W o r l d / N a t io n Ma s s e s Sports C linton A fr ica S un D evils lo o k A n t e lo p e s g r eet in to c o r r a l P age 3 P age 13 ©Copyright.State Press, 1998 Tempe, Arizona ' An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 83 No. 41 Tuesday, March 24,1998 Lake Havasu apparently claims 1 life B y C adonna P eyton State P ress ■ ’ . One of his teachers described PffcBp Longo as a “delight­ ful and very thoughtful human being,” who will be missed greatly by fellow classmates and Hjtfed ones. The 18-year-old freshman business m ajor apparently drowned after losing his balance and falling off a 20-foot pon­ toon boat at Lake Havasu Saturday evening, said Steve Johnson, a spokesman with the Mohave County Sheriffs Office. “The best way to describe Phil as a student is delight­ ful,” said Trish Murphy, an English instructor who has been Longo’s teacher since September. “He was very careful with all of his work and very thoughtful with his dealings with other students.” Murphy said Longo, who wanted to go into law enforce­ ment, was very diligent and always dying to improve his work, “Often we would leave class and he would say, ‘Hey Trish, I’ve been thinking about my introduction and maybe 1 should add these details to make it better.’” One thing classmate Becky Hoffman remembers a b o u t. Longo is his dedication. “ He w a sn ’t a sla c k e r and he w as a good w rite r,” Hoffman said, remembering one particular paper he wrote' about U.S. marshals. A u th o rities co n tin u ed to search fo r L o ngo’s body Monday by using video cameras and sonar to map the area where they believe Longo went into the water, which is about 30 feet deep. Johnson said he doesn’t know exactly what happened but believes Longo fell from the boat and was sucked underneath near the London Bridge. Alcohol is suspected to have been a factor in the incident. “Accidents happen every year,” Johnson said, mention­ ing five boating fatalities which happened last year. “But this is the first spring break fatality like this since 1995.” Longo was enjoying his break with eight other students. Chicano culture focus o f weeklong celebration ed,” Rodriguez said. “The global market has decided Mexico should only export cheap People living in the margins o f society, labor and cheap resources. Their livelihood those minorities living in a white majority, will be lost because of that. are groups receiving too little attention and “They tell us we have no choice but to interest from global society, a Zapatista fig h t b ecause we w ill die anyw ay. We official said. . ^ w ould rath er stand up “A lot of people don’t , and fight then die. That ;«aire iSbouLtraai’s hapis w ho the Z ap atistas n tfo r us uni ^^péQÏng :tp- the p e o p lë'at are. T his is how they : the m argins o f so ciety . zai o co n tin u e have lived and this is i^|^^oftim atelÿf.that’s who how they will die.” lini n d develop ' tire M ex ican o s and Chicano Culture Chicanos have been for a Week, sponsored by the ou r cultu ral identity h long tim e,” said Cecilia C h ican o : S tu d en t here on cam pus. O ur •Rodriguez, spokeswoman Movement o f Aztlan or •for the N atio n al M EC hA , a C h ican o events are tryin g to C o m m issio n for based student organiza­ prom ote Chicano D em ocracy in M exico, tio n , w ill c e le b ra te U .S .A ., a U .S .-b ased cu ltu re culture a n d our history, C h ican o advocacy group fo r the th ro u g h o u t the w eek as w ell as ou r future, Z a p a tis ta N atio n al during various campus Liberation Army. ev en ts and a c tiv itie s. R o d rig u ez spoke to This year’s theme, “The students and community Sixth Sun,” is intended m em b ers M onday on memi to sig n ify a prophecy Hayden Lawn in célébra- —------- -— ■■ statin g how; C hicanos tio n o f L a S em an a will rise again. Cultural, or Chicano Culture Week, to edu­ R afael R eyes, a six -y ear m em ber o f cate people about the conditions in Mexico M E C hA , sa id R o d rig u ez w as asked to and the struggle o f the Zapatistas, a political speak because o f her close ties to Mexico movement composed mostly o f rural, poor and the Zapatistas. indegenous people. “She brings in a true version on what’s “The Z a p a tista s’ liv elih o o d is being going on with the Zapatistas,” Reyes said. Brad Lang/State Press eliminated, much like the same way small “A lot o f information has been filtered by National Com m ission for Democracy in Mexico, The speech was sponsored by the ASU chapter farmers in the United States were eliminatB y A lly A sher State P ress m iSg ■-1II mm Cecilia Rodriguez, the spokeswoman for the speaks to students Monday on Hayden Lawn. of the Chicano Student Movement of Aztlan. Turn to C hicano W eek, page 2 . Stiffer penalities added to drug, alcohol charges B y M onica J . A guirre State P ress Students arrested with misdemeanor or felony charges related to drugs or alcohol will soon face skyrocketing fines and more severe punishments. Violators on campus can now be fined $400 to $2,500 due to stricter penalties. “Anytime you are arrested on ASU’s campus or by an ASU officer for an alcohol violation, you can expect to goto the jus­ tice court,“ said David Swain, lawyer for student legal services. In 1997, 306 students were arrested with alcohol violations on campus, according to ASU Department of Public Safety. Within die last year, Judge John Ore, who presides over the Tempe Justice Court, has enforced these raised penalties. Those with infractions used to be able to take an aver­ sion class for a small fee and erase the charges from their court record. They no longer have this option. On first alcohol offense there is a $400 fine. The second Y q fju st y p h ’t count on th is stu ff (m isdedony charges) goin g away o m m ts ir m h e record. lawyer for StudenL violation is an $800 fine. A third infraction incurs a fine along with a mandatory 24 hours injail, Swain said. The penalties are much more than they used to be, he said. Five years ago, the fine was $75 and a diversion pro­ gram would erase the first offense. ; “Students are less apt to go and do that again because they’d rather follow the rules than violate the laws,” said DPS Officer Stewart Adams. S ubstance and p arap h ern alia p o ssession also have increased punishments. In 1997,124 ASU students were arrested on drug charges. Any drug in possession other than a minute amount of marijuana is considered a felony and sent directly to the Arizona Supreme Court. Possession o f paraphernalia or small amounts o f marijuana is usually charged as a Class One misdemeanor. M isdem eanors h eld in Ju stice C ourt can ex pect a $250 to $750 fine, 24 hours o f community service and one year probation. -• Criminals have one other option,, which is to sign up at the Treatment Assessment Screening Center, a drag diver­ sion program for Maricopa county. In d iis case, the charges may be erased. Swain said many people choose this option because havT urn to N ew drug k h jc y , page 2 . Page 2 State P ress Tuesday, March 24,1998 Chicano Week IbÖAY C ontinued from page 1. Campas clubs and o rgaaonicni may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of tbb Matthews Center. Requests will not be takes over the phone or via fax. . Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries w ill not be accepted more' than three working days before publica­ tion. Only one entry per organiza­ tion per day is permitted. E ntries m ust contain the full; .name of the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address of the location. AH requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. ..... The Today Section is a daily cal­ endar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, firstserved basis and are printed as space permits. • A sian B usiness L e a d e rs Association — A général meeting w ill be held in the MU K aibab Room 2 9 |B ||| » A sian general'; meeting will be held id the MU'' Conference Room 1A/1B at 4 p.m. • Baptist Student Union — Tuesday P.M., an evening of praise and wor­ ship, will be held in the J3SU Center, 1322 $, Mill Ave., at 8 p.m. • Career Services — M arketing your liberal arts degree in the MU Room 223 at 12:40 p.m., portfolio workshop in the MU Röom 208D at 10:40 a.m., and comptetihg tbe puzzle ' w orkshop in the C a re e r; .Development Center at 10 a.m. • C ounselor Training C enter Free eou nseling is. avai iabl e fo r ASU students, faculty and staff. The cost is $10 for pait-time, $35 for non-ASU people; session are unlimited. The center is located in iPayne Hall Room 402. felÄ jd Timor Action Network — A general meeting .Will--take’place; j in the MU Hohokam Room 208D at 6 p.m. the government and die media. Cecilia has been there and she tells the situations how they really are.” Reyes said Chicano Culture, W eek is a way to get people together to contemplate the fu tu re o f C h ic a n o s, an e ffo rt he described as ah ongoing straggle. “It’s important for us (Chicanos) to con­ tinue to maintain and develop our cultural identity here on campus,” Reyes said. “Our events are trying to promote Chicano cul­ ture and our history, as well as our future.” Reyes said MEChA is a support group for students who are still searching for iden­ tity. He also said the biggest issue facing the group is the major misrepresentation of Chicanos on campus. “M EChA works to prom ote education th ro u g h o u t th e c o u n try ,” R ey es said. “Being a support group and supporting our culture helps the retention here. I t’s an uphill battle.” O scar n ig h t w ith D rew N e w d r u g p o lic y C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . ing a m isdem eanor or felony charge on record can be detrimental when applying for jobs. 1 : "Y ou ju s t c a n ’t co u n t on th is s tu ff going away once it’s on the record,” he s a id .' . The penance for false identificatio n has becom e quite severe as well. "A nybody charged w ith having fake ID will autom atically have their license su sp e n d e d fo r six m o n th s, no e x c e p ­ tions,” Swain said. C astrai. OilWANKSKOAL Castro!< nx w astm l O IL C H A N G E S P E C IA L ca ASU COLLEGE of EDUCATION in te r ► y m p o siu m * 1 6 .9 5 UP TO 4 QUARTS O F CASTROL GTX D R IV E Michael CàuhtoW Ad Photo A ctress Drew Barrymore arrives at the 70th Annual Academ y Awards In L o s Angeles Monday. Barrymore currently co-starring with Adam Sandler in The W edding S in g er, pre­ sented an award at the show. H A RD *REGISTER TO WIN CastnM. NBA G EAR C A LL FO R APPOINTMENT •SO M E M O D ELS SLIG H TLY HIGHER •USING A FACTO RY HONDA OIL FILTER Donaldo Macedo University o f Massachusetts - Boston ^flrra D O C TO R Exclusively Honda & Acura Service S e rvice ” m eans honest, quality repairs at fair p rice s TE M P E N 2090 E . University Suite #115 V 967-7282 ^ "Dancing with Bigotry: Poisoning Cultural and Ethnic Identities" F aculty D iscussant: C hris Faltis S tu d e n t D iscussant: P au la Wolfe 6:30 p.m. in the Education Lecture Hall 5:30 Reception outside Education Lecture Hall W here “B lue Ribbon 1-10 & Elliot Rd 7144 S . Priest, Ste #101 345-1177 THURSDAY March 26,1998 Scottsdale 8225 E. Butherus, Ste #4 998-5966 Donaldo Macedo is Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and Education and graduate program director of Bilingual and English as a Second Language Studies. He is a leading authority on language and critical education and has published extensive­ ly in the area of critical literacy, creole studies and linguistics. He was a long-time collaborator of the late Paulo Freire, having co­ authored several books with him including Literacy: Reading the Word and the World and Ideology Matters. He is also the author of Literacies of Power: What Americans are Not Allowed to Know. ______ W orld /N ation ___________ .Tuesday, M arch24,1998 Page 3 Clinton’s Africa trip begins w ith cum bersom e crow d B y T er en c e H u n t A sso c ia ted P ress A C C R A , G h a n a -r B u o y e d b y th e b ig g e s t c r o w d o f h is p r e s id e n c y , President C lin to n hailed “ the new face o f A frica” and its grow ing peace, pros­ perity and d e m o c ra c y as h e o p en ed a historic six-nation tour on M onday W hile p o v erty a n d w ar still trouble p a rts o f th e c o n tin e n t, C lin to n sa id A m ericans m ust shake o ff “the stereo ­ ty p e s th a t h a v e w arp ed o u r view and w eakened o u r understanding o f A frica.” D ic ta to rs h ip s h a v e fa lle n in m any cou n tries, C lin to n said, and h a lf o f the 48 n atio n s o f sub -S ah aran A frica now h av e elected governm ents. W here busi­ n e ss w as o n c e stifle d , “ now A frican s are e m b ra c in g eco n o m ic re fo rm ,” th e presid en t said on a m ission to applaud political reform s and open the door for U .S .-A frican trade. C lin to n ’s m essage was alm ost lost to a few se c o n d s o f d ra m a tic v id eo th at show ed him being jo stled by an enthusi­ astic crow d. A fte r w aitin g fo r hours in tem p era­ tures that hovered near 100 degrees, the m a ssiv e c ro w d ro a re d at th e s ig h t o f C lin to n in I n d e p e n d e n c e S q u a r e , a spraw ling parade ground alo n g sid e the G u lf o f G u in e a . A fte r w e e k s o f sex scandal publicity back hom e, the W hite H ouse h ap p ily p assed along G hanaian g o v e r n m e n t e s tim a te s o f m o re th a n 500 ,0 0 0 peo p le, alth o u g h th a t n u m b e r seem ed high. C lin to n ’s p re s s s e c re ta ry s a id th e audience was “th e largest h e ’s seen as president, m aybe one o f the largest any A m erican president has ever seen.” Last J u l y ’s v is it to B u c h a r e s t, R o m a n ia , cheered by tens o f thousands, had been the previous benchm ark. But the huge turnout and intense heat b r o u g h t p r o b le m s . C r o w d s s u r g e d to w a r d C lin to n to s h a k e h is h a n d , e n d a n g e r in g p e o p le p r e s s e d a g a in s t m etal b a rrie rs. An o b v io u sly alarm ed C linton w aved crow ds to stop, and he s h o u te d , “ B a c k u p ! B a c k u p ! ” Spokesm an M ike M cCurry said C linton was w orried about the people in fro n t being injured. F ights broke o u t in the crow d o v er scarce bottles o f w ater. Police and m ili­ tary security w hipped people w ith belts and canes to keep order. T housands o f people drifted away from the square as the cerem ony droned on. A ccra, once an A tlantic port for slave trad ers, w as the gatew ay for C lin to n ’s 12-day, 21,000-m ile jo u rn ey to G hana, U g a n d a , R w a n d a , S o u th A f r ic a , B otsw ana and Senegal. O ver the course o f the trip, he w ill spend about 42 hours on A ir Force One. T he U nited S tates sees A fric a as a huge potential m arket, w ith per capita incom e rising in 31 countries. The pop­ u la tio n o f S u b -S ah aran A frica is p ro ­ je c te d to d o u b le to 1.5 b illio n in 27 years. C linton’s jo u rney is the longest for­ eign trip o f his presidency and the first tim e an A m erican president has visited any o f the six countries on his trip map. “It is a jo u rn e y long o v e rd u e ,” the president said. “I w ant to build a future partnership betw een our tw o people and I w ant to in tr o d u c e th e p e o p le o f th e U n ite d S tates through my trip to the new face o f A frica.” G hana is considered one o f A frica’s su ccess sto ries, w ith a 3 p e rc e n t eco ­ n o m ic g r o w th r a te . Y e t, a s e v e r e d ro u g h t h a s c a u s e d an e n e rg y c r is is resulting in regular pow er outages o f 12 hours a day. A fter a daylong stay, C linton flew to U ganda, arriving after 1 a.m . lo cal tim e in a light drizzle. But first the president v is ite d w ith P e a c e C o rp s v o lu n te e rs , noting that G hana was the first country w here Peace C orps worked. Orag GibaoitfAm oclated Prats Paa Solo, a Ghanaian man who calls himself the national showman, poses for photographers showing his painted face« body and beard, adorned with replica of the American and Ghanaian flag in Accra Monday. President Clinton is starting a 12-day, six-country African tour in Ghana and is also scheduled to visit Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa, Botswana and Senegal. Yeltsin fires entire Russian governm ent Study: Time limits By M itchell Landsberg Associated P ress MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin picked a little-known reformer as acting prime minister Monday after firing his entire Cabinet without warning. He promised that Russia’s biggest government shakeup since the Soviet Union dissolved would not derail democratic and ftee-market reforms. Yeltsin shocked many Russians when he dismissed the Cabinet, including his stolid and loyal prime minister, Viktor Chernomyrdin. Few had ever heard of the man named as Chernomyrdin's acting replacement, Sergei Kirienko. Despite the shakeup. leaders from Yeltsin on down insisted Russia was not teetering on the verge of a political crisis. "There is no governm ental crisis in the country,” Chernomyrdin said after losing the job he had held since 1992. "This is a natural and routine process of renewing power. One thing is dear: The course of reforms in Russia is irreversible.” Most Cabinet members were ordered to stay on temporarily and many, including Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov, were expected to keep their posts. In Washington, State Department spokesman James Foley said Secretary of State Madeleine Albright will discuss implica­ tions of the changes with Primakov during a previously arranged meeting Tuesday in Bonn, Germany. President Clinton, traveling in Africa, said Yeltsin’s action is not likely to harm the partnership he has been trying to build with Moscow. One symbol of U.S.