ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY In s id e Classified* Comics. C msMvrau 20 Horoscopes.................... ........ 25 w ©Copyright, State Press. 1998 Tempe. Arizona l ! _ ____H An Independent Summer Weekly Voi. 83 No. 75 Tuesday, July 14,1998 m m m v a l l e y f i r e f i g h t e r s s t r u g g l e t h e i r e m t o d e a l o t i o n s w i t h d a i l y . News I Opinions 1 Movies • Sports S tate P ress Tuesday, July 14, 1998 Frats face closure Aug. 1 Arizonans like if no sprinklers installed B y J ayso n P eters S tate P ress The historic fraternity houses on Alpha Drive may soon be just that — history. The state Fire M arshal’s O ffice said it w ill shut the houses down Aug. 1 if they do not comply with a two-yearold order to install fire sprinklers. Jim Geil, a deputy state Fire Marshal who gave the order two years ago, said the action was the indirect result of an accidental fire that killed five people in Chapel Hill, N.C., in 1996. He said that event “certainly caused us to look at fraternity houses more strictly.” “Some o f the conditions that existed there exist here,” he said. “They (the A lpha D rive houses) all needed to be sprinklered.” Yet little has been done to the houses since the order came down to install the sprinklers, which help contain and extinguish blazes. “It’s the eleventh hour,” said Robert Francis, executive coordinator for Greek Life. He said it could take between $500,000 and $800,000 to bring each fraternity house up to code. The task involves not only the installation o f sprinklers, but the removal o f asbestos as well. A lthough the known carcinogen is sealed and is not itself a fire code violation, it will be exposed when the houses’ ceilings are tom up and it will need to be removed, Francis said. Geil said the houses on AdelphiDrive are already up to fire code. The health of fraternity members is not the only thing at stake, however, according to the Associated Students o f A SU . T he stu d en t g o v e rn m e n t’s S um m er E x e c u tiv e Committee issued a resolution Wednesday highlighting the potential harms to the community involved if available housing at ASU is reduced even further by closing down the fratemity houses. The resolution warned against forcing students to relocate “from the domain of campus police” and “placing them in neighborhoods less tolerant of fraternal life. “ASU would be doing a disservice to its neighbors by displacing fraternities and creating a potentially divisive situation,” the resolution statedASASU also declared its support for a Greek proposal that the University “act as a responsible landlord” and “pay for the improvements needed to these 35-year-old buildings, “The Associated Students o f Arizona State University endorses the fraternities’ view that they are merely tenants of the houses on Alpha Drive, and are not the ‘constructive owners.’” In 1994, the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity sued the University for more than $63,000 after completing repairs on the house, The fraternity claimed they were tenants in the house and the University should be responsible for the maintenance, The Arizona Board o f Regents settled the lawsuit, but that doesn’t help the other houses who face big bills for safety improvements, The houses on Alpha Drive, ASU’s “fraternity row,” are growing accustomed to emptiness. Financial problems and misbehavior have temporarily shut down the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. The Pi Kappa Alpha house has been closed since a fire last summer. And the Theta Delta Chi house has been vacant since 1995. Francis said that although the fraternities “have not always received good {Hess,” he supports Greeks on campus, adding that he hopes for a compromise that will give them the time they need to complete the upgrades, “I would hope we all support continued Greek life at ASU,” he said. While he said he would be “extremely dis: appointed” if no compromise is reached, “the welfare (of) the individuals that are going to live in those houses” is most important, The fraternity houses on Alpha Drive were built by the University in 1962 with the help o f municipal bonds that were issued to cover the cost. Since then, the fraternities have paid monthly rent in an effort to pay back the bonds by 2002. At that time, most fraternities will be able to take ownership o f the houses for the cost o f die land — about $200,000, ASU officials said. Only one fraternity has exercised their purchase option. iM M l ^ÿÉvmém ém ém bm “He is truly Mr Arizona,” M etili said "1 think peo­ ple just like the name of Sky Harbor and prefer to keep it. 1 think they feel there arc other, more appropriate W hile 27 percent o f die respondents wanted to see (he name changed. 10 percent said they had no opinion Voters in Maricopa County were even more support­ ive o f retaming the current airport name than voters liv­ ing in other parts o f the state O f the 314 voters sampled in Maricopa County, 74 percent did not w ant the nam e changed. 18 percent wanted to have the Goldwater name included and 8 per­ cent did not have an opinion. According to the pollsters, the i ssampling s s error i i afor the a statewide sample o f 412 voters was plus or minus 4.8 percent, while the sampling error for the sample of 312 Maricopa County voters was plus or minus 5.5 percent Other opinions examined by the poll were approval ratings o f Gov. Jane Hull. Sen. John McCain and Sen. John Kyi. ** Results indicate that 74 percent of all registered vot­ ers approve of the job Hull is doing as governor. Sen. John McCain’s popularity ratings have dropped front 75 percent in April 1998 to 61 percent in June 1998 SUNDAY JULY 19TH MAJOR RECORDING ARTIST BIG PUNISHER LIVE AT POMPEII CALL FOR DETAILS PO M PEII SU M M E R S C H E D U L E W ED N ESD A Y S: * P E N N Y D R IN K S from 8 pm to iopm & -m illen n iu m " with . DJ STEVE LEVINE SPINNING THE BEST HIGH ENERGY DANCE MUSIC IN THE CITY! FR ID 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! SA 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 pm : e x p e r ie n c e OF DANCE CLUB. th e n ext le v e l A R E YO U U N D E R 2 1 ? DON'T FORGET ABOUT AFTERHOURS ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FROM 1AM TO 3AM! 9 1 9 E ast A p a c h e , T e m p e 9 6 6 -B 0 0 4 S tate P ress Tuesday, July 14,1998 Page 3 A nnihilation by m eteors unlikely, exp erts say B y A ngela Y eager S tate P ress W ith the millennium quickly approaching, the fear of the end o f the world has crept into the minds o f many Americans. Films such as Deep Impact and Armageddon only feed on the Year 2000 jitters. The question is, how real is the possibility o f a meteorite coming and wiping out mankind? A cc o rd in g to A SU im pact c ra te r re se a rc h er John M cH o n e, sc e n a rio s such as th e ones p re se n te d in Hollywood films are closer to fiction than fact. In reality, the possibility o f extinction due to meteorites is almost non-existent. “T here aren ’t very many large particles out th ere,” M cH one said. "In history, there h asn’t been anything o b se rv e d th at is c lo se tb the size Of the astero id , in Armageddon." A cco rd in g to M cH one. the larg est m eteo rite ev er observed from space was about half of the size o f Texas. However, even a smaller meteorite can cause damage. ■“The meteorite that is thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs was about 10 kilometers wide, or six m iles,” McHone said. In Armageddon, a giant asteroid the size o f Texas is hurling towards the earth. Only a few days are left until the asteroid wipes out civilization and it is up to a few men to insert a nuclear bomb in the asteroid. M cHone said this scenario is pure fiction. “Something that big would be detected years before impact,” he said. McHone said several outlook centers are set up across the world- Researchers and scientists are constantly on the lookout for objects in the sky. He said if something was projected to hit earth, there would be years to devise a way to stop it. McHone also added that drilling a hole in the asteroid would probably not break it up and set it off its course. “Underground nuclear tests are being performed all the time on Earth,” he said. “The country o f Pakistan didn't break up when they set o ff underground nuclear explo­ sions.” , Despite the improbability of risk, there are plans in case the impossible becomes possible. McHone said these plans include sending a robot controlled rocket or nuclear bomb up to the asteroid or comet and setting o ff an explosion ASU scien tists say m ovies predicting world destruction by a meteorite are far from reality. Pictured here is Asteroid Ida, which is about 55 km in length. This photo w as taken by the Galileo spacecraft. next to it in order to “nudge” the object off its course. M cHone isn ’t alone in his study o f particles from o u te r sp ace. P ro fe sso r C a rle to n M oore is in v o lv ed w ith th e A SU M e te o rite C e n te r, w h ic h h o ld s th e largest co llectio n o f m eteo rites o f any u n iv ersity in the w orld. M oore is busy th ese days an sw erin g the pu b lic’s questions about the m eteorite that is thought to have landed near C asa G rande in June. A fireball was w itnessed shooting dow n from the sky, but so far, the crash site has not been found. “Hundreds o f people have come in holding pieces o f rock they thought were meteorite pieces,” Moore said, and added that meteorite pieces are valuable if found, but the chance o f the average person finding pieces with the naked eye are slim. “Unless you know what to look for, it can be difficult.” Moore warns people to find out what to look for, or else they could be in for a big disappointment. “ One lady drove here from C orpus C hristi, Texas because she was sure she had a meteorite part,” he said. “When I told her it was only a rock, she broke down into tears.” The meteorite center is located in Physical Sciences CWing and is open to the public. M W sPpM M kat,410 Äve^l ^ a h É K I ifaso n sn iah tclu b .td tè:' >jfcAWÙM :* w ^ THURS ;0m fe BA/tf| AgM'SHP^ "o i ^ i I í é ^ R Kcmmmm Sushi Bar Restaurant W ednesdays: From 6-8 enjoy our great Happy Hour specials and see Stephen Ashbrook of Satellite play acoustic, tnursdays: From 6-8 kick back and listen to Mark & Lawrence of the Pistoleros as they groove during Happy Hour. \ Located on the southeast comer of Scottsdale Road and First Street 990-9256 O p in ió n Page 4 Tuesday, July 14, 1998 S ta te P ress ; their existence. A «tate auditor wasn’t puDing its w ei^u and faiiingto recruit students -a branch campus with grater ambitions, but it is time for ' University dfâtàsSs to r e d in die' Glendale campus an^ use it to relieve the population pressure d Main. BRAVO to Phoenix Mayor .Skip “Skippÿ“ IScuÙiit# skipping away from Ws personal drive to rename ¡Sky I Harbor International Airport aft«' Sen, Goldwater. It’s nice to see a politician recognizing when their ideas clash with the community they represent After receiving more [ tona 2,000 phone calls rejecting the idea in one d ut, Skippy backed off. But J hot that people who are not usually become so. It’s so hat kids stay inside with the dnnwL U’s ro he*, m cream is bailee &’s w h o t- «J tth eid ea.B u taB » A V O isin « d erfo rto eeiliy H appiness com es from w ith in way you are. (W hoa! M r. R ogers alert!) W hether you “To be, or n o t to be. That ENNIFER w atch too m uch television or not enough, w hether you is the q uestion.” LACASELLA eat too m uch ju n k food or too little, w hether you are a T h u s b e g in s H a m le t’ s happy-go-lucky beach bum (or pool bum in the case o f fa m o u s s p e e c h in o n e o f Columnist A rizona) or a studious intellectual, you are a u n iq u e S h a k e s p e a re ’s m o st stu d ie d plays. It was a very serious question th at H am let was individual and you d o n ’t have to change ju s t because asking him self, and in d eed , one th at w e should also, o th e r p e o p le say y o u o u g h t to, (N ote: H o w ev er, if ask ourselves. To be w hat w e are or not to be w hat we your tastebuds w ater at the m ention o f a yum m y liver dinner, you do need to change.) W hoever you are and are. T hat is the question. The b est way fo r m e to describe m yself w ould be to w hatever you’re like is fine. I ’m happy being me, ju st say th at I am an atom ic bom b in danger o f exploding as everyone e lse (except the liv e r-e a ters) should be at any m om ent. M y stom ach alone is a raging inferno happy being him or herself. If you are one o f those lucky people w ho likes the that threatens me w ith burning ulcers. In short, I am very stressed out. T h a t’s really no big deal because w ay y o u are an d you are h ap p y e n o u g h w ith y o u r every student is very stressed b ut, b u t the incredible im p e rfe c tio n s to le t th em c o n tin u e a d d in g to y o u r thing about m e is th at I am very stressed out 24-hours overall perfection, then my advice is to tell the rest o f a day, seven days a w eek. I have been since the day I the w orld to m ind its ow n b u siness (I guess we can was bom and I w ill be until the day I die. T h at’s me. add hypocrisy to my list o f faults since I ju s t advised y o u a ll th at you sh o u ld n o t listen to o th e r p e o p le ’s A nd th at’s fine. I h a v e b e e n c r itic iz e d c o u n tle s s tim e s fo r th is a d v ic e ). J u s t b e c a u s e p e o p le g iv e y o u u n w a n te d o m n ip re se n t p re o c c u p a tio n th a t h a u n ts m e day and advice about how to change this, that o r the other per­ n ig h t, and .m any p eo p le have o ffe re d the fo llo w in g sonal trait o f yours, doesn’t m ean you have to listen sage advice - “R elax!” Easy fo r them to say. Even if I (but listen to me anyw ay because w e’ve already estab­ d id n ’t have anything at all to w orry about (and w hen I lish e d th a t I ’m a h y p o c rite ). J u s t as e v e ry o n e can say nothing I m ean nothing - not tests, not papers, not change if he o r she so chooses, everyone can rem ain biological w arfare, not the environm ent, n o t anything) the sam e if he or she so chooses. R em em ber that happiness is the ultim ate life goal I w ould still fin d som ething to w orry about. I t’s my nature. I f nothing is bothering m e I feel incom plete. and you should do (o r not do) w hatever it is you need L u c k ily , life h as d o n e a p re tty g o o d jo b la te ly o f to do (or not do) to be happy. W ork tow ard the satis­ handing me problem s to w orry about, so I h aven’t had faction o f your ow n life goals - ju s t try to do it w ith­ to go looking fo r any. N evertheless, I don’t appreciate out eating liver. B ecause if yo u ’re happy as a beach a ll th ese peo p le o fferin g me unw anted advice about bum (o r w h atev er you are) th a t’s g reat; ju s t as i t ’s how to change m yself w hen I ’m quite happy being the g reat th at I ’m happy as an atom ic bom b. R em em ber w alking atom ic bom b th at I am. So please, don’t c riti­ th a t S h a k e sp e a re a lso said , “T o th in e ow n s e lf be -.true.” . cize me fo r w orrying too m uch. Jennifer La C aselld is er graduate student studying In return, I prom ise not to critic iz e you fo r being S p a n ish L ite r a tu r e a n d ca n be re a c h e d a t w ho you are. Y ou are you, and even though you may not be a w alking atom ic bom b, you are perfect ju s t the queviva @imap2. asu. edu. J T IM O T H Y TA IT, E ditor AISLINN FAHY......,.......„City Editor COPY EDITOR: Mario Lopez MICHELLE CRAIG .........Opinion Editor COLUMNISTS: Becky Bevins, Scott Bracken, KRISTEN HATÇHER ......News Editor Jennifer La Casella, Scott Lewis. JEREMY HEIN .--.¡.........Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Jonathan Inge (graphics coor­ dinator), Matthew Bannon, Melissa Carr, Carrie REPORTERS: Dave Woodfill (senior reporter), Behrens, Carios Ramirez, Adrian Sferie. Michelle Barlett, Gayle Bass, Alicia Caldwell, PRODUCTION: Amber Carr, Joe Corrao, Becca Case, Tony Guerra, Stephanie Paterik, Kai Risley. Katie Pegler, Rob Pegler, Jayson Peters, Hayiey SALES REPRESENTATIVES: David Goodwin, Ringle, Susan Schimrnel, Timothy Scott, Ganga Jennifer Hadden, Jonathoa Negretti, Shane Siren, Subramanian, Stephanie Weber, Angela Yeager. Kathy Welsh CLASSIFIEDS: Vicki Carroll, Jeannette Phnom. Boos & Bravos reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority vdte among the mem­ bers. Views expressed on die opinion pages do not reflect the views of the State Press staff as a whole. The summer edition of the State Press is pub­ lish ed every Tuesday during the summer through August 4, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ., 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusive-. ly published for and circulated on the ASU cam­ pus. The news and views published in this news­ paper are not necessarily those of the. ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S ta te P ress P h o n e N u m bers Information............ 965-7572 Newsroom.... :.........965-2292 Magazine....... .........965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds............ ,..965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edU O p in io n • , ; . - Page 5 Tuesday, July 14,1998 S tate P ress • '# : ' . ; - •• . . '••• ••• •• y,. . •. • • .