W o r l d / N a t io n Sports STORMS CLIMBS V ea l sh o o ts fo r N B A a t N ik e C l a s s ic Page 3 Page 13 D eath c o u n t fr o m so u t h er n A R I Z O N A STATE U N I V E R S I T Y . ©Copyright, State Press, |l 998 Tempe, Arizona Friday, April 10,1998 An Independent Morning Daily Voi, 83 No. $4 Loss, not gain, made on Mardi Gras events B y T im o t h y T ait S tate P ress The weekend Mardi Gras festivities, sponsored by the Associated Students of ASU. lost between $17,000 and $ i 8.000, an executive officer told the senate Tuesday. Activities Vice President Autumn Ness said the event incurred a loss — contradicting what she told the State Press earlier this week. In a statement made in Tuesday’s edition of the paper, Ness said the event actually made a small sum of money because of income from ticket sales. Thursday, Ness said $21,460 was spent for the concert and other Mardi Gras activities. The entire concert budget for the year. $16,000. was used to pay the bands and the Mardi Gras budget. $5,460, covered other expenses. A Wejftdn 'tj&cike any revenue, per se. We m oM^D,000 show and only had to SJ^0 I would consider thi making money. k u tu m n * e ss, A SA SU activities vice ¿president $5,000 donation for an outside corporation financed the signs advertising the event. In the Tuesday State Press, Ness said the costs for the concert totaled only about $15,000 and that some money would flow back into the organization from the ticket sales. Senators at the meeting Tuesday night questioned Ness’ claims and demanded to know where the profits were. Ness, however, said there was no cash to declare and that she was misunderstood. “When was the last time the State Press correctly quot­ ed anyone in this room,” Ness said in the meeting before storming out after senators continued to question her deci­ sion to spend money on a concert that was attended by only 1,495 ASU students. About 3,119 non-students paid $10 to see the show — that money was split between ASASU and the concert promoter. . — . >'» - Turn to Mardi Gras, page 2. Art true passion for campus cop B y C a d o n n a P eyton State P ress W hen A1 Phillips becam e a police o fficer it w asn’t because he had a burning desire to uphold the law. What he really wanted to do was to become a police sketch artist. Although Phillips has been an ASU police officer for the past 12 years, he said he really didn’t want to be a cop but was told the only way to become a police artist was to become a certified policeman. “The police part is kind of like a job 1 learned that I'm really good at. and 1 really like it,” Philips said. “The vast majority of my passion comes from art. I have a certain amount of passion for this (policing), but it’s nothing like the passion 1 have for the art. It's so much more a part of who I am.” ’ pv.'.V;-' : Ever since Phillips was a little boy. his first love was art. He said he realized his talent in kindergarten. And he still remembers the first picture he ever drew. i t was of kids playing on the playground.” Phillips said smiling. However, his picture was unlike the other kinder­ garteners’ pictures, he added. While most children drew simple stick figures, Phillips drew' full-figured people with corduroy jeans, their sleeves rolled up and their shoes untied. Now, P h illip s m ostly draw s p ictu res dealin g w ith Turn to Phillips, page 2. Jerem y Hein/State Press W hen ASU police o fficer Al Phillips says “draw ,” he’s not talkin g about guns. Phillips, w ho has been w ith cam pus police fo r the past 12 years and is th e departm ent's only black o fficer, stands next to one o f his creations: a draw ing o f a N egro Baseball League player. C o m p lain t against ASASU hopeful awaits verdict B y M o n ic a J . A g u ir r e S ta te P ress Student government presidential hope­ ful Seth Deitchman and form er presiden­ tial opponent Damon Pace dueled it out over p a in ts, b allo o n s, a “S p id er-M an ” tablecloth, and other campaign paraphern a lia T h u rs d a y in a A SA SU e le c tio n comm ission trial. D eitchm an, who gained the m ajority o f votes in the April 2 election, disputed Pace’s charges that he deliberately falsi­ fied his financial statement. “I have b latan tly been called a liar, an d I ’m n o t h a p p y a b o u t t h a t ,” D eitchm an said. “I ’m disappointed that I’m looked at as doing som ething illegal. If I did som ething illegal, kick me o ff the cam paign.” Pace subm itted a com plaint last Friday w ith n u m e ro u s a lle g a tio n s th a t Deitchm an failed to report tools, paint, clothing, food and propaganda. “Pace m ade his In h is c o m p la in t, claim according to the P ace re c o m m e n d e d f in a n c ia l s ta te m ent that the elections com ­ tantly been th at w as erro n eo u s in m is s io n “ d is q u a l i f y 1r, and I ’m nature,” said M eredith the candidate from the election because o f his not happy about that. T a y lo r, D e itc h m a n ’s cam paign m anager, in re c k le ss d isre g a rd for I ’m disappointed that a s ta te m e n t to th e th e ru le s o f the e le c ­ tio n s p ro c e ss and h is I ’m looked at as doing c o m m issio n . “ H e did n o t see th e c o rre c te d r id i c u lo u s d is r e g a r d something illegal. I f I v e r s io n w h ic h w as fo r A S U ’s in te g rity a n d ( to ) s ic k th e did something illegal, posted.” T a y lo r f ile d a G reen G o b lin on him kick me o ff the c o m p la in t w ith C h ris a n d h is c a m p a i g n ,” Z ock, e le c tio n s cooh-j re fe rrin g to campaign ■ dinator, fo r posting; an . D e itc h m a n ’s “ S p iderincorrect sta te m e n t.; •; M an” cam paign. A S A S U presi “W h a t. wals: The financial state­ posted was not what we m ent w ith w hich Pace ________________ h a n d e d i n ,” T ay l o r b a s e d m a n y o f h is sa id . “ T h in g s w ere alleg ations was posted b y A S A S U o f f ic i al s w ith c l e r i c a l p h o to co p ied in c o rre c tly and one page was missing. W hen the public looked at errors. it, they were given false information.' T he e le c tio n s co m m issio n d ecid ed , in a closed hearing follow ing the Pace vs. D eitchm an tria l, th at only the c o r­ re c t fin a n c ia l sta te m e n t w ill be u sed w hen determ ining the verdict. - In his com plaint, Pace said he feels the elections were unfair. “I personally think that the ASASU P resident needs to have som e integrity and th ese a lle g a tio n s, fo u n d gu ilty o r not, prove th at the integrity o f the in d i­ viduals involved w ith this cam paign is q u e s tio n a b le ,” P ace sa id in h is c o m ­ plaint. . I f D e itc h m a n is fo u n d g u ilty a n d accum ulates 20 penalty points, he will be d isq u a lifie d from the ru n -o ff e le c ­ tion.- P a c e , w ho cam e in th ird in th e A pril 2 election w ill take his place. The elections commission compiled all the inform ation and will post the verdict hy 5 p.th;-Monday. Page 2 S ta t e P ress Friday. April 10,1998 Mardi Gras T oday Continued from page 1. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f the M atthew s C enter. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication ami entries will not be Accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the.fiiS name o f the club or organization, a description o f the event, dale, thne and the (UH address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-co m e, first-se rv e d b asis and are primed as space permits. • All Saints C atholic Newman C enter— Good Friday services will be offered at norm and 7:30 p.m.; Stations of the Cross w ill begin at D anfortb C hapel a t 1:30 p.m . P le a se c a ll 967-7823 fo r E aster Mass times. » A m erican Indian Council -r- A meet­ ing will be held in the American Indian Institute at 12:30 p m. • A n th ro p o lo g y C lu b — M eet a t La Tolteca for food and fun at 6 p.m. • C o u n se lo r T r a in in g C e n te r — Counseling is available for ASU students, facttity and staff. H ie cost is $10 for pari­ ti tnè, $35 for non-ASU people; session are unlim ited. The center is located in PayneH all Rooih402. • F a r c e S id e C o m e d y H o u r — T h e sketch comedy group will perform in thè MU Programming Lounge at 12:40 p.m. • L a tte rd a y S a in t S tu d e n t Association— Dean Maifaeson will speak on ethics and the law , the legal system and the roles attorneys play in die LDS Institute o f Religion, McCallister Avenue and Terrace Road, at 11:45 a.m. • Phi Alpha Delta — The pre-law fra­ ternity wiD have an e-board m eeting in the L ife Sciences Building Room A 163 at 3 p.m . > • Veritas Forum — Good Friday service w ill be held in the MU Programming Lounge at 7 30 p m. • Young Democrats — A general meet­ ing will be held in die MU Yuma Room would consider that making money.” Ness admitted that she didn’t choose her words carefully enough, but said the sena­ tors in the meeting Were not interested in learning the truth but just wanted to criti­ cize her and the concert. “Senators — they take the facts they have and m ake argum ents th at are not founded on anything,” she said.“ The sena­ tors are riot rational.” Another ASASU officer told senators that the event was not designed to make money — officials fully expected a loss. The extent o f that loss will not be known for about two weeks until all the bills and receipts are totaled. “We didn’t make any revenue, per se,” N ess sa id T h u rsd a y fro m h e r o ffic e , cro w d ed w ith cases o f le ft-o v e r soda from the event. “We put on a $50,000 show and only had to spend $15,000. I Phillips Continued from page 1. Saturdays Events: • Ballroom O n b — A weekly practice w ill be held in the physical Education Building West Room 113 at 3:30 p.m. • Pbi K appa Alpha —• A food drive fo r V a lle y K ic lte r s w ill b e h e ld at F rankie's P izza , 1420 N . S co ttsd a le Road, at 10 a.m. •P rep arin g ¡future F aculty — A 1 « ture, ‘Teaching in the Confessions o f a Geek Wanaabe,” wiHbe presented b y ; -John F R ey n o ld s, University o f Texas at San Antonio, in the MU Turquoise Room 208 at 2:30 p.m. • Y ou n g D em o cra ts Y oung Democrats vs. C ollege Republicans sofit|baff .game w ill be held on jbe southeast jsoftball field by the SRC at lL a.m, | • Veritas Forum Free m ovie, Dmd ¡Man ■Walkings tv ilf be sbtfwn in McClintock Hall at 8 p.m, | Sunday’s Events: ■ • The Exchange:Tempo free Easter breakfast will be offered :sum., follwed byEaster service « t i l m , !a t9 69S .A 8h A ve. tm? African American history. He’s drawn pic­ tures of the Buffalo Soldiers, players from the Negro Baseball League and people like Malcolm X, Josephine Baker and Gregory Hines. Through his art, Phillips said he wants to tell positive stories about African American history in a way in which every­ one can relate to it. Even though Phillips is not doing what he initially set out to do in the law enforcement arena, he has moved up the ranks and is now a detective. However, it hasn’t been easy. At times, Phillips said, it’s been frustrating. ASU Department o f Public Safety has n o t h ire d an A frican A m erican, sin ce Phillips was hired 12 years ago. He has been the only A frican A m erican in the department for at least seven years, Phillips said, and that alone can be frustrating. “In a lot of ways it’s not that big of an issue, but in a lot of ways it is,” Phillips said. “There’s always a point in time when you start feeling that token mentality.” P hillips said w hen he first started at ASU and there were racial incidents, offi­ cers would call on him. “Sometimes it’s a good thing to do but sometimes it could be the worst thing they could do,” he said. “They don’t understand when I have a problem with a group of white guys, I don’t have to call on a white officer to take care of it for me. I can take care of it.” Even though this doesn’t happen anymore, being the only black officer is still a problem, Phillips said, adding that he doesn’t place all the blame on the University. “But by having only one black officer here, other officers don’t get to see that all black people are different,” he said. This is one of the reasons Phillips has n o t le ft A SU . P h illip s said A frican American students know him on campus, and they need to feel that there is someone here looking but for their best interest. B u t a n o th e r reaso n P h illip s said he remains at ASU, is his art. “If I was working at any other depart­ ment, I wouldn’t have the flexibility I have here,” he said. That flexibility allows him the time to draw. Phillips said he will continue to try to be the best police officer he can as he waits for his big break in the art world. “I have a specific goal,” Phillips said. “And I’m going to reach that goal no matter what.” AFTERHOURS FOR 18 AND UP IS NOW ON THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY! TUESDA YS: BEGINNING APRIL 14TH IT'S TWO FOR TUESDAYS WITH LIVE MUSIC BY “ROCK LOBSTER' NO COVER WITH AN ASU ID CARD AND TWO FOR ONE DRINKS UNTIL 11PM* W EDNESDAYS: X “MILLENNIUM” WITH DJ STEVE LEVINE SPINNING HIP-HOP, HOUSE AND HIGH ENERGY DANCE MUSIC. WITH $1.00 YOU-CALL-IT DRINKS UNTIL 10PM AND $2.00 YOU-CALL-IT DRINKS UNTIL 11PM TH U R S D A Y S : N "SHAMPOO" WITH 106.3 "THE EDGE" AT OUR LADIES NIGHT. “SHAMPOO” IS THE NEXT LEVEL OF LADIES NIGHT WITH DRINK SPECIALS. NO COVER. SPA GIVEAWAYS. AND AFTERHOURS DANCING FOR 18 AND OVER FROM 1AM TO 3AM! FRIDA YS A ND SATURDAYS: START YOUR WEEKEND OFF THE RIGHT WAY AT POMPEII. RELAX WITH YOUR FRIENDS OR DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY UNTIL 3 AM WITH THE HOTTEST AFTERHOURS IN THE VALLEY FOR THOSE 18 AND OVER. DRINK SPECIALS, CONTESTS AND THE WILDEST SETTING TO HIT THE SCENE EVER. 9 1 9 E ast A p a c h e , T e m p e 9 6 6 - 8 0 0 4 W orld/N ation S t a t e P ress Friday, April 10,1998 Page 3 Cleanup begins, death toll rises after Southern storms By Jay Reeves Associated Press B IR M IN G H A M , Ala. - R escue crew s Went from one wrecked house to another and a helicopter with a sensor to detect body heat was flown in to help find the dead and alive Thursday after a tornado killed at least 32 people in Alabama. E ncouraged by finding a 9-m onth-old baby alive, S heriff Jim W oodw ard said rescuers would continue looking for victim s through the night until they were confident everyone was accounted for. The tornado struck with winds up to 250 mph while many people in this Bible Belt area were at regular W ednesday nig h t church serv ices. V io len t w eather from the same storm system also killed five people in Georgia and one in M ississippi, for 38 deaths altogeth­ er. In A labam a, nearly all o f the dead w ere in small communities west o f Birmingham, where some houses looked as if they had exploded. More than 40 people remained hospitalized, several o f them in critical con­ dition. Gov. Fob James said 150 homes were destroyed and 300 heavily damaged. President Clinton declared parts o f A labam a and G eorgia disaster areas, clearing the way for federal aid. “It’s quite amazing, and I hope you all say a prayer for those folks tonight, and join with them in spirit as they rebuild,” the president said during a visit to a high school in Carrollton, Ky. V ice President A1 Gore told the governor that he would visit Friday. In the town o f Rock Creek, the tornado hurled one victim into a tree and flung others across streets and yards. The house where Allison Brown and his wife, Hazel, spent most o f their 89 years looked as if it had been blown up. They were found dead, together, two blocks away in a ditch. ■ “I hope it w as q u ic k ,” said L ynn P ap p as, th e ir daughter. “ I hope they w eren’t afraid.” The tw ister ripped open trailer hom es as well as h o u ses with traditional foundations. Deb Helm s and her tw o sons, C olby, 8, and C arson, 4, w ere killed while they hid in the basem ent o f their Rock Creek home. “ It’s supposed to be the safest place,” said Leon H y ch e, a re la tiv e . “T he w hole w all c o lla p se d on them .” ’ R escue crew s went from one devastated house to another and brought out tracking dogs to sniff out any- B etty W atson, right, cries on her daugher, S helia W ilson’s, shoulder, in Tuscaloosa, A la., o n Thursday. W atson w as in her hom e, background, w hen a tornado sent a m obile hom e flyin g into it W ednesday night. W atson and another in th e hom e escaped w ithout a scratch. one dead or alive. The sheriff said a helicopter with a had survived. heat sensor was being flown in. By m orning, w ith the a ir crisp and skies sunny, There was one joyous discovery Thursday, he s a id ,. diesel trucks from the power company rumbled along clu tte re d ro ad s and chain saw s b u zzed as clean u p workers cleared streets. The pungent smell o f fallen and freshly cut pine and oak trees filled the air. Gary McGowan was one man who lost his home but wifè and baby, and God counted him self among the blessed. As word o f the ap p ro ach in g to rn ad o sp read , he ran from C alv ary êÉÊÊÊÈt Baptist Church to his trailer, only to find that his