-Russian cooperation has been Vice President A1 Gore’s frequent meetings with Chernomyrdin. Their last meeting, just 10 days ago, produced a flunry of accords and good will. Yeltsin said he needed a fresh government to re-energize eco­ nomic reforms, which he said were moving too slowly, jeopar­ dizing the friture of democracy in Russia. “1 believe that recently the government has been lacking dynamism and initiative, new outlooks, fresh approaches and ideas. And without this, apoweriul breakthrough in the economy is impossible,” he said, speaking slowly and calmly in a nation­ wide television broadcast. The Russian economy actually has begun to show signs o f growth after years of decline. But as Yeltsin acknowledged, it has been too little, too late for many people. The Moscow Stock Exchange plunged on news of the dis­ missals but steadied after Yeltsin’s television address. did little to remove people from welfare By Laura M eckler Associated P ress Saigai Karpukhin/Associated Press Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, left, and President Boris Yeltsin, stand during a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of Unknown S o ld ie r to m ark the Day of the Defender of the Fatherland in Moscow, Sunday, Feb, 23, 1997. Yeltsin fired his prime minister and the entire government Monday, a bombshell announcement that followed weeks of bitter infighting in the Kremlin. The Kremlin gave no explanation for the sudden dis­ missals. The government’s top economic reformers had been locked in a power struggle with some of Russia’s top business tycoons over control of the economy. WASHINGTON - In the nation’s first evaluation of time lim­ its for people on welfare, researchers found that a looming dead­ line did little to encourage;recipients to move off the rolls more . quicldy on their own.; The study of a prdgram in Pensacola, Fla., also found that by the time they were kicked off welfare, only about half of welfare recipients had found a job. For most of the nation's history, cash assistance was available as long as needed to anyone poor enough to qualify. But in 1996, Pensacola became the first place to remove people from the rolls because they had hit a time limit. j Today, welfare recipients across the country face a five-year time limit imposed by the 1996 federal welfare overhaul law. Many states impose shorter limits. Florida allows two years for most welfare recipients. The Florida report, released Monday by Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., offered a look into the future but did not measure conclusively how people forced from the rolls are faring. Florida officials and other supporters of time limits noted that the study found no horror stories. But the limits also didn’t pro­ duce the positive effect of getting people to move off the rolls vol­ untarily. The program began in 1994 in Pensacola, near the Alabama bonier. The first participants reached their time limit in 1996. In fact, only 11 percent of die Pensacola families actually hit the limit after two years because, like families nationwide, they came on and off the welfare rolls as their circumstances changed. Time limits might have a greater effect on future recipients, who will see that officials are serious about enforcing them, researchers said. And they noted that caseworkers did not pressure recipients to leave welfare earlier, suggesting that they use their time to get education and training rather than bank it forthe future. O p in io n Pag;e 4 Tuesday, March 24, 1998 S tate P ress ’ South Park prevails ‘ despite mtical disgust It seems the wholesome, fun-fiar-lhe-whole-family TV gfitow S m k P m k k m i «p d fio M n g r. The show about “four lovable scamps” — Cartman, Kyle, Stan and Kenny —•and their struggles growing up / iaalM clwa(#iifoKKittbt m m i ' ntorc problems among die older generations who find its. brand of humor erode and offensive. ■ Crude and offensive? What’s crude and offensive about K y le’s creation o f i t imaginary Incod, Mr deal With his feelings o f inadequacy and loneliness resu ltin g from his Jewish heritage, which prevents lurnfrorn celebrtfing CfadlADw llkeibt: other k ith ,, "**' t * lust because Mr. Hankey came from the toilet. . . ' OK, so we see the point o f those naysayers who deem the show inappropriate for children and consid­ e r It a counteractive upbringing. , ' 111 H 9H B | H pw ever,w e ask amtemptuously. if these parents are such bastions o f proper child-rearing and moral influence, why are their children, watching TV at 11 jttptV when the show a m ? O r w onteW W H W W H M I the reruns are on? V The show is obviously intended for mature audi­ ences, although we use the word “mature” loosely. There is a big warning a t the b e g ttM tig o fM d iflw , it's in i tale tune slot and it's the only animated scries labeled with the MA rating, 'MrihKt. i *• ■ ■* . W hat else do the cnlics want? | Included in M s anti-South Park campaign were par­ ents and school officials in a small town in Virginia. ■According to MSNBC, elementary-school children were coming to school Thursday mornings (the show airs Wednesday nights, for those still in enthralled by Beavis mid Butt-head) spouting off language ¿ id catch-phrases associated with die show. School officials w ereso dis­ traught, they banned all references and paraphernalia I (doted to the caustic cartoon, and went on MSNBC to encourage the show’s demise. (To be fair, the school dis­ trict bans any t-shirts or merchandisefromanyTV show. Even Barney.) ' : T h a n k fu Ily , C o m e d y C e n tra l sp o k e sp e o p le defended why the ¿ lo w is deeaiecl obviously warned against child viewing. J . **.■ *’-* , The executives aren’t stupid —1 taking the show Since the show’s inception last fall, thanks lw word I f m outh and the multitude o f South Park Websites dedicated to the scatological foursom e, the show 's popularity is at an all-tune high, i W ant proof? Just consider the credit-card hounds o n campus a few weeks ago, trading impeding stu­ dent debt w■Idnepelc^f^fi .;; Walking by the table, people would call out, “Look, South Park]" and sign their names on the dotted line, setting themselves up for a heaping helping o f inter.¿st mite*; flo w ’s that for devotion? . Like it or not, South Park is here to stay, for at Those o f as with the warped Safety w orth shelling out the dough on campus at that time, they would have said yes. Recently, I was put in a situ­ But what has happened since then? Have they made the ation where I had to question campus any safer? I would argue no. whether or not I felt ASU has a This campus is the same now as it was during the time of safe campus. these two rapes and the time afterwards, the only difference Yes, we all feel that ASU is is that there is no outcry for heightened safety levels on u n sa fe at c e rta in p e rio d s o f campus. I think there should be. time. For instance, after a rape There need to be more DPS officers on this campus, or some other assault crim e is more security on campus, more DPS call boxes throughout committed, we all feel unsafe, this campus and, especially, a more proactive view toward and there is a heightened sense . making this campus safe — not just a lot o f time and effort o f security on campus. W e’ve to go into things once there is an assault. all felt and w itnessed that — Yet, anytime you bring the issue o f more security on take last semester, for example. campus, the powers that be counter the argum ent with T h e e v e n t th a t m ad e m e ' question the “safety” o f this cam pus happened when a the, “That costs money we don’t have,” argument. I am cow orker o f mine had her car stolen from her at gun­ not going to let this be an excuse anym ore, and you point. Now, I know a lot o f people may think that she should not either. If it is im portant to the students — was not thinking by parking in a dark, unsecured area. a n d I th in k o u r s a fe ty is — th e n yo u F IN D T H E W ell, th a t’s not true. She was parking her c a r in the M O N EY ! F ind som e w ay to pay fo r m ore C am pus ASU p arking lo t b ehind R ank O ne on R ural Is this Police, or safety phones or whatever you need to have a m ore proactive approach place safe? W ell, as safe to campus safety. as anywhere else on cam ­ Is th is a s k in g to o pus. m u c h ? N o t a t a ll. W ill A s te r r ib le as th is be m ore D P S officers on th is h ap p en ? N o, n o t as c rim e w a s, I th in k it m s, m ore security on cam pus, long as it is one person’s addresses an even bigger o p in io n a b o u t c a m p u s problem that we have on n 0 0 D P m m ll boxes throughout this safety. this cam pus. T h at is the cam pus and, especially, a m ore proactive T h a t is w hy I n e e d a p p ro a c h o u r b e lo v e d y o u r h e lp — an d by ASU DPS takes after inci­ view tow ard m aking this cam m is s a f “your,” I mean every students like this. den t on th is cam pus. To Let us look at the rapes ““ ” ’ dem and m ore out o f our th a t h ap p e n e d h e re la st sem ester. A fter the news h it the cam pus, people were DPS officers, and even more im portantly, dem and more frightened and scared to go out at night. To cope with out o f our cam pus leadership and campus adm inistrators th is , th e re w ere e x te n d e d h o u rs fo r S a fe ty E sc o rt to m ake safety a priority and not ju s t p o litical c atch Service, added safety sem inars by DPS and beefed-up phrase to make people feel safe. I f the pow er o f change lies w ithin us, then we m ust security in the residence halls. After the two suspects were arrested, they were paraded use it to change this campus and make it be known that in fro n t o f the new s cam era and the DPS spokesm an we want to learn in a better, safer environment. If we all announced that the department had caught their man and demand this then this will happen. ASU is once again safe. This was hue, and I think that if Ross Eide is a senior studying marketing and can be you would have asked the average student if they felt safe reached at eide@asu.edu via e-mail. PERCY EDNALINO, Editor JODI BAFUNDO, Managing Editor CARYL-SUE MICALIZIO.......... ..................... Night Editor KARA SHIRE.................. ROWE EDGELL.................. GINGER SCOTT.......... CHRISTI FOIST........ ......... BRAD LANG .................... JEREMY HEIN ................. . MATT PAULSON................ RANDY JONES. ............ VIVISTENBERG............. REPORTERS: Ally Asher (Cultural Diversity), Monica Aguirre (ASASU), Becky Bevins (General Assignment), A tslinn Fahy (City, o f Tem pe), Kristen Hatcher (Administration), Chris Kahn (Science & Tech), Cadonna Peyton (P-olice), Tim Tail (General Assignment), Dave Woodflll (General Assignment), Karen Yamada (ABOR). SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Flanagan (Track & Field), Lori Haro (Baseball), Jason Joseph (Swimming & Diving), Carlo Mercaldo (Men’s Golf), Scott Lewis (Wrestling) COPY EDITORS: Lorie Roberts, Susan Schimmel. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Scott Samplin, Jeremy Weiss. COLUMNISTS: Brian Ary, Scott Bennett, Scott Bracken, Michelle Craig. Ross Eide, J.E. Hardee» Amber Knuth, Gregor A. McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, A.D. Niver, Brian P olicoff, George D. R ose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Steve Stein, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge, Gentry Smith, Charles Lundsberg. PRODUCTION: L. Adrianna Garcia, Steven Garza, Kay HaischRisley, Hilmar Hilmarson, Alyson Hurt, Wayne Nelson, Eric Paulson, Sara Pike, Jennifer Swinfond, Hubert Alexi Zemke. SALES RH*RESENTAT1VES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, Sharan Gill, David Goodwin, Mike Knievei, Monika Konat, Jessica Matluk, Jonathan Negretti, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. CLASSIFIEDS: Kate Desk), Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect die views o f die editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect die opinion of die State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: PERCY EDNALINO Editor JODI B AFUNDO Managing Editor GINGER SCOTT Opinion Editor CHRIST! FOIST News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam* periods, a r Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in dus newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul- : ty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o n e N u m b er s Inform ation...............965-7572 N ew sroom ................ 965-2292 M agazine........ ..........965-1695 A dvertising,.............965-6555 Classifieds................. 965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu O p in io n S tate P ress L etters to the E ditor Pretty signs cant replace hard work E-MAIL THE EDITOR: SINJIN@IMAP2.ASU.EDU Continued learning In a letter to the editor on MarcnT 1, Jim Buckley said, “Any student that is actually here to learn knows that die learning pro­ cess does not stop when the test is turned in, b u t also in clu d es fin d in g o u t w hat w as answered incorrectly so that mistakes can be learned from.” Hear! Hear! However, most courses are not complete until the final exam. Then they are finished. Aye, there’s the rub. The last exam seems to be the end o f (and not necessarily a means to) learning. Some professors seem to wash their hands (from their students) with termi­ nal velocity once the final exam is given. H ap p ily , a d istin g u ish ed p ro fesso r I had in m y previous life had us take the fin a l exam d uring th e last class p eriod and then come during the scheduled final exam tim e to go over the test, check the grades and fill out the course/ihstructor e v a lu a tio n fo rm . T o o b a d th e y d o n ’t m ake them like him anymore. ASU officials should require that at least answer sheets be made available at the end o f final exam s. U nless, o f course, they’d prefer that you “have patience with every­ thing that remains unsolved in your heart T ry to lo v e th e q u e stio n s th e m se lv e s” (Rainer Maria Rilke). The scholarly Mark Twain once said that he never let his schooling interfere with his education. He would be one o f those rare students who. after the end of the semester, would try to contact his ex-professors to review his final exam s and continue his education. The rest of us, however, could use better schooling. S h a h K h a tri Staff Inform ation Technology End justifies means While reading Anita Hill’s remarks print­ Q Page 5 Tuesday* March 24,1998 ed in the March 23, 1998 State Press edi­ tion, page 3, concerning sexual harassment by President Clinton, I could not believe that such an educated attorney could be so purposely and deliberately blind to objec­ tive moral truth. Anita Hill (and Gloria Steinem) is will­ fully and deliberately taking a blind eye (and she even admits it) at the sexual mis­ conduct o f President Bill Clinton, by saying it is OK fo r C linton to sexually harass w om en o n ly b e c a u se he sta n d s up fo r women’s rights. But if one does not stand up for women’s rights, then that person cannot sexually harass women? What is this? Would Anita H ill (and G loria Steinem ) say the same thing if Republican Robert Dole committed same offenses had he been elected presi­ dent? Definitely she would not ... because Dole is a Republican and he does not seem to stand up for women’s rights. Therefore, in her eyes, it would be wrong. I cannot understand how fem inists can to le r a te s e x u a l h a ra s s m e n t fro m D e m o c ra ts w ho seem to sta n d up fo r w om en’s rights, but not tolerate it from Republicans Who do not seem to make a big issue o f women’s rights. The feminist movement has sold its soul over to the D em ocratic party ... right or wrong! Yes, this only goes to show that the feminist agenda in politics has fallen to that sam e ag e-o ld vice as q u o ted in A rthur Koestler’s book, Darkness at Noon: “That the end justifies the means,” is and remains the only rule of political ethics. Anita Hill (and Gloria Steinem) says the same thing a$ Koestler when Hill says, “We live in a political world, and the reality is that there are larger issues (ends) other than ju s t (C lin to n ’s) in d iv id u a l b e h a v io r (means).” C la y ja v u re k Staff Electrical Engineering uotables “F ighters were n ot su pposed to be hum an o r intelligent. J u st brutes th a t ex ist to entertain a n d to sa tisjy a crow d’s th irst f o r blood. ” — Muhammad Ali, The Greatest, 1975 — ---------- -— —a rnprsts rvow cowe bundlej fi w itfa iv ) e K VAienoscftBrowser.. 