• ■V " __ B ouncers deserve m ore credit Y eah, usually y o u run in fo a bouncer w h o in all actu ali­ ty d o esn 't like anybody, n o twatler h ow c o o l or n ic o y o u throw you outta there, and maybe they are. But let’s first give them some credit. They’re probably just sore because they’d much rather be someplace else or had just got done taken care o f some other drunk who thought he was tough, Or maybe his Yul Brynner-approach is the most effective demeanor to pre­ vent hysteria w ithin the bar they govern. And let’s all remember that most bouncers, whether or not they’ll admit it, have the nightmare o f having to deal with the guy who really is psychotic carrying a knife or a gun or a multitude o f Chinese throwing stars all aimed directly at their fore­ heads. In essence, bouncers are brave men who show no fear when perform ing the duties required for their position. And as a former bartender witnessing these tragedies first­ hand, I’U even go a step further and say that all bouncers deserve a raise in pay for the risk they put their minds bodies through each and every night they assum e their post. ■ So the next time you’re out getting wasted in a drinking facility and end up getting tossed for pushing the eaVbtope a littleto© far...M ane yourself, not die bouncer. The big guys are just doing their jo b - nothing personal. a ie. T h ey ’l l g iv e y o u that c o ld harsh stare w ith d ie arms fo ld e d , im plying that th ey’re ju st lo o k in g ^or a reason to Scott Bracken is a senior studying broadcasting and canbereackeetatwizzar4s@ im ap4.asu.e4u. L e t’s all tip our h ats to the COTT b o u n c e rs o u t th e re in th e b ar BRACKEN world. The big guys that make sure things don’t get out o f hand Columnist when a crowded room drunk off whiskey and beer feels the urge to start something nasty. W e’ve all seen the angry drunks out there who purpose­ ly go out looking for trouble. And even though I’ve never quite understood this rationale of thinking, no matter how despondent the present situation, these crazies do exist. They come in all different shapes and forms and the more they .drink the larger the chip o f rage gets resting between their Shoulder and their “street fighter-like” atti­ tude. And not that these loons w ere scared o f anyone before they put alcohol on the fire, but by this time they just don’t care. It’s dark, it’s late, the tramp flaunting her figure on the dance floor just rejected him and he’s look­ ing for something, or someone, to take his venom out on. But thanks fo our bouncers who stay sober (most o f (fee tithe) and m andate the perim eters they m ake sure that y o u ’re having a fun, safe time. ■ ¡1 It's jn n t lo i)e iiwivkit « p i t dMHMxU. k '« sot e v a f undergraduate student that gets hrt own lawyet, paid for Ay S t public How would you like to have a law \ er off «ail to get a 10 cent copy of anyA SU public document you desire? I have one. The best part is that the lawyers time me nothing {he or she) will do all the leg Work 1 Mutt, research m v Question 1 have and is^gF'UU e-mail away. N d( -I'm not talking about the Legal ServieoHn the Memorial Uptoo This is my very own personal lawyer assigned to me by Ai>u M . bSaacy Trifebepsep, associate general GouBsel for tbe (jnivcrsils, iiuni h ivc a hit of free lunc on her bands. She has been assigned to di-qipii any public ¡nuinivitiOK doi.u ment that I might want to ‘review, A list o f public fprtiniutees on campus? She’ll get it for me. My. cost? Tea cents for the copy. If you wanted that list of committee mem bet. you; wonldtetve hadtoctdl orwa!K^ .limdK<«rtment and raisesi it It would be available a i m counter, probably it to H H H Political power: dangerous drug W A SH IN G TO N , D C. — 1 COTT love the smell o f politics in the BENNETT morning and this town stinks of it. It hangs heavily in the air, Columnist like a wool blanket suspended from the sky. , This is a town full o f junkies, who straggle through the streets like vicious rats, fighting for the crum bs o f pow er that the crisp, starched law yers and politicians leave behind. They are addicted to power, or what they think is power. You can smell it on them; the sickeningly-sweet stench o f am bition that seeps from their skin. You watch them eyeing the happy, simple M idwestern tourists with their cam eras, fanny packs and indelible, stupid grins. This is not a place where you w ant to irri­ tate the natives. They w ill rem ove y our skin w ith an orange peeler if they think it w ill help them get ahead. They are constantly hungry and the corpses o f their vic­ tim s litter the streets. T here’s one now — M onica L ew insky. She was an intern too, poor girl. Peppy little chick from California, wanted to make a difference, to experience a piece o f the big city. And look w hat happened to her, they chopped her into little bloody chunks and splattered them across newspapers and magazine covers. So it goes. O ne o f the nice things about W ash in g to n is all the neat souvenirs you can buy. A Chinese general got quite a bargain a little while back — nuclear technology that helped him aim nuclear m issiles at W ashington, fo r only a few h u n d re d th o u s a n d d o lla rs to th e D e m o c ra tic N ational Committee. A nd o th e r C h in ese o ffic ia ls , fo r a little b it m ore money, bought the entire American government! But all they w anted was for us to look the other way while they d ro w n b a b y g irls , fo rc e w om en to h av e a b o rtio n s , im prison people for no reason and m urder hundreds of im ite*l What is me goat « inc arboretum f is mere a uiiki scape master plan for ASU? What is the background o f the arboretum staff? Pretty tough questions A lter refusing to answer the questions. Mr. Peterson requested written documentation about my research If my research was deemed valid, he would condescend to answer my questions. After submit­ ting the docum entation. Mr Peterson still refused to answer these questions I countered with a request to Ms. Tribbensee that she inform Mr. Peterson about the state’s public information pnlùy. I also asked Mr. Peterson's boss. Dr M Harrison, vice president o f Administrative Services to remind Mr Peterson that lie was a public official .it a public institution who was being asked to supply public informati on ■ students in Tiananmen Square. Fair trade, I think. B u t th e re a l c o m m o d ity in th is to w n is p o w er. Everyone is obsessed with it; from the greasy lawyers in their black suits and shiny black shoes to the herds of interns with perpetual expressions o f pain on their faces. If power is a drug, this town is in serious need o f a mas­ sive rehab program. The search for pow er never ends. It follows you down the street, inside anxious office buildings and through tightly packed happy hours with endless talk o f who was just elected or impeached or is going to jail or to Capitol Hill. You can see the quiet, desperate hunger for power burning in the eyes o f each starched and strained intern. And pow er is the most dangerous drug o f all because you can never get enough. The desire burns within you* and consumes you, until you are nothing but an emptyeyed junky, swilling coffee and scanning newspapers in a pathetic attem pt to find out w ho has m ore pow er than you. A nd power junkies are a thousand times more dan­ gerous than crack addicts because there is no cure for their addiction and no lim it to their desire. You always need more power and eventually you run into thaf wall; that point Where you have all the pow er possible. A nd still you want more. That is the saddest sight here in W ashington — bro­ ken old men who sit oh park benches with nothing to do but think o f how powerful they once were. In the after­ noons you can walk the banks o f the Potom ac and see G eo rg s B ush, B ob D o le and H enry K issin g er sittin g together on some park bench, feeding the pigeons and lamenting fate. This is not a pretty town. But it is my solemn duty as a journalist to give you the truth, no m atter how grue­ some it might be. Mtteeh Scott Berinitt is a junior studying political science and a Washington, D.C. intern. He can be reached at columnist@ asu.edu. KAET/Journalism S ch ool P oll 10% No Stay a s is Last weeks results.*. g | Change the name H ] No opinion Should the name of the airport be changed to Goldwater Sky Harbor International airport or remain as it is? Story on page 2. I ' Change the nam e 27% . ■ Should theiaove tochange the n am of w Peak " be continued? D u e to a low response in voting, results w ill not b e pubhshed but can be view ed on ou at ttew s.^ » a .a 8 u j Page 6 S ta te P ress Tuesday, July 14,1998 Former Sparky roots for education in legislature Bv Stephanie P aterik State P ress Once A SU’s mascot and now one o f the University’s biggest supporters in the Arizona Senate, Gary Richardson is again making an effort to cheer his team to victory. His team in the legislature, that is. Richardson began his political career in 1982 when he was appointed to the Tfempe Design Review Board by Harry Mitchell, who is now his opponent in the election for the Senate. A Republican from District 27, which includes Tempe, Richardson was first nominated to the House of Representatives in 1990 and chaired the Congressional Committee. He was elected to the Senate in 1994 and has served as the majority »drip for three years. if elected in November, Richardson says he would like to serve as the majority lead». “I am positioning myself to have even more o f an impact to ensure that the people I represent can get program s passed,” said Richardson. University funding is an issue Richardson has played an integral role in, and says he will continue to. ‘*1 consider myself a strong advocate for the universities and I am a huge supporter o f ASU — always have been arid always will be,” said Richardson, who received a bachelor’s degree in Public Administration at ASU. He is currently enrolled in the ASU MPA program. ASU President Lattie Coor has said Richardson’s “will­ ingness to stand as our strongest supporter in the Senate is greatly appreciated by all o f us at ASU. Diversity of opinion and response. E-mail: shades @ imap4 . a su .edu n Because you look good inaturtle new! •1st PERSONPAYSADMISSION •2® PERSONSKATESFREE. OCEANSIDE IC E A R E N A 1520 EXCEPTIONAL RESULTS $900 $25.00andup $15.00andup $10:00 $5.00 $6.00 $11.00andup $20.00andup $34.00andup $15.00 AVE DA •SKATE RENTALEXTRA C heck Letters to the Editor “(His) efforts on behalf o f the University are crucial if we are to continue providing programs o f excellence.” The focus o f Richardson’s platform promises to “continue to be at the educational front,” with the goal to involve par­ ents in their children’s education. “Even more than socioeconomic status, parent involvement determines a child’ssuccess or failure in school,” said Richardson. He also wants to continue his pursuit to fund education. According to Richardson, when he was first elected to the legislature the state could only write a check for a maximum of $51,000, which made funding education difficult “After tough decisions about where it should go and cutting taxes, Arizona is at the forefront of economy. We cm now begin to fund schools out of the surplus rather than bonding,” said Richardson. Richardson said that he wants to find ways to reward teachers for their value to society. One plan, already in motion, is to reserve $5 million dolldfs each year for die pur­ pose o f rewarding school districts that excel in academics. He would Ijke to see the money go directly to teachers, based on their students’ test scores and the level o f parent Satisfaction with their child’s education. Richardson also supports state-funded liability insurance for teachers. To encourage dead-beat parents to pay child support and alimony, he supports a unique solution that has already been implemented by some states. “I want to have a bill that would allow us to put ads in newspa­ pers o f the 10 most wanted dead-beat parents,” said Richards«), who believes the embarrassment would cause parents to p&y up. r University State Press N. McC lintock, T empe 941-0944 3 3 4 5 S. RURAL RO A D 4 9 1 -0 4 4 9 N O W O PEN M O N -FR I 9 :3 0 - 6 :0 0 20% Discount with V a lidated Student I D, SA TU RD AY 8 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 All w ork p erfo rm ed b y students under the sup ervisio n of Lic e n se d Instructors. E x p ir e s 8 /1 5 /9 8 o u t t h is h o t d e a l fr o m th e C ommons on L emon G et th e 1Jifaonth lease price o n a m onth (shared room ’4 9 5 private room m ïtM m te room) At the Commons on Lemon, we provide the life-style and amenities to make your ASU experience even more enjoyable. • Microwave Oven • Pool and Spa * • Extra Large Walk-in Closets • Gazebo • Washer and Dryer in Each Unit , O n l Yj ¡L O C K S mm ^ lipipMipippiir ' g _ • Contemporary Furnishings I From Throughout ÂSU University Dr. Mill! Ave. Terrace Rd. A S l l Cholla Hall Lemon St _____________ Apache Blvd. I F Broadway Rd. N >v \ THE COMMONS on Lemon • Barbeques • Private, Off Street Covered Parking • Covered Bicycle Parking • Lighted, Sand Volleyball Court \ TH E C O M M O N S O N L E M O N 602-968-6427 • FAX 602-921-0564 1215 EA ST LEM O N ♦ TEM P E, A Z 85281 Only Two Blocks from Campus and Walking Distance to Downtown Tempe arid Shopping. S ta te P ress Tempe co-op exam ines its financial health B y Katie P egler S tate P ress THE ORIGINAL ALTERNATIVE NIGHT IN & OUT NIGHT. B u rd en ed w ith fin a n c ia l p ro b lem s, T em p e’s G en tle S tren g th C oo p erativ e might have to close its doors, but a possi­ ble deal with ASU could bring the co-ops products to campus. Competition and fewer members have spelled trouble for the Tempe landmark, but officials said the shop is far from dead. “W e’re in the throes o f turning every­ th in g c o m p le te ly a ro u n d ,” sa id L ucy Logan, co-convenor of the member’s meet­ ing held June 16 to discuss how to survive the financial problems. According to Logan, two of the biggest obstacles for the co-op have been the open­ ing o f chain health food stores like Wild Oats and Whole Foods, as well as a drop in store purchases by members. W hen the two chain stores opened in October 1997 and February 1998, the co­ op experienced major financial losses total­ ing m o re than $100,000. Sales are now averaging about one-third less than for the same period last year. Financial problems changed the Gentle Strength’s Discount Policy for its member April 1. A membership at the co-op costs $35 per year for one. The original discount was changed from 7 percent to 4 percent for non-active member and from 15 per­ cent to 10 percent for core workers who v o lu n te e r at th e co -o p fo u r h o u rs p er month. The decline in m em ber discounts has contributed to the many people dumping th e ir m e m b e rsh ip ’s w ith the c o -o p . A verage daily custom er count is dow n about 18.5 p ercen t from last y ear, and member sales declined from 49.7 to 41.2 percent o f total sales, store officials say. The decrease in 1998 hit the co-op,during th eir norm ally highest sales o f the years. The co-op usually depends on the spring to boost the purse for the slower summer months. This year, however, the shop was forced to pull $50,000 out of sav­ ings before the summer hit. In addition, members are faced with a balloon paym ent on th e ir m ortgage o f about $75,000 on September 1. Yet members are optimistic about b e t-. te rin g th e s to r e ’s fin a n c ia l sta tu s. Committees are focusing more on cutting operating costs, and they are trying to refi­ nance the mortgage. “Rumors of the imminent death of the co-op are extrem ely over-exaggerated,” said Jim Ward, chair of the Financing and Planning Committee. Ward said the co-op is also planning for the future by tapping into the financial resources o f the ASU campus and bringing students into more' contact with the co-op and its resources. Jennifer Wright and David Jackson are c u rre n tly w o rk in g w ith A SU and the M arriott to bring a Gentle Strength deli cart on campus similar to those o f Coffee Plantation. Marriott has approved the pro­ posal, and ASU has offered a space by the Business School’s east patio for the cart. Students would be able to make purchases with their Maroon and Gold account. Wright and Jackson are currently work­ ing on figures and plans for the project. They m ust decide if building a $10,000 cart will be profitable and if they are able to build the cart with the co-op’s current financial standings. DANCE MUSIC INSIDE • LIVE MUSIC OUTSIDE STARTS AT 7PM NO COVER FOR LADIES BEFORE 10 PM DRINKS 4 -1 0 PM FREE FOOD BUFFET 4-7 PM where? Z O W IE & L I TEAS BO W IE8 250 A M A N D A DRAFTS STA R R AtlheASU MONSTER BEERS In the Computing Commons. UPCOMING EVENTS Candlebox JULY 26 Phunk Junkeez AUG. 10 - Tricky Got:** expiras 7/17/98 c o m p u te r s to re Open 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 965-4488 http://bookstore.asu.edu/coinpstor/ Page 8 Thursday, July 14,1998 S ta te P ress American says Frenchman swiped his happy smiley face TheBirthplace Birthplaceo fofttieSmitey the SmileyFace” Face”——side sidewith with ‘The Ball, however. He said he first drew the poky yellow face in . 