Former Sun Devil Tillman turns Cardinal heads at training camp Vice President Gore subject o f Reno fund-raising probe ASU sees rise in students seeking loans B y L idia E. K elly St a t e P ress Sarah Nojon stood in a line snaking through the Memorial Union. She waited to receive her sweet candy — a financial aid check. She did nor know how much she would get, but said she hoped for $1,500. “Basically I need the money to pay for registration and books,” said Nojon, who also works part time as a typist for Motorola. The job brings in $500 a month, which helps to pay for her apartment. “With the financial aid 1 should be fine,” the 23-year-old biology major said. ~ The Student Financial Aid Office at ASU estimated that about 32,(KX) students will receive need-based financial aid during this academic year. More than 20,000 of them are borrowers, while the remaining 10.000 arc awarded with grants and scholarships. This is roughly 60 percent of the total student population. 4 4 It's e a sy to borrow. B u t stu d e n ts need to k n o w th e y w ill h a ve to p a y it back one day. Diane Stem per, D irecto r of A S U ’s Student Financial A id Office The total amount of loans paid by Student Financial Aid could get close to $160 million this year, which is four times the amount awarded in 1991, said Diane Stemper, director of ASU’s Student Financial Aid Office. Also, the number of students at ASU borrowing money jumped from 12,300 in 1991 to more than 20,000 this year. “This is consistent with the national trend,” Stemper said. “More students go to school now and more of them need financial assistance.” The amount of money students can borrow depends on their class standing. Freshmen can receive up to $12,200 a year in subsidized and unsubsidized loans. The average they received last year was $5,600. Stemper said while the office is trying its best assisting students, it also needs to make sure students do not borrow more than they need. “It’s easy to borrow,” Stemper said. “But students need to know they will have to pay it back one day.” The further a student progresses in school, the more they can borrow, according to the federal government limits. But it doesn’t seem true for some. Sophomore Mike Barclay said he hoped for $1,700, but received $600 instead. He braved the long lines at the financial aid office to ask for more money. Although he lives with his parents and works 35 hours a : T«irti t«T 5d »»S p s g e 0 2 Cam pus sites couId keep going corporate But renaming buildings after donors will be done within reason, officials say B y A licia A . C a ld w ell S t a t e P ress O felia M adrid o f t h e S ta te P re ss Francisco N avarro works overtime Wednesday evening at the Jefferson Commons. M any buildings a t the new apartm ent complex a t University Drive and McClintock have yet to be completed, incon­ veniencing some ASU students who were scheduled to move in there earlier this month. It’s home on the range fo r com plex’s residents U n f in is h e d J e ffe rso n a p a rtm e n ts h a v e so m e re n te rs lo o k in g f o r a lte rn a te h o u s in g o p tio n s B y Jessica W S t a t e P ress o lf Some ASU students were forced to begin th eir sem ester calling motels home as construction made it impossible for them to move into the still-unfin­ ished Jefferson Commons apartments. Although housing complex, on 1655 E. University Dr., rented out all its apartments, several buildings are still under development. So students scat­ tered to find a place to reside. Joy Arthur, director o f corporate communication for Jefferson Commons’ m anagem ent com pany, JPI D evelopm ent in D allas, offered an explanation. She said the company sent out prior notices to affected students and is com­ mitted to working out a solution with every person who has a lease. T enants have all been given the option to cancel their lease and do not ,Turn to Apartment* page 02 donation to support C hicana/C hicano Studies and the Center for Small Business With corporate sponsorship becoming Development. Marilyn Taylor, vice president for media more prevalent in all areas o f athletics, there is now the possibility for a spill­ relations with Wells Fargo Southwest, said over into academics by re-naming build­ the donation was made after a request from ings for financial contributors. the University and was made as part of But the question rem ains: are these Wells Fargo’s continued relationship with donations made simply to benefit the uni­ ASU and its community. versity, or do they function more as adver­ “We already have a strong relationship tisements for corporations? with ASU,” Taylor said. “This happened to In July, W ells be the most recent Fargo made a five-milallian ce (betw een lion-dollar contribu­ 4 4 N e v e r w ill th is the university and Wells Fargo).” tion to A SU ’s in s titu tio n be f o r C am paign For M ark Brand, assistan t ath letic L eadership, a fund­ c o rp o ra te sale. B u t d irecto r for ASU raising drive initiated w e w ill look a t media relations, said last year to raise $300 the money received million dollars for the b u ild in g from W ells Fargo University. In return, p a r tn e r s h ip s . w ill be used to ASU renam ed the improve the arena. U niversity A ctivity The donation will C enter the W ell s Lonnie O stram , aid in upgrading the Fargo Arena. President of A S U Foundation quality of the arena But Lonnie Ostram, president of the ASU Foundation, said this without raising ticket prices, Brand said. “The money is being put back in the wasn’t just an advertisement for the bank. “Never will this institution be for corpo­ building,” he said. Four other groups have also contributed rate sale,” he said. “But we will look at more than five-m illion dollars to ASU building partnerships.” Ostram said the University is always according to the Honor Roll of Giving, a looking to build partnerships with local cor­ list o f donors com piled by the ASU porations and has not ruled out the possibil­ Foundation. That list of four includes local corporations Motorola and Intel. ity of future name changes. Ostram said that each donation and pro­ “It has to be the right tenor