Sculptor launch first ASU film anim ation class. Page 2 S ta te P ress Tuesday, June 23, 1998 H ousing shortage plagues cam pus again B y J ayson P eters S tate P ress Incoming students hoping for on-campus housing will face a waiting list again this fall, according to Residential Life officials. “W e’re full, for all intents and purposes, based on the number o f assignments that we have made, the number of vacancies that we currently have and the number of'stu ­ dents that we have yet to assign,” said Tom Boylan, princi­ ple support systems analyst for Residential Life. Boylan said that the University is working harder and earlier to avoid the housing situation that made life difficult for hundreds of students during the first few weeks of class­ es in the fall 1997 semester. Last year, the department received almost 7,000 applica­ tions for nearly 5,000 bed spaces. Students who could not be placed in on-campus housing were placed temporarily off-cam pus and billed the norm al ASU room rate. The University, he said, swallowed the difference. Boylan said R esidential L ife does not receive state funds, only revenue from room rates. “We had a lot o f people suggest that had they known earlier it would have helped them in their decision mak­ ing,” Boylan said, adding prospective students participating in recent on-campus orientations were warned that housing is limited. “We shouldn’t be their first consideration for housing,” Boylan said. “W e’ve always had only a certain number of spaces. It’s just that in years past we’ve had enough avail­ able for die demand, and last year kind o f took everybody by surprise.” H e also said that last y ear’s record enrollm ent was responsible for driving the demand for housing higher. “Enrollment has been growing, and definitely the num­ ber o f applications that we have been receiving over the last few years for on-campus housing has been increasing,” he said. S eth K riz , cam p u s a ffa irs v ic e p re s id e n t fo r the Associated Students o f ASU, said students can find help by picking up the 1998-1999 Guide to Off-Campus Living at the main desk on the third floor of the Memorial Union. “ The MU has the cards for people to put up (for) hous­ ing,” Kriz said, referring to the information desk on the first floor. For the long-term, however, Boylan said that the prob­ lem is unlikely to just disappear. “I think it’s ju s t that A SU is a great place to go to school,” Boylan said. “There’s a larger college-age popula­ tion that wants to live on campus. “We really only house 10 percent o f the ASU enrolled population,” Boylan said. “It’s a complex operation, but our space is limited. We can’t; go out and build a hall inside o f a year to accommodate an extra 400,500, or 1,000 students.” Products help sm okers’ w illpow er to quit B y T o n V G uerra S tate P ress The tobacco ind u stry w on a b a ttle w ith Sen. John McCain when an anti-smoking bill was killed last week. However, even w ithout the proposed tax increase on tobacco products th e'p u b licity m ay have enticed som e smokers to take a shot at kicking the “tumor causing, teeth staining, smelly, puking h ab it” Leslie Gill, an 18-year-old student, slowly decreased die number of cigarettes she smoked until she q u it “A Philosophy o f Science paper caused enough stress for me to start back up two days later,” Gill said. “I have been smoking a pack of Reds since I was 14 and have not been able to quit.” She is not alone -r- national success rates have been his­ torically low. A 1992 article in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report showed that out o f 50 million Americans who smoke, 17 million try to stop each year. Only 1.3 mil- lion are successful. The three most popular choices in aiding in the fight against nicotine are a-pill, the patch and gum, according to Tempe pharmacist Gary Holliday. The pill, Zyban, requires a prescription. According to information provided by the manufacturer, Zyban reduces withdrawal symptoms and the urge to smoke in many o f the patients who take i t The manufacturer also indicates that a person can smoke while on Zyban without harmful effects but patients are encouraged to quit after the first week o f taking the pill. Patches and gum include nicotine replacement. But tile m anufacturer w arns against sm òking w hile using these products because it may cause severe nausea or dizziness. According to experts, Nicorette is a gum that has a taste which takes some getting used to — don’t expect a “kiss a little longer” Big Red gum feeling. After about 12 weeks of using the gum a person should have kicked the habit. N icoderm CQ and N ico tro l are b o th p atches. The Nicoderm CQ, a 10-week treatment, lets people go through steps with three different strengths based on how many cigarettes the person smoked. Nicotrol is a one-size-fits-all dosage that lasts six weeks. All o f the smoking aids have a 1-800 number to support smokers and some go so far as to include a stop smoking video or audiocassette. How mtibh will it cost to Stop? A survey o f local phar­ macies indicates the cost o f Zyban is about $90 per month and die gum and patches run about $25 to $30 a week. Teens, however, are at a disadvantage. Package-labeling says that nicotine replacement therapies cannot be sold to anyone under 18, even though teens'are a large percentage o f the smoking population. The National Center for Disease Control and Prevention reports that an estimated 22.2 percent o f all high school students in 1996 smoke one or more cigarettes per day. POM PEII SUM M ER S C H E D U L E W ED N ESD A YS: P E N N Y D R IN K S FROM 8PM TO 10PM & "MILLENNIUM'' WITH DJ STEVE LEVINE SPINNING THE BEST HIGH ENERGY DANCE MUSIC IN THE CITY! FRID A Y: HOT MIX USA'S DJ ARON SCOFIELD SPINS MUSIC TO POUND YOUR SOUL ALL THE WAY TO 3AM FOR THOSE OF YOU 18 AND UP DRINK SPECIALS ALL NIGHT! S A TU R D A Y : 2 5 C E N T L O N G N E C K S u n t il io p m i e x p e r ie n c e • OF DANCE CLUB. the next level A R E YOU U N D ER 2 1 ? DON'T FORGET ABOUT AFTERHOURS ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FROM 1AM TO 3AM! 919 E a s t A p a c h e , T e m p e 9 6 6 -8 0 0 4 S tate P ress Page 3 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 Volunteer program helps students help others B y Stephanie W eber S tate P ress The ASU Community Service Program is looking for people who think they have too much time on their hands this summer. The program offers hundreds of volunteer opportunities, but it’s unique because it uses an individual-centered approach to placing students in volunteer environments. “There are literally hundreds o f opportunities,” said Erin Murphy, a coordinator for the program. “W e have some­ thing right for everyone.” M urphy said the program is connected to all sorts o f organizations, many within walking distance, ranging from food banks, boys and g irls clubs, sum m er cam ps and Habitat for Humanity. Murphy said that all the big organizations, like AIDS Project Arizona *and the American Heart Association, have opportunities. However, there are also many unique smaller groups like Horses Help, a group which takes handicapped people horseback riding to build their confidence. The pro­ gram can provides information on fundraising hikes and races and how to get involved. Murphy stresses that whatever students enjoy doing can help someone out. In the past, computer majors have set up networks in Tempe public schools, film students have cre­ ated videos for fundraising organizations, and construction majors have built houses and even served as on-site man­ agers through Habitat for Humanity. Volunteers can tutor younger kids in the Tempe area or meet with students living in school districts that don’t pro­ duce many graduates. The program has worked out especially well in helping kids envision college as an attainable goal and providing the w ould-be v o lu n teer w ith a w ealth o f experience, Murphy said. “Being responsible to another person and having to earn their respect does a lot for our volunteer’s self-esteem and identity,” Murphy said, adding that volunteers also receive real world training and contacts that will come in handy after graduation. But many volunteers get more out o f the program than just a reference on their resume. “I help somebody because I can,” said Kathleen Hayes, a student helping out with AIDS Project Arizona. The Community Service office is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the basement of the Memorial Union. Engineers keep their cool Wanted: Female engineers B y G anga Subramanian State P ress While Valley dwellers anxiously watch out for the soaring mercury, a group of ASU researchers are keeping their coed. An electrical engineering professor who is researching a new generation of semi-conductor switch­ es works in what he describes as the coldest spot in Arizona. According to Dr. Jonathan Bird, an electrical engineering professor at ASU, the dilution refrigerator he uses to cool the transistors that are placed on silicon chips is 30,000 times colder than room tempera­ ture. : . * , This system allows objects to be cooled to temperatures as low as l/100th of a degree above abso­ lute zero, Bird said, adding that there are physical laws that say absolute zero can’t reached. Bird said this is the only system in Arizona, as well as in the Southwest, that can reach this tempera­ ture. He said it is important to achieve these temperatures as they enable scientists to study quantum effects that can’t be observed at room temperature. “If we look at this as a 100-meter race, then we are living at the finish line and this experiment takes place 3 millimeters from the starting point,” Bird sakL The equipment was obtained at a co$t of $165,000 and costs about $800 a week in maintenance and upkeep, he said. According to Bird the equipment is also very sensitive. If a cricket could survive inside the fiidge then the small amount of energy it generates hy rubbing its fed together could cause the system to warm right up, he said , However, this is a basic research project that Bird said could take up to 20 yeas to go into applica­ tion. Bird is part of the Nanostructures Research Group, a collection of faculty, staff, and students w ak­ ing on research in the regime of ultra small semiconductor devices. B y Stephanie W eber S tate P ress 1 :7 Female enrollment in the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences is up 43 percent from last year, but that increase is less than other fields of science. To encourage young women to consider an engineering career, the Women in Applied Science and Engineering (WISE) summer programs at ASU offers three programs sponsored by the Intel Corporation. WISE Teams are for girls entering middle school, WISE-UP is for high school students and the WISE bridge program is for incoming College of Engineering and Applied Science majors. According to program officials, these hands-on programs help girls to see that engineering is problem-solving that uses math and science to benefit others. “Women traditionally go into fields where they can actually see they are helping people, such as teaching or nursing,” said Stephanie Blaisdell, director of the WISE program. “We want to present engineering as such a field” Past participants did all scats of team projects, such as working as hioengineers, designing a heart valve to remedy Arnold Schwarzenegger’s heart problem, designing aitplane fight paths in the hall­ ways and imagining a way to create an artificial heart from components usually found on a deserted island The main goal of the programs is to build girls’ confidence in their problem-solving skills, Blaisdell said “We like to get the girls with potential who are not necessarily the super stars to help them stay interested in math and science,” she said According to Blaisdell the programs have been quite successful with 64 percent more students saying they would consider majoring in engineering after the WISE-UP program. In fact, 50 per­ cent of WISE-UP alumni are now enrolled in the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. For information on WISE, contact. Stephanie Blaisdell or Shawnaa Fletcher at965-6882. Sushi is low fist, RA Power! Located on the southeast comer o f Scottsdale Road and First Street 9 9 0 -9 2 5 6 Wednesdays: From 6-8 enjoy our great Happy Hour specials and see Stephen Asnbrook of Satellite play acoustic. Tnursdays: From 6-8 kick back and listen to Mark & Lawrence of the Pistoleros as they groove during Happy Hour. Opinion Page 4 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 B lÉ p Ü (ÍÉ I S tate P ress (~y w g | I■■ oof 8§fDravos . ‘ ,S BO O to Beanie Babies. Those dumb little animals • te causing sane adults' to act worse than children, te; mals, paying hundreds o f dollars for collections and after all, a toy we are talking ireáil, Toys are usually' not for adults. Yet adults have become the primary consumer o f die little stuffed animals. In a f é # yedra, Beanie Babies and jim m im up closets. l i k e all trends. It will pitas and tfa» wwiH . . deserted by their adult collectors. Í B O O to parents who sue when dudr d a i^ tf e g a É e ^ pregnant. Florida p&renu are tm n g d m mwthcr o f a boy who got their daughter pregnant. The girl’s par­ ents claim the boy’s mother knew the high school stu, dents wore having sex and did nothing about i t The I g id h id m abortion but suffers ftom the emotional trauma o f the experience. She should have thought about that before spreading h er legs for her sweet- I h e a rt Sorry, no sympathy here. The notion o f parents suing parents when kids get pregnant is unreasonable. Kids will have sex. There is little parents can do to halt that. And it seems die burden unfairly rests on the boys for the deed. Kids have rights too — includ­ ing the tig h t to engage in sexual activity. B O O to the shortage o f dorm rooms on campus. ASU needs to get a clue: It’s tim e to build a new. dorm complex. Sonora Center, built nearly 10 years ago. was the last dormitory to be built on campus. The population on this campus is exploding add the University is failing to keep pace m providing student housing. Center Complex could be torn down for a new, multi-story dorm to accommodate the influx o f students. ASU is a big school — dial’s not going to Double B O O to the Phoenix city council mem­ bers. and Mayor Skip Rimza, who first had die bril­ liant idea to rename Sky Harbor International Airport after die late Sen. Barry Goldwater: After being inun­ dated with phone calls opposing the idea, they took it one step further and voted that the nam e o f our new airport would be Goldwater Sky Harbor International Airport. First o f aU, the tax dollars that it will cost to change the name on anything it is printed on is outra­ geous — estimated to fee about $100,000. Second o f all, is this what Goldwater would have really wanted? H e opposed the idea several years back, but settled on having Terminal 4 named after him. Woukfei i ( b e more appropriate to name somediing, natural after the late senator'or to bestow his sam e on something more meaningful than an airport ? BRAVO to th e C ity Of Phoenix for taking an a d d e d in t e r e s t in t h i s y e a r 's J u n e teen th Celebration. Juneteenrh. the southwestern celebra­ t i o n w h ic h c o m m e m o ra te s th e d a te A fric a n A m e ric a n s in th is r e g io n le a rn e d o f th e E m ancipation Proclam ation, had been prim arily been celebrated only by the people it honors. With the added support and involvem ent from the city, it has opened m ore eyes to the idea that regardless o f color, this event is a tim e for people to affirm the universal principles o f freedom and justice for all. Reality’s w hat you perceive One o f my friends was once te llin g m e a b o u t th e m o st ENNIFER inspiring teacher she had ever _LA CASELLA had. It seems th a t her art teach­ C o lu m n ist e r really challenged h e r class to look at the world in differ­ ent ways, not only for the purposes o f discovering and creating art, but also for the purpose o f living life to its m axim um p o ten tial. To give an exam ple o f how her teacher inspired people to think about things rather than b lin d ly accept them , my frien d asked m e w hat color purple was. W hat color is purple? O bviously, it’s purple. So, I pointed to a poster on the wall that had purple in it and to ld h e r th a t w as th e c o lo r p u rp le. T h en m y frie n d