wife — G tS f M cG ow an , and 3-year-old daughter had gone to her parents’ home JEorm s tffv iv o r nearby. He ran inside, and they all sought shelter in a central hall. when a 9-month-old baby missing throughout the night “I laid over my wife and baby, and God laid over was found alive. The sheriff was unsure if the parents me,” he said. Starr to explore p o ssib le co n serv a tiv e-W h itew a ter lin k By K aren G u u o Associated P ress WASHINGTON - Brushing aside possible conflicts o f interest, the Justice Department gave Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr the goahead Thursday to investigate allegations that a conservative foundation may have provided financial assistance to his star witness. Justice officials were looking at Starr's ties to the American Spectator foundation, said a senior agency official who requested anonymity. But Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder told Starr in a letter that the independent counsel has “investigative and prosecutorial jurisdiction over these allegations” because it involved possible tampering with one of his witnesses. “The department lacks jurisdiction to investi­ gate it,” Holder wrote. A witness has alleged that top Whitewater witness David Hale received payments and other ; assistance from conservative activists working for the American Spectator Educational Foundation, which publishes the magazine, when Hale was cooperating with Starr’s investi­ gation. Starr’s friend and former law partner, highpowered Washington lawyer Theodore Olson, is a director on the foundation’s board and the magazine’s publisher is a personal friend of Starr's. Also, the foundation has received fund­ ing from a group controlled by billionaire pub­ lisher Richard Mellon Scaifc that gave $1 mil­ lion to Pepperdine University, where Starr plans to teach after the investigation. Holder alluded to those ties in his letter, say­ ing that “there have been suggestions that your office would have a conflict of interest, or the appearance of a conflict... because of the impor­ tance of Hale to your investigation and because the payments allegedly came from funds provid­ ed by Richard Scaife.” And Holder practically invited Starr to refer the matter back to the Justice Department if nec­ essary. “Should you believe that this matter would be better investigated by the Department of Justice,” he wrote, “we would be prepared to accept a referral from you.” Earlier Thursday, Attorney General Janet Reno declined to talk in detail about the matter although she told her weekly news conference that Justice officials hoped to have a decision quickly. Allegations that Hale was assisted by conser­ vative activists working for the magazine first came to light in March. Muslim ‘stone the devil’ ritual results in stampede; 150 dead B y T arek A l -I ssawi A sso cia te d P ress MECCA, Saudi Arabia - Muslims rushing to fulfill a rit­ ual known as “stoning the devil” set off a huge stampede Thursday that reportedly killed more than 150 pilgrims, many o f them elderly, on the last day of the annual pilgrim­ age known as the hajj. Some o f the victims had sat down to rest on an elevated walkway in the 100-degree heat while waiting to begin the ritual. They were trampled from behind by fellow pilgrims when w ord cam e that the group could m ove forw ard. Others were knocked o ff the walkway and fell 17 feet to their deaths, witnesses said. “If security forces had not intervened to stop the rush, thousands o f pilgrims would have died,” a Mecca police official said on condition o f anonymity. A doctor who saw the stampede told The Associated Press that up to 600,000 pilgrims were waiting for police to open the walkway so they could cast their stones. Another doctor said an elderly Moroccan woman was trampled so great.” ; Ambulances rushed to the scene, and Saudi television showed soldiers carrying a body out on a stretcher. One sol­ dier was trying to revive another casualty whose face was covered by an oxygen mask. Another offered water to an elderly man, who grabbed the bottle with a trembling hand. — Hundreds of pilgrims lined up outside Mina hospitals Thursday night, anxious to know the fate of their relatives. ffêecuitây forces had not intervened to Among them was Ziad Daher from Syria, who was look­ ing for his brother Farouk. “I lost him in the crowd about sto p p e jru^h, thousands oféÊÊrintt^. 12 noon,” he said, tears in his eyes. “I haven’t seen him would have idied since.” . It was the latest tragedy to befall the hajj, which has — Medía policeofficer been bloodied by other stam pedes, fires and political protests that turned violent. Saudi Arabia has invested millions to improve security The stampede took place in the desert plain at Mina, for the increasing number o f Muslims who make the pil­ about three miles from Mecca. To shield themselves from grimage. The hajj is required of all Muslims at least once in the sun, pilgrims had covered their heads with towels or a lifetime if they can afford it, and some 2.3 million are in carried umbrellas, some inscribed with the phrase “God is Mecca this year. heavily that her head was crushed. Saudi officials said at least 30 pilgrims suffered injuries, including cuts and broken bones. Police and doctors said those killed were from Malaysia, Indonesia, India, Pakistan and the Mideast. _________ O pinion _________ P age 4 _____ Friday, April 10,1998 STATE PRESS (BöösTTBravos B r a v o — To new m en’s basketball coach Rob E vans. B ig things are exp ected from him , and w e g et the feelin g the form er M ississippi coach is going to exceed those expectations. Watch out. Lute, w e’re on tfae m ove. Better to have a d ili­ g en t, hard-w orking co a ch lik e E vans -—w h o | w an ts m t o M A $S§ — th u s a w ish y -w a sh y , sw eater-w earin g slo b w ho ca n ’t m ake up h is je tte d . G o C oach Evans-; w ork th a t ^evRs snatched the seventh and final at-large spot for d ie cham pionships. Lot’s hope C arie C ourtney, l i s a \fincijaabvh5 and th e gang can conjure tip Som e m ore m agic next w eekend In L os A n geles ! and vault, fiip a n d balance their w ay to a ia tio n al title. s TAFF STATE PRESS Loyalty for new hometown team takes time But Wednesday’s game brought this problem to the forefront. W ed n esd ay n ig h t’s m ajo r I w a s n ’t sure w h e th e r or not to re jo ic e at the league baseball gam e between Diamondbacks’ victory or regret the Dodgers’ loss. What the D iam o n d b ack s and the made the entire situation worse is to have my beloved D odgers posed an in terestin g Dodgers lose to former rival Matt Williams. p ro b lem fo r m e. W hen is it A problem similar to this probably occurred when the g o ing to feel lik e the Phoenix Suns were bom about 30 years ago. D iam ondbacks are P h o en ix ’s This town, without a basketball.team, was filled with own? s * ■\\ Celtic and Laker fans. But eventually, everybody came It's oo secret this Valley is around and adopted the Suns as their own. and now the Chock full of Cubs fans. Spring Phoenix Suns have an incredible fan base. You don’t see training attendance reveals that. too many people cheering the Bulls in the Purple Palace.; There are also your Giants fans, The sam e tra n sfo rm a tio n w ill hap p en fo r the your Yankees fans, your Dodgers fans and yes, even a few Reds fans. And these aren't necessarily all snow birds com­ Diamondbacks. Sure, plenty of fans have packed BOB during the past ing and leaving Arizona at their own free will, either. These are natives or long-term residents who have been without a two weeks. Not all of them are die-hard Diamondbacks fans — at least not yet. The Cubs’ stint here baseball franchise to call their own for in July is likely to show just who the fans years. here in the Valley are really behind. But what are we, the potpourri of But ju st a$ the Suns were, the baseball fans, supposed to do now that m ^ew ^fyfishing we Diam ondbacks will Soon be popularly we have a team o f our ow n? Do we adopted. abandon th o se team s fo r w hich we ^m d a professional Though I felt as if I was betray­ spent our lives cheering? Do we have team so I could see my ing someone, 1 smiled when we Shut out m ass b u rn in g s o f T ig ers p e n n an ts, Rangers and other team m em orabilia Dodgers play. 1 never L.A. — we, the Diamondbacks and base­ fans here in Arizona.' It seems I have not affiliated with the Diamondbacks? thought about the fact ball already begun the transformation. At the age of five I began collecting I would be rooting Though the many baseball fans b aseb all cards and m e m o rab ilia — in A rizona will never be able to com­ m ostly because I liked the free gum. Piazza and his crew to pletely abandon their roots, their home­ When I got a little older and realized victory aagmst the town pride will develop. bazooka was pretty m uch cardboard So, while the seats at the Bank shaded pink and shaped like a stick of h o m e to ^ m ^ u ^ Q l) One Ballpark might be filled with fanatic gum, I fell in love with the cards that Cubs fans in Ju ly , they w ill becom e came with the tasteless candy. I thought few er and few er over tim e. A fter all, the number seven was lucky because it th a t’s one se rie s w h ere th e was worn by Mickey Mantle, and dis­ Diamondbacks are sure to be victorious, and winning never covered Dodger blue was the prettiest color in the world. I grew up wishing we had a professional team so I could see hurts in building fan support. my Dodgers play. I never thought about the fact I would be root­ G inger Scott is a senior studying journalism and can be ing Piazza and his crew to victory against the hometown team. reached at sinjin@ asu.edu via e-mail. PERCY EDNALINO, Editor JODI B AFÜNDO, Managing Editor CARYL-SUE MICAL1ZIO......,'.....:.........,....NightEditor KARA SHlRE.M..... ............................. ,*>••*,.... ...CityEditpr ROWE BDGELL ........... ,.....Asst City Editor GINGER SCOTT .......... ...Opinion Editor CHRISTI FOIST....,..:........ BRAD LANG................ JEREMY HEIN................ MATT PAULSON............ Asst. Sports Editor RANDY JONES............... .............. VIVI STENBERG.................................... Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Ally Asher (Cultural Diversity), Monica Aguirre (ASASU), Becky Bevins (General Assignment), Aislinn Fahy (City of Tempe), Kristen Hatcher (Administration), Chris Kahn (Science & Tech), Cadonna Peyton (Police), Tim Tait (General Assignment), Dave Woodftll (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 Policoff, George D. Rose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam JSchiffer, Steve Stein, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Ifige, Gentry Smith, Charles Lundsberg. PRODUCTION: L. Adrianna Garcia, Steven Garza, K#i HaischRisley, Hilmar Hilmarson, Alyson Hurt, Wayne Nelson, Eric Paulson, Sara Pike, Jennifer SwinfonL Hubert AJexi Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, Sharan Gill, David Goodwin« Mike Knievel, Monika Konat. Jessica Maduk, Jonathan Negretti, Shane Siren, Kathy.Welsh; CLASSIFIEDS: Kate Desio, Amanda Green, Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: PEfcCY EDNALINO Editor JODI BAFUNDO 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, at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University;Tempe, AriZi.85287-15Q2, We do not answer questions o f a general nature-. The Slate Press is the only newspaper-exclusively published, for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers I n f o r m a tio n ............. .9 6 5 - 7 5 7 2 N e w s r o o m . ..............9 6 5 - 2 2 9 2 M a g a z in e .................9 6 5 - 1 6 9 5 A d v e r t is in g ............. 9 6 5 - 6 5 5 5 C la s s if ie d s .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 http://new s.vpsa.asu.edu O pinion S t a t e P ress Friday, April 10,1998 L etters t o t h e E d it o r E-MAIL THE EDITOR: SINJIN@IMAP2.ASU.EDU Respectful rivalries I am w riting in response to the a rti­ c le s a b o u t th e U o fA r iv a lry . I a g re e w ith S teve S tein that o u r rivalry som e­ tim e s g o e s to o far. I th in k i t 's ra th e r c h ild is h to “ h a te ,” as A d ria n F o n te s says, a school or group o f people from a s c h o o l, s tric tly b e c a u se o f a s c h o o l, riv alry . A s a m em ber o f the Sun D evil m a r c h in g b a n d , I h a v e le a rn e d w h a t h av in g pride in y our school m eans, and th a t I w ill c h e e r A SU to v icto ry o v er U o fA an y day . H ow ever, 1 do not act lik e an id io t a n d y e ll h a te fu l a n d /o r dem ean in g phrases tow ard UofA. Both A SU and U ofA are ju st universities try ­ ing to b rin g m oney in by w ay o f ath let­ ics. I f U ofA m akes it to a to urnam ent and w e d o n ’t, I w ill root for them , p lac­ ing m y prid e in the state o f A rizona in all a th le tic s . I w o u ld d o th e sam e fo r Ñ A U . I w ill alw ays cheer for A SU , but h av e learn ed to respect o u r other state sch o o ls. K y ra E spinosa Ju n ior B iom ed ical E n gin eerin g C o m ic will be missed I w as shocked and am azed this w eek as I read “A cross T he H all.” I am p art o f th e handful o f p eo p le w ho enjo y ed this com ic strip. Even m y m other loves the strip; she alw ays looked forw ard to re a d in g “ A c ro ss T h e H a ll” w h en she c o m e s h o m e fro m w o rk . N ow a s w e r e a d t h i s w e e k ’ s i s s u e s , w e le a r n “A cross T he H all” is ending. A classic ending at that, killing everyone o ff and thus m aking it seem that th is is the end. B ut is it, there are still five m ore w eeks to go in the sem ester, why w ould it end so soon? C ould th is be a clev er ploy to m a k e u s all th in k it is o v e r an d th e n com e back M onday and d isco v er it was a ll a d re a m (it h as b een d o n e on TV m any tim es), o r does Mr. Sm ith need to tak e tim e and focus on his final exam s? N o n e t h e l e s s , it is a s u r p r i s e a n d a shock to see such a g reat strip such as “ A c r o s s T h e H a ll” g o , a n d to g o so early . A llan H utchison Ju n ior M arketing F L A S H gives service I am a new ap p o in tee to the P ublic Safety Advisory Committee and consider m yself som ew hat know ledgeable on the subject of the FLASH bus service, especial­ ly since I have been riding those buses since their inception. S. Schimmel has filed a com plaint in the court o f student public opinion via the State Press that the FLASH system does not meet her personal standards for speed, efficiency and her own conve­ nience. Som ehow , she labors under the delusion that “Flash” stands for all o f the above. In actuality, FLASH is an acronym for “Free Local Area Shuttle,” and need not be construed to be anything else. I have navigated the ASU campus for a number of years prior to the institution of the FLASH buses and find them to be convenient, safe and comfortable. Although their time sched­ ule does not meet the standards of retaining a personal chauffeur, as some would like to have, they provide the best transportation alternative for the most people at the best cost. I have yet to see a public transporta­ tion system that will meet everyone’s per­ sonal standards o f quality, but I guess if that’s what you want, you’ll just have to pony up the bucks. Faulting the buses for not being able to get somewhere in a hurry is like blaming the weather for your being late for a final. It’s ju st something that happens. In order to forestall the problem that you would have with the bus system, it behooves you to plan ahead and take into account the fact that all systems have glitches. I have n o tic e d th a t if I j u s t m iss a b u s an d because o f some traffic problem the buses have bunched up somewhat, that I have to wait 20 minutes! This has happened to me m a y b e th re e tim e s in as»m any y ears. W aiting for the bus with the attitude that you should be in a hurry to relax plays havoc with your stress factor. Talking it over w ith others o f the sam e m ind gets the juices flowing even more freely, and you turn into a Jerry S pringer m obster ready to kill the driver and bum the bus. Cut the FLASH some slack, ju st like you would want for yourself. B ob Felix G raduate Student E ducational P sychology M em ber, Public Safety A dvisory C om m ittee Page 5 Stadium politics, BOB and the future for a Cardinals’ stadium W e even gave up one of the things tiris If future gen­ country w as founded on, “No taxation eratio n s ever without representation.” unearth the city J u s t lo o k a t th e p o te n tia l A rizo n a o f Phoenix, they Cardinals’ stadium Bill Bidwell wants to w ill conclude build. We don’t want him to get bis own th at this was stadium. Why is that? Because we don’t once a p e a t city like him. in the desert and Wu all think he is the n c h ow ner o f we worshipped arguably the worst NFL franchise ever, who Jerry Colangelo could really care less about his fans. So why a s o u r god on should we give Mm Ms own