1963 as part of a “friendship” campaign to ease tensions between employees after State Mutual Life Insurance Co. toe* over a small Ohio insur­ er. Ball, a free-lance artist, was paid $45 to come up with a graphic. State Mutual printed 100 smi­ ley buttons. A 1964 State Mutual publication shows company Vice President John Adams wearing one. Soon requests for tens of thousands of buttons began pouring in. Finally, Ball said, the company stopped printing than in the late 1960s. Ball never sought a trademark or copyright. He said he doesn’t miss the millions he could have made on his creation And he isn’t planning legal action against Loufrani, who has a U.S. trademark, but only for a combination happy face and the word “smiley.” Ball just Wants recognition as smiley’s creator. “Never in the history of mankind or art has any single piece of art gotten such widespread favor, pleasure, enjoyment, and nothing has ever been so simply done and so easily understood in art,” he said Loufrani, reached in London, had no com­ ment esije M iller By Leslie Assooated P ress W riter BOSTON— Harvey Ball did not have a nice day recently when he learned a Frenchman had registered a trademark for the smiley face. As just about everyone in Ball’s hometown erf Worcester knows, it was Ball who designed the ubiquitous symbol of good cheer in 1963 as part of an in-house happiness program for an insur­ ance company. Franklin Loufrani, a 55-year-old entrepreneur from France, first registered the symbol in 1971 and now holds the trademark in much of the world. Ball, 76, didn’t find any of this out until a cou­ ple of months ago. Then he got really steamed more recently when he learned that Loufrani has threatened to sue U.S. companies that manufacture or sell products with the smiley symbol in the 80 coun­ tries 'where Loufrani holds the trademark. “So much for smiley and happiness,” Ball huffs. Loufrani, president of London-based Smiley Licensing Corp., said he made up smiley while working at a French newspaper to illustrate posi­ tive stones after the student riots in 1968. Since registering the trademark, he has made millions. The people of Worcester —- which Nils itself Chips, banana or LittleOebble IPWSIBIMwith a sandwich Welnhard’s $6.99 12/pk +tax CAMEL’S $2.10 +tax when you buy 2 GPC &DoraI $1.79 +tax 2 IFlfSIMMbags o f Ice with keg purchase FOOD SHOP Over 200 BREWS Phattest subs in Tempe NE Corner-Apache ft Terrace [iPlhm m 968-7880 m i? 736-0210 2_you re a s o n s I UTDN —N ew T im es W inner B est o f P h oen ix 2604 W. 1st Street. Suite 34. Tempe ; coursey We know the CAT You 11 Score More U?vT Princeton Review student's GMAT scores improve an average of 80 points*. With an average final 'GMAT score of 59D/TPR students significantly .out-score students from other GMAT prep courses. ‘AMftibipaaRRrei), IlaAMnIMÉbMdiMiftPikareilWHNhiwO HELP WANTED Looking for H ¿o ^ T H E b est futons ’ a n d REASONABLE PR IC E S GMAT should take our care Who they hit” IT (AFj — As sure as there will Even Fricke was 1 target. Two people be fireworks on the Fourth of July, reveler, will stage a ¡hunt wafer fight in downtown dumped buckets o f water on ban, and be cked than for disorderly conduct flnrecott. A w ater balloon broke part o f Linda Now police are suggesting fhe figba, aiisà&* Stubbs’ business sigrvbut she doesn’t think the tìo n f o r y e s ^ i s g é f t ^ o t i t ^ l « ^ ; - fij^j&eutofhand. T On July 4, hundreds o f youths and some adults lined downtown streets, ’d o sin g cars and fellow revelers with wafer balloons and owns Stubby Nails & Fashions on Guriey S tn ^ “ft was an accident— ttiey were having [ waterguas, ; " f WrU ■P ', Water balloons brake three Windshields, , *• ■ S B ; police said O te bystander spent the night in Police have received about 15 reports of die hospital after a balloon hit hkn kt the eye. A [damage so fitr-fritt reports stilt-are coming in, V’ " " 4. ’ . buA rss sign was dwnagedl llK | | I Police traditionally have let the tight go oh; [ ” “People don’t realize the potential for dam­ not stepping in unless someone complain» In age or injury,” Sgt. Shane Reed said. Police were investigating a report that a [general, they ask people to shoot water only at motorist hit by a baQocn returned and fired a others participating in the fight Now they’re going to ask the public gun Police found three bullet holes in one vehicle but haven’t concluded whether the cul­ whether it still wants the fight or would like police to curtail p For example, Reed said prit was firing into the crowd, Reed said. ' Sgt Mark Fticke, Who fris been around tor police want to know whether officers should all of the right to 10 years the fight has been; limit fights to water guns and ban balloons or take other steps to protect public safety. held on the Fourth of July, said Saturday rnght The Yavapai County Sheriffs Office took fight this year “They were in such a freafty that any per­ son walking down -the street was a target,” : and harmed -participants from the coreftoutt don't plaza downtown. THE PRINCETON REVIEW 602.967.1480 0 2 K 5 News Reporters and Columnist are needed for Fall 1998. Applications m ay b e picked up in Matthews Center basem ent - Room 15. Deadline: July 31,1998 State Press 1 m 0 11 TEACHERS&TUTORS1 — -*1J — — N eed ed Scottsdale location • Must have transportation m tw Call 9 5 3 - 3 0 7 0 for more in formation 804-1554 A KEY TO YOUR FUTURE? Questions: C o n tact Karen Yam ada (Reporters) a t kyam ada@ cim edia.com , M ichelle Craig (Columnists) at shades@ im ap4.asu.edu or call the State Press newsroom at 965-2292. I E lem e n ta ry & S eco n d a ry The State Press is now hiring qualified students to work days and nights in the State Press production department. QuarkXpress experience is required and must be familiar with Macintosh software. Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of Matthews Center to pick up an application today OR call the production department at 965-2097 for more Information. B 1 Page 9 Tuesday, July 14,1998 S tate P ress Banks blam ed for credit w oes C am pus C o rn er *Beer & Soda *Photo Developing *Health & Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill 712 S. College 2 LOCATIONS 967-4049 858-0567 ■ lg » ■ f o u w t jm w r O R T Y - F O O W 1M K U R ■ iwaa I mm 1 Prwentcottpon tocisWer priortosale I BÌBllÉ UXBl 1 9' a*•.. /»i»f «¿MiHrtiiIn.michiiirjtrfjtrHfl¿alii' xiïiaia Brobeck maintained, unused credit lines for bank cards,totaled $1.8 billion at the aid. of March and bank card debt reached $425 billion. He blamed what he sees as a two-part strategy by banks: mail­ ing put credit card solicitations, now in the billions each year, aimed at getting people to open an account; then, after the con­ sumer already is in debt, raising the credit limit on his or her account by hundreds of dollars to inappropriately high levels. “They throw more credit at you,” Brobeck said An official of the American Bankers Association, the indus­ try’s biggest trade group, insisted that banks have stiffened their credit card lending standards in recent years. Neatly half the 6,000 U.S. banks that issue credit cards have actually reduced their credit limits, said Donald Ogilvie, the group’s executive vice president “Banks are very concerned about high debt levels,” Ogilvie said in a statement “Banks must protect foe financial soundness of their customers if they are to get their repeat business.” MasterCard International and Visa USA Inc., the two biggest credit card companies, also disputed the Consumer Federation’s statements and said most consumers were able to manage their debts responsibly. They cited recent American Bankers Association figures showing the delinquency rate off credit cards was 3.11 percent in the first quarter, significantly below the record 3.72 percent set in the fourth quarter of 1996. Some analysts have noted, however, that the delinquency rate remained relatively high in the January-March quarter, despite low unemployment and strong inflation-adjusted income growth. By Marcy Gordon AP Business W rtier WASHINGTON — Banks are aggressively enticing their customers with high spending limits on credit cards even as they. push legislation to make it tougher for Americans to sweep their debts away in bankruptcy, a consumer group complained Wednesday. The banking industry rejected the accusation of hypocrisy, saying consumers benefit from the choice and convenience of credit cards. With personal bankruptcies at an all-time high of 1,3 million, die banks said they are concerned about excessive con­ sumer debt and have been tightening their credit card lending standards. The debate comes as Congress weighs the most far-reaching overhaul of the nation’s bankruptcy laws in 20 years. A bill passed last month by the House, on a 306-118 vote, would for the first time establish a “needs” test for people filing for bankruptcy court protection from creditors. Opponents charge that lawmakers bowed to the profitable banking industry and credit card lobbies at the expense of honest working people hit by job losses, medical crises and ensuing financial disaster. The banking and retail credit industries spent millions of lobbying dollars campaigning for the legislation. Prospects are unclear for a milder measure pending in the Senate. “Banks are hypocritical to seek bankruptcy restrictions when their irresponsible marketing and extension of credit card debt has been an important cause of rising personal bankruptcies,” Stephen Brobeck, executive director of Consumer Federation of America, told a news conference. In a market increasingly dominated by a few big banks, 9 i i t f r: A S U M A T S G R 0 .0 M I, N G R A N only 'lM*mw,9 . A M Y S fâ â E i . F O U N T A IN mm MIDDLEEASTERNMARKET&DELI v 4 s “ Vy O R IN K 10% D ISCO U N T w/Studenl ID U S 966-5462 FREE SAN D W ICH Located in the Arches Plaza w/Minimum P u rch ase B e tw e e n R u ra l & M c C lin to c k 1 3 4 4 E. A p ach e M HAI II S TU4> I O 3 0 3 -6 6 0 0 ^iniversity M-Th Fri Sat 9-8 g 9-6 S 9-5 5 QUADRANGLES VILLAGE A PA R TM EN TS LIMITED OFFER STUDIO, ONE BEDROOM & TWO BEDROOM HOMES • WALK ING DISTANCE TO ASU A N D DOW NTOW N TEMPE SAVE ON UTILITIES - H O T WATER INCLUDED A LA RM SYSTEM AVAILABLE PRIVATE BALCONY/PATIO 3 POOLS (1 HEATED) BARBEQUE AREAS CEILING FANS CUSTOM VERTICAL/M INI BLINDS EUROPEAN CABIN ETRY LARGE STORAGE AREAS C O S U N D E V IL S ! , University Dr. ASU QUADRANGUS ^ V ,« A G . Apache Blvd. QUADRANGLES VILLAGE Broadway APARTMENTS 1255 EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE TEMPE, ARIZONA 85281 6 0 2 .9 6 8 .8 1 1 8 , M 1 3 , p C ^ l c c t o f a. 2 1 ■■' ^ . . V U •: o a A N P ag elO Tuesday, July 14,1998 Almost-freshmen pleads for mercy They don’t know how good they’ve got it, living it up in their wonderful free world. Note to all continuing summer students: Free from everything — parents, responsi­ please be kind to the pre-freshmen, bility, guilt, boredom . I want to be like I make my request as one of their num­ them, NOW. ber, one o f the many who are coming to And don't even try telling me that col­ campus early just to pretend we are already lege life is not really like that. I’ve seen here. W e’re quite a conspicuous group, Saved By the Bell, the College Years. Any stumbling around with our heads bent over attempt to contest my version of reality will campus maps, drooling at the Real College only provoke a public spectacle. Students. Some of us. the more sophisticat­ I know this is not a phenomenon unique ed of the group, try to pass as Real College to me — all my high school g rad u ate Students. That’s a delicate practice. , * friends are members of the-“can’t breathe W e really can’t help oursdlves. Being ‘till college” support group and emergency present on campus is the only antidote for hotline network. Our meetings provide a our anticipation. Our present state is poi­ unique haven, sitting around com paring soned by a very com m u n icab le, m essy mini-fridge prices and speculating as to the fever, including the drool. real reason that ASU’s “frat row” is in dan­ The wait for college to begin is a lot like ger of demolition. hell on a hot day — we knew beforehand it And it doesn’t even matter which school would be unbearable, but its duration is they’re going to attend in the fall, or what worse than could ever have been anticipat­ th e ir m ajo r is. T h e y ’re a ll m ise ra b le . ed. July is not even halfway over and I'ni (Although the pre-ASU freshmen definitely already counting the hours until Move To have it the worst, as we will soon have it Campus Day. Mail from ASU, whether it’s the best.) It’s a misery I w ouldn’t trade for any­ about class fees or residency sheet sizes, thing, not even an early end to my family waters the drought of college-related activi­ vacation. Thank God high school’s ever. ty that once was my social life. Oh yeah, and thank G od the cam pus Never mind that it’s monsoon season, police don’t remove wandering, dreamynever minejuthat I’m going out every night eyed 18-year-olds from the premises. If you with my friends. ' I’m BORED, and anxious. N ervous. happen to run into me, and in my awe I E x c ite d . K in d a p a ra n o id . M y c o lle g e accidentally drool on you, 1 apologize in friends arc so sick o f my questions that advance. See you again in the fall! Starry-eyed Stephanie Reeves is a free­ th ey ’re plotting to drug m e for the next month, so I’ll relax a little. How do I know lance w riter fo r the State Press and an incoming freshman at ASU. this? I hear them whispering. B y S tephanie Reeves S tate P ress C olumnist S ta te P ress Would*your campus department like to have a bundle o f the State Press delivered to your office each m orning during the academic year? Call Beth at 965-7572 Please recycleyour State Press. N e w ! COLDSTONE Chillers Tempe’s original \5 O 0 O F F i I I ! I _ I 100% Nonfat, No Fillers! M ade from o ur sw eet cream yogurt frozen fruit & Ju ice. CO LD STO N E CR EA M ER Y 921-7456 at the com er of 5th & Mill With Coupon Expires 8/10/98 Want something yoyr coffee tablethat you Ve gotten some class? Hayden’s AT THE CORNER OF 5TH & MILL State P re ss O n lin e h ttp - .n e w s . v p s a .a s u .e d u You can submit... Letters to the Editor... Story/Topic ideas to the newsdesk... Classified ads ...all from the comfort of your very ow n home (o r fro m th e c o m m o n s) Ferry Review A S U ’s Litera ry M a g a zin e Much cheaper, and it won’t break when you wrestle ¡n the living room. Ask for it at your local bookstore, or call 965.-1243 for more information, State P ress Tuesday, July 14,1998 E xp erien ce la m e e x p e rie n c e . What will you do with your degree if you don't have experience that tests what you've learned? Without experience you'll probably get an entry level position that will give you the experience you could have gotten as an undergraduate by selling advertising at the State Press. But what's waiting another two years for that great job with great earning potential? Just two more years, that's all. If you want to pay your dues after you graduate, go ahead. If you want to get the experience now, call us today and we'll get you started! The State Press has three advertising sales repre­ sentative position available. We will begin training next week and selling for fall semester. We are looking for stu­ dents who enjoy talking with others, have self-confi­ dence, can think quickly and creatively, are dependable and self-motivated. No sales experience necessary. We do ask that you have a vehicle to use, have a year to commit to the position and are taking no more than 13 credits per semester. Hours are flexible and average 20 hours per week. The more hours spent on the job, the more money you'll make. This is a commission only job and your earning potential is better than excellent. It's a great working environment. Interested? Curious? Questions? . Call Jackie Eldridge at 965-6741 or pick up an application at the info desk of the State Press in the basement of Matthews Center. G e t s o m e e x p e r ie n c e ! S tàtè P A S U d a ily n e w t h e o n r e a l ’s o r n in g s p a p e r b e s t c a m w o r ld 44J, m r e ss p u s A N D p la c e t o g e t e x p e r ie n c e ! P a g e 11 Kids who survived sect now prospering in college B y Karina B land A ssociated P ress They were secluded in rural Mexico and forbidden to attend school by their father, the leader o f a polygamist sect who had at least 13 wives and 57 children. They survived a family legacy o f terror­ ism, robbery, aggravated sexual assault, incest and auto and truck theft, as alleged by the FBI. Their mothers were presumed murdered. And now they are in college, getting nearly p erfect g rad es at A rizo n a S tate University, Mesa Community College and the University o f Arizona. Five o f the youngest children o f Ervil LeBaron have shrugged off their unwanted past and turned to what they can make of the future. “W e are survivors,” says 26-year-old M onique LeBaron. “That is all we have ever known.” T heir achievem ents are proof o f what people arc capable of, no matter what their b a c k g ro u n d , says th e ir m en to r, P at M cIn ty re, a c o u n se lo r and te a c h e r at Phoenix College. “Everything that they had to go through just to survive has created not only a love fo r edu catio n — b ecause they w e re n ’t allowed to have it but also a willingness to do whatever it takes to get an education,” ■she says. Jared LeBaron-is a strapping 22-year-old studying finance at ASU, and a husband and father. Jennifer LeBaron, 24, is studying com­ munication at ASU, sure of a career in pub­ lic relations. Jo sh u a L eB aro n , 21, is a t M esa Community College, studying engineering. Danny LeBaron. 22, is studying comput­ er science at the University of Arizona. And Monique, who is Jared’s full sister, also is an ASU student, studying supply chain management. She is in Maryland on a prestigious internship, working at a corpo­ ration for six months. As the c h ild ren o f c u lt lea d e r Ervil LeB aron and his w ives, they endured a legacy o f religious violence that spanned two decades and left them orphans. Their father led the Church of the First Born o f the Lam b o f God, a sect whose d e sc e n d a n ts, a u th o ritie s b e lie v e , are responsible fo r the deaths o f at least 25 people, including one child, in the United States and Mexico. The LeBarons have been the fodder for books and a television movie. The mothers o f these children have been missing and presumed dead since the kids were young. Jared’s mother has been gone since he was 5, Jennifer’s since she was 7. M o n iq u e w as 9 w hen h e r m o th e r w as killed. Ervil LeBaron was 56 when he died in 1981 in a Utah prison o f a heart attack. “There definitely was a lot of sorrow in our lives,” Jennifer says. Their history is chilling. In the late 1980s, an FBI bulletin said the LeBarons were wanted for “serial mur­ ders, cult executions, domestic terrorism, bank robbery, aggravated sexual assault, incest, auto and truck theft, transportation o f stolen property, weapons violations, drug smuggling and transporting illegal aliens.” O ne n ew sm ag azin e c o m p ared E rv il LeBaron to Charles Manson. The fam ily moved often, living at one time or another in Salt Lake City, Denver, San D iego, Phoenix, Dallas and Atlanta. Often, they split up. F or the m ost part, the children o f the sect stayed isolated in rural Mexico, often left to fend for themselves. “We grew up depending on each other,” Jennifer says, perched on a concrete step outside the College o f Business at ASU. “Almost the only thing we knew was each other.” All three fondly remember learning how to read with the help o f Dr. Seuss books and a 12-year-old sister, who went tp sixth grade before moving to Mexico. Jennifer studied The Cat in the Hat and followed her sister with a notebook, beg­ ging for homework. Jared and Monique’s mother would read to the children and insist that they read for at least an hour a day — American history, Bible Stories, biographies. The mother dis­ appeared, but the books remained. In 1989, the children w ere placed in Utah foster homes after being subpoenaed for a grand jury investigation into the 1987 killing of Daniel Ben Jordon, a Colorado polygamist and former LeBaron sect mem­ ber. The children were warned by their older siblings, Jared says, not to utter a word. They fled back to Mexico in a car that one of the teenagers bought for $250. Jared took care of the younger kids and w h atev er house they w ere living in — sometimes a simple shack with a roof but no walls. There are six LeBaron children who are younger than those attending col­ lege in Arizona. They live with their moth­ er in another state. Monique and Jennifer got jobs teaching English. At just 15, Jennifer worked from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. The younger children would greet her with hugs and calls of “Mommy Jennifer!” She worked at that job until she was 20. A t 15, J a re d , to o , sta rte d te a c h in g English, studying each lesson himself the night before. The job didn’t pay much, and some weeks they ate nothing but tortillas. Other family members came and went — some contributing money* some not. Still, the children of the sect studied. “1 alw ays pictured m yself with a bunch of books