asked m e how I knew it was the color purple. A gain, obviously I knew it because I had been observing col­ ors my entire lifetim e and I knew all the colors o f the rainbow. “So?” she asked me. “So?” W hat did she m ean by, “So?” She had begun this inane conversation by asking me a very obvious question that any five-year-old could answ er and now that she had her answer she dared to say, “So?” I began to w onder w hat planet this girl was from . T hen, as I w as sta n d in g th ere b e fu d d le d an d in d ig n a n t at h er response, she asked m e another question. “How do you know that when I look at that poster and see the co lo r y o u ’re pointing to, I ’m also seeing purple?” Alm ost angry at this ludicrousness, I asked her if she was attem pting to deny that the color I had pointed to w as purple. She heartily agreed th at the co lo r in the poster was purple. So what was her problem ? Her problem was that she didn’t know if I was see­ ing the same color as she was w hen I pointed to that now infam ous color purple on the poster. I saw a color and I declared that color to be purple. She saw a color and she declared that color to be purple, but how would w e e v e r know if w e w ere a c tu a lly se e in g th e sam e I color? W hat if she saw that color and called it purple, but in her eyes it was «really w hat I would call yellow ? And what if when we saw yellow and called it as such, we each saw a different color even though we agreed upon its nam e? How can we ev er know w hat o th er people are really seeing? Thus, I began to see the com plexity o f the situation. For if we can never be sure th at other people are seeing the sam e co lo rs w hen th ey look at a rainbow o r the ocean or even a pizza fo r that m atter, how can we ever say that anything is real? O r rather, how can w e denom ­ inate reality? W hat is reality? T h is b rin g s us to th e p o in t my frie n d ’s in sp irin g a rt te a c h e r w as try in g to m ake: re a lity is w h at w e perceive it to be. If I think w e’re having bad w eather b e c a u se i t ’s ra in in g an d I h a te ra in , m y r e a lity is th q t w e ’re h a v in g bad w e a th e r. I f you th in k w e ’re h a v in g g o o d w e a th e r b e c a u se i t ’s ra in in g and you lo v e to ro m p in p u d d le s, y o u r re a lity is th a t w e ’re having good weather. It all depends on how we perceive the events and e le m e n ts aro u n d us. W e can n e v e r g et in to an y o n e else’s head and see or feel exactly w hat he o r she sees o r feels. So, we can never know exactly w hat reality is for anyone else. This phenom ena has som e very interesting im plica­ tions in society as a whole. Take for exam ple the boy. w ho recen tly shot h is p aren ts and h is classm ates in O re g o n . W h a t is r e a lity to h im ? D id he so m eh o w believe th at they w ere conspiring against him or that they were going to kill him if he didn’t kill them first? O f course it sounds absurd to us, we who are not inside that boy’s head, but does it really sound absurd to him ? I’m not defending his actions but I am saying that w e need to try looking at all situations, w hether they seem rid ic u lo u s to us o r n ot, and c o n sid e r th a t n o t everything is purple and yellow. Jennifer La C asella is a graduate student studying S p a n ish L ite r a tu r e a n d ca n be rea c h ed a t queviva @imap2. asu. edu. STATE PRESS TAFF T I M O T H Y T A IT , E d ito r AISLINN FAHY.................City Editor C O P Y E D IT O R : Mario Lopez MICHELLE CRAIG .......... Opinion Editor C O L U M N IS T S : B ecky B evin s, Scott Bracken, KRISTEN HATCHER ......News Editor Jennifer La Casella, Scott Lew is. JEREMY HEIN .................Photo Editor C A R T O O N IS T S : Jonathan Inge (graphics coor­ dinator), M atthew Bannon, M elissa Carr, Carrie REPO RTERS: Dave W oodfill (senior reporter), M ich elle Barlett, G ayle B ass, A licia C ald w ell, Behrens, Carlos Ramirez, Adrian Sferle. P R O D U C T IO N : Am ber Carr, Joe Corrao, B e c c a C a se, T on y Guerra, S tep h an ie Paterik, Kai R isley. Katie Pegler, Rob Pegler, Jayson Peters, H ayley SA L E S R E PR ESE N TA T IV E S: David Goodwin, Ringle, Lorie Roberts, Susan Schimmel, Timothy Jennifer Hadden, Jonathon Negretri, Shane Siren, S co tt, G an ga Subram anian, S teph an ie W eber, Kathy Welsh A ngela Yeager. C L A SSIFIE D S: Vicki Carroll, Jeannette Pluiom. Boos & Bravos reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority vote among the mem­ bers. Views expressed on the opinion pages do npt reflect the view s o f the State Press start as a whole. The summer edition o f the State Press is publis h e d e v e r y T u e s d a y d u r in g th e su m m er through A u gu st 4 , e x c e p t h o lid a y s and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tem pe, À Z ., 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 . W e do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusive­ ly published for and circulated on the A SU cam­ pus. The news and view s published in this news­ paper are not necessarily those o f the A S U admin­ istration, faculty, staff or student body. S ta te P ress P h o n e N um bers Information*.............. 965-7572 Newsroom ........... „965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds..................965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu Opinion S tate P ress r T T E D C L j Cj 1 1 Ü K Page 5 Tuesday, June 2 3 ,1 9 98 j T A 1 U T U E 1 r l L FH T T A D L í U l 1 U K Keep them wanting more I ’ve picked up the Stoic Press twice this summer in order to glance through it on the way to class. The first time, Ì read an editorial cheering and applauding the fact that a human being had committed suicide by hanging him­ self to death in his prison cell. The second time, I read a colum n in w hich hom eless p eople w ere d escrib ed as “germs,” among other things. Does your newspaper actually require any journalistic qualifications ò f the people who w rite for it, or do you throw out the welcome mat for pretty much anyone who can express an opinion at least as eloquently as Beavis and Butthead? Neil Singh Senior Finance E -M A IL T H E E D IT O R 4 . a s u .e d u s h a d e s @ im a p does not qualify people based on their race, gender, ethnicity or religion. Mr. Lopez and his PC racist buddies would not find comfort in the NRA membership qualifications, there are none. Every American’s constitutional rights are in jeopardy because of the “thought police.” Mr. Lopez should consider the state of Florida as a good example Of why Americans should arm themselves. Florida’s homicide rate dropped from 37 per­ cent above the national average to three percent below the national average following the reinstatement of its concealed cany law. (Florida Department o f Law Enforcement, 1993, 'Annual Report). Also, Mr. Lopez might find it interesting that the criminals in prison in 1986 killed almost one and a half times as many Americans than died in the Vietnam War. (Bureau o f Justice Statistics Special Report, July 1990). It is truly disgusting that racist liberals, like Mario Lopez, blame the NRA and other law abiding citizens for the violence in America. With Mr. Lopez’s argument, we should blame the matches for those who commit arson. I have a revolutionary idea, how about blaming the perpetrator? (Editor’s note: Indeed, the State Press does require journal­ istic skill o f its writers and editors. That standard, however, doesn’t apply to the authors o f letters.) Aluminum is cheaper Ben Kemper forgot one crucial point in his dissertation on the evils o f aluminum bats: .wooden bats break. Try con­ vincing the athletic department to eat the cost o f a year’s worth of expensive, broken bats (don’t forget batting prac­ tice) and you’ll begin to see a m ajor plus to those “alu­ minum sticks.” As is often the case, it com es down to money, plain and simple. Don Price Graduate Student Business Anger, guns don’t mix O f all of die articles I have read in the State Hess, Tuesday’s Opinion page on the National Rifle Association was pathetic at best Mario Lopez, who happens to be a racist, anti-American lib­ eral, Wrote an anti-gun article that was typical o f the paranoid left. Mr. Lopez is obviously grossly misinformed about what the N RA stands for. T he N RA is fo r d efen d in g every American’s rights guaranteed under die Constitution. Every cit­ izen in this country has die tight to defend themselves and their family. The second amendment o f the Constitution is the most fundamental right of any. Mr. Lopez decides to make himself lode even more stupid when he remarks on the NRA membership profile regarding women and minorities saying, “only 10 to IS percent o f the organization's members are women - and it doesn’t keep statis­ tics on its members of color (a testament in and of itself to the association’s single mindedness).” ft is clear that Mr. Lopez has never heard o f die NRA Women’s Issues Department. Further, the NRA has published a Women’s Shooting Event Handbook. If Mr. Lopez were so enlightened on the profile of die NRA, he would have known that Ms. Marion P. Hammer, who happens to be a woman, is a former president of the NRA. I realize that.Mr. Lopez, being a typical racist liberal, is upset over the NRA not keeping records of the membership’s skin color. The politically correct totalitarianists cannot be satis­ fied with a club representing all Americans. The NRA wel­ com es any and all skin co lo rs in to th e ir m em bership. Unfortunately, people like Mr. Lopez are causing White stu­ dents to change their strategy for acceptance in society. For example, White college students are finding it more worthwhile to spend time and money creating a family tree to try and find some long lost minority relative so they can get accepted into graduate school. The NRA is one of the few organizations that Eric R . H a n k in s Senior Political Science (Editor ’s note: The State Press stands behind columnist Mario Lopez and his opinions. The editorial board doesn ’t perceive the actions or writing o f Lopez to be racist or con­ tain racist overtones. We see no justification in the refer­ ence toLopez being a racist.) A taste o f patriotism Scott Bennett has outdone him self once again in iris crusade as a self-appointed defender of liberty. H e truly is ASU’s champion o f truth, justice arid the American way. But, Scott, why walk on the flag inside the w alls o f the museum with only a handful o f cheese and croissant eaters looking on? W hy not take the flag outside and defecate on it for all to see? W ouldn’t that be an even b e tte r w ay to e x p re ss y o u r Jove fo r A m erica? T h at would really show those flag waving geezers that nause­ ate you so much. I’m sure once you use your keen logic to explain to the 250-pound Vietnam veteran bikers how patriotic your actions really are, they would understand. And you couldn’t be more right about that “myopic wim p” Sen. John M cCain. In fact, h e’s so wimpy, I ’ll bet he even cried out in agony when he w as tortured by your beloved N orth V ietnam ese in ways you o r I can ’t b eg in to im a g in e . W h at a sissy . B u t th en a g ain , he probably deserved it for being stupid enough to fall for th a t “G o d a n d c o u n try ” c ra p . I f h e w ere sm art, he w ould have dodged the draft and fired up a m onster bong w ith your buddy A bbie H offm an. O r m aybe he could have jo in ed your o ther hero A llen G insberg at a m e e tin g o f th e N o rth A m e r ic a n M a n -B o y L o v e A ssociation. How can anyone forget G insberg’s lesserknow n b u t s till tim eless cla ssic poem “ Y oung B oy, G ive M e Y our A ss?” A ll sarcasm aside, Bennett’s colum ns ooze his anti­ p atriotism and h atred o f the m ilitary like pus from a festering bo il. L iberals like B en n ett love to say th at they d isag ree w ith you b u t th e y ’ll rig h t to death for your right to say it. B ut they alw ays leave that part up to som ebody else. And w hen they com e back they spit in th eir face and call them babykillers. Then they dese­ crate the one thing that em bodies everything for w hich they fought, suffered« bled and w atched th eir friends die in their arms. Tom McDermott Graduate Student Molecular and Cellular Biology Internet access entices bashers While surfing the Web the other day 1 happen to stumble across a page on bashing die show Friends Now even though 1 enjoyed die manner in which this site c ritiq u e d the sh o w 's p re­ dictable scenarios and die real­ ity dial diere’s no way anyone (fo u ld afford a high-rise apart­ ment in downtown New York f i n a coffee house w aitress’s ■ alary, the com m ents were pretty brutal. t i While reading this colorful criticism I kept thinking how easy it was for anyone (anyone with a PC. modem and server, or access hi them) to create their own Web page and attempt to humiliate some other T V show or book or movie or government official or city or countiy or fashion trend or rival university (UotA) or even that one professor who's personal goal was to make your life in his or her class a living hell. You could even dedicate a Web page to scrutinize the people who spend their lives bashing Page 6 S tate P ress Tuesday, June 23,1998 Food service gets revam ped B y S tephanie P aterik State P ress Dining services at ASU will be seeing major renovations soon, but not without sacrifice; Plans to reconstruct M anzanita H all’s dining area and expand the Memorial Union are in progress, causing the cancellation o f the promised construction of two campus cafes, according to food service officials. After three years of planning, the cafes were set to be completed last fall, but when bids came in well over the allocated $750,000, the project was postponed for the fall. After a year re-designing the structures, the bids came in near budget, but the project has been postponed again and no dates are being set. “When we consider the needs that we put into the pro­ je c t five and a h alf years ago, a number o f things have brought about the decision not to proceed with building the permanent structures at this time,” said Flòyd Land, MU director. Among these reasons are vendors’ changing interests due to the structures’ higher cost, and a product mix needed that may be different now than it was five years ago. Yet another reason is that the University has its eyes set on even bigger projects for Main campus. “It’s not so much that the cafe project is not going to happen,” said Land. “We just feel that this is not the time to spend that kind o f money, not knowing exactly what we will be doing in the MU.” Marriott has agreed to contribute $1.8 million of capital in v e stm e n t m o n e y , w ith th e u n d e rsta n d in g th a t the University will match that figure, to pay for various renova­ tions o f the campus this year. Renovation o f M anzinita's dining space begins in one week and should be com pleted by the start o f the fall semester. New furnishings have been ordered and a Change will be made from cafeteria-style food to “just-in-tim e cooking.” With the new format, Customers will be able to order their food and watch it being prepared in front o f them. A new entrance will also be m ade so non-residents won’t have to enter through Manzanita’s lobby. “Anyone and everyone can eat there,” said Land. “It will definitely be a great addition to that side of campus.” Plans to reconstruct the MU are not as definite as the understanding that there is a problem with the building. “The MU was meant to accommodate about 22,000 peo­ ple,” said Land. “We just can’t meet our needs with the existing structure, «specially between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. during the academic year.” An arch itect m et w ith L and and o th er co n su ltan ts Thursday to discuss the expansion. According to Land, they hope to have a conceptual design by mid-September, when it will be presented to the University administration. In the meantime, a need still exists for food service near the Farmer Education and Language and Literature build­ ings. Land said they plan to create two temporary outdoor dining areas similar to the Coffee Plantation carts, which would take the pressure off of the MU at peak times. The areas would have tables, chairs, misting and lighting at night. Other projects recently put on hold include plans to re­ construct the Grand Market and Union Square. Once a defi­ nite plan is made for the MU, Land said he and administra­ tors will be able to assess the remaining needs of the cam­ pus and concentrate on the postponed plans. rU TD N itM M M I I e j g ^ T H E B E S T FU TO N S * a n d R E A S —ONewN TAimBesLWEinner P RB estICo Ef PShoenix 2604 W. 1st Street, Suite 34. Tetnpe 804-1554 SPECIALSTUDENTFARES Round trip from Phoenix COSTA RICA ...........