and weighed 20 pounds. IfJA f Jo c u l a r P a r a b l e B y D a v id C o u l d 'V ow . i t i t a c i t w o pocTtsPALj C artoons c h i l d i s h AhkoughIk majorityofdiecontentsoftheStott Pressmeof toxyf bk quality, the artoona inthe (faper) mr an embwrassment to ASU. file intended audience aecma to be hnmature teenage«». It it obvious that lione of the cartoonist» for our Unimgky^newRpaperwiBeverbeoomepmfeaMonalcartDongte. Lisa Schaefer Ph.D. student Industrial Engineering Alberto Marquez Ph.D. student Industrial Engineering v o t e - t h e ir c r e d e n t ia l s moke l in e s , iHAU TH eiR AUD (A/E P E V O lt ) Ô F WRITE THR6£ INDUSTRIAL u Let's s e e TKIHP OF I ANY REfEKBsttS TO SENTENCES- O A C IT A T IO N S o p THE G0MIC.S WHICH -W ey C R IT IC I^ I BeTTW eifc - m e s is p u p e e s t e g STUMÑIN&. J H ic - f y e ^ p Z T tiiïe è ..., nm iiiiiini|rjj: take u p ü rrre e EMBREA SV I N6r?? Hey l is a . 60 / 1 Love A h p i t is COMPLETELY I STUDENTS TO Ùbó6 ye*M. THEY MA|ce Hey ALBERTO, it © 0 TOO. w e tz e L lac y ... u m i- eMtiueeeiMer. PllBCRT© FUN»y. / i have N tW ùH Ti T V IO U âtlS A 6out~you.. ■ 'm r 5 o , WHUF I r l * FMSlétÊ THArweiMAy A/eVER é e r SYNDICATED, i r c o q L D % e A ¿ ¡c o p T U M 6 , else we't> A/eveR A&le to AespoNP to ö u A R G sip e w r h a l fw it s ! B a d h a ik u SNACKS B y C a r r ie L . B ehrens George Olesen holds the record for beer keg lifting. He raised a full keg weighing 138 pounds above his head 737 times on May 1, 1994. B y C h a r l e s W esley l//ouR E ÒUST A Z-iPft) ;M THE- a Ó ” IF I KEEP THIS K UP, I ßrtAlfcJEoPT/ ARE S O U O N , b R u e s ! ? l „ BECAUSE I STICL bOM'T UNbER&TANb VOVR. STRIP NO ONE bOES ! AS A /HATTER. OF FACT ÊVER-Y ONE t T"AUC, TD IN THE SCHOO <_ Op BUS INeSS THINICS -yoü SUCX < HAPPINESS IS A OoARm g N U l f r rtlAN, THE BRGQJCRSI u i u . n e \/er - cover , twvt SoN G 7 New Movies this Month on Channel 2 187 • Nothing to Lose Double Team My Best Friend’s Wedding George o f the Jungle Dusk Till Dawn How to be a Player Boys on the Side Addicted to Love Escape From LA And much, much more! Cvi-Uqe vf At Northwestern College of Chiropractic we feel strongly about the quality of education we provide to our 650 students and their preparedness for satisfying careers. As our 3,000 alumni know, we can provide you with an unmatched educational experience featuring: • A well-rounded, rigorous educational program; • Emphasis on clinical, hands-on education and • experience; 11:1 student-to-faculty ratio, individual faculty • attention; Clinical internships four : library to support education and research. For a personal visit or more detailed information, call a Northwestern Admissions cpunselor at 1-800-888-4777 Committed to Clinical Excellence end Preparedness for Professional Success NOItTJLWE S T E RN COLLEGE 2501 IE84th S t OF C H I R 0 P R A Ç T Ï C • Minneapolis, Minnesota 5543! __________ S ports __________ STATE P ress - A c h ie v in g B y J a so n J o seph S t a t e P ress Jerem y HetiVSUte Press P a g e 17 W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 Ever since the youthful age of Eve, success has been inevitable for ASU junior golfer Tui Selvaratnam. Selvaratnam grew up in the wartom island nation of Sri Lanka, but did not let her hostile surroundings affect her love for athletics. She grew up with an interest for swim­ ming, but continued to accompa­ ny her m other, a sem i-pro golfer, on the golf course near­ ly everyday. “When I was five-years old, my swimming coach came up to me and asked, ‘Do you want to continue swim m ing or do you w ant to chase a little white ball on the grass?’” Selvaratnam said. A t that moment Selvaratnam made a decision that not only affected her childhood but affected her future as well. Selvaratnam competed in junior golf tournaments until die age of 11. At 12, she enrolled in the Sri Lanka A m ateur Championships. Not only did she win the tournament, she reserved a spot for her­ self in die Guinness Book o f W orld Records being the youngest person to ever win a national amateur golf tourna­ ment. Success was inevitable. From then On Selvaratnam took part in dozens of tourna­ ments, winning her share of them and gaining the respect she rightfully deserved from her colleagues and the rest of the world. In 1994, Selvaratnam and her father, Siva, came to ASU to tour the campus and to talk to head coach Linda Vollstedt After that t h e in e v it a b l e meeting, Selvaratnam finalized her decision to become a member of the nationally recognized Sun Devil golf program. “H was a great opportunity for me to come here,” Selvaratnam said. “My parents gave me the chance to come all this way and to do die one thing I love to do— play golf.” , Selvaratnam redshirted her feeshmatt year at ASU and said she feels that was a good decision. “Redshirting was probably the best thing I could have done,” she said. “It gave me a chance to become fam iliar with the system and get to know the team.” Selvaratnam’s game has steadily developed throughout her three-year Sun Devil care«'. During last season’s NCAA tournament, Selvaratnam high­ lighted that career with a spectacular final round 67, setting a new course record. "Tui’s strongest performance came at nationals, which is a coach’s dream,” Vollstedt said. “Her hard work and dedication paid off at the right time. Watching her shoot a course-record 67 was the high­ light of die tournament She definitely put us in a position to win NCAAs.” With that performance, Selvaratnam finished the tournament in a tie for seventh-place and guided die Sun Devils to their unprecedented fifth national title in eight years. Later this month, Selvaratnam will be represent­ ing her home country in the Sirickit Cup which will be held in India. Selvaratnam has had some good performances in overseas play. She has placed in the top-four in die last 22 foreign tournaments she has competed in. “It’s an honor for me to represent Sri Lanka,” Selvaratnam said. “I always enjoy playing in Asian tournaments.” Selvaratnam, Sri Lanka’s“ Sports Woman of the Year” in 1990, is majoring in business with certifi­ cates in International Business and Southeast Asian Studies. “I w ant to learn more about the w orld,” Selvaratnam said. ‘Everything is not just domestic.” On and off the golf course, Selvaratnam has had a strong impact on her coaches and teammates. ‘Tui has been such a wonderful influence on me personally,” teammate and roommate Keri Cornelius said “She’s always so positive. If you’re in a bad sit­ uation, you can always count mi her to cheer you up and get you focused again.” Vollstedt added “She’s the type of player every coach wants mi the team. She’s a very hard worker, and her gotf game has improved greatly.” Media makes minor mischief major Man, am I disgraced to be an American. CVeO TT As should every other person ■ V L E W IS out th ere w hose h e a rt bleeds Sports Columnist red, white and blue. Shamed we all are. H H P W At