stadium? earth. Well, in die funding part o f BidweU’s W hy w ill they think that? Well, at present, we have potential stadium, he is trying somethmg a two larg e “monuments” to his greatness little different; he isac tu a lly having die — A m erica W est Arena arid Bank One p eo p leo fth e East Valley, where the stadiinri would be located, vote on whether or Ballpark. This may possibly fee a taderf an exagger- ; not they want the facility and the corre­ ation, but there is some truth to i t Within the sponding tax'that would go toward paying last two weeks, the Bank One Ballpark, for it. I know, this a new a revolutionary BOB, Was unveiled to us as a state-of-the-art way of thinking, hut it might just work. The other argument people use when amusement center that also has a baseball field in it. It was built to house Phoenix’s justifying why Bill Bidwell should not get new Major League Baseball firinchise-—the lusow nkri& ijrf«¿that the Cardinals donT j Arizona Diamondbacks. win enough. They have never won consis-1 But just because there is a new sports ; tently in the past, said when they do start te a m in the V alley do esn ’t m ean they to win, the people might think about build­ should get their own stadium. Look at the ing thatstadium. However, for everyone out there who C a rd in a ls. So w hy th en d id the : Diamondbacks, and m ore appropriately, th in k s th is is a good a rg u m e n t, th en Jerry Colangelo, get; their own stadium? a n sw e r m e th is q u e stio n : H ow m any W hy? Because currently the -citkens-of| G A M E S d id th e D ia m o n d b a c k s w in I before they got their own stadium? Let me j | Phoenix are in love with him. But there is some actual basis for our feel­ help you with that one: ZERO. I don’t necessarily think BOB is a bad ings toward Jerry; he has inçroved the level of the Sims during Ms tenure as owner o f the thing. In fact, I think it wiD do amazing team, and he has also brought new sports fran^ tilings for the urban renewal of downtown :.chises to the sports-crazed and sports-deprived Phoenix. And by the same account, I don’t Valley of the Sun. Besides this, he is also a lik- think an Arizona Cardinals’ stadium would iable character; good owner/general be a good thing. I just wanted to address the m anager -who brings good players to his : way we look at these two team sand, more teams, takes care of them, and he also takes importantly, theirawners. care of the fens whom he honestly likes. W e have this love affair w ith Jerry So w hen Jerry C olangelo asked' die Colangelo. and w e h a v e given him two people of Arizona to build him a n e w stahave Bill Bidwell, who is like a funner dium, wè were happy to oblige. But he, o r maybd more appropriately, lover who has cheated ori us and hurt us, the p o liticians, d id n ’t ask us that. N od so w e hate Mm and we will ,never give d; "s instead, they just levied a new tax, which him anything. M aybe we should try to look at these we did not approve, that would pay far the stadium issues in more equal terms, With stadium. Y ou know , I cou ld b e w rong, but I not so much emotion. For instance, did the remember reading about some radical group c ity o f P h o en ix and th e re sid e n ts o f once who didn’t get to vote on whether or riot Phoenix benefit from the two downtown they were getting taxed This extremist sepa­ stadium s? Yps. D o you think the East ratist group then went and did something Valley would benefit from a Cardinals’ sta­ crazy; they dumped aD this tea into some har­ dium? The answer again is yes. In thinking bor. This analogy might be a tad o f an over­ tills way, maybe we should give the OK for statement, but it just shows how much we a new Arizona Cardinals stadium. love Jerry Colangelo and how we will give Ross Eide is a senior studying marketing and can be reachedateide@ asu.edu via e-mail. him anything to make him happy. Good Friday, Easter a time to take pride in power of good over evil W hen I was a y o u n g g irl, my paren ts told me about a young man who lived a long, long tim e a g o in a la n d not so far away. F ro m th e tim e o f h is b ir t h , w h ic h w as m u c h -h e r­ alded in his area, to his brutal death, He tried to teach others how important it was to love one another; how im portant it was to be unselfish; how im portant it was to not ju d g e o th ers by th e ir o u te r appear­ ance. I was always intrigued by this man and thought the way he lived his life was a good way to live mine I also thought, as a naive child, that this way o f life was how all peo­ ple lived. As I continued my journey to adulthood, I met and learned of many people who, like the man my parents told me about, were kind, gentle people who looked for the good in others and lent a helping hand to those less fortunate. Like the one guy who was told by many that because of the color of his skin, he was not good enough. He did not let this stop his preaching to others that they were important in God’s eyes and how important it was to be judged by the content of one’s character instead of the color of one’s skin. Or there is the woman who, after becoming a nun, was so moved by the presence of the sick and dying on the streets of her city that she spent the rest o f her life caring for this group,- giving o f herself unconditionally. And there are the many who may not make the headlines or win peace prizes and who sometimes even go unthanked, who try to live their lives in the same manner as the man lived his. As I grew older, I found that this way of life w asn’t how everyone lived. I learned there was another group of people who real­ ly didn’t care much about others; they cared only fo r them selves. I learned o f other groups o f people who thought they were better because their skin was lighter or they were better looking. There were even some who had money and everything their hearts desired, but lacked enough compassion to pass on their good fortune to those less for­ tunate. It is this side of life that was destroy­ ing oUr w o rld , d e stro y in g o u r n a tio n , d estro y in g o u r p eo p le. It is th ese evil people w ho are slow ly killing the good around us, causing those who believe in th e g o o d to h a v e d o u b ts , to b e c o m e d e p re sse d , to tu rn to e v il th em selv es. S ince the b e g in n in g o f tim e, w e have seen g o o d com e, an d , o v e r tim e , ev il rep lace it. W e have seen good peo p le m ake a change for the future and then bad people appear to try to take over the world. It is an ongoing cycle that never seems to end. But one day the cycle will end. And contrary to w hat m any believe, I do n ’t believe this cycle w ill end with evil. Yes, evil always proves to diminish a person’s spirit. But we must not despair. Evil will cause some to turn to it, think­ ing this way o f life is the answer. But we must not be tem pted by the forces of evil. L ik e th e c a se o f th e m an m y p a re n ts taught me about, evil can end one’s life. But we must not give up hope. On this day, the man was crucified, he died and was buried. But he did rise again. Sunday is a day to take a few a min­ utes in between looking for eggs and eat­ ing candy to rem em ber that he did rise again. So, no m atter how bad things get or how ev il people m ay be, ju s t know that good will rise again. Michelle Craig is a junior studying journalism. S t a t e P ress Friday, April 10, 1998 P age 6 Exhibit addresses gender roles; Illuminates through art B y D av id W o o d f ii .i . S tate P ress A pair of breast implants lay on a shelf, used underwear hung from the ceiling, a fake urinal was taped to the wall and a plastic dildo sat on a table. These were some o f the items featured in “Artifacts of a Gendered Life,” an art display, created by students in thé W om en an d Popular Culture class, in the W omen’s Studies department Thursday. The purpose o f the e x h ib its, said P ro fesso r A lisa Klinger, who teaches the class, is to expose the public’s mind to gender roles in society through cheap, mobile art students created in their spare time. “Art is sometimes a better way to address political mes­ sages than through print media,” she said. “We did it all without spending a dime.” Before art-goers were let into the room, they were ran­ domly assigned a gender. Onto inside, one of the first dis­ plays was to depict the disparages between male and female sports departments. “Here, you get a penny since you’re a girl,” said Jessica Share, a student in the class, to each “female” art-goer who passed her station. “Welcome to athletics.” The coins were chocolate candies wrapped in foil. Everyone who was assigned as a male got a silver-dollar chocolate candy. O ne ex h ib it' title d “The G ood W hore o r the Bad Virgin?” depicted, according to the students who put it together, the two extrem es o f sexual labels applied to women. The exhibit included a plastic vibrator, a Bible, a pom video and a guide to good sex. “The purpose is to look at all this debris from the vari­ ous spheres of people's lives and see how it defines our (women’s) gender,” Klinger said. Pippin Chapm an, a senior w om en’s studies m ajor, helped put together a display o f underwear hanging on a clothesline, titled, “Intim ate M atters.” She said women have been conditioned to wear very uncomfortable clothing and garments because society considers it sexy. One item hanging from the line was a matching pair of bra and panties with pins stuck in it to demonstrate the dis­ comfort of some types of underwear and “draw attention to the point that most underwear considered fashionable isn’t always comfortable,” Chapman said. “When you’re a boy, certain perceptions are instilled that say you will be strong and that girls will be sweet and cute,” said Carolyn Khalsa, also a senior in the women’s studies department. She said she wished society could abolish these stereo­ types. More than 100 people showed up to the two-hour instal­ lation and, after walking through the displays, were asked to write their comments and thoughts on a long sheet of butcher paper called, “The Writing On the Wall.” Animal center seeks student volunteers, temporary homes for pets By B ecky B evins State P ress Maricopa County Animal Control workers arc looking for ASU students with a longing for pet interaction and a desire to help the ani­ mal world. “Spring is the natural time for all animals to ■breed. Litters drop because the food is plentiful and the w eather is m ild,” said B arbara Westermeyer, kennel projects coordinator lor the Mesa animal control facility. “Because of all of the animals, we also need volunteers to help us out.” That’s where ASU students come in. The animal shelter offers programs for stu­ dents to take in pets temporarily until they can be placed. “The program works well for students because they may not be able to commit to owning a pet long-term but want the compan­ ionship,” said Claire Rhoads, a volunteer and master of counseling student at ASU. “It’s amazing what an animal can do for depression. It releases ettdoiphins^ in humans and increases feelings of well-being.” The shelter is also holding an “adopt-athon” May 2 and 3, where it will be open for 36 hours to find as many homes for pets as possi­ ble. * “We are going to need a lot of volunteers for cleaning, grooming, information assistance, etc. for this event and many others to come,” Westermeyer said. “This is a great way to help out the animals and have interaction with them when it isn’t feasible to own one yourself.” , Westermeyer also said events such as this could improve public relations for the shelter. “ft’s so often that we are portrayed as the bad guys because we are involved in taking so many diseased and sick animals off of the street when there is a problem,” Westermeyer said. “I hope that a lot of these negative conno­ tations will disappear with more positive events, such as the adopt-athon.” CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH Va SI Is =13 Ña s >f 0 V a a p i h II H i n| f n 1a : 1 0 N i L n c5 d j 0 s 0 IK )V n ' i a l | s rt a S 0 a f in î T \ d 3 1 d ) fa 1 1 : d a d 0 L0 i l l 1 ° a 0 i 5 « I la p 1 i a n< lu : n ■ Jl. 0 ’ l l H i 0 FI Is ACROSS man Norm 1 Myanmar 39 Up neighbor 40 Middling 5 Highlander grades 9 Minor no 41 Sailing more DOWN 11 Match 1 CD-player setting part 13 Nymph 2 Slow chaser passage 3 Rusty 14 Copter 4 Cunning 12 Forest part 5 Boston makeup 15 Conceit entree 17 French 16 U-235, for 6 Geezer pronoun one 18 Mixed the 7 Closed for 19 Vampire good feature deck 8 Line about 22 Settled 20 Cry of 23* from 24 More distaste the equator offensive 21 Fiery gems 10 Diva’s 25 Dieter's 22 Basics practice lunch 23 Hosp. workers 24 Winter worry 25 Forman only 27 Idaho city 29 Trajectory 30 Sulky behavior 32 Sideways pass 34 Ultimate 35 Like a gymnast 36 “If-L o v e There Was” (Four Tops song) 38 Wash­ ington congress- ■ HELPING YOU BUILD A SECURE FINANCIAL FUTURE IS AN IMPORTANT JOB. 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Readthemcarefully beforeynuinvertorsendmoney. 11AA-CRKKIndividualandInstitutional ServicesdistributesCREFcertificatesandinterestsintheTIAAReal EstateAccount. o | i a o V VT a V i s 2/98 *...y CRYPTOQUOTE H Y G E P Y J Y H YJ Z T H Q ; P Y HYSS PTR FPYJY G B B Y E H R EG Z Z Y X YJ TZB S K YZEY R H V U R . — P Y Z J Q G N G L R Y esterd a y 's C r y p to q u o te : FAITH MOVES MOUNTAINS, BUT YOU HAVE TO KEEP PUSHING WHILE YOU ARE PRAYING.—MASON COOLEY Page 7 Friday, April 10, 1998 S t a t e P ress P o l ic e R epo r t W E T H E P U T “ F .U . FU N ! LIVE ON THE PATIO KONGO SHOCK THE 0RI6ÜUU. ALTERNATIVE NIGHT |D2RA5C ^ ^ H FTS o o 3 2 oz. M O N S T E R B E E R S & L . I. T E A S The A SU police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • A woman not associated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for driving on a suspended license and excessive speed at 300 E. University Drive. • A student was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol with an alcohol content level over. 10 at 401 E Stadium Drive. The Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • A 29-year-old man was arrested for assault, delay, obstruction of justice and possession of a suspended license at 119 W. University Drive. He assaulted another man by hitting him with a water bottle in the stomach and slapping him across the face during the police investigation. He provided the officer with a suspended license and also continued to yell after several requests to shut up. He was booked on all three charges. • An 18-year-old man was arrested at Smitty's, 3232 S. Mill Ave., after he concealed razor blades in his pants pocket and left the store without paying for them. The suspect, admitted to the theft after he was read his rights. He was arrested and held to see a judge at Tempe City Jail. • One man assaulted another man by ripping his shirt and punching him. The suspect was mad at the victim (who is married fo the Sus­ pect’s ex-wife) because his daughters could not get into the victim’s house. When the vic­ tim came home, the suspect went after him, knocking him to the ground and assaulting him. The Phoenix police arrested the man later at his home. Today’s photo radar locations: • Mill Avenue, between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue • Kyrene Road, between Southern Avenue and Baseline Road • University Drive, between McClintock Drive and Price Road • Rural Road, between University Drive and Rio Salado Parkway . C o m p iled b y S ta te P re ss rep o rter Cadonna Peyton . Survey: boomers willing to pay higher taxes For better schools MESA (AP) — Members o f the baby boom generation are willing to volunteer and as a group don’t mind paying higher taxes for better schools, a survey suggests. A national survey conducted by Del W ebb Corp. suggests that 50 percent of those 33 to 51 years old do regular volunteer work. Seventy-eight percent said they’d pay higher taxes to improve education. That's despite the fact that 80 percent of those sur­ veyed believe taxes are too high. Just 30 percent said they would pay high­ er taxes to bolster thé military . Forty-eight percent said they’d pay higher taxes for better roads and 45 percent said they’d pay higher taxes to provide better social programs. S t a t e P r e s s o n l in e — h ttp :/ / n e w s.vp sa .a su .e d u LIVE ON THE PATIO IN & OUT NIGHT..* DANCE MUSIC INSIDE •UVE MUSIC OUTSIDE LADIESNIGHT FOR STARTSAT 7PM NO COVER FOR LADIES BEFORE 10 PM 4-11 pm FREE FOOD BUFFET 4-7PM O O «o rw LIVE ON THE PATIO MONSTER BEERS* & L.I. TEAS Z O W IE B O W IE S A M A N D A D R A F T S A PR IL 16 A PR IL 2 2 A PR IL 2 6 A PR IL 2 8 MAY 10 MAY 13 MAY 1 4 S T A R R UPCOMING EVEN TS: Win Diamondback T ickets!, Miller Genuine Draft Blind Date Concert i ??? Mystery Band ??? 