1 ir n fm L e t 's heur ■ any time or space on them it for the can­ D RIAN ■ On to the presidency. didates* FONTES ■ I see it as a clear-cut race between T h e “S p id e r-m a n ” (S eth D eitchm an) and Guest Columnist A SA SU can ­ “ S alsa-M an" (D am on P ace). You a ll. didates have created a colorful display ■ s h o u ld know w h o th e y a re , sirifceo f cardboard and wood placards intend­ th ey're the two who will end up in the ed to persuade us to vote tor them. To run-off, so I’ll give the rest o f the field com plim ent this annual ritual, we -will a little exposure. I'm feeling very gen“nicknam e" the candidates so (hat we S c ro u s today : can m ore e a sily id e n tify the p erso n jp L each An unfo rtu n ate nam e w ith J with the symbolism ■ u n fo rtu n a te c o n n o ta tio n s. A lth o u g h We start with the Office o f Campus A ffairs Vice President. This race fea­ B rock does have a cool first nam e. I tures two very different approaches to think he got way too cam py w ith the promotion. The first, by Seth K m , fea­ “ •w hole “ B ro ck th e V o te ” th in g . I t ’s tures fluorescent green signs w ith his alm ost as if he w as “leech in g ” ideas name, in small print, smack in the m id­ from som ew here. (Forgive the pun, T dle. Not terribly creative. I’ve spoken B u s t had to do i t ) L e t’s just call him with Seth and find him to be a likable “T he Leach." Frost. Paul is a nice guy, and I like die guy. Since this office is m ostly adm in­ istrative, I w on’t give him a good nick­ whole "Frosty," “Frostbitten” blah blah name until lie creates some better sig­ blah. Let’s call him “Mr. Freezemiser” nage. Fur now, h e 's “Kriz Krinklc." (y o u rem em b er the song from th a t Trust me, they gel better. Rudolph knockoff, right7) Eddie Ableser, the other candidate for ¡1 Lujan. His signs scare me. It’s like Campus Allairs Vice President, has neat being in Central America in tbe early 80ssigns. You can recognize (hem easily by The lone black shadow on that deep red the Sw ingers graphic with the red star. background reminds me of leftist inter­ W e’re going to call him the “Heincken vention through Cuba und N icaragua. Red Star Guy.” It may hurt his campaign Wc'H call him “The Sundanista.” since to be associated with a particular brand of his signs remind us of Marxist interven­ beer, but at least he’s not the “Bitter Beer tionism. Face Guy." Ried. Blah. The only distinguishing The A ctivities Vice President coor­ factor on his signs is that he compares d in a te s H o m e c o m in g . M ardi G ra s, him scll with Ghandi and Howard Stern E arth Day and m any o th er p ro g ram s in the sam e m essage. Since this was [that m ake ASU liv ab le and fun. I t's probably the idea of his campaign man Stone vs. Reinesch. Now, I'm not very Sger (you rem em b er h er. she thinks ¡fluent in G eim an, so w e’ll be giving Bun & Jprry are communists), I ’m not Reinesch a nickname based on the "pop c u ltu re " o rig in o f his nam e and the too surprised. 1 think Craig could talk a office he’s running for. Before we do good talk, and could probably walk the that. I'm going to have to apologize to good w alk. B ut u n til lie p ro v es me all the Germans at ASU, all the sensi­ right, w e’re going to have to give him tive people who think ethnicity should the pseudonym “Big W ind.” I'll let you stay out o f politics, and Reinesch him ­ figure out what kind ol wind. self, for not checking with him to see if If 1 did not sec your sign on Monday, his name is ically Geiman or not. How- you did not get mentioned. No apology does “Colonel Klink” sound? Reinesch necessary. is not a Nazi. H e’s probably never been Childish, unnccessoiy, personal, offen­ in the m ilitary, and I ’m sure he does sive and all the rest. This column is all not w ear a m onocle. B ut as w ith the that and more. I*d like to point out to all TV c h a ra c te r, and th e fact th a t the die candidates that spring, die season of o f fic e 's m ain role is to prom ote the new life, is a great time to be walking “fu n ” s tu ff at.A S U , the nicknam e is around this world-class arboretum we call meant in jest. Get over it. ASU Main Campus. Stone. What the heck arc we going Seriously, the outgoing senate could to do w nh that one? She’s running for do this campus on aesthetic favor and A ctivities Vice President too. “Stoner” f|jan any future cam paign signs on this is just too obvious I think she’s more c a m p u s . I f th e c a n d id a te s fo r of a “Stone Soup.” I'v e met with her, und I think sh e 'd be good at pooling A ssociated Students offices want their lo ts o f d iffe re n t re so u rc e s to c reate c o n s titu e n ts to know w ho th e y are, something good (remember the story?). K e y should perform during the year, T h is is n o t an e n d o rs e m e n t. T h o se in ste a d o f fo cu sin g th e ir e n e rg y on w ell-reasoned argum ents w ill surface jj|c s e silly signs right before elections. later, after I'v e had a chance to m eet I A SU spends tons of money to keep w ith all the candidates This is ju st a our campus clean and beautiful during the nickname that fits her cam paign image. te s t o f (he year, and our future student l a d e n are doing everything dtey can 10 “Stone Soup ” I like it Since the G raduate Student A ffairs jfttract from its beauty. W hat a shame, Vice President's race is pretty boring, and p n o i i Fontes u a senior studying com­ there is only one candidate for Executive munication and can be reached at adriVice President. I’m not going to waste mb.fontes@asu.edu via e-muil. — I C a J ■ ■ 965-6881 I e Page 6 Tuesday, March 24, 1998 State P ress ^ Tuition issue rem ains undeterm ined B y K a r en Y a m a d a S t a t e P ress By this tim e o f year, the state L egislature has usu ­ a lly p u t to bed the issue o f u n iv ersity funding, leav ­ in g a c le a r e r u n d e r s ta n d in g o f s h o r tf a ll a m o u n ts requiring financing from o th er sources. B ut this y e a r’s tuition setters are w orking w ithout a final figure, largely due to. leg islativ e bickering on K-12 financing, w hich is puttin g an additional crim p in the process. * “S in ce th e state L e g isla tu re is still p lay in g w ith the budget we d o n ’t, rig h t now , have a p o sitio n on tu itio n ,” said C h ristin e T hom pson, ex ecutive director o f the A rizona S tu d en ts' A ssociation. “E verything is up in the air.” . , W ith o u t a fin a liz e d sta te a p p ro p ria tio n in sig h t, student groups, like A SA , can only identify a relative position on tuition, based o n recom m endations m ade in the past. T h o m p so n s a id A S A is lik e ly to re c o m m e n d a tuition increase range o f zero to 4 percent. A BO R and- the u n iv ersity p resid en ts have id en ti­ fied funding prio rities as a w ay to talk about tuition, so students, their fam ilies and legislators can u n der­ stand how the m oney w ill be spent. “T he board has gone to a new process about talk ­ ing about tuition,” said A llan Price, vice president o f Institutional A dvancem ent at ASU. “W e reached an agreem ent betw een the students, regents and universities that w e w ould identify a p ri­ ority list o f issues and funding item s, including bu d ­ g e t ite m s, b e y o n d th o se in th e sta te ap p ro p ria tio n req uest.” A SU M ain has identified funding priorities, to ta l­ in g $ 4 0 .2 m illio n , re q u irin g fu n d in g th ro u g h the state, tu itio n and reallo catio n sources, acco rd in g to an A BO R report. “ If it com es to a p o in t w here w e d o n ’t know the budget at the tim e the regents set the tuition, the stu­ dent body presidents w ill probably hold the un iv ersi­ ty p resid en ts’ feet to the fire to tell us th eir plans so that w e can form ulate a recom m endation,” Thom pson said. T U IT IO N H EA R IN G LO C A TIO N C H A N G E FOR A SU -E A ST M a rc h 2 5 , 1 9 9 8 7 :3 0 p .m . - 9 :3 0 p .m . C lassroom B uilding (C L R B ), Room 106 • A man not associated w ith ASU was arrested, cited and released for possession o f drug paraphernalia at 832 S. M aple St. • An em ployee reported that he lost six keys belonging to ASU. The Tempe police reported the fo l­ lowing incident Monday: • A man was pursued on foot by an officer at 740 W. U niversity D rive. D uring the pursuit, the m an turned aro u n d and p o in te d a h an d g u n at the officer and shot three tim es, but the gun did not discharge. T he m an then fled and was caught w ith the help o f a canine search. T he m an was taken into custody and arrested on c h a rg e s o f a tte m p te d m u rd er. The sam e suspect w ho fired shots at officers last year in G uadalupe. get * A m an w as a rre ste d at 1010 S. Sm ith Road after he was found sit­ ting in a car w ith a friend sm oking m a r iju a n a . H e w a s s m o k in g a “ro a c h ” th at he said he found on the g round, b u t he w as sittin g on seeds and p lan t stem s b eliev ed to be w eed. H e said he had fin ish ed sm oking the “roach” and w as w ait­ in g f o r a f r ie n d . T h e m a n w a s tra n sp o rted and b o oked at T em pe city jail. • A M obil sto re c le rk saw a m an sleep in g on the sid ew alk close to the convenience store. H e attem pt­ ed to w ake th e m an up fo r ab o u t fiv e m inutes, but the m an c o n tin ­ ued to ignore the requests by turn­ in g h is h e a d a n d f a llin g b a c k a s le e p . A n o f f i c e r c a m e to th e scene and asked the m an to m ove for three m inutes. The subject was The only free thing at ASU. F ashion S h o w AUDITIONS for M ale and Fem ale M O D ELS of all e th n icitie s M a rc h 2 6 -2 9 ,1 9 9 8 Fashion Show will be held in the Memorial Union and will be featuring various clothing sponsors arrested and transported to jail. •A 3 2 -y ear-o ld m an w as arrested f o r a s s a u lt a t 6 8 1 1 S . T e n tilly L ane, a fte r he p u sh ed h is liv e-in p re g n a n t g ir lf r ie n d th re e tim e s , leaving red m arks on h er side and arm s. She also had a large softball siz e d b ru is e in th e c e n te r o f h er u p p e r b a c k . H e w as tra n s p o rte d and booked at Tem pe city jail. Toddy ’s photo radar locations: • E l l i o t R o a d , b e tw e e n M ill A venue and H ardy D rive • R ural R oad, betw een U niversity D rive and R io Salado Parkw ay • M c C lin to c k D r iv e , b e tw e e n B ro a d w a y R o a d a n d S o u th e rn A venue • B a s e lin e R oad, b e tw e e n M cC lintock D rive and Price Road C o m p ile d b y S t a t e P r e s s rC A M P U S -i l-C O R N E R -l 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D eli 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s from C o ffe e Pla ntatio n Everyday Low Price 2 4 exposure Call 965-6822 P olice R eport The A S U police reported the f o l ­ lowing incidents M onday: S tate P ress to m ake an appointm ent DOUBLE PRINTS Contact: Mandy or Sonya s e e s to r e f o r d e ta ils C o lo r C - 4 1 P r o c e s s B e s t P r ic e in T o w n New Movies this Month on Channel 2 The Blues Brothers Dave The Game Air Force One Batman & Robin Chasing Amy Contact Conspiracy Theory G.l. Jane Event Horizon Ferocious Female Freedom Fighters Deyil’s Advocate Eight Heads in a Duffle Bag And much, much more! ■ ■ ■ I ll reporter Cadonna Peyton ArnccFRUIT0PIA ■HI GE!C0 WITH THE PURCH ASE OF A inhere a driuer milh a past still has a future. LARGE POPCORN Offer good after 9:00 PM at participating AM C theaters Even if you don’t have a perfect driving record, GEICO has a place for you. Every year, we offer renewal to over 98% of our policyholders. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 ♦ Low down-payment Monthly payment plan Money-saving discounts 24-hour claim service Immediate coverage Free rate quote CHOKE Preferred at ASU Call today or stop by our local office: (602) 931-0766 S tate P ress Page 7 Tuesday, March 24,1998 St a t e P ress N o c o v e r c h a rg e . r C A M P U S -| lC o r n er J 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 next to C o lle g e S tr e e t D eli 6 0 9 S . Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P la n tatio n Nichols sentencing hearing slated for this week DENVER (AP) r— Three months after Terry Nichols was convicted in the Oklahoma City bomb­ ing, he returns to court this week for a hearing to decide what guidelines a federal judge will usé in determining his sentence. Prosecutors contend Nichols should receive life in prison without parole plus 48 years, the maxi­ mum sentence allow ed under the guidelines. Nichols’ attorneys argue that he deserves a new trial or, if that is rejected, a much shorter prison term. U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch is scheduled to hear arguments on the sentencing proposals Wednesday. Nichols, 42, was convicted Dec. 23 of conspira­ cy and eight counts of involuntary manslaughter in the April 19, 1995, bombing. He was acquitted of minder and Weapons-related charges. The jury deadlocked on whether death was the appropriate penalty,- which leaves Nichols’ sentence to Matsch. In briefs filed in U.S. District Court, defense attorneys have maintained the jury rejected the pros­ ecution theory that Nichols worked “side by side with Timothy McVeigh” to plan and carry out the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, which killed 168 people and injured hundreds more. McVeigh is appealing his conviction on murder, weapons-related counts and conspiracy and death sentence. The defense also argues that Nichols is entitled to a new trial because the government withheld a large number o f previously undisclosed witness statements, known as lead sheets, which might have changed the trial’s outcome. Prosecutors say the defense didn’t need the wit­ ness statements because they only pointed specula­ tively to possible other suspects. They are the type of early leads the U.S. Supreme Court has said do not need to be turned over, the government attor­ neys said. If the new trial motion is rejected, Nichols’ attor­ neys plan to ask for a sentence of 46 months to 57 months on the conspiracy conviction and up to 18 months on the manslaughter convictions. Meanwhile, in Oklahoma City, U.S. District Judge G. Thomas VanBebber of Kansas City, Kan., issued a schedule of hearings leading up to the May 27 sentencing for Michael Fortier o f Kingman, Ariz. Fortier was a key government witness in the tri­ als of McVeigh and Nichols. Everyday Low Price 3.99 * 2 4 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS s e e s t o r e fo r d e ta ils C o lo r C - 4 1 P r o c e s s Per Minute 24/7 Sta t e P ress ® 80 Crosswords They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. A c c e s s ib le from all A S U d o rm s TPHITE P r e p a id Lo n g D istan ce P h o n e S e rv ic e ★ NO FEE S ★ NO G AM ES ★ For FR EE SAMPLE call: 759-6999 Creative Call Inc. B e s t P r ic e in T o w n rC A M P U S l LCORNER-i Trial experience from DUI to First Degree Murder and Defense of all Drug Cases 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 FREE C O N SU L T A T IO N FO R A SU STU D E N T S n e x t to C o lle g e S tr e e t D eli J a m e s P. L e o n a r d , A t t o r n e y a t L a w 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 Paris $ 2 8 7 46.35 S o u th L ak esh ore D rive • T em pe, AZ 8 5 2 8 2 London $307 Madrid $407¡ Romo $446 3 4 5 -4 4 2 4 A Practice D edicated to Complete W om en's Healthcare ‘ I PAMS ARI \f? RT I1AS11) UN.RT I'URtHASI.