least that’s how the media (not me though) would like everyone to feel after the U.S. hockey frat, following their shocking loss at the Winter Games to eventual gold medal-winners Czech Republic that eliminated them from medal contention, went ballistic and turned their Nagano hotel into Animal House. W ell, in the immortal words o f the rapper Redman, “Whateva man.” O r in the infamous words of legendary basketball slacker Derrick Coleman after then-teammate Kenny Anderson missed practice, “Whoop-de-damn-do.” Was it wrong that members of the U.S, hockey team threw six chairs and a fire extinguisher out a fifth-floor window and caused oyer $3,000 in damage? Sure. Should the guilty parties have come clean arid apolo­ gized for their sophomoric actions? Definitely. But is it really such a big deal? Hell no. A few players got mad, acted like idiots and vented their anger. No excuses, but no one was hurt and somehow we will all go on. U.S. team member and St. Louis Blues’ sniper Brett Hull says that the “cowardly” actions of the unknown cul­ prits has embarrassed the whole team. Now Hull says that he’ll never play in the Olympics again. I say good — with a 5-on-3 advantage in an openinground game against Canada, H ull had five consecutive shots in the slot against Patrick Roy and didn’t touch twine once. Let me tell you Hull, we’ll all miss you. As for the U.S. players not owning up to their actions, it might have to do with “the air down there.” Or, better yet, the air in Phoenix. The New York Post — always the last word in tabloid journalism — reported that the main suspect is none other than captain C oyote, K eith Tkachuck. Fellow Coyote Jeremy Roenick has already been quoted as saying that he broke chairs, but only while playing a card game — mosh poker anyone? It might just be that with the witch hunt already in full swing, that Tkachuck and Roenick are looking to hide their late-night howling at the moon and protect the name of the Phoenix Coyotes. Pure speculation on my part, but considering some of the Tempe bar stories I’ve heard about Tkachuck, and the insanely stupid com m ents o f R oenick, th is scenario wouldn’t surprise me in the least. It’s a shame that one night of frustration has put such a black mark on the U.S. hockey team. Especially after last year’s odds-defying Canada Cup victory over Canada. Which makes you wonder if this would be such a big deal if the U.S. team had won and broken those chairs in celebration? Probably not. Then again, the media is oftentimes an equal opportuni­ ty attacker. Unfortunately, the rules seem to be reminiscent o f Don H enley’s song D irty Laundry. “H it'em w hile they’re up, kick’em when they’re down.” B a rk ley B labbers The funniest comments that came out of the U.S. hock­ ey team’s unsuccessful Winter Games were made by none other than the Houston Rockets’ Charles Barkley. Barkley said that the U.S. team’s performance was “disappointing” and that it was “embarrassing” that the Americans came home without a medal. No Charles, disappointing is when you go to a team that had won two NBA titles in three years and turn it into a second-rate, predictable club. Embarrassing is when you spit on a girl in the stands, like he did a few years back.at the Meadowlands. Barkley may get credit for speaking his mind, but his thoughts are usually moronic. Hey Barkley, I know you ju st quit drinking. W hat’s your excuse for being a jerk now? S co tt L ew is can be cubie@imap4.asu.edu. reached via e-m ail at I n t h e m idst of all her _ fortune, Selvaratnam has had to deal with a pro­ longed injury in both of her knees. Although doctors have recommended that she have surgery to cure what is thought to be tendonitus, Selvaratnam has attempted different alternatives to fix the painful problem. ‘Eack home I tried an herbal treatment program which helped for a while,” Selvaratnam said. “ It’s something I will just have to live with.” The injury has not dampened her will to win. ‘Tui is definitely a leader,” assistant coach Ashley Adleta said “She brings us all together and does it with such high energy.” Concerning her future, Selvaratnam has consid­ ered playing professional golf but also has other plans. T will try to go pro,” she said “That is one of my options. My other possibility is to go to graduate school.” Whichever career field she chooses, Selvaratnam has made it clear and evident of where she wants to live. “Thé situation in my country is not very good right now. We have a civil war occurring currently,” Selvaratnam said. “It’s not very safe so I will try to stay here as long as possible. I really love it here.” So now, day after day on the green grass o f Karsten Golf Course, which the players call ‘home,’ Selvaratnam arid the rest of the reigning NCAA Champions will try to do it all over again — win another national title. “W e can definitely win another title ,” Selvaratnam said. “We want to keep the tradition alive. Therefore, we will strive for excellence.” For Tui Selvaratnam, success is what she has worked for all her life. Success is inevitable. 213 Student-athletes honored at luncheon F r o m S t a ff R e p o r t s ASU recognized 213 of its student-athletes Tuesday at th at annual M aroon and G old S cholar-A thlete Luncheon. Honorees all had GPAs of 3.0 or better in 1997. Twenty-six student athletes had 4.0 GPAs in the fall and 10 have cumulative 4.0 GPAs. The 10 included Jennifer Bennett (biology, basket­ ball), Jennifer Browne (exercise science, swimming), Micha Dappv (pre-business, wrestling), Lukas Forney (pre-business, swimming), Maurice Lee (biology, track and field), Anna Moll (management, tennis), Casey Myers (mathematics, baseball), Leif Poison (biology, wrestling), Natalie Tucker (pre-business, basketball) and Lisa Vineijanovic (zoology, gymnastics). M e n ’s b a s k e t b a l l a w a r d s Forward Bobby Lazor has been named to die 1998 GTE Academ ic A ll-D istrict V III F irst Team. The Norwich, N.Y. native is a business marketing major with a 3.61 GPA. Lazor jo in s W ashington S tate’s Carlos Daniel as the only Pac-10 representatives on the first team. G uard Jerem y V eal has b een se le c te d by the N ational A ssociation o f B ask etb all C oaches and General Motors to the All-District 15 second team. Veal is the all-time leading point producer in school history and currently leads the Pac-10 in scoring, aver­ aging 20.7 points a game. F o o tb a ll lo ses player Mike Barnes, a junior offensive lineman, has quit the football team. The 6-foot-2,285 pounder was'used as a backup right guard for most of his three seasons on the team, starting occasionally. The 1994 graduate of Norco High School in Norco, Calif., had a reputation as a free spirit due to his pierced tongue and long, often died goatee. Barnes was unavailable for comment Page 18 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, M atch 4 ,1 9 9 8 A rgentinean A ce BY C a r l o M S t a t e P r e ss ercaldo Growing