and relation­ ship,” he said. “We would look at (renam­ posal is taken on an individual basis. “Most relationships are developed over a ing a building after a donation) if there was period of time,” he said. a specific relationship.” Students seem to have a positive attitude The naming process is not one that comes easily or quickly. Each proposal must go to towards the contribution system and the the ASU Building and Names Committee naming of buildings as recognition. . “It’s a good idea,” said Jason Bethel, a and then be looked at for pertinence and rel­ senior business major. “It’s a way for the evance to the university, Ostram said. The W ells Fargo donation, O stram school to receive revenue.” Kasey Thompson, a communications said, came after a number of the bank’s other donations to different departments senior, said the donations were a benefit and programs of the University. Recently because the money brought into the the banking company made a $1.1 million University can only help. 99 Loans Today C am p u s clubs and org an izatio n s may su b m it w ritte n entries to the State Press in th e basem ent o f th e Matthews C enter. Requests will n o t be taken over th e phone o r via fax. D eadline fo r req u ests is noon th e day befo re publica­ tio n and e n trie s will n o t be a c c e p te d m o re th a n th r e e w orking days before publication. O nly o n e en try p e r orga­ nization p e r day is perm itted. Entries m ust contain th e full nam e o f th e d u b o r organi­ zation, a description o f th e event, date, tim e and th e full address of th e location. All req u ests a re subject to editing fo r c o n te n t, s p a c e and clarity . In c o m p le te o r illegible entries w ill be discarded, The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • All Saints Catholic Newman Center — An informa­ tion table will be se t up on th e mall, including a sign-up sh eet fo r th e N ew S tudent R e tre a t • American Marketing Association — An informal, old m em ber meeting to discuss se m e ste r plans will be held in th e MU Alumni Lounge R oom 202 a t 4:45 p.m. N ew m em bers are welcome. • Baptist Student Union — F ree lunch follow ed by a sh o rt devotion will b e held a t 1322 S. Mill Ave. a t noon. • Campus Crusade for Christ — The first m eeting o f th e year will be held in Palo V erde W e s t a t 7:30 p.m. • Center Complex — Pop C ulture jeo p ard y N ight will be held in th e Hayden Hall Study Lounge a t 6 p.m. • Christian Students Fellowship — A Bible study on “G od C reate s Man to Supply Him: G en. land 2” will be held in th e MU T urquoise Room a t 12:40 p.m. • Men’s Soccer — T ryouts w ill'be held from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. a t th e ASU bandfields. F or m o re inform ation se e th e W eb site: w ww .public.asu.edu/-jpearcy. • Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic — Individual, couple and family therapy is available for students, faculty and staff in th e clinic, located in C ow den Family R esources Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 for m ore information. • MUAB Comedy Committee — Auditions for Barren Mind Improvisation and Farce Side Comedy H our will beheld in the MU Programming Lounge from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. • Omega Delta Phi — Information tables will be s e t up all w eek on Cady mall. • Young Democrats — Pizza and Politics, including guest speakers form er T em pe Major H arry Mitchell, and State House candidates Tom Head and Paul Valek, in the Student Services building third floor balcony at 5 p.m. week, he still needs at least $1,000 more to get by, Barclay said. In the best position are juniors and seniors who can get as much as $5,500 of different loans per semester. And that’s how much student Ben Perrine is getting this year. “My wife has just quit her job,” Perrine said. “I need money to support both of us.” And even the additional annual income of $33,000 which he brings home as a “body-guard” is not enough for two, he added. Perrine has been receiving finan­ cial aid for the last three years, but this year was the first time he asked for more. His total debt has reached $12,000, and because of this year’s loan, it will almost double. A p a rtm en ts Still, the upper limit is not always fair, Perrine said. “The amount should be decided on a case-by-case basis,” he added. “Some students have just greater needs.” Stemper agreed. “For some students these loan lim­ its are a burden,” she said. “But again, we want to make sure students do not borrow more than they need.” from p i p 61 have to pay rent until they Johnson said. “ But they are actu ally living at the didn’t set enough time, and complex, with no penalties 4 4 I t seem s like th e y ru sh ed to g e t the apartm ents ju st aren ’t or extensions on their year­ ready.” people sig n e d up. B u t th ey long contracts, Arthur said. Johnson said it has The buildings are expect­ d id n 't s e t enough tim e, a n d the been difficult to adjust to the ed to be com pleted by the new school year w ith the a p a rtm e n ts ju s t aren 't ready. end of September and con­ added stress of his living sit­ (BP struction crews are working uation. M artin Johnson, overtim e to get it done, He is also disappointed A S U sophom ore Arthur said that the ASU shuttle service Until then, students are stuck living in motels like advertised by the apartment complex has yet to materialize. Microtel. “A lot o f people don’t have cars,” Johnson said. “I A front desk clerk for Mictrotel said it’s filled to picked this complex because of the shuttle service, but now capacity with students and Jefferson Commons is picking they say there isn’t going to be one.” up the bill. Sophomore Jeremy Grant said he had no problems mov­ Sophomore Martin Johnson has been living at Days ing into the complex a week ago. H ow ever, his room ­ Inn for a week, but expects to get his apartment within mates have been living there since May. the next few days, Grant said that he’s happy with his apartment, but is irri­ “It seems like they rushed to get people signed up,” tated by all the construction and damaged parking lots. yy Sea r c h a b le A r c h iv e s «H a y d e n ’s F e r r y R e v ie w • and M ore __ TV http://w w w .statepress.com Student Discou Looking for good furniture on a college Globe Furniture Rentals has the styles and prices to get your apartment setup fast. Rental return sofas, dinettes, dressers, desks, and even accessories are all marked down in our clearance center. Present the $25 coupon below and receive a student discount on your purchase of $ 150 or more! P referred at A S U CLEA RA N CE CENTER Y o u S ave M o re B e c a u s e W e 'v e R e n te d It B e fo re * w w w .g lb e .co m mm Just bring this coupon into our Globe Furniture Rentals Clearance Center B ethany H o m e Rd. and you'll get $25 off any purchase o f $ 150 or more. ()M ie Phoenix: H ou rs: mm mm$ *|tems subject to availability 1650 Camelback Road (602) 264-1958 Mon-Fri 9am -6pm Sat IOam- 5pm !? 