« Fari s ud noi -mituoi jaxi s. Risik: is the right way to remember Princess Diana. I certainly won’t be buying i t ” Meanwhile, the Royal Automobile Q ub denied news reports that it was planning to use Diana’s death in an Aug. 31 car crash in a campaign to promote seat-belt use. She wasn’t wearing a seat belt NEW DELHI, India (AP) — Richard Gere met Monday with six Tibetans on a hunger strike to demand a U.N- investigation of human-rights violations in their country. ‘The six human beings represent six million Tibetans,” the actor told reporters. “They have pledged to die and I sincerely believe that they are going to die.” Gere, who has been advocating the cause of Tibetans for 15 years, criticized Giina’s human-rights record and said Beijing needs to be pushed on die issue. China invaded Tibet in 1949. Ten years later, the Dalai Lama and thousands of followers fled and established a government in exile in the northern Indian city of Dharmsala, after the Chinese crushed a Tibetan uprising. The protesters, including a 70-year-old Tibetan, began their hunger strike on March 10, the 39th anniversary o f Tibetan National Uprising Day. TUCSON (AP) — Israel must make concessions to teach peace in the Middle East, says the widow of Yitzhak Rabin. “It’s like a train stuck in die middle of the tracks ... and we ask ourselves why it is not moving,” Leah Rabin said Sunday night Since her husband’s assassination in 1995, Israelis and Palestinians have made no progress ip resolving the occupation of several disputed territories Israel captured in 1967, including the West Bank, die said. “The land was not meant for Israel to own,” Rabin said, “and we must give part of the land as a compromise.” She was in Tucson to help celebrate the 50th anniversary of Israel and to accept an award from two Jewish groups. Page 9 VALUABLE COUPON SAVINGS! JUST RIP THIS STRIP. CLIP THEM APART AND SAVE BUCKS! Tuesday, Match 24,1998 S tate P ress S tate P ress Tuésday> March 24,1998 P age 10 ABC nam es Kevin Newman as new ‘Good M orning America’ co-anchor By D avid Bauder Associated P ress NEW YORK — Newscaster Kevin Newman will replace Charles Gibson as co-anchor of Good Morning America, a show that has struggled in the ratings for years. The program’s executive producer was also relieved in the shakeup, ABC announced Monday. Gibson, who held the job for 11 years, has made it known for months that he wanted to move on. He plans to stay at ABC News and will probably host a new prime-time newsmagazine expected to begin next fall. Newman will take over on May 4 as co-anchor with Lisa McRee. ‘It’s an enormous privilege and it’s the kind of broadcasting I like — it’s personal, it connects with the audience and it kind of ties together all of the things I’ve done previous to this,” Newman : said. : ABC essentially held open auditions for Gibson’s job, trying out former Fox After Breakfast host Tom Bergeron and ESPN’s Dan Patrick. But Newman, who has read the news on of Good Morning America since the summer, impressed ABC brass with his cool performance anchoring the network’s coverage thé night Princess Diana died. Newman was called in from his suburban New Jersey home that night to handle the anchor desk when the story broke. Newman, 38, who is married with two children, was a political correspondent arid anchor of a daily news and interview show for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. before joining ABC News in 1994. Thé network hopes his appointment will provide a boost to of Good Morning America, which has trailed NBC’s Today in the ratings for the past few years. The gap grew larger after McRee replaced longtime host Joan Lunden in September. B R O A D W A Y S C 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 Everyday Low Price 3,99 AHEAD DO 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s fro m C o ffe e Pla ntatio n Everyday Low Price DOUBLE PRINTS 3.99 * 2 4 exposure ress T - n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D eli 2 4 exposure l a s s if ie d s - rossw ords 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 * C ress rC A M P U S -| l C o r n e r -! a c ro s s fro m C o ffe e Pla ntatio n S tate P P THEM IN INK. n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D eli C o lo r C - 4 1 P r o c e s s B e s t P r ic e in T o w n S E R I E S tate Go 7 1 2 S. 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TRAINING IN Web Page Design S*.,March21€ 2pm TOD*965-1*71 Multimedia (Java, Shockwave, HTML) C A R L Y N ’S Mill Ave B a rb e r S h o p mputer Animation Silicon Graphics O FF (Alias/W avefront Software) Y our H aircu t 5 m i n u t e s f r o m ASU! 414 Mill Ave 920 -5198 Digital Video/Avid Non-Linear Workstations 1 1 1 1 E T H IO P IA N FOO D 1 5 % O F F CAÜ LA LIB ELA AW ARD W IN N IN G R E STA U R A N T EVERYTHING . (T-TH) 849 W. UNIVERSfTYDR. (SECORNEROF HARDY8. UNIV.) j 1 1 1 1 Day/Evening Classes 5 Month Programs Financial A id Available J 20% off (for those who qualify) UPS Shipping (3M w/ 6M R ) . “ FREE M AIL BOXES ETC. 903 S. R R . • 967-1414 M a il b o x S e r v ic e onths onths ental ural d 1739 E. Broadway • 829-3900 1110 S. Alma School • 964-1001 Limitonicoltomi« customerkrvisit.Notvalidincombinationwithbnyotheroff«. Vauoatparikipatinclocations. Expires5/5/98. NothingtoDo? GetontheICE • W m u'm m m i one 1 Actor DOW N O ’Shea 1 Sutler's 5 Court partner figure 2 Baseball 10 — Gay division (bomber 3 More plane) protracted 12 Wipe dean 4 Bullfight 1 3 ‘ Black­ cry board 14 Onion­ 5 Director Jungle’ skin’s kin Renoir actress 6 Fancy vase 19 Fountain 15 Equip orders 7 One kind 16 — Tin Tin of equality 20 Takecare 17 Lyricist of 8 God of Gershwin 24 Catchthe dead 18 Listless phrase 0 Used-car 20 Go 25 Lined with deal yachting elms 21 Elegance 11 Atlas 26 Tactful section 22 Different 23 Moral fall 25 Tiff 28 Chores members 31 Brewing ingredient 32 More impover­ ished 3 4 — mode 35Cribbage need ■ ■ 1 As k about training for Computer Network Administration Careers 36 French friend 37 ‘ 10 Lb. Penalty* author 40 Moral system 41 Actor Nick 4 2 ‘ M r.— Goes to Town’ e n t a r y T o u r KT EA T V s i m i i im c A D A D U ir n c c i f t M 56789 123 ’ 10 12 1 1 4 13 18 _ 15 ■ ■” 18 19 A■ “ i 1 24 5 1 ■ ■ 2930J 252627 J ■ 28 33 31 32 J1 34 3 8 ■ :3 ■936 38 37 40 42 1E CRYPTOQUOTE P U A p lim 27 Cochise, for one 29 Wise answerer 30 Near East native 33 Stair part 35 Some mil. people 38 Josh 39 Tadt okay DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONG FELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is 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. Gall 9 6 6 .3 0 0 0 to schedule your C o m 1 SB February 3 - March 29 U3Ta s a 31 3 Q 3 i î 0 Nl 3 i H 1 3 X 3 1a 8 T 9 N V□ 1wÏ ■ 9 1 a V 1 V a 3 1O O 3 □BHm 0 □ 1 1 V □□ 0 ¥ 8 d□ 3 51 3 3' 3 aE 1 1 YS 3 T 3 NV V a "j ■ N 1 a 9 1 a s i 9 N V□ a 3 N N V 3 s Ha 3 V 1 ON3 a 0 Vn r 0 1 1w P X J W N K A TL P U Q P P U A Y T P EQVP M J W U KQLA D A P PJ c ru n n i • 2NDffîSONMES FH P U A A LC T L Q L Q Y EW K ; • SkATt RENIAI EXISA a/C I PIT / C t A H t C N /1 1520 N. McClintock, Temp€ 941-0944 Exmes5/31/98 1140 S. Priest (between University and Broadway) Tempe, A Z 85281 U W X X M . — VJ W X Z A J N V Z W X A Y e ste rd a y 's C ry p to q u o te : I NEVER READ A BOOK BEFORE REVIEWING IT. IT PREJUDICES YOU SO.—SYDNEY SMITH Page 11 Tuesday, Match 24,1998 State P ress W illey refuses second interview California’s h igh court says Scouts can ban gays, atheists NEW YORK (AP) — Kathleen Willey turned down CBS’s invitation to come back on 60 Minutes this week to talk about the friendly letters she sent to President Clinton after the incident where she accused him of making an unwanted sexual advance. 60 M inutes on Sunday added a short postscript to last week’s Willey interview to mention the letters and W illey’s efforts to sell her story to a book publisher. CBS and correspondent Ed Bradley were criticized for not being tough enough on Willey during the March 15 interview, par­ ticularly in light o f later revelations about her correspondence with Clinton. A lthough she didn’t want to be inter­ viewed on the air, Willey was asked about th e le tte rs in an o ff-a ir c o n v e rsa tio n , B ra d ley sa id . She e x p la in e d th a t she b e lie v e d C lin to n re p re se n te d h e r b est chance o f getting a job, and she didn’t want to lose that contact. The newsman also explained on Sunday th at W ille y ’s law yer had assured CBS before the interview that there was no deal to sell her story. Sc surrounded by commitment dedication and 137 years oí uaiversity traditioa. In th e h e a rt o f S o u th e rn C a lif o r n ia lie s th e n a tio n 's new est A B A p r o v is io n a lly a p p ro v e d S c h o o l o f Law. A n d , as y o u m ig h t e x p e c t “Scouts meet regularly in small groups By Bo b Egelko Associated P ress (often in private homes) that are intended to SAN FRANCISCO — The Boy Scouts foster close friendship, trust and loyalty,” are not covered by California civil rights said the lead opinion by C h ief Justice laws and can exclude gays, agnostics and Ronald George. atheists, the state Suprem e C ourt ruled “The Boy Scouts is an expressive social organization whose primary function is the today. In a pair o f unanimous decisions, the inculcation of values in its youth members.” court said the Scouts are not a business and Although the Scouts sell goods to mem­ therefore are free, like any private club, to bers of the public, George said, “nonmem­ set their own membership policies. bers cannot purchase entry to pack or troop m eetings, overnight One ruling upheld a hikes, the national jam ­ decision by a C ontra / “F or 88 years, boree or any portion of Costa County Scout orga­ L w e ’v^J^iight the * the Boy Scouts’ extended nization in 1981 to reject training and educational Timothy Curran, an 18m oral values o f the process.” year-old form er Eagle Scout oath a n d law G reg S hields, Scout, as an assistant spokesman for the Boy scoutmaster after he dis­ to A m erican boys. Scouts of America, said closed in an interview Those who m eet the the organization was that he was gay. pleased the court recog­ The o th e r ruling standards o f this nized it as a “voluntary involved 9-year-old twin m em bership association,” not a busi­ brothers, M ichael and ness. W illiam R andall, who organization are “For 88 years, were barred by an Orange welcom e to w e’ve taught the moral County Cub Scout den in values of the Scout oath 1990 after they refused to belong and law to A m erican declare a belief in God. boys,” he said. “Those • The tw ins w ere who meet the standards allowed into the Scouts —d H h itS of this membership orga­ by low er-court rulings spokesman faM he BojJ nization are welcome to and recently qualified to Scouts^fAmeMfS. belong.” becom e E ag le Scouts, The ruling con­ Scouting’s highest honor, subject to approval by the national organiza­ trasts with a decision March 2 by an appel­ tion. T hey and th e ir father, Jam es G. late court in New Jersey that said the Boy Randall, who is also their lawyer, say the Scouts and their local councils were “places boys are agnostics who haven’t yet worked of accommodation” with open membership and were covered by the state’s civil rights out their religious beliefs. Both suits w ere brought under law. That ruling, in favor of a gay scoutmas­ California’s Unruh Civil Rights Act, which ter, was die first by any appellate court in the forbids discrimination by business establish­ nation against the Scouts’ anti-gay policy. The Boy Scouts say homosexuality vio­ ments on various grounds, including sexual lates their concept of traditional moral val­ orientation and religion. The justices said today that the Boy ues, embodied in a provision of the Scout Scouts are a private, selective organization, oath in which members pledge tobe “moral­ not a business. ly straight.” w it h a new, e lite p ro g ra m , stu d e n ts at C h a p m a n h a ve access to th e best o f a ll that's new : new te c h n o lo g y , a n e w la w lib ra ry , a n d v e r y so o n , a n e w b u ild in g in w h ic h to h o u se it all. A s part o f an e s ta b lis h e d u n iv e rs ity cam p u s, th o u g h , C h a p m a n la w stu d e n ts a lso h a ve th e b e n e fit o f b e in g part o f a c e n t u r y - lo n g t r a d it io n o f e x c e lle n c e a n d e th ic s . It’s a tr a d it io n th a t’s a liv e a n d e v id e n t in o u r fa c u lty , as w e ll as in o u r stu d en ts. If that's s o m e th in g y o u 'd lik e to b e a p a rt of, c a ll that an HIV test is important to you, the Home Access* HIV test is tijg*—right choice. C h a p m a n U n iv e r s it y 's S c h o o l , o f L a w to d a y. W h e n y o u c o m e to C h a p m a n , y o u 'll s u rro u n d , y o u r s e lf w it h a ll You can take it in the privacy of your own Jjome. n e e d to b e c o m e th e k in d o f Or anywhere else you choose. la w y e r o u r s o c ie t y needs. Anytime. HBCHAPMAN ¡U N IV E R SIT Y Get your anonymous results fa st The test i$ doctorrecommended and greater than 99.9% accurate. m m SCHOOL OF LAW Trained, caring professionals will answer your questions and ease your mind— 24 hours a day, seven days a week— with complete confidentiality. T ? 8 :’? 2 ' 4 f T T l f f j p i r a in o r © c h a p m a n , e d u W American Bar Association * 5 5 0 W est North Street« ■ Í 46205 * Hff~2$4m40 HOME ACCESS’ v TheleaderinTelemedicine Available at your local drugstore or call 1-800-HIV-TEST for more information. C o m ic s Page 12 Tuesday, March 24,1998 T rials & T ribulations S tato P ress By Jonathan Inge if S nacks By C arrie L. B ehrens The tradition of tying shoes to thè back of newlyweds’ cars originated from an ancient ritual. Wedding guests threw shoes at the departing couple. r Hu m u THAT? StMtfttE'5 AT Jo c u l a r Parable IF YOU B A T I'l l J u s t Be U S IN Ö T »F TMfnr Buteee. you'u- j u s t & e c u m a jó you* [¿joes! yeAds, # t e ¿ y . O £ I CAM £At s j * out 5 My [A ÌH Ù TB u f e a m p u u e TO ly e fit p E p E M IX - U B A F lA ir , S T M i u e , a r t h r i t i s - r i p p *m o n e s A T 1h& EM D .*' - fksö y M V SAviOPV BueérF£S>4NJ> P I E T H O Ü 6 H ..-T H 0 ufe s h o u t % € £ „ . I c A a I B I 7H e e [ 2 m B e e b - B i 'M i G eA A iPCW ltPPEr1/ S O C lA L -se C U R lT iPFPEAJPEM Tf t/J&Vc, U u e e & ip o ti e d HUS/c o P A Al/t Al A c r o s s t h e H a ll By G entry S mith Vour . . . . Vovjr. Cr .«s> C hicken- stick Bug Face By Jim W odark 1 .? 3 0 A - K M>oNTMifc»ySLY (#wlî)VrtTfep. X THINK Wt£ Voo <*.►#? T’w OKU. VfcU-, TH/KT Ps!HH / i ' v, f l Ü |\AAaH M - ^ ^ S A M Ba d h a ik u ■'v rJ D A m m rT f / m a t e w h e iJ IT ^Peoy>iM boot>i_E OM us Tea llx show s b v S I ie s P E C T /ÎAJb A LS O b e ö R A b c s t h e F kice v a lu e ~U O F TH E B y C h a r le s W e sley lo e u - .. Y e p . Gum Çoe. pm it/. © S ocolar. FyiEryf e i e y PlAPeft » SorA # ' T J', / / Coffee Break in the work-a-day world of the "Wild Kingdom”. - S t a t e P ress o n lin e — ://news. vpsa. asu. SUM M ER’S A P P R O A C H IN G ! JO IN US IN M EX ICO ! GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week B ringing Fine Food and Friends Together Since 1963 Mama Rosa's Traditional Sonoran M exican Food Recipes A re Sim ply the Best! J u ly 6 — A u g u st 20,1998 Featuring Selections to Enhance War Healthy Lifestyle Study Spanish in beautiful Guadalajara Mexico! Attend this 46-year old program to earn credit for Intensive Spanish, Upper-division Spanish and Mexico-related courses. Live with a Host family. 