up in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the son o f a tennis instructor, ASU’s top ranked player and No. 41 ranked player in college tennis, Gustavo Marcaccio always had a passion for the game. The game, however, has not always been tennis. “M ove soccer,” M arcaccio said. “That’s my passion, even though I really enjoy tennis, soccer is just something com­ pletely different for me.” Marcaccio said he played both sports as a kid, but around age 12 he knew he had to make a commitment to one or the other in order to do excel. Fortunately for tennis fans, Marcaccio decided to hang up the soccer cleats and concentrate on the hard courts. The road to ASU was not a direct path fo r M arcaccio , th o u g h . By age 18, Marcaccio had been playing junior tourna­ ments throughout South America for over 10 years and had achieved an impressive world ranking in juniors. Once again it was decision time. To turn pro or not to turn pro, that was the question. “When I was 18 I had reached position No. 45 in the world for junior tennis which w as re a lly go o d , b u t I had to choose between turning pro or going to college in the United States,” Marcaccio said. U nlike the d ifficu lt soccer decision, which Marcaccio still questions sometimes when he watches his idol Diego Maradona put one in the back of the net, the decision to turn pro or not was a no brainer. “I chose to come to the states and get an J f W y W sis s/Stf P u t Argentinean native Gustavo Marcaccio said coming to ASU “was one of the greatest decisions I’ve made In my Hfe.” education because the rewards you get in the future are just unbelievable,” Marcaccio said. “You get a degree, you will improve your tennis, you get great coaching and so many other things that make it so worth it. “But if you tty to turn pro, and you don’t make it then you can never go back, plus you can alw ays go pro after you get a degree. That way even if you don’t make it in the pro’s you always have something to fall back on.” Marcaccio took a one year pit-stop in Mobile, Ala., on his way to ASU where he played for the University of Mobile, an NAIA School. While there, Marcaccio capi­ talized on his first Chance to compete in col­ lege tennis. He posted a 27-1 singles record, finished first in the 1996 spring conference championships, and led his team to a sec­ ond place finish in the NAIA N ational Championships. Still he wasn’t satisfied. Marcaccio said he enjoyed his experi­ ence in Mobile but his goals Were always to play for a good Division I school and get a good college education. It was tim e to transfer, but where? Once again it was deci­ sion time for Marcaccio. 1 W hile playing ju n io r tennis in South America M arcaccio had becom e friends w ith c u rre n t ASU N o. 2 p lay er A lex Osterrieth, so when it came time to pick a school, Marcaccio called up his old friend. “I taiew Alex was at ASU and when the coach gave me the opportunity to come here I took it and transferred last year, ” Marcaccio said. It d id n ’t take long fo r M arcaccio to become acclimated to the rough waters of big-time Pac-10 tennis. A fter joining the team in the spring of 1997, Marcaccio pro­ ceeded to win five of his first seven singles matches while splitting time at the No. 3 and 4 singles slot. Besides his rock-solid game, the work ethic of Marcaccio can be attributed to his impressive rise to the upper echelon of col­ lege tennis. Marcaccio’s drive can be summed up in one scenario that was played out earlier this season. The team had ju s t dem olished UTEP at home in a 7-0 shutout It was time to celebrate, right? Not for Marcaccio, he and roommate Osterrieth, took to the prac­ tice courts for another two hours after the match, because the UofA match was loom­ ing just two weeks away. "Usually we practice for an hour or two before class in the morning, then I go to class, and then practice again from about 3 to 6 (p.m.) and finally I get home and eat and then study for a couple more hours before I go to sleep,” Marcaccio said. “I think th at’s the toughest p art o f college Sports, try in g to fin d th a t eq u ilib riu m betw een spending enough tim e playing Turn t o Ace, pa g e 19. No. 8 womens tennis sweeps Lions, 9-0 B y Lori H aro State P ress The ASU wom en's tennis team had its match against Loyola Marymount won before the doubles matches even began, beating the Lions 9-0 Tuesday afternoon at the Whiteman Tennis Center. With the win No. 8 ASU improves to 7-1 on the season, while Loyola Marymount drops to 2-6. Freshman Celena McCoury was the last to finish her singles match, but her 6-2, 6-4 win over Milica Cukulic clinched the match win for the Sun Devils. Head coach Sheila Mclnemey went with a line­ up of top-player Reka Cseresnyes, freshman Karin P alm e, ju n io r A lison N ash, Sophomore Kerry Giardino. freshman Celena McCoury and freshman Faye DeVera against the Lions. Since the Sun Devils are such a deep team this year both McCoury and DeVera have seen limited playing time so Mclnemey Was pleased with their play especially. “There is not much difference among any of the kids on the team,” M clnemey said. “It’s difficult because you don’t want to be yanking kids in and out of the lineup, kid’s want to get into a rhythm. It’s a catch-22.” The line-up worked well for ASU as the Sun D evils won each singles match in straight sets. Cseresnyes beat M ara Colaizzi 6-2, 6-1. Palme defeated Laura Gross 6-2, 6-0, while Nash won her match against Lia Bunker 7-5,6-0. “I think just looking at the scores, everybody took care of business,” Cseresnyes said. “After having that Saturday match (ASU’s 5-4 loss to the UofA), I think everybody probably needed that lit­ tle confidence boost, and ju s t get in a good match.” Giardino eased to victory over Amy Labetich 62,6-0 as did DeVera, beating Jacque Haas 6-2,6-0. “Faye is as capable as anyone on this team,” Mclnemey said. “Faye is going to be an integral part of our team down the road if not this year.” ASU also swept the doubles matches as the No. 13 duo of Stephanie Lansdorp and Katy Propstra beat Colaizzi and Gross 8-2. Cseresnyes and Palme also won their match 8-2 over the Lions’ Holly Freudenberg and Bunker. McCoury and DeVera finished the match off for the Sun Devils with their 8-1 defeat over Labetich and Brahna Pastorini. M clnemey said that she was glad to get in a match before the team heads to California Friday to take on both Cal and Stanford this weekend. “We knew this team wasn’t going to be very strong, but it is nice to have the luxury to play a team that you’re definitely better than, it doesn’t happen often,” Mclnemey said. “Our schedule is so brutal so to have a little bit easier match gives everybody a match under the belt before We go up to play probably the two toughest matches we’re going to have all year,” 921-FAST S U M M E R JO B S (3278) 2107 S. RURAL RD. • TEMPE PERSONAL CHECKS OPENLATE 7 DAYS A WEEK! FAST, FREE DELIVERY! GUMBY SOLO ¡ AFFORDÔUBLES LA R G E 14" 1 TOPPING j 2PIZZASW ITH1 TOPPINGEA. *5.99.