1 1 7 th Ave. m o o M Cam elback Rd. Indian School Rd. I ■C V\i"„ i“'.'!«* f*s ♦n mm: ‘ Not valid with other offer or coupons. © 1998 G lo b e Business Resources, Inc. World/Nation Reno opens probe into Gore fund-raising calis By M ich ael J. S niffen A sso ciated P ress WASHINGTON— Attorney General Janet Reno opened a prelim inary investigation W ednesday to determ ine whether an independent counsel should conduct a full probe of Vice President Al Gore’s telephone calls soliciting campaign contributions, officials said. This is the second time Reno has authorized a 90-day examination by Justice attorneys into the 45 telephone calls Gore made from his office in the fall of 1995 and spring of 1996. Last December, she closed a similar 90-day probe of Gore’s calls, saying there wasn’t evidence to warrant an independent counsel investigation. As required by the independent counsel law, Reno trans­ mitted her decision to a three-judge court that picks coun­ sels, but the court did not immediately authorize her to pub­ licly disclose it, according to officials who spoke on condi­ tion of anonymity. The department said it would have no announcement on the case Wednesday. Reno’s decision means she has found a specific allega­ tion that Gore committed a crime which requires mòre probing. But it does not mean she will name an indepen­ dent counsel. Justice officials have said that unless more evidence emerges during the 90 days this second inquiry also Will be closed without seeking a special prosecutor. Gore spokesm an C hris Lehane said the Justice Department has not told the vice president of any decision by Reno. “Wherever this process may go and in whatever stage it may end. we're completely confident that it will show that the vice president’s actions Were legal and proper,” Lehane said Wednesday evening. Gore's attorney, James F. Neal, said the vice president has been interviewed twice about thè calls and “has fully, completely and honestly answered every question.” Republican reaction was mixed. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, RUtah, said Reno’s move “could be perceived as a delaying tactic, I feel it would be prudent... to defer any conclusive comments on this matter until after die attorney general has had the opportunity to discuss this with me in greater detail.” He said he is scheduled to be briefed next Tuesday by Reno and former chief of her campaign finance task force, Charles LaBella, on the case and LaBella’s July 16 memo urging her to seek an independent counsel. Citing that memo and similar recommendation last fall from FBI Director Louis Freeh, Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., called Reno’s decision “inaction” that “has done nothing to allay our concerns that something is seriously wrong at the Justice Department.” Vice President Al G ore address the American Federation of State, County, M unicipal Employees International Convention a t the Hawaii Convention C enter in Honolulu, Hawaii, Tuesday. Attorney General Janet Reno opened ^ w w prelim inary investigation Wednesday to d eterinine if an an independent counsel is needed for a full probe of*Gore’s telephone calls soliciting campaign contributions. Burton added that Reno’s move reinforces the decision lekes in campaign fund-raising. by the House G overnm ent Reform and O versight The Ickes matter was said by Justice officials to appear Committee, which Burton chairs, voted to hold Reno in more serious at this point than the Gore calls. But because contempt for refusing to turn over the Freeh and LaBella Ickes is not a covered person under the independent counsel memos. The full House has yet to vote on the contempt law, there was no deadline for a decision on him. citation. In Gore’s case, Reno went right up to a deadline set by House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt, a potential the Independent Counsel Act for making a decision on the Gore rival for the party’s presidential nomination in 2000, next step — a practice she has repeated several times in said in an interview with CNN: “I believe him (Gore). I nearly two years of a Justice Department investigation of believe that he did not have a problem here, and I support campaign fluid raising for the 1996 election. him.” Gore has said his calls were to solicit only permitted Justice officials said that Reno also continues to weigh soft-money contributions for party building and issue ads. whether to start a separate 90-day preliminary inquiry into ' Last December, Reno concluded the available evidence the foie of former White House deputy chief of staff Harold then supported Gore’s contention. Investors voice concerns as Russian economy falters By Ma u r a Reynolds A ssociated Press MOSCOW — The Russian government failed to restore confidence in its collaps­ ing banking sector Wednesday, with the ruble sinking ever lower and the Central Bank canceling dollar sales after they had been agreed upon. There were signs the country’s finan­ cial c risis was e sc alatin g . The ruble plunged alm ost 40 percent against the German mark after the Central Bank void­ ed trad in g ag a in st the d o lla r on the Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange, and banks reported that the government had failed to make some payments on its