$566 GUATEMALA . . . . . .$566 BELIZE ..................... $559 BRAZIL ............ . . .$758 MEXICO CITY . . . . .$231 BOLIVIA . . . . . . . . .$815 ARGENTINA . . . . $1,004 CABO SAN LUCAS ..$275 PUERTO VALLARÍA .$208 CARACAS . . . . . . . .$538 PERU . . . . . . . . . . . .$618 C AN C U N . . . . . . . .$396 M A Z A T L A N _____ $298 COLUMBIA . . . . . . .$728 CHILE ........... $1,028 GUADALAJARA . . . .$263 IXTAPA“ . , .................$308 PANAMA . . . . . . . . .$594 EUROPEAN RAIL PASSES & TRAIN TICKETS ISSUED HERE 5 DAY YOUTH PASS................. $216 ! O ther C ities Available MILLAVENUETRAVEL 966-6300 : D is c o u n ts A ls o A v a ila b le to Fa cu lty & Staff R estrictio n s A pply. S u b je c t to Availability. CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH D rin k an d drive? G et a stick er B y Ro bin Estrin A ssociated P ress BOSTON — Judge Daniel Winslow spent last month driving around in his blue Volvo with two bright orange stickers plastered on the rear window. “Convicted repeat drunk driver,” the stickers say. They urge other drivers to report "erratic driving” to p o lice.;■ W inslow w as try in g o u t a new p u n ish m en t to see. whether the humiliation would be too great to impose on ; others. He decided that it wasn’t. The W rentham D istrict C ourt ju d g e has added the bumper stickers to the range of punishments he metes out to repeat offenders, a sort of scarlet letter for drunken driv­ ing. Winslow has yet to actually sentence anyone to use the stickers, but says he won’t hesitate. Public humiliation is not the only goal o f the stickers, said Winslow, who has handled hundreds of drunken-driving cases in three years on the bench. ihiimi? In the "real world", an education and resume alone .will not get you the job you want. Real World Networking is one of the most powerful job-hunting tools available. This complete workbook will show you step-by-step how to reach your career goals through effective networking. Only $9.95 including shipping. ^ Send check or money order along with your name and address to: Red World Business Systems P.O.Box 17056 Phoenix, AZ 85011-0056 “T he idea is to remove the mask o f anonymity from driving a car and expose one’s driving to 1,000 eyes,” he said. “I’ve deputized the public to make sure this person; stays sober.” . The sticker would be used in conjunction with other pro­ bation conditions, such as treatment for alcoholism, which would be accepted by the defendant as an alternative to jail. Winslow said he would only make the offender stick it on his or her car for a set period o f time — three months, for example, provided the offender stayed sober. Karolyn Nunnallee, president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said any measure that might deter drunken driving should be encouraged. • “If it is embarrassing to wear that scarlet letter, they should have thought before they made the mistake to drink and drive,” said Nunnallee, whose 10-year-old daughter was among 27 people killed in 1988 when a bus collided with a drunken driver’s vehicle. Campus Corner 712 S. College (College & University) 967-4049 •Beer 6, Soda •Photo Developing •Health Si Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill (Across from Coffee Plantation) 2 LOCATIONS 858-0567 (beer only at College St. store) 39 Fire­ fighting tool 40 Arouse 41 Leaves out 43 Dodge 44 Seer's deck 45 Caning FOUNTAIN DRINK F O R T Y -F O U R O Z; 46 Taboo DOWN 1 Gerald’s WE’RE COOL.. ® FC ó V'o •- f liv e t n i e . W ED N ESD A Y S . pmtoy mm enm $1.50 SH O O TER S 11 17 ' ■ * 28 1 I ■ 1 37 30 32 " 33 ■ 1 s 1 «4 45 9 27 38 40 8 , ■ 1 22 i 1 31 36 t “ 25 7 ‘ 1 1 34 35 39 42 CRYPTOQUOTE HYV E0 N HIQT O IGPGKE WINE SPECIALS 6 capital 34 Singer Hoyt 35 Basil sauce 37 Elm er of cartoons 38 Pro charges 42 Stag-party attendee am O F O U N T A I N 8 2 9 -8 6 8 7 1 0 3 2 5. T E R R A C E . 22 Headdress bow 24 Dinosaur, e-fl25 Old 27 Susan of “L.A. Law" 28 Quartz gemstone 30 Exploit 33 Mubarak’s DAILY CRYPFOQUOTCS— Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. HIGHER GROUND O' ■ » 43 R e tt! Win U! S o lu tio n s f o r E v e r y d a y / V o / i/ « ' YOU’RE HOT? head for predeces­ sor 2 Actor Quinn 3 Pol’s concern 12 Banish v 4 D ifs counter­ 13 The Gem part State 5 Bastes 14 Some 6 W ay out spouses 7 Like some 15 Joplin highways piece 8 High dice 16 Like a rolls (type 9 Transmit again 20 Lair 21 Skeptic's 11 Guest’s sleeper comment 23 Terminus 17 Needle part 24 Tear down 19 Gifted one 26 Bettor's 1 2 3 4 concern 28 Actress 10 Garth, to friends 13 * 29 Patsy 15 31 Fitting ■ 32 Airport 18 18 worker 36 Starch, A C R O SS 1 Uttered 5 Passover meal 10 Arizona natives NOK G F U AM MY V U G I I G O N ML K M V A G KE NOZQF AGF A M C Q. - H M I G V A M S tate P ress Page 7 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 M urphy nam ed coach o f the year F rom S taff R eports ASU head coach Pat Murphy has been named Baseball America’s Collegiate Coach of the Year after guiding the Sun Devils back to the College World Series for the first time since 1994 and to their highest finish, second, since 1988. ASU finished the 1998 season with a 41-23 record. Faced with a challenging schedule that included 30 games against 1998 NCAA region­ al participants, ASU responded with the intensity and fundamental play characteristic of Murphy’s teams. The Sun Devils went to Wichita, Kan., for the Midwest regional as a No. _3 seed and won the regional for a trip to Omaha. “I’m humbled and overwhelmed by the award,” Murphy said. “Coaches don’t like to get awards. Awards are for players. You get your satisfaction from watching them do things the right way on the field.” Murphy’s first appearance at the College World Series has been, to this point, the peak of his career. He got his start as a player at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Fla., and was a member of the school’s first baseball team. His first coaching job was at Maryville (Tenn.) College at the age of 24, and he moved on to Division III ClaremontMudd-Scripps (Calif.) College for two years before coaching at Notre Dame for seven sea­ sons. He became coach at Arizona State in 1995 and has compiled a record of 149-87 (.631) in T em pc., Golfer goes to C urtis Cup Ex-ASU golfer Kellee Booth, a four-time All-American, was selected by the U.S. Golf Association to compete in her second Curtis Cup. The Coto de Caza, Calif., native made her first appearance in the biennial amateur golf competition between the United States and Great Britain and Ireland in 1996. Booth, 22, won her first collegiate tournament in April at the PING/ASU Invitational and registered eight top-10 finishes in 11 outings this season. She capped a stellar colle­ giate career by placing fourth at the NCAA Championships with a 72-hole total o f 4under-par 284. During the 1997>-98 season, Booth compiled a scoring average of 74.00, the sixth lowest average in the nation. She finished third in the 1997-98 Final MasterCard Collegiate Golf Rankings. Booth is one of 12 Sun Devils who have been chosen to compete in the event. Former ASU golfer Jane-BastanchuryjBooth, Kellee’s mother, was a member o f three Curtis Cup teams (1970, 1972,1974). The competition will take place at the Minikahda Club in Minneapolis on August 1-2. IN & OUT NIGHT. 1=1fSISISIBISISISISISISISEISISISISISIBISISISISISISISISISISIBISIEISIEISISISISIMISISISISISISISISISISI DANCE MUSIC INSIDE • LIVE MUSIC OUTSIDE C STARTSAT7PM NOCOVERFORLADIES BEFORE 10 PM D R IN K S . 4-10 PM FREE FOOD BUFFET 4-7 PM F | J o m e F :■ o r D o in Y o u r r ie n d s r in k s T E O H P E I ’B & H IS T O R IC , F o o d H O U S E ! I IiI g I I i D R A F T S S T A R R i UPCOMINGEVENTS JUNE 23 - The Crystal Method JULY 21 Candlebox I I I A T j n W T H ife A S H TBBSHR, A R X 2 K>NA Thunk Junkeez 5 ^ AUG. 10 - i Tricky Old Town Tempe 's Famous Historical House espiras 6/26/98 Guinness • Sierra Nevada • Harp • Bass New Castle « Anchor Steam • Fat Tire • Honey Brown Wine & Cocktails Plenty of Parking I II I 1 I1 | II i i i I Í i S ta te P ress Tuesday, June 23 ,1 9 9 8 Page 8 Can’t hold your booze? Flies help answer why B y D an iel Q . H aney AP M ed ic Xl E ditor BOSTON — Drunken flies dial carry a genetic muta­ tion nam ed “cheapdate” are helping scientists unravel one o f life’s mysteries: why some people can hold their liquor better than others. The research found that fruit flies — and perhaps peo­ ple, too — are especially apt to get inebriated if they nat­ urally produce low levels o f a chem ical called cyclic AMP. T hese are, o f course, ju s t flies, but scientists have long known that the basic processes o f life in such sim­ ple creatures often turn out to be virtually identical to the ones involved in more com plicated animals, like people. Indeed, given too much alcohol,,speck-size fruit flies act remarkably like humans on a bender. They become hyperactive and uncoordinated, buzzing about erratical­ ly. A fter a few minutes, they fall into a dazed stupor and then pass out. A team led by D r. U lrik e H eb erlein o f the G allo C enter (nam ed for the C alifo rn ia w ine fam ily) at the University o f California at San Francisco created thou­ sands o f fruit flies with genes random ly knocked out. One o f the flies, it turned out, couldn't hold its alcohol. They dubbed its genetic flaw “cheapdate.” The researchers put flies inside a 4-foot glass dome — called an in eb rio m eter-— and pum ped in alcohol vapor. T he dom e is crisscro ssed w ith m esh landings. Ordinarily, the flies like to stay neA{ the top. But as they got drunk, they fell from level to level. Ordinary fruit flies take 20 minutes to hit bottom. But the cheapdate mutants tumbled down in 15 minutes. F u rth er research fo u n d th a t the easy d runks w ere missing a gene called “amnesiac,” so-called because its deletion causes bugs to have very poor memories. Flies missing this gene are believed to have lower than usual production o f cyclic AMP, a chemical m essenger known to be involved in m any c ritical pro cesses, including memory and responses to some hormones. The study, published in Thursday’s issue o f the jo u r­ nal Cell, is the first clear evidence in a living creature of a link between cyclic AMP and reaction to alcohol. The scientists blocked other steps in the production o f this chemical and found these, too, made the flies more prone to drunkenness. “If you’re a fly and your cyclic AM P levels are low, then you are sensitive to alcohol,” H eberlein said. “In people, it’s been studied, but it’s not so clear.” In a laboratory dish, alcohol stimulates human cells to make more cyclic AMP. However, long-term exposure has the opposite effect, making cells gradually produce less o f the chemical. No one knows for sure if the same thing happens inside the body. H ow ever, the fruit fly experim ent suggests it does, said Dr. Hugo J. Bellen o f the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Baylor College o f M edicine in Houston. P eo p le w ho can h o ld th e ir liq u o r, esp e c ia lly at a young age, are more likely to becom e alcoholics than are those who get drunk easily. This tendency is inherited. Bellen said the accumulating evidence raises die pos­ sibility that individual variations in production o f cyclic AM P might contribute to the way people handle alcohol. For instance, those whose normal production is low might get a big boost o f cyclic AM P when they drink, while those with naturally high production get less o f a kick. H ow ever, these high producers could over tim e be more susceptible to alcoholism , because chronic expo­ sure to the higher levels o f booze they can tolerate sup­ presses their cyclic AM P production. So they drink to bring their cyclic AM P back up to normal. C ertain ly , the b o d y ’s response to alcohol is m ore complex than this, and the theory is still speculative. But Bellen said the fruit fly study “opens the door to under­ standing the chronic response to and need for a drug, in this case alcohol.” - FREE DRYING u in m S. Ash Street c i A A f t U n iv e r s it y ) vitine pwrrkrvnt • C h ip » , b a n a n a o r L ittle D e b b ie P tR U B w ith a a a n d w ic h • • W e in h a r d ’a $ 6 .9 9 1 2 /p k C A M E L ’S $ 2 .1 0 whan yo u b u y 2 G P C $ D o ra l + ta x • • 2 f f l H b a g s o f Ic e w ith k e g p u rc h a se Ov«r 2 0 0 BREWS Phftttftst subs in Temp* NE Comftf-Apftch« I Terrace p o m m a 9 6 9 -7 9 8 0 m x 7 3 6 -0 2 1 0 The car The insurance doesn't haue to. ♦ Low down-payment ♦ Monthly payment plan A1-Òt s h * MIDDLE EASTERN MARKET & DELI 1 0 °/o DISCOUNT w / S t u d e n l ID B e tw e e n R u ra l a M c C lin t o c k 3 0 3 -6 6 0 0 1344 E. A pache ♦ Money-saving discounts ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Immediate coverage ♦ Free rate quote Call or visit your local GEICO representative fo r car insurance; ( 602 ) 931-0766 Elementary & Secondary TEACHERS S NTUTORS eeded — — SM DIRECT Preferred at ASU Scottsdale location • Must have transportation Call 9 5 3 - 3 0 7 0 far more information Government Employees Insurance Co • GEICO General Insurance Co. * GEICO Indemnity Co. * GEICO Casualty Co. Wfashiiigion, DC 20076 S ta te P ress Page 9 Tuesday, June 2 3,1998 Proposed stadium — good for team, bad for voters News Analysis B y D a v id W oodfill State P ress The A rizona C ardinals and the N orth-E ast V alley Team for Sports, Tourism and Entertainment Partnership, called Nextstep, announced Friday their proposal to con­ struct a $1.5 billion stadium in the East Valley. Promoters are asking for a quarter-cent raise in sales tax over 20 years, which will add up to about $300 mil­ lion. The stadium, complete with 4,000 hotel rooms and a residential developm ent, m il be funded in part by the Cardinals and through private sources. The project will be called the Rio Salado Crossing and will be built just east o f Phoenix along the banks o f the Salt River. Recently, the proposed stadium district, which would border Mesa and Tempe, has come under a high degree of criticism. As a new strategy, Nextstep has chosen to reframe die project under the guise of a new convention center. Cardinals executives have whined for years about not having their own stadium. They’ve said their performance would greatly increase with their own home-field advantage. Granted, teams have been historically known to improve when they get a new stadium. However, this notion o f a convention center with hotels and golf courses appears to be a smoke screen for yet another major stadium which politicians and business leaders — given the reaction to BOB -— know all too well voters simply do not want. The football team has agreed to eat $75 million o f the development which would leave the taxpayers a large bulk o f the re st o f the co st — ab o u t $299 m illio n . Promoters said Friday that taxpayers will only be asked to pay for the “public component” o f the project — the sta­ dium will be paid for with private funds. The Associated Press on Friday quoted Cardinals Vice President Michael Bidwill as saying, “[T]his is the largest capital contribution than any other NFL team has made.” The public funding for the project will come from a quarter-cent increase in sales taxes over the next 20 years. This development is not as cut and dry as it seems. Lawmakers and taxpayers need to keep in mind some of the disadvantages that will inevitably go along with this new com­ plex. For one tiling, ticket prices will likely increase dramatically. Whenever a new stadium is built, promoters paint visions o f more jobs andi money floating into the local economy. However, as most districts eventually find out, a lot of that money goes right back into the owner’s pockets. Sure, hotels and businesses inevitably spring up around new stadi­ ums, but in the case of this stadium, most of the shops and accomodations will be controlled by the stadium, which will see more money than private business owners ever will. As for more jobs, sure, there will be lots of jobs pick­ Best Indian Restaurant -1 9 9 1 ing up discarded beer bottles and sandwich wrappers. Another issue that will need to be examined is do we