under my arm and on a huge cam­ pus,” says Monique, who taught until she was 22. .; ’ At 17, Jared came to Arizona. He was put in foster care when a brother he was staging with was sent to prison. While in foster care *he met McIntyre, who would change not only his life but also those o f some o f his brothers and sisters. McIntyre works with foster children, help­ ing them apply for grants and scholarships. “Jared was so thirsty for information, for an education,” McIntyre says. Jared enrolled at Phoenix College, rode a secondhand bike to get there and worked part time. He transferred to ASU with hon­ ors. W hen he turned 18, he rented a room from McIntyre, taking everything he owned with him in a plastic bag. Since then, M cIntyre has helped other LeB aron offspring apply for grants and scholarships. All, she says, are very bright. In 1994, Monique came to Arizona, also renting a room from McIntyre. She started classes at Phoenix C ollege a week later. Jennifer arrived in December o f 1994 and started classes that spring:. “It was something I wanted so badly, I was afraid to believe it would ever come true,” she says. Like her brother and sister, Jennifer got perfect grades and earned a scholarship. She started at ASU i n 1996. “All the brothers and sisters I worked with are very serious about leading a nor­ mal life,” McIntyre says. M onique, Jen n ifer and Jared all w ill graduate in M ay. ' Page 12 Tuesday, July 14,1998 ' S tate P ress Firefighters help a struggling d ia b e tic re c o v e r from an ep isod e. W hile m edical and em ergency ca lls fill the days of firefighters, the emotional d rain ca n h ave a dram atic effect of the men and women o f V a lley fire departm ents. Support at home and coun­ seling at the fire houses keep th e fire fig h te rs sa n e and ready for the new challenges offered by a new day. S h y ra N a c h t/S ta te P r e s s Emotional challenges face firefighters Give me the concern fo r others ...a willingness to seek out those in need. Give me the courage... the boldness o f spirit to face and conquer fea r to share and endure the ordeal o f one who needs me. Give me the strength... the strength o f heart, to bear whatever burden might be placed upon me. Give me the wisdom to lea d ... the compassion to comfort and the: love to serve unselfishly... And please, Lord, throughout it all be at my side. — A Fireman’s Prayer B y D a v id W o od hll S tate P ress The solemn poem, “A Fireman’s Prayer,” hangs on the wall of Phoenix Fire Department Station 33, reminding the firefight­ ers why they work the long hours and constantly put them­ selves in danger. While the danger comes from the elements they fight and the people they fight for, there are also hidden enemies. Coping with the scenes they see are things firefighters must face and deal with every montent of every day. They must remain strong, the firefighters say, and focus on thé problem. Dealing with the emptiops irf a scene, like the death of a child, corqes later. Along with the prayer there is a series of pictures of fire­ lighters in action, each with a single inspirational word. There is a photo of a firefighter holding a small child and another spraying w ater on raging flam es. They read “P rid e,” “Excellence” and ‘Teamwork,” This is the Phoenix Fire Department. A para-military branch of the civil service which is dedicated to serve lawyers, factory workers, fast food employees and athletes alike. They are men and women who come to the call of anyone in need — regardless of race, class, creed or income-level. But what kind of breed does it take to be a firefighter? Obviously, most would say that it takes a man or woman who is as brave as they are resilient. Someone who doesn’t let things outside of his or her control affect them. However, as the driver for Engine 33, Keith Kennedy, will tell you, there are stresses and frustrations, internal and exter­ nal, that go beyond a firefighters’ control. There are some stresses and problems they take home problems and scenes they often have trouble forgetting. As with any characteristic of the human psyche, different people handle them in different ways. ‘T h e stre n g th o f h e a rt’ Ask any firefighter what stresses them out (if anything at all) and each one will probably respond differently. Some will say they cope better under pressure and others say they have a good system of contending with problems. Most, however, will probably say that stress doesn’t affect them to the point that they don’t enjoy their job. “There definitely are the stresses,” Kennedy said. “You’ve got to remember to separate yourself from the human element for a minute sometimes. “I mean, it’s like if you take this chair for example,” he said, grabbing a stool sitting in front of him. “If it was broken, say the back is busted, the leg’s broken and there’s some fluid spilling out from i t You have to separate yourself from that human aspect just as if the subject was an object so that you can do whatever it takes to fix what’s broken.” * Removing themselves from the emotions and ignoring the per­ son to only focus on the problem may seem cold, but it’s necessaiy. “I mean it seems like kind of a cold and impersonal way of dealing with it but that’s what you have to do,” Kennedy said. “I believe in Jesus. I mean I figure there’s got to be a plan to it all and that is how I deal.” Ron Tapscott, director of behavioral health programs for the Phoenix Fire Department, said of the crew members he sees about half complain of family and marital problems. “A lot of times stresses from the job can play themselves out in a family context,” Tapscott said. Tapscott said the rest of his case load, about 35 to 40 percent of it, is from firefighters who develop psychological issues or substance abuse problems. Brian Woolstenhulme, 37, is a captain-in-training with the Phoenix Fire Department. He said he deals with stress by leaving work behind when he goes home and concentrates instead on his son, daughter and his wife Elizabeth. “People happen to deal w ith stress d ifferen tly ,” Woolstenhulme said. “Some guys like to go out and drink, some turn to religion and others have the ability to just let it slide off their backs. “You have to put (the job) into perspective,” he said. “I think to myself, ‘hey, I’m just here to try to make a difference in someone else’s bad outcome’ and sometimes you can and sometimes you can’t “I just figure that things happen for a reason. W e’re all going to die someday. Some people will die worse than others so you kind of have to separate yourself. I mean you have to be com passionate but you c a n ’t take it p erso n ally ,” Woolstenhulme said. While knowing that everyone dies, Woolstenhulme said it is still difficult when a patient dies and he loses the fight to save their life. “There have been some occasions where I said to myself ‘well if I’d have only gotten there a minute earlier,’ or ‘if I had done this differently or that differently, everything would have been better,’ but you just can’t do that to yourself,” he said. Kevin Boyle is captain of the engine crew at Station 33. He shares responsibility with one other captain in the fire station, * Capt. Joe Goniaz, who directs the ladder truck crew. Boyle said that his crew and most firefighters in general have the ability “to remove themselves from any potentially emotionally-charged situation.” “There are some bad calls that we get, but I would like to think I’m close enough to the crew to pick up on some of those things that are disturbing them, not as supervisor but as a frond,” he said. “ In a situation like that I’d ask them ‘hey is everything okay? Do you think you need to go home?’” Gary Lawrence, a veteran fireman with Engine 33, said he’s always been low-key and when bad things happen on the job they just don’t bother him. Lawrence has been with Station 33 for 24 years and has been on longer than anyone with his crew. He joined at the department at age 24. “When 1 came on this job, when something happened you dealt with it yourself,” Lawrence said casually, as he sat with his arms folded. In that time, however, fire officials around the nation have realized that the crews who put their lives on the line to fight fires and save lives often need some help themselves. “There’s been a lot of change in the past 24 years. There used to be no help through the department,” Lawrence said. “Now we have counselors and other avenues you can pursue when the job is getting to you. But back then it was just some­ thing you learned to deal with as you went along.” However, some things are harder to deal with than others. Some images are burned into the minds of firefighters and they remain throughout their career and beyond. Images like a dead child physically scarred by flames, families who were overcome by smoke in a house fire, or a tot who drowned. “There’s things that stick out in your mind,” Lawrence said, lowering his voice. “The first dead body in a fire I came across was, of course, shocking. To see what a person looks like after they’d been burned up - it’s almost surreal - n o t something you want to remember. “Some people, it eats at them and other people never let it bother them,” he said. Gary Sklut is a young fireman who is “roving” at Station 33 for three months. He’s a rookie — a “boot,” as other, more experienced firefighters on the crew call him. Sklut is an energetic man who said he loves the fire depart­ ment and that joining was the best thing he could have done in terms of the benefits. Shortly after joining the department, Sklut said that there was a call he went on that bothered him more than he thought possible. It was one of the first calls Sklut responded to — a baby had drowned in a pool. v “That affected me a lot,” Sklut said. “I’m not used to seeing dead babies and I hadisomq bad dreams for a while alyout that baby.” ■" / He said that his captain talked with him shortly a fi^ the call, S tate P ress Shyra Nacht/State Press Captain Kevin Boyle lifts weights during h is spare time at the station. “1 told him I was fine and then I went home and talked with my wife about it,” Sklut said. “She’s a very supportive woman. 1 think when you talk about it and get it out of the way, then you’re okay. It’s when you don't that can cause problems.” That home-based support' system will be important in the future for this rookie, he said. In fact, most firefighters would say the calls that disturb them the most are those dealing with children. Tapscott said these types of calls probably cause the most of die job-related stress to the men and women in the department. “Anytime you have calls that involve chil­ dren or issues like a failed attempt to revive someone — those calls have a cumulative impact on diem over the years,” Tapscott said. ‘A boldness o f sp irit’ Most firefighters have their own frustra­ tions and challenges as they approach die mil­ lennium. The divisive issues facing today’s Phoenix Fire Department are numerous and varied, officials said. Problems vary from internal matters such as co-ed housing in the fire stations, to mar­ riage problems, to job-related risks like lung cancer and AIDS. Boyle, however, said he believes the major concerns facing the fire department go much deeper than issues of contracting a disease or high divorce rates. He said some of the biggest problems fac­ ing firefighters in the city o f Phoenix are growing demands on the department due to a growing population. “Obviously, everyone expects service,” Boyle said. “So trying to keep up with that growing population is a problem.” Kennedy said his biggest concerns are about violence toward firefighters in today’s society. K ennedy said that one evening after responding to an emergency where a toddler had fallen and hit her head, he decided to put gas in the truck before parking it in the garage. As a car went passed the station, it backfired with a loud boom similar to a^uqshot. Kennedy said he looked around, looking to see if someone had taken a shot at him and the firetruck. “You can never be too careful anymore. We’ve found bullet holes in everything from our fire hoses to the walls of the station houses,” he said. “It definitely is more dangerous now. I think we’re walking on eggshells too much.” Kennedy said in Mesa, the fire department has made the use of bulletproof vests manda­ tory when crews respond to calls of domestic violence or gang shootings. The City o f Phoenix recently considered follow ing suit with sim ilar m easures, but decided against it “They (city officials) felt that it would make us more of a target,” Kennedy said. “(Gangs) are always finding new initiations, like ‘pop a fireman and get into a gang,’ for instance.” Domestic violence calls usually present the worst danger, he said. “When responding to some of these calls, we used to just sort of cowboy on in, but now we have to use our heads m ore and w ait around for the (police) if we think there’s a p o te n tia l fo r d a n g e r,” K ennedy said. “O bviously we all w ant to m ake it to our retirement, so we’ve got to see what’s going Page 13 Tuesday, July 1 4,1998 on before we just go running into a situation” Kennedy attributes m ost instances o f violence to the rapid population growth in Phoenix. The growth and lack o f funding to expand the fire departm ent at the same pace, has led to less dow n tim e for the firefighters. “You get more of a bad element with more people,” Kennedy said. “Along with all these people come the drag pushers and the addicts and the gang members. “Another reason we (firefighters) are at risk is because we’re the ones who are called when people are at their worst,” he said, “Yeah, we’re supposed to be the care givers but in a lot of instances, the guy who’s having a nervous break down and just stabbed his wife and slashed his own wrists isn’t going to want help.” Joe Goriazz has been with the Phoenix Fire Department for 17 years and believes lung can­ cer is a serious reality firefighters must face. He said-there is a lack of available resources, such as disability, for firefighters to access. “We can justify diseases like AIDS if we get it on thte job,” Goriazz said. “If you get contami­ nated blood on you a id you have a cut or some­ thing and you get the disease, it can be easily proven that you probably got it chi the job. But it’s impossible to justify that you got lung cancer from smoke ingestion, for example. “How can I prove that the smoke I inhaled today is a considering factor in the cancer 1 develop in, say 25 years? That’s easy — there is no way,” he said. : ‘Seek o u t those in need’ Along with a higher demand on the fire department’s services, Boyle said, comes an increasing expectation for firefighters to respond to emergencies they haven’t dealt with traditionally. “Eighty percent of our call volume today deals with medical emergencies,” Boyle said. “That’s something that fire departments didn’t use to have to deal with as much. Now you add social concerns, like mental health patients or the elderly that need care, and that’s pretty much uncharted territory for us.” “If I get to a scene with someone whose manic depressive and needs to talk to some­ one, often times those types of calls require a great deal of follow up,” he said. “Something we’re not equipped to do.” Keimedy agreed and went further to say he feels the state should offer more funding for free mental health care. “W e would like to help, but if we don’t have the tools, we can’t,” Kennedy said. “If the proper resources were in place, we could take these people to the hospital and then die hospital would take action and call the proper specialists. Same way you would with heart attack patient” Kennedy said. For instance, the Phoenix fire department has instituted a program where they can call an Adaptive Response van, which is a crew of interning graduate students from ASU who are training to be psychologists. The vans are called on scene as needed, but Kennedy feels that the program is just a bandaide solution to a larger problem. ‘C om passion to co m fo rt’ It was brisk Wednesday in April. At about 1 am ., Engine 3 responded to a call where a 24-year-old Hispanic man was having a reac­ tion to a mixture of heroin and PCP that he had taken earlier in the night. A neighbor called police because she noticed him prowling the neighborhood and acting distraught. When the engine company arrived, the young man was huddled next to a lamppost on the street, shaking in the cold because he had removed his shoes and socks and was only wearing a tank top and pants. Frank Contreras, who was putting in some overtime, was one of the paramedics with Station 33 who responded to the call. “What'd you take, homes,” he asked as he lifted the young man on the stretcher. ; By that point the man was in too much of , an unconscious state of mind to respond to Contreras’ question. “I see a young guy trying to find another way out of the hood,” Contreras said, leaning against an ambulance, after dropping the young man off in the emergency room at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. “He thinks he’s invincible now and that he can do anything or take anything, but he doesn’t think of any consequences,” he said. “Right now, he’s feeling very humble. At this point, he’s like T il never do it again,’ but as soon as he’s back on the street he’ll go right back to doing what he did to get himself (in the hospi­ tal).” Woolstenhulme also responded to the call. He said drug-related calls have become com­ mon for the Phoenix Fire Department “W e’re here to clean up society’s mess,” Woolstenhulme said. “I think people are so frus­ trated with die way things are, and they can only get so frustrated before they start to act it out “I see so much of that frustration and anger and people can’t take it anymore. “It was the same situation with that woman who burned up her kids a couple of months ago,” he said. “From what everyone on her block was saying, she was this great mother and I guess everything just got her down so much that she just snapped.” “I think so many people are so quick to judge. It’s not easy to be a single mother today. I mean she had a lot of other problems, but rather than saying what a horrible person she was, we should ask ourselves what pushed her over the edge like that.” ‘P rid e . Excellence, T eam w ork.’ Father Carl Carlozzi is a m inister who offers his services to the men and women of the Phoenix Fire Department He offers coun­ seling when needed, as well as his friendship, when crewmembers are struggling with any­ thing from marital problems, to worries and troubles with the job. Carlozzi also teaches a seminar to young recruits at the fire academy called, “How to deal with death and keep smiling.” “Some people think that firemen and police have all these huge problems because of what they see on the job. I d o n ’t believe that assumption at all," he said. “People don’t real­ ize that these men are extremely resilient. “The thing I try to instill in (recruits) is, when they go out to a scene where a person was dismembered because he was run over by a truck, they have to remember that the subject doesn’t live there (in their bodies) anymore,” he said. “Instead I tell them to focus on what that person would say about the firemens’ effort on their behalf. “They certainly, wouldn’t want them to be emotionally traumatized and have their personal life or career ruined because of what they saw.” Carlozzi said that the public is influenced by what he calls (he “media perception” of atragedy and that Is if someone Ls exposed to a traumatiz­ ing situation, they’ll never be the same again. “ft’s the way the mental health industry makes money,” Carlozzi said. “They over accentuate the myth that ‘you will never be the same,” he said. Much like the pictures displayed in Station 33, Carlozzi said that the people in the fire department truly are exceptional people. “I feel that the fire department is the best example of God’slove in the world,” he added. “They treat everyone with the same respect, whether they’re rich, poor, rational, irrational, saint or sinner. That is something you would never see in any religious institution; no way. “Firemen will put their best interests aside so that they can tend to someone else’s needs no matter what the situation is.” ‘L o rd , be a t m y side’ As the crew from Station 33 responds to their next call, one of them may look at those pictures hanging in die main lobby where the crew gather together during their leisure time to eat and watch television together. “Pride. Excellence. Teamwork.” That particular firefighter may even say a little prayer before he leaves. A prayer similar to the one on the plaque hanging from the wall. ‘Most of these guys are here because they like to help others,” Woolstenhulme said. “You won­ der as you go through the academy, how things will affect you and sometimes you see things that are really bad, but I never regret making the decision to join.” C om ics P age 14 Tuesday, July 14, 1998 K in g d o m s S tatt P ress B y C a rrie L. B eh ren s D ro p / A dd B y M atthew Ba n n o n buA tühen X. fiomeKnrtes X jusV axriH cvK e. i o n t o t o y s e l Ç +o fV ip -«die. * , ■ïWsAZ. heed ... keep slo ì -Vc V» +o s o X sfrrc*f> «X CoteV— H I- S u n stro k e B y C a r lo s Ra m irez PfNMK SvMSTHOKE Do TOO SLEEP .s o n t jl o lMa iu p S? J M el & Ell I B y M elissa C arr a b X Î5QA vpMc,,v»3a>AV i A SH TRA Y .1 vi uvi TAR I MV /'KTP*M Y bV ££.l B igger T han H uge B y B rian B alch u m a s I Hey dude check It out I gat these new ^ pills. 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WASH * V ta iu n i* W M M hatee a O tti a Weeh In te rio r dawned a Spray Wax aArm or AMttrae aArm or M d ia A ir Fraehener 41 SÄ 4 I J FUtmmg» M M cKaN ioi C u rry mäSSSSf S tate P ress Tuesday, July 14,1998 Page IS A ssau lt o n p o r n th rea ten s fa m ily tra d itio n By T ed A ntho ny AP N ational W riter NEW YORK — For his grandfather, it was Vargas g irls and n au g h ty B e ttie Page pinups that drew the customers in the 1950s. His father held out through the - hard-core revolution of the 1970s th a t tu rn ed T im es Square into a chaotic swirl o f p ru rie n c e an d p u rp le neon. Lou Lipkin is long dead. George Lipkin has retired to Long Island. So it falls to a th ird g e n e ra tio n o f v Lipkins to keep the family business p rospering — a b u sin ess as synonym ous with Tim es Square as the w ord “ th e a te r” is w ith Broadway. Now, at a time when the most vocal sentiment from New Y ork’s m ayor down paints him as an agent of filth , S cott L ipkin w ants people to know he’s a lawabiding m erchant try in g , like his father and grandfa­ ther, to make a living sell­ ing sexual imagery in the place some call the world’s crossroad. It has never been easy. It is less so today. “I love New York,” says Lipkin, 29, a compact man w ith a stoical face and a black ponytail that reaches Associated PreM/Jim Cooper down his back. ”1 just don’t Scott Lipkin poses in h is adult video store off New York’s Tim es Square. Lipkin’s father and grandfather, ran the store before him, although in h is grandfather’s love what they’re doing to day it w as Varga g irls and Bettie Page pinups that brought the custom ers in. us. W e’ve paid taxes fo r three generations.” o f sex,”. Lipkin says. “W e’re interested in it. It’s H is fa th e r and un cle to o k o v er from his Last September, Lipkin, a film fan, realized a W h e th e r y o u su p p o rt a beautiful thing. W e should have places where grandfather. They opened other stores, five at dream: He opened a cult-video store one door h is rig h t to p u rv ey p orn over from The Palace. It has all sorts o f offbeat, o r believe he is an agent », people can come to understand sexuality. It’s a / their peak. His uncle, bruised by opposition and police, nonsexual movies, and a small, low-key adult o f S a ta n , S c o tt L ip k in ’s "lot more dangerous when you hide it — when you say, ‘Oh — that’s disgusting.’” moved to Canada. Some stores closed* their leas­ section, dominated by old pom — movies like sto ry is, if n o thin g else, In Times Square, sex has hardly been subtle; es ran out. The flagship store burned down — H istoric E rotica and m agazines lik e M odel interesting. the d istrict is know n across the w orld as the the only time, Scott Lipkin says, that he saw his Studies and Sir!, quaint in their odd mix o f nudi­ H e re sp e c ts h is o p p o ­ place where the gargoyles shine in voluptuous father cry. George Lipkin grew ill and retired in ty and modesty. But his adult place continues to nents’ right to dislike what neon, w here n am es lik e “P eep W o rld ” and 1991. pay most o f his rent. he does and despises hyp­ “P laypen” protrude from am ong new sstands, “I look at my father as a hero in some sens­ The new law says that if the sexual content of ocrites w ho condem n his bodegas and electronics shops. es,” Scott Lipkin says. the inventory is above 40 percent, the store can­ p ro d u c ts b u t sh o p a t his But as Giuliani pushes his effort to revitalize Lipkin had a “norm al, typical” childhood, not be within 500 feet o f a residential neighbor­ s to re . H e h as w atch ed New York, Tim es Square’s very visibility has growing up on Long Island, never entering his hood. So T ie Palace is having a sale. All goods D isn e y b u y u p T im es made it a centeipiece o f reform. High rents are father’s stores until he was 20. Today, where the are half-price. “Everything must go-go,” says a Square property, watched driving out small businesses. flagship store once stood, a big fence says “42nd hand-lettered sign. / " t h e O liv e G a rd e n s an d “T his to w n ’s all about big business right Street Development.” - / Bui Scott Lipkin vows one thing: Though his S barros pop up, and now now ,” Lipkin says. “The small stores are get­ Five years ago, Lipkin bought the store he stock may be less than 40 percent sexual, it’s not sees M ay o r R u d o lp h W. ting nailed •— the delis, the little clothes shops owns today. It was called the Pleasure Palace. going to be even 1 percent knickknackeiy. Not Giuliani promoting a law to g e t ru n o v e r f o r a H o m e D e p o t o r a H e ch an g ed it to T he P alace to so u n d less for him the plastic Statues o f L iberty and “I drive sex shops out o f resi­ B lockbuster,” he says. provocative. Love New York” T-shirts that fill the neighbor­ dential areas. “I see these things being tom down, and it’s T o d ay , th e p o rn co n su m e r p ro file has ing stores. H e te lls o f g u y s w ho generations o f my history.” ch an g ed , p rim a rily w ith th e rise o f vid eo . H e’ll reduce his stock, yes. But Scott Lipkin c o m e in an d a sk to re n t H is g ra n d fa th e r, L ou L ip k in , fle d N azi W omen and couples have joined the regulars. — free-speech hero to some, reviled pornogra­ v id e o s u n d e r assu m e d Germ any in the 1930s and opened a bookstore Lipkin says he now ships videos to women he phy merchant to others -— isn’t giving up. The n a m e s. “ I ’m p o litic a lly ju s t o f f T im es S quare. H e soon discovered w en t to c o lle g e w ith . E ven p o lic e o ffic e rs law is under review in federal court, and the involved,” they tell him. He that sex sells; thè back room w here he kept patronize his stores, he says, including one who A m erican C ivil Liberties U nion, a prom inent know s about the businessthe pinups and nudie m agazines proved a big used to arrest his father in the 1970s. defense attorney and adult-video studios are ■men in the Italian-cut suits attraction, though it represented only 5 per­ Lipkin says he and his employees monitor the helping wage the battle. w hose ey es d art furtively cent o f his business. peep-show booths and eject anyone who misbe­ “W hy do people com e to N ew Y ork C ity? a b o u t b e fo re th e y scurry Before he died at age 61, he had built some­ haves. B ut he says the city law that bars sex B ecause y o u ’re going to get m aterial you’re into his store. thing unusual in an industry that thrives on shops — whether strip joints or video stores — n o t g o in g to g e t a n y w h e re e l s e ,” L ip k in He also knows that there anonymity — customer loyalty. from many areas o f the city is just too much. says. “I like that th ey ’re trying to get m ore is one constant: Sex sells, “1 have people w ho have been com ing to “My family’s always abided by the law,” he tourists and clean up the neighborhood. B ut and it has put food on the m y b u sin e ss fò r th ree g en eratio n s. T h e y ’ll says. “But it makes me sick. Look at HBO. Look w e’re n o t dirt. W e d o n ’t need to be cleaned table for three generations say, “I rem em ber yo u r g ran d fath er,” ’ Scott at the Internet. There’s a lot o f people who are up, I like w hat th e y ’re doing. I ’d ju s t like o f Lipkins. accepting of this. They just don’t want to say it.” - our business to b e a part-of-it.” - - • • - . “W e’te .« ll hens because . L ip k ta 'S q y s today* P a g e l6 Ted ‘Dr. E vil’ T ü rn er ta k e s o v e r s p o r ts B y S co tt L ewis S tate P ress C o lum nist I f th e re w as e v e r a f ittin g a n a lo g y between real-life and fiction, this is it. Ted Turner is Doctor Evil. W hich would mean that Jane Fonda is his feline friend, Mrs. Bigglesworth. W hich, to paraphrase A ustin Powers^ would make me want to “shag her rotten, baby!” , T u rn e r is shagging rotten alright, but u n fo rtu n ately it has nothing to do w ith Fonda. Turner is currently embarking on a m ission to shag the sports w orld rotten, whether we, the fans, like it or not. F o r th o s e o f you w ho h a v e n ’t seen A u stin P ow ers: In tern a tio n a l M an o f Mystery, Dr. Evil was a middle-aged mad­ man who attempted to take over the world. A fter holding the w orld hostage for the hefty ransom o f $100 billion (a sum which, by die way, Turner could probably pay for with the loose change in his pocket), Dr. E v il-w a s 'e n lig h te n e d by h is sid e k ic k Number Two that “there is no more World. It’s all corporations.” Whic h brings us to our real-life, modem day Dr. Evil. Mr. Corporate America him­ self, Turner. Despite owning tw o TV sta­ tions (T N T and T B S), a M ajor League Baseball team (Atlanta Braves), a profes­ sio n a l w re s tlin g O rg a n iz a tio n (W o rld C ham pionship W restling) and a majority share of CNN/SI, Dr: Evil isn’t done. Not by a longshot, buddy. Now “the Ted” wants to start up a new football league. The working name for this le a g u e is, you g u e sse d it, th e T u rn e r Football League. For all you readers who are bad with acronym s, that would make it the TFL. Which to me stands for Too Friggin’ Late! If Dr. Evil hasn’t noticed, there is a very successful league called the NFL that has been around for decades. Others have tried, past and present, and have failed. The infamous short-lived USFL (Useless Stupid Football League), the CFL (Cable Football League, because cable is the only place you’ll see it) and the arena football AFL (Almost a Football League) have all failed to dent the mindset of the American sp orts fan. N o v elty , m aybe — a need, never. "' The NFL, on the other hand, is a neces­ sity for this country. There are millions of people, just like me, who live, breathe and eat football (not that I’ve ever eaten a foot­ ball, but after a few beers the pigskin might start looking pretty good). As for these other leagues, I have never sat down and watched a full game. I’ve tried, I just can’t do i t Am 1 alone? I think not. Now Dr. E vil w ants to start his own league, with his own name on it, to feed his hungry ego. Why? Because TNT was left out of the new NFL TV package. Too bad, Dr. Evil, get over it. Nobody wants to see the T e d ’s versus the T u rn e r’s w ith the Janeleaders cheering them on inside o f Dr. Evil stadium. Dr. Evil, however, isn’t stopping at foot­ ball. Rumor has it that a basketball league is in the works. Wily? I don’t know!®#?*! M aybe “th e T e d ” w an ts h is son (d o es Turner have a son?) to have a league o f his own to run when he grows up. Turner Jr: “Daddy, I want to be the: President o f a basketball league when I get older. ” Dr. E vil/T u rn er: “A n ev il President? ” Sorry, Turner, basketball has enough tro u b le rig h t now w ith o u t the TB L (Turner’s a Big Loser). Can’t Dr. Evil just stick to ruining wrestling and counting his money? Doesn’t that take enough time? And what about his Mrs. Bigglesworth? Doesn’t she take up enough of his time. Or, to paraphrase Powers once again, does he not like that pussssy cat? Scott Lewis can be reached via em ail at cubie@imap4.asu.edu Odds & Ends BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — Strolling nude in Berkeley now might be no more serious than jaywalking. The City Council voted last week to down­ grade Berkeley’s anti-nudity law by giving police the option of just issuing a ticket, worth a $ 100 fine on first offense. Under the original law. officers had to arrest offenders, who then would have to face a jury trial. If convicted of the misdemeanor offense, a nudist could face up a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. However, no Berkeley jury had ever con­ victed an accused violate»'. Ironically, the anti-nudity amendment drew opposition from a group called die Berkeley X-Plicit Players, which performs nude as a form of political protest Councilwoman Betty Olds didn’t understand why the X-Phot Players opposed the amendment “If I go sashaying down the street nude, I would be happy to pay a $100 fine,” she said. But pro-nudists called the legal change an attempt to take away (hie process. “We are performance artists,” said X-Plicit player Marty Kent. “We don’t feel what we are doing is a trivial matter on the level o f a parking ticket” NEW DELHI, India (AP) — A bride­ groom was so drunk just minutes before his wedding that his wife-to-be called in the police and then promptly married someone else, an Indian newspaper reported Thursday. Officers hustled the groorp, who had been shouting drunken insults at the wedding party, to the police station in Hapur, near New Delhi, The Hindustan Times newspaper reported. After die bride and her parents called off the wedding, a neighbor gallantly proposed to the woman and she readily agreed, the paper reported. That union took place the same njght. The drunken man was later released and retumedhome. State P ress Tuesday, July 14,1998 PERRY. Okla. (AP) — Grieving relatives have been getting an earful of lively sex chat due to an error in a local Yellow Pages. The toll-free number for Perry Monument was printed wrong by one numeral. Instead of being connected to Perry, callers are put through to the “Penthouse Live Sex Line,” and told how they can talk to “uncensored phone mates” for $4.95 per minute. “Any wrong number would be bad, but this is as bad as it could be,” said Cindy Branscum, who owns Ferry Monument with her husband, Ron. About 63,500 of the 1997-98 Southwestern Bell directories were distributed in Perry and 16 other towns and surrounding areas. A spokeswoman for Southwestern Bell said it would not charge Perry Monument for the listing and is crediting $150 to Perry Monument’s account for next year. WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)— Who were those masked angels? Two men, disguised and dressed in red, white and blue hats and patriotic garb, entered a church; handed the minister a can filled with money and then fled. “Everything happened pretty fast and there was a lot to take in,” said the Rev, David Twedt, pastor of die Trinity Lutheran Church. Tw edt said the pair, who w ere either w earing m asks or w earing som e kind o f makeup, walked into the church July 5 just after the congregation finished a hym n. Then, telling him they were “angels sent from G od,” they gave him a coffee can fille d w ith $ 1 2 0 w o rth o f S u sa n B. Anthony silver dollar coins. Also inside the can was a business card print­ ed with “Smile, Jesus Loves You.” The bpttoro of the card had the initials “SMAB.” One of the men was carrying two American flags. Several other churches or groups in the area have also received coin donations accom­ panied by the same card. HELP WANTED Looking for TO YOUR FUTURE? News Reporters and Columnist are needed for Fall 1998. Applications m ay be picked up In Matthews Center basem ent - Room 15. Questions: C o n tact Karen Yam ada (Reporters) at kyam ada@ clm edia.com , M ichelle Craig (Columnists) at shades@ im ap4.asu.edu or call the State Press newsroom a t 965-2292. Deadline: July 31,1998 IP Summer Jams T u e s d a y s a t N o o n ! DOWNTOWN t e mP e *1 C O F F E E * ! P LA N TA TIO N 1 lernor w h e r e th e w o r ld m e e ts HE 6™ST.TEMPE 966-46S1 OPEN LATE 'til 2 am Thurs. thru Sat eftofcf th e ” m o tfe rn m ira c le t h a t I s ... ►*■ H O ME OF THE “ K ILLE R C A LZO N E ” H ours: O pen Dally 11 a.m . -1 0 p.m D A IL Y L U N C H THURS, LOCALS ONLY This is an All Ages Show WHAT |M | m i ) fire DO S P E C IA L 1 I A /V I - 2 P M Buy 1 slice & a Drink, Get Another Slice _____ of Equal or Lesser Value . ....................... FR EE,! rm S p a g h e tti.... .. THIS SUMMER M .I.R.V., Y O K O LO VE, CO U SIN S O F THE W ISE w ith salad & Garlic Bread H “KILLER” CALZONES...