longer-term debt. A cting Prim e M in iste r V iktor Chernomyrdin rushed to Ukraine to hold an emergency meeting with International People gather outside a commercial bank in downtown Moscow to withdraw their money Wednesday. As the value of Russia’s currency plunged again W ednesday, lines of Russian depositors grew longer a t banks throughout the capital. M onetary Fund (IM F ) head M ichel Cam dessus. He was expected to plead with the IMF not to delay the next install­ ment o f a m ultibillion dollar loan that R ussia has been using to shore up its Central Bank reserves — eroded by the effort to support the ruble. But while some Russians were angry that they could withdraw bank deposits only in rubles, not dollars, panic had yet to swell in the streets of the capital. “I’ve got no confidence left in the gov­ ernment, of course. You can’t even buy hard currency now,” said a woman identi­ fying herself only as Julia who waited out­ side a branch of the troubled SBS-Agro bank. The financial crisis has so far had little effect on ordinary Russians, who don’t own stocks or bonds or mutual funds. The anxiety some are beginning to feel comes largely from fear of inflation, which many expect to rise in the wake of the govern­ ment’s decision to devalue the ruble. The devaluation, announced 10 days ago, has increased demand for dollars both among banks and the public. Banks with inadequate hard currency reserves are expected to collapse; the first, the Imperial Bank, went belly up W ednesday. Like many in Russia, the small com m ercial bank concentrates on money speculation instead of customer deposits. Anatoly Chubais, a former top Kremlin policymaker highly regarded in the West, said the government is in a tight spot. “On the one hand, the banking system should be prevented from complete col­ lapse, but on the other hand, declare the bankrupt banks bankrupt,” he said. Traders and investors expressed dismay with a government debt repayment plan announced Tuesday, and their disappoint­ ment dragged down the stock market even farther — closing at 76.26 points, down 8 percent from Tuesday in feeble trading. “Many thought the debt swap condi­ tio n s w ere ju s t u n a c c e p ta b le ,” said Mikhail Koltsov, trader at the Moscowbased investment bank MFK-Rcnaissance. Foreign investors have already begun withdrawing from Russia in droves, and the losses they will sustain under the plan to restructure the country’s massive debts — in some cases receiving just 17 cents on the dollar, according to analysts — will discourage many from returning any time soon. In a further worrisome sign, a number o f m ajor W estern banks rep o rted the Russian government had also defaulted on payments on long-term government debt not covered under the restructuring plan. The ruble dropped another 5 percent, ending at 8.26 rubles to the dollar, or 12.1 cents. It plummeted even more — nearly 40 percent rjh against the German mark as banks went after marks. Opinion »4 State Press f o r T h u rsd a y, A u g u s t 27, (998 E d ito ria l T ruth in advertising to be taken with grain of salt Ads are a funny thing. T hey’re the perfect tool j for spin, which is why US West is currently using them for strike damage control. And why telephone ; com panies contrive to sell you an intrusive cell phone on the prem ise that it will give you m ore time, of all things! Whatever the case, the messages ads pound into your brain are produced by highly-skilled profes­ sionals, with a price tag o f several thousand dollars, even millions. Don’t mistake them for the truth. O f course, advertising is often the only way for 1 a company, organization or person to get a m essage j out. There’s only so much the media will cover. We j aim for balance, truth — something that can be ter­ ribly unflattering. The lines get blurred, though. W hile it’s hard to mistake a “W olf’ law firm commercial for a news story, print ads often mimic real news. Full-page ads for weed-killers and weight-loss pills m asquer­ ade as garden how -to’s and personal testimonies. D on’t m istake the brainchild o f an advertiser for the real thing. But w6 know that, right? We e le c t p o litic ia n s b a se d o n is s u e s an d v o tin g records. E lections get m arked on o u r calendars a n d in o u r D a y tim e rs in b lo o d - r e d in k th a t ; scream s from the paper. And long before the election, w e’ve done our research. W e've poured over newspaper articles and analyses. We’ve almost done enough research on the candidates to write a footnoted eight-page paper. Right? O r maybe we registered to vote because the table was situated someplace we had to go any- : way. We checked the box for party that has our par- j en ts’ loyalty. And if we actually rem em bered to | v o te, it w as fo r the ca n d id a te w hose nam e w e j rem em bered from ads squeezed in between South j j Park, The Simpsons and Seinfeld reruns. But are elections really a m atter o f “obeying our J ; th irst,” as if voting w ere a grocery-store choice j f between Sprite and Surge? Truth always m atters, j \ The trouble is, it’s not always apparent. {: Sometimes you have to ask yourself what’s being j j said in an ad. “W hat’s the message here? W hat are I these images communicating? Is this true?” W hile truth about soft-drink taste is not terribly J life-changing, truth about congressional candidates’ j [ credentials is. We elected Bill Clinton for various . and sundry reasons. We’ve seen how good or bad I | those reasons proved to be. H is im age may have beat George Bush and Bob D ole’s hands down, but was that a reason to elect him? Sprite commercials have one thing right: image is j nothing. As elections approach this fall, do your homework for something beside Organic Chemistry, j R egister to vote. M ake a point to vote in the J upcom ing state prim ary elections on Sept. 8. And j think about the issues that m atter to you! Find out I w h ich c a n d id a te s su p p o rt y o u r v iew s. C lin to n jfoibles aside, the Democratic Party m ay still repre- j sent your values and convictions. But that’s some- ) thing ads w on’t tell you. j j Solution to stop shootings is