1998 Crawfish Festival w / Azzizz Sevendust Soulfly The Roots I Last Day of School Bash with with student 1.0. ARIZONA • STATE • UNIVERSITY Thors., Fri. & Sat. - April 9,10 & I I * ASU Activity Center Tw o gomes per n i g h t - Gomes s t a r t o t 6pm •xpires 4 /1 0 /0 0 with conpoo 430 N. SCOTTSDALE ROAD, TEMPS, ARIZONA 8828« (6 0 2 )8 9 4 -6 7 7 9 W W W .C L U B R IO .C O M > Friday, April 10,1998 Page 8 St a t e P ress U ofA official says he was scapegoated for athlete book thefts T U C S O N , A riz . (A P ) — A fire d U o fA o ffic ia l claim s he was m ade a scapegoat in an in vestigation into book thefts by athletes. “This happens all the tim e in governm ent, big busi­ ness and even in ath letics,” said M ike Fisher, form er director o f academ ic services for the school’s athletic d e p a rtm e n t. “ O ne p e rso n has to tak e the b lam e, I guess.” ' F is h e r sa id he w as fire d in Ju ly , a m onth a fte r p o lice caught UofA fo o tb all p layers L eland G ayles and M ikal Sm ith trying to sell stolen textbooks at a univérsity-area bookstore. He said he w asn 't given a reason for his dism issal. P olice arrested th e fo o tb all p lay ers a fte r finding about 60 textbooks in G ay les’ c a r’s trunk. G ayles and Sm ith, both 21, pleaded guilty to theft April 3 in Pima County Superior C ourt. They adm itted stealing books from the athletic d ep artm en t’s return bins, then attem pting to sell them at bookstores. T h eir arrest prom pted UofA officials to investigate the athletic departm ent’s book-distribution policy for scholarship athletes. „ A report pinned m uch o f the blam e on Fisher, say­ ing his office neglected the school’s book-loan policy and failed to correct the problem s. Fisher denies that, saying he gave specific orders that the rules be follow ed. UofA pro v id es its sch o larsh ip ath letes w ith free textbooks. A thletes are required to return the books after each sem ester. T u c s o n a tto r n e y C a ry S a n d m a n in v e s tig a te d U ofA ’s book-loan practices. His findings were report­ ed to Pac-10 Conference com m issioner David Price in January. . The 1 1-page report found that 12 student-athletes last year receiv ed tex tb o o k s in v io la tio n o f NCAA rules. Those findings did not involve book selling. T heir nam es were w ithheld because o f federal pri­ vacy laws. In the course o f his investigation, Sandm an inter­ view ed several athletic departm ent officials. He never contacted Fisher, who was responsible fo r overseeing book distribution, he noted in his report, Sandm an refused to tell the Tucson C itizen why he failed to contact Fisher. He referred all questions to Kathleen “Rocky” LaRose, UofA senior associate ath­ letic director. L aR ose said she c o u ld n ’t com m ent on personnel m atters. F ish er’s attorney, Don A w erkam p , said Sandm an n ev er co n tacted his c lien t b ecau se F ish er had been singled out as the fall guy. “T hey needed som eone to hang for the P a c -1 0 ,” A w e rk a m p s a id . “ (S a n d m a n ) in te rv ie w e d p e o p le above Mike and below M ike. So I guess they decided to blam e M ike.” Awerkam p filed discrim ination claim s on F isher’s behalf with the U.S. Equal Em ploym ent O pportunity Com m ission and the U.S. O ffice o f Federal C ontracts Com pliance. ■ Student ends standoff after trading guns for cigarettes, pizza By B iu . B eecham A s s o c ia t e d P ress POCATELLO, Idaho — A 14-year-old student at a school for troubled youths pulled a gun on the principal today, and then holed up inside for five hours before surrendering after trading his guns for cigarettes, pizza and soda. The principal escaped unharm ed, and police said it was unclear whether four stu­ dents who were in the school with the boy were held hostage. “The other students may be in there will­ ingly," police L t Garry Pritchett said about an hour before the stan d o ff ended w ith no injuries. “They ate all the pizza, they drank all the pop and they trashed the whole building,” - police Capt. Mike Stayner said. Initially, police believed several students and possibly a teacher were being held hostage at The Alternate School by the boy. who fired a shot into a wall or ceiling and demanded cigarettes and alcohol. Around 11 am ., 2 1/2 hours after the stand­ off began, two students walked out separately, leaving four — two boys and two girls — inside with the armed student. A little after 1 p.m., the remaining five stu­ dents came out and were put in the back seats of police cruisers. . Earlier, a psychiatrist talked to the armed student. Pritchett said the students had been watch­ ing the standoff on television until police ordered cameras removed from the area and a cable to television sets inside the school sev­ ered. The area around the school was cordoned off and all homes within a block were evacuat­ ed after the incident began about 8:30 a.m. About 90 minutes into the standoff, some­ body stepped outside and placed a gun on the ground. A short time later, a person — it was unclear if it was the same one kicked the gun farther away. P ritchett said the 14-year-old, who remained armed with another weapon, had swapped a .22-caliber semiautomatic pistol for packages of cigarettes from police. He later traded a .45-caliber weapon for pizza and pop. Police said the youth had threatened princi­ pal Paul Matthews on Wednesday. The boy returned today and pulled a w eapon on Matthews, who threw a table between them and ordered students to evacuate, Matthews said. Christopher Williams, spokesman for the Bannock School District, said the incident occurred in the school’s multipurpose room. Matthews had just begun his daily routine of explaining what would be on the students’ agenda when the boy pulled the gun. “He (Matthews) told me he had just gotten out about three sentences when the student pulled the gun,” Williams said. The school normally has 30-35 students. There arc 10 students per class arid three teachers and a principal at any one time. ARRESTED? T rial e x p e r ie n c e fr o m D U l to F irst D e g r e e M urder a n d D e fe n se o f a ll D ru g C a se s FREE CO N SU LTA TIO N F O R A SU S T U D E N T S James P. Leonard, A tto rn e y at Law 4 6 3 5 S o u th L ak esh o F e D riv e • T e m p e , AZ 8 5 2 8 2 345*4424 fhoenix, , international n ac e w a y " 115th Ave. & Baseline Presented by the Arizona Chevy Dealers Tempe Prim ary Care Associates, PC NASCAR Craftsman Trucks NASCAR Winston West Stocks USAC Sprint Car Series is c o n d u c tin g a r e s e a r c h s tu d y fo r th e tr e a tm e n t o f s tre p th ro a t. • If you have a moderately severe sore throat you may qualify to partiepate. • Free study medication wHI be provided, plus free study related office visits and examinations. • A stipend is provided for your participation. If interested, please call: Tempe Primary Care Associates, PC 5030'S. Mill Ave. D-12 Tempe. AZ 270-8822 - Race day - Sunday, April 19 Qualifying - Saturday, April 18 Gates Open: 8 am • Sprint Car Race: 11 am W inston West Race: Noon • Chevy Trucks 150: 3 pm Gates Open: 8 am • Qualifying begins at 1 pm In order: Craftsman Trucks, W inston West, Sprints Redeemable at Phoenix International Raceway Ticket Offices or at Dillard’s Ticket Outlets. Call 252-2227 for more information. One discount per I .D ., not redeemable with any other discount. T IC K E T S A V A I L A B L E A T A L L Dillards S T O R E S Z IA R E C O R D S O R C H A R G E B Y P H O N E 503-5555 & S tatte P ress P age 9 Friday, April 10.1998 M icro so ft takes its case to th e p u b lic w ith new spaper ads REDMOND, Wash. (AP) —- Microsoft Corp., embroiled in ah antitrust dispute with the federal government, took its case to the public today by running advertisements in five newspapers outlining “the principle we are fighting for.” The quarter-page ads appear in today’s Thé Washington Post, The W ashington Times, The New York Times, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and The Seattle Times. “W e believe the m arketplace should determ ine what innovations consumers want,” the ad states. “At Microsoft, the freedom to innovate for our customers is more than just a goal; it is a principle worth standing up for.” The Ju stice D epartm ent is also considering a new antitrust case against Microsoft involving the latest operat­ ing system software’s latest upgrade — Windows 98 — scheduled for public release June 25. A dozen states have also been looking into the company’s business practices. A draft complaint is circulating among 11 states and could be filed by the end of the month before U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, The Wall Street Journal reported today. State officials said they plan to take action with or without the Justice Department, the newspaper said. The report did not say which states were involved. The ads appear a day before lawyers for the company and the Justice Department are scheduled to meet in preparation for a hearing at a federal appeals court in Washington, D C., on an antitrust lawsuit. The lawsuit, filed in October, alleges M icrosoft was using its dominance with the Windows 95 operating system software to gain an unfair market share for its Internet E x p lo rer o v er co m p etito rs such as N etscap e Communications Corp. Microsoft disagrees, saying use of its browser is increas­ ing because it works better than the Netscape browser. H om eless m ans tale o f London and dance were no delusion B y V erena D o b n ik A s s o c ia t e d P ress NEW YORK — Arthur Bell, a 71-yearold man, was found homeless and disorient­ ed on a Brooklyn street last month, barely s ta n d in g , his fe e t fro zen . He to ld paramedics he was once a ballet dancer in Paris. “And they went. ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah,” ’ recalled social worker Maria Mackin. Bell’s medical chart, after all. noted possible signs o f dementia. But during the days that followed, Bell w o u ld te ll M ackin ta le s o f P aris and L o n d o n , F red erick A sh to n , M argot Fonteyn, Olga Preobrajenskaya, Katherine Dunham and James Baldwin. “He started telling me things that only someone who was really in the dance world would know. And I thought, ‘This is not dementia,” ’ said Mackin, who happened to have been a ballet photographer at one time. She also saw that Bell was “ incredibly graceful ... slender, sleek.” The accuracy, the richness of detail and the clarity with which he spoke led her to the New York Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center. Bell’s story checked out. He had been a pioneering black ballet dancer. Though he was no star, he left his artistic mark on the 1940s and ’50s, “when there was no place for African-Americans in classical ballet,” said M adeleine N ichols, cu rato r o f the dance collection at the library. Bell worked odd jobs after his dance career ended, but can’t remember how he wound up on the street, where he had been living for months in the dead of winter. His last address was a men’s shelter. He would have been sent back there had Mackin not intervened. Cam pus Corner 712 S. College (College & University) 967-4049 Now he’s in a nursing home, recuperat­ ing from frostbite on his feet and legs. Slowly, he’s learning to walk again with a cane. He uses a w heelchair m ost o f the time. I “I convinced them that he needed a high­ er level of care,” Mackin said. “I said, ‘This is a guy who was a pioneer in the dance world. He’s special, he’s an important part o f African-American culture. We should go out of our way to help him.’” W hen Bell was rescued off the street, “the very first thing I asked was, ‘Do you have Medicare?” ’ Mackin recalled. “And he 609 S. Mill • B e e r 8, Soda (Across from Coffee Plantation) • P hoto D eveloping 858-0567 • H ealth & B ea u ty A id s Beer only at College Ave. 12 PK. CANS Expires 4-12-98. BRING YOU Expires 4 -1 2 -9 8 I D.s • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST F R E E # ^ J BRING YOUR I.D.s » WHILE SUPPLIES LAST D O U B L E S Expires 4-12-98 BRING YOUR I.D.s • WHILE SUPPLIES LAST 2 4 E X P O S U R E C O L O R P R IN T S e e s to re fo r d e ta ils ASU CLOTHING ’ s P l^ Home of the "Killer" Calzone CAPS • SH O R TS • SW EATS A lo t more than books! « n denf* 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 7 0 4 S. C o lle g e University A L L . D A Y ...F R O M O P E N T O C LO SE! B U Y O N E E N T R E E (W G A R L IC R E C E I V E S P A G H E T S P A IT H B R A S T I E G H E T S A L A E A D ) E C O N N T R E T I D & D E W h a t w ill s h o w y o u h a v e c la s s w t b e t t e r th a n a p a in t b y n u m b e r .., H ayd en ’s, ,/y (FREE ENTREE MUST BE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE. IN-HOUSE ONLY) 106 E . U n iv e rsity D r. FREE . I block East o f M ill Ave. DAYTIME on University CAMPUS JL * '., J f iH E B 894-M AM A delivery ÜrilvegityOr. $10 Minimum Delivery 'M am a K now s B e st St a t e P ress Friday, April 10, 1998 1. What do you like best about Mama’s Pizzeria pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste □Value dCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time □Service □Never tried iff . 2. What do you like best about Domino’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste □Value OCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time OService ONever tried it 3 What do you like best about Papa John’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time □Service ONever tried it 4. What do you like best about Sunny’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste □Value □Crust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time □Service ONever tried it 5. What do you like best about Slices’ pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust OSauce OToppings □Delivery time OService ONever tried it 6. What do you like best about Last Slice’s pizza? (check all that apply) Com plete this survey and fax it to 965-4706, m ail it to : Pizza Contest PO Box 871502, Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 or cam pus m ail codé 1502 OR go to our w ebsite http://new s.vpsa.asu.edu and com plete the survey on-line! Hurry! Deadline is Monday, A pril 20 at noon. One entry per person. Five winners w ill be random ly selected and each w inner w ill win tw o free pizzas! Viva le anchovy! j j 12. Do you choose a pizza delivery business because you can write a check? □ yesO no 13. Do you choose a pizza delivery busi­ ness because you can use a credit card? □Taste OValue OCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time □Service ONever tried it 7. What do you like best about Buono’s pizza? (check all that apply) □TasteOValue □Crust OSauce OToppings □Delivery timeOService ONever tried it 8. What do you like best about Old Chicago’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time OService ONever tried it 9. What do you like best about Half Time’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust □Sauce OToppings □Delivery time OService ONever tried it 10. W hat do you like best about Frankie’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust OSauce OToppings □Delivery time OService ONever tried it 11. What do you like best about Gumby’s pizza? (check all that apply) □Taste OValue OCrust OSauce OToppings □Delivery time OSeryice ONever tried it OyesO no 14. How much do you tip a pizza delivery person (per pizza?) 0<$1 0 $ 1 0 $1-2 □ $2 -3 □more than $3 ndon’t tip 15. Does delivery time influence your deci­ sion about which pizza to choose? Oyes □no 16. What is the single most influential reason you choose what pizza to order? □price □coupon □taste Olocation □service Odon’t know 17 Have you ever scored a date with some­ one who delivered a pizza to your place? □yes Ono Owanted to but chickened out I W A N T T O W IN F R E E P IZ Z A ! My Nam e is: . ^ . ■. . . . : My phone num ber is : --------------------— — If I am selected to win tw o FREE pizzas, I w ould prefer to get them from my favorite pizza piace(s): : :■ v m itik i« ¡ E * * If You Have Receiveda 2-Year or 4-Year Degree in the Last 2 Years s You D are D U M P THE BUMPS, TRASH r You WillReceive a 2 or 4-Year Degree in the Next 6 Months... THE RASH, DITCH THE ITCH All th a t awful Irritation you can get after rem oving yo u r bikini hair w ill be h isto ry w ith Bikini Zone. 