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GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA P.O .B O X 40966 TUCSON, ARIZONA 85717 O R C A LL U S AT: (520) 621-5137 E-MAIL: Janeg@UJVrizona.EDU H O M EPAG E: www.coh.Arizona.edu/gss S po rts Page 13 Tuesday, March 24, 1998 State P ress A S U looks to extend winning streak vs. Antelopes Jeremy Hein/State Press Sophomore Dustin Delucchi and the ASU baseball team will bevel across town tonight et 7 to play Grand Canyon University at Brazell Stadium. Majerus remains ASU s No. 1 choice B y M att P aulson S tate P ress D espite the fact that Utah head coach Rick M ajerus’ price, tag seem ingly doubles w ith every win his Utes pull o f in the NCAA Tournam ent, it appears he is still the top candidate to be the ASU m en’s head b asket­ ball coach next season. • “ I t ’s p re tty o b v io u s w ho w e ’re going a fte r,” a source in the ASU Sports Inform ation O ffice told the State P ress M on d ay , re fe rrin g to M ajerus. M ajerus has guided Utah to a 293 re c o rd th is se a so n an d its first Final Four appearance since 1966. MAJERUS H o w e v e r, w h e th e r o r n o t M ajerus rem ains as interested in ASU now as he once was rem ains to be seen. M ajerus has said in the past that he w ould like to coach at ASU. Having now reached the Final Four at Utah, a feat he previously said he didn’t think possible, though, M ajerus m ight not be so adam ant about leaving Salt Lake City. M ajerus was unavailable for com m ent M onday, but he did tell the Tribune Saturday after U tah defeated UofA, “The last thing on my mind right now is whether I’m staying or leaving.” He did add, though, “I listen to anyone that would have something to say to m e.” ASU Sports Inform ation D irector M ark Brand said M ajerus hadn’t been contacted about the jo b and “if he is c o n ta c te d , w e w o u ld w ait u n til a fte r th e seaso n because we w ouldn’t want to serve as a distraction to his team .” M urray State head coach M ark G ottfried, who confermed he was contacted by ASU Athletic Director Kevin White about the position, appears to be the univeristy’s No. 2 choice. W hile there has been no official statem ent from the athletic departm ent w hich has rem oved ASU interim head coach Don Newman from consideration for the full time post, he is not believed to be on the proverbial list. Newman, who was unavailable for com m ent, led the Sun D evils to an 18-14 reco rd and N IT T ournam ent berth this season. O th er ru m o red c a n d id a te s in c lu d e M is s is s ip p i’s R o b E v a n s , G e o rg e W a s h in g to n ’ s M ik e J a r v is , X avier’s Skip Prosser and N orth C arolina-C harlotte’s M elvin W atkins. By Lori Haro State Press Coming off a three-win weekend, the ASU baseball team will try to keep its streak going at 7 tonight against Grand Canyon University at Brazell Stadium. The Sun Devils are currently 19-12 overall and 8-6 in the Pac-10 Southern Division. ASU is third in the Six-Pac confer­ ence behind Stanford and USC. The Antelopes are 17-11 overall and 5-4 in the WAC Northern Division. Grand Canyon is second in its conference. Last Season the Sun Devils swept the Antelopes with two W ’s at home and one on the road. Two of the wins were highscoring affairs with ASU winning 26-14 and 13-3 over Grand Canyon, while the third game went down to the wire, as the Sun Devils edged past the Antelopes 7-6 in 10 innings. ASU leads the all-time series with their across town foes 7620. Sun Devil head coach Pat Murphy said that Richy Leon or Aaron Kramer will start the game. Leon started Sunday’s game against Cal and was hit pretty hard in the two innings he pitched, giving up four runs on five hits. He has an ERA of 5.16 with nine walks and 18 strikeouts in six appearances. Kramer is 2-2 with a 2.75 ERA with five walks and 25 strikeouts. Kramer got Friday night’s save after pitching three innings giving up only one walk and striking out five. Antelope head coach Gil Stafford will tentatively start either Ben Menke or Mike Torres. Menkc (0-1) has an 11.25 ERA with three walks and four strikeouts in four appearances. Torres (0-1) has an 11.85 ERA with eight walks and six strikeouts in 13.2 innings pitched. Stafford said that pitching for tonight’s game will be some­ what shaky after a rough weekend conference series with New Mexico. “We’ve just come off a pretty tough conference series with New Mexico and we have another conference series with Utah this weekend so our pitching is a concern,” Stafford said. Stafford is, however, pleased with his team’s progress from last year’s performance. “Last year we only won 13 games and this season we have already won 17, so we’re off to a good start,” Stafford said. _ Stafford said that this*Season’s team has “been able to swing that bat pretty well and score some runs”, but claims that while T urn to G rand C anyon , page 1 5 . 8 t o S u n D e v i l s A l l - A c a d e m n a m i c e d I t e a m j F r o m S ia m R epo rts T he P ac-1 0 C o n feren ce an n o u n ced (he A ll- I Academic trains for women's gymnastics and m en's j and wom en's haskciball. Sun Devil gymnasts sophomore Amy Shelton and j junior Lisa Vinrijanovic made first-tram. Vincijanovic owns a 4.00 grade point average, | studying Zoology/Pre-medicine. Shelton has a 3 58 i GPA in political science Sophomore Elizabeth MeNabb, with a 3.47 GPA in | Zoology, was named second team, while sophomore | Elizabeth Reid earned honorable mention status. In m en's basketball, junior forward Bobby Lazor earned first-team honors. L azor possesses a 3.61 GPA in business marketing. On th e w o m e n ’s sid e , s e n io r S p rin g S teed achieved second-team status with a 3.45 G PA in I chemistry. I Sophomore Rachel Holt and Kristine Sand were 4 named honorable mention. I to m îS w O n Lsihu has prawn to b« The best hammer throwerin ASU hiataiy By throwing 70.82meters (232 7) at Saturday's ASU/NSTCA Irwnatnnal the senior became Hie first SunDgyilto6t!%>eette ~Q mark'The throw also broke IMS o w schoo1 record and •utoms&Mgy quaOllad for Hie NCAA Championship meet Giti, a snpi H | showed why she in thé ASU soltbail team's cleanup hitter during !ast weekend's Diamond Days Clos'ic The third basemen s jggpd in his in 13 at hats Hem was a msgor contributor tp the A$Ui w H |«tt track team a first victory tn three years At Saturday's ASU/ IpTCA Invitational, she «An the 150C meter race with a HU of 4 rninimh. 33,43 sec­ onds and scored prints as one of ASU'e seven individual champions. i BM .iiMai¿Bngahoífw«m,tWihtid on die season Gjtl also drove n sc.on runs to load ASU to a 5-0 record. P riscilla H ein -¿-r C h ristine G T r a c k fit F ield SOfTBALL ill M ik a la ih o - T r a c k & F ield Mills improvfd to a 4-3 record with ASU s t 2 win over Cal Saturday night, The junior ! pitched six sand Innings gtviiig ip the two r ms on fou l Is ! with three walks and a season- 1 high 13 strikeouts The win was s first since Feb. 13. Ry a n M ills Ba s e b a l l Page 14 Tuesday, March 24, 1998 State P ress S u n D e v il B a s e b a l l S t a t is t ic s Individual B attin g A vg . A B Individual P itch in g N am e G /G S B . H e in t z e lm a n W . B lo o m q u is t 4 /0 3 1 /3 1 .4 0 9 115 3 7 J. P h e lp s U 2 6 /1 9 .3 9 1 15 G . G oseyvT sch A . B e in b r in k 2 2 /2 0 3 2 8 6 9 67 14 3 1 /3 1 30 C . M y e rs 2 3 /2 1 .3 2 4 74 M . M o re n o .3 1 6 136 R. L e o n 3 1 /3 1 2 3 /2 3 .2 8 6 J. S it z m a n 1 8 /5 .2 5 9 77 27 17 7 J . Jo n e s 2 4 /1 6 9 13 2 3 /2 3 .2 5 5 2 4 7 51 R. A r q u e lle s 77 22 19 15 9 17 3 0 ■ 3 « :■ 1 1 3 15 4 5 0 0 2 327 2 9 /2 1 224 76 D . M e ie r 2 6 /1 7 .2 1 7 6 9 D . D e lu e c h i 2 1 /5 .1 8 9 37 <3. H a l v o r s o n 2 0 /1 5 .1 3 2 53 8 0 11 /1 R. W ie n s 1 /0 125 0 0 0 , H 2B 3B H R RBI S lg . S B /A 0 0 0 0 Ó /Ó 4 7 5 i 3 0 2 9 .5 0 0 .5 0 4 27: 3 2 1 ■ 12 ,5 3 6 6 /8 14 2 2 2 1 0 13 .3 8 8 4 /6 12 3 7 2 4 13 2 5 43 .6 1 1 2 /1 3 2 2 16 3 .7 4 5 -3 1 0 9 7 0 1 18 .4 5 9 1/1 1 i 1 2 R. M ills 4 .6 3 4 -3 1 0 /1 0 0 0 5 6 .1 31 43 4 0 6 2 7 1 0 /1 2 12 5 .1 6 1 -0 6 /4 0 Ö 2 2 .2 26 1 4 /1 3 9 18 .2 8 0 1 1 1 0 2 11 16 R. M iln e r 6 .0 8 0 -0 7 /0 0 0 1 3 ,1 19 9 3 5 8 2 3 1 0 0 1 .2 9 6 8 8 C , C a ll 6 .5 2 4 /1 0 0 9 .2 9 .2 3 1 4 1 10 .3 1 4 1/2 7 1 4 J. G e h rk e 8 .3 1 4 /3 1 0 1 3 .0 12 1 2 /1 2 5 4 7 o '0 1 -0 2 -1 1 0 /9 1 3 /7 9 7 1 /3 2 /4 23 14 R. L e o n 2 2 .4 5 6 .3 7 7 8 .2 3 5 1 5 .3 1 2 6 /8 9 2 0 D . M e ie r 3 6 ,0 0 0 -1 2/1 0 10 1 2 /1 2 2 1 .5 8 8 0 2 2 .3 2 9 2 /3 10 13 0 3 .0 .3 0 4 1 /4 12 T e a m 4 .3 6 1 9 -1 2 31 4 2 7 2 .2 2 4 5 1 6 9 /1 3 2 1 0 6 2 7 5 .2 3 9 1 6 2 8 O p p o n e n ts 5 .9 2 1 2 -1 9 31 4 2 6 7 .2 3 0 9 2 2 9 /1 7 6 1 7 3 .2 9 4 3 6 2 6 ■' . 1 . L a - 1 113 M . C o llin s M , E rn ste r R V 1 1 7 /2 2 V BB K N a m e E R A W -L - G /G S G G 1 0 1 .1 3 2 -1 2 1 /0 32 14 C . C ru m p to n A . K ra m e r 18 C . P e n n in g t o n 3 .5 6 2 -1 12 D . F r ie d b e r g 3 .7 2 0 -0 0 8 12 0 8 .2 4 3 1 /2 0 2 0 4 0 6 .1 3 2 0 /0 5 19 .1 2 5 0 /0 2 .0 0 0 0 /0 0 3 0 7 2 1 0 0 (j 3 7 1 0 0 Ô 2 0 0 0 Ö 0 0 1 5 2 0 5 .4 0 6 6 4 /8 8 1 7 3 210 2 9 1 5 5 .3 9 1 1 1 /2 7 1 0 6 2 7 5 3 7 T eam 31 .2 9 4 1 0 5 1 2 2 9 3 0 9 51 11 O p p o n e n ts 31 .2 3 9 1 0 2 7 1 6 9 2 4 5 5 6 7 V . .... BB..m .. WBm P. L o w e r y 5 '' , v 2 .7 5 I M S 2 -2 a s i l i S V IP H R /E R BB K B /A v g . W P HBF 0 0 3 1 3 9 .2 2 7 1 1 / 5 1 3 3 7 .1 9 7 1 4 1 9 .2 7/3 0 0 3 0 .1 9 2 4 9 /0 0 0 9 .2 11 1 2 /0 9 /9 2 2 '+í ¿ . [ - $ l i p 5 5 .1 ,V § 6 /6 5 25 .1 3 2 1 8 /1 2 8 /4 12 5 33 11 .2 1 6 0 0 .2 8 2 2 4 0 3 0 /2 3 2 4 61 .2 0 4 1 5 8 3 5 /2 9 18 65 .2 6 0 4 ; ^ 21 Q § y y ¡Ü y, 3 2 0 4 6 i l ! f l¡ ¡ t l¡ L. Adriana Garcia/State Press The ASU m e n ’s b ask etb all season has been over fo r n e a rly tw o w eeks now , and a head coach for next season has yet to be named. An n e w m an n o @ asu .ed u announcem ent from the university isn’t expected until after the NCAA Tournam ent, which ends next Monday.' Several candidates have been rumored for the job but apparently interim head coach Don Newman isn't among them. Newman led the Sun Devils, who were picked to finish last in the Pac-10, to an 1814 overall mark, a tie for fifth place in the Pac-10 at 8-10 and an N IT Tournament berth this season. The job appears to be Rick M ajerus’ to take or leave. Majerus, the current Utah head coach, has hinted in the past that he would like to coach at ASU, but with his team Th o se in fa v o r a n o th e r co a ch now in the Final Four, the price tag for him has skyrocketed. write in at newmanno@asu.edu O th e r c o a c h e s re p o rte d to be c a n d id a te s in c lu d e G eo rg e W ashington’s Mike Jarvis, X avier’s Skip Prosser, North C arolina-C harlotte’s M elvin W atkins and Mark Gottfried o f Murray State. The State Press would like to know who you — the fans, students, faculty and staff o f ASU — think should be head coach o f the men’s basketball team. What do you think? NewCoach 7 1 2 S . College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D eli 6 0 9 S . Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s fro m C o ffe e Pla ntatio n Everyday Low Price ‘ Students should include their name, class standing and major. Faculty and staff should include their name and college. Results of the poll and selected responses will be published in Friday’s edition of the State Press. Those in favor of Don Newman being promoted to head coach e-mail your responsetonewmanyes@asu.edu 3,99 2 4 exposure D O U B L E P R IN T S s e e s t o r e fo r d e ta ils C o lo r C - 4 1 P r o c e s s Hubert Alexi Zemke/State Press B e s t P r ic e in T o w n I n d e p e n d e n t I m C p o r t F E M A LE AND M A LE C O U N S ELO R S N EED ED FO R TO P CHILD REN ’S C A M P IN MAINE. a r e S E R V IC IN G I lin M n n • A n ID A ■ W E H O N O R M O S T EXTE NC)ED W A R R A N TIES n x o 3039 E. Thomas Rd. P h o e n ix ( 2 B l k s . W . o f 3 2 n d S t.) c o o n Top salary, room/board/laundry, clothing and travel allowance included. Must have skill in one or more of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts (ceramics, stained glass, jewelry), athletic trainer, basketball, canoeing, kayaking, dance (tap, pointe and jazz), drama, field hockey, golf, gymnastics (instructors and qual­ ified spotters), horseback riding/English hunt seat, lacrosse, photography, videographer, piano accompanist, pioneering/camp craft, ropes (challenge course, 25 stations), sailing, soccer, softball, tennis, theatre technicians, traGk and field, vol­ leyball, waterskiing (slalom, trick, barefoot, jumping), W.S.I./Swim instructors, windsurfing. Also opportunities for kitchen, cooks, maintenance, nurses, and sec­ retaries. C a m p V e g a fo r G ir ls ! Visit our website at ww w .c a m p v e g a .c o m o r e - m a ilu s a t j o b s @ c a m p v e g a .c o m . CALL 1-800-838-VEGA or WRITE: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332 AMERICANI EXPRESS I 1820 E. Apache Tempe C O M E S E E U S ! W e w ill b e o n y o u r c a m p u s T h u r s d a y , A p r il 2nd M e m o ria l U n io n , L a p a z R o o m #223 Interview s a n d Infprm ation fro m 10a.m . - 4p .m . (1 B l k . E. o f M c C l i n t o c k ) No appointment necessary. W h a t C a n I P o W ith M y L iberal A r t s P eg re e ? Market yourself and your degree effectively by attending V 2 i COMPUTER RENTAL INTERNET ACCESS Bring this coupon to the Kinko's listed below and receive off on-site Mac & IBM Rental and Internet Access.. Today 12:40-1:30 pm M e m o r i a l U n io n 2 2 3 Offer does not apply to d igital output of files. Offer is lim ited to one coupon per person. Coupon must be presented at time o f purchase and is not valid with other offers or discounts. Offer valid at tinie o f purchase only and may not be discounted or credited toward past or future purchases. Offer valid at Kinko's listed locations only. Coupon void where prohibited by taw. No cash value. Offer expires 8/30/98. *1998 Kinko's, Inc. A ll rights reserved. Kinko's is a registered trademark of Kinko's Ventures, Inc. and is used by permission. Kinko's requires written permission from the copyright holder in order to; reproduce any copyrighted materials. A S U Career S e rv ice s C L A S College Council AAB877 Open 24Hours • Ask about free pickup and delivery EXP 8/30/98 I State P ress Page 15 Tuesday, March 24,1998 Mens tennis looks for upswing against New Mexico A SU h a s c o m p ile d a 2 5 -9 re c o rd at hom e, including a 5-1 record this year. The Sun Devils w ill play three straight at h o m e b e fo re h ead in g o u t on the ro ad April 3. “We are a great team at home,” junior G u sta v o M a rc a c cio sa id . “ I th in k we h a v e a c h a n c e o f b e a tin g an y b o d y at hom e, but on the road we still need to work on it.” M arcaccio also said that the w in against USC proved ASU can play w ith the g re a t team s, w h ich has b o th good and bad by-products. “We proved to ourselves that we can win a big m atch,” M arcaccio said “So it’s g re a t f o r o u r c o n fid e n c e , b u t it a lso means every team we play will be more m otivated to play us, so we ju st have to be ready for every match, and stay men­ tally tough.” W hile the team has been playing very w e ll a t th e f r ie n d ly c o n fin e s o f W hitem an, the players also understand that they cannot afford to take anyone lightly. “ You can n ev er u n d er-estim ate any team ,” sophom ore Alex O sterrieth said. “W e ju st need to get out there (today) and do what we are capable of.” W hile the team did play a couple o f home matches during spring break, it was an adm ittedly different experience w ith­ out the. student support. “I th in k th e w h o le team is e x c ite d f o r ( t o d a y ’ s) m a tc h a g a in s t N ew M exico S ta te ,” so p h o m o re E d C a rte r said. “I t’s the first tim e in a w hile that w e’ll be able to have a full m atch d u r­ ing school, b ecause d u ring the S pring B y C arlo M erca loo S tate P ress The roller coaster ride that is the 1998 ASU m e n ’s te n n is s e a s o n w ill m ak e a n o th e r p a s s th ro u g h th e W h ite m a n Tennis C enter today, as the Sun D evils host the New M exico State Lobos at 1:30 p m The team has played some great tennis so far this year, but has not been able to get on that roll that players and coaches have anticipated. Over spring break, ASU bottom ed out in its match against No. 10 UCLA, losing its first doubles point o f the season cn route to a 6-1 spanking at the hands o f the Bruins. The next day, however, the Sun Devils peaked, coming up with an im probable 43 victory over No. 6 IJSC, capturing their first Pac-10 win o f the seaso n . A S U ’s victory over the T rojans, only the fifth ever, ranks as one o f the biggest wins in the program ’s history and served notice to the re st o f the P ac-10 th at the Sun Devils are for real. In the next m atch, though, the roller coaster took another severe dip as ASU lost a heartbreaker to No. 55 UC Santa B arb ara, 4-3 on S a tu rd a y , in a m atch were the Sun D evils had a m atch point but were unable to capitalize. „ Now at the m id-point o f the season, the team will try to regroup, as it makes a ru n fo r - th e P a c -1 0 an d N C A A Cham pionships at the end o f the year. One thing which bodes well for ASU in the n ear futu re is its d istin c t hom ecou rt advantage. In the p ast tw o years, Don’t forget to vote in the Newman Poll Jeremy Hein/State Press Ed Carter ahd the men’s tennis team host the New Mexico State Lobos today at 1:30 p.m. at the Whiteman Tennis Center. B re a k m a tc h e s n o t to o m any p e o p le w ere a b le to com e o u t. So it w ill be good ju s t to get back out there and get into the flow o f our co u rts.” G rand C anyon C ontinued from page 13 . (e-mail addresses on pg 14) From State Press cartoonists BRAINSTORM CENTRAL O rder yours today! they can hit the line drives and doubles they “don’t hit a lot of home runs.” Grand Canyon does have 34 home runs on the year. ASU’s count stands at 15. The Antelopes are led by Cody Ransom who is batting . 