attainable When children refuse to eat their aétìteaD e a h l broccoli or pick up th eir toys, no dessert or TV are common and expect­ ed consequences. But what’s the appro­ priate punishment when a child com­ mits murder? As fictional as it may appear, a plague o f adolescent m urderers is engulfing society today and must be p re v e n te d b efo re it becom es yet an o th e r p re d ic ta b le b lip on the evening news. However, the difficult aspect with such inexplicable occurrences is how to go about preventing them, and when they do happen, how to fittingly punish these children. The dilemma is producing a solution for something with no known cause. We can preach about the lack of family values all we want; we can blame everyone from Clinton to Beavis and Butthead; we can gripe and moan about the deterio­ rating safety in schools and we can shelter children from the horrific tragedies of everyday life, but the fact is that no one, including the children themselves, fully knows why they took the actions they did and no solu­ tion, no matter how ideal in theory, can cure a cause that has yet to be identified. There are few generalities when it comes to children. Not all youths who have access to weapons are going to utilize them. Not every fatherless child is going to end up the h ead lin er on H ard Copy one day. And ju s t because a child com es from a “tra d itio n a l” fam ily doesn't mean that he or she won’t become the next ado­ lescent murderer. Although there is no obvious reason for such inci­ dents as the Jonesboro, Ark. and Springfield, Ore., school shootings or the murder of 11-year-old Ryan Harris by 7- and 8-year-olds, it is common sense that extreme violence is not natural. It is taught, whether it be by parents, TV or the community. Children don’t sim­ ply awake one day thinking, “Gee, I’m really angry at the world and I think I ’ll take out my frustrations by killing a dozen people.” Until we start treating each child as an individual and stop assuming that single-parent families and violence in movies automatically produce a troubled child, we may as well sit idly by as more second and third graders kill each other off. " However, what this entails is yet another predica­ ment. Should children be eligible for the death penalty? After all, we are a society which condones the killing of those who kill, and some children are killing innocent people out there. But where do we draw the line? We are not prepared as a country to legally justify the termi­ nation of children, even if they do commit such an hor­ rific act as homicide. This isn’t surprising, seeing how we can’t even admit that famous football players with histories of spousal abuse could possibly commit mur­ der or back-woods politicians from Hope, Ark. would ever commit adultery. No wonder our children turn to prime time for role models. The notion of releasing these alleged murderers on their 18th birthday is equally absurd. Some states even allow the ridiculous practice of expunging, where even homicide can be stricken from one’s record. Allowing these youths to roam the streets once again does nothing but keep shows like COPS on the air. I’m sure some percentage o f juv en ile ex-convicts actually become prime examples of how rehabilitation can work, but I’m not sure that it’s worth releasing them all without know­ ing which ones will kill yet another mother, father, son or daughter. In cases like these, the right of every citi­ zen to live a secure life should outweigh the right of a criminal merely because they have become of age. While no one effective solution seems to be in sight, there are things that we as communities can do to help prevent such outrageous incidents. And the most impor­ tant thing is for us to stop attempting to find fault — this may take forever — and simply take better care of our children. * Ashlea Deahl is a sophom ore studying com m unications and journalism and can be reached at bigdeahl@ imap4.asu.edu. 11111111^111 ^ Percy EdnalinoJr., Editor Jodi Bafiindo, Managing Editor Caryt-Sue M icalizio Becky Bevins Cartoonists -Night Editor ------------ ------- -------- ---- ——.„ —Magazine Editor — C ity Editor David W oodfill -------------- --------- -— --- ;— -A s s t Magazine Editor Reporters -— ——■ — C hris Kahn Jonathan Inge -Assistant C ity Editor Michette Craig •— —— O pinion Editor C h risti Foist ..— ----- New s Editor — — ----- Photo Editor Jeremy Hein -Assistant Photo Editor Ed Odeven ------------ Sports Editor Production — . — .— — . .. — _______ __ _______ ___ R o b ert Deal, KeWi G erchick, Alyson H u rt, H e a th e r N ash, W ayne Nelson. Joanna W ik e , Alicia CaldweS, Lidia E. Kefly, JD. Long Stephanie faterik. Jayson Peters. Kim Prender&st, Hayiey Ringe, G a n ^ Subramanian, Jessica Waif, Angela Yeager. Sales Representatives_______________ _ Sports R eporters----—— Brian Ary, Mike Giallanza, David G oodw in, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Sharon R obertson, Shane Siren. Kathy W elsh. --------— ........ Scott Bracken, Curtis Cariock, Doug Ranapn, Carlo M eroido. EXwid Myers Brad tang — .— .......... Brian Baichumas, C a rrie L Behrens, Mike C u rran , Brian Farrington, C arlos Ram irez. A drian Sferie. Copy Editors — -------------------------— ----------- 1502. W e d o n o t answ er questions o f a general n ature. T he State Press is th e only n ew spaper exclusively published fo r a nd circulated o n th e ASU campus. T he new s and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU adminlstra“ " h facutty. staff o r s tu d e n t body. _ , ^ ... . , ' . Student Media Phone Numbers---- I n fo r m a tio n S ta te P re s s N e w s ro o m 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 «. 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M ano Lopez. Susan Schimmei. Marketing Team— — --------- — S ta te P r e s s M a g a z in e 9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 Photographers---------------------------------------------— - Rid.Gttbett.AngrieeKbt, A d v e rtis in g 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 Kate Desio, Amanda G reen, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. C la s s if ie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Mike C u rran , Soley H artei, Ofelia Madrid, Jerem y W eiss. Colum nists ——.