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Mail of QUftV' M E W Z - i i mmm S t a t e P ress Page 11 Friday, April 10, 1998 Aerocommuter gets stuck in pow er lines; rescued 4 hours later B y G e o r g e T ib b it s A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s / S E A T T L E — M ik e W a r r e n g o t hung up on his w ay to w ork T hursday. W arren, w ho co m m u tes to Work by a ir , g o t h is s m a ll p la n e ta n g le d in pow er lin es and d an g led U pside-dow n by o n e w h e e l, 6 0 feet ab o v e a h ig h ­ way, fo r nearly fo u r h o u rs b efore fire ­ fighters in a ch erry -p ick er b ro u g h t him dow n. “I thou g h t that som ebody w as lo o k ­ ing a lte r me. 1 w a sn ’t going to lo o k a gift horse in the m outh,” said W arren, w ho a d d e d th a t th e r e w as n o s e n s e f r e t t i n g b e c a u s e “ y o u ’ v e g o t tw o o p tio n s — i t ’s g o in g to h ang h ere or it’s not g oing to hang h ere.” W arren , 47, Was w h isk ed aw ay for h ospital tests an d released hours la te r w ith o n ly b ru ises acro ss his lap from hanging in his seat belt. W arren, a crane o p erato r, got stuck w h ile try in g to lan d at B o ein g F ie ld ju s t south o f S eattle after his com m ute across Puget S ound from A pex A irport near his hom e o f S ilv erd ale. T he a ir­ craft hung there like a ; m odel airplane in a d ogfight position from the ceiling o f a b o y ’s bedroom . C rane o p erato rs retriev ed W a rre n ’s C essn a 150L sh o rtly a fte r his rescu e, setting the 1,300-pound p lane dow n on its landing gear, “He w as m o re c o n c e rn e d ab o u t his airp la n e than h e w as a b o u t h im s e lf,” s a id T u k w ila F ir e L t. D a v e E w in g . “ H e ’ s a lu c k y m a n ,” E w in g s a i d , adding that the rescue “w as a fun one to do.” The N ational T ransportation Safety B o a rd s a id it w as in v e s tig a tin g th e accident. W arren said he w as a b o u t 20 feet o ff the runw ay during a ro utine lan d ­ ing w hen his tw o-seat plane was su d ­ d e n ly to sse d to the le ft by a v io le n t pocket o f turbulent air left behind by a d eparting aircraft. W arren said he gave the plane full pow er and tried to fly out o f the d an ­ ger, but his turning radius was lim ited b e c a u se o f th e n e a rb y c o n tro l to w e r and he struck the pow er lines. S p arks flew and the p lan e flip p ed , b u t the im pact was actu ally lig h t and springy, W arren said. He was w orried fo r about 30 seconds, but then realized the plane w asn ’t going to tum ble. W arren said he ra d io e d th e to w er, saying, “I think I have a situation here. T he lady called back and said, ‘Y eah, y o u ’re hanging by one w h eel.’” W arren, w ho has been flying since 1981, said he talked to the to w er and tried not to m ove during the rescue. P ow er to the lin es w as tu rn ed o ff, le a v in g a b o u t 2 ,5 0 0 hom es and b u s i­ n esses w ith o u t e lectricity fo r an h o u r o r tw o. Foam w as sprayed on the road as a p r e c a u t i o n . R e s c u e r s p la c e d tw o c r a n e s u n d e r n e a th th e a i r c r a f t arid a tta c h e d strap s to sta b iliz e the p lane A fire tru c k then m aneuvered the c h e r­ ry -p ick er clo se to the co ck p it. Steve Ringm an/The Seattle Tim es/Associated Press There is more to life than news and sports. M |ke W arren is rescued from his Cessna 150 afte r hanging from pow erlines fo r m ore than fou r hours Thursday. The sm all plane becam e entangled in pow er lines W hile approaching a landing, and the uninjured p ilot sat in the upside-dow n cockpit 60 feet above a highw ay fo r alm ost fou r hours before he w as rescued. C h e c k o u t th e Meet ASU's new transfer from Seattle. ASIAN e U L T U RC W £ € K April 6-11 19 98 A r d o n o Met e U n . v e m t y ASIAN coalition Friday, April 10 1:00 pm • Hayden Lawn -Filipino Traditional Dances All Day • Memorial Union -Cantonese Pop Culture Expo 2:00 pm • Memorial Union Cinema -Movie: “Double Happiness” Saturday, April 11 9:00 am to 4:00 pm • Armstrong Hall, College of Law In 1971, we opened in Seattle, the first store of its kind. Today, we still dp things unlike any other coffee company! 0 - ‘‘Embracing the Vision of Diversity” like buying only the very finest arabica coffees, no matter how far We have to travel. Maintaining legendary freshness and quality standards. Roasting each bean to its individual Spring Conference peak to bring out all the subtle flavors! Training every employee so our service matches the quality 7:00 to 9:00 pm • Memorial Union Cinema of our coffees. And all along, giving back to th e community and the world through charity. 0 - Documentary N o wonder coffee-lovers have helped us grow all the way here, 0 So now you can taste why. 5:00 pm • Memorial Union Cinema Join us for our Grand Opening at 5th & Mill in Tempe. - Movie: “Rumble in the Bronx” 7:00 pm • Memorial Union Pima Room -18 Mighty Mountain Warriors B u y ■ * Office of the Vice President of Student Affairs • • Office of the Senior Vice President and Provost Senior Staff • • Japanese American Citizens League • •Asian SUNews • Asian American Faculty and Staff Association F o r m o r e in fo : 9 6 5 -9 7 5 4 A ll p r o g r a m s s u b j e c t t o c h a n g e . P le a s e c a ll f o r c o n fir m a tio n . O n e , G e t O n e F R E E . B ring th is c o u p o n to th e n e w S tarbucks a t 5 th & M ill in T e m p e . 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S E C U R E - C O N V E N IE N T - C L E A N 502 N . H ayde n R d . .9 4 5 - 6 8 6 0 r X - ¡§ B ■• • , - 2422 W . B ro a d w a y 9 6 8 -1 0 2 1 fr ee: r e n t (o n s e le c t e d s iz e s ) C A L L U S! St a t e P r e s s V eal makes point adjustment. There’s a lot more pressure on the pro one. You When Jeremy Vea], ASU's all- know, I'v e been working on time leading scorer, look the court in that (playing the point guard) the opening game of the Nike Desert every day. Classic Thursday, he wasn't at his “Coach (Don) Newman customary shooting guard spot. did a good job. making sure I Instead, once the game started, had the ball in my hands, the ball was in his hands. He was working on ... looking up the point guard, directing his team's the court, w orking on my offense, creating shot opportunities dribble, things like that. So 1 for others as well as scoring nine think that made the adjust­ points himself. ment a lot easier for me.’’ Did Veal shift positions because A c h ie v in g a D r e a m there was a more talented tu'o guard Veal, as a youngster growon his team? No. Did he move as a ing up in .San Dimas. Calif., result of his inabilites at the two? No. was like any other basketballHe moved because when Veal obsessed kid: he im agined steps onto the floor of an NBA area himself as Michael Jordan or next year, it will be at the point. He Magic Johnson, dreaming that switched because his future requires he could follow in the foot­ him to. steps of his heroes, and one T h e T r a n s it io n day, have the opportunity to j Veal's chances to have a success­ show his a b ilitie s on the ful NBA career depends on his abil­ highest level of the sport. ity to make the transition from the It appears as if he'll get i shooting guard spot, a position that his chance. is primarily considered to have a “I have the ultimate dream A score-first mentality, to the point, of playing in the NBA.” he j§ where leadership skills and the tal­ said. “You play any sport, ent to distribute the ball come first and you w'ant to achieve the and foremost. greatest goal, and (for me) “I think the one is more of a chal­ that's the NBA." lenge for me,’" the 6’3" Veal said. By leading the Pac-10 “You really, really gotta be a quar­ in scoring w ith 20.8 terback out there, a head coach. So points per game, and once 1 think that's a challenge for me.” again being named to the According to Veal, this shouldn’t be A ll-C o n feren ce first a challenge that he won't overcome. team. Veal has put virJjj^M “I played the one under (former tually assured himASU head coach Bill) Frieder.” he se lf o f receiv in g a J jfljS p said. “Playing the pro one and play­ phone call on draft day. ing the college one is a big. big Where he will so in the ^ B y D oug Flanag an S t a t e P h i ss is not quite certain, player. But I also think the most projected as a high-to- important team for guys to go to the cond round selection right team, teams that need their serNBA scouts. vices. 1 tell you what, the way that tan, who coached Veal league is. you have to be able to put senior season, knows that ball in the hole and make good vill have to do in order decisions when you're running that A-quality player. point. And Jerem y can do those hearing different things.” 2 s.” Newman said of Veal grew up a fan of the Los a l's draft position. Angeles Lakers. But he has no prefObviously, with the erence of w'ho drafts him. He just draft being two wants his chance to play in the NBA. rounds. I would “Whoever drafts me, that's fine." think he's probably he said. “I'm going to play hard." a top-60 M a k in g a G o o d I m p r e s s io n At the Nike Desert Classic. Veal was assigned to the Pacific team, ygt which is coached Laker legend and NBA Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Abdul-Jabbar said that Veal made a strong first N»>. IlMfew impression 'on him. "Jeremy's a smart player.” * ~ % 1 | ® Abdul-Jabbar said. “He ran 'it the offense well, (is a) good defensive player, and didn't turn the ball over. He's a solid player.'’ I j/0 Veal also impressed «m Jt/m wm another NBA immortal I 0 ■ r ■' — ex-B oston C eltic ¥ ■ forw ard and current T im berw olves general manager Kevin Me Hale. "He’s got a good feel for the g am e,” M cH ale said. “He’s got good range on his shot. I like what I've seen so far. He moves the ball pretty well, he’s got range on his Brad Lang/State Press Offense outshines defense at annual ASU spring football game By S c o rr L e w is S t a t e P r e s s ■- •• Thanks to a multitude of injuries on offense and defense, ASU’s annual spring football game turned into, for all intensive purposes, a spring scrimmage. With the implimentation of referees and field goal attempts, but without the tracking and implications of downs or turnovers, the Sun Devils’ offense, led by .sophomore wide receiver Tariq McDonald, freshman running back Davaren Hightower, senior running back Marlon Farlow and fieshman quarterback Chad Elliot, outplayed the defense Thursday at Sun Devil Stadium. "1 thought today ... the offense looked the best it has all spring,” head coach Bruce Snyder said. “We had a lot fewer penalties (and) 1thought we were more efficient. From that stand­ point, I’m pleased. I’m not pleased with the defense and what it did. , "Playing spring ball is a frustrating time because you’re never happy. How much difference does a week make? Last Saturday, the offense couldn’t get a first down and the defense dominated. It’s a merourial thing during the spring. We did play a lot of play­ ers, so I’m pleased with that. And we got out of it clean, we didn't get anybody hurt.” There may have been no serious injuries, but Farlow, who gained 458 yards last season as the third-string running back, laid some hurt on the defense during goal-line drills. During one sequence, Farlow appeared to be stopped on the two-yard line by a mob of defenders. But Farlow kept his legs churning and bull­ dozed in for the touchdown. ; “I don’t like to go down, no matter what,” said Farlow, who gained 44 yards on 11 rushes. “I don’t want to be tackled and 1 don't want nobody to touch me. I didn’t want to be denied the end zone. I wanted to get in there... and get the touchdown.” McDonald, despite the fact that high school teammate quarter­ back Ryan Kealy is still rehabbing his knee and was held out of the scrim m age, had no problem scoring touchdowns on Thursday. McDonald caught four passes for 125 yards and two touchdowns, both of which were of the highlight film variety. “I’m running with the one’s (starters) right now and hopefully I’ll keep the job,” McDonald said. “If I go out there and keep perT urn to Sp r in g b a l l , pag e 16. Jerem y Hein/State Press W ide receiver Tariq M cDonald is hauled down by cornerback J’Juan C herry during Thursday’s scrim m age at Sun D evil Stadium . M cD onald caught fo u r passes fo r 125 yards and tw o touchdow ns. Page 14 S t a t e P ress Friday, April 10,1998 M ills, potent hitting lead ASU past Trojans, 18-3 By L o r i H aro State P ress The No. 19 ASU baseball team’s opening game against USC was a combination of great pitching and timely hitting as the Sun Devils banged out 18 hits in their 18-3 win over the No. 3 Trojans, Lefty ace Ryan Mills went eight innings allowing only two runs on three hits while walking five. He struck out 15. ’’All the credit tonight goes to Ryan M ills." catcher Jeremy Jones said. “He was unbelievable.” Mills stands at 5-3 on the season. For the Trojans Seth Etherton (8-2) received his second consecutive loss for only the'second time in his four year career. In Seven innings pitched, Etherton gave up six runs on 11 hits walking one and striking out six. “Things were going good for me. I was just battling,” Mills said. “It feels good to beat one of the best; pitchers, one of the best teams in the country.” The Sun Devils didn’t only get great pitching though, they kept their offense going, a definite key to their success. ASU (25-14, 12-6 Pac-10 Southern Division) started the scoring early getting a three-run homer over the right center field wall onto R ural Road by third baseman Andrew' Beinbrink. Beinbrink scored outfielders Rudy Arguellcs and Mikel Moreno who had been hit by a pitch and walked respectively. Beinbrink was 2-for-4 with three RBI and a double in addition to his home run. The Trojans (29-9, 14-5) got two runs in the third after first baseman Robb Gorr hit a two RBI single to right field to score Dominic Correa and Josh Townsend. USC’s only other run would be designated hitter Jason Lane's home run in the ninth. In ASU’s half of the third Beinbrink. who had doubled to center field, scored after second baseman Richy Leon reached base on an error by the shortstop. The Sun Devils got another run in the fourth as Jones singled and later scored off of Arguelles single to center. In the fifth inning, first baseman Dan Meier hit a home run over the fence in right center for ASU’s only run that a n inning. , " However, the Sun Devils offensive explosion came in the eight inning against three different Trojart pitchers. ASU scored 12 runs on .seven hits. The Sun Devils went through their line-up nearly twice with each player scoring Brad Lang/State Press at least once. Arguelles had an RBI single while Moreno Sun Devil shortstop M ichael C ollins scored a run and had an RB I in ASU’s 18-3 victo ry over USC. C ollins also robbed Trojan first and M yers bach had two RBI hits. L eft fielder W illie basem an Robb G orr o f a sing le in th e eighth inning throw ing him out at firs t an the run. Bloomquist capped the inning with a three RBI triple to Bloomquist had three RBI, Moreno two. The Sun D evils w ill start right-hander Richy Leon right center. “It was just a matter of time,” head coach Pat Murphy Friday night. Leon will go up against USC’s M ike Penney A rguelles w ent 3-for-4 w ith tw o RBI and two runs Gametime is 7 p.m. at Packard Field. sc o re d . B lo o m q u ist and M o ren o w e re both 2 -for-5. said. “It’s really starting to come together for us.” No. 9 softball to play just another game vs. No. 1 UofA B y D o u g F lanagan Sta te P ress In football, it is known as ‘T h e Game,” In softball, it is just another game. When the ASU softbal 1 team (27-11. 3-5 Pac-10) heads to Tucson tonight to play two against the No, 1-ranked, defending national cham pion W ildcats o f UofA, Sun Devil head coach Linda Wells will have this point stressed to her team. "I don't know that (the rivalry has) been characterisitic,” she said. “I can't really say that I carry that cultural, we-hate-them kind of attitude. I have a lot of respect for their program. I feel like they’ve been fortunate and the pendulum has swung their way for a while. W e're kinda working hard to see if we can get it to swing back. “I would have no problems with us being the top two teams in the country. So in that regard, it’s like they’re just another oppo­ nent. I know that probably doesn’t represent the typical sentiment of the school, but to me they’re just another team.” UofA (41-3. 7 -1 Pac-10) has been ranked first in the nation since the preseason, but suf­ fered their first Pac-10 loss of the season last weekend at the hands of Washington. 9-0. Huskie hurler Jamie Graves handed Wildcat ace Nancy Evans (20-1) her first defeat. D espite her rough o u tin g ag a in st Washington, Wells regards Evans as a com­ plete, dangerous player. "She single-handedely pitched them to the World Series national championship last year,” she said. “She’s gifted. She’s athlet­ A Practice Dedicated to Complete Women's Healthcare THE I p miGHTY mounTHin wI hhídhs W OMEN S HEALTHCARE OBSTETRICS AN D GYNECOLOGY 1492 S. M ill A v e ./ S te . 