$ 4 .3 5 • 8pm D oors •• $5 a t th e d o o r 1 0 ” PIZZA w ith 2 FREE to p p in g s ■ L a d ies N ig h t w ith ......$ 3 .3 5 H P Pan $4.5 9 New York $3.75 I B “HOMEMADE” LASAGNA ■ P H I w/salad & garlic bread. Meat or Spinach $4.99 Cheese $4.50 SATELLITE Au. fak 1/2 RouMontiP based on roukdtrip TRAVEL, DONOT INCLUDE TAXES, RESTRICTIONS APPLY, SUBJECT 10 CHANGE W ZEN LUNATICS t THE JENNIES v . HAPPY HOUR M o n d a y - F r id a y Z - S p r h &. 7 - 9 :3 0 p m w Vki 8pm D oors *21 an d over • Ladies no cover Come early & enjoy ou r drink specials.... I . 894-MAMA F A X 8 9 4 -8 7 9 5 t J aELCMKilMteteraatioNil EANCBlimlEict—i t s i I■ s 1 ASU a U N IV ER SITY D R . 130 E. University Dr. Ste. A Tempe (60$ 966-3544 T he creators of Boogie Knights bring you. CREATURES don't pack the funk in'the trunk.the music ¿ocs on wit featuring S i o u x s i e S io u x , B u d g i e & Jo h n C a le F U N K E N S T E IN * • 9p m show W/ s p e c ia l g u e s t, PO W ER 9 2 .5 C o C o C o rte z H • $ 2 5 T ic k e ts (D illa rd s ) • 21 & O v e r • D o o rs 8 P M • $5 C o ver DOWNTOWN 1 e m P e. *Toq M uch Soul to Control' 967-1234 • 410 S. M ill Ave w w w .g ib s o n n ig h t c lu b .c o m Page 18 State P ress Thursday, July 14,1998 ‘Lethal W eapon 4:’ Squeezing out another bomb OUT OF 5 B y D a v id W o o d h ll S tate P ress Like a constipated fat man on the toilet, Richard Donner has m anaged to squeeze out y e t an o th er tired L ethal Weapon movie starring Mel Gibson and Danny Glover, It’s a funny thing, I specifically remember buying popcorn and Ju-Ju Beans, grabbing a seat and putting an arm around my woman. But after the opening credits of iM hal Weapon 4, I don’t remember much. A strain of severe boredom that seemed to come over me and everyone else in the audience. All I remember is it was something about stuff blowing up, some car chases, some karate fight scenes, and Gibson shooting indiscriminately and killing some bad guys (and guess what, he isn’t so much as grazed by a single bullet — amazing!). Oh yeah, and Glover runs around in public in his underwear again. But that’s not even the best part, folks: The best part is that you can see all this for the low, low prjce of about $7. Or if you wish, you can see the Very :same thing on video for about a buck-fifty by renting Lethal Weapon 1, 2. or 3, or perhaps a Bruce Willis film. A brief synopsis of the movie would be that Gibson, who plays the cliché loose-cannon and unconventional Sgt. Martin Riggs, is once, again paired up with the more conser­ vative Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover). The two are joined again by the blood-curdling, nasal-voiced Leo Getz (Joe Pesci), and if that’s not enough to make you leave halfway through the film , they also added the rantings o f Chris Rock, who (get this) plays a young detective named Lee Butters. Keep straining* Donner. We can almost see the beads of Sweat dripping down your forehead. The three all pair up to investigate immigrant smuggling an d counterfeiting all being m asterm inded by a Chinese Mob — end o f story with die exceptions o f a few explo­ sions and blood-splatter scenes. To tell you the truth, I’m beginning to confuse all the Die Hards, and the Terminators with the Lethal Weapons. What all these movies have in common is that they were Andrew Cooper/W amer Bros. Danny Glover (left) and Mel Gibson star in Lethal Weapon 4. pretty good until the story lines were exhausted with con­ tinuing sequels. The moral to the story that I wish people like Donner and James Cameron would learn is this: the sequel will never be equal. In an age of big budget Hollywood films, quality movies that require an audience to use their brains have become obsolete. Bottom line is that the American movie-going audiences are mindless drones that need their entertainment spoon-fed to them. W e’re all stupid people and the big movie-making producers and directors realize this. . Moviemaking unfortunately is a business and like any other industry that wants to last, it is profit-driven. The sad fact is that it is no longer economically viable for Hollywood to produce movies that appeal to the silent minority o f people who appreciate an intelligent (dare I say artistic) film. As a result, every movie has to have at least three explosions in it before it can even begin to compete with the other summer blockbusters. So if you’re looking for some mediocre entertainment and are not too concerned about thinking too much, go ahead and slap down your hard-earned money for a ticket to see Lethal Weapon 4, but keep this in mind, you probably won’t even remember what you saw the next morning. Kerplunk!! ~ A aaaahhh___ Whoosh!! And down the drain goes the bomb, never to be seen again. ‘Something about Mary’ more comedy than romance out of 5 B y C raig B rizzee State P ress Glenn W atsonOMh Century Fox Mary (Cam eron D iaz) and Pat (Matt D illon) enjoy an evening out in T here’s Som ething about Mary. Two S$ Tuesdays CrlsMchtOut! *2 Any Drink or 7 5 « Well, Wine and Domestic BeerAll Night Drafts for Ladies 350-9888 *2 Burgers ScFries *2 Bud ScBud Light Bottles FROM3- 1OPM 5 0 < D rafts There’s definitely Something about Mary. She’ll make your hair stand on end, if you’re not careful. This movie stars Ben Stiller, Cameron Diaz and Matt Dillon in a twisted love quad­ rangle that will have you laughing from beginning to end. . Ben Stiller, also a talented director, has now provén that he is an equally talented comedic actor. Since Stiller’s debut role in 1994’s Reality Bites, we’ve seen him, briefly, in other comedy endeavors including The Ben S tiller Show on Fox and as host o f MTV’s Viewer’s Choice Awards. The story revolves around Ted (Stiller), an admitted nothing who will continue being a nothing in life until he finds his first love — the beautiful Mary. Dorn (Chris Elliott), an oversexed but devoted family man and Ted’s best friend, enlists the help o f a privaté investigator to find the dazzling Mary, for better or worse. . Enter Pat (Matt Dillon), the Stereotypical o o HaRpy Hour 3 - 7 pm Saturday Nkht! flowered-shirt-wearing private investigator, who also falls in love with the awe-inspiring Mary. While scrutinizing the who, what, why and w here o f the w ondrous M ary, Pat designs his plan to win over the ravishingly beautiful woman. And finally, the extraordinarily elegant Mary (Cameron Diaz), who is a magnet for losers, geeks, and deviants, lives for 13 years blissfully unaware that her senior prom date has carried her picture around the entire time, in hopes o f an impromptu reunion. Well, the reunion is far from spontaneous. This film is being billed as a “romantic com­ edy.” I (Ioti’t know about “romantic,” but this is most assuredly a comedy of epic proportions. The directed image produced by Peter and Bobby Farrelly of Dumb and Dumber fame Was well-crafted and funny. The situational follies used in this film could’ve happened to any of us. Well, not any­ one, but the fact that they could’ve happened is what makes this movie a genuine laugh riot. In short, there is something about Mary, all right; It’s a fresh comedy the likes of which I haven’t seen since Fletch. o o Em ) o f t w W eekend *3 60“ Pitchers *2 Burgers 3-9pm 1/2 Price on Any Sandwich 3-8 pm of Miller Light 1/2 Price Drinks, Beersand Apps. $ | 50 Well, Domestic Bottles $2 Coronas and Sc Drafts Long Islands $2 Vodka Drinks «2 Jager Shots All Night for the Ladies FREE PO O i! FROM7-1IPM <**TWi* * n . TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY A DAM GOOD PLACE TO3 5COME lO O l 0 -9 8 8 8 C a st 8 th S t r e e t • T em pe • SUNDAY ¡■ H i £ MONDAY ‘U niversity 8th S treet 0 o Page 19 Tuesday, July 14,1998 S tate P ress Rare Hollywood glimpse at emotions in ‘noble tale’ Sm all Soldiers packs b ig anim ated ap p eal •£r£r£r&l/2 out of five stars behaving incorrigibly as Alan’s materialistic neighbor (cliché seven). Kirsten Dunst gives a solid and very Fargolike performance as Alan’s love interest Who secretly collects Gwendy dolls. The dolls are later, for lack of a better word, surrected (as opposed to resurrected) by Hazard’s comman­ do unit to be reinforcements. Directed by Joe Dante (Gremlins, Gremlins 2), he effectively balances and Wends comedy with action. Although paced slowly at die out­ set, once the commandos stint taking humans hostage, you’re definitely in for a treat tmtil die closing credits. It succeeds not only in special effects, but also in scripting. The writers dearly possess the amazing ability to take the cliché and make it entertaining and fresh. Sure, we’ve seen similar stories before, but only occasionally are they told so well. The soundtrack lends itself to the overall theme. Where else would the tune “Wat'’ be appropriate? Yes, even a Spice Girls tune is used, but don’t let that prevent you from seeing dus one. I can’ttw wait for the the sequel sequel (chdrieght). (cliché eight). lean a t for | out of five stars By G ayle Bass State P ress If you liked Gremlins in the ‘80s, then Small Soldiers is sure to be your fix for die “90s. Yes, this may sound cliché, but if you choose to see this treat, you’ll understand how appropriate ft is. In this story, young Alan Abernathy (Gregory Smith) gets hold of some very tech­ nologically advanced toy soldiers and Gorgon mutants while minding the family toy store. Cliché numero uno. Toym aker Jay M ohr {Jerry Maguire) assumes the psuedonym Gizmo (cliché numero dos) and inadvertently powers the toys using milftaiycomputerchips.Thismakesihemsertùent beings,much like Data fin n Star Trek, but of course, much shorter. And think for themselves they do. Tommy Lee Jones distinctly voices die commando lead­ er, Chip Hazard. His foe, Archer, voiced with Zeus-like authority by Frank Langella (cliché numbers three through six). However, the actors are not upstaged by their shorter animatronic screen mates. The tette Phil M Hartman is classic, as only he could be, By G ayle Bass State P ress If you see any movie this summer, check out Smoke Signals, a worthy winner of two awards at die Sundance Film Festival. Based on Sherman Alexie’s short story, “The Lone Ranger and Tonfo Fistfight in Heaven,” director Q uis Eyre weaves a beauti­ ful tapestry of magic, faith and friendship. In this tale, the lives of two Coeur d’Alene Indian boys are intertwined following a fateful childhood fire. Victor (Adam Beach) becomes brooding with a stoicism that hangs like a thun­ dercloud from his countenance and actions. Thomas (Evan Adams) is smaller, not just in height, but in bis knowledge of the world. He tells stories fun of both truth and lies, partly an attempt to carry on his people’s oral tradi­ tion, and partly to convince himself of his inner magic. With years of violent memories and a very talkative Thomas, Victor journeys to Arizona tp pick up die remains of his estranged father. The film tells just one of the many tales of the angst and loss of the Native American. But it also ¿ 6 gives glimpse at at those those everyday everyday emo­ emoit gives aa glimpse tions that affect all of us — longing, need and die magic of faith and friendship. The Adams and Beach characters show these emotions well. The same can be said of the host o f supporting actors, including a delightfully benign app'earance by Tom Skerritt Not fold in a traditional linear form, the director carefully kneads drama arid comedy together with the past and foe present Painted against the open backdrops o f Idaho and Arizona and the songs of its people, the direc­ tor leads the viewer in an odyssey of the sens­ es. Smoke Signals is truly an American tale, told about a great and noble people. Yet, we are shown that the nobility in this pair is in us alias we are enveloped in their journey toward the inner man. This gives the movie something rare in film — depth and feeling. Victor jokingly tells Thomas their lives are npt like “Dances with Salmon,” since their people were fisherman. And he is correct, no similarities can be drawn between this and the Kerin Costner film. This story has an individu­ ality of its own, and one that should not be overlooked. overlooked. Dhicago-style pizza aw aits the w eary at N ello’s ecca C ase By Becca ase State P ress The search is over — I have found a pizza that lingers succulently on the taste buds, making you daydream for more. And that’s exactly how brothers Geno and Brian Mei, co-own­ ers of Nello’s Pizza, wanted their pies to taste. A Chicago style pizzeria, Nello’s relies on its reputation of deli­ cious food and great service to bring in business, Brian said. In a city that’s brimming with over-run and hungry ASU stu­ dents, Nello’s boasts a laid-back ambiance that caters to the colle­ giate comforts. Sporting events grace the televisions in the dimly-lit bar and someone always appears to guide you to a table. If you’re C F J o m e D o r T T E a f f iP E ’S A T ambling drink, amblingininforfora quick a quick drink,Nello’s Nello’sselection selectionisissosoexpansive expansiveeven even a beer-logged party-goer may find something new. “In Crust We Trust” is the Nello’s motto, and any pizza con­ noisseur can see why — their Chicago deep-dish crusts are light and crispy, not dense o r soggy. So you don’t fill up after one slice and can partake in the plentiful variety of pies. Another of Nello’s unique pizza-making traits is they don’t pre­ cook their pizza sauce, This sauce which took Geno seven years to perfect is heaped on the pie right before entering the oven, brother words, it doesn’t sit in a vat cooking for hours as is customary for most pizza places. The result is a fresh and wann spiced tomato accompaniment to any topping or cheese. N IN T H & H O U S K «Cs A S H Old Town Tem p e 's Famous Histo rical Guinness • Sierra Nevada SALT RIVER • Harp « Bass New G u ile • Anchor Steam ♦ Fat Tire • Honey Brown UNIVERSITY CASEY MOORE'S | y _ h o u se N M 1- |H *TH STREET A V E W ine & Cocktails Plenty of Parking Nello’s in Tempe is located at 1806 E. Southern Ave. Call 8972060for store hours. o in r in k s H IS T O R IC Nowthat thatyou youwant wantsome, some,think thinkabout abouttrying tryingananOld OldWoric World Now Classic Salad, I consider vegetables my enemies, but this salad dis­ guised the fact that 1 was eating vegetables so well that‘1 readily scarffed down every bit, removing not one green offender. And Nello’s special house dressing has no match for its texture and fla­ vor, thus making it the perfect compliment to the salad. “You’re at home at Nello’s” Brian said. He said he believes the comfort Nello’s provides makes it a pleasure to visit But if you just want a slice of heaven, you can get it a Nello’s. L S ‘ * ' ‘1 GAMMAGE # ■ -------------: TOWER RECORDS. THE WHEREHOUSE / ROBINSONS • MAT iIL 602/784-4444 CALL-FOR-TIX ONLINE: http://www.ticketmaster.com www.azconcerts.com www.eveningstar.com Thursday, July 14,1998 S tate P ress Television boosting rocker stardom By D avid Bauder AP T elevision W riter NEW YORK — There is rock ’n’ roll and there is rock ’n’ roll on television. Chrissie Hynde learned the difference when a makeup artist, powder puff in hand, scampered across the stage toward her during a break between songs. “We’ve got to stop the show because I’Ve got some shine,” the Pretenders’ lead singer said, looking slightly mortified. She waved o ff the woman, preferring a towel to wipe away sw eat that reflected light into a camera. Drummer Martin Chambers Wondered aloud if his bald spot was Caus­ ing similar problems; Both shrugged off the annoyance to finish a sharp, 90minute set earlier last week. Producers hurriedly distilled it into an hour-long Hard Rock Live installment in time for the season premiere. In Hynde, they had a reluctant TV star. “1 don’t like being on television particularly, because I don’t.think music comes o ff very w ell,” she said a few hours before her performance. “But it’s more the name of the game these days. This is America, and if Americans see you on television, then you e x ist” While nothing replaces the experience of music in a club or arena, the electronic concert halls o f television are becoming increasingly important to a music career. For one thing, cable gives music many more television outlets. Hard Rock Live and Storytellers, where musicians intersperse songs with stories, are regular series on VH1. Sister station MTV has a weekly live music series and still makes installments o f its Unplugged series. PBS’s Sessions a t W est 57th is another respected m usic series. B lack Entertainment Television will introduce an hour-tong con­ cert series that wiD run five nights a week in the fall. Talk show hosts like Jay Leno and Rosie O ’Donnell also offer regular slots to musical acts. All are a tong way from the grainy footage o f concert specials o f the 1970s, often shown post-midnight, if at all. And with radio station playli$ts tightening considerably in the 1990s, more often television is the place for artists to expose their new work. In their early years, the Pretenders and other Britishbased bands made rock videos that were aired on children’s shows in England. When MTV started in 1981, its playlist was filled with this material. “It looked like there was this English invasion in music when actualjy there wasn’t,” she said. “We just happened to have a few videos knocking around.” Hynde w inces w hen she sees “rockum entaries” that glam orize the m undane lives o f m usicians. Television’s unforgiving nature is also somewhat intimidating for her: It’s tougher to play past a bad night and hope no one notices. “You can’t rely on any other party fo re i you may have up your sleeve,” she s a id .. W hen the Pretenders were asked to be on H ard Rock Live, she wanted to see some past shows and producers sent tapes o f perform ances by the Indigo G irls, Lou Reed, Rusted Root and Paula Cole. She liked that they simply got on stage and played. “If you like that act and they sounded pretty good that night, you’ll like the show,” she said. “It wasn’t like there were these incredible camera angles or something. It was the straightforwardness that appealed to me.” So the Pretenders, standing on a New York soundstage designed to look like the ruins o f ancient Greece, simply played. There were two new songs, but mostly they roared through hits like “Back on the Chain Gang,” “Precious” and “Middle of the Road.” Television cameras couldn’t quite tame Hynde’s rebel­ lious spirit. She seemed annoyed that organizers didn’t want to hear “Precious,” presumably because of its obsceni­ ties. She also didn’t ingratiate herself to sponsors. “I know this won’t make the final cut,” she confided to the stdbio audience, “but we by no means endorse the Hard Rock Cafe in any way.” Further evidence that rock ’n ’ roll isn’t always polite. Even television can’t change that. The second season o f Hard Rock Live, stretches into October with acts like Third Eye Blind, Boyz II Men, Ani D eFranco, T risha Y earw ood and the A llm an B rothers Band. Each week’s show is repeated three times: Saturdays and Thursdays at midnight and Mondays at 7 pan. mm □□ C RO SSW O RD w nniM S Joseph i resorts DOWN 1 Scan computer A cn o ssf Ulhereadriuer mithapaststill hasafuture. Even if you don’t have a perfect driving record, GEICO has a place for you. Every year, we offer renewal to over 98% of our policyholders. ♦ Low down-payment ♦ Monthly payment plan ♦ Money-saving discounts * ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Immediate coverage ♦ Free rate quote Call today or stop by our local office: (6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 1 Easy win 5 Track event 9T he Color Purple’ heroine 10 Onward 12 Salary boost 13 Conductor Zubin 14 Adjective modifier 16 Sphere 17 Layer 18 Expires, as a sub­ scription 21 Print uniis 22 Buccaneer 23 Soft-drink buy 24 December festival 26 Reid official 29 Nervous 30 City southwest of Leipzig 31 Study 32Chewy candy 34 Hinder 37 Wonder­ land guest 38 Black­ board 39Scout homes 40 Rough ouess 41 Health □ B n n ra n BBB B 0 □ D D 0 N3 1 3 1 V] d s 3 S dj V i p E H3 1 1 a dO am 3 A a V v 1 H 3 N■ 3 S 1 V H DN 0 i V■3 1 1 3 0 g 12¡V d ■ d w O¥ ■ 2 Martini garnishes 3 Scrooge, «0. 