— --------—------------— —-------- — — Brian Ary, Scott B ennett. A shlea Deahl, Ross Eide, S c o tt G illette. Stephanie Johnson, Nancy Kui, C.C . M cCandies, G re g o r McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff. — ------- — — — T h e State Press is published M onday th rough Friday during th e academ ic year, e x c ep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atthew s C e n te r, Room 2» A rizona State University, T em pe, Ariz., 85287- On the W8bhttpi//wWW.St2ltepreSS.COm E -m a il S tD re S S i@ )a S U e d u vp a a ^ e a u .c u u inion O p State Press fo r Thursday, A u g u s t 27, 1998 ‘Th e Rules* teaches the game But looking back, I realize the prob­ lem wasn’t really the guys. The problem was I d id n ’t have enough respect for myself. I would catch a boyfriend in a lie and let it go because, “I really like him. And it was only one lie.” I’d find out a boyfriend cheated on me and I’d rational­ ize it with, “Well, it was only one time. I don't think it’ll happen again. I’ll let it go.” On and on I went, making excuses and m aking m y se lf m ore and m ore unhappy. And yes — not following The Rules — which tell you that once a man does something wrong, say good-bye ... and mean it. I know 1 am not the only girl who has m ade exCUSWs fo r a man when I should have walked. One of my oldest friends is currently dating a man who treats her terribly. He’s broken up with her more than once, told her he doesn’t love her, called her names and has told her that she just isn’t going to factor in his future. It breaks my heart when she calls me crying to tell me the latest thing he has done th at has m ade her miserable. She asked me once what she should do and I told her, “leave him.” And she said, “But I can’t! 1 love him!” And sadly, I know things aren’t going to get any b etter for her. By staying with him, she is giving him permission to treat her badly. H av in g s e lf- re s p e c t can im p ro v e your love life so m uch. T hree years ago, after ending one bad relationship after the next, I decided I would only date guys who respected me, treated me w ell and w ere lo v in g , se n sitiv e , kind, caring, com passionate and hon­ e s t. S h o rtly a f te r w a r d s , I m et my boyfriend, who is all those things and more. Was I ju st lucky? Maybe that is p art o f it; but I th in k it was m ostly because I learned to respect m yself and not settle for just anyone. If you find yourself dating bad men over and over again, stop and look at your p ast re la tio n sh ip s. W ere you m aking excuses and lettin g y o u rself be taken advantage of like I was? If so, tell yourself you aren’t going to settle anymore and decide what you want in a man. And if you meet someone who doesn’t treat you well or isn’t what you are looking for, don’t be afraid to say good-bye and move on. As long as you respect yourself enough, you will find the perfect person. It doesn’t mat­ ter what you look like, where you come from, what kind of clothes you wear or anything else like that. Maybe it won’t happen right away, but isn’t it so much better to be alone than be with someone who makes you unhappy? The Rules aren’t about playing games. They are about playing the game better than the guys who would take advantage o f you. And I think it’s time some of us women allow ed ourselves to have the upper hand. e v e ry f ir s t day o f school at ASU, I found m yself at the ASU Bookstore, standing in a mile-long line to pay for my textbooks. I found a diversion on the bookshelf next to me — a co p y o f E lle n F ein and S h e rrie S chneider’s notorious book The Rules. Thinking it might be interesting, I added it to my basket of books, carefully hid­ ing it beneath my Communications Law textbook and a purple five-subject note­ book. 1 c o u ld n ’t let anyone see I was buying that. What would people think of me? Later in the day, I had some free time so I sat m yself down to read the book. Not a lot o f it really applied to me i— most o f the book focuses on finding Mr. R ight and w hat to do on the first few dates. Since I’ve had the same boyfriend for alm ost three years now, I felt I was b e y o n d th a t s ta g e . (A nd b e sid e s, I already broke some cardinal rules — 1 think I was the one who talked to him first and 1 speak to him on the phone for more than 10 minutes at a time — defi­ nite no-no’s). Then there are rules like “# 12: Stop D ating Him If He D oesn’t B uy You A R o m antic G ift For Y our Birthday Or Valentine’s Day.” You mean there are girls out there who don’t know that? Hey, I don’t even wait for special occasions. I demand gifts all the time! Critics o f the book have said it teach­ es w om en to m a n ip u la te m en, p lay games and hide their true personalities. I m u lle d th is o v e r and w o n d ered to m y se lf, do w om en re a lly need The Rules? And then I found my answer at the m ost unlikely o f places — at the Memorial Union. I was in line at one of the eateries and happened to overhear the conversation of two guys behind me. One was telling the other about the hot new girl he had met and wanted! to sleep with; only he already had a girlfriend. “Oh well,” he conclud­ ed. “I ’ll ju st sleep with this new girl, then stop seeing her and stay with my girlfriend.” And that’s when I knew us girls need The R u le s. No, I am not saying th at every, or even most guys are jerks, but I am sure most girls could attest to the fact that there are quite a few out there. And all The Rules is basically saying is if a woman has self-respect for herself, she w ill h av e p o w er in the re la tio n sh ip . W ould there be any guys out there who were disrespectful if all women refused to take that kind o f treatment? B efore my current boyfriend, I had p ro b le m s w ith v irtu a lly ev ery guy I dated. I started wondering if every guy in the world was no good or if it was just me who was lucky enough to attract the w o rst o f the w orst. I dated guys who c h e a te d on m e, gUys who lied to me, guys who tried to get horizontal