really have the m arketbase for a develpm ent o f this scale. These seem like issues that have received little attention at best by enthusiasts. A s fa r as a new co n v en tio n cen te r is concerned, Phoenix has announced plans to expand the Civic Plaza. In the end, I predict that Nextstep will continue to hit voters over the head with constant manipulation and pre­ tenses o f a new convention center until they are finally convinced. If that doesn’t play out, then Nextstep will use another methods, like going over voters’ heads in a man­ ner similar to what happend with BOB. Through political connections and backscratching, it is not inconceivable to see it happen again, although it would be difficult to gar­ ner the backing they will need from city officials. One important question Nextstep officials continue to dance around, and will soon have to answer if this project is going to fly with the voters this November, is if the taxpay­ ers are truley not paying for the actual staduim, then what does this development need tax monies for at all? Phoenix already has a convetion center and the valley cetainly doesnt’t seem to be lacking in hotel accomodations. The bottom line I predict is this: Nextstep will not give up despite taxpayer* disapproval — and voters will be the ones to get the shaft in the long run. - The Arizona Republic 1998 Best 4 Star Restaurant in Arizona 1998 A*iHKlI MIM 11-2:31 MUSummerJams T u e s d a y s ★ Sat-SU11-4 ★ Binar 5-11» ★ lB its AW e e k ★ lltt-la, C ataria!aid Ta ka -B a tAvallan e a t N o o n ! TODAY! T uesday, J u n e 23 12PM - 1PM MU Program m ing Lounge Indian Cuisine Restaurant With i § ,'/;> ,V 1845 E. Broadway, Tempe SjÈ, Cortrcr Broadway& McClintock • 6 7 -5 2 3 4 Fax 967-6770 Now Open- 2nd Location 830 W. Southern, Mesa N.W. Corner Extension & Southern a a a -9 9 6 6 OUR NEWEST 3 * 'LOCUTION N O W O PEN 1125 E. Apache Blvd. “Close to campus” Between Terrace & Rural on S.E. Corner 5 5 7 -7 8 8 2 \ 2 0 % ! A ll M f D in Page 10 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 S tate P ress Andy Ortiz: ‘In the thick o f things’ B y D avid W oodfill S tate P ress For Andrew Ortiz, the 29-year-old former ASU student body president, the future is a mass of clay waiting to take shape. The grandson of a Mexican immigrant, Ortiz was instilled with values of hard work, self discipline and leadership by his parents Celia and Joe Ortiz. Ortiz’ story begins with his grandfather, Esequiel Flores, a, Mexican immigrant who workéd in the copper mines around the state to support his family. Flores migrated from the town o f San Juan Deloslagos. He eventually died from lung cancer after w orking in mines all his life. , . Ortiz’ father. Joe. is a food service attendant at Motorola headquarters’in Mesa and his mother, Celia, is a Spanish teàcher at Scales Elementary School in Tempe. Ortiz learned Spanish before he did English. He said the influence from his grandparents and parents “had a huge impact on my life and made me proud to be who 1 am.” . “He was always a leader.” Celia said about her son, recalling that as early as the fourth grade she could tell he was destined to be a leader some day, when he was elected -class president at Scales Elementary School. t In the eighth grade, Ortiz was elected student body pres­ ident at Gililland Junior High School and again at Tempe High School. : . Alex Arrcndondo. former superintendent of Gililland Junior High School, spoke highly of the 12-year-oid Ortiz he remembers. “He was able to bring students togèther even at the ten- . der age of 12,” Arrendondo said. “He showed a lot of matu­ rity at that age. “1 rem em ber when he was running for student body president and he would m ake alT these big prom ises,” Arrendondo said. “I remember thinking to myself, ‘yeah, yeah right, I bet,’ and sure enough within a year he had fol­ lowed up on all of his promises.” Arrendondo said he thought Ortiz was just some young adolescent making promises. “ B ut he w as tru e to h is w ord ev en back th e n ,” Arrendondo said. . ,, ■ * Sitting at his kitchen table. Ortiz mused about his child­ hood experiences and how it helped mold his désire to become aleader. “I’ve always been the kind o f person who wanted to be in the thick of things,” Ortiz said, adding that his decision to get involved with the Associated Students of ASU back 2> £p £3 in 1988 came naturally, He said he saw it as a good way to get to know people on campus and feel like he belongs to something. “W hen I first cam e to ASU, I thought ‘this is such a huge place, how am I ever going to get to know any­ body h ere,’” he said. “I felt like I w as a really sm all fish in a huge pond.” Ortiz first graduated from ASU in 1992 with a bachelor’s degree in political science and went on an academic fellowship program in Washington, D.C. at the Center for the Study of the Presidency. It was there that Ortiz would meet his future wife Deborah, whom he married in July 1997. “That was probably the best assignment ASU’s ever sent me on,” he said. “It changed my life in more ways than one.” In April 1997 Ortiz was elected student body president. ASU president Lattie Coor had several words o f reflection on Ortiz’ administration. “(Andy) had a clear set of goals when he set out and he stayed with them,” Coor said. “He had an ability to articulate those goals and follow through with them.” Coor said he expects Ortiz will do a lot with his future. “He certainly has a style and interest in leadership and I would expect him to go far with that,” he said. Ortiz said there were a few things he worked toward in his administration that he is most proud of. Mainly his campus' safe­ ty program, new student involvement on the Rio Salado project and the promoting leadership program which facilitated a speak­ ing engagement with former President George Bush in May. “It’s actually interesting now to reflect on the year because you look at everything that you tried to do,” he said. “I think we (ASASU) have done a lot more than we set out to do, but in a lot of areas there’s still more work to be done.” This summer, Ortiz will graduate from the ASU law school. “I want to focus on my legal practice fora while,” Ortiz said. Ortiz said he would like to use his master’s degree in public affairs to deal with civil rights issues. “Politics is something that is always a possibility in the future,” he said The city council and eventually the mayor’s office are two things Ortiz will set his sights on in the distant future. “The community is changing at such a rapid pace,” he said. “I’d like to be involved in that.” ;; As for tihe new ASASU student body president, Paul Frost, Ortiz had the following words of advice to offer him in his new administration: “I would tell him to know who his friends are,” he said. 23 23 23 2>23 23 23 2 ? 25 V S Sh yra Nacht/State Pre ss Form er A ssociated Students of ASU President Andy Ortiz is pictured here with h is wife Deborah. O rtriz, who graduates THIS summ er with a law degree, said politics will probably be part of h is future. “One thing I’ve noticed about (Frost) is that he’s very softspoken. He seems like a really nice guy, but if he’s not care­ ful he can be sort of looked over and cut out of the loop if he doesn’t speak up.” . Christine Wilkinson, vice president for student affairs, said that Ortiz “fully integrated himself in all aspects o f the role o f president.” “He’s a very outgoing and personable person,” Wilkinson said “Because of his own life’s experiences he was able to work with a laigc number of different constituencies and listen to their input rather than driving toward one goal without understanding the implications.” 23 <552 3 2 3 23 23 23 2 5 2 3 25 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 C O M I N G S O O N ........... m o CC S u d cfte à d FOR NON-BUSINESS MAJORS “TWO THUMBS UP!!” Business People Say... “A BLOCKBUSTER CLASSt!” students Say............... 3 “STANDS FAR ABOVE THE CROlSfott” “G R E A T IN T E R A C T IO N !!” “ E x a c tly W h a t I h a v e b e e n lo o k in g f o r! ¡7 “V e r y In sp irin g !!” * 7 e a o fa n & — ( fa e a t ^ H ^ o n M u U c o K ff ” o n e e * tt6 u 4 i< i4 tic f f " Visit The Center for the Advancement of Small Business O u r s t a f f w ill a s s i s t v o u w i t h r e g i s t r a t i o n , in B A C 111 COB 394 - Small Business Foundations COB 394 - Small Business Foundations CALL: 965*1042 TTH 1:40-2:55 T 6:40 - 9:30 Hufifìy most Classes Begin July 6 GateUJay Course NMT280 PON29Q DFTII0 DFT252AA DFT252AH DFT254AA DFT290AA DFT29QAH CISI2IAE CISI22AE WRTI00 CIS 191DL CPDI50 ENG07I ENGI0I ENG 102 CREIOI RDG09I COM263 HCCI0QAD HUM2I0 COMI 10 PSYI0I Description Nuclear Medicine Seminar Certified Nurse Midwife First Assistant Technical Drafting 1 Computer Aided Drafting 1:Autocad, Release 13 Computer Aided Drafting 1: Microstation ’95 Computer Aided Drafting II: Autocad Cad Update: Autocad Cad Update: Microstation ’95 Windows ’95 Windows ’95 Level II Introduction to Hydrology Windows NT Administration Strategies For College Success Fundamentals Of Writing First Year Composition First Year Composition Critical And Evaluative Reading College Reading Skills Elements of Intercultural Communication Basic Medical Terminology Contemporary Cinema Interpersonal Communication Introduction to Psychology GateUJay Course PSY240 PSY298AC BIO 100 FON24I MAT065 MAT082 MAT092 EMT200 NCEII0 NCE24IME NCE2I4ND NCE2I4MM NCEI26 NCÈI26AA NCE2I5ND NCE2I5ND NCE2I5ND NCE2I5ND NCE22I NCE223 NŒ2I5 Description Developmental Psychology Special Projects Biology Concepts (Lecture & Laboratory) Principles of Human Nutrition Graphing Calculator Arithmetic Review Introductory Algebra Refresher Course for Certified EMTs Basic First Aid Advanced Metrology IV Drug Therapy Nursing Developer/Skills Health Provider Math/Methods of Drug Calculation Nurse Assisting Nurse Assisting # Nursing Skills Update (Waunds/Skincare Update) Nursing Skills Update (Internet Skills for Long Term Care Health Professional) Nursing Skills Update (Substance Abuse) Nursing Skills Update (Internet Skills for School Health Professional) Patient Care Technician Skills LPN-IV Therapy and Medications Skills Neurological Update for EMT’s Classes at G ate W iy are just $38 p er credit hour fo r M aricopa C ounty residents, and m ost academic credits transfer to A SU . Choose from day o r evening classes. Register today! Check out ou r com plete class schedule on the Internet at gw cm aricopa.edu G a te ^ ä 1 m ur I C o te 392-5000 40th Street & Washington (just 4 miles from ASU) An EEO/AA Institution M M A R IC O P A COMMUNITY CO LLEG ES Page 12 Tuesday, June 2 3,1998 S tate P ress V* a grattare S h yra N acht/State P re ss Lew A lquist adds a little more animation to one of his subjects that will be used in h is Film Anim ation Production class. From sculptor to film m a k e r Anim ation class gaining m om entum B y A ngela Y eager S tate P ress F ive years ago L ew is A lq u ist had th e urge to do som ething new. A sculptor by trade, A lquist was teaching a sculpting class when he decided to turn it into som ething ASU didn’t have a film production class. : A lquist gathered old film equipm ent and m aterials other classes were throwing out and started A SU ’s first and only film production class. Alquist said his interest in film, combined with his skill as a sculptor, led him to design the class. . "1 w as s u rp ris e d th a t th e re w a s n ’t a n y th in g on the entire cam pus o f ASU as far as film production,” A lq u is t s a id . ‘‘So th is c la s s c o in c id e d w ith my d e s ir e to d o s o m e th in g n ew w ith m y s c u lp tu r e class.” . ' " The result was Film Anim ation Production, a class offered through the School o f Art that uses stop-motion cam era work to film 3-D anim ated objects:. Students can use everything from clay sculptures to their own draw ­ ings to create moving images — otherw ise known as a movie. Alquist said stop-m otion is a process o f filming one slide at a time in which the film m aker has to stop the cam era after every shot. The class has been a success. Alquist said. "At first, this was an experim ent ju st to see if I could get away with it,” he said. “But in the past year or so, a lot o f people have becom e interested in film produc­ tion.” : • Jon Sharer, interim director o f the School o f Art, said he agrees that film production has started to become a priority. “M any stu d en ts have com e to talk w ith me about their interest in film and we have begun to look at the options,” Sharer said. L o c a te d in an o ld e le m e n ta ry s c h o o l near University Drive and Ash Street, A lquist operates out of two room s, one o f which is \ used for assem bly o f sets and the other as a film lab. Students create and design their sets, usually in card­ board boxes, and place their characters for their film. Then they position the cam era to see inside the box and move the characters accordingly. On film , the process comes to life as an anim ated short. the cause though. “ T h e lo n g e s t film a s tu d e n t can a c c o m p lis h “W hen my la st film w as d istrib u ted and received is a tw o -m in u te f ilm ,” A lq u is t s a id . “T h e y can very successfully at major film festivals, people started do th is in one se m ester, b u t th at is w ith o u t p o st­ to take notice,” he said. production.” S h a re r s a id h e h a s b e e n ta lk in g w ith A lq u is t P o s t-p ro d u c tio n in v o lv e s e d itin g , la y in g so und ab o u t p lan s to ex ten d the liv e -a c tio n c lass, as w ell and sending the film to a lab for processing. Alquist said as start a series o f classes related to film production. “There are m any instructors interested in teaching this takes another sem ester to complete, and since there is only one class offered, students m ust use their own film classes,” he said. “But everything is ju st in the dis­ cussion stage right now.” ' time and money to complete the movie. Currently, film anim ation is the only production class During the summer, Alquist wants to finish the short regularly placed on the schedule. A live-action film pro­ film he has been working on for four years so that he has duction class was offered this past spring, but its future more to bring back to his students in the fall. is unknown. But A lquist doesn’t foresee leaving the U niversity “W e w ould like to see both classes offered in the anytime soon. : ■ , 1 fall,” Alquist said. “That would be ideal along with one “ I like it here,” he said. “I will continue to push for post-production class in the spring.” . more film production and enjoy the work my students A lquist said this m ight be difficu lt. It has been a are producing.” stru g g le to m a in tain his class and he is unsure if the adm inistration w ould financially support anoth­ er class. “ S tu d e n ts w an t m ore film at A S U ,” A lq u is t said. “The problem is no one wants to pay for it.” A c c o rd in g to S h a re r, one o f the m ain re a so n s, there isn ’t more film pro­ duction classes available is the expensive nature of the course. “T he e x p en se o f film production classes keeps us fro m o f f e r in g m o re classes,” Sharer said. Alquist said it is unusu­ al for a university the size o f ASU not to have a film school or at least a. film major. Rising support for a film m a jo r an d w id e r re c o g n itio n o f A lq u is t’s Story boards show the sequence of of events to be shot through stop-m otion film ing where the personal work has helped film aker has to stop the camera after every, shot. S tate P ress Page 13 Tuesday, June 2 3 ,1 9 98 Scottsdale College film powerhouse B y A ngela Y eager S tate P ress W h ile th e la c k o f film p r o d u c tio n c o u rs e s at A S U can be d is c o u r a g in g fo r s tu d e n ts w a n tin g to become the next Quentin T arantino there are ways to s tu d y th e a rt o f film m a k in g w ith o u t h e a d in g to California. The first and forem ost center for film in Arizona is Scottsdale Community College. Only a two-year degree is offered but SCC is the only college in the state with a film school. For those wanting to major in film, SCC requires 25 credits in film studies and production, including intro­ ductory classes such as motion picture production and screewriting. Students can also choose from classes on com puter graphies, women in film and how to finance films. According to Norman Jenson, SCC académie advisor, students at SCC are given the