4 Equal 5 Aries 6 Pub brew 7 Rowan or Martin 8 Main course 9 Packing boot 11 Yaks it up 15 One of Santa's team IBScope 2 3 9 lauK 20 Golf goal 22 Engine sound 23 Young fellow 24 Prepares topropose 25 Attacked 28 Saskatch­ ewan capital 27 Makes 28 Clotho et ai. 29 Gambling concern 30 Minty drink 33 Horse chow 35 Greek vowel 36 Yank’s foe B 7 4 > 1 1 ■ 11 jo a 13 M IS 17 It It 20 It 25 27 28 29 31 34 35 36 38 41 40 1 _ 1 DAILY CRYPT0QUO11S - Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE X S X A R F PX E FS X DIRECT 11 M§30 31 1 5 a Ï| 1 a VIN1 fr i U Y LK Q U V Y D F P K X A ZJ E L P K PX B XYYLAR, LC A X X Y UV V Y. VGL V RX V F P• W J Y V K UL P X P F FPX D G LV L B I XA Q L P Page 21 Tuesday, July 1 4,1998 S tate P ress Merchandise matters more than movies B y M ic h a e l F l e e m a n A P E n t e r t a in m e n t W It’s a dizzying display that speaks to the importance this studio, which has yet to produce a major hit in its four-year history, is placing on the $60 million-plus Small Soldiers. C ritics w ill be keeping a sharp eye on w hether Sm all Soldiers, the movie, matches the merchandising. It also underscores the potential windfall DreamWorks can enjoy if the toys take off. A successfiil movie merchan­ dising campaign can bring a studio $30 million, and mil­ lions more when the video comes out. If the toys become a franchise, like Star Wars or TV’s Power Rangers, there’s no limit to the money that can be made. Yet DreamWorks’ efforts come at a delicate time in the merchandising business. Godzilla showed that the critical reaction to a movie is linked as much to the merchandising as die film itself. Disney saw back-to-back disappointments with The Hunchback o f Notre Dame and Hercules, and went slow on promoting Mulan, with a less aggressive tele­ vision campaign, to keep expectations in check. Indeed, caution is the buzzwbrd. Globe says that despite the large army o f Small Soldiers merchandise, the game plan for DreamWorks has been marked by moderation, par­ ticularly in dealing with retailers. “Our job is to get good product out there and part of it is managing the expectations and not letting the product lead the way,” says Globe, “If you oversell something and it doesn’t work out, you could be in trouble.” That’s why, he says, DreamWorks has earmarked this r it e r UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — Depending on how you look at it, Small Soldiers is either a movie that comes with a ton of merchandise or a ton o f merchandise that happens to come with a movie. Sound familiar? Hollywood went through this drill a few weeks ago with Godzilla. The critics were merciless, blasting the film as little more than an afterthought to an aggressive “sire does matter” promotional campaign that overran the stores with lizard toys. In this post-Godzilla environment, DreamWorks launch­ es its first major movie and merchandise effort with the nationwide opening o f Small Soldiers, a live-action/computer animation film about toy action figures that come to life and do battle. “This is our coming-out party," said DreamW orks’ con­ sumer products chief Brad Globe- Not to miss any opportu­ nity for cross-promotion, Globe was sitting at a table deco­ rated with Small Soldiers birthday party supplies, right down to the cupcake holders, in a company office crammed to the ceiling with other movie merchandise. Along with the action figures and birthday parapherna­ lia, DreamW orks is rolling out Small Soldiers candy, Tshirts, backpacks, View m asters, beach tow els, sleeping bags, little electric cars that kids can ride in, snowboards, video games, even Small Soldiers drapes. ■ M M « « « O U U IV II D l f t ;f i <9 H ave a N ice D ecad e — T h e ’70s P o p C u ltu re Box (Rhiao)-«* 1"V,5 * *v | Smiley faces are back, along with kitschy carpet, Richard Nixon and C.W. McCall. Rhino Records has packaged die 1970s in a $100, seven-CD set featuring 160 songs from the M e Decade, including more titan SOfiwraerNo. I hits. T te e a r fr ta n e c a ^ b o ^ warned this ambitious set to be fin. And lock at whit’s inside: a soundtrack o fth e ’70s, which means music bothgood and bad The set opens w ith Edison Lighthouse (“Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes”) and closes with McFRdden ■ W h ite h e a d (“A in’t No Stopping Us Now”), meaning long-forgotten tunes from beginning to en d Performances range from awesome to awful as Rhino rem em bers the H ues C orporation (“Rock the B oat”), A licia B ridges (“1 Love the N ightlife” ), Andrea True Connection (“More, More, More”) and Gilbert O'Sullivan (“Alone Again Naturally”). The liner notes include a song-by-song essay and a time line with dates o f major events in die decade. Completing the aural flashback are occasional snippets from ’70s newscasts. So wallow in nostalgia. Dig that digital version oi “Dueling Banjos ” Be proud to discover you remember all thè words to “Smokin' in the Boy’s Room.” — By Steven Wine, Associated Press Writer. Payton’s Place (Verve) — Nicholas Payton Nicholas Payton’s new CD strengthens his standing as one movie for major merchandising. The studio’»first ani­ mated feature, Prince o f Egypt, w on’t have such a push when it’s released at Christmas. DreamWorks executives felt it would be inappropriate to spin off merchandise from the story of Moses. Retailers, meantime, are bullish bn Small Soldiers. “DreamWorks has positioned it in a way that it’s not really going to have that much competition,” said Michael Tabakin, director o f licensing and entertainment marketing for New Jersey-based retail giant Toys R Us. T he film ’s c o m p u te r-a n im a te d G o rg o n ite s and C om m andos are facing only F rench sch o o lg irls from Madeline, with a limited line of dolls and their accessories. E ven the G odzilla experience isn’t scaring retailers. Tabakin says that the little-discussed reality is that while the Godzilla backlash made for good reading and Water­ cooler gossip in Hollywood, it actually didn’t translate into dollars and cents. The line of lizard figurines, key chains and sprats bottles continues to do steady, if unspectacular business, with the beast easily avoiding that fate worse thaf bullets: the bargain table. “We have, been extremely satisfied with product sales,” he said, though he stressed that there are no guarantees in movie merchandising, in which important planning deci­ sions are made long before the movie comes out. : “You have to take a leap o f faith,” he said. “You have no choice.” one o f the most important young voices in jazz “Payton's Place” is the third solo album from the 24-ycar old trum­ peter. and each d f the 12 tracks is special. Guest artists include Wynton Marsalis, Roy Hargrove and Joshua Redman, and the musicians seem to inspire the best in each other Tim W arfield (saxophone) and Anthony Wonsey (piano) also provide fine support The arrangements are inventive, the solos exciting and the ensemble playing first-rate. Highlights include “Zigaboogaloo,” which kicks off the record w ith a solid N ew O rleans groove: “Three Tnim peteers“ with Payton, Marsalis and Hargrove swap­ ping solos, and “People Make the World Go Round,” an affectionate co v efo f the 1970s song by the Stylistics. - By Steven W ine, Associated Press Writer. : — Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in . our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... Sarsaparilla is the root that flavors n a i kaar APARTMENTS FREE RENTAL SERVICE APARTMENT MATCH The easy way lo api locating Phone 736-0100 Z iti S. MAI Ave. Sie. *06-J Tempe, A Z 8588Ï __ (1 block south of Broadway L 5 J on Milli «MSB! C al Toll Free 1-888-260-3788 Makeyouradvertising $$$$workherder! Put it in the Classifieds! APARTMENTS APARTMENT RELOCATION Service. Look now for an apart­ ment. Call for current info. 752^ FREE (3733). Ask for Amy. VERY NICE, lrge, clean, 2bd/ lba, walk to A SU . $569/m o. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238 I l&Z ^ B edroom A p a rtm e n ts APARTMENTS APARTMENTS MCCLINTOCK/ UNIVERSITY N ew ly rem odeled 2bd/ lb a , $50a/mo. 858-0444 TEM PE/ASU. NICE 1 bdrm, pool, lndry, fans, quiet. 5 min. walk to ASU. $400.921-7120 PAP AGO PARK I 2bd/2ba, $85tVmo. John 945-1370 HOMES FOR RENT TAMARACK APTS. Near ASU. Large 1 & 2 BR, w/d hookup, cov'd ; prkng, laundry, pool, quiet. From $500.967-3404 3 BD HSE, pool, w/d, dw, ac, etc. $1095/mo; 5 bd hse, pool, w/d, dw, ac, e tc ., $1295/m o, Rural/Apache. 966-2627/692-0844 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL d / w , w / d . C o v e re d p rk n g , p o o l C lose to C am pus R E sid E N T U l/D a y PRoqRAM I n stru cto rs , Apache Terrace Apartments • 968-6383 W o r Ic w irb disA bled acI u Its in dAy, FT/PT. r esìc I en tìa I VOC pROqRAM. S c OTTSì I a I e (oCATÍONS. 9 9 4 '5 7 0 4 EOE HOMES FOR R g N T _____ HOMES FOR RENT 3B D , 2BA w/ lg bkyd, ac. $l,060/m o, 1 mi west o f cam­ pus. Hob 333-3194 STOP RENTING! Own for as lit­ tle as $1,680 down. Tempe fam­ ily park. A SU not far away. 839-3980. ' 3BD /2BA , $800/MO. 4bd/2ba, $900/m o. 5bd/2ba, $ 1000/mo. Close to ASU. Call 894-0288 4 B D /2 9 A HOME, 2000 sq ft. a/c, evapr cooler; fridge, w/d, 2 car carport. 7249 E. Latham ( S c o t t s d a le /M c K e l l i p s ) . $1200/mo. 941-5327 BIKE TO ASU. 3 br/2ba, w/d, a/c, fenc yd, 813 W. Laird, $1,150i 520-284-9283 Eva. / NICE 3B D hom e 1/2 mi‘. to ASU, a/c, w/d, fridge, pets p.k., fenced ytd. $975/mo. 968-7319 TOWNHOMÈS/ CO N D O S FOR 2BD/1 1/2BA condo, conven­ iently located. Private patio, comm. pòol, new flooring & paint, $700. Monica, 314-5753 3BD/2BA, UNIVERSITY/PRICE, w/d, new carpet, cov'd prkng, pool, Jacuzzi, $895/mo. Avail. 8/1. Call 861-2052 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT PAP AGO PARK V illage I, A vail. A ug. 3bd/2ba, $ 1300/m o; 3bd/2ba, $1250/m o; 2bd/2ba, $850/mo; 2bd/lba, $80Q/mo Call 496-8939 PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba con­ do. New paint, clean carpets. Very nice. Call 430-3194 QUESTA VIDA - 2 master bd, 2 master ba, w/loft, e n d porch & balcony, w /d, d/w , frig, evd pkng, 2 comm, pools w/spa & raq. ball. A vail A ug. 1. $72Q/mo. Rob 333-3194. QUIET 2BD/1BA, walk-in clos­ et, w/d, pkng, good sch ools, new ac, private yd. $850/m o 424-7882. HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd/2ba Condo, pool, w /d, a/c, patio, W alk/bike to A SU . $675/m o. A lso, 3bd/2ba at $875/m o. 966-0987 » QUESTA VIDA 3bd/3ba. Start at $ 1 100/m o. Luxury tow nhouse, 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 h elp w X n ted GEN ERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL Social Service agency seeks applicants to w ork in program s designed to prom ote com m unity par­ ticipation for individuals w ith develop­ m ental disabilities. W e offer a variety of positions w orking w ith individuals in their ow n hom es o r residential set­ tings. W e offer over 4 0 hours of paid training and have an excel lent, benefits plan. W e have flexible schedules with FT, PT and on-call positions available immediately. O u r pay ranges from $7.00 - $8.00 DOF/EOE. Please call 431 -9511 for m ore information. Page 22 Tuesday, July 14, 1998 S tate P ress RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING ROOM S FOR RENT ROOM S FOR RENT 2 RMMTES needed for 4bd home w/ pool! $275 + utils. Fe­ males pref. Call 456-1126 CONDO NEAR A SU , mature n/s grad. Mstr. bd, $350 or 2nd bd $300, w/d incl. comm, pool. Call owner at 266-7675. ■ RMMTE W A NTED to share 2bd/2ba apt. 1/2 mi from ASU, female pref, male ok, $350+1/2 utils Call Ryan, 921-8639 ROOM FOR rent, Scottsdale/ Chaparral. Double bed, phone, desk, cable, male student prefd. $275/mo, 970-5830 F RMMT pref to share 2bd/2ba condo. N S, NRx, student. $350/mo+dep & 1/2 util. Alma School/Baseline, 345-8503. ROOMMATE WANTED: 3bd/ 2ba, 1/3 utils+$333/m o. Fern., N /S, 21+, like cats, laid back. Call Renee or Lisa, 784-2249. LARGE ROOM for rent in' 3,000 sq.ft. 3bd home. All util­ ities included. Spa, w /d , din­ ing, liv in g , sun den, library, backyard deck. Baseline/Rural. $40Q/mo. Call, 456-4189 FOR AUG- rmmt to share 2bd, 2ba apt, Baseline/48th. $375 + 1/2 Util 438-0307 ROOM S FOR RENT 20 S O M ETH IN G single mom looking for respon sib le ea sy ­ going fem ale to share Ahwatukee condo. $400 + 1 /2 utils. W alking distance to S. Mtn. Call M ichelle, 752-0583 or msgy @ 592-9631. 20 YR-OLD fem ale student looking to share house, apt or condo with other girls for Fall '9,8. Call if looking to rent out a/oom. Katie 425-776-0411, LOOKING FOR fun, easy-go­ ing, responsible roommate to share. 1000 sq.ft! 2bd/2ba apt. Fully furnished, new ly rem o­ deled,, pool, 1; block from ASU! $ 4 1 5/m o. inclding all utils.: Call Jennifer at 956-1219. 21 YR.+ female wanted to share 2bd/2 1/¿ba twnhme, i 3th St./ Hardy. . $350 '+ $200 . dep. + 1/2. utils. N/Si must like cats, avail, now. Robin, 921-4134. / BEAUTIFUL 4BD /2BA home, • Southyrn/Riiral w /pool, cable, fireplace & Crystal water. Fern, prefd. Avail, now, $350/m o.+ utils. Lisa Marie, 692-3085. Find it F A S T in the Classifieds C la s s ifie d s 0 6 5 -6 7 3 5 R MMTE FOR 2bd/2ba condo. Carport, great furniture, walk-in closet. $400/mp. 777-2165 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ACT CiFESTYLE. 3 cool rmrpts needed n o w N o credit nee. $ 3 5 0 /m o + l/5 u til, free cable/ movies, pho/ voice mail, exotic; (party) pool w/jac, sngle/adlt ac­ tivities. Lg ktchn, furn.;. Glean . resp. only. $ 3 5 0 dep now, $100 cleaning fee. N /S, N /D , N/Rx. 1311 W. Laird St. (Priest & Univ). J.J. 967-3930 or 602653-5040, cell. MALE GRAD to share 3bd house w / pool: Near A SU, shopping. $350, utils, incld. Call Lynn, 491-720L NEW IN town? Rooms avail, in 4bd/2ba house w / pool, $150/Wkly. Call Dana, 929-0446 ROOMMATE W ANTED to share 3bd house w / fun people. W /D, walk to ASU, $275/m o. Call 967-7199. HOMES FOR SALE RMMTE NEEDED asap, beauti­ fu l’.large hse, 3bd/3baf pool, $280+173 u t il.. Warner/Price 756-2307 PATIO HOME for sale, less than 2 mi from ASU. $61,900. 3bd/2ba, 1264 sq ft, 919 S. Hacienda Dr, Tempe, 3 separate patios, across from pool. Call Pam Allsworth @ Melcher 9057271 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Looking for an individual with general clerical experience. Must be able to use photocopier, facsim ile machines, type­ writer, and c o in g ia à ^ .^ t^ positively interact w ith public and answer phone courteously. £ajrt-time position available M-F 12-5. *7.00-87.50 DOE. Fill out an application at 2403 W. Huntington Dr. #100, Tempe at 48th ft Southern, behind Bank One or call 431-9511 for more information. HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL NEW RESORT RESERVATION CENTER Coordinate Tours/ Reservations • Guarantee $7-$15.92/hr. • 37 Permanent Positions •9-1 or 5:00-9:00 (24 & 30+ Href • Training Provided, No Selling Ellen 491-4921 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE 2BD/2BA, 2 car garage, w/d, jactizzi. 1280 sq. ft. C lose to A SU i M cK ellips/ C ollege. $123,500.970-4724 TEMPE/ QUESTA V IDA, $98,000, 1.5 mi to ASU, 1400 sq ft, 3bd/ 3ba TH, assum e loan or 3% FHA, new floor/tile, lots o f Upgrades. Harris Equity 888-870-5762. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL FLEXIBLE PART-TIME F O C U S o ffe rs fle x ib le :a # # Jb ; even in g sh ift^ fo a id train in g , h o urly p lu s bo nus plan! E n jo y v a rie V a n d p e o p le ? You’ll lik e in terview in g co g su m e rs th e phone. No s a le s . Id e al fo r stu d e n ts. C a ll .iW v a t 8 7 4 -2 7 1 4 . HELP WANTEDGENERAL CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE! CONDO NEAR A SU , $350 utils, incld. 2bd/2ba, poolside, w/d, male or female. 921-3513 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE H ave fu n c a llin g V alley s in g le s t o in v ite th e m in f o r a f r e e t o u r o f S c o tts d a le ’s m o s t p r e s tig io u s s in g le s s e rv ic e , Great Expectations! $ 10/ H R CALL CENTER RECEPTI0t|p| M V * MOBILE Communications is one o f the hattoe^i most innovative messaging centers and currerrtly has openings for professional, courteous Receptionists to handle inbound calls. No selling o r telem arketing involved. We are located on 48th St. ju st south o f Baseline. Qualified applicants must possess excellent spelling and. communication skills and typing speed o f W e-currently have F/T & P/T shifts avaB. $7 riper hour to start which includes excellent benefits. R E B fe ftp e rO w » to set up interview. G U A R A N T E E D ! !! p lu s b o n u s e s ($12 - $ I 5 / h r avg.) n o e x p e r ie n c e r e q ’d 9 4 1 -0 5 0 0 C a ll a f t e r 4 p m Summer Sunsational Earn up to $ 1 9 2 per m o n th by donating life-saving plasma! New donors earn a total of $ 7 0 for the first 2 donations. Visit our friendly, m odern center an d find out m ore about th e o pportunity to earn cash w hile helping others. P/T CUSTOMER SERVICE REP Study While You Work! Now Hiring 3rd Shift, 11:30pm - 8:00am Fridays & Saturdays $8.50/hr Paid Parking D ow ntow n Phoenix Location Must b e a b le to a tte n d training. 