on the first date and guys who basically had no A n d rea B alsky is a sen io r studying jo u rn alism ; respect for me. Got a problem ? A story idea? Something you just want to com plain about? Call us. 965-6881 Y eltsin ’s mood swings may be cause fo r U .S . to w o rry In Am erica this ^ „ B e n n e t t week, pretty much columnist everyone was dank« tag about sex. And interns. And stained blue dresses. And secret trysts in the Oval Office. Sure, people may deny it when the pollster comes around. “I am tired of discussing this terrible affair,“ they say. "And although it is horrible and disgraceful and wrong, we need to get back to the important issues facing this nation.” Or my personal favorite, “I think it is shameful that my children can’t even watch the evening news anymore.” Almost everyone claims to be tired of talking about the president’s sexual appetite. Except for Republicans, o f course. They are obsessed with sex. But who can blame them, when they are all strung out on Viagra and don’t want to talk about health-care reform or tobacco settlements or gun control or poverty or anything else th at m atters. So they blather about “moral leadership” and “setting a bad example” and how the president should resign. Yet despite all our self-righteous rhetoric, deep down inside each o f us beats the heart o f a lecherous old man who wants to watch every minute of “The Great American Porno.” Who can blame us? It has a fascinat­ ing plot, intriguing and powerful charac­ ters and is broadcast free-of-charge every night to every American living room. The actresses leave something to be desired, but I still m aintain th at Monica Lewinsky is a hottie. Still, I think we may have overlooked some things in our lascivious fervor. In the rest o f the world, where peo­ ple have real problems, most everyone was th in k in g a b o u t slig h tly m ore important issues. In R ussia, B o ris “ C razy D runk” Yeltsin fired the prim e m inister and replaced tarn with the old prime minis­ ter, whom Yeltsin had canned only five months before. It was the latest in a string o f remark­ ably bizarre decisions from an unstable and unpredictable man with serious health and alcohol problems. W hy is this a big deal? Because Crazy Boris is sitting on top of a mas­ sive pile o f nuclear warheads —22,500 of them, according to Time magazine. The world’s largest nuclear arsenal is in the hands o f a man who starts ran­ domly firing members of his Cabinet every time he goes on a bender. That is a veiy big deal. When the first atomic bombs leapt up against the sky like apocalyptic flowers, America was forever changed. War was forever changed. Before we could split the atom, terrible battles and wars had left countless bodies scattered across centuries, but everyone understood the wars would eventually end and life would continue. Now we cannot be that certain. The prospect of nuclear war scared us, and it should have. When one parson holds the power to kill another, it is frightening. When many people hold the power to end all life by pushing a but­ ton, k is a waking nightmare that will never go away. Yet now we are too transfixed on whether the president (hopped his pants or lied about it or is setting a bad exam­ ple or should resign, to consider what would happen if Yeltsin got soused and pushed the little red button that means the end of the world. O r w hat w ould happen i f he le t someone else push it, like the ultranationalists who get nostalgic about Joseph Stalin or the Iraqis or anyone else who hates Americans enough to u sh e r in A rm ageddon to feed th e dem ons o f ideology. A nd there are plenty of them. But in America this week, people were thinking about sex. Sco tt Bennett is a junior studying journalism and can be reached at colum nist@ asu.edu. Role models have responsibility to fans Today is the day I will sadly remove my favorite picture from its prized position on my refrigera­ tor door. It is a picture of me, with a goofy grin — like any smitten adoles­ cent would have — hug­ ging Olympic gold medalist, Gary Hall Jr. H all was my role model throughout my high school years. I swam fo r D obson H igh S chool (go Mustangs!) in Mesa my sophomore year. I grew up a member of a local swim team and used my swimming skills to acquire a position as a Chandler lifeguard. I now teach swimming lessons to younger chil­ dren every summer. W ith my aquatics background, it was only natural th at I would look to Hall as a role model. I read as much as I could about Hall and his many accomplishments. So when my senior year rolled around and word got out that Hall would be speaking at a local church, I hit the roof with excitement I must have spent hours choosing the perfect outfit and pondering the most intelligent questions to ask him. I decid­ ed that I would write an interview piece featur­ ing him for my high school paper. My story turned out well and I continued to follow his career. Unfortunately, I have recently stumbled upon some information regarding Hall that disheartens me. | A lthough Hall stood before me and many other wide-eyed teenagers preaching about the importance of staying away from drugs, he did not do so himself. It has been reported that Hall tested positive for mari­ juana at the 1996 Olympics and at recent meet on May 15. Even though this behavior was not in violation of Olympic rules at the time, it is clearly illegal and extremely dan­ gerous as well. This isn ’t the first time someone of prominence has let down those who look up to him. Take the president of the United States, for example. These prominent fig­ ures become public icons and should be set­ ting examples for others, but often end up in a position they cannot handle. If people have the capacity to affect the behavior of children and they acknowledge that fact, then they must not betray the trust of these innocent individuals. I am tired of enduring such disappointment. That is why I firmly believe you should look to those closest to you for inspiration. For it is those nearest and dearest to you who can help you cultivate and capture your dreams. Stephanie Johnson is a sophomore studying journalism