Chance to intern for on-thejob experience. “Many of our students intern at the 20th Century Fox Animation Studios,” Jenson said. SCC also holds the annual Southw est Film Festival where film m akers and students have the chance to show off their hard work. Jenson said thé col­ lege receives more than 200 entries each year. , According to Jenson, after completing film studies at SCC, students can be hired on in the film industry. “Right after t h ^ finish here our students are ready to work,” Jenson said. F o r th o se lo o k in g b e y o n d tw o y e a rs at c o lle g e , the U ofA offers a film m ajor through its C ollege o f F in e A rts. T h e m a jo r, w h ic h is o f f ic ia lly title d Media Art, offers a “variety of film study and production Classes. " A c c o rd in g to B eth O sw a ld , a se c re ta ry fo r the College o f Fine Arts, more than 600 students are major­ ing in film making it one of the college’s more popular majors. Those interested in film shouldn’t rule out ASU com­ pletely — the humanities and theater departm ents offer film studies Classes. H ow ever these courses, including “Film s o f the ‘30s and ‘40s” and “Foreign Film s and Filmmakers,” are lecture classes, ' ' . ' A cco rd in g to L ew is A lq u ist, th e se c la sse s are a good way to start out but experience and hands-on train­ ing are the only ways to become a good filmmaker. In order to gain that experience, students might need to look outside the school. “Students can get art internship at a small, local film production,” Alquist said. “Even a menial job will pro­ vide in sight in to the process that goes into m aking a film.” * S h yra Nacht/State P re ss Professor Lew Alquist sets up the camera for a still shot. He teaches A S U 's only film animation Class, where students learn to Shoot Short stop-motion film s using 3-D dim ensional objects. Lew A lq u ist prepares for the fin a l cut of a sh ort clip . Five years ago, the art professpr/Sculptor wanted to do som ething new and oreated A S U ’s first and only film production class. Students use stop-m otion camera work to film objects such as clay sculptures or draw ings. It takes an entire sem ester for students to shopt enough footage for a two-minute film. Sh yra Nacht/State P re ss Page 14 S tate P ress Tuesday, June 23, 1998 ASU student flees homeland, helps refugees that you are a refugee.” During the stay in Kenya, his fam ily worked with an From his hom e country o f the w ar-ravaged Somalia agency from the U nited Nations, who brought refugees to a refugee cam p in Kenya, a young man and his family abroad to start a new life. The fam ily went through a trav eled to the U nited S tates in search o f freedom , a series o f interviews and after a tw o-year stay in Kenya higher education and a home. moved to A rizona in Decem ber 1992.  bdifatah M oham ed has experienced more than most W hen M oham ed a rriv e d in the U n ited S tates, he young m en h is age. A t 2 5 -y éars-ò ld , he has lived in d id n ’t know any E n g lish . H is fa th e r w o rk ed for an three countries, know s four languages and is the first American Embassy, but didn’t teach his family the lan­ m ale to ever receive the Voices o f Courage Award for guage. ■ : starting a club to help Somali children refugees. “I w as re q u ire d to tak e an E n g lish c la ss in h ig h “I m oved here to find a better life, to go to school so ' school,” M ohamed said. “But nobody really listened.” I can make my life better,” M ohamed said. M oham ed w ent th ro u g h an in ten siv e eig h t-m o n th A civil w ar in Som alia forced M ohamed and his fam ­ pro g ram to learn E n g lish and is now able to sp eak ily into a refugee cam p in Kenya because o f an over­ th e la n g u a g e a lo n g w ith th e S w a h ili, A ra b ic an d b earin g d ic ta to r p resid en t who ru le d S om alia fo r 2:1 S o m a li la n g u a g e s , he s a id . H e e n jo y s liv in g in ..years.;. r th e U .S ., b u t d o e s n ’t lik e a ll th e v io le n c e on “ I le ft b e h in d my ho m e, my b e lo n g in g s and my television. ■ friends,” M ohamed said. “Some o f my friends I haven’t “In some ways I like living here,” M ohamed said. “I can do things I couldn’t do before, go to better schools seen since the w ar.” It was hard to stay in his country because the war Was .and see how dem ocracy w orks. B ut I d o n ’t like the sp read in g , he said. He had ju s t grad u ated from high things I see on TV. Here I am running away from a war school and had plans to go on to college but the war was and I am constantly being reminded o f the violence on holding him and his fam ily back. the news.” O riginally, M oham ed d id n ’t have plans to m ove to M oham ed attended Phoenix C ollege for tw o and a the U nited States, but his f a m i l y - including his parents h a lf years and is now a C o m p u ter S cien ce m ajor at and eight brothers and sisters — realized it was the only ASU. choice after die w ar hit, he said. ‘He started a club six months ago for Somali refugee “E verything w as m onopolized by the governm ent,” children with his friend Hukun Rage after concern over M oham ed said. “ You had no choices on w hat you want­ w hat was happening to refugee children in cities like ed to do for your life. You had to go through the gov­ San Diego and M inneapolis. ernm ent if you w anted to be a professional.” “These cities had problem s with their youths joining A fter living in thé refugee cam p for five m onths, the gangs and startin g illegal activ ities,” M oham ed said, fam ily was able to get m oney from relatives in Somalia adding th at the club w as m eant to prevent these kids to get a house, he said. from doing those activities. “ W e d id n ’t h a v e v e ry g o o d liv in g c o n d itio n s ,” “The main focus is to make kids better citizens,” he M oham ed said. “W e were living in huts with no shelter said. “To teach them that once they finish high school from the rain. there is so much available for them .” “W hen you are a refugee you have no passports, no The club has between 35 and 40 kids, ranging in age perm its for work and you are constantly being reminded from 10 to 18. They m eet every Saturday and do a vari­ B v H ayley R ingle S tate P ress ety o f activities from sports and field trips to help with schoolwork. There are no funds for the club other than some help from the com m unity, M ohamed said. Both he and Rage drive the kids in their ow n cars and they use a space in sid e the In te rn a tio n a l R escu e C om m ittee on 19th Avenue and Camelback Road in Phoenix for club activi­ ties. L in d a M c A lliste r, the c e n te r c o o rd in a to r for the Phoenix A cculturation C enter at the IR C , nom inated M oham ed for the V oices o f C ourage A w ard from the W o m e n ’s C o m m is s io n f o r R e fu g e e W o m en and Children after she was im pressed by his devotion to the club. “ I saw him as a m odel fo r w hat p eo p le can d o ,” M cAllister said. “Out o f sheer personal effort and will he is already doirig a lot o f good.” Actors Sam W aterston and Liv Ullman presented the award to M ohamed in New York. “I felt good because I have been awarded for a job I had done for my com m unity,” M ohamed said. “W e’re at a time when you have all these kids and I took the ini­ tiative.” ' ' M o h am ed a p p lie d fo r c lu b fu n d in g th ro u g h the O rg a n iz a tio n o f R efu g ee R e -se ttle m e n t and sh o u ld know before the end o f June if the proposal is accepted. W ith the m oney, M oham ed said he hopes to rent a place for the club and buy a van. But he still has many plans for the future. “I hope to get a jo b here and help more Som alians go to college,” M ohamed said. “I want to try and pave the way.” Eventually, he wants to go back to Som alia and help rebuild his country, he said. The im pression he has made here, however, is more than m ost w ill make their entire lives. “I was ju st am azed o f M oham ed,” M cA llister said. “He was going to school, working part-tim e, and out o f thd goodness o f his heart, started the club. I was very im pressed.” UFO and Hitler sightings — FBI’s old cases now on the Internet By M ike Feinsilber A ssociated P ress W riter W ASHINGTON — H itler’s alive! U nidentified fly­ ing o b jects sp o tted in N ew M exico! Ame.lia E arhart abducted in the air! It is the stuff o f tabloids — and o f the FB I’s over­ stuffed file cabinets. Now anyone- with com puter access to the Internet can brow se through 16,000 pages from 37 FBI investiga­ tions, full o f rum or, conjecture, innuendo, gossip and the occasional case that was closed in a flurry o f gun­ play. The Freedom o f Inform ation Act requires the bureau to make many o f its old cases public and 400 employees w ork fu ll-tim e at han d lin g req u ests. To save m oney spent running the photocopying m achines, the FBI has b e e n p o s tin g som e o f its m o st re q u e s te d c a se s on th e In te rn e t, say s sp o k esm an Jo h n C o llin g w o o d . A new batch was posted this month. Names o f correspon­ d e n ts an d in fo rm a n ts w e re b la c k e d o u t to p ro te c t privacy. Among the documents: • A letter from som eone claim ing he saw A dolf H itler and a woman in Seat 40, C ar 10 o f the Illinois Central Railroad. A nother putting H itler in a hotel lobby in rural Quebec, Canada. A nother said H itler — minus m ustache — had arrived by subm arine in A rgentina with a group o f henchmen and headed for the Andes. • Reports o f UFO sightings, called “unidentified aerial objects.” One told o f a UFO that m oved due north, was three tim es the size o f the evening star, was stationary for five to 10 seconds, was blue but turned white and then “went out like a light.” • Lots o f mail speculating.on-w hat happened to Amelia E arh art, the p io n e e r a v ia to r w ho v an ish ed o v e r the Pacific Ocean in 1937. One correspondent offered a the­ ory: Foreign stowaways on her plane took control and landed at a secret place. The FBI intends u ltim ately to p o st all 1.3 m illion pages o f files already opened to the public and available for perusal in FBI headquarters. So far, 1.4 m illion vis­ its to the FBI site have been recorded. The bureau started the practice by posting cases that once com m anded hu g e h ead lin es. A m ong them : the explosion o f the G erm an zeppelin Hindenburg in 1937; the 1962 escape o f three A lcatraz inm ates w ho fash­ H ELP fQ re a s o n s 4Ëmm jJW M v. ; should ta k e our F le x ib le s c h e d u l e s P r e m i e r e C AT s o f t w a r e r ¡• nR LF , course. CO U RSIS START J u l y 7 th. C a l l TODAY TO REM RVI YOUR MATS THE PRINCETON REVIEW w w w .revirw .com ioned a raft from rubber raincoats; the crim e spree o f B onnie P a rk e r and C lyde B arrow w hich end ed w ith their roadside killing by police in 1934. •Some don’t involve crim inal investigations at all: the 1953 c o n g re s s io n a l in v e s tig a tio n in to w hy a c tre ss Lucille Ball registered to vote as a Com m unist in 1936. (It was at her grandfather’s insistence.) Or the internal FBI memos showing that D irector J. Edgar H oover declined to m eet Elvis Presley when he visited the bureau in 1970. Hoover had been advised by an underling that Presley was “not the type o f individual whom the director would want to m eet.” The m ost popular file concerns unidentified flying o b jects. S ig h tin g s becam e so com m on fiv e d ecades ago th a t the b u reau d ev ised a 2 8 -q u e stio n form fo r u se in in te r r o g a tin g e y e w itn e s s e s . P e o p le w e re ask ed a b o u t th e “a p p a re n t s iz e ,” “c o lo r o f o b je c t,” “ s h a p e ,” “ so u n d an d o d o r,” “ m a n e u v e rs,” “ m an n er o f disappearance.” Then there is a line for “comments o f in te rro g a to r relativ e to in tellig en ce and ch aracter o f observer.” , The F B I W eb site is: h ttp ://w w w .fb i.g o v on the Internet. W A N T E D Looking for A KEY TO Y O U R FUTURE? News Reporters are needed for Fall 1998. Applications may be picked up in Matthews Center basement - Room 15. 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H EW LETT ' PACKARD M-F 8:30A M -5:30PM & S at 1 0 -3 Call fo r Custom PC P ricin g : 968-8S8S Film turns noñ-believer into ‘X-Phile’ 4 & s OUT OF 5 B y G ayle B ass S ta t e P ress Alright, I admit it. I am now an XrPhile. I only watched "the show once, but I plan to correct th a t m isju d g m e n t. W hy? B ecau se I re a lly e n jo y ed this film. I w en t in h a lf e x p e c t­ ing to se e a w id e -sc re e n v e r s io n o f tw o - h o u r episodic telev isio n . A nd I certain ly w asn’t hoping it w ould go the d isa p p o in t­ ing w ay o f m ost (not all) Star Trek m ovies. I was wrong. It didn’t. .T h e X - F i l e s m o \y e evolves around the m yste­ rio u s d e a th s o f five p e o ­ p le a t th e h a n d s o f an alien virus . H ow ever, the FBI claim s they died in a fe d e ra l b u ild in g e x p 1o S io n . H ow iro n ic th a t it takes place in D allas. A g e n ts F ox M u ld e r (D a v id D u c h o v n y ) a n d D an a S c u lly ( G illia n A nderson) fig u re out th a t so m eth in g is am iss. A n d quite capably they do. A lth o u g h f a m ilia r ity w ith th e c h a ra c te rs m ay b re e d a s o r t o f b a n a lity to a c to rs; th is is n o t the c a s e : w ith t h i s p a i r . T a k i n g E m m y - w in n i n g r o le s to th e s c r e e n a n d d o in g it w e ll is e x a c tly Rtonfck MortonÆOth C e n tu ry F o x w hat they did: FBI Special Agents Fox M ulder (David Duchovny) and Dana S cully (Gillian Anderson) search for clu es in ä foreboding cornfield in The X-FUea. C asting w as straight on ta r g e t. M a rtin L a n d a u , D oes she pay th e p ric e fo r h is p o k in g scenes w ere a little predictable, as was something often wanting in films today. W illiam B. D avis (“C igarette-S m oking th e b eg inning, b u t 10 m inutes in to the T he only real disap p o in tm en t I had, around? W ho w ill die? Is it global con­ M a n ” ), a n d J o h n N e v ille ( “ W e ll- m o v ie a n d y o u ’re h o o k e d . H o w e v e r, w ithout giving too m uch aw ay, is once spiracy? For those who want the answers, M anicured M an”), all em body the essence C arter m anages to take Files beyond the you know the tru th , you d o n ’t see too you have to see the film. The answers are o f th e ir p a rts as X -F ile s-c re a to r C h ris sm all screen. m uch o f it. However, there are purposes there, in one form or another. C arter intended. So, you know you know where I’ll be C ertainly, it is not epic in granduer, for that as well. It is well w ritten too. Sure, some o f the and need not be. B ut it is satisfying — D o S cully and M u ld er get tog eth er? Sunday night. ‘X-Files’ morphs from small-screen with little change B y M ichael Fleeman A P E ntertainm ent W riter LOS A N G ELES T he tru th is out there. But is the audience? The X F i le s o p e n e d in th e a te r s F rid a y a s a H o lly w o o d n o v e lty : a m o v ie m ad e fro m a TV s e rie s th a t is s till h o t, w ith th e sam e a c to rs an d a sc rip t th a t a d v a n c e s th e sm a ll-s c re e n story line. The m ovie’s challenge is to appeal to both hard-core fans — the “X -Philes” — as well as non-fans who don’t even know w h e th e r M u ld e r o r S c u lly is th e guy. (It’s M ulder.) “ I t w as a tr ic k , a n d w e k n e w it w o u ld be a tr ic k ,” sa id X-Fi les g u ru C h ris C a r te r , p ro d u c e r o f th e m o v ie a n d c r e a t o r o f th e F o x sh o w a b o u t g o v e r n m e n t c o n s p ir a c ie s , p e rs o n a l psychoses and the extraterrestrial. “But w e w a n te d to g e t a la r g e r X-Fi l es audience.” C arter attem pts to do th is by produc­ ing an X-Files m ovie th a t is a b igger, n o is ie r , m o re a c tio n - p a c k e d v e rs io n o f th e T V sh o w , w ith e la b o r a te s p e c ia l e f f e c t s , in c lu d in g a s k y ­ scraper bom bing. T h e s to r y is s e lf - c o n ta in e d an d m o s tly u n d e r s ta n d a b le to th e n o n initiated. The plot picks u p from last sea­ so n ’s TV show -cliffhanger and lays the g r o u n d w o rk f o r a t le a s t a n o th e r season. T h e 2 0 th C e n tu ry F ox m o v ie c o st $60 m illion to m ake — about 50 tim es th e c o st o f a o n e -h o u r e p iso d e o f the TV show — and is being released as a su m m er e v e n t, h e a v ily p ro m o te d and a c c o m p an ied by C D -R O M gam es and tw o