8 h rs for o n e day o r 3-4 hirs e a ch day over 3 days for Summer and Fall To sch ed u le an ap p o in tm en t, call Tamy o r Vicki a t 707-1875 & refer to jo b #A SU 71498 C € N T € O N ► $5S0to\$790plus bonus • Mafte vour hours CalTIoda B io -S e rv ic e s . In c 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 • Tempe 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Must be 18-49 years of age, p o sse ss a valid ID.and proof of local ad d ress & So cial Security num ber. U LT IM A T E ST A F F I N G ASU Sun Dial Fund S E R V I C E S B e st Shift in Ticx\n HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO: ✓ Be o u t i n tim e to e n jo y t h e day! A m e r i c a 's d i s c o u n t s o u r c e f o r c o m p u t e r s , h a r d w a r e a n d s o f t w a r e AND WORK FOR A FUN, ENERGETIC, SUPPORTIVE MANAGER. Wfe CURRENTLY HAVE 20 FT/PT AVAILABLE FOR OUR 7 M 3 6 0 % I F T A re ✓ Wa n t you a late riser ? ✓ T hen the or our 1 2 6 0 9 pm shift ! ARE YOU A PARTY ANIMAL 3 pm -9 pm S cheduled QSM C ustomer (In te rn s h ip s C o lleg e of R é s ilio n s S tu d e n ts shift is t h e place to be . A ll SHIFTS PROVIDE PAID TRAINING C alling for our F ortune 500 companies A dvancement opportunities for everyone & Tempe-based Insight is a $485 m illion, publicly-traded telesales organization marketing computers, hardware and software to business custom ers nationwide. We are seeking careeroricnted professionals looldng.for great opportunities to join our 1000+ employees in a fast-faced and fun environm ent to m eet people th a t h a v e your sleep habits ? T h e n J o in ✓ Attention ASU Graduates and Students: We need your help! raises service positions also available! College * Graduates Business Acct. Executives Aflor formal job training, Top 2 Performers will receive a scholarship for the following somocter iLoxirjal training with pay 30-35K possible 1 year you will receive Base+Bomia+Benefits Interested in being an Intern at Insight? Please apply in person (n o phone calls) at: STOP BY FOR AN IMMEDIATE INTERVIEW! 6820 South Harl Avenue, Tempe, Arizona 85283 1310 E . Broadw ay Suke% lQ3 * T empe Insight offers 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 mail resume. Please specify you are applying for internship position. No phone calls will be accepted. Smoke-free workplaoe. Drug testing. EOE m/frh/v. Visit our Web She at wwwjnsigbtxxmi (602)8949816 St a t e P r ess Tuesday, July 14,1998 REAL ESTATE AUTOMOBILES GOV’T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1. D elin ­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area ' Toll free 800-2 1 8 -9 0 0 0 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. 84 GJ7 JEEP, hd top, ac, blk, 1 owner, good cond, $7,0 00 obo. Must see. 897-1524 FURNITURE SOFA $199; bed $59; bunk bed $179; dinette $95; fouton $119; dresser $59.962J0749 M ate your advertising $$ $$ work harderl Put It In the Classifieds! HELP WANTEDGENERAL 90 TAURUS W agon, 3 .8L, 89K, new trans, brakes, tires. Must see. $4500obo. 839-9549 91 SATURN SL2, twin cam, 4 dr, pwr windws & locks. 5spd, a/c. $4250 Bob, 890-7861 96 DODGE NEON, great cond, 30k, great ac, am/fm cass, 5spd, $6,700. Must sell. 395-8895. NEED GREAT transportation?? 84 Toy Camry, high mi. Runs great!! $750obo 829-7075 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ExceRent Opportunity COMPUTER JOBS CS. C SE A CIS Majors W alk to W ork! Now • Windows NT/95 Developers, Tech Support & Testen • VB, VC++, SQ L, JAVA, Visual InterOev or MFC Experience Helpful G REA T ENVIRONMENT! G R EA T LOCATION! [Apply in person at the Tempe Town Center 20 E . University Dr, Suite 304 or FAX resume ¡to 967*5444. E O E. www.vHrix.com v ap it -h -ioc tutors Meded li you have a desire to help High School students succeed, we have positions available for graduate students with the ability to tutor in allthree (not just one) of the following subjects: ★ High School Spanish 1-2 * High School Algebra 1-2 * High School Chem istry 1-2 a M onctey-Thuisday schedule (m ust work at least two full days from 1:30pm -8:30pm ), a wage of $654-$1,632/m onth, and valuable work experience. We For more information on Fall openings, please call 953-3070 Summer positions available NOW for High School and Elementary teachers. AUTOMOBILES ' SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, C adil­ lacs, C hevys, BMW’s, Cor­ vettes. A lso Jeeps, 4 W D’s, Your area. Toll free, 1-800-2189000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $500 SIGN ON Earn $8-$ 15/hour or more. Guaranteed hourly/bonus. N o selling, set appts. only. Call es­ tablished customers. Flex, hrs., am/pm shifts avail. Fun office, paid weekly: Call 655-0329 APPT. SETTERS needed p/t, competitive wages. Denise, 6450747. V CHRISTIAN PRE-SCHOOL & ch ild care center positions avail, for a.m. &/or p.m. 8382440, Price & Guadalupe. KYRENE SCHOOL District is seeking Club Leader positions working directly w / children for the 1998-99 school year. PT & FT positions avail. Apply in person at Kyrene School D is­ trict, 8700 S. Kyrene Rd.; Tempe, 85284 (corner o f Kyrene & Warner Rds.) by submitting a resume & 1 letter o f recom ­ mendation. O f stop by our table at the A SU Round Up, Aug. 1st at the Activity Center, Call 598-7308 with questions. CUSTOMER GREETER, FT pref, or PT possible, m ostly weekends! Apply at front desk of AutoNation USA. 705-3600. by Fran ces Drake Tuesday, July 14, 1998 ARIES (Mar. 21 to April 19) attracted to your new centered . Sumption up your most charm­ ; self, ing smile,and use it to convince SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov, 21) someone that you’re right. The Solutions are elu siv e; so you end result is bound to make should postpone making impor­ everybody happy. tant decisions. In the meantime, TAU3RUS (April 20 to. May 20) iiys all right to toss around some Be sure to make time for yourstrategies with colleagues. self,, even if it requires rearrang­ SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 22 to ing your sch ed u le , in the Dec. 21) The love arid support e v en in g , attend a cultu rally o f another helps you advance enriching event with some one farther than you would have on you admire. your own. Once you’re on the GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) right path, make sure not to ; it’s an excellent time for cre­ stray far from it. ative Inuinstorming and intellec­ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) tual thinking. Join forces with Roll up your sleeves and put in another in order to expand your so m e m u ch -needed grou n d ­ possibilities. work. Your public reputation CANCER (June 21 to July 22) might cause you some concern. For o n c e , sen sa tio n is more At night, call a close relative, im portant to you than hard AQUARIUS (Jan. 21) to Feb. 18) thought. Make the most o f the Dream up som e new ways o f decadent period by enjoying it pu ttin g your th o u g h ts into with someone special. action. The key m ight lie in ; LEO (July 23 to Aug. 2 2) You being willing to ask for help or are inspired to learn th ings. advice from a relative. Thus, it is a great time to gather PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) information. Focus on data that A troubling mystery is finally can help you fulfill long-term solved. Now that you have the goals: missing piece o f the puzzle, you VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) can decide what to do about the Rather than argue with someone situation. 4• • close to you, indulge his or her YOU BORN TODAY are dri­ desires. The logic o f that course ven by nature. Others usually o f action w ill become apparent are unaware o f your grand ambitions. Your ability to feign shortly. LIBRA (S ep t 23 to Oct. 22) m od esty m akes p eo p le e v en While it’s your nature to nurture more appreciative o f your cre­ others, make it a point to look ative talents. You tend to be ide­ after y o u r s e lf f o r a c h a n g e. alistic when it comes to love. ©1998 King Features Syndicate Inc. O th ers w ill be e v e n m ore HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL FRONT OFFICE work for Tempe doctor’s office. Typing nee. Ft/pt, 8am-12pm, M -F. 838-2277 FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $7-12/hr. Call Kristin at 777-1054. GQ/VOGUE New co. seeking 5 people who want to make a changé. Fun, freedom & finance. 955-3475. Ask for Jeff. GROWING COMPANY has FT positions avail. in customer service, marketing, purchasing & computer trouble shooting. Hours flexible, $8/hr. to start. Corporate opportunities after 6 months. Near ASU . Call 4384400, Courtney. GROWING TEMPE Opinion Research firm has several posi­ tions available. Flexible full or part-time. 967-4441 HAIR STYLISTS & Nail techs needed. Busy ASU area. Gen­ erous commission or rent. Call Jim, 967-2360 C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS IMMEDIATE Openings - Growing Compnay needs thé following positions: Admin. Asst/Exec. Sec., excel­ lent pay, FT, $9.00 up, DOE. R eceptionist, opportunity to grow, FT/PT, $7 00 up, DOE. Acct. Reps.-outside sales, FT/ PT, com pensation package. Draw com m ission. A ll p osi­ tions full medical, dental, eye. Mesa office. Call Kevin Stevens at 833-9560, M-F, 9-6. LAWN SERVICE pt/ft help. No exp. nec. $6.50/hr. 966-3269. Flexible hours. NEWS REPORTERS needed for State Press Fall 98 semester. Questions: Chris Kahn, 965-2292 or e-mail Christok@asu.edu. Dead­ line July 31st. P/T ASSIST» wanted, Looking for someone who is interested in pharmaceutical sales after col­ lege to assist in the day to day aerations on my business fran­ chise. Minimum 10hrs./wk, re­ quired. Please fax resume in­ quiries to, 753-4247. P/T CUSTOMER Service Reps. United Blood Services, the Val­ ley's nonprofit blood provider since 1943, is seekin g indi­ viduals who want to make a dif­ ference in people's lives. Mom- RESTAURANTS/ BARS Drive a School Bus! Paid sum m er training NOW for school starting in August, if you enjoy being outdoors & working with childreri, then this is the job for you! 20 hr/wk minimum guarantee. $8.96/hr. Apply at: Tem pe Elem entary School D istrict #3, 3205 S . R ural Rd. 00 150-9006, Ë x t 7001 9 Y The Ahwatukee and Chandler YMCAs are now accepting applications for a variety of full-time and part-time childcare posi­ tions. Work 1040 hours per week, flexible shifts available from 6:30am to 6:30pm, M-F. $5.67-$7.55/hr. Ahwatukee 759-6762 ChandlerGilbert 899-9622 HELP WANTED* GENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ing, evening & weekend shifts avail. $6.87/hr. + shift differ­ ential for eve. hours. Good cus­ tomer service skills & pleasant phone voice p r e f d. C all 4319500. Tem pe location. Em­ p loyee drug testing req'd. EOE/M/F/D/V WALK TO work! R ecept. w/ good com m ., organization & cust, relations skills. Account­ ing exp. a huge plus. Apply in person; Tem pe Town. Center, 20 E. U niversity, Ste, 304 or fax resume to 967-5444. EOE. www.vitrix.com for more info. P/T POSITION distributing ad­ vertising materials on campus. N o selling involved. A ll mate­ rials provided free o f charge. 800-YOUR-JOB. www.acmnet. com/postering/youjob.htm WANTED: HOST/ H ostess, flexible schedule, $10/hr. Call Alan 874-5888. PERSONAL CARE assist, need­ ed for a.m. & 11p.m. w / quad­ riplegic. $8-9/hr. N o taxes withheld. 966-2059 PT, M-TH 6-9pm $7/hr. Near ASU. Survey telemarketing, no pressure presentation, No exp. nec. C all for interview with Norm Gifford at 829-3460 P/T RECEPT., must be avail­ able holiday breaks. Icon Hair Architexture, Scotts. Fashion Square. 941-8656. PT/FT POSITIONS for students in­ terested in legal profession. Need professional appearance & car. Call 452-1826 for appt. RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits, Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe. Cindy, 496-0255 SALES ASSOCIÂTES wanted for AZ M ills candy store, flex, hrs. Fun jub, good pay. C all Sweéts from Heaven, 777-7307, SECRETARY/ RECEPT. computer/people skills req'd. M-Th, 3 -8 :30pm. Located at S cot­ tsdale Airpaik. $7/hr, 951-2716 FRONT COUNTER duties (phones, fax, cust. svee* deliv­ ery, etc,) IBM &Jor Mac exp & Quick Printing knowledge a +. Start $6/hr. Flex wik hrs., 9am4:30pm, M-F. 820-0100 Carole note information. ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST Page 2 3 SELL ADVERTISING for the State Press. Start now! Pick up an application in the Matthews Center, Rm 15. Great experi­ ence. Great pay. Great place. Do it now! f.‘ You Asked For It, You G ot It! NOW SERVIN G S LIC E S A LL DAY! 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e rs ity 0 6 8 -0 6 6 6 FREE ■ SLICE BUY ONE GET ONE FREE ALL DAY & ALL NIGHT EVERYDAY O f f e r E x p ir e s 7/31/98 S u n n y ’s P iz z a 9 6 8 - 6 6 6 6 TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G E TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G q Term Paper Editing & Typing Resumes Theses • Dissertations Applications • Cover Letters 262-5454 SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emplymt. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hfs/wk. Call Jori for interview between 2pm4pm, 921-8282. STONE WORKER- Lapidar y shop seeks Production Tech in making o f gift items o f stone. S u ccessful applicant is detail oriented & m echanically in ­ clined. Must be physically strong. Send/fax .resume to: - Kyle Enterprises, 1851 S. Emer.son St. M esa, AZ 85210; fax (502) 839-0251 ; STUDENT WORKER needed to work in State Press C lassi­ fieds office. Phone, people & good com m unication sk ills a must. Familiarity with Macs a 4-. Please apply in the basement of Matthews Center. INSTRUCTION Bartending A ca d em y WordWt&rk T y p e w r i t in g E d itin g SHOW ME tiie- money! Are you earning $500/wk.? Local mar­ keting company is hiring 6 people to fill direct- sales posi• tions. Work evening hrs. promoti ng local video stores & res­ taurants. Equals $204- per hr. Call Tom at 460-0859. 1-Oey Servie* Have Fun... Make Money... Meet People K a th y Je ro m e Fastest ty p is t In the USA Wertem Temporary Services National Typing Contest - 1 6 2 wpm TUTORS TUTORS A L L T U T O R S W e offer tutorial for th e following su m m e r classes: S u c c e s s fu lly h e lp in g stu d e n ts s in c e 1 9 8 0 . C a lli-800-B A R T E N D w.ww.bartendingacademycom N O T PUT YOUR money where yoUr mouth is. Set appts. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. 4-comm. $12/hr. avg. 829-6222 SALES ASSOCIATES needed. Not telemarketing! $9O$204-/hr. .Day, eve & wknd hrs. Call 7531771 or 800-208-6533. •LOOKING* For a great job, fast cash, nobrainer sales, no nonsense. Call 888-275-4462 or fax resume to 714-375-0493. HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE F/T OR live-in mother’s helper for bilingual 3 yr. old boy. Car & good driving record needed. M-F, 9am-5pm. Call 820-3838. JO B OPPORTUNITIES POWERFUL JOB Hunting workbook, "Real World N et­ working"- $9.95, Real World B usiness System s, P.O. Box 17056, Phx, AZ 85011-0056 RESTAURANTS/ BARS BARTENDER, M -F, 16-30 hrs./wk., $8-12/hr. Fun neigh­ borhood bar. Apply at The Woodshed 1 ,19 W. Baseline. STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. Apply in person, lpm -5pm , Mon.-Fri. 5001 E. Washington. SERVICES TYPING & TRANSLATIONS, Spanish and E nglish. 4978361 Marié. HEALTH & FITNESS LARGER BREASTS! A fford­ able & safe alternative to im ­ plant! Toll-free 877-6-BREAST TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G $2.50/PG , S15/R E S, Proofed, APA/M LA. Same day. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. INSTRUCTION GUITAR LESSONS. Doctoral student in c lassical guitar at ASU, avail, to teach all styles & theory. Call Caine at 894-1376. 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 m es­ sage at 940-1935. Find out what it takes to make it in Hol­ lywood. TUTORS MATH TUTOR for Algebra, PreCaicUlus, C alculus, Finite Math, Statistics, and more. Call Andrew 730-5904. TUTORS A R E HELP WANTEDSALES TUTORS A L IK I A lg e b ra/Fin ite Math MAT 117, MAT 119 Calculus MAT 210, MAT 270 Statistics QBA 221, PSY 230 Physics PHY 111, PHY 112 Business FIN 300 , OPM 301 S u m m e r sc h o o l m o v e s fa s t — d o n ’t h e sita te in getting o u r h e lp ! MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON" CALL: 968 4668 • Cornerstone Mall Page 24 Tuesday, July 14, 1998 S tate Prfss SPECIAL STUDENT FARES O pinions R ound trip from Phoenix BELIZE ............. . ,$520 B R A Z IL .......... ............. $759 C O LU M B IA .......... , .$728 VENEZUELA .................$538 GUADALAJARA . . . . $ 3 0 3 BOLIVIA ..................... $795 PANAMA CITY . . . . $594 C O S T A R IC A ............. $544 GUADAMALA ........... $527 IXTAPA ........................ $308 CANCÚN ...................$395 CABO SAN LUCAS . .$298 PUERTO VALLARTA .$308 M A ZA TLA N ................$298 M E X IC O C IT Y ...........$350 PERU ......................... .$656 C H IL E .........................$1028 EL SALVADOR . . . . .$496 ★ ★ ★ ★ - The Arizona Republic 1998 Best 4 Star Restaurant in Arizona 1998 ★ Luch Battit 11-2:M ★ Sat-Sa 11-4 t l i i n r 9-llpa ★ Opta 7 Rays AWeek ★ Rlit-li, Catering aid Tnkt-an Anilabla magic kingdom, including Adventure lidian Cuisine Restanrant Land, Tomorrow 5 DAY YOUTH PASS................... $216 Other Cities Available Land and Fantasy MILL AVENUE TRAVELi f « 1845 E. Broadway, Tempe SJÏ. Corner Broadway & McClintock 9 6 1 -5 2 3 4 Land. vV / Discounts Also Available to Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. Best Indian Restaurant - 1997 Your passport to a EUROPEAN RA IL PASSES & TRAIN TICKETS ISSU ED HERE 966-6300 S t a t e P re ss t a 9 9 1 -9 1 1 9 Now Open- 2nd Location 830 W. Southern, M esa N.W. Comer lyrtrnoton & Southern I S S -9 9 6 8 See pages 4 & 5. □ ™™™™ MM NEWEST S ” W SW ISN ™— M OW O PEN 1125 E. Apache Blvd. “Close to campus” Between Terrace & Rural m S.E. Comer 5 5 7 -7 8 8 2 D RA FTS O PEN T O CLOSE 7 DAYS A W EEK!!! BU D L IC H T & M IL L E R LITE 99 Fri. & Sat. 8-TO pm (» 0 5 S . A 4 1 L L A V E . T E A 4PE IjapM W E at■ O m O m gefcioasti», w eek 1 w eek S w eek 3 w eek 5 w eek 6 w eek 7 w eek 3 PLAY TO WHY GROOVY PRIZES EACH WEEK. » V ■ m mmmmm I I I I a ir h o c k e y" championplayer wili win a FULL YEAR of games„ movies anti sportsi o n e Enter our sweepstakes to win a trip to the REAL T H H M EinAustralia in the summerof EO O O ! H u le m a n d ! r e g u l a t i o n s a v a i l a b l e a t G a m e W a r h m . AH Sum m er Lung - A Whale IMew Way to Play! M o n . • F ri. 5 :3 0 p m ~ l lp r n W e e k e n d * lO a n t • 1 1 p m M o n d a y • F r id a y 1 O a n t • 5 :3 0 p n t School 1 ho—r m , • e e e th tm a O u t » P la y a In l l w f e ! ! ! S ! 'l * > ', $ 1 0 . 0 !» - ^ P r im e T im e P l a y ” 0 E V E R Y NICHT 11pm • Jam Late Night Lunacy” 15*00 lim ite d p ia r ! $ 1 5 . 0 0 ' (Milan T *