374 with 46 hits, five home runs and 24 RBI. Blake Woods is hitting .359 with a team leading 29 RBI. The Sun Devils are still being led offensive­ ly by left fielder Willie Bloomquist who is hit­ ting .409 with 47 hits and 29 RBI. Third baseman Andrew Beinbrink is batting .327 and leads the team in doubles (13) and RBI (43). This season marks Grand Canyon’s last at -the Division I level. Next season the Antelopes will join the Division II rankings instead of going back to being an independent Division I team, as they were before they joined the WAC. “Being a Division I independent team is like being in no man’s land, there is no hope and you play the worst schedule, always on the road,” Stafford said. “W e’ll still continue to play ASU and Arizona. They have assured us we’ll be able to continue to play with them.” From the backstop •Bloomquist was recently invited to USA Baseball’s summer camp for the 1998 USA Baseball National Team. Bloomquist attended the team trials in November. Approximately 40 players will be invited to the summer training camp that opens June 1 at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson. The team will be comprised of 22 players, beginning play in mid-June. Troubles again for Tart’s team There are three ways to reserve your copy: 1. Fax this form to 965-4706 2. Mail this form to BrainstormCentral, 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. We’ll call you when the book is ready for distribution. acollectionofokifavorites& neww orkby StatePresscartoonists w ithforew ordby order form • BRAINSTORM CENTRAL*order form into&form er J Your name: . __ ■ . i Phone: ’ ■ : ■ "' ■ . StatePresscartoonist |Mailing address: — — — -----— M ikeRitter i - - - - - — ■■ ■ ■ * • — — — — — — ■ \Number of copies:_x $5=$____ St c TTP ress Q u e s tio n s ? C a ll J o n a th a n Inge at 965-2292 Books WHI bs available for sals on Cady Mall by the fountain beginning March 12 l (add $2.95 shipping per copy if you want your I copy(s) mailed to the address above) | □ m a il b o o k (t) to a b o v o a d d re s s | O I’ll p ic k m y boo k u p at th e S tate P re ss a tta r S p rin g B reak I C l I’v e e n clo se d a ch e ck to r paym ent □ b ill m y c re d it ca n t ■ a V la a □ M C □ A m ex C a n t« : I e x p ira tio n data: ' . prepayment reserves your copy of this limited edition ' A ssociated Press — Jerry T arkanian called a p layer’s m other after the latest arrests a week ago, and felt the shock and bewilderment and helplessness in her soft, sobbing voice. H ere w as another kid T arkanian had given a second, third and fourth chance, another o f his reclam ation projects gone bad, and now he had to tell the mother that her son, center Avondre Jones, had been arrested and kicked o ff the Fresno State team. “ S he w as all sh o o k up, h e a rts ic k ,” Tarkanian said. “She still can’t believe it. Avondre would have graduated. He made the honor roll last spring. He just screwed himself all up.” Even by Tarkanian’s turbulent standards, the Fresno State team he brings into the NIT semifinals Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden has gone through a hellish season. . A ssaults and arrests. F ists, guns and samurai swords. Booze, drugs and rehab. Six suspensions, one dismissal, and linger­ ing suspicions of point-shaving. “It’s been the m ost difficult year, by f a r ,” T ark an ian said , w earin ess in h is scratchy voice, rings around his raccoon eyes, lids droopy as ever as he boarded a jet for New York. T arkanian knew tough tim es at Long Beach State and UNLV, each placed on probation during his reign, and he survived a long legal joust with the NCAA. He also knew his share o f triumph, capturing the Final Four at UNLV in 1990 and coming into this season with the best winning per­ centage among active coaches at 667-145. But nothing in all his years — not even the infamous photos of former Rebel play­ ers in a hot tub with a convicted gambler that led to his exit from UNLV in 1991 — com pared to this 21-11 season o f utter chaos and surprising success. “I don’t plan on doing this very long,” said the towel-chomping 67-year-old, who is in his third year at his alma m ater (all with at least 20 wins and NIT berths) and has a co n tra c t th ro u g h next seaso n . “I would just like to turn this thing around. I thought we could have done it by now. I’m disappointed we didn’t.” Tarkanian’s recruiting style wherever he has coached has been to place talent ahead of character and brains, to take kids who have had problems with alcohol or drugs or the law and give them a way out through basketball. H e’ll take kids from obscure ju n io r co lleg es, o r tran sfers w ho w ere unhappy at major universities. Anyone who has The Game. U n lik e c o a c h e s at sch o o ls su ch as Stanford and North Carolina, who are in the Final Four, Tarkanian hasn’t been restricted to students who must have high Scholastic Aptitude Test scores and good grades to be accepted. This shark is a bottom fisher. Classifieds P age 16 Tuesday, March 24,1998 N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for die validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. rrm m m Mara Trivia... ANNOUNCEMENTS STUDY SPANISH in M exico! Call toll-free 888-5-ESPANOL APARTMENTS lBD/lBA 4-PLEX, a/c, pool, cov'd prkng. Near dwhtwn Tem­ pe. $425/mo. Call 731-9460 RURAL/ TERRACE, vintage floor plans. Sm all com plex. 2bd $650/m o. & lbd $S20/m o. inclds utils. 731-9460 ONE BD apart. Laundry, 1 blk from campus, quiet, small com­ plex 933 S. Farmer 675-0928 Reno, Nevada TEMPE: 2BR apt, a/c, cov'd parking, completely remodeled, small complex close to dwntwn & campus. $500/mo. 804-0537 is vast o f Los Angeles, ANNOUNCEMENTS HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING ROOMS FOR g | N ^ _ aBS^ 3B D /2B A , 2 CG hom e, 1 mi. to ASU. Fridge, w/d, fruit trees, pets ok! $975/mo. 968-7319 M /F TO share 3bd 2ba N ice pad! A ll ammen. $330/m o. + 1/3 util., 4-2 avail. 949-5298 3B D /2BA /2G G HOME 1 mi. from A SU . Frige, w /d, fruit trees, pets okay ! $975/mo. 9687319 RMTE NEEDED for 3bd/2ba w/ pool immed. $350 4 1/3 Util. Call 774-0239 ROOM AVAIL, in clean 4 bd house w/pool, fp, garage. $250 + 1/4 b ills, dep. Tem pe 8316577 TEMPE NEAR Broadway & C ollege, 3bd/2ba, pool, w/d, frige, 2 car garage, $ 1250/mo. 829-8218 RENTAL SHARING 4B D /2B A HOME at Southern and Rural w / pool and fire­ place, F/Grad student pref. A vail, now, $350/m o +utils. Call Lisa Marie 692-3085. WALK TO A SU , 6 5 0 sq. ft. guest house, pool, utils, incld. $625/m o. 3bd/2ba, w/d, pool, $1300. A vail, immed. 7313969or 360-1626 pager. California., A SAP RMMTE beautiful lg 3bd 3ba, p ool, tennis ert $280/m o. + 1/3 util. Warner/Price 756-2307 BpsT ROOMS FOR RENT F PREF, cute 4 bd house, close to campus, $325/mo + 1/4 util, & security dep. Laundry facili­ ties. Tw o rooms available for summer Susie 946-0527. SHARE LARGE Home. Dobson/Warner area. Frplce, ch efs kitchen, w/d, prvte entrance to mstr. bdrm suite. Smoker ok. $375+ 1/2 utils. 814-0793 HOMES FOR ^ L E _ _ _ NEED SOMEONE to finish apt. lease until May 31st. $500/mo. Urgent call Fred at 736-2988 HOMES FOR Sale 3bd house w / pool, remodeled, very nice, close to campus. Realty Exec­ utives Bob Bullock 998-2992 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL I FEMALE PREF, house at I-10 & Elliot, 10 min. from campus. $400 incl util. Janet 598-1196. Rancho Las Palmas ,j 3FÌX!£>SS&S* wSñ& 0 2 ROOMMATE WANTED/ NO FREAKS Bitter, controlling egomaniac s e e k s egg-loving, m o n s te r tru ck driver to sh are room, late night co-ed Twister and m o re. M u s t w ea r s iz e 6 shoes. I’m your Jack, you’ re my Chrissy and Janet OR cal I The J e ffe r s o n C o m m o n s. Spacious 1,2,3,4 bdrm, Fum. W/D, Individual leases. 1-888367-4340. Close to Cam pus g a g g ^ g r a il k sss , ga; HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Apache Terrace Apartm ents 9 * 8 -6 3 8 3 Call 965-6735 Shifts: • • • • Sun. (5p-9p) & Mon-Thur (lpm -5pm ) Mon-Fri (5:30p-10p) Mon-Fri (10:30p-2:30a) Must be 18 years of age Able to lift & carry 70 lbs safely Maintain constant work p ace for 3-5 hours (on your feet) Extremely physical work UPS OFFERS THE FOLLOWING: • . Paid vacations & holidays M edical Insurance • Promotional opportunities • Student Loans up to $25,000 per year HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Healthy women (ages 21-32, alt ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 . clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2,000. Data Entry Operators n e e d e d a t a U P S p r o c e s s in g c e n te r. L o c a te d n e a r 1-10 S TU niversity in T e m p e . * 1 s t & 2 n d shift, w e e k d a y s o n ly * F a s t-p a c e d , p ro d u c tio n -o rie n te d D E. * 10 key b y to u c h , 10,000 k e y stro k e s p e r h ou r. A ll p o sitio n s a r e lo ng term jo b o p p o rtu n itie s w ith ro o m f o r a d v a n c e ­ m e n t G r e a t b e n e fits p a c k a g e in c lu d e s h o lid a y s, s ic k p a y , a n d m ore! Z acso n ’ C O R P O R A T IO N Zacson, a global leader in the telesale/ teleservices industry represents Fortune 500 clients in the telecommunications and financial services arenas. We have immediate openings for telesales representatives for these shifts7am - 3:30pm 12:30pm - 9:30pm 5pm - 9:30pm * /am - noon * lp m - 9:30pm * 4 p m -9 p m O C a ll 517-6645 M a n p o w e r is a n E O E Psych & Social Work Majors Gain Valuable Experience DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who aré Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $6.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Timé Off, Advancement Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Pull Benefits Package ' $1 t/hour average with $8.50 base • Full &. part-time positions available • Paid training • Medical/dental/vision after 90 days • $50 Referral bonuses • Paid vacations/holidays • $50 sign-up bonus after 90 days • Training dasses begin every week G U AR AN TEED $ 1 0 / H R O p p o r tu n ity to m a k e m u ch m ore! Vend Cookies at Ball One Ballpark Great PT position / Flexible hours Call 470-2064 for more information or apply directly at our fadlity for an on-the-spot interview. 3601 E. University, Ste. 100A Phoenix, AZ 85034 UPS will b e co n d u c tin g o n -cam p u s r e c tru itm e n t o n M arch 24 a t th e C ady Mall a n d interv iew s o n M arch 26 in t h e S tu d en t S e n d e e s Building. For m o ré inform ation, c o n ta c t th e ASU S tu d e n t Services office. An em p lo y er p a id ad. 95 GMC Sonoma SLS pickup. 5spd, ac, ps, cass, custom w heels. $7,995 Brown & Brown Nissan 461-4300 S ta rtin g s a la ry $8/hr. UNITED PARCEL SERVICE NOW HIRING LOADERS/UNLOADERS POWERPC 180MHZ 32MRam, modm, monitr, lots sftwre, exc. web desgnr, $825obo 752-7897 = Our folly automated and professional environment provides: m N issan Sentra hchbck, 5spd, sunrf, am/fm cass, new paint, very clean $2700 Call 8324263 Life/Health in s u ra n c e , p d v a c a tio n , \ to place your classified ad --------------------- ♦ ----------------------UPS Is now hiring permanent part-time employees at $8.50/hour for the following positions: M ACINTOSH PÉRFORMA PowerPC, 4 0 MB RAM, 500 MB hard drive, 33.6k modem $550, obo. Paul 273-1823, pbock@asu.edu For more information call (602) 860-4792 One o f AZ's to p rated LTC facilities h a s a full-time position for an individual w ith a t least 2 gears accounts payable experience. Computer skills in Quatro-Pro and account­ ing database software preferred. Must have excellent organizational, accuracy and com­ munication skills and enjoy interacting w ith th e elderly. Up to $ 1 0 /h r DOE plus excellent benefits. Mail or fax (957-9493) resume. Attention: Controller, or apply in person Mon. - FH. 8:30am - 4:30pm at: MVEL CAMPUS OF CARE Goldsmith Building 8 2 9 -9 6 0 7 1 2 CARS: 93 GEO Tracker, 5 spd. conv. 5 1 ,000 m i., Viper COMPUTERS ACCOUNTS PAYABLE COORDINATOR 1 2 4 9 E. S p e n c e , T e m p e Bedroom A partm ents 2 CARS: 91 Honda Civic, exc. cond: CD, am/fm, a/c, 4 dr. se­ dan, $3500. Mazda stn. w ag­ on, am/fm Cass., a/c, 62K mi. Very clean, $3000.230-8505 DONOR EGGS NEEDED X /, Less than 1 Mile from ASU APARTMENTS PORTABLE BAR Cabinetsolid wood* recessed w heels, 30” x 4 0 ” closed, top opens to 6 0 ” w ide. Racks inside for g la sse s, bottles. Good cond. $100 obo. 854-0910 Call Terry: 998-0325 • S t u d e n t L iv in g • 1 & 2 B e d ro o m s • G r e a t A m e n itie s At Rural A University AUTOMOBILES F/T & P /T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park How simple is that? See Thursday’s State Press for details. FURNITURE Assembler Jobs-$8/hr. APARTMENTS Get a date. Get a lunch! Sta te P ress EOE • Avg. 4 hr. shifts • Season runs March 29-Sept. 27 • Health Insurance If you can carry 25 lbs, are in reasonable shape & enjoy w orking w ith people, call M-F, 9am-Noon. J fi 944-7006 PageJL7 Tuesday March 24,1998 State P ress BICYCLES AUTOMOBILES 95 SATURN SC2 sunroof, cass, low m i., very clean. $11,995 Brown Sc Brown Nissan 461-4300 MT. BIKE- Specialized stumpjumper M 2, LX, XT, 15.5", grip shift 600, Judy XC fork, like new, $750 obo. 854-0910 MOTORCYCLES SPECIALIZED ROCK Hopper 1994 GSXR 750 Metallic silve w / red trim /and w heels. Jus t tuned and tagged, Low eas] f miles Kevin 962-0677 LX many new xtras. Xlent cond. Steal $450! Jason 9495298 Find it FAST in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departrs. Buy coupons/awards. M ost places worldwide. 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL______ A APPT SETTER $ 10/hrly + comm. Multi-million $, natl co est in 68, needs ppl w / or w /o exp to call on bus. Days only, no wknds. *Leads provided*Paid weekly*Great training* B enefits. To make great $$ call Curtis @ 557-6378. HELP WANTEDG E N E R A ^ _ _ i_ ANSWERING SERVICE- Pleas­ ant voice, will brain,, ft, pt, pm, operators, friendly staff. Good comm, skills Sc typing a must. 24th S t Sc Osborn. 553-4302. APPT. SETTER $9/hr.