soundtracks. H ollywood is well known for adapting te le v is io n sh o w s to th e b ig s c re e n , from M ission: Im possible to The Brady Bunch M ovie, n o t to m ention the Star Trek m ovies. B ut those w ere all m ade a fte r th e o rig in a l TV sh o w s w ere o f f the air. F o r th e acto rs, h o w ev er, th e m ovie was business las usual. “E v eryone w as like: W e’re d o in g a m o v ie , i t ’s c o s tin g a lo t o f m o n e y ; y o u ’re getting paid m ore m oney, w hat are you going to do different? Are you going to make it better?” Duchovny said. “W ell, if there were things that I thought co u ld be b etter, I w ould have changed th e m a lr e a d y . I ’m p la y in g h im th e sam e.” : s ? s G illian Anderson, David Duchovny and writer/producer C h ris Carter oh the set of The X-Files. Page 18 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 St a t e P ress Merchant’s ‘Ophelia’ complex, colorful, vivid 4 1 /2 f t s OUT OF 5 B y Lorif. Roberts S tate P ress Natalie M erchant’s newest creation, Ophelia, tenderly embodies a romance between sentimental speculating, and gratitude. The lyrics float along a paradoxically smooth plane o f duality — that of sorrow and of ceaseless passion. Ophelia, the daughter of Polonius in Shakespeare's Hamlet, is an intricate, elusive woman. She has romantic feelings for Hamlet, yet the young prince is cruel to her and she believes he no longer desires her. Insanity engulfs Ophelia when Hamlet kills her father and treats her poorly. The most fascinating facet of Ophelia’s reactions to her insanity is that she tells us what she’s feeling only through little pieces of songs (popular culture songs) which have to do with death and sex. Merchant may or may not be playing with the notion of com m unicating disturbing, yet human thoughts through song, just as Ophelia does in Hamlet. Everything Ophelia says is elusive. M erchant’s lyrics are not necessarily elu­ sive, yet in many ways that component does reside. As in everything, there are always hues of gray interspersed. In the end these variations o f gray and elusiveness do not falter. As in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Ophelia dies and we, as readers, get a report on her death without a descrip­ tion o f it as it occurs. She allows herself to drown, we are told. Yet later, grave diggers said she committed suicide. So again, the factor of uncertainty plays in. Another factor is that the women in Shakespeare’s plays are intensely important, but in a secondary fashion. Hamlet lets us know what he’s thinking, but we are only given reports on Ophelia, similar to the other women character portrayals in Shakespeare’s work. We are not given first-person perspectives. Perhaps Merchant is applying this idea to her music, in the sense that often, people may think they can discern what type of person she is through her music. Yet in actual­ ity, one cannot truly understand someone through lyrics and image. A person is always much more complex than his or her projected and perceived image. Merchant’s song “Effigy,” conveys the heart-wrenching Natalie Merchant In a salutary pose for Ophelia. idea that we are often crucified by others based on their representations and images of us. While she celebrates life, she also delves into duality in all its complexity. Merchant’s lyrics apply the concept of duality to emotion. W hile the songs show a love o f life expressed often through sentimentality, there is also sorrow involved. The songs are rich with love and suffering. • This is similar to Merchant’s previous work, Tigerlily. However, once again, duality plunges in. Tigerlily’s lyrics, in contrast to the lyrics in Ophelia* convey thoughts and emotions concerned with injustices in life (as in the tribute to River Phoenix, titled “R iver,” and the track “Seven Years,” about a man losing his lifelong partner). Ophelia is more a thankful celebration o f life. It is a bold yet delicate devotion to*life in all its com plexity. T he cut “K ind and G enerous,” is the em bodim ent o f the album — liltingly, happily exhibiting the virtues o f being grateful to others for th eir guidance, love and support. M erchant’s new est album is am azing. T here is so much depth and grace to it — it’s alm ost unbelievable. There are ¡so many paradigm s in the lyrics', and thèrè’s such a tender yet forceful exploration o f hum an em o­ tion in all its tender, sorrow ful, sentim ental glory. Fu M anchu tunes closer to idle noise than m usic movie, imagine screaming over noise. ZiP Z e r o Z ilc h N ada (Ou t o f S) B y S u san S ohim m ei . State P ress Quick — someone call the music police! Fu Manchu has got to go! Fu M anchu’s The Action is Go is so horrible that one w o n d ers how they ev er got sig n ed to a reco rd label. Somebody must have been on some serious drugs that night. The vocals sound like Matt Dillon trying to sing in the m ovie Singles. F or those o f you who haven’t seen the The music itself is just that — noise. There is little if any instrumental organization or style. Im agine a bunch o f five-year-olds sneaking into the garage and getting their hands on a real band’s instruments. The results must have been what Fu’ Manchu was aiming for: However, if that wasn’t the case, then they failed miserably. Even the pictures on the CD sleeve leave much to be desired. The blurred im ages look as if they can’t even afford a decent photographer. Hell, a friend’s Polaroid would have been a vast improvement. W hat w ill sh o w y o u have class mmggp, better than a paint b y num ber... H a y d e n ’s Ferry R e v ie w HAYDEN'S FERRY K S g A S U ’s L ite r a r y ^ A s k f o r It a t o r c a ll 9 Ö 5 - I ' 10OFF 100% Nonfat, No Fillers! . Made from our sweet cream yogurt frozen fruit ft Juice. __ »STONE CREAMERY 921-7456 at the com ar of 5th ft I W lth C o u p o n Expires 8/10/98 J AT THE CORNER OF 5TH & MILL The humorous thing about all o f this is they are making a pathetic attempt at being deep. The songs have titles like “Strolling Astronomer,” “Unknow/i World,” and “Grendel, Snowman.” If they really were talented, they might then have a clue that they stink worse than a moldy, rotten, old egg in the Arizona sun on a scorching summer’s day. So, unless you arc a serious masochist with deep-rooted self-loathing tendencies, don’t bother wasting your good money on this. If you’re a sadist who likes to torture other people, then this is the album for you. Page 19 Tuesday, June 2 3 ,1 9 9 8 S t a t e P ress Ugly Americans have fun, seriou s tunes •4 '¿ATS OUT OF 5 B y B ecca C ase S tate P ress WWMmMßm S 2 B U C K S E X A W P K A W S THUR.-M CEKTMARKSJiiB FRI: ^ T A C T T O fr S C t f T g W t f S o jr r H O F " r o a p ç S thä O ia íE Ía n GOT A CLEAN CAR? O kay, all you o ld -fa sh io n e d m usic lis te n e r s . I t ’ s tim e to r e t i r e y o u r M etaHica m usic library, pull down your posters o f leath er-clad V an H alen and g iv e a liste n to w h at the ‘90s are a ll about in the latest album from the Ugly A m ericans. D u b b in g th e m s e lv e s th e “ M u sic a l essen tials fo r to d a y ’s doom ed g en era­ tion” the Ugly A m ericans throw patrio­ tism to th e w ind. Iro n ic a lly , th o u g h , their songs on Boom Boom Baby encap­ sulate ju st about everything this decade m usically represents. A n o u ts ta n d in g c o m b in a tio n o f styles hom ogenizes the sound. Im agine a ja m sessio n w ith the R ed H o t C h ili P eppers, P hish, L enny K ravits and G. Love and Special Sauce in a ja z z lounge an d y o u ’ve g o t th e U g ly A m e ric a n s. You can ’t get m ore ‘90s than that. Or m ore A m erican. L u st o o zes fro m th e ir alb u m title d song, “Boom Boom Baby.” Sounds a lot lik e “W ham B am T h an k Y ou M a’am ” d o s e n ’t it? W e ll, th e r e is a w o m a n g ro a n in g in th e b a c k g ro u n d b u t you w on’t be grinding to this song at Club R io anytim e soon since the hard rock and ska'com bó surpasses the club sound. B ey o n d the fun h a lf-se rio u s songs, these guys do have some depth to their m usic. B ut if you w ant som ething to get deep to, this isn ’t it. So you w on’ t d ro p any te a rs upon h e a r in g th e e m b itte re d s in g e r c ro n e about the girlfriend that did him wrong in “T exas I s n ’t B ig E no u g h ” Y et its hon ey -d rip p in g vocals and slow blues rh y th m sh a p e so m e id e a l m a k e -o u tinspiring m elodies. “ T he W rong D ire c tio n ” ju s t m ig h t inspire an erection o f em otions because this song is really quite exciting. Here the U gly A m ericans in co rporate lively ja z z piano and hearty vocals w hich for­ m u la te an u p lif tin g c re s c e n d o o f funked-ovèr cha cha. M o s t o f th e a lb u m is liv e ly arid fu n k ified . T hese guys are to o good to keep th e ir ingeniously ecclectic sound quiet m uch longer so don’t be surprised w h e n y o u h e a r th e n a m e U g ly A m erican s again. T his is a fun album for jrist about anyone. Summer Jams P h o to s by Je re m y Hein Let the professionals at rU M M ID ^ I U l UMCEHIM make it shine for you! < 5 ALWAYS A DISCOUNT WITH YOUR ASU IDI BASIC W ASH | | M Vacuum * Windows Inside & Out * Soft Cloth Wash with ASU I D. DIAM O ND W ASH Vacuum * Windows Inside & Out * Soft Cloth Wash * Interior Cleaned VSprayW ax * Armorall Tires * Air Freshener * Vonda Shepard, front Fox’s Ally McBeal, perform ed June 16 at Celebrity Theater. with ASU ID. V.I.P. W ASH * Vacuum * Windows Inside & Out * Soft Cloth Wash * Interior Cleaned * Spray Wax * Armorall Tires * Armorall Inside * Air Freshener Flamingo Rural & McKellipS 949-WASH (two miles from ASU) X MrKAHfeM W ynton M arsalie an d h is sep tu p le ! perform at the S co ttsd a le C enter fo r the A rts amphitheater Sunday, June 18th. Page 2 0 Tuesday, June 2 3 ,1 9 9 8 S tate P ress Tempe rocker: ‘You gotta see the good’ B y L o r ie R o ber ts S ta te P ress M usician Shaw n Johnson, lead vocalist for Left o f Center, has now ventured out to com pose a solo album. The album, entitled Soul vs. Ego, fuses Shaw n’s vocals, female vocals, saxophone and bass guitar. It all began in M ind's Eye Digital Recording Studios, The owner, Larry, is an extrem ely professional, downto-earth man. A lthough he ow ns an incredible studio and has quite a bit to brag about, he is relaxed, intelli­ gent and mellow. T his was the general attitude am ong the m em bers o f the band and the recording studio ow ner. A relaxed atm osphere was realized , one w hich h eld the vibe o f love. T his view o f love and c a rin g fo r one an o th er was ju s t given. In a tim e o f extrem e ego and greed, Johnson and his frien d s p ro p ag ated p o sitiv e energy an d g e n u in e te n d e r n e s s to w a r d o n e a n o th e r. T he respect and adm iration Shaw n and his friends show ed fo r o n e a n o th e r w arm ed th e h e a rt an d so o th e d th e soul. It is a rare thing in the V alley the&e days, esp e­ cially am ong people in th eir 20s, fo r love to be real­ ized for the pow er it holds and fo r its ab ility to m ake things hap p en , For Shawn Johnson, things are happening. Johnson invited me to his recording studio to hang . o u t an d liste n to him p u t to g e th e r h is new C D . T he squ n d was com pletely a m ^ in g . The interview , as folState Press: W hat made you decide to start playing? SJ: I ’ve always loved music, my whole life — it’s the only thing I’ve ever had passion for, like 100 per­ cent; and when I found out I was pretty good at it, that’s when I decided to pursue it — when people were like, ‘you don’t stink,’ you know? State Press: A t w hat age did you begin? SJ: Ah, late 21, was when I ... learned my first E chord ... I learned A and E , D, C and G and wrote my first song. And the guy who taught m e the chords, his mouth kinda dropped because it was like, the next day. State Press: H ow has your p o p u larity as an artist changed your life? SJ: I can ’t be norm al ... even on a sm all scale — you still have things to look up to and you gotta look out for people more. You have to be m ore aware o f peo­ p le ’s intentions. State Press: W ho do people say you sound like? SJ: T racy C hapm an, C at Stevens, D ave M atthew s, C o u n tin g C ro w s, R u sted R oot; a co u p le peo p le said Live. State Press: D oes it offend you to be com pared to other artist, or do you find it flattering? W hichever you feel, why? SJ: Totally flattering, association. T hat’s the way it is ... som etim es p eople have nam ed my five favorite artists, bands — so it’s like, sw eet! T hank you very much, State Press: H as y o u r m usic/succeeding w ith your m usic given you m ore confidence overall? If so, how? SJ: CM) yeah, absolutely. In a lot o f things, I ’m ju st a geek. I was a geek in high school. O nly, [with] painting, drawing, I cannot [express m yself]. It baffles me ... I’d think I’d be able to express m yself in that way ... but I grab a pen and paper, you know, start drawing stick fig­ ures. State Press: So who taught you to play? SJ: I taught m yself, but Chris Aviles taught me my first chords, in one o f the neighborhoods I grew up in. W e’d party in the woods ... you know, congos and tam borines. Tem pe m usician Shawn Johnson (left, sitting) w orks with band members during a recording session last week. Joh n son 's m usic has been described a s a blend of Tracy Chapman, Cat Stevens, Dave Matthews, Counting Crow s and Rusted R o o t Johnson has cut C D with Left ot Center, but th is is h is first solo effort State Press: How many shows have you and the band done? SJ: 225. . '■ ‘ ' . State Press: How m any have you perform ed alone? SJ: 100. S tate Press: How long have you been play in g in Tempe? SJ: [Since] N ovem ber o f ‘95. W e started playing all the tim e, every week [in the Valley]. State Press: Did the success o f other Tempe bands inspire you? SJ: No. W e have our own [unique] sound. S tate Press: M any people from back E ast, such as yourself, have stated that Phoenix has a lack o f unity, th at there is som ething d ifferen t about it, som ething that’s hard to put a finger on. Do you agree with this? SJ: Lack o f unity ... yeah, that says it all right there. State Press: Do you specifically w rite all o f your own lyrics? SJ: Y eah, I w rite all o f the lyrics I sing. W ith the band, I w rite about 75 percent o f the m usic and Justin w rites the other 25 percent. State Press: In w hat setting do you w rite your lyrics? SJ: Usually at four in the morning, at my house, on rooftops, but there’s countless different places. State Press: Some o f your solo shows are two hours. The band w ill play fo r two to four hours. Is it difficult for the band to play fo r such long stretches o f tim e? SJ: No. M ore than anything else, that’s w hat sets us apart. I w asn’t trying to be part o f the scene. I was trying to build one ... ju s t absolutely ... not try to tie into any other band, not try to be part o f a click — you know —do things my own way. I t’s often not about the band or the m usic, but the beer special. [Tempe sound is] about w riting funky rock songs — [that’s the] norm in Tempe — and that’s cool — but when you got, you know, 20 bands that are vying for the same spot, why add your hat to that mix? I have stage stuff, ya know, but there’s another part o f me that’s as real as the stage Shawn. You know , som etim es people don’t care about that other side, and often people are jealous — I give 100 percent you know, every tim e I play, and when people react negatively to that, it really bothers me. B ut like, usually, I find out second hand ... they’ll be really nice to my face. Greed and jealosy is ju st hum an nature ... some peo­ ple are right up fro n t - I love constructive criticism . B u t ... destructive criti­ cism ... not so much that it hurts ... if you have something to say that’ll m ake m y show better . . . A few peo­ ple are like, ‘You need to learn how to shrug things ... . I’ll never be that way. I ’ve been singing since I was th ree— my sister has a r e c o r d in g o f m e s in g in g P u p p y L o ve b y D o n n ie Osmond. State Press: To sum it all up, what is your favorite song yon sing? SJ: Peace Tree ... it’s universal — it kind o f has all my different feelings w rapped up in a song. My brother passed aw ay three years ago before I m oved here. So songs about him are my fav o rite. S o through all the harshness, you gotta see the good. for T uesdays... on ALL D rafts 8 -11pm 1 FREE APPETIZER 8 -1 2 A M * Sampler Platter