3 1 4 T em pe win, you gotta have at least three. You don’t score, you don’t beat anybody.” ASU is 12-1 this season when they score five or more runs. Wells said that even if they don’t come out victorious this weekend, playing the top team in the country will provide her team with a learning experience. “If we can be successful, fine, but if we can't, well, let’s learn so that we can put good games on the field against Stanford and Cal because that’s where our berth is coming from. “I don't really (think that) we have to beat UofA to make our season or to do any­ thing else. To me, it’s irrelevant if they win a national championship. It’s where do we finish?” T h e m cn id ’s m ast s u ic id a l H sian A m e r ic a n s k it co m ed y group. FILIATED 8 2 9 -6 3 3 1 ic, she can hit, (and) she can play third. But her big strength is on the mound. She has a good rise ball, and she has a good drop ball. She keeps people off balance.” ASU lost three out o f four games last weekend to conference foes W ashington and UCLA, and dropped two spots in the USA Today/VSFCA Poll to ninth. A reason why the Sun Devils struggled last weekend was a lack of offense. Wells said this can't happen against UofA if her team expects to put at least one game in the win column. ; “T hey're a very good club, and w e're not going to be able to go in there and not score runs, or not have pitching, or not have defense,” she said. “If you look at our stats, it’s prtty easy to sec that if you want to be sure to win, score five runs. To be iffy to Romance... ¡fo m o M ce... ^ * i i • J» itttewáiHUi<¡j ¿f ]ìMVocatiue! Out of th e s u g a r c a n e p la n ta tio n s a n d into g o u r facBl Sponsored bg: flBian H m erican Facultg G s ta ff Association Open to the Public Free □{ FHIDflY 1Ú charge 7pm Hsian Pacific R m arican S tad ias P rogram Hsian Student Coalition p Soma s k its co n tain profanity, sexual explicitness, male toplsasnsss and poopoo jokes. Call 965-6060 PIIÏ1H H D O m for information IJ le m O ría l U n io n State Press Page 15 Friday, April 10,1998 No. 8 ASU looks to improve rank matches this year, but I thought we played one of our best matches against Stanford,” Melnerney said. “I didn’t think The No. 8 ASU women’s tennis team has a great oppor­ we played particularly well at Cal last time, though.” tunity to move up in the rankings this weekend when the This weekend’s matches mark the last for the Sun Devils Sun.Devils take on No. 1 Stanford Friday at 1:30 p.m. and at home. ASU will take on UofA foe its last conference and No. 10 Cal Saturday at noon at the W hitem an Tennis final regular-season match next Saturday; A SU has stay ed in the In te rc o lle g ia te T en n is Center. The Sun Devils are currently 12-4 overall and 4-3 in the Association’s rankings top-10 all season. Top-player Reka Pac-10 Southern Devision. Stanford stands at 20-1 and 8-1 Cseresnyes and freshman Karin Palme are both ranked in in the Pac-10. The C ardinal’s only loss was to No. 14 singles. Cseresnyes is ranked No. 29 while Palme is 10 UCLA. Cal is 14-5, 7-2. The Bears lost to Stanford 7-11 spots back at No. 39. Monday. The Sun Devils’ top doubles duo of Stephanie Lansdorp ASU is coming off a 5-2 loss to.No. 5 Texas last week­ and Katy Propstra is ranked No. 10 in the nation. end. The loss was the team’s last road; match of the season. While Melnerney knows that this weekend’s matches The Sun Devils finished their non-conference matches with should be as tough as they were last time, she said the team a 8-1 record. knows what is needed to get the job done. ASU will look to prevent a season sweep this weekend. “We just have to come out and play well. There will be •Earlier this; season ASU lost to both Stanford and Cal dur­ b attles, and w e’ll have close, hard-fought m atch es,” ing their trip to northern California, .The Sun Devils fell to Melnerney said. the Hears 7-2. Stanford edged ASU out with a 5-4 victory. : Stanford is anchored by No. 4 Julie Scott who holds an ASU .head coach Sheila Melnerney said that the earlier 18-1 record in dual matches. The Cardinal has several other matches with the two were probably the toughest the team ranked players including No, 15 Teryn Ashley and No. 16 has faced all season. However, the Sun Devils have had Anne Kremer. In doubles the team of Ania Bleszynski and many other challenging matches this year. The team has; Scott are No. 9, Ashley and Kremer are No. 15. < Cal is lead by No. 6 Amanda Augustus who has a 22-5 played 11 matches against teams ranked in the top-30 and singles mark on the season. She is 14-3 at the No. I spot. compiled an 8-3 record against those teams. “I'd say probably Stanford and Cal were our toughest Augustus and doubles partner also have a 14-3 record. B y L o r i H aro S tate P ress By D oug Flanagan State P ress The Sun Angel Classic, is, simply stated, ah integral part of Sun Devil track and field traditon. Carl Lewis. Dan O'Brien. Inger Miller. Leroy Burrell. Jackie Joyner-Kersee. Gail Devers. These are some o f the track and field legends- who have participated in past Sun Angel Classics. This Saturday, the 19th edi­ tion of the m eet w ill once again feature some of the nation’s best. “This meet is one of the premier outdoor tra c k and fie ld c o m p e titio n s in the Southwest,” ASU Senior Associate Athletic D ire cto r D onald Bocchi said. “W e are extremely proud of the many records estab­ lished and the numerous world-class com­ petitors in all events.” The 41 -event meet, which will begin at 11:30 a.m. with the hammer throw event, w ill be, h o st to to p -2 0 sch o o ls S outh Carolina and UofA, among others. Despite this big-meet atmosphere, ASU head coach Greg Kraft said that this is just one in a progressive series of events meant to help to continue the developement of his Jerem y Hein/State Press Freshm an Karin Palm e w ill have to be at the top o f her gam e th is w eekend if ASU is to upset No. 1 Stanford. The No. 8 Sun D evils b attle th e C ard inal today a t 1:30 p.m . and No. 10 Cal Saturday at noon, b oth at th e W hitem an Tennis C enter. young squad.; . • ■ “It’s a chance for us to involve the com­ munity, with the age-group races and the high school races,” he said. “It is an elite meet, but every m eet that we have has a purpose, and this m eet is no different. I know it’s a coaching cliche, but we take them one meet at a time, and (this) is just another meet in our development,” , Kraft also said the fact that most of his team was given last weekend off as a result o f the Texas Relays helped them recover from various m inor ailm ents, including injuries to javelin thrower Jared Schrieber (an k le) and sp rin te r B rian R aspeberry (hamstring): “W e’re still a little dinged up,” he said. “W e’re very thin, and (injuries) can be very scary,” ; : /■ Kraft will-rely on his team’s five NCAA automatic qualifiers to once again, shoulder the lo ad , M ika L aiho (ham m er throw ), S c h rie b e r (ja v e lin ), C h a rity A m am a (javelin), Dawnyell Linder (100 meters), and Joronda White (400). L aih o Won the 1996 co m p etitio n in th is m eet w ith a th ro w o f 2 2 3 -fe e t-5 inches. 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Monday, April 13 • 7:30pm • Harkins Centerpoint Opens Friday, April 17 Page 16 S t a t e P ress ■ F riday, : A pril W hite made correct choices with Newman, Evans OK, I’ll be the first to admit it, I was very critical of ASU Athletic Director Kevin White’s decision to hire Don Newman in September (as was stated in a pre-season column). 1 thought Newman was thrust in a no-win situation. And I didn’t think he had an ounce of hope to come in and fix the mess that exASU men’s basketball coach Bill Frieder had left behind. Boy, was I wrong. The Sun D evils w ere the b ig g est surprise o f the Pac-10. Their remarkable and unexpected turnaround (from a woeful 10-20 season to an 18-14 campaign) turned heads from here to Hempstead. In retrospect. White made the right decision. By handing Newman the interim post, which he filled admirably, White had ample time to find the right man for the job. And it gave him time to do things his way. Sure some fans and the media jumped on the Newman bandwagon and vigorously lobbied on his behalf, but White knew what he was doing. Now Evans is ready to work his magic in The Valley of the Sun. And already, there are indications that Evans will be a suc­ cessful Pac-10 coach. •He received positive endorsements from ASU standout for­ wards Mike Batiste and Bobby Lazor. •He inherits a program on the rise. •And he will lure quality players to the program immediate­ ly (including current Ole Miss players and recruits). Over the next five seasons, Evans will lead the Sun Devils to perennial appearances in the NCAA Tournament. He will return the program to the Top 20. He will make Dick Vitale rant and rave about another school with the moniker Devils. And more importantly he will make people forget the unfor­ tunate point-shaving scandal that tarnished the school’s image. Evans is a well-respected coach with as solid a resumé as any coach in the country. He may not be a household name just yet. But then again... “Everybody doesn’t have to have that great big name.” Arkansas head coach Nolan Richardson said. “A lot of people could have asked who was Dean Smith a hundred years ago.” They eventually found out how good a coach Smith was. And they will find out how good Evans is. Ed Odeven can be reached via e-mail at crazyed@asu.edu O f course, the lovable chubby guy from Utah probably could have put fannies in the many vacant seats at the University Activity Center and taken the Sun Devils to the Sweet Sixteen two years down the road. , But after Rick Majerus decided to $tay put, White opted for Plan B — which took him to the heart of Dixie where his son Michael resides and dons an Ole Miss uniform. While in Mississippi, White found the man to lead the ASU program into the 21 st century: Rob Evans. * The reason? Evans is not one to back down from a major challenge. “I was told Ole Miss was a basketball graveyard and not to accept the challenge,” he said Tuesday. “I accepted the chal­ lenge. That's why I’m here today (at ASU), because we have a challenge in front of us.” Evan’s previous task was to make the Rebels a respectable program. During his six seasons at the helm he accomplished that by guiding the Rebels to back-to-back 20-win seasons, including a 42-16 record over the past two years. It marked the first time Ole Miss eclipsed the 20-victory plateau two years in a row since 1938, and in doing so helped transform the school into a haven of hoops frenzy, which was certainly missing at this traditionally football-crazed school for decades. S p rin g b a ll J Continued fkom pack 13. forming, the job is mine. It’s mine to lose.” “We m oved (M cDonald) from backup behind Lenzie (Jackson) to the starting flanker and he’s made some plays,” Snyder said. “I think Tariq has the sànie type of talent that Lenzie has. The fact that we have receivers at the other spot really gives us a chance to go to the open guy instead of always going to the same guy. Lenzie is the most consistent receiver we have. To me, he is a big-time receiver.” One job that will be decided come the fall will be the backup quarterback spot. Senior Steve Cajfinpbell, who quarterbacked ASU to last season’s Sun Bowl victory over Iowa, and Elliot w ere both im pressive in the scrim m age. Campbell completed five of 12 pass attempts for 95 yards arid two touchdowns. Elliot was partic­ ularly sharp as he completed of six of nine pass attempts for 89 yards and a touchdown. Elliot also rushed for 18 yards on two carries. “I think what we discoved about Chad this spring is that he has real ability,” said Snyder, while also noting that Elliot needs to improve his knowledge of the offensive system. “He has a crisp arm, the ball is accurate. He can throw the rock.” ' With a number of gaps in the Sun Devils' starting lineup because of graduation, spring practice was the first opportunity for ASU play­ ers to prove they belong on the field Fall prac­ tice at Camp Tontozona in August will be the last opportunity for hopeful starters before the 1998 season arrives. “I think (linebackers) Adam Archuleta, Eric Fields, they really stepped it up,” Snyder said. “Hightower looked really good to me. (Freshman) Scott Peters, our left guard, didn’t play particularly well, but he shows a lot of abili­ ty, he just needs to become comfortable. “1 thought (defensive tackle) Albrey (Battle) had a real strong spring practice. We need to take areal look at (Junior College transfer defen­ sive linemen) Junior Ioanc and Erik Flowers. I think we need those two kids to come in (when they arrive in the fall) and emerge.” ASU, with back-to-back top-15 finishes, will likely be in the top-15 of every major pre-season ranking. Have the Sun Devils finally emerged as a major player in college football? v “This team doesn’t need to hear that,” Snyder said. “We maybe overrated right now. I do like this team, but I don’t think we have arrived. We are quite a way aways from really being the team that maybe people think we might be. So until we’re there, we’re not there.” On Sept. 5, when Pac-10 rival Washington head into Sun Devil Stadium for the season opener, Snyder will find out whether or not his team is “there.” “The thing we got to be able to do is every down, every day, every practice, be able to show the consistency that they had today,” Snyder said. “They don’t deserve a lot of credit until they do it day after day.” S c r im m a g e S c r a p s •Hightower, who rcdshirted last season due to a broken leg, rushed for 77 yards on 17 car­ ries. •Pre-season Heisman Trophy candidate run­ ning back J R. Redmond rushed for 20 yards on two carries and played defense for six plays, assisting on a tackle. •Wide receiver Kenny Mitchell caught two passes for 35 yards and one touchdown. •New field-goal kicker Mike Gauthier was good on three of five attempts, including a 52yaider that went at least another 10 yards. •Free safety Phillip Brown made the lone interception of die day off Campbell. •Estimated attendance was 237. V eal Continued from page 13. shot, he's got good quickness, and he’s got decent size for his position. He’s got a chance. He has potential (for a suc­ cessful NBA career).” T he F uture Newman and Veal had several discussions throughput this past season about V eal's pro prospects. Newman was pleased with Veal’s performance on the court, but he was fessional career. But if and when he is out bumping heads with the best players in the world, he will carry the remem­ brances of his childhood, o f him “being” MJ or Magic, car­ rying his team to a dramatic victory, in his head. “I’m no different from anybody else,” Veal said. “I pic­ ture me hitting the game-winning shot versds somebody, and hopefully one day, someone might say that about me.” also pleased with the way he dealt with the new, incoming pressure to perform off the court. “One thing we tried to do was keep everything in per­ spective,” Newman said. “I think he did a phenomenal job o f taking care o f the task at hand, which was his senior year. But no question, his lifelong dream is to be an NBA player, and he’s worked very Hard at that.” Veal could very well be on his way to a productive pro­ C l a s s if ie d s Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may. wish to irtvfestigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... Al Capone's ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS FREE, FREE. Free! We need men & women haircutting mod­ els. Also color & highlight models: Call:Brad or Frank 9665462 FOR RENT:; Large 2bd/l bà, Very nice, within walking dis­ tance to ASU. $569/mo. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238 APARTMENTS 2BD/2BA APARTMENT, great Scottsdale location. $725/mo. Call 675-0911 for more info. DON'T MISS the boat! Reserve your apt. for fall today. Studio, 1 & 2bd avail. Meridian Corn­ ers. 1440 E. Broadway, Call now! 966-5818 business card used furniture dealer. i& z Raise $ 5 0 0 in one week. Fundraising opportunities available. No financial obligation. Great for clubs. For more information call (888) 51-A PLUS ext. 51 Find it FA S T in the Classifieds 3BD/2BA, BRAND new, close to ASU $825/mo,; 2bd/lba ; 1,2,3 BD CONDOS, Papago $500/mo. Summer & fall rentals Pk & Questa Vida. 6/1 moveavail, also, 8944)288, Tim in. $650-$ 1300. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives 998-2992 WALK TO ASU: 2bd lba 3BD 2BA Condo in Scolts: $700; 3bd 2ba $900; 4bd 2ba Carport, new carpet, tile, arid $ 1050; 4bd 2ba w/ pool fresh paint. Avail. May 15 (+/-), $1400; Summer & fall rentals $825/mo. Steve 821-1394 avail, also 894-0288 HELP WANTEDGENERAL APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT CONDO NEAR ASU, mature n/s grad. Mstr. bd, $350 op 2nd bd $300, w/d incl. comm, pool, avail, 5/3 266-7675 PAPAGO f t - 2br/2ba, w/d, cov­ ered parking, pool + 1,000 sq. ft. $725/mo. 1-800-977-0803. QUESTA VIDA 3bd/3ba $ 1 195/mo. lux t/h, vltd ceil*' irigs, fans, sky lights, w/d, d/w, micro, 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, 2 story. 98 lease begins Spr/Sum. Harris Equity, 829-0902. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL E M B A SSY S U IT E S RESORT SCOTTSDALE S /W /Y /7 /T /L /P /M , 18 NEEDS R O O M IE said he was a ANNOUNCEMENTS WALK TO ASU, 650 sq, ft. guesj house, pool,.utils.; ine Id. $650/mo. 3bd/2ba, w/d, pool, $1300. 4bd/2ba, w/d, $1200 Avail, immed. 731-3969 of 360-1626 pgr. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT Bedroom Apartm ents Close to Campus Apache Terrace Apartments 9 * 8 -6 5 8 3 MS)" • i - a s s y ”- Me, I love pink fuzzy slippers, so ft su n sets and n ig h ts m ak­ ing old wine bottles into waxdipped candles. You, like rain­ b o w s, M o rk an d M in d y and have new id e a s fo r th e glu e gun. Come live with me w e’ll o r d e r b a b y b a c k r i b s on T u e s d a y s . O R c a ll T h e Jefferson Com m ons. Spacious 1 ,2 ,3 ,4 b d r m , F u r n . W /D . Individual leases. 