™* O R 2 FO R *10.99.™* ADDITIONAL TO PPIN G S *1.00 EACH PE R PIZZA J MEDIUM 12” 9.99 ¡ LARGE 14* 11.99 ¡ XLARGE16” 13.99 «MASSIVE 20” 16.99 I TAXNOTINCLUDED J e re m y W@iss/Stat@ P r o s Junior AHaon Nash won her singles natch 7-5, 6-0 Tuesday to help lead ASU cruse past Loyola Marymount 9-0. FEMALE AND MALE COUNSELORS NEEDED FOR TOP CHILDREN’S CAMP IN MAINE. e-mail the sports editor beavis@asu.edu Top salary, room /board/laundry, clothing and travel allow ance included. M ust have skill in one o r m ore o f the follow ing activities: archery, arts & crafts (ceramics, stained glass, jew elry), athletic trainer, basketball, canoeing, kayaking, dance (tap, points and jazz), dram a, field hockey, golf, gym nastics (instructors and qual­ ified spotters), horseback riding/English hunt seat, lacrosse, photography, videographer, piano accom panist, pioneering/cam p craft, ropes (challenge course, 25 stations), sailing, soccer, softball, tennis, theatre technicians, track and field, vol­ leyball, w aterskiing (slalom, trick, barefoot, jum ping), W.S.I /S w im instructors, windsurfing. Also opportunities fo r kitchen, cooks, m aintenance, nurses, and sec­ retaries. Camp Vega for Girls! Visit our website at www.campvega.com or e-mail us at jobs@campvega.com. CALL 1-800-838-VEGA or W RITE: Camp Vega fo r Girts, P.0, Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332 COME SEE US! We will be on your campus Thursday, April 2nd Memorial Union, Lapez Room #223 Interviews and Information from 10a.m .,- 4p.m. No appointment necessary. Page 19 W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P r ess A ce_ C ontinued fr o m pace 18. without forgetting about the school work.” Even with his hectic schedule and almost non-existent free time, Marcaccio said he relishes his decision to come to ASU. “Coming to ASU and being able to be with this team was one of the greatest decisions I’ve made in my life,” Marcaccio said. “Every day I realize how glad I am to be in week, that will not ruin our season. We are undefeated at home and we are undefeated in doubles, we just have to keep our focus and try to reach our goal of making it to the NCAA Championships at the end of the season.” Marcaccio and the rest of the ASU men’s tennis team are presently on hiatus, but will return to action on March 13, when they host Pac-10 foe UCLA. this whole situation, my teammates, the coaches, every­ thing is just amazing.” On the season Marcaccio has a singles record of 17-7, and the Sun Devils as team have a record of 4-4, 0-3 Pac10, and Marcaccio is pleased with the way they are playing. “We are having a Very good season,” Marcaccio said. “Even though we were upset with the loss to UofA last S un D evil Basketball S tatistics W o m en 's In d iv id u a l S tats M en 's In d iv id u a l Stats Name ' 6 FG-A /■O ' -, Pet FT-A Pet Rb-Avg Pts-Avg Name G FG-A Pet FT-A Pet Rb-Avg Pts-Avg Jeremy Veal Bobby Lazor Mike Batiste Eddie House Ahlon Lewis Jason Patton Urit Kelly Ron Dubois D'Angelo Jones Derek Smith 29 29 29 29 29 26 28 13 8 10 220-486 186-324 186-330 129-296 67-172 61-126 54-104 5-10 1-7 2-8 45.3 57.6 56.4 43.6 39.0 48.4 51.9 50.0 14.3 25.0 110-139 117-146 70-111 21-27 57-67 23-33 30-45 4-4 0-2 3-4 79.1 80.1 63.1 77.8 85.2 69.7 66.7 100.0 00.0 75.0 125-4.3 230-7.9 230-7.9 86-3.0 109-3,8 64-2.5 92-3.3 4-0.3 3-0.4 8-0.8 601-20.7 503-17.3 452-15.6 329-11.3 208-7.2 153-5.9 138-4.9 18-1.4 3-0.4 7-0.7 Stephanie Freeman Rachel Holt Michelle Tom Kisha White Leaf Newman Kristine Sand Rameeka Lowe Rechelle Lang Kellie McDanal Spring Steed 24 25 19 25 25 25 24 16 24 23 108-264 102-199 47-111 81-169 57-167 66-167 51-148 25-69 8-28 10-42 40.9 51.3 42.3 47.9 34.1 39.5 34.5 36.2 28.6 23.8 86-120 64-96 42-60 46-63 41-57 34-51 38-54 26-34 13-13 7-9 77.0 66.7 70.0 73.0 71.9 66.7 72.2 76.5 100.0 77.8 106-4.4 124-5.0 52-2.7 107-4.3 79-3.2 81-3.2 90-3.8 40-2.5 26-1.1 17-0.7 342-14.3 268-10.8 153-8.1 208-8.3 177-7.1 187-7.5 152-6.3 79-4.9 29-1.2 30-1.3 Team 29 934-1913 48 jB 441-587 75.1 1070-36.1• 2465-85.0 Team 25 577-1424 40J5 409-581 70.4 881-35.2 1676-67.C O pponents 29 8984004 44.8 401-599 66.9 1201-41.4i . 2379-82.0 Opponents 25 676-1453 46 .5 350-529 66 .2 959-38.4 11 80 -73J aSEBwaSwanB V , ;O O v O'- tTvX/ ■•••¡¡|||¡g| GOLD MASTERCARD V A L 1 E Y B R O A D W A Y S E R I E S February 3 - March 29 ASU’s Memorial Union _ _ _ WEB SITE DEVELOPER & WEB MASTER Public Events . 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C o lleg e 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e xt to College S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S . M ill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 across fro m Coffee Plantation Everyday Low Price *3,99 2 4 ex p o s u re DOUBLE PRINTS s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils C o lo r C -4 1 P ro c e s s B e s t P ric e in T o w n Classifieds Wednesday, March 4, 1998 Page 20 N otice to o ur readers: Before responding to any advertisement , requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer, The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... Mark Twain was barn an the slay i n 1835 when Haley's Camal cama inte view. Ha died an the next day that it cana inte view, in 1910. ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS FROM STATE Press Cartoon-. ists. BRA IN STO RM C E N ­ TRA L. A c o llectio n Of old & new w ork by State Press c a r­ toonist w ith foreword by Trib­ une & form er State Press c a r­ to o n ist M ike R itter. O rder yOurs today. Only $51 This Unir ited ed itio n w ill go fast. C all Jonathan Inge at 965-2292 for info, o r see th e d isp lay ad in today’s State Press. ’MARY KAY model search, free entry, grand prize trip to H ol­ lywood, Call Lori 668-9069 W A NTED C O U N TRY m u si­ cians to record dem o CD. 5-7 yrs. exp. Kurt 535-9278 APARTM ENTS~ TEM PE: 2BR apt, a/c, co v ’d parking, completely remodeled, small complex close to dwntwn & campus. $500/mo. 804-0537 Get a date. Get a lunch! HELP W A N TED GENERAL Find it FAST'm the C lassifieds ANNOUNCEMENTS DON A CHARLIE’S, One of the v alley 's b u siest re stau ran ts is h irin g for host/ess; c o ck tail serv ers A food serv ers. Exp. req'd. for servers. Apply in per­ son at 7501 E. Cam elback Rd. Scottsdale H U G E 4B D /3B A hom e W /D , frid g e, DW , new tile , c arp et, paint, avail, now . 14th A P ri­ e st, rid e to A SU. $1300/m o. Very clean. Joe, 922-2715 W ALK TO ASU : 2bd lb a $700; 3bd 2ba $900; 4bd 2ba $1050; 4bd 2ba w / pool $1400; Sum m er A fall rentals avail, also 894-0288 How simple is that? See Thursday’s State Press for details. HO M ES FOR RENT TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT A SU - C O N D O S av ail, now. Q uesta V ida 3bd/3ba, $1050; 2bd/2ba, $740; U niv. R anch 3bd/2ba, $925, a ll appls. in ­ cluding w/d. Joel 967-6205 or Greg 755-0299 P A P A p O PA R K V illage I, 2 sto ry , 3 b d /2 b a , 1444 sq.ft, w/d, 1200/mo. Call 496-8939 T h is s h o u ld b e y o u r a d C a ll 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP W A N TED GENERAL HELP W A N TED GENERAL BRAND OPENING DONOR EGGS NEEDED At Rural & University H ealthy wom en (ages 21-32, a ll ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonym ously to help in fe rtile couples Raise $ 5 00 in one week. St a t e P ress APARTMENTS achieve pregnancy. M ust have health insurance, ?