not included W ith Coupon O ffer Expires 6 / 3 0 / 9 8 6 0 5 S. M I L L AVE S tate P ress P a g e 21 Tuesday, June 2 3,1998 sports B y S co tt L ewis State P ress There is h o need to sugarcoat this little piece o f brain candy: I love sports. I know, big revelation. Sportswriter loves sports. But, as my ex-girlfriends know only too well, my fanaticism often­ times becomes obsession. How else can you explain my sad inability to wake u p ' before noon on m ost days, but yet somehow possess an amazing ability to be at a sports bar on Sundays by 10 a.m., Bloody Mary in hand, to watch every New York Jets and Giants game last fall? Or the fact that if I have my druthers, I’d watch ESPN Sportscenter not Once, not twice, not three times, but four times a day. And then i’ll throw on the CNN Sports Report just to see the different highlights and commentary regarding information that I’ve already seen repeatedly. As those noted prophets Mettalica once bellowed, it’s sad but true. Do I owe it to the nature of my beast? Men, after all, drink beer by the 20, mate with many and watch sports aplenty. Once again, it’s sad but true. But I’ll tell you what else is true, all may be well with sports right now, but all is hot perfect. So grab your beer, as 1 take you on a journey through the Wide World of ScrewedUp Sports. N FL F o o tba ll : “ It’s the sport o f kings, better than a diam ond ring. Football ... football.” — Wildcats. Football is definitely die sport o f kings, but for the love o f God, bring back instant replay. Too many games, way top many games, have been decided by bogus referee calls in the endzone. The NFL needs to take a cue from hockey, which replays questionable goals, and start replaying questionable touchdowns. Limit the number o f reviews per game, put a tim e frame on each review and let’s get this dam thing right. “... better than a dia­ mond ring. Football... football.” N H L H ockey: Forget about getting rid of righting, it’s not going to hap­ pen. Nor should it. EAS got rid of fighting on Sega’s NHL 96 and the game sucked. Fighting fuels the fire of players, not to mention fans, who must endure the monotony o f an 82-game season. Besides, when the playoffs start, the righting stops. What the NHL really needs to do is remove the red line at center ice. This would eliminate the ridiculous two-line pass penalty, open up die ice and speed up the game. Instead of the clutching and grabbing that has become the trademark of the NHL and which sent Mario Lemieux and his bad back into early retirement, the fans would be treated to skating and scoring and the “fastest game on ice” that the NHL advertises itself as. M L B B a se b a l l : If you ask me, the inclusion o f wild-card playoff teams and interleague play has spiced up baseball like a pre-game of pepper never could. I also believe the designated hitter in. thé American League is an interesting contrast to the pitcher-hit­ ting National League. And, as the relatively even record in recent World Series games between AL and NL teams show, neither league has an advantage come post-season. W hat baseball needs to do, how ever, is change its stupid post-season rules. The home team during the play­ offs is pre-determ ined, regardless o f w on-loss record. Stupidl Give the team with the better record the home- field advantage.*After all, if you’re going to play 162 games (and lower the games to 154 while you’re at it) m ake the season w orthwhile and rew ard the team who experienced the most success. I know, a brilliant idea. Which makes you wonder how M LB couldn’t figure this out. W ell, I ’ll tell you why. MLB is the only major league sport without a commis­ sioner. The acting commissioner is Bud Selig, who also happens to be the ow ner o f the M ilw aukee B rew ers. W hich also happens to be the same team that switched from the AL to the NL this season. Conflict o f interest anyone? If you ask me, it’s just plain stupid ! N B A B a sk etball : The NBA is in big, big trouble. N ot Juwan Howardand C hris W ebber sexual assault charge trouble. 'N ot Allen Iverson weapons and m arijuana possession trou­ ble. Not D ennis R odm an m issing practice during the NBA finals to appear at a professional w restling show trouble. Not even Larry Johnson and Alonzo M ourning slap-boxing sissy trouble. N o, my frie n d s. T he N BA is in tro u b le b ecau se Michael Jordan is retiring soon and there is nothing left but a bunch o f overpaid, overlaid, prim a donna, dunkhappy, can ’t-shoot-straight slackers left to take his place. D o h ’t even get m e started on the referees. S eriously though, the NBA is in shambles. And to think that now they are considering gping on strike. I, an underpaid, selfdeprecating, no vertical jum ping, c a n ’t shoot straight slacker columnist, love the game o f basketball so this is kind o f sad. But I say go ahead and strike. See if anybody cares. I know I don’t anymore! C lassifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting moneybe sent or invested, you may wish to investigate die company and offer. The State Press; cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721 . rrm m m Mare Trivia... A*u Bslsys k>4 6 fingerntils on one ktatl, but only 5 fingers. She bail i smell extra melt en the site ef her finger that she hegt hittea with lang glanes. APARTMENTS 1BD/1BA, 2 blocks from cam­ pus, pool, spa, laundry, cov­ ered prkng. No pets. $445/mo. 1700 S. College. 967-7212 PAPAGO PARK I 2bd/2ba, d/w, w/d, covered prkng, pool $850/mo. John 945-1370 TEMPE/ASU, Nice 1 BR, laun­ dry, a/c, fans, quieL 5 min. walk to ASU, $385.921-7120 HOMES FOR R g jT _ _ _ _ = 3BD/2BA, $800/MO. 4bd/2ba, $900/mo. 5bd/2ba, $ 1000/mo. Close to ASU. Call 894-0288 3BD/2BA, Walk to ASU Xlnt oppty. Art deco. Apache/Terrace, $725/mo. Paul, 784-4085 3BR/2BA, 2 car garage, new. Great location, Rural/ Elliot. $ 1 ,1 ^ .7 7 7 - 2 1 6 5 . APARTMENTS 1/2 OFF 1st full mdnth!s rent. 2bd/lba apts, $545. Private pa­ tio, cov'd prkng, students wel­ come- Casa Grande Apts. 9686926 NEAR ASU, 5th S t./ Priest. Large 1 BR apt. $344/mo. + dep. 996-5419 5BD/2BA, Nice area, ASU 2 mi. Pool w /sryce. AH appl. plus w/d. 2000 sq.ft. Avail, how. $ 1495/mo. + deps. 969-4480 ASU WALKING distance. 3bd/2ba, large townhouse, pool, cov'd prkng, all appl. in­ cluded. $950/mo. Call Shah, 820-3333 WUSA, O/A HUGE 4BD/2B A home near ASU. Avail, now. $1250/mo. + deposit. 816 W 10th St PMC, TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd/2ba condo, pool, w/d, a/c, patio, walk to ASU, $670/mo. 510 . W University 966-0987 MARLBOROUGH PARK 3bd/ 2ba, w/d, new carpet/paint,; 2 car gar., fenced bkyd. 496-8939 PAPAGO PARK Village, 3bd/ 2ba, avail Aug. 1, w/d» all appl, 2-story. Call 496-8939 QUESTA VIDA 3bd/3ba. Start at $1100/mo. Luxury townhouse, great for 4 people, vltd ceilings, fans, sky lights, w/d, d/w, m icro, 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, 2 story. Har­ ris Equity, 888-870-5762 TEMPE POOLSIDE deluxe, 2bd/2ba. Walk to ASU, M ill. Frplce, walk-in closets, w/d, new fridge, carpet, built in shelves, tile. No yrd. $695. 829-6302 or 317-532-0021. UNFURN. 2BD/2BA 3 mi NE of Univ. Dr. 3rd fir, great view. W/D* fridge, disposal, cable. $600/mo. Sandy, 965-5405 or 898-8820 or John 965-7239. C la n RENTAL SHARING ROOM S FOR RENT 20 YR-OLD female student looking to share house, apt or condo with other girls fbr Fall '98. Call if looking to rent out a room. Katie 425-776-0411. RMMTE WANTED to share 2 bdr, 2 ba apt 1/2 mi from ASU, f pref, male ok, $350 + 1/2 util. Call Ryan 921-8639. RMMTE NEEDED 3bd/3ba lrge beautiful house w/pool. Warner/Price. $280+1/3 util. 756-2307 4BD/2BA HOME at Southern & Rural w /pool & fireplace, F pref. Avail, now, $350/mo +utils. Lisa Marie 692-3085 C0ND O NEAR ASU, mature n/s grad. Mstr. bd, $350 of 2nd bd $300, w/d incl. comm, pool. CaU owner at 266-7675. ROOMMATE TO share 3bd townhouse (Dobson/B aseline). $350 inclds utils. Avail, now. Call 777-8965. ROOMMATES 3 needed July 1, no credit needed. $350/mo + 1/5 util, free cable/ movies, pho/ voice mail, exotic lagoon (party) pool w /jacuzzi, lg kitchen, furn. CONDO - 2B D /2b a , Clean & resp; only. $350 dep $362.50, $250 dep ($150 re­ now, $ 100 cleaning fee. N/S, fund.), 1/2 util, all appl, NS, M N/D, no drugs 1311 W. Laird or F, anim als ok. Spacious, St. (Priest & Univ), J.J. 967Broadway & McClintock, near ASU. Need rmrote by Jyly 12v 3930/ 602-653-5040 (ceU). or 31,417-9263. ROOMMATE WANTED, M/F, N/S, 3br house w/ 1 male & FEMALE ROOMMATE needed dog. Wamer/Price. 755-8345 to share room in 3bd/2ba patio home. $335+1/3 util. Call April 897-6906; Jeff 491-0061 ROOM S FOR *" LOOKING FOR laidback room­ mate to share lg 4bd house on Price/Broadway w/pool, w/d, & pets. $300+ 1/4 util. 966-7931 t if l e d 8 W o r k 'fo r Y o u ! HELP WANTED- • GENERAL R |A L |^ |_ _ RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTEDGENERAL ROOMMATES NEEDED: 7/1 &. 9/1. 4 bd house, walk to ASU. $276/mo.+util. Stdnts or grads prefd. CaU Leah, 774-0640 A QUIET atmosphere, Scot­ tsdale. Responsible roommate to share 3bd furnished townhouse. $350/mo. inclds all + dep.+refs. 924-7551, lv msg. STRESS FREE rmmate to share house w/2 others in The Lakes. $400 inclds util. & clubhouse. Avail, now. Brian, 755-0504 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR S A L g _ _ _ _ PAPAGO PARK, 3bd condo, very clean. Pref. mature student/ profess. W/D & all amen., own bthrm, $375. July 1.929-9962 TEMPE/ASU-BUY for $0 down! Take over payments* FHA as­ sum., 2bd/2ba near Broadway/ College. Nice linit w /lots of closet space, cov'd prkng, w/d, lg pvt patio, pool, frig. Must qualify @ $588/mo. & HOA . dues & be owner occupied, $57.5K. CaU Sam for info at 800675-4049 x21 lo r 714-729-5601. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL 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 fw current listings. FURNJTW^_^^^ HIDE-A-BED; tan, xlnt con­ dition. Orig owner,. $150 obO. Make me an offer. 754-6724 COMPUTERSCPX LAPTOP & printer, never used, exbas, $1600.833-0626 MACINTOCH LC3, 14" color m oniter. Style W riter 11, key­ board, mouse & pad. $450. 270-8383, lv. msg. POWER MAC 6500, 275Mhz, multi-media, avid video card, 96MB ram, 461 HD, software, TV & radio tuner, vidto player w/ remote, $1000. Call Eric at 351-4508, lv. phone # & name. TICKETS PEARL JAM tickets, July 8th, $50 each, I deliver. Call 4968939 ^ Fn > i t Fa s t n the Classfed s! I HELP WANTEDGENERAL 866-0000 1 0 1 B edroom A partm en ts LARGE 3BD bouse, w/d, d/w, a/c, etc. Excellent condition. Broadway/ McClintock, $995. 966-2627 or 692-0844. Close to Cam pus PROFESSORS, GRADS, rare opportunity. Date Palm Manor, Broadway/Mill, 3bd/2ba, hard­ wood floors, sem i-custom, $130Q/mo. Paul, 784-4085. A pache Terrae« » 6 8 > 38 3 FREE REN TAL SERVICE APARTMENT MATCH The any way to apt looting Phone 736-0100 (ICI S. M ill Awe. Ste. toed Tempe, AZ 8588* (1 Mock south I S J m um of Broadway on M W Call Toil Free 1-888-260-3788 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT ASU/TEMPE-S0 down! Take over paym ents, FHA assum., 2bd/2ba near Broadway/College. Nice unit w/ lots of closet space, cov'd prkng, w/d, lg pvt patio, pool, frig. Must qualify @ $588/mo. & HOA dues & be owner occupied, $57.5K Call Sam for info at 800-675.-4049 x211 or 714-729-5601. COMMONS ON Lemon, 2bd/ 2ba, fully furn. Spa, pool, sand vllybll, d/w, w/d, dsgnd for 4. $250 each. Aug 16.756-1136 Classifieds - 965-6735 Tutors Needed If you have a desire to help High School students succeed, we have positions available for graduate students with the ability to tutor in all three (not just one) of the following subjects: * High School Spanish 1-2 ★ High School Algebra 1-2 * High School Chemistry 1-2 W e offer a Monday-Thursday schedule (must work at least two full days from 1:30pm-8:30pm), a wage of $654-$1,632/month, and valuable work experience. For more information on Fall openings, please call 953-3070 Summer positions available NOW for High School and Elementary teachers. S u m m er S u n sa u o n a l Earn up to $192 per month by donating life-saving plasma! New donors earn a total of $70 for the first 2 donations. Visit our friendly, modem center and find out more about the opportunity to earn cash while helping others. C e iS lT E O N B io - S o r v lc o s , In c . 968-6139 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102* Tempe M u s t b e 16-48 y e ar» o ta g e , p or o s e» a «WM ID a n d proof o í lo cal ad d r e w S. S o d a r Security number. Page 22 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 AyTOM Ogys^ 70 VW BUS camper, low miles engine/trans, runs great, every­ thing works. S ilk in receipts, 1st $2995 5044*16. 91 SATURN SL2, twin cam, 4 dr, pwr windws A locks, Sspd, a/c. $4250. Boh, 890-7861 91 VW GOLF GL, red, 4dr, Sspd, a/c, am/fm, CD, xlnt in­ terior, 76K. April tags, $4000 obo. Bruno, 493-8000 x 3361 94 FORD MUST, con v, wht/wht, V-6, pw, ps, abs, cd, 53k mi, nice shape, 1 owner. $12,000 obo. 563-7687. SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, C adil­ lacs, Chevys, BMW's, Cor­ vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD’s. Y,our area. Toll free, 1-800-2189000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings.' BICYCLES RALEIGH T ECHNIUM, front suspension, barends, clipless pedals, on A offroad tires. $500. 270-8383,Ivmsg. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CAREER OPPORTUNITY- 20 yf bid barter organization has openings for pt & ft, trade brok­ er & admin. Multi-tasked. Basic computer & good comm; skills a must. Flex, hrsv Salary + ben. Call Lori at 443-0322 ext, 225. AIDE NEEDED yesterday for disabled girl! ASU credit? Fern, M-Fy 3pm-9pm, $7-l0/hr., own car' 423-5903. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ANSWERING SERVICE -P /T variable. Shifts start at 2 or 3pm10 or 11pm. Also 3 graveyard shifts avail. Thurs., T ri., Sat., 10pm-8am. 553-4302 COMPUTER NETWK Admin/ Progrmr. P/T. Com petent in SQL, Visual Basics, NT40 Serv­ er. Ability to m anage/maintain/im plem ent Internet, pro­ grams, office systems & train personnel. Interpersonal skills a must. Fax resume: 244-1538 HOSTESS NEEDED, p/t. Apply in person 8 Mike Pulos' Spaghetti Company, 414 S. Mill in downtown Tempe, bet­ ween 2-5pm. Do it today^it's a great place to work! PT/FT POSITIONS for students in­ terested in legal profession. Need professional appearance & car. Call 452-1826 for appt. SELL PROGRAMS at B.O.B. Great money! Paid in cash! Call Patrick, 736-8592. CUST SERV. Reps wanted ft/pt for Tempe Co. Good pay, ca­ sual work environment, close to ASU. Call Karen 967-2678 Openings - Growing Compnay needs the following positions: Admin. Asst./Exec. Sec., excel­ lent pay, FT, $9.00 up, DOE. Receptionist, opportunity to grow, FT/PT, $7.00 up, DOE. Acet. Reps.-outside sales, FT/ PT, com pensation package. Draw commission. All posi­ tions full medical, dental, eye. Mesa office. Call Kevin Stevens at 833-9560, M-F, 9-6. SURF CITY Squeeze at Centerpoint is looking for a Juice Bar m anager responsible for store operations including man­ agement of staff, maintenance of store inventory, deposit of dai­ ly receipts, record sales, cus­ tomer relations. 40-45hrs./wk., shifts vary. Salary DOE A edu­ cation. Please contact our cor­ porate office, CSS at 921-1616. AZ YOUTH Assoc, is a be­ havioral Health Agency found­ ed in 1985 to assist in de­ pendant, delinquent & emo­ tionally disturbed youth. We have positions avail through­ out Phx A Mesa for Behavioral Health professionals of all lev­ els, incl masters, bachelors, student & interns who have the desire to work in a residential setting. For more info please contact the Human Resources Dept 602-861- 0625 BDC DATA entry, PT; 2 lot at­ tendants* PT or FT. Apply at front desk of AutoNation USA. 705-3600. Me c h a n ic needed F/T, experience nee. Good sal­ ary plus benefits. Apply Domenic's Cycling, 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe, 967-7700 b ic y c l e CASE WORKER for hire. Will be responsible for developing, accessing, facilitating & moni­ toring all components of case load. Bachelor's in Soc. Sci. Bi­ lingual prefd. Fax Suzanne at 484-7069. CLICKS BILLARDS in Phx is looking for energetic, moti­ vated people who want tp have fun in a drug-free atmosphere. We offer full benefits. Apply in person. 