1-888-3674340. M S K S .J Now open the follow ing Saturdays ACCEPTING W ALK-IN INTERVIEW S M, Tu, and F 8:30 -10:30 or 2-4pm • H ■a an UM uv yey r- f 9am - 1pm: I April 11 April 25 May 9 May 23 Buaaar • Satrvam ($3.50/hr + tips) • Floor Supervisor - FT • Una Cook - FT • Momt/Hoakma • Room Service ($4.25/hr * tips) • Banquet Servers * FT & PT work available Please apply with Hum an Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. S t a t e P re ss Page_17 Friday, April 10,1998 RENTAL SHARING AVAIL 5/1, roommate wanted to share 2bd, 2 1/2ba TH, 13th St./Hardy $350/mo, + l/2utils. Call Robin 921-4134 RO O M S FOR RENT ROOM S FOR RENT ROOM S FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE NICE 3 BD home w/ citrus trees, screeened porch & patio, w/d. Must like dogs. N/S. Avail, now. $350/mo. (incl. util.) + sec. dep. Call Tom 952-1045 RURAL/SOUTHERN. MSTER bd. priv. ba, 5 min to ASU. $325 + 1/2 util. Call Chad 4561496 6-11pm JBL, ALTEC stereo speakers $150 & $100 for pair respec­ tively. Call Brad 966-5462 or 899-0138 HOMES FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES OWN ROOM & bath in nice home; phone line, w/d, garage. 2 mi. froth ASU. $450/mo. inclds everything. Laura 921-2640 S350/MO. 1/T1LS incl'd. Female. Private bath, phone & fridge. Debra. 379-3534 x 249 PAP AGO PARK. 3bd condo. Veiy clean: Pref mature student/ profpSs. W/D & all amen. Own bthrm, $375.929-9%2 May 1st 2 PEOPLE needed for 3bd condp. $400/ropm inclds utils. 4 riii. to ASU. Kristy; 844-0899 LOOKING FOR female room­ mate. Move in mid-July. Nice house, 4bd w/popl. Call, 820-5925 RESPONSIBLE MALE. N/S to share? new furnished home* Ray/ 52nd St; Perfect for young prof, or grad. Frplce, spa, laundry. Avail, immed. $450 inclds. utils. 753-9344 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HOMES FOR Sale 3bd house w/ pool, remodelled, very nice, close to campus. Realty Exec­ utives Bob Bullock 998-2992 REAL ESTATE GOV’T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1. Delin­ quent tax, repo’s, REO’s. Your area. Toll free 800-218-9000 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! P u t it in the C la s s ifie d s ! HELP WANTEDGENERAL Ü BQT. SERVERS Busythru May Make up to S12-S rs/hr. Accepting walk-in Interviews M. Tu. &F 8:30-l0:30am or2-4pm EMBASSY S U IT E S RESO RT SCOTTSDALE ~ HELP WANTEDGENERAL Apply at Hum an Resources 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Part-tim e Customer Service Reps United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, evening & week­ end shifts. $6.87/hr plus shift differential for evening hours. Good customer service skills & pleasant phone voice pre­ ferred. Call 431-9500. Tempe location. Employee drug ' testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V Management Development Pregram Independent Capital Mgmt (ICM ), a fin sys co, MOTORCYCLES 95 YAMAHA VIRAGO; new chain, classic style, still want’d, 2.5K 968-2922 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departrs. Buy coupon s/a wards 4 Most places worldwide. 968—-7283 ’93 WRANGLER, forest green, 6 c y L , ac, show room cond., 52K mi. Call 368-5484 HELP WANTEDGENERAL 78 FIREBIRD Formula 350 V8, A/T, POSI, t-tops, a/c, must sell now, make offer, Call 369-3419 ASSEMBLER JOBS^ $8/hr: FT & PT lighting & electronic as­ sembly work at‘ Scottsdale Air Park. Call Terry, 998-0325 91 MITSUBISHI Mirage hatch­ back 60K mi. auto new tires, battery a/c xlent cond. $4000 288-1732 after 6pm ATTN ASU West students! Health Club hiring: fitness/P.T., front desk, child care/ summer camp. Apply at: 10251N. 35th Ave. 866-0330 I HAVE too many cars! 1975 Datsun 280Z in good condi­ tion, great tires, ac, $3000. Please call 542-8492 BETHANY CHRISTIAN School is currently looking for childcare workers fo r after­ school & substitute teachers. Also certified teachers for fall ’98. Please call 752-8993 SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, Cadil­ lacs, Chevys, BMW’s, Cor­ vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD’s. Your area. Toll free, 1-800-2189000 Ext; A -1676 for current listings. CASH TODAY!!! CASHIERS - CHEVRON selfservice station & convenience store hiring f/t, p/t positions. Good pay & benefits. Apply in person. 5002 E. Chandler Blvd. I BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/M isc. Items. HELP WANTEDGENERAL piuit a j j iH^ribb-$209-$249‘l ^ f c v W A I I - $ $ H 9 q /w . '! listen in Inc. Magazine's 1996 & 1997 lis t o f CAI l 8H8 AIRHfTCH nation's 500 fastest growing priv co's, announces hnp '/Www aiihlfch Mg A s sem b ler J o b s -$ 8 /h r. May 98 graduation. Due to our commitment to : F /T & P /T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park C a l l Terry: 998-0325 expand locally as well as nationally, we desire career-oriented individuals looking for COMP. DHL,. THE world’s leading in ­ ternational air express network, is hiring in the following areas: customer service, tracking & tracing, & inside sales. These are FT positions w/ flex sched­ ules. Benefits include: casual dress environment, 4 0 IK plan, m edicai, dental, & vision in­ surance, paid vacations, & trav­ el priviledges. Apply or mail in your resume to DHL Airways, . .1900 W. University Dr., Tern-. pe,AZ 85281. EOE DRIVERS- OWN car/insurance. $9-$15/hr. Mori-F.fi-, 11am2pm, flex, shifts. We deliver Restaurant food to Central Phx businesses. 1-800-951 -3663, leave message. FITNESS TRAINER needed for E. Mesa Country-Club. Great for exss student. Contact Russ Brandt at 981-8135 GQ/VOGUE New co. seeking 5 people who want to make a change. Fun, freedom & finance. Call now. 212-7586 . GREAT SCHOOL job. Care­ giver for active quadriplegic. 34 eves/wks. OR week.end mom. Healthy, smoke/drug free ass!t. w/ positive attitude. Good pay, will train. Tom 949-7241, ly. msg. IMPROV - LOOKING for Promotions/Graphic artist. Apply within, Thurs.-Sun., 6pm-9pm. 874-3268 mgmt trainee positions in our PHX offices upon. HELP WANTEDGENERAL IMPROV - LOOKING for box office attendant. $5.50/hr. Apply Thurs.-Sun., 6pm-9pm. MECHANICAL TECH- ft/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU; Flex, hrs; Call 956-8200, days including personnel mgmt and admin. Avg DiV Mgr inc $50K+bonuses, pft sharing & $ 9 /h r stock own. Bring resume to Mohave 222 Our new Technical Call Center needs sales & enthusiasm. If you have worked in a telemarketing environ­ ment; please contact Tim at 230-1035 or fax us at 230-1066 There's No Com parison, (Mem Union) 4/13, 6pm. Prof dress req. You can't compare apples to oranges -an d you Can't compare ProMark One with any other employer in the industry. Psych & Social Work Majors NOW HIRINC SALES ASSOCIATES Full Time hours - 7am-3:30pnv lpm-9pm Sr lOpm-Sam Part Time hoias - 330-9pm (Will work with college and HS schedules) DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. • $7 An Hour Guaranteed (Commissions Up To An Additional S£An Hour) • Advancement Opportunities •Paid Training -Paid Vacations • Relocation Opportunities Earn $6.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package • Paid Holidays/Sick Time • Paid Weekly on Fridays •Health & Dental Benefits ■Professional Work Environment Business Casual Dress Code Direct Deposit Available 3136 S. McClintock Ste. #7, Tempe Or CaD (602) 777-0S77 Fax 777-RS4Ì (McClintock and Southern) tAppttcattonsTo: □BC Residential Services 2405 E Southern Ave 09 ¡ ¡ I Tempe, AZ S 756-1223 EOE www.promarkone.com SHyHarborA irp o rt S ecurity New C ontract!!! 2 0 Officers Needed NEED STUDENT for MD office, Scotts: 12-20 hrs./wk- Mostly afternoons. General Office work, local errands. Must have own transp. Call 947-7651 or fax ttsume 947r0274.; . OFFICE ASST. Yr round posi­ tion. Phones, filing, outgoing mail prep, approx. 20 flex hrs/wk. Must work 3-5pm. Send resume: Attn. Donna 398 S. Mill Ave. Suite 304, Tempe, • 852*1 P/T OPERATOR for Tempe based answering service. 7am2pm & 2pm-9pm, some wknd. work. $6.50/hr. to start. 303-2222 P/T PERSON needed to help w/packing pharmaceuticales, order checking & some data en­ try; Must be depend. Flex. hrs. Call 470-8119 PATROL OFTICER Trainee, private, $6.40/hr„ pt/ft, flex hre,, Gene 968-0311 PHONE SURVEYS I-10/Baselirie. FT day & PT eve. M-Th 59pm & Sat 9-4 or Sun 2-9 $6.50/hr. Emily 443-8883 PRESCHOOL NEEDS toddler teacher 'M-F. Also need summer help. 894-5338 PT GUST Serv/ Mkting Asst, needed for Tempe Co., .15-20 hrs/wk, close to: ASU, good pay. Contact Brian 967-2678 The R ep u b lican P a rty W e o ffm : is n ow h irin g . Relaxed H eaIiIi / D ema I B i-m -His 1liiiois' AssisiA\( I Ui\ifoRMSSupplilrd / MAiMAiNlEtl atmosphere, convenient hours and great I R A V I L A W A R D S !! A< commoeIaii SlLlIlM S( 111(lull s networking opportunity. Call Truman ® WoRldwIdc SecuRliy Assoc. 427 S. 48th Si. # 105 • ÎEMpt 957-7770 966-0141 S a l e s A s s o c ia t e s V Diane’s, a fast-growing chain of Hallmark Gold t Crown stores, is seeking Full and PT employees for its Chandler and Tempe stores. Personality, commitment & honesty a must. Hourly wage + benefits. Call for an immediate interview. Scottsdale ' As We Grow, So Do You! rested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion, advancement and success? Stuck in a dead-end job that’s taking vou now here ’ I hen l ACS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, wants to talk to you! The FACS Croup, Inc. provides financial, credit administrative services for Federated Department Stores, Inc. including Macv's, as well as other companies. Business is ex celso we're looking tor dependable, motivated, service-oriented people to join pur dynamic team. In our last-paced environment, m cement 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 ST O R E O P E R A T O R S • EX PRESS C R E D IT Join the dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: • S8.25—S8.50/hour to sta rt fo r m o st p o sitio n s • V a r ie ty o f f u ll - tim e a n d p a r t - t i m e s h i f t s • F u lly p a id t r a i n i n g o n p h o n e a n d C R T o n lin e a p p lic a tio n s • R e c r e a tio n a n d s o c ia l a c t iv itie s Resort and Villas We a r e imm ediately hiring for: * O n C a ll B a n q u e t S e rv e rs N e e d e d IM M E D IA T E L Y $ 1 2 /h o u r 785-1659 C o m p le te b e n e f i t s f o r f u ll - tim e G e n e ro u s d is c o u n ts o n m o s t M a c y 's p u r c h a s e s S e rv ic e & p e r f o r m a n c e a w a r d s MRKTING ADVRTSNG major. Good comm, skills. Will train. Flex hrs. S. Scottsdle 946-3383 No Exp N ec/ P akI TRAilNilNCj You musi bh 18 yus or o IcIkr Have H/S DiploMA / GED No Fi loNips / Ditucj Free Apply in person Mon-Fri, 9am - 3pm at the Scottsdale Hilton In the Human Resources Office 6 3 3 3 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, A 2 8 5 2 5 0 1 iBiiiiiiliBB FINANCIAL and CREDIT SERVICES MEXICO/ASIA National Co. seeking sales/mgmt. for local & interna­ tional expansion. Training.pro^; vided, 9 5 5 - 3 4 7 5 RAN4P AGENT positiorisv Sky . Harbor Airport, wages .$7- .. $ i0 /h r, FT, split shift, 30/hr. Wk, nied/dent after 90 days, lift 70. lbs,, have, work boots & valid DL, J 0-yr hckgrnd/crimihal check, Apply in person TF, 9a-3p. 2633 E. Buckeye Rd. This shouldbe your ad Call 965-6735 ¡S I TRAINING in all aspects of running an office FACS HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL \ h ^ y-A -C T R. E G P H O A T E c N E N C l V 1C r Y I P I A Z A Earn Cash - Have Fun. ✓ Flex Schedules & Shifts ✓ Accessible from Major Bus Routes ✓ Competitive Pay i»d for all positions. Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast corner of 52nd Street and VVei oadw av Road and University Drive). e information lull free, 24 he 1 888 284 3227 bbhhhhmhi ra»iMMiiiaiiWiiaiirwwiriiia>in«amiiiitrMinttra^ mHHt Grow • Network • M ake $ $ $ ForCutrent Openings , : &Further Details Can- J O b 1 1 11 e 440-3154 Page 18 IP HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits! Fun, outgoing, Tenir pe. Cindy, 496-0255 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 dfesk in the northbasement of Matthews Center. Do it today ! Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 S O M E O N E W H O ; c a n p a in t , c h i Id ro o m & o d d j o b s . C a il S h a w n 706-1451 N oW h irin g 6-8 in d iv id u a ls for. im m e d ia te eniply.m t; ' $8 g u a r, to s ta rt a t 15-30 flex - h rs /w k . Ç à ll J o n f o r i n te r v ie w b tw n 2- 4p m , ; v ; ,- • STUDENTS, TEACHERS & grads. Stop stressing!. Cutting edge environ. & health> cp. seeks motivated indvs. w/exc. people skills, 954-9537 ARMY ROTC Summer Leadership Training:. Five weeks o f paid leadership and challenge. No obligation; all o f the fun. Free travel* room and board. Call Army ROTCyat 965-7468; SWIM INSTRUCTORS Need­ ed? Good. pay. Open interviews ill., April 16th 1-5.pm. MU Rm 204, Bring refs. telem arketers No selling. $ 10/hr, Great bo­ nuses. Fun room. On bus line. Mill & Broadway. 517-0400 TICKET AGENT: part-time af­ ternoons & weekends; Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 VALET PARKING attendants,; must be clean cut, good atti­ tude, $6-$12/hr. 789-7206. ZACSON CORPORATION- We have immediate openings for these shifts: 7am-3:30pm, 7amhoon, 12:30pm -9:30 pm, 1pm9:30pm, 5pih-9:30pm, 4pm*; 9pm. Our fully automated and . professional environment provides: $ 1J/hr average With $8.50 base. Call 470-2064 formore information; GEN OFC/RECEPT. 1-10/Baseline M-Th 3:30-11 pm & Sat 9-4 or Sun. 2-9. Must be flexible! Phones, cust. serv, WP, & of­ fice skills req’d. Rorídá 443-8883 EARN UP to $2000 pt in just 4-8 wks. Memolink needs 1. highly motivated individual to direct its summer sales/niarketr irig project at ASU. Call Peter at (888)509-6313. 'V :yPV;-8'-; NOW HIRING Sales Associates FT hfs: 7amT3:30pm, 1pm-9prn, & T0pm-5am, PT hrs: 3:3.09pm. Will work w/ college schedule. $7/hr. (commissions up to an additional $8/hr.) Paid training.! Call (602); 777-0877 or fax 777-884 ly 3136 S. Me- • Clintock, Ste. #7, Tempe (Me* Clintock & Southern); EOE PUT YOUR money where your mouth is. Set appts. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex, hrs; Near ASU. $8/h'r. to start g uar.. + comm. $12/hr, ave. 829-6222 Makeyouradvertising $$$$ workharder! Put it in the Classifieds! CAMP COUNSELORS New York C am p Shane J T80Ö) 2 9 2 -2 2 6 7 Web: www.campshane.com Adminstrativé Assistant Join our North American Distribution Center for fine quality architectural prod-: acts. Duties include: presentation preparation, report presentation, research, letter preparation, customer service support, and a variety of other administrative details: Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, PowerPoint, Project Manager, and Visio is necessary. Fluency in German helpful. Scottsdale Airpark location. Fax resume to 602-951 -7165, Attn: Ken Moore. Graduating Seniors/ Graduate Students Farmers Insurance Group has an Agency Career opportunity for you. If you’re energetic, hardworking, ambitious, and enjoy people, you need to check us out. $8/HR + BONUS A 14-YR-old co. needs friendly people for data entry & calling our cust. 10 min from ASU, nice environment, flex. hrs. MF. Call Ken at Cornerstone 244■ 872o! ~y?y Co*ed Trim Down - Fitness C am p located in the Catskill Mountains. G ood salary, internship credits & free Rm/Bd, All Sports, W ater Skiing, Canoeing, Ropes, Lifeguards, C rafts, Dance, Aerobics, Nutrition & Counselors. Also Kitchen, Office & Night Watchman. 120 positions. ATTENTION: HELP WANTEDCLERICAL Rickshaw Runners. Earn hun­ dreds daily! Downtown area AWA BOB AZ CNT. Limited availability, 1st come 1st serve opportunity. Contact Dino 2506376 HELP WANTEDSALES SPORTS MINDED 921*8282/ : ' WANTED f PART-TIME RECEPT/TVPIST. Flexible to meet your school sched. Near ASU. Need reliable tfans. for errands. Call Ms. Brown at 967-5778; Friday, April 10,1998 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CORK'NCLEAVER Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t, Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585, GENERAL HELP needed Fun atmosphere. Apply in person at Dilly’s Deli corner of Southern & Price. Ask for LeArin .491 - i 196 MESA COUNTRY Club ifi now hiring for foodservers; banquet servers^. & bussers. Applica­ tions accepted M-F 9-2pm, 660 W. Fairway Dr., Mesa. Call 9641797 for directions. Drug test­ ing is req’d. EOE REC E PT. /C A LL CÓÓ R DI NATOR - p/t, Í3-T5 hrs; wk.^ wk. nites & wkends. Must have : RUBY TUESDAY front! office & multiyphone exp. 4843 E Ray Rd. hiring cooks,: Mature w/p rof ess io ria 1 appear. servers, hosts* bussers & dish­ $6.50/hr. Century 2.1 A.M. Re­ washers/Apply ip person, 940*3504 alty 831-1114, Bárbara HELP WANTEDGENERAL M anager C areer O p p o rtu n ity HELP WANTEDGENERAL Tired o f D ialin g across America and not getting paid w hat yon're worth??? 