-10 clin ic visits and injections involved. Fundraising opportunities available. No financial Accepted donors com pensated $2,000. obligation. Great for clubs. For m ore inform ation ca ll (602) 860-4792 For more information call (888) 51-A PLUS ext. 51 GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS Have Fun * H u > A h m ie w x * Summer m New England M/F, 21 + share th w/2 F. Mstr bd r, c o v 'd prkg, W D , pool. $375 +1/3 u til. A v ail, now . C all Amy 955-7558 day, 7551688 eve. Rancho Las Palmas Hockey, Golf, Swimming, S ailing, Mountain Biking, Backpacking, Canocmc, Coaching, and UN’s Etc. Located in the Mountains of Massachusetts just %.% from NYC/Boston. Competitive salaries * room and board. Internships are available. Call Camp Gretlock for Bots (Soo) S4X-SZI4 or Camp Romaca for Girls (8 oo) 779*970. • Student Living • 1 & 2 Bedrooms Call 965-6735 HELP W A N TED GENERAL • G re a t A m en ities O ’ Z a c s o n ’ CORPORATION HELP W A N TED GENERAL ***Sdence, Nursing and PreM ed Majors*** CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES NEEDED MDS Harris, a leader In the pharmaceutical test­ ing industry, has opportunities available for monitoring activities of study participants and collecting find documenting data. Great experi­ ence for sdence, nursing or premed majors. We currently have early morning, afternoon, and evening shifts available on both weekdays and weekends. Please apply at: ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS BALLYARD BREWERY BE P A R T O F TH E CURE S3 MDS Harris N o w H ir in g Servers Kitchen Staff Cashiers M erchandisers Hum an R e s o u r c e s 4 6 3 9 S ou th 3 6 th S tr eet P h o e n ix , a z 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE We are looking for fun, energetic people to be part of baseball history! L u xu ry G uest R anch now hirin g fo r su m m e r season! S ervers, ch ild re n ’s c o u n s e lo rs , c u lin a ry s tu d e n ts , fin e d in in g w a it s ta ff, lin e c o o k s , w in e s te w a rd , la w n & o u ts id e m a in te ­ nance, exp e rie n ce d w ra n g le rs only, fly fis h e rm a n , h ik in g g u id e s , b a r ­ te n d e r s , a n d m o re . C o - o p s a rid in te r n s h ip s a v a ila b le . R o o m a n d board plus w ages. Come be a part of the team in our 20,000 square foot restaurant located 20 yards from BANK ONE BALLPARK S e nd/fax resum e, picture requested (b u t n o t r e q u ire d ) to W IT ’ S E N D G U E S T R A N C H , 4 2 0 7 N . 1 9 th A v e n u e , P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 1 5 . F ax (602) 234-0298. Call to schedule im m ediate interview Less than 1 Mile from ASU GOV’T FORECLO SED hom es from p e n n ie s on $1. D e lin ­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. T o ll free 800-218-9000 Ext. JJ-1676 for current listings. Your ad should be here! RESIDENTIAL SUMMER CAMPS SEER STAFF W HU SOlIVtOUAL AND TEAM SPORTS1 B M O A U , BASKETBALL, TENNIS, SOCCER, INLINE REAL ESTATE RENTAL S H A R IN G 4 6 2 -3 8 0 0 1249 E. Spence, Tempe 8 2 9 -9 6 0 7 Zacson, a global leader in th e telesale/ teleservices industry represents Fortune 500 clients in th e telecom m unications and financial services arenas. SP,** 11 VftHKLW 128spaelSNStesttesharein rara. W indow .D oor.Benincludedi!!!Linoleum floors.Flourescem lights. lati/ kitelandow nball. M f/18Fliibts dow nInm eldy basem ent. Guy. alm ostretro.|| foram aletnee,endIbtJefforsen Com m ons.Spacious1,2,3,4Urei, fare. W /0.M icro,Peci, Fitness.V 888-361-4348 HELP W A N TED GENERAL HELP W A N TED GENERAL N ew T im eta b le? ...W o rK P /T and Be Flexible Trying to organize your new sch ed u le and b old ■ dow n a job? Focus M a rk e t R esearch has openings for students w h o lik e to work with p eop le and enjoy talking on the phone. There a re NO SALES - w e «re gathering consum er’s opinions. W e o ffer tra in in g and a fle x ib le sc h e d u le . L ooks great o n a resum e. Date eatpry, ev en in g reception , clerical p osition s also a v a ite fc t* .. - ¡ 3 Cell D ee at 874-2714 W e have im m ediate openings for telesales representatives for th ese shifts: SH O R T ON GASH? P la s m a M a k e s a L o t o f Ç e iits l I New Donors Earn $ 8 0 For Your First Two Donations I • Haven't been here in 90 days? 7am - 3:30pm 12:30pm - 9:30pm 5pm - 9:30pm • 7am - noon • 1pm - 9:30pm • 4pm - 9pm O ur fully au tom ated and professional environm ent provides: Return and receive a $10 BONUS!! • Exciting in-house promotion • Ask us about career opportunities • P/T positions available EO E :M FVD 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 1.02 • Tempe $ 11/h o u r average with $8.50 base • Full & part-tim e positions available • Paid training • M edical/dental/vision after 9 0 days • $ 5 0 Referral bonuses • Paid vacatlons/holidays • $ 5 0 sign-up bonus after 9 0 days • Training d a sse s begin ev eiy w eek Call 470-2064 for m ore information or apply directly a t our facility for an on-the-spot interview. 3601 E. University, Ste. 100A Phoenix, AZ 85034 Œ N T 6 0 N 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 EMBASSY SUITES RESORT . stcrrrsoSy ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, Tu, and F 8:30 -10:30 or 2-4pm N o w op en th e fo llo w in g S a tu rd ays I 9am - 1pm : February 28 March 14 March 28 Set-up Supervisor • Servers ($3.50/hr + Ups) • Bussen (S5/hr+ tips) • Bqt. Set-up PM • Houeepetson PM •B q t. FT & PT work available EOE Please apply w ith Hum an R esources, 5001 N. S cottsdale Rd. S cottsdale Em bassy S uites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. I HELP WANTED* GENERAL IxccBeirt M i n y r n f Experience Great pay - $8-10/hr, HELP WANTEDGENERAL MISCELLANEOUS FORSA Warehouse Specialists BROTHER STYLEW RITER word processor, top o f the line, graphic capabilities, brand new, $225 obo. C all 678-5814 day, 730-9721 eve. AssemblySpecialists, Order Fillers, ShippingSpecialists, Receiving, ForkLift Operators, needed. Join our industry-lead­ ing North AmericanDistribution Teamat our newScottsdale Airpark facility. Ourquality products requireyour TLC. $7.50* dependant on experience Full benefit package. Fast-paced environment. Mon-Fri daytime hours. Apply; 7845E. Paradise Lane, ScottsdaleAZ951-2675 20-30 hrs/wk. Growing building m rintainance com pany n eed s outgoing, energetic people for m anagem ent training program. Telephone and autom obile req. E Phoenix, M esa and Tempe areas. 