+ bonus! FT/PT avail. Great Tempe loca­ tion. Contact Kim 517-1977 HELP WANTEDG gN |R AL__ RECEPTIONIST BUSY, FULL-SERVICE veterinary hospital in E. Phx. seeks mature, people Sc animal orient­ ed individ. w / computer exp for afternoons, 20hrs/wk. Call 9558430 or fax resume 955-0215 KENNEL HELPER AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS YMCA is now hiring for before & afterschool, summer daycamp, preschool enrichment, & certified swim instructors for spring Sc summer lessons. Ap­ ply: 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Suite 6B, Phoenix, AZ 85044, 759-6762 ATTN BUSINESS Majors: Mar­ keting, research, & consulting firm seeking pt asst, to account mgrs. Good resume experience, college credit, & advancement for graduates available. Please Call 941-3121 ext. 215 for info, or fax resume to 941-5246 BUSY, FULL-SERVICE veterinary hospital in E. Phx. seeks resp. animal-oriented person. Pt hre. avail, early morning, late af­ ternoon, som e wknds. Salary neg. Call 9 5 5 -8 4 3 0 or fax re­ sume to 955-0215 ANSWER CALLS from child­ ren who are lonely, bored, or BECOME A mobile DJ. Work weekends. We train* Depend­ able vehicle. Call 820-8220 CAMP STA FF Join the fun working w/ girls ages 7-14 at a summer resident cam p in the Catalina Mtns. near Tucson or at a resident camp in east Tuc­ son. Opportunities for coun­ selors^ unit leaders, assistant cook, program sp ecialists Sc equestrians. Call R achel at (520) 327-2288 x. 134 for a position list Sc application. AA/EOB ' S u m m e r C a m p C o u n s e lo r s N eeded fo r P rem iere C a m p s in M a ssa c h u se tts Positions for talented, energetic, and fun-loving students as counselors in all team sports including ( Roller Hockey, all individual sports such as Tennis & « Golf, Waterfront and Pool activities, and specialty activities including art, dance, theatre, gymnastics, newspaper & radio. TO P SALARIES, room, board and travel. June 20th-August 19th. Enjoy a great summer that promises to be unforgettable. MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118 DANBEE (Glrls):1-800-392-3752 HELP WANTEDGENERAL CHOICE HOTELS International is now hiring for Reservations Sales Representatives. We are looking for sales-oriented peo­ ple w / enthusiasm, basic com­ puter know ledge & excellen t communication skills to service inbound calls. For more infor­ mation,.call 953-4509 EOE *• CIGAR STORE clerk, P/T, no exp. nee,, must work thru Sum­ mer vacation, clean cut, outgo­ ing, like smoke, 840-9080 CLUB LEADER' positions avail, working directly w/ child­ ren 4-11. Shifts avail, in schoolbased programs, M-F between 6:30am-8:30am or from 2:306:15 each day after school (with an early start on Wed. from 12:30-6:15)*. Call 5987308 to set-up an interview. DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now hiring order takers Sc drivers. Drivers must have own car & in­ surance.. PT/FT. Extra $$. Call 220-0000 New Timetable? ... Worn P/T and Be Flexible Trying to organize your new schedule and lurid down a fob? foots Market Research has openings for students who Ukc to work wllli people and rqjoy talking on die phone. sv 7)ow frO rfng G>H {Positions e sp e cia lly : Sen/ers- ^ (totaUalary & tips) iQ i Q w C 9 VCr rfrm tr $ 1 0 + per hour (based on experience & work schedule) FULL & PART TIME V FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES On The Border, an authentic, Northern M exican, full-service dinner house, know n fo r M exican vaquero and m esquite-fited fare is opening soon in S u p erstitio n S p rin g s! L ife is better a t On The Border, and so are the....benefuA like: tuition assistance program, p aid vacations . and insurance, and more, a ll in a ' »T fu n and very friendly work <5 -L l T h e n are HO SALES - w e are gathering consumer's Do You Need Extra $$$ To Pay For Spring Break? Immediate Openings in Outbound Telesales The Aftermarket Company is now hiring for our Outbound Telesales departments. Return calls to current customers on behalf of the client. Flexible afternoon an d even in g schedules great for students! Shifts available to fit your sch ool schedule. ★ Paid Training APPLY IN PERSON Mon-Fri 10am-4pa I Sal lO a a -lp a it: 1710 South Fewer Road ia Mesa We offer training and a flexible schedule. Looks Meat on a resume. Data entry, clerical positions also available. Call Dee at 874-1714 -■ E r PHLEBOTOMISTS Great part-time opportunities MDS Harris, an International leader in the pharmaceu­ tical testing Industry, seeks phlebotomists to draw blood samples from study participants and to process samples. We require previous phlebotomy experi­ ence. We currently have early morning, afternoon, and evening shifts available. Number of hours will vary based on staffing needs. Competitive wages for skilled Phlebotomists. Please apply at: ★ Full & Part Time BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E ★ Weekly Paychecks i t Benefits for F/T HrNo Cold Calling i t Generous ★ Weekend Shifts Avail, ' Commissions S3 MDS Harris 4 6 3 9 SOUTH' 36TH STREET PHOENIX, A Z 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE C a ll 470-2500 A f t e r IVI a r k E T Aftermarket is located near 40th St: between University & Broadway S Scottsdale Resort and Villas We are immediately hiring for: * tip# RI' AM Restai A m e ric a ’s d is c o u n t so u rce for com puters, hardw are and so ftw are ; v ' AM Room Sendee ($5 + dp# :sp8BM Inturnihipi Available fa r College of Business Students 10 iatwrniblpi offerml • N u ib l* part-time hours «$0 .0 0 por hoar to start lif PM Restaurant Servers ($3 + tip# ; .✓ AM/PM Restaurant Hostfess) \ Apply in person Mon-Fri, 9am - 3pm at the Scottsdale Hilton In thé Human Resources Office 6 3 3 3 N, Scottsdale Rd." Scottsdale. AZ 85250 r HELP WANTEDGENERAL DOMINO'S PIZZA Come join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for the ASU area. With the addi­ tion o f hot w ings, salads Sc breadsticks this Dom ino's is one o f the top campus stores in the country. We need more f/t & p/t, phone help, pizza mak­ ers, & drivers, (especially late night shifts Sc lunch shifts) to help us make, bake, Sc take all these orders. Our drivers can make $7-$14 per hour include ing mileage Sc tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned. We are very flexible Sc can work around your school schedule. We support a drug free work environment. Apply in person after 11am at 903 S. Rural, Tempe, or c all 9685555. EOE. DRIVI2RS-OWN CAR/INSUR $9-15 hr. Mon-Fri 11 am-2pm flex, shifts. We deliver Restau rant fo o d to Central Phoeni b u sin e s se s. 1 -8 0 0 -9 5 1 -3 6 6 3 leave message. Summer Camp Jobs in Southern California! YMCA Camp Marston, Raintree Ranch and Camp Surf In San Diego, seeking leaders to teach and inspire children in Resident Camp setting. Representative on campus April 1. For info or interview con* tact Rik Nicholson at 760-765-0642. EEOE ymcacamps@aol.com Hey Sun D evils Get D ratted By The Pros! D on’t m iss this opportuni­ ty to work In tw o o f Arizona’s m ost exciting sports v en u es - The America W est Arena and The Bank O ne Ballpark! The Phoenix Suns, Arizona Diamondbacks, and Phoenix C oyotes Team Sh ops are currently accepting applications for part-time: Novelty Sales Representatives Team Shop Sales Clerks General responsibilities include selling team merchandise, cash register operation, stocking merchandise, and maln. talnlng store appearance. A polished appearance and professional attitude w ith excellent com m unica­ tion skills are required. Prior retail experience and/or general M acintosh experience preferred. Interested applicants may apply at th e America W est Arena team Shop located in dow ntow n Phoenix at 201 E. Jefferson St. or th e Fashion Square Team Shop located Inside th e Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall. EMBASSY SUITES' Tempe-bascd Insight is ■ 1628 million, puWkly-lnsded telesales orpniw uion mdfktting computers, hardwsre and software to b u m m oistom ers nsiioow ide. We are seeking career-oriented professionals looking for great opportw ni»« to join our I2IXI+ employees in a fast-paced and fun environment. luagfu »«.«Lieuiivt Olay, twiuoplj», 40IKa«4 ««A pwthi* gba. Applyin peiwii M-F torn Aw-Spni, fAX<6»2iV02-HB? Attii' N iu l Htnnmyj or ntaiJ totant. Please specify yuw aie atrplymjt for nw*ii»h

n phiak.Ciilt sril be .vccptrtl. smoke-frey 'm kptet. Drug testing, BOB u ft/k /v . W it oar Weft S i t at wnwuwg)«.i«u FT & PT work available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. Tuesday, March 24, 1998 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL EARN $ 1 0 t$ 1 8 /H R . Take cash home every night: Blackjack Pizza is hiring delivery drivers for day, or night, f/t or p/t. Call 464-2121 or apply at 121 I N. Country Club, Mesa. N.E. corn­ er of County Club & Brown. FLEX. PT to file tax publica­ tions , do sim ple research, & handle general o ffice tasks: & gopher assignments for lawyer & CPA. 3 person o ffice near Broadway & Price. Hrly rate $914 DOE. Send resume to CPA, ■ P O Box 26846, Tempe, AZ 85285-6846 MECHANICAL TECH, ft/pt. some mechanical exp: desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/br. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU. Flex. hrs. Call 956-8200, days SELL ADVERTISING for the State Press & pave the road to an excellent future! (Talk about a resume builder!) Hours 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 EARN UP to $ 100/day for 3 hours work hawking programs outside piam ondback garnet Reliable lab mouse prefd. Call ■Tom, 736-1135 FUN PEOPLE •' EASTERN EUROPE Employ­ ment - D iscover how to teach basic conversational English in Prague, Budapest & Krakow. Competitive wages + benefits. Seasonal/year-round positions;. For more info: (517)336-0640 ext. K59131 ' ;/.V - y ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIV. ISTS Wanted. Work p/t to pro­ tect the natural heritage Arizo­ na's kid s,w ill inherit. Arizona League o f Conservation Voters, 966-5485 FLAGSTAFF, AZ Help bring c iv il action for violations o f Constitutional rights. Spring or Summer. Rm & Bd, some trans., expense acet., % o f sett. Ed (520) 526 -0 6 2 4 Ph * Fax 6104, NaviRanch@aoi.com Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits, $7- 12/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054. V ::; MOTIVATED REP for internet technology co. $2K -20K /m o. potential. Email reply to stantj@psnjiet, or 369-4040 NATIONAL PARK employmentParks, Forests, W ild life Pre­ serves. Ask us how! 517-3243109 Ext.N59181 GET A summer job! Attend the PARK ATTEND, S u miner j ob Fair '98 W ed. *■ Attendants needed for all ev ­ April 1 Cady M a ll/M eet with ents at Bank One Ballpark. dozens o f potential employers! Must be reliable, 18+ yrs. AZ Parking Services 905-7185. GROWING TEMPE Opinion Research firm has several posi­ RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal tions available. Flexible hill or Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ part-time. 967-4441 pe. Cindy, 496-0255 MANUELS AND Baja Tilly’s ac­ cepting applications for all po­ sitions, arh/pm. Apply in person between 2-4pm at 1123 W. Broadway, Tempe. Tired of Dialing across America and not getting paid what you're worth??? $$$$ work harder! Put it in the C las sified s! IMMEDIATE AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to p e o p le and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort is the place to be! • Eve. Hrs/Scottsdale M Diamondback Baseball Stadium For confidential . (new L mgmt avail) Starting at $7. per hour, based on experience. Interviews held at these locations: • 51 st Sve. & McDowell • 7th Ave. fk Camelback * 24th St. A Osborn 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 interview, call Dobson & Guadalupe 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 Warner & Country Club Marketing Internship Opportunity MDS Harris, art international leader In the phar­ maceutical testing industry, is looking for a Marketing intern to help promote pur clinical tri­ als on the ASU campus. The successful candi­ date will be an enthusiastic and creative individ­ ual currently in pursuit of a marketing degree. Please apply for this excellent opportunity at: BE P A R T O F T H E CURE S3 MDS Harris H u m a n r e s o u r c e s - J -M 4 6 3 9 S outh 3 6 th str eet P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /E Q E - l^ I II ■ • No Exp. N ecessary • Big $$$$$$$$$ ext 216 Bea (Leave message for same day Interview) HELP WANTEDGENËRAL STUDENT WORK TEMPE POLICE YOUNG GUNS Skilled social science researcher wanted to undertake compre­ hensive auto theft study. Prefer graduate student w/ course. work/exper. in research meth­ odology. $ 1 6 .5 0 hr., 20hrs/wk. for 6 months. Con­ tact Brenda Buren at 350-8991: $ 36,000 N ew co. expanding locally seeks career minded individ who loves fun & $. Train­ ing provided. Call 667-6330 STUDY WHILE you work. Steady phone work, no sales. All shifts avail. 941-7700. ARMY ROTC Summer Leadership Training: Five w eeks o f paid leadership and challenge. N o obligation, all of the fun. Free travel, room and board. Gall Army ROTC at 965-7468. Seeking student to create sales opportunities, promotions, spe­ cial events & marketing activi­ ties for Coca-Cola products on & around campus. Potential for FT sum m er em ploym ent, as w ell as regular em ploym ent upon graduation. Fax resum e 3 4 5 -3 0 8 2 or apply 1-10 & Elliot Rd., Tempe, M-F, 8-4pm. EOE/AA $8/HR GUARANTEED +BONUSES UPTO$1000/WK 874-8613 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Up to $9.4 0 . F lexib le sched­ ules around cla sses. No exp. nec. Great resume builder. Na­ tional scholarship program. Conds. exist. Call 2124)551, ‘PfioenvtCoca-Cota ‘Bottling Company ASU Campus R ep Location S10/HR. Flexible Hours Great A tmosphere N ext to Bus Routes Full Benefits HELP WANTEDGENERAL Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ KENNEL WORKER needed PT. M ust be neat &. depend­ able. 7311: E. Thomas Rd.,. Scottsdale, 945-7692, Make your advertising ÆM SPORTS ORIENTED individ­ uals needed. Work p/t making f/t incom e representing top names such as: Nike, Reebok, Rollerblades, etc. Contact An­ thony at 360-5040. S ta te P ress Advertise your Internet business or W eb site In the Classifieds. WANTED: HOST/HOSTESSES, flexible schedule, $10/hr. Call Alan 874-2227. Call 365-6731 for m om Information CAMP STAFF positions available at Girl Scout summer cam ps in Phoenix mid Northern Arizona. Camp counselors, horsem anship instructors, lifeguard, ldtchen staff, RNs. June 1 - Aug. 5 LIFEGUARD p ositions available at Girl Scout sum m er cam p in Phoenix June 8 - Aug. 3. Certification required. HORSEMANSHIP INSTRUCTORS needed for Girl Scout summer cam ps in Northern Arizona. Experience with children, horse care & western trail riding. June 1 - Aug. 5 RNs needed for Girl Scout summer cam ps AZ. First Aid & CPR certification required. June 1 Aug. 5 2 ,4 & 8 w eek positions available. Cooks, kitchen helpers & dishw ashers heeded for Girl Scout summer cam ps in Prescott & Payson. June 1 - Aug. 3 (602) 253-6350? M-F, 8-5 CHOICE HOTELS IN T E R N A T I O N A L Customer Service Associates W ork w ith one o f th e b e s t n a m es in the a p p lia n ce in d u stry! As an affiliate o f General Electric, A dvanced Services, Inc. (ASI) is a n a tio n a l service cen ter p rovid in g te le p h o n e assistance to custom ers regarding GE app liances. As a m em ber o f our Inbound C ustom er Service D epartm ent team , you m u st have a dyn am ic telep h on e personality, type at 2 0 vypm and be ready to work w ith a great team . Previous custom er service experience and W indow s com ­ puter skills are preferred. • • « • • • $7.20/hour starting wage (increases 30« after successful completion of training) Paid training Fnn, motivated, professional work environment Afternoon and early evening shifts available Advancement opportunities Excellent benefits'for FT and PT employees (health, dental, vision, tuition reimbursement, profit sharing and more) Apply now - classes are beginning soon! . Applications, are accepted Monday-Friday, 7am-4pm at: 3137 E. Elwood Street, Suite 100, Phoenix, AZ 85034 (University; east of 1-10). For more information/ directions, « please call: 414-2592. w J ■ Equal Opportunity Employer Advanced Services. Inc. Choke Hotels In t e r n a t i o n a l is now hiring fo r Reservations Sales Representatives at our two call centers located on the cam ­ pus o f Scottsdale Community College and the Paradise Valley Mall area. W e are looking fo r sales-oriented people w ith enthusiasm, basic com puter knowl­ edge a n d excellent communication skills to service inbound calls. For the valuable skills you bring to our worldwide hotel network, we offer: • Flexiblefull and part tim e schedules • Competitive salary • Generous incentive plans • Paid training • Excellent benefits plan For m ore inform ation, call 9 5 3 -4 5 0 9 , a p ply directly at our W estern Regional head q u a rters, 4 2 2 5 E. W in d ro se Dr., P h o enix, A Z 8 5 0 3 2 , (ju st w est o f PV Mall), or apply at Scottsdale Community C ollege, C a reer S ervices, 9 0 0 0 E. Chaparral, Scottsdale, A Z 423-6523. EOE # D O U B L E Ú R ít P iosadL át R e s o r t As We Grow, So Do Scottsdau , A rizona 4949 E. Unción Dr., Scottsdale, AZ 85253 | (Comer oftinooin Dr. ¿uniTatum Blvd) ■ We have great Jobs available: perfect tor a student's $ebed|d«|M íf Oreetef/QudkNsr 5**rvmr | Executive Conference Mgr. Honor ta r Attend««* ; Lau n dry A tte n d u * UneCoofe U I| | 8 M | I4 MigliI dBjMBMBf fo o t A tte n d a n t p | Interested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion, advancement and success? Stuck in a dead-: end job that's taking you nowhere fast? Then FACS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, wants to talk to you! The FACS Group, Inc. provides financial, credit and administrative services for Federated Department Stores, Inc. including MaCy's, as well as other companies. Business is excellent so we're looking for dependable, motivated, servioe-oriented people to join our dynamic team. In our fast-paced environment, advancement opportunities abound - in as little as 120 days, you can move up to a position of greater responsibility and reward. C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E • C O L L E C T IO N S • A U T H O R IZ A T IO N S C E N T R A L S T O R E O P E R A T O R S • E X P R E S S C R E D IT yoin the dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: * $8.25/hour to start for m ost positions * Complete benefits for full-time • Generous discounts on most Macy's purchases «Service & performance awards * Variety of full-time and part-time shifts * Fully paid training on phone and CRT online applications - * Recreation and social activities A ll o f this plus with our casual dress code you can even wear shorts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 5. 