40th S t & Thomas. DESIGN ROOM asst, wanted p/t for local Tempe mfg. Duties will incl. digitizing templates into CAD/CAM system. Assist w/new im plication design & other projects. Great exp. for. eng. or CAD students. Close to ASU. Call Brad 967-2678 IMMEDIATE the at 8 7 4 -2 7 1 4 \ Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote community par­ ticipation for individuals with develop­ mental disabilities. We offer a variety of positions working with individuals in their own homes or residential set­ tings. We offer over 40 hours of paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. We have flexible schedules with FT, PT and on-call positions available immediately. Our pay ranges from $7.00- $8.00 DOE/EOE. Please call 431-9511 for more information. ij SECRETARY/RECEPT. Computer/ people skills req'd. M-Th, 3-8:30pm. Located at Scottsdale Airpark. $7/hr. 951-2716 SELL ADVERTISING for the Stale Press. Start now! Pick up an application in the Matthews Center, Rm 15. Great experi­ ence. Great pay. Great place. Do it now ! GRAPHIC ARTISTS needed with extensive IBM CorelDraW exp. Fax resume to 807-679L TELEMARKETING-9 YEAR old local company w/ supportive management. $ 10/hr. base up to For June 29th hair show. Earn $20.00. We train. Flexible hours, $100 cash + hair products. Call weekty pay.Daily cash bonus. Tempe Aveda Institute, 470-8167 for o location. Close to ASU. 350-9336 info. or 800-279-5686. MOTIVATED PROFESSIONAL SPORTS MINDED needed for telemarketing/ mar­ Now hiring 6-8 individuals for keting assistant 'position. immediate entplymt: $8 guar, to Course credit avail. $6/hr. + bo­ start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call nuses. M-F, 8am -12pm. Call Jon for interview between 2pmChris, 667-4618. 4pm, 921-8282. NEWS REPORTERS needed for Store Press Fall 98 semester. Applications may be picked up in the Matthews Center Base­ ment, Room 15. Q uestions:' Chris Kahn, 965-2292 or email Christoki@asu.edu. Dead­ line July 31st. GROWING TEMPE Opinion Research firm has several posi­ tions available. Flexible full or part-time. 967-4441 PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/t, $ 8 ,10/hr, no exp nee. Heavy, lifting reqd. 804-0300 DRIVER NEEDED- license sus­ pended- mornings or after­ noons 1-2 dys/wk. Car & gas while driving supplied. Todd 945-4200 EARN UP to $1000 a week! Contract Sales Rep. for senior resource directory. 1 yr. exp., must have transportation. Call 256-6840, ask for Sally. FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $7-12/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054. M A P M O BILE Communications is one o f the nation's offers hourly plus bonus You’ll like interviewing consum ers No sales. Ideal for students. C all RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tempe. Cindy, 496-0255 ________ MODELS NEEDED .G ILL CENTER RE FO CUS training, people? phone. S tate P ress most innovative messaging centers and currently has openings for professional, courteous rrte p tio fw iM iR handle in b ou n d calls. N o selling o r tetem ati& IM igf involved. We are located on 48th S t Just south o f Baseline. Qualified applicants must possess excellent spelling and communication skills and typing sp eed o f 35 wpm. W e currently have F/T & P/T shifts avail. $7 p e r hour to start w hich includes excellent benefits. C^ fflois o r Clara to set up interview. ’ brive a School Bus! Paid summer training NOW for school starting in August. If you enjoy being outdoors & working with children, then this: is the job for you! 20 hr/wk minimum guarantee. $8.96/hr. Apply at: Tempe Elementary School District #3, 3205 S. Rural Rd. 00 00 WE'RE LOOKING for two crea­ tive, detail-oriented, outgoing ASU students to be a part o f the State Press marketing team. The position encom passes all phases of promoting the State Press A Devil D eals...every­ thing from creating promotions to tracking numbers. This is a position that requires quick» thoughtful thinking & a com­ mitment to detail & excellence. If you want a fun job on cam­ pus that will keep you very busy, then submit a one page essay that creatively explains why you would work well in this position. If you have ques­ tions* call Jackie Eldridge at 965-6741. Please e-mail your essay to: HireM e@asu.edu pr fax it to 965-4706 o r drop it off in Matthews Center, room 47"T>y July 1. Hours are flexi­ ble, approx! 15 hrs./week, $5.50/hr.r.it's a great place to work! HELP WANTEDSALES PUT YOUR money where your mouth is. Set appts. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. + comm. $12/hr. avg. 829-6222 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL F/T ADMINISTRATIVE Asst., receptionist for S. Scottsdale event marketing office. Mac ex­ perience' a plus. Salary $7$9/hr. Fax resume by 7/1/98 to Carolyn at 970-3717. HELP WANTEDGENERAL O f f ic e A s s is t a n t ■ Looking for on individual w ith general clerical experience. M ast be able to use photocopier, facsim ile m achines, type­ writer, and com puter. Must be able to p o sitiv ely in tera ct w ith public and answer phonic courteously. Part-tim e , position available M-F 12-5. '7 .0 0 *7.50 DOE. F ill out an application at 2403 W. H untington Dr. #100, Tempe a t 48th ft Southern, behind Bank One or call 431-9511 for more inform ation. H r * " * - - ? 431-0054 / ----- & Scottsdale _ ' Si " Resort and Villas “Summer” employment opportunities: ;" : • Pool Server • P M B tisser » Night Auditor • Sales Assistant • Preventative Maintenance Engineer • Guest Services Agent J o b H o t lin e : 9 4 8 -7 7 5 0 e x t. 4 9 0 Apply in person Mon-Fri, 9am - 3pm at the Scottsdale Hilton In the Human Resources Office 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85250 Business Attire required for sam e day interviews EO E/D rug Flfêe RESTALIRA, Inc., exclusive food and beverage provider for the America West Arena seeks candidates to fill immediate openings: Concession Stand Workers $6.50/Hour Assistant & Stand Managers $6.85-7,25/Hour Positions are ideal for self-motivating, dependable individuals who seek part-time work for supplemental income with flexible hours. Selected candidates will start immediately. Please apply: A m e ric a ’s d isco u n t so u rce for com p uters, hardw are and softw are Attention ASU Graduates and Students: We need your help! Tempe-based Insight is a $485 m illion, publicly-traded telesales organization marketing com puters, hardware and software to business custom ers nationwide. We are seeking career-oriented professionals look in g for great opportunities to join our 1000+ employees in a fast-paced and fun environment. E n to rn s h ip s College ,, 10 internships offered Flexible part-tim e hours $9.00 per h ou r to s ta r t. w Students ido s itio n s *•' C o l le g e G r a d u a t e s Business Am erica W est Arena 2 0 1 E. Jefferson Phoenix, A Z 8 5 0 0 4 Business lo p 2 Perform ers w ill After form al job training, raceive a scholarship for you w ill rocoive the follow ing sem ester Base+Bonus+Benefits Interested in being an Intern at Insight? Please apply in person (n o phone calls) at: 6 8 2 0 South Harl Avenue, Tem pe, Arizona 8 5 2 8 3 Insight o f t » a competitive salary, bonus plans, 401K and stock purchase plan. Apply in person M-F from 8am-5pm, FAX (602) 9021157 (Attn: Nicol Henning), or m ai resume. Please specify you are applying for internship position. No phone calls will be accepted Smoke-free workplace. Drug testing. EOE m/f/h/v. Visit our Web Site at wwwjnsi^Lcom G uest Service Entrance 1st St. & Jefferson M onday, June 2 9 , 1Ó a.m .-7 p.m . Tuesday, June 3 0 , 1 0 a .m .-5 p.m . Page 23 Tuesday, June 23,1998 S t a t e P ress HELP WANTED* CLERICAL RECEPTIONIST Old Towne Scottsdale office is looking for p/t receptionist for eve. & wknd hrs. Flexible schedule & fun working envi­ ronment. Outgoing personality & professional appearance are a must. If you love interacting w/ people, call Deanne a t -945* 1997 RECEPTIONIST/ OPERATOR for busy real estate co. in Scot­ tsdale. Variable wknds. Please call Nancy Sauder at 991-2929. HELP WANTEDC H IU JC A R ^ ^ EXPERIENCED RELIABLE babysitter needed. Variable eve. hrs Call Kristie, 517-0357, LOOKING FOR nanny in Chandler home. Must have re­ liable transport. & verif. refer­ ences. N/S home. Call 8022962, between 5:30pm-8pm. Classifieds 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL JO B OPPORTUNITIES POWERFUL JOB Hunting workbook, "Real World Net­ working"- $9.95. Real World Business Systems, P.O. Box 17056, Phx, AZ 85011-0056 F/T PUBLIC Relations. P R. inedia & promotions for. special events. Starting salary range $20-24K. Fax resume & writing sample to: Cause & Effect Mar­ keting by 111/98 . Attn : Kelly, (602)970-3717. BUSINESS " OPPORTUNITIES ARE YOU worth it? If you don't think you're making what you're worth, we should talk! 1800-493-1174! MAKE SERIOUS $$$ and get a free Gateway pomputer plus website. Need help now. Call 888-251-8961. Coordinate Tours/ Reservations • Guarantee $7-$15.82Air. • 37 Perm anent Positions •9-1 o r 5.00-900 (24 & 30+ Hrs) • Training Provided, N o Selling TUTORS MATH TUTOR for Algebra, PreCalculus, Calculus, Finite Math,. Statistics, and more. Call Andrew 730-5904. STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. Apply iu person lpm-5pm, MF. 5001 E, Washington. WANTED! 79 people to lose 10-29 pounds in the next 25 day call 888-268-6506. INSTRUCTION 965-7572 S2.50/PG, S15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA. Same day. Near ASÜ. Brian, 967-5987. by Frances Drake Tuesday, June 2 3 ,1 9 9 8 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) It’s an excellent day for enhancing your b u sin ess prospects, so use your powers o f communication wisely. It’s a great time to invest in some new office equipment. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Your thoughts are con­ sumed by money, and how to acquire more o f it. Doh’t let the unusual spell blind you to the true meaning o f encoun­ ters. GEMINI (M ay 21 to June 2 0 ) The w eek b eg in s with admirers lin in g up outside your dopr. Single Twins are likely to find a new admirer, while attached Geminis fall in love with their partner all over again. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You might find yourself feeling rather overwhelmed. Seek help from good friends, and plan for a quiet relaxing evening at home. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You are in the spotlight at all social gatherings, and the Lion rev els in such attention. A new acquaintance affects your philosophical outlook. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Try to stop yourself from day­ dream ing so m uch, as you really need to take a c l o s e . look at the details, E nlist a practical friend if you’re feel­ ing overwhelmed. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) You aré filled with positive energy, and others gravitate toward your radiant presence. It’s an ex cellen t tim e for a Hove Fun... Make Money... Meet People RESTAURANTS/ BARS C a ll! - 8 0 0 - B A R T E N D ■vvvw.oartendingacademy.com 0 [’ W o rd W k rk s T y p e w r it in g E d it in g BOOKS Term Paper Editing & Typing Resumes • Theses • Dissertations Applications » Cover Letters 262-5454 1-Day Servie* Kathy Jerom e A SU ’S National Literary Magazine F a tte ti Typist In Ihb USA W estern Tem porary Services N ational Typing Contest -1 6 2 wpm C all for inform ation about our nëxt issue! RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS Cf>SMÏC 965-1243 966-6339 491-4921 It’s Simple. Gourmet Qzal We’ve got everything you want. Great weekly pay, all the benefits, perfect schedules, a relaxed atmosphere & terrific training to help you succeed! FREE DELIVERY Give us a call. 735-000 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST B arten d in g A ca d e m y State Press Information TYPING/WORD PROCESSING RESTAURANTS/ BARS SERVICES NEW RESORT RESERVATION CENTER INSTRUCTION INTERACT ACTORS Studio: LA-based acting studio is look­ ing for students for its Phoenix class. Call: Rick Johnson at 818-990-7443 or leave mes­ sage at 940-1935. Find out what it takes to make it in Hol­ lywood. A S U Box 871502 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement HEALTH & FITNESS office: 965-6735 Summer Classified Ad Order Form L A R G E R BREASTS! A fford­ long heart-to-heart conversa­ tion with a special friend. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Be sure to remember the facts while being swept up in the thrill o f a moment. If you still insist on taking a risk, don’t except the outcome to be as you planned. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to D ec. 21) The fu n -lo v in g Archer is feeling a little seri­ ous. Someone might be trying to get a rise out o f you, but keep your cool when it comes to your heartfelt convictions. CAPRICORN (D ec. 22 to Jan. 19) Your day takes an unexpected departure from the routine. If a good friend calls on you for help, make sure to cancel all other plans. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) F in an cial w o es you thought long gone might rear their head again. Pay a visit to your accountant and devise a more-realistic budget. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) W hile you think you’re being perfectly clear, others are having trouble com pre­ hending your message. Stow down. If necessary, go back to square one. YOU BORN TODAY have e x c e lle n t com m u n ication skills, and learning comes eas­ ily to you. Completing pro­ jects might be difficult for you and long-term goals can be hard to attain. Home and fami­ ly are important to you. You crave emotional security. © 1998 K ing Features Syndicate Inc. able & safe altern ativ e to im ­ plant! Toll-free 877-6-BREAST Name Home Phone Business Phone HELP WANTEDGENERAL Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words: Psych & Social Work Majors % Gain Valuable Experience D BC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents. and young adults who are Developmentaliy. Em otionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn S6.50 - $8.00 per Hour W orking With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursem ent, Paid Tim e Off, Advancement Potential, 6 MPnth R aises, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package SubmitAppHcaooos To-. DBC RMidanBat Swutees 2405 E & M h « n A w k « 9 Tempe, AZ8S282 766-1223 Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall hot exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE! Have fun c a llin g Valley s in g le s to invite th em in for a fre e tour o f S c o tts d a le 's m o st p r e stig io u s s in g le s se rv ic e, p lu s b o n u s e s ($12 - $ 15 /h r avg.) n o e x p e r ie n c e req'd 9 4 1 - 0 5 0 0 __ ____ □ O B „ Q Please include 1 •_: / •■••• M S i p w Ai _ ■ Private Party "' ^7*Á'y"# ' t'fá '/ ■ Commercial 1-4 issues -.$1.67 perline, per day 5-9 issues - $1.55 per line, per day 10 issues - $1.36 per line, per day £ § r. *................................... . 6 of Days .. r ...... Total X = . 'lÊ É Ê È Ê Ê m . Classtflftatton NamafNumber; * 6 .. ...................... ~ 1-4 issues - $2.00 per line, per day 5-9 issues - $1.87 per line, per day 10 issues -$1,74 perline, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines, per day. Pries par Day M Name on Card The Sfate Press publishes weekly during the summer. Dates vou wish vour ad to run: 9 1 TSêê ÊILIStaMÉÉfeEMlfaMT t ' ' ■ > '{ ' '%■ ? V' Great Expectations! $ 1 O /H R G U A R A N T E E D !!! B R ' % * Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads through the mall. 1_______ !_____________________________ 1 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 066 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Autom obiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found 's088 052 049 101 074 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted- Child Care 072 Help W anted-Clerical 073 Help Wanted- Food Service 070 Help W anted-General 071 030 040 102 107 103 075 135 Help W anted-Sales Homes for Rent Home (or Sale Housecleaning Instruction ’ Insurance Internships Internet-Related Services 130 Internet U R Ls 056 076 015 120 050 045 063 048 082 090 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous for Sale M obile Homes M otorcycles Moving & Storage M usic Personals 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Room s for Rent Services Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for Saie Transportation Travel , Tutors Typlng/Word Processing 115 W anted 041 060 067 106 105 Page 24 Tuesday, June 23, 1998 S ta te P ress PARTY WITH THE BEAVER 3pm -1 am BAR& RDEN 1001 E. 8™ STREET TEMPE, A Z 85281 University 8th Street 6 0 2 * 3 5 0 * 9 8 8 8 Apache