995*4491 IMMEDIATE AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS ClamaIfit»da 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL COMPUTERS A U T O M O B IL E TRAVEL COMPAQ COMPUTER moni­ to r A keyboard. F irst $400 takes iL Cal! for details. Ask for Jerry. 730-5005 96 FO RD M ustang 5spd a/c c ass p/s p/b alloy w heel tint $6988 Brown & Brown Nissan Mesa 461-4300 SPRING BREAK R osarito Beach from $49-$219. For more info, call i -888-PIC ANTI 1-888-742-2684 AUTOMOgJUSS^j ’91 HONDA CRX Blue, am/fin cass., Air, 93 k mi, tint, $6000 obo. 868-0466 pgr. 91 GALLANT G reat drive A cond. loaded 4dr 5spd a/c am/fm stereo cass. white w/ blk trim $4500 obo. 381-8830 93 GEO Storm 5spd a/c cass p/s p/b great gas saver $5995 Brown A Brown N issan Mesa 461-4300 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to ta lk to p e o p le an d work w here you are appreci­ ated? The O range Tree Golf Resort is th e place to be! DATA ENTRY J o in our G REAT STUDENT car. Red Ford M ustang convert, black top, 1994, V-6, all pwr, cruise control, 59K mi. Perfect cpnd. Asking $11,200 418-7772 SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, C a d il­ lacs, C hevys? BM W ’s, C or­ vettes. A lso Jeeps, 4W D ’s. Your area. Toll free 1-800-2189000 Ext. A -1676 fo r current listings. Classifieds WORKI HELP WANTEDGENERAL iNDUtTRT- LEADiNG N orth A m d u c a n Du n n u n o N t u n a t o u > new S c o ttsd a le A ik pak k • Eve. H rs/Scottsdale Location f a c iu t t . • N o E xp. N ecessary loin the Fiesta Fun! AND FILING. $8/H R GUARANTEED +BGNUSES UP TO $1000/W K N ight H ouseperson C o m preh ensive renkfit fa c r a g e . F a st -pa c e d env ir o n m en t . D ay tim e Mo n -F r i h ou rs . snyHarOorAirport Security New Contrattili 2 0 te n o r s Heeded Fsstnmn D u t ie s m e u m INVOICING, ENTERING INVENTOaT TRANSACTIONS • Big $$$$$$$$$ M ol\|. \ l < ’ ill ex t 216 Bea S co ttsd ale , A Z PT (Leave m essag e for sam e d a y interview ) 951-2675 Reservation A gent Banquet Servers Cocktail Servers Cooks I & II Dishwashers Food Servers Men's LR Attendant Receptionist Snack Bar Attendant Mi \ iilii C oncierge 1 \iljM M S !Si p p l i i i l / M ì ì m v i\ 1IÍA V I l $ 8 -$ 1 0 /h r P/t appt. setter for E. Phx. Ins. Agency. M-Thurs.,v4-8pm A oc­ casional Sat. C all M ike or Linda at 952-2707. AWARENESS New Phoenix Co. seeks 12 peo­ ple w/ environmental awareness to fill office. Great income/flex. hrs. Call now 955-3475 W onM wkk Security Assoc. 627 S 48flrnliiy* liu\ employe?; MARKETING MAJOR wanted for internship w/pay. Agressive Scottsdale business. C ontact John at 990-7676. ACME Bar A Grill. Female pref. FRATERNITIES SORORITIES AND G .D .I.'S! W an t to work ou td o o rs for th e W orld Series C h am ps (albeit o f 1912). Pay Tribute to Harry b y p ou rin g th e beer h e loved! $ 7 per h ou r and w e'll ev en lo a n y o u a shirt & hat! FOOD TEAM, INC. W e Pay a lo t & . Staff Fun Stuff! 1438 W . Broadway Ste 2 6 0 f W e're right d o w n th e street! 968-9200 The United Auto Group- West has an immediate opening for a P /T maintenance person for our Scottsdale Lexus facility. Candidate must be available evenings and weekends. For information, please contact Kelly D. Davis at 675-0015 or kelliKlavis@sunauto.com Here, life’s a game & work’s a ball with the Arizona Diamondbacks! * Health Insuranee • Vacation * Tuition reimbursement LOCAL TEMPE Manf seeks re­ tail clerk FT/PT morns, or aftms fo r its Factory O utlet Store. Easy work, friendly casual en­ viron. C lose to ASU. $7-8/hr. guaran. Can earn more w/ bdnus. Call Brad, 967-2678 Find it FA S T in the C lassifieds JO IN OUR INDUSTRY LEAD­ TECHNICAL INFORMATION. C o m p r e h e n s iv e b e n e f it PACKAGE. FAST PACED ‘ Cooks and Hosts/Hostesses bring in your paystub mid wr‘ll match it or brat it! IMAX THEATRES, Tem pe A Scottsdale are currently hiring theatre floor staff. All avails, needed. A pply in person at 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd. or call 949-3100 X 201 fo r info. Come join our team! SCOTTSDALE CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST N ow in Scottsdale, AZ Call (602) 954-5238 Now Hiring: Servers • Bartenders * Bussers * Dishwashers Cooks * Hosts/Hostesses* DEUVERY- $2Q/HR. avg. De­ liv er applications locally, No exp. 1-800-373-3696 e x t 6732 ING NORTH A m e r ic a n D is t r ib u t io n T e a m a t ^ 804-5285 QUALITY PRODUCTS' REQUIRE YOUR TLC. D u t ie s in c l u d e Nothin’! Im-uI- a »iiiiiiii» i iiiiiliiiialion i|iiitc like iii'linii-|>urkrH in Itit-Do y flex. hrs., close to ASU, Call Brad, 967-2678 2 m iles from ASU The American School for International T our Directing (13 Day C ourse) CIGAR STÖRE clerk, P/T, no exp nec, must work thru Sum­ mer vacation, clean cut, outgo­ ing, like smoke, $6.50/hr. 8409080 AZ PEDAL Cab Co. needs rid­ ers fo r local sports gam es & Spring Training in Scottsdale. FT or PT. Call 955-8569. CASE MANAGER J HELP WANTEDGENERAL BSW or equiv. Interview ing/ assessment skills, record keep­ ing- 20 hrs/wk. $11.54 hr. B i­ lin g u al helpful. Send resum eto: Tempe Salvation Army, P.6. Box 627, Teinpe, AZ 85281 or call 967-8649 2100 S. Priest Tempe T ravel a ro u n d th e w orld fo r fre e & g et p a id fo r IUI AW ARDS 9664141 F ie s ta In n W h a t a r e y o u d o in g a f te r g ra d u a tio n ? D i s i t ! H i m liis It !fJÜ Assisi \ m i PT M anagem ent O pportunities Available A pplications accepted Mon-Fri, 9-2, 660 W. Fairway Dr., Mesa AZ. W est off C ountry Club, n o rth of Brown Road. Call 964-1797 for directions. W e prom ote a drug free work environm ent- Drug testing is required. EOE II/S D ip lo m / ( . 11) N o I I I ONUS / D i t t i, I mi HELP WANTEDGENERAL \\ i o l i i ic 784 $ E . P a r a d m e L a n e , Our new clubhouse is about to open and the follow ing positions are available FT, FT. The follow ­ ing enthusiastic,energetic people needed for all shifts: I* t ill III \ÍV Í\¡ ( Voi MISI 1)1 1f i \ Its (III (ill It A pfl t i 874-8613 M ESA C O U NTRY CLUB \ Page21 W ednesday, M atch 4 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P r e ss United States Postal Service Ü Kelly Services Have Immediate PT Positions for Customer Service Call Center. Must commit to 5-wk training class. M-F, I2p-6p, $7 39/hr. • Customer Service Exp. • Type 30 Wpm • Windows Literate S h ifts a fte r tr a in in g vary tro m 4*8 h r s/d a y . M ust w o r k b tw n n p - i z a , in c l S at Ü S u n . $ 8 .3 9 /h r . S h ift d ifferen tia l U b ilin g u a l (s p ) , add $. V acation , H olid ay ( i M edical a fte r tr a in in g . E ast V alley lo c a tio n • 53rd U W ash in gton . Call S h a w n a at 407-1441 Kelly S ervices N ev er an a p p lica n t fe e • EOE We are à Drug Free Organization PHLEBOTOMISES G re at part-tim e o p p o rtu n ities MDS Harris, an international leader in the pharmaceu­ tical testin g industry, se e k s p h leb otom ists to draw blood sam ples from study participants and to process sam p les. W e require previou s p h leb otom y ex p eri­ en ce. W e currently h ave early m