52nd Street (northeast comer of 52nd Street and West 14th Street between Broadway Road and University Drive). For more information call: ^ 0 O O O /m O (toll free, 24 hours) J “ 0 O 0 “ Z o 4 " J'm àÆ é / FFINANCIAL ACS a n d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunity fo r all P age 19 Tuesday, March 24,1998 St a t e P r e s s HELP WANTEDGENERAL ZACSON CORPORATION- We have: imm ediate openings for these shifts: 7am-3:30pm, 7amnoon, 12:30pm -9:30pm , lpm9:30pm , 5pm -9:30pm , 4pm9pm. Our fully automated and professional environm ent provides: $ 11/hr average with $8.5 0 base. Call 470 -2 0 6 4 for more information. F in d the T O D A Y s e c tio n o n p a g e 2, o r ori tlie in te rn e t at http://news.vp8a. asu.edu/ HELP WANTEDGENERAL NEWRESORT RESERVATION CENTER PUT YOUR money where your mouth is. Set appts. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. . Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar; ' + c(Mnm. $12/hr. ave. 829-6222 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL A 14-YR-OLD co. needs people for data entry & callin g our cust. E xcel exp. a +, Great $, 10 min from A SU , nice envi­ ronment, flex. hrs. M-F. Call . Steve at Cornerstone 244-8720. : ELP WANTEDGENERAL Ellen 491-4921 $ g .9 6/H O U R DRIVE A SCHOOL BUS! ‘* Great w ork schedule for stu d e n ts D riving before and a fte r classes. *P a id tra ining now a nd th ro u g h th e sum m er for th e 1 998-99 school gear. • 2 0 h r / w k minimum guarantee. A pphj at: Tempe E lem entarySchool D istrict # 3 ,3 2 0 5 S. RuralR d. o r caH: 3 5 0 -9 0 0 6 , e x t 7774 ADMIN. ASST. Top V alley Employer.is seek­ ing a P/T assistant to the HR Manager. Must have MS Word, E xcel & type 55 wpm+. 20 hrs/wk. to start. Excellent pay, great location! Start Imme­ diately! Apply in person or call: Encore Staffing Services, 1930 S. Alma School Rd. #B210 Mesa, AZ 85210. Ph. : 8392888, Fax: 839-6987 EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service (a Tempe Co:) has im­ mediate openings for operators. F/T & P/T. Must type 45+ wpm, 10-key by touch, com ­ puter exp. Call 264-4000, 7am3pm, Mon.-pri. Find it F A S T in the Classifieds M A r e you interested in taking pictures & going to parties? < h y C o o rd in a te To urs/ R e se rva tio ns • Guarantee hourly/$15.62 avg. • 37. Permanent Positions • 10-2 or 5:30-9:30 (24-30+ Hrs) • Training Provided, No Selling HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDSALES F reeze Frame Fotography is HELP WANTEDGENERAL looking for you! W eekends & t e r evenings! W e w ill train the right people! C a ll Nina at F reeze Fram e for info - ^ _ 929jj332 _ ^ ^ WE NEED YOU! Smoothie Makers Managers • Wear a co ol shirt • Make fun smoothies • Play with the public Flex hrs and schedule Decent wage for fun easy work. Call today and explore the hip happening Frozen Fusion Fruit Smoothie fast food world. Locations across the Valley. Call 948-5604 x320 Frozen Fusion P/T CUSTOMER SERVICE Several P/TCSR positions avail. Flex Raw s. Financial services industry. $8+/hr. Call 998-7585, ext 105. Diamondbacks, Tempe Artfest, many major : i concerts and special events throughout the ■ Valley, htimèdiaie . Fulltime available, cowpelMvo Wages, flexible scheduling, no’ - exp. necessary. Part-Time/ Full-Time Positions Available $S.60/hr - $7.50/hr. General W arehouse between 10am - 6pm, Local S h ip p in g c o m p a n y se a rch in g fo r m otivated, d e p e n d a b le , h o n e s t p e o p le to jo in o u r team . M o rn in g a n d a fte rn o o n sh ifts available. W arehouse, p a c k a g in g i an d / o r c o m p u te r e x p e rie n c e a plus. $6 p e r h o u r to start. Please a p p ly in p e rs o n b e tw e e n 8am - 5pm at: ! Total Fulfillm ent, Inc. 2850 S. Roosevelt, Ste. 102 Tem pe, AZ 85282 AST1?OLOGICALFORECAST by Frances Drake Tuesday, M arch 24, 1998 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) A void a tendency to push too hard in a romantic relationship. A lighter touch is heeded. On the jo b , y o u ’re e ffic ie n t and quick. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) M oney is very much on y o u r . mind, particularly those creditcard debts. It’ s a good time to set priorities budget-wise. Later, a family outing is both pleasur­ able and inexpensive. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Som eone is really baiting you, but you d o n ’t have to bite. Instead, tap into your inner self and deal with this calm ly. An e v e n in g o f c a rd -p la y in g or board games is fun. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your appetite for fun is whet­ ted. However, you need to get on with what must be done at w ork. Som e fin d th em selv es working later than planned. L E O (Ju ly 2 3 to A u g 2 2 ) You're a bit groggy and tired as the day begins. Try not to push yourself too hard. You could be run-down and susceptible to a cold or flu. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) K in dness is a better w eapon than a sharp ton gue. In fact, y o u ’ll be qu ite p lea sed with how Well everything g o es. A child reaches a scholastic mile­ stone. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) You find yo u rself in a som ewhat uncom fortable situqfion early in the day. However, you can handle yourself admirably. Don’t let that o ff color joke yoti hear put you in a sn it du rin g. evening hours. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to NoV. 21) You are taken by surprise when someone returns a kindness you did long ago. This helps to rein­ force your b e lie f in p eo p le’s} goodness. In general, your out­ look is sunny. SAGITTARIUS (N ov, 22 to Dec. 21) Taking the phone o ff the hook and rolling over in bed isn’ t goin g to help. Y ou just have to face the day, no matter how boring a particular assign­ ment is. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) An extra burst o f energy comes to your aid. You can accomplish much during your work day. T his carries forward into the evening hours. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) There’s some trouble brewing w ith a particular friend. However, avoid confrontational tactics. W ait to see what this person has to sày before you fly o ff the handle. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Just when you were ready to g iv e Up, so m eo n e co m es through for you in a big way. Be sure you express your grati­ tude. A short trip could be in store for afternoon hours. YOU BOHN TODAY possess a wisdom and understanding o f humankind that is uncommon. Even from a very young age, you seem w ise beyon d your years. Extrem ely Sensitive o f other people’s feelings, you are a lw a y s the peacem aker. However, you have the courage o f a Hon and are not afraid to defend the downtrodden. JFields o f interest are medicine, social work, teaching and counseling. 829-6066, HELP WANTEDCLERICAL P/T OFFICE help wanted. Morn. & afternoons 20-25 hrs/ wk. Good phone skills & basic com puter knowledge a +. A pply in person @ 3100 S. Rural, Suite #1 PHONE SURVEY/NOT Sales Mkt research co. located near I10/Baseline needs PT shift MTh 5-9pm. Your choice o f Sat.' 9-4 or .Sun 2-9. Must be de­ pendable & enjoy phones. Of­ fice exp . desired $6.50/hr. Sally 443-8883 HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE NEIMAN MARCUS Busy lunch restaurant currently hiring for p/t wait staff p osi­ tions. Day hours o n ly, no nights required. Applicants must love to give excellent cus­ tomer service and have previ­ ous exp. Apply in person M-F, Neim an Marcus, Human R e­ sources office, 6900 E. Camelback Rd. Scottsdale. HELP WANTEDGENERAL LOOKING FOR SUM M ER W ORK? Summer *98 JOB FAIR APRIL 1 CAD Y M ALL IKON/DLS NEEDS jfl-F D ATA ENTRY P ersonnel Commercial Credit Part Time Data Entry • J7.25/hr to start • Flexible AM St PM schedules • Casual Press • No Sales ■• Paid Weekly • Schedules Adjusted Each Semester • Close to Campus • Year-round Position • Additional Hours During the Summer To qualify you must type 45 vypm, be will­ ing to work weekends, have reliable trans­ portation and enjoy a fast-paced atmos­ phere. Call today 438-2511 • EOE N/E Scottsdale Airpark Location ” MustType 50wpm. Relaxed Work Environment. Flex hours. $10+ per hour FAX resume Attn: Viki 9 2 2 -4 6 6 9 HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE CORK'NCLEAVER A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess) Sc lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w / ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. A pply in person M-F 2~5p.m. or by appt. 5101N. 44th S t 952-0585. IMPROV - SERVER needed. Must have exp. Also must have a sense o f humor. Min. + tips. Apply within. LOCAL BAR is having a grand reopening & . needs honest, hardworking people, bar­ tenders^ cocktail persons, bouncers, etc. N o exp. nec. Apply in person 3-8pm M-F Mustang Sally's corner o f Ap­ ache & Terrace MAJERLE'S SPORTS Grill is currently hiring .all positions. Apply in person at: 2 4 N. 2nd $t., Phoenix. E N C O D E R S - $$$$ $ Temp to hire at Banc One, 8 positions, Mon 4pm to la m , $ 9 plus incentive, W. Valley, require 8K K /S , 1 yr experience. Also need D.E. operators, M-F, 8a-5p, $ 8 .5 0 to start. V o lt S e r v ic es G roup 7 3 1 0 N. 16th St., Ste. 110 HPh:^97-7B00 Fax: 99 7 -0 3 0 0 7 1 0 2 W. Thomas, Ste 101 Ph: 8 4 9 -6 7 8 0 /8 4 9 -9 0 3 7 EOE P/T NANNY Or Babysitter, afternoons, flex, hrs. Must have car. 854-2201. HELP WANTEDGENERAL JOB OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000+/mo. in fisher­ ies, parks; resorts. Airfare/Food/L odging! N o exp. req’d. (919) 9 3 3 -1 9 3 9 , ext. A i34 v . ; CLUB MED & Cruise ships now hiring. Free details< 800:■436-3242 ' .V' ■ ■ CRUISE EMPLOYMENT - Earn to $2,000/mo. Free world travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.) plus food/lodging. Ring: (919) 9331939, ext. 0 3 4 . < 92b1278 FREE REPORT on Five Power Secrets of Marketing Y ourself Write: Power Secrets Report, Box 3658, Suite 104, Lacey, WA 9 8 5 09-3658, or Fax: (253)565-4407 ì> (rtp h m f a t e ! is now hiring fa r S a les position In o u r new location a cro ss from th e Bank One Ballpark Join u s in the inaugural year excitem ent o f th e Diam ondbacks. CallTm y/Noah fo r In fo HELP WANTEDGENERAL i tm AVarnott. HOTELS • RESORTS • SUITES • Front Desk S jp o rv tN * -# ?:* ! FiEstnmn N igh t H ouseperson Concierge S ♦ FroBiPcrif e . ^ . - a • PBX Operator - P/T - AM&PM PT PBX O p e ra to r . PT 2 miles from ASU 804-5285 968-6139 1334 E. Broadway, Ste. 102 • Tempe PERSONALS KRONIC COMIC Com ic Sc collectable store: 4228 N . Scottsdale Rd. www.kroniccomics.com 947-3650 WjjQl NEED E D AA date? Be a contestant on E instein’s Lovin' Lunchin' Meet & Eat Contest! See Thurs­ day's State Press for details, or' stop by Einstein's at Rural & University. ADOPTION A PHYSICIAN and his wife can give your baby lots o f love. Call 520-218-1688 SERVICES .: Cigars - Cohiba, M acanudo, etc. Bando Cigar Co. 697-7934 W A NTED!.79 people to lose 10-29 pounds in the next 25 day call 888-268-6506. HEALTH & FITNESS MARY KAY CoSmestics. 10% discount on every item always! 20% o ff if you hold a skin care class! Call Tabitha 963-4088 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $2.50/PG , $ 15/R ES. Proofed. Laser. APA/M LA. Same day, DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. WANTED GRAD STUDENT searching fbr a safe summer, sublet durjhg Physical Thejrapy Internship. May 22-Aug 1. Call Beth (504) 488-1401 or e-m ail at gchn22e@prodigy.com DONOREGGS 2100 S. Priest Tem pe Earn u p to $ 1 9 2 per m o n th by donating life­ saving plasma! New donors earn a total of $ 7 0 for the first 2 dona­ tions. Visit our friendly, m odem center and find o u t m ore about the opportunity to earn cash w hile helping others. EARN $$& WIN a video caihcorder. Is the se ­ mester alm ost over Sc ydur group still needs money? B e ­ fore it's too late, try a Master­ Card fundraiser Sc earn quick cash. It won't cost a thing, call today! 1-800-323-8454 x 22 PERSONALS ■ Fiesta Inn More info; fu n d r a isin g " IMPORTED has openings Tor; Must be 18-49 years of age, possess a vaBdlD and proof o# local address & Social Securitynumber. €>1998 King Features Syndicate Inc. LOVE TO have fun?! If you're the type o f person that enjoys hanging out w / kids, the out­ doors, & just plain having fun, we're the place for you. Timber Lake Camps seek general coun­ selors. specialty staff in athlet­ ics, crafts, waterfront. Outdoor adventure, mountain biking & theater. Top Salaries & Travel Allowance!! Please call us to an On-campus interview on April 1st, C all 800-828-C A M P or check us out On the web at www.camptic.com Certified Cactus Sports You m ay help save a lit e . B io - S e r v ic e s , Inc. PRESCHOOL TEACHERS & cook ft/pt. No wknds. Benefits, great program. Apply at La Pe­ tite Academy 4025 E. Chandler Blvd #11 759-0824 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Donate Plasm a. C 6N TC O N JOB OPPORTUNITIES CRUISE SHIP & Land-Tour Jobs - E xcellent benefits. MESA COUNTRY Club is hir- ■ World Travel. A sk us h ow ! ing food servers. A ll shifts 517-324-3090 ext. €59182 avaik.660 W. Fairway, Mesa. FED UP Grad? Young intel. co. Cali 964-1797 for directions. seeks individuals for sales/mgt. EOE/DFWP Advancement/train/traVel, avail, for motivated, result oriented team players. 667-6330 loin the Fiesta Fun! MONDAY NIGHTS HELP WANTEDCHILDCARE INTERSHIPS INTERNSHIP Fiesta Bowl is accepting re su m e s fo r Its paid internship program until April 1. Internships avail­ able inJhe areas of: • Event Operations • Marketing • Public Relations. S u c c e s s fu l a p p lic a n ts must be at least 21 years of ag e by Se p te m b er 1 and have reliab le trans­ portation. Must be avail­ able from August 10 until January 29. A minimum of 40 hour work week is essential. Frequent over­ time and weekend Work d u r in g ' s e a s o n . S e n d resu m e to a tte n tio n of Jo hn Fung, 1.20 S. Ash Ave , Tqmpe, 85281. Fact: One woman In six has trouble con­ ceiving. We need an egg donor of ethnic diversity. We have an] immediate need for donor of Hispanic, and Spanish descent. We need a woman in good health with health insurance, 2028 years of age with factors. OSS paid to donor, h r more Infor­ mation, please coll Laura nl'. 42»« 0 t f l RESTAURANTS/ BARS “Your Neighborhood" Ban • Food • Spirits • Pool • • Bowling • Cigars • 4245 N. Craftsman Ct. Old Toum Scottsdale 990-7111 Page 20 ________ ■ _________: _________ Assembly Technician Equipment Technician Frit Seal Engineer Searching fo r your place in the univem Device Engineers or a more competitive pay stricture. There couldn't be a better tim e to make more money a t Excell, à m ajor provider o f long distance directory information. Our customers call you fo r directory assistance, you sim ply provide the required information: That’s it ; absolutely ho selling is involved! We offer a variety Of work schedules, in a casual working environ ment, p a id training, 401 (k) program and more! Process Development Engineers Photo Engineers Please visit one o f our fo u r convenient Valley locations: .\ Mesa Phoenix Camelbäck 3rd Floor, Sie. 300K (CamelSquare Atrium) . Tempe : Phosphor Screen Engineer . 1906 E. Main (NW.‘confer of Main &■Gilbert) 4250 £ 1919W.Fairmdnt •' (off 48th Si. between Broadway A Southern, near I-IÖ) Thick/Thin Film Engineers P eo ria .'9802 W. Peoria (NE corner o f Peoria &:99ihAve.) OK CALL OUR JOB SQUAD: 808*0008 fo r an im m ediate interview. STATE PRESS Tuesday, March 24, 1998 __________ Employment Opportunity MICRON DISPLAY ’ T will be at Arizona State University on J MARCH 29th through MARCH 30th PRESENTATION March 29th from 5pm -7pm Memorial Union Room 209 (food will be served) INTERVIEWS MARCH 30th Please contact Career Services for more information. Glass Engineers Excell Agent Services Chemical Engineers EOF.. Drug-Free Workplace Electrical Engineers The Leader in Flat Panel Display Technology E V ER Y TU ESD AY WATER A ERO BICS HAS BEGUN! ! ! Class schedule Watet Aerobics Aqua Express M-Th 5:90-6:20|>tn M, W, F 12:05-12:55|>m T he S pring Aerobic « MOVE YOUR ■ H witfi 1 The Geeks Live m usic b e g in s e a rly... N O C O V E R for ladies ali night com plem ents of the G eek Crew & T h e Sport Rock 8-10 PM SPECIALS: ‘1.SC Hetaekens • >1.50 Stoli Flavors schedule is out!! Pick one up at the SRC. If you haven't taken aerobics at the SRC, now is the time. Passes are half price through the end of the semester! It includes water aerobics classes, too. C H E C K OUT OUR W ELLNESS CLA SSES f o r Ma r c h & A p r il S tay involved after th e Break! etil 9 6 S -S 9 0 0 fot mota Information on the above programs endet! SRC programs! TM L iv e C o v e r T u n e s fro m th e 7 0 s - 9 0 s b y y o u r fa vo rite N E R D S ! W EDNESDAY NIGHT