1S10/HR. 1 Flexible H ours 1 G reat A tm osphere ’- N e x t to Bus R outes ’ Full B enefits D iane’s, a fa st-g ro w in g chain o f H allm ark G old C row n stores, is seeking a M anager fo r its Chandler store. This is an e n tiy level p o sitio n and requires personality, organization, leadership, com m itm ent, and honesty. If you have these qu alification s, c a ll 78 5-16 59 o r send resum e to : D iane’s H allm ark 9 8 8 0 S. Rural Rd. Tem pe, A Z 85284 Salaiy+Bonus+Benefhs S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE SERVERS NEEDED ASAP. Ft/ pt days avail. Flex. hrs. Great 1$. Dwntwn Phx, near Ballpark. z. Call 252*4682 for interview. SPORTS DELI Needs team, players w/ right at­ titude. Top wages + incentive. Flex, schedules, no weekends, nights or holidays. FT & PT positions avail. If ready to have fun, call 453-0841 UPTOWN BREWERY looking for enthusiastic, eneigefic', posi­ tive personalities to fill the fol- lowing positions: pizza & line cooks, servers, service assts. & delivery drivers. Flex h rs :. day/eye. 2 mi, from ASU. Apply within Uptown Brewery, - 1470E. Southern HELP WANTEDGENERAL INVENTORY PLANNER Join our North American D istribution C e n te r for fine quality architectural products. Experience in material planning neces­ s a ry . D u tie s in c lu d e stock status review, PO p la c e m e n t, m a te r ia l e x p e d itin g , d e ta ile d re s e a rc h , in ternation al c o m m u n ic a tio n s , a n d MRO p u rc h a s in g . Proficiency in Microsoft Excel, & W ord is neces­ sary, Fluency in german h e lp fu l. S c o tts d a le A ir p a r k lo c a tio n . F a x re s u m e to 6 0 2 - 9 5 1 7165, Attn: Ken Moore HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL f Scottsdale Jaguar has an immediate opening for a part time file clerk. Som e experience in cash handling a must. Hours will vary and wages start at $7 Air. To apply: please contact Kelly D. Davis at 6 750 0 1 5 or by email at kellydavis@ sunauto.com 'J FiEstRinn loin the Fiesta Fun! C oncierge PT P B X O p e rato r PT F ie s ta In n 2 1 0 0 S. Priest T em p e 2 m ile s f r o m A SU M ore info: 8 0 4 -5 2 8 5 We H ire S tu d en ts For confidential interview, call 777-8757 ■ Dobson & Guadalupe 735-0000 ye¿»rs of esperi enee Warner & Country Club MESA COUNTRY CLUB Our new clubhouse is about to open and the following positions available. All shifts are flexible hours. The following enthus­ iastic, energetic people needed for all shifts: Foodserver B anquet Server Bussers Applications accepted Mon-Fri, 9-2, 660 W. Fairway Dr., Mesa AZ. W estoff Country Club, n. of Brown Rd. Call 964-1797 for directions. We prom ote a drug free work environ­ m ent. Drug testing is required. EOE The kids are in college and you’ve got time to spare, so start a new beginning by bringing your work experience to Excell. We’re a major provider of phone listing information and the place to get U lL . extra spending money. Our Directory Assistance Operators work in a casual, comfortable environment in a variety of work schedules. We provide a competitive salary and outstanding benefits. Pick up the phone and call our Job Squad for an immediate interview. r v r n „ JSm • W ecW ï L,AV>L.L,L AGENT SERVICES " loti* J lo d b y l As America’s leading foil service restaurant, Denny's Knows what it takes to attract motivated individuals, including a Fresh and exciting work environment. R ir e Open -fióme - / I pût 29 $ 26 Call 345-9509 M on -Fri., 9am-5:30pm W alk-ins W elcom e M-F, 9am -5:30pm 808-0008 Convenient locations • Mesa • Peoria • Phoenix « Tempe SERVERS, COOKS, HOST/ HOSTESSES & SERVICE ASSIST. «ch eck ce N ecessa ry 24-hour job hotline: t . » R H a il^ a in in g 209 E. Baseline Rd , Ste. 103 (M ill Towne Center-M ill & Baseline) D IA L A M E R IC A M A R K E T IN G IN C . You’re our type! Y ou ll find thisand a w hole lot m ore- Oat Package Includes: • Great Wages • Profit Sharing • Insurance (including Medical/Dental) • Career Advancement Opportunities • Flexible H oars/ Various Shifts • Paid Vacations Openings exist at the following locations: • 1150 S. Country Chib Dr., Mesa • 1343 W. Broadway, Tempe • 4403 S. Rural Rd., Tempe Also Now interviewing for the Re-Opening: 1210 E. Main S t, Mesa (Apply at Restaurants Above.) For an immediate inter­ Call John Junek for more information, view, please apply In person. Denny’s is committed to work­ force diversity and is always an Equal Opportunity Employer. 602-839-5280 Common Sense Served Daily Earn up to $ 1 9 2 per m o n th b y d o n a tin g life-sa v in g plasm a! N ew d on ors earn a to ta l o f $ 7 0 , for th e first 2 d o n a tio n s. V isit our frien d ly, m odern cen ter and fin d o u t m ore ab ou t th e op p o rtu n ity to earn cash w h ile h elp in g others. 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 Tempe Œ N T E O N l l o - S a r v i c e 8, In c . 968-6139 M ust be 18-49 years of age, possess a vafed ID and proof of local address & Social Security number. S t a t e P ress Page 19 Friday, April 10,1998 HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE JOB OPPORTUNITIES WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings, lunch shift. $5 + tips, Ja­ panese food exp. req’d. Host/ess needed. $6/hr. Sakana Sushi Bar & Teppan. 5061 E. Elliot, 598-0506 B .R .IX E . INC: BHTs & Providers. F/T, P/T to work w/ DD/EH/LD children & adults. $5 75-$8/hr. DOE. Apply at 2920 N. 24th Ave. Ste. 24. Phx, AZ 85015 or call Dan at 254-2785 ; - PT MOTHER’S helper for 3 yr. old boy. T & Th 8^5pm For­ eign lang. desirable. Call 82038381v msg. Refs, req’d P/T SITTER for 11 y/o. Must have flex hrs.; car & ref. P/T. Tues. afternoons a must. Tcmpe area; 756-0549 ALASKA SUMMER Employ­ ment- Fishing industry: Excel­ lent student earnings .& benefits potential (up to $2,850 +/mo. + room/board). Ask us how! 517-324-3117 ext. A5918I Cewti/ieS t>otpk*H J HELP WANTEDGENERAL EXP. BABYSITTER to care for 3 girls, hrs: 2-6pm, 5 day/wk. flex for summer & holidays; need own car, 945-9948 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Bill Johnson’s Restaurant Now hiring - Servers - Cashiers - Cooks 3757 E. Van Buren 2 7 5 -2 1 0 7 950 E. Main St. 969-6504 3110N. Arizona Ave. 892-2542 16810 N 19th Ave. 8 6 3 -7 9 2 1 3101 W . Indian School Rd. 277-6291 NANNY FULL Time, good sal­ ary» optional room. Nonsmoker. 693-5762 or 460-1126 NEEDED: LIVE-IN Nanny to care for 2 Children. Ahwatukee/Foothills. Own transport, rqrd. Flex, w/ school schedule, rm & brd + wkly salary. Inter­ ested apps. call 706-9646. DEAN WITTER work w/ the lar­ gest financial firm. Broker’s asst.’ Great resume builder. lOhrs/wk Mr. Lentz 381-6471 lv msg MARKETING INTERN wanted. Junior, senior, or grad student. 20 hrs./wk. $6.50/hf. Various projects: sales, event planning» trade shows, design work. 263-0115 MARKETING INTERN- lots of everything. Comp. exp. & trans. nee.- 8-16 hrs/wk $6.50/hr. Call Laura 955-2233 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Scottsdale Porsche has immediate openings for Full and Part time EOE INTERNSHIPS HELP W/ child caire PT/as need­ ed basis. Also during summer. Contact Shawn 706-1431 Valet/ Car Washers. SERVICES ! WOODSHED ! [ • O ld e s t n e ig h b o r tx x ! Tempe • Est. 1979 ! • M w Timas a w a it w in n er !» C h e a p B eer S tjÊ !• We show all MLB. NBA. ! Codage & !• Greeks W ¡ • 1 / 2 Your V PETS ATHLETES, ENERGETIC, proud, fun acting, p/t, f/t, 4 lo­ cations» all positions, career op­ portunities, high $$. Frozen Fusion Smoothies, call 9485604 X320 (pt/ft) or x250 (Ca^reer) benefits great. DEPT; STORE, fine jewelry, hir­ ing P/T days & wknds; P/T eye. & wknds. Call Jennifer @ 941-0066 ext. 2754 WANTED: AGGRESSIVE, per­ sonable student to work w/security firm to do cold calling & recruiting new business, p/t. Could lead to f/t brokerage po­ sition. 667-4634; Everaii Sec. RESTAURANTS/ BARS EASTER PUPPY- Lab, AKC, Male, chocolate; 8 wks. First shots, dew claws, avail, now, $450 call 515 9206. S2.50/PG, $15/RES: Proofed. Laser. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU, Brian, 967-5987. PERSONALS INSTRUCTION $21.99 GETS a full set of nails from Dena at Wizzards Hair Stu­ dio. Call 967-2360. CSE/CS/CIS GRADS: 24month Masters series program at the Harvard/Yale o f the IT in­ dustry. Certified Technical In­ stitute. Full or partial scholar­ ships avail. Call 800-305-3150 or http://orctirinc.org GRADUATE STORIES Look­ ing for stprieS to use in gradua­ tion publicity. If you know a student who has overcome un­ usual hardship or excelled aca­ dem ically, send the story to graduate@asu.edu ADOPTION CARING, IN love couple w/gentle Golden Retriever wish­ es to share their loyè w/new­ born* Exp. paid. Call Shelley & Steve 1-800-835-9218 SERVICES ~ WANTED! 79 people to lose 10-29 pounds in the next. ?5 day call 888-268-6506. NOW HIRING Line cooks. Fun & exciting environment. Apply any time, 715 S. McClintock. TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING F in d it F / l S T i n th e C la s s ifie d s WANTED ~ ATTENTION MUSICIANS! All types of instruments needed to start rock & rqll batid. Inter­ ested, call 2Q8-7619! SPECIAL EGG Donor Needed! Loving infertile, couple is hop­ ing to find a compassionate woman to help us have a baby. We’re hoping for someone who has blond of brown hair & blue eyes. We’d be delighted to find a healthy, intelligent; college student or graduate. Age 2130, Thank you for your con­ sideration. Compensation up to $5000 + expenses. If. you can help us, please call 1-800-8869373 ext. 6733 ,À x* SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES You m ust have a d ean driving record, b e 18, and pass a drag test. DISCOVER T H E P E O P LE WITH T H E H Y A TT TOUCH! »C o o k- 3rd shift • Host/Hostess - AM »Front Desk ■Coffee Bar Attend. - AM • P a s tr y C o O k Cocktail Server Singing Food Service Bussers Boom Service Cashier Security O fficer • Receptionist 991-9670 Experience the benefits at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale: If you’re interested, or apply In person $14” at Scottsdale A cun, Comic fiu ta a t 6 75-0015 6625 L . free fietwenj is pleased to announce opening o f their clinic w ith specialists in Pediatric M edicine Obstetrics and Gynecology Internal M edicine m atology/O ncology ' Psychiatry §Ü¡ ¡III §§§ m b Personal WebPage ✓ $30 design fee * Upto 5MB ir Nomonthlyfee t/ Digitalphotos: to fo r $to wFtee Caps, Bom iU m II 968-4200 photo em ailed to up to to addresses Ruthanne 1492 S. M ill, S uite 307, Tem pe, AZ 85281 966-bm McDowell Rd • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 4 0 1 (k ) Plan » Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition R eim bursem ent • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates A pplications are accepted M on. 9am -tyqôn and T ues. 3prn-6prn; A t th e Human Resources Office 7506-B D oubletree Ranch Rd. 'Piease enter at the:West end of the building néxt to the loading dock. Gertainpositionsm ay requiretesting. 4 Z- Z4ot tobas please contact Kelly F or More Information C all: 1 Z I 4 . "fiutai u / Z Toppings 9684)982 Participating w ith many m ajor health plans. State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip ■ Hyatt supports a drug free woikplace, AA/EÔE/M /F/DÀ/. MMkWWiWWIWMiaWWSMWB ASTROLOÔICAL FORECAST Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. by Frances Drake Friday, April 10, 1998 . Partners work well together, ARIES (March 2 Î to April 19) You talk a good gam e with A new self-confîdénce shows in financial interests. Meet with . the, way you speak and carry ,ÿoursélf, Y p ur popularity is bankers and handle insurance assured: You begin planning for and credit concerns. SAGITTARIUS (Noy. 22 tb a: vacation. TA0RUS (April 2Ô to Màÿ 20) Dec; 21) Travel, discussion and Organize files .and' g’è t book­ educational interests áre high^ lighted. It s a good time to make keeping in order. Financial d evelopm ents are p ositive. decisions affecting your future; Buying, selling and saying are Go out for good tim es once fayored. You complete a work . your work is done: project. ; . : V CAPRICORN (Déc. 22 to Jan, 19) it is one of; the best days you ve GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) had iii a long time in furthering Communication skills come to the fore. Catch up on correspon­ your career. Make the most o f dence, or do something Creative. th e opportunity and o f your Shop for the home . Participate • potential! in group functions. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20toR & 18) CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Public speaking.» group interests You make important domestic and clubs are highlighted. A decisions. Getting rid of. clutter work project challenges you. and shopping for new item s Friends start playing a more could be on your agenda.. Enjoy important rote in yoiir life. a luncheon date with a prospec­ PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) tive business associate. A fter'y o u make p lan s for a LEQ (July 23 to Aug. 22) You weekend party, you roll up your enjoy à healthy rapport with sleeves .for a m ajor research children as you reach new levels project. Your thinking is on tar­ of understanding. Treat yourself get. Confidential talks are in. after dark by going someplace order: special, but don t blow your YOU BORN TODAY are an budget. inspired worker who gravitates VIRGO (Aug, 23 tb Sept. 22) to challenges. Nothing is too big Yoiir dealings with the opposite for you to envision or to tackle. sex get exciting; You m ight The full employm ent o f your, make a m ajor job decision or creative talents. though, could take on fresh responsibilities b'e marred unless you learn to and undertakings. rise above being temperamental. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Your sense of the dramatic and You have ^xtra drive cm the job: em pathy for others can bring P artn ersh ip s are favored. you success in such fields as Couples are bound to spend acting, writing and public life. more time with each other in the You embrace the pause of the coming weeks. underdog. ' 1998 King Features Syndicate Inc. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov 21) Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you w ish i t to 'a p p e a r in th e State Press, including punctuation. P iease check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and cre dit m ay be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qu a lify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cre dit w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 086 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments ••• * Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found 088 052 049 101 074 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-Child Care 072 Help Wanted-Clerical 073 Help Wanted-Food Service 070 Help Wanted-General 071 030 040 102 107 103 135 Help Wanted-Sales Homes for Rent Home for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Internet-Related Services 130 Internet URLs 075 Internships p Private Party A j 1-4 days, S1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, S1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day 3 5-9 days. $1 76 p e rline, per dr 10+ days, $1.60 per line, per d: 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. 056 076 015 120 050 045 063 048 082 090 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes Motorcycles Moving & Storage . Music Personals 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rente! Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for. Rent Services Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 Townhomes/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomes/Condos for Sale 060 Transportation 067 Travel 108 Tutors 105 Typing/Word Processing 115 Wanted TOYOTA 1 ( S c ô fô e & tle Our Huge Tent Sale Has Just Ended. We’re Overstocked WHh Used Cars— W e've Got'em Priced Id Move NOW !! We will be closed Easter Sunday to allow our employees to enjoy the holiday with friends and family. Ttankyou. " ^ \a e^ r S 1993 HONDA ACCORD LX 19 96 TO YO TA CELICA 24,000 mi — $11,995 23,800 mi — $16,395 NOW $10,896 NOW $15,295 1995 TOYOTA 4RUNNER 19 94 GEO TRACKER 4X4 LIMITED — 33,000 mi — $25,995 N O W $24,495 26,000 mi — $8,995 NOW $8,295 1996 LEXUS SC 300 1997 CAMRY LE 12 TO CHOOSE FROM! $16,995 - $17,995 1994 DODGE DAKOTA CC 31,000 mi — $14,595 NOW $13,295 25,000 mi — $36,995 O ffe r E xp ires 4 -11 -9 8 In -S to c k U nits O n ly 1994 CHEVY PICKUP XTRACAB SILVERADO -$ 1 4 ,5 9 5 ■ " '— i NOW $31,995 1997 HONDA CIVIC 15,000 mi — $13,995 NOW $12,995 NOW $14,395 1994 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER W/ LEATHER 42,000 mi N Q W $ 2 9 ,9 9 5 v 1996 NISSAN 200SX 1997 CHEVY TAHOE 5.7L 15,000 mi — $11,495 V-8 — 16,000 mi — $28,995 NOW $10,695 1996 BUICK REGAL FULL POWER — $12,995 NOW $27,695 AUTOMATIC — MOONROOF NOW $14,495 TOYOTA TOYOTA SUPERSTITION FREEWAY NOW $11,995 1996 VW JETTA PLACE YOUR ORDER NO W FOR T H E NEW V -8 LAND C R U IS E R ! 6 8 5 0 E . M c D o w e ll w w w .to y o ta -s c o tt.c o m WE’RE EVERYDAY PEOPLE DOING BUSINESS WITH EVERYDAY PEOPLE