orning, afternoon, arid ev en in g shifts available. Num ber o f hours will vary based on staffing n eed s. Com petitive w a g es for skilled Phlebotomists. Please apply at: BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E S3 MDS Harris 4 6 3 9 SO U TH 36TH STR EET AZ 85040 AA/EOE P h o e n ix , W ednesday. M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 Page 22 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T JOB, $10/hr. "human sign" Sat. & Sun. 7-4. Transportation needed. C all Adam for more info. 968-5514, leave message MARKETING REP. for the State P ress ad dept. Seeking creative student with excellent communication skills & a flair for details. In this po­ sition you will work on mhvie promotions, contests & market­ ing projects for the State Press, from start to fin ish . M ust be Mac lite ra te & com fortable using Q uark & MS O ffice. Looking for 20 hrs/wk; can fit hours around your schedule. $5 5 0/hr. To apply cal 1 Jackie Eldridge today, 956-6555. R EAL ESTA TE? $ 8 -$ l0 /h r. N eed car and charism a. C a ll Marty. John Hall & Associates, * 844-5900. RETAIL A rizona's Jr. apparel leader is now hiring a store m anager in Fiesta Mall. We offer exc. train­ ing, promotability & fun atmos. C all K athryn at Red Eye for immed. interview. 833-9207 M ECH AN ICA L TECH ft/p t, some m echanical.exp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU. Flex, hrs. Call 956-8200, days SECRETARY FOR a busy auc­ tion gallery on N antucket Is­ land, M ass. M ay-Dec. Rm. & salary (602) 991-4271. SELL ADVERTISING fo r the State Press & pave the road to an excellent future! (Talk about a resum e b u ild er!) H ours are flexible. Pay is excellent. Work is intense. Must have a car. In­ terested? Pick up an application at the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center.. Do it today! Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 „ M ODELS - SEEK IN G ASU'S cutest girls for video/internet. No pom. $500+/day. 706-7761 MONEY HUNGRY? Tired o f being at the bottom of the food chain? Need 2 m oti­ v ated in d iv id u als. C all 4915136,4-5pm. Start today! HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPORTS MINDED VOGUE Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emplymt. $8 guar. to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon fo r interview btwn 2-4pm, ?21-8282 New co. seeking 5 people who Want to make a change. Fun» freedom, & finance. C all now 955-3460 STUDENT WORK Up to $9.40. Flexible sched­ ules around classes. No exp. nec. Great resume builder. Na­ tional scholarship program . Conds, exist Cajl 212-0551. SUMMER JOBS & internships at resorts. W rite or e-m ail for free brochure. NIS 711 Signal M tn. Rd. Ste 155. C hatta­ nooga, TN 37405 N ISjobs@aol.com TELEMARKETERS $10/HR.Great bonuses. Fun room.- Am A pm. 2020 S. Mill 266-7549 TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights & w eekends, fun job, 947-6562.2013 N. Scottsdale Rd. WANTED STUDENT Therapist. Will train. Work w/ a 5 yr. old autistic child. Work in a dis­ crete tria l training program . S7.50-9.00/hr. 706-0860 YOUNG GUNS $36,000 New co. expanding locally seeks career minded individ who loves fun & $. Train­ ing provided. Call 667-6330 F in d th e T O D A Y s e c tio n o n p ag e 2 , o r o n th e In te rn e t a t http://news.vp8a. asu.edu/ HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE FEMALE SALES person need­ ed at upscale men's store to sell hot new women's sports w ear line. Exp. req. call at 954-7005 Biltmore FP. A 14-YR-OLD co. needs people fo r data e n try & c allin g our cust. Excel e x p . a +. G reat S, 10 min from ASU, nice envi­ ronm ent, flex. hrs. M -F C all Steve at Coriterstoné 244-8720. BUSY DELI counter help. O ff University. P/T, M-F 1 lam-5pm and 4pm-8pm. A lso Sat. 7amlpm. Call 967-14U PERSON TO Person Marketing, hot telem arketing! Sales asso­ ciates ¿needed. $9/hr. + d a ily bonuses. Day, eye & wknd hrs. Call 753-1771 or 362-8299 . TELEPHONE SALES, setting appts. for sales rep. for w ater purification units. Working for m ajor co. M ake up to $250/w k., 4 hrs./day. C all Jerry at 829-9255. Aqua Chill HELP WANTEDGENERAL D O PERA TO RS ' P a rt T im e Volt, in partnership w ith Bank O ne, is seeking PART TIME DATA ENTRY OPERATORS for th e Bankcard center in Tempe. M ust have 8 0 0 0 KSH or type 35 WPM. Evening and w eekend hours. Pay is $8.50. CALL IMMEDIATELY!!!!! iv o t ty fl^K JO D A N D PR IZES ‘ Thursday. M uck S, 1998 t-6pm :| t^hoppbcitntmuuffloutanAppBcaUooavl .V ’ i' 49*9 E. Ih d M flr, ho m ih lr, AZ B IB -»«W AdnMatnUve AModate TtaMgMt S tiv a r H w itf ; H w t D—fc M a n s a r fvrrtrr.iT ith irr ï| | | | CIA S hop As m s Unan) liar ftltm tlm l ^ ijMHwie R fe eP M » » Front D ull A yut lin e C ook ' , y ' N lgbt C leaner ' Volt Services Group 7 3 0 -1 8 0 8 N m illM ta t W w ie fle ik . * : ■orna ia R tc a S a m c Sm * ! 1 w •*$£ HELP WANTEDGENERAL NEW RESORT RESERVATION CENTER CoonHiWi Tour»/ nfonvallon« J u ic e Bar M anager *t^’"JQB FAIR Find it F X S T in the C lassifieds • Available in the Student Recreation Complex is looking for a o u b l e T ret P/T O FFICE help w anted. Morii. & afternoons 20-25 hrs/ wk. Good phònè skins.& basic com puter know ledge a +. A pply in person @ 3100 S. Rural, Suite #1 Immediately * SurfCity-USA 1 ^ Poscula. R e s o rt 2 0 DATA ENTRY T em pe HELP WANTEDGENERAL S t a t e P ress • Responsible for general store operation • 40-45 hrs/week • Salary DOE and education • Strong customer service skills are essential along with athe ability to manage a staff ofl5 employees. Please contact our corporate office: (602) 921-1616 Fax:(602)921-1621 • G uarantee hourly/ $15.62 avg. • 37 Perm anent Positions • 10-2 or 5:30-9:30 (24-30«- Hrs) • Training Provided, No Setting EUmn 491-4921 C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ’ Ahwatukee Foothills YMCA to looking for the fol­ lowing Spring and Summer positions: Swim Instructor» Lifeguards, Summer Dag Camp Counaekne and Preschool Enrichment Teachers and/fostnictors. Pag rates- $5.67-$7/hr. Applications can ha picked up at 3233 £ Chandler Blvd. V or call 759-6762. Medical Assistant Great Part-time opportunity! MDS Harris, an International leader In the pharmaceu­ tical testing industry, Is seek ing a m e d ic a l assistant. Performs and oversees procedures necessary to screen study participants during pre-study ev en ts to ensure e a c h p a rticip a n t m e e t s t h e re q u ir e m e n ts o f th e u p com in g study. Phlebotom y ex p erien ce required. Education in a health-related field preferred. Must be available t o work early m orning hours. Num ber o f hours wifi vary based on staffing n eed s. W e offer a com petitive hourly rate. If Interested, p lease apply at: BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E S3 M DS Harris hu m an R e s o u r c e s - j -MA 4 6 3 9 s o u t h 36 t h S t r e e t P h o en ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE f * I M 02T9S 3-4945 lob botane ft Do you like great benefits paid vacations luifiui S p rin g B re ak F ev er Do You Need Extra $$$? 1 Drug-free, EOE/AA, Se habla «spaftoi. Im m ediate O penings in O utbound Telesales The Aftermarket C om pany is n ow hiring for our O utbound Telesales departments. Return calls to current custom ers o n behalf o f the client. MDS Harris, an international leader in the phar­ maceutical testing Industry, is looking for a Marketing Intern to help promote our clinical tri­ als on the AStl campus. The successful candi­ date will be an enthusiastic find creative Individ­ ual currently In pursuit of a marketing degree. Please apply for this excellent opportunity at: Flexible afternoon and evening schedules great for students! Shifts available to fit your school schedule. ♦ Paid Training * Full & Part Time BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E * Weekly Paychecks * Benefits for FAT ft No Cold Calling ■ * Generous ★ Weekend Shifts Avail. Commissions S3 MDS Harris C all 4 7 0 -2 5 0 0 AFTERMark ET Marketing Internship Opportunity Aftermarket is located near 40th St, between University & Broadway H u m a n r e s o u r c e s - J -M 4 6 3 9 S o u th 3 6 th S treet p h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /E O E Nightime As W e Grow, So Do You! flit.) ¡oh tluil s Liking vou i Hip, hit.. pro\ k irs tinanei. ithvr m m piñiifs Iíiisíiu'sn C U ST O M E R SER V IC E • C O L L E C T IO N S • A l I liO K I/ A I IO N S C EN TR A L STO RE O PERA TORS • EXPRESS C R E P U FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES • $8.25-S8.50/hour to start for m o s t p o s itio n s C o m p le te b e n e fi ts fo r f u l l - t i m e G en erous d isco u n ts on most Maev's purchases Service &. p e rfo rm ance awar ds • V a rie t y o f f u l l - t i m e and po rt -t im e s h ift s • F u l ly paid tr a i n i n g on phon e and C R T o n li n e a p plicati on s • Recreation and social activities »2nd Street, (northeast i o rn er of -»2nd Street an d West 1 888 284-3227 - - Daytime You Pick the Right Time! (Mon-Sat between 7am L 9:30pm) AM or PM, WE CAN CREATE A Shift Around Your School Schedule. 'O n-the-job training-Paid • Resumer builder ' Improve communication skills 'W eekly checks • State-of-the-art facilities 'Casual atmosphere CALL TODAY or APPLY TODAY Mon-Fri,9am-5:30pm 345-8317 209 L Baseline. Bldg. E-IQ3 After hrs/wknds: 1-800-883-6123, ext. 7903 > Page 23 W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P r e ss HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE CORK’NCLEAVER RED ROBIN A ccepting apps. fo r lunch host(ess) A lunch'food server. W ill train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability A person­ a lity a re im p o rtan t. A pply in person M -F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th S t 952-0585. Tempe has immediate openings for experienced waitstaff, bar­ tenders A cooks. Have fun A m ake good m oney. A pply today at 1375 W. Elliot TMm m h o u ld b o y o u r m d • C m ll 9 9 5 -6 7 3 5 Classifieds WORK! RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELPWANTEDFOOD SERVICE RUTH'S CHRIS Steak H ouse now hiring friendly, e ffic ie n t exp. hostess p /t, eves. $7/hr. Apply in person daily 2-4pm. 2201 E. C am elback Road (IS min. from ASU) ZORRO’S FRESH biirrito grill. CASHIER p/t days + cvs. avail. Exp. a plus. C om petitive pay. Apply at SE corner o f McClin­ tock A G uadalupe btw .' F ry's and Pet Co. 2-5 p.m HELP WANTEDO H I^_O A R |___ ____________ $6-7.50/ HR. Preschool teacher or van driver, Pt/ft, training avail. Children's V illage Learning Center, 9495552 J U L Y 'S IM //.A ¿V P A M A Where ASU Goes for Pizza 12" PIZZA 16” PIZZA w /1 Topping w/ 1 Topping & 1 doz. wings $13.99 JOB o p p o R ¡y N m ¡s_ RESTAURANTS/ BARS CHILD CARE, Loving care giv­ er, my home. Sat. 9:30am 5:30pm for 2 children, 3 yrs. & 6 mos. O nly serious attention giver need apply. 730-6358 STUDENT FILM this summer! A ctors/actresses needed. Audi­ tions 3/1 A 3/8! H urry! C on­ tact: DAndei6774@aol.com MADISON'S IN Scottsdale Now hiring cocktail waitresses, host­ esses, door/security staff. Great pay. A pply in person between 2-6pm daily. 7108 E. Stetson Dr. CHILDCARE: PREFER early childhood education major and exp. $6.00/hr. T,Th 2:30-6 p.m. Call 814-8660 THIS SUMMER, take care of 2 yr. tw ins A 4 yr. old. 30-40 hrs/w k G ood pay, ow n trans. CPR A FA cert. Exp. pref. 32nd St./Shea. Lauren/Steve 788-6838 JOB oppoRTUMT|g_ CLUB MED A C ruise ships now hiring. Free details. 800436-3242 RESTAURANTS/ BARS SERVICES & 1 doz. wings $ 9 .9 9 *'*" HELP WANTED_ c h iu > c a r ^ j WOODSHED I 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e rs ity WARNING!!! Our Pizza May Be Habit Forming!!! I lamI I pm Sun-Wed CROCODILE CAFE has imme;■diate opening fo r host p o si­ tion. $6.S0/hr. + tips. Apply at 525 S. Mill Ave, Tempe. 9 6 6 -4 6 8 1 LOST CAT; Irg reward. White w /gray ears; paw s, ta il, blue eyes. H ardy/U niv. C all 5170269 KRONIC COMIC C om ic A collectab le store: 4228 N. S cottsdale Rd. w w w .kroniccom ics.com 947- NEED A date? Be a contestant on E instein's L ovin' Lunchin' Meet & Eat Contest! See Thurs­ day's State Press for details or stop by E in ste in 's a t R ural & University. ADOPTION FUN CHRISTIAN couple wish­ es to adopt n ew born/infant, counceling/law yer available. Call anytime, 892-7373. SERVICES T-SHIRTS AT a GREAT price 4 frat./sor, club, bus., church, team, or etc. SAM 964-4416 TYPING/WORD P R O C K g [N G _ S2.50/PG , S15/RES. Proofed. L aser. APA/M LA. Same day. DTP. N ear A SU. B rian, 9675987. • FREE PREGNANCY TESTING N o a p p o in tm e n t n e c e s sa iy . • ABORTION WITH TW ILIGHT SLEEP Saturday a p p o in tm e n ts a vailab le. TERM PAPERS RESUMES APPLICATIONS • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAMS WOODSHED II L ow c o s t c o m p le te birth con trol. A fford ab le PAP sm ea rs ¡» M a w T im a* I M S Bank • fEMALE NURSE PRACTITIONER 7 8 0 6 N . 2 7 th A ve. H ave you r w ork d o n e b y a p ro fessio n a l a n d fo rm er fa ste st ty p ist In t h e U .S .A . 1-D a y S erv ice 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 Kathy @ 2 6 2 - 5 4 5 4 ¡»AH Appetizers on Happy Hr FAMILY PLANNING INSTI }- 4 Satellites - 22 S c reen« ¡«W s show ALL MUS NBA, Co 090 I I E. 6 th S t. FREE LOST/FOUND SERVICES SERVICES ASU JEW ISH Students! W ell train you to teach and pay you to learr.. Call Rabbi Lee for info. 3650 FREE DOG to good home- job tra n sfe r c an 't take her. 6m o., spade, all shots. C all for d e­ tails. 967-6822 Taken w ith in 4 8 h o u rs o f u n p ro tec ted in tercou rse. M ed ical sc r e e n in g n ecessa ry . j , Over 100 M anu Hams i* C h ea p B eer a C h eap S hots “A Unique Style Pizza |o in t” ACME BAR A G rill. Scot­ tsdale, now hiring for doormen. See Dave, 4245 N. Craftsm an Ct. (Scotts. RdV5th Ave. approx.) PETS • -M ORNING AFTER” PILL IS I5S5555555SI OPEN LATE TIL 2am Thurs-Sun OPEN RESTAURANTS/ BARS PART/FULL TIME C