arid can be reached at sdjohn@ imap4.asu.edu. Study shows greater rainwater contam ination in urban areas By G S u b r a m a n ia n washed into the gutters, sewers, storm drains and reacli with a moderate intensity of six inches per hour — a the river channels. A high concentration o f these materi­ typical rainshower. Ammonium and nitrate deposits are considerably als in the river channels could affect their quality, Hope The ra in fall sim u lato r co n sists o f a p lastic tray higher in urban land surfaces compared to desert sur­ said. mounted on a tripod with needles arranged in a grid faces, an ASU ecological study reports. ASU environmental researchers said the results indi­ through which water drips to simulate rainfall. A fiveResearchers from the Central Arizona Phoenix Long cate urban spaces contain 30 times more ammonium and minute shower generates approximately three liters of Term Ecological Research (CAPLTER) examined rain­ 200 times more nitrates than pristine desert surfaces. water, which can then be chemically analyzed in a lab. water washed off asphalt parking spaces over the sum­ The water flowing off these surfaces will influence the Hope and other researchers conducted the tests in an mer. They looked for nutrients like nitrogen, phospho­ growth of algae and microbes in aquatic systems. industrial site in Tempe, a desert parking lot in Papago rous and carbon, as well as heavy metals like copper, The CAPLTER is an $8.5 million project that studies Park, a commercial site in northwest Phoenix and a resi­ lead and zinc, said Dr. Diane Hope, CAPLTER field the ecosystem and the problems associated with urban­ dential site also in Phoenix. project manager. ization. Researchers then compared these findings with that “Between rainfall events, atmospheric depositions, R esearchers used rainfall sim ulators to study the o f another study conducted at a rural site. oil drips, bits o f tire and asphalt surface pieces, there amount and concentration of nutrients and heavy metals Use o f land patterns also determ ine concentration builds up a layer of materials,” she said. accumulated on asphalt parking spaces. levels. Older surfaces with holes and cracks tend to con­ With the flow o f rain w ater, these m aterials are Hope said the rainfall sim ulator produces rainfall tain more deposits than newer surfaces, Hope said. a n g a S t a t e P ress ^ r a 0 W S Î 1 1 D im T i FAJITA FIESTA EXTRAVAGANZA! f. Join us Sunday, August 30th 7pm Celebrate the end of the first week of classes with a traditional Mexican feast A University Presbyterian Church and the United Campus Christian Ministry invite all college students to an evening of fun, food, and fellowship. FOOD, PRINK, MUSIC, POOR PRIZES and much, much more at: Sunday, 3 0 th 5 - 7 pm B ro a d w a y H ILLEL JE W IS H ST U D EN T C EN T ER A ll A re W e lco m e ! Hillel is located at 1012 S. Min Ave. (between Domenic's and BrueggeTs Bagels) Alameda (lSp charge for dinner Child care and transportation provided 1 Southern rptease caff 9 6 6 ^ 6 2 6 7 for more information ■¡ppppM HHftk Ehrhardt’s Schwinn S A L E DIAM0NDBACK Outlook f .G r « tilr i a t í S t i i d c n t s l f o i T ut< W e h/WE posiiioNS avaiIa M e foR: H ick Sch o o l M atR & S c Iewce Tutors (You must b e aMe to teacIi b oth subjEcrs) F o r í n Ío r m a t í o n o n SCHWINN FaIIo p Q M Í N q s , p íc a s e c a U 955-5070 Frontier REMEMBER THE ^ "i* * GOOD TIM ES (AND DELETE THE BAD ONES.) with bike purchase: • • • • I T e m p o B ik e R o u te M ap W a te r B o t t l e a n d C a g e 3 0 - D a y C h e c k u p • L if e t im e W a rra n ty 1 y e a r G ear and B ra k e A d ju stm e n t BIKE TUNE-UP I KRYPTONITE | V w / -lock sp e c ia l'^ " v W a a » 1 3 1 1 © 919 « IQ Q lU O V la l # i v « U v W:rs K Wot t&lffej tfà «râtrhin' , O F T a n y o f o u r U - L O C K S w h ich • C h eck and A d ju st AH W heel and C ran k C ones W heel Alignm ent SAKE M SO Ü E h r h a r d t ’s T u n e -U p 1 1 1 W. University Fmmt rep a ir» o u r sp e cia lity ! IN THE CORNERSTONE RURAL & UNIVERSITY 829-7473 Rule increases penalties for underage drinking on public land B y Jayso n Peters Sta t e P ress A new rule restricting the possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages by minors on Arizona’s public land will take effect Oct 1. The Bureau o f Land M anagement Arizona office announced die restriction earlier this month. State staff ranger John McLaughlin said die rule came as the result of too many incidents of underage drinking on public land. Underage drinking is especially a problem in Yuma, Lake Havasu and Lake Pleasant which are frequented by ASU stu­ dents. Penalties for violating the restriction include arrest and, upon conviction, up to $100,000 in fines and up to 12 months in prison. As part of the U,S. Department of the Interior, the BLM manages over 14 million acres in Arizona. “We certainly don’t want our public land and resources trashed,” McLaughlin added. Sudents’ opinions varied, “I think it’s good,” said Brianne Griffin, an urban planning major at ASU. “There needs to be restrictions on thinking age, and it needs to be enforced.” She added that the fine is excessive in that “minors wouldn’t have that much money.” Cody Hurlburt, a business management major, disagreed with the new rule. He said a small fine and alcohol counseling would be more appropriate. Hurlburt said he was once fined for underage possession of alcohol. “If those are the consequences then I’d have been in some serious trouble,” he said, “I don’t know what they’re trying to accomplish with i t ” Mohave County Board of Supervisors to revisit pigeon-feeding issue KINGMAN (AP) — The Mohave County Board of Supervisors will take another look next month at the issue of pigeon-feeding. The board voted 2-1 Monday to reconsider an ordinance that bans feeding wild pigeons, Officials say good-hearted residents who feed pigeon are creating a messy, unhealthy problem, side of the Issue before voting last month. Anderson on reconsidering the issue. as the birds are thriving in places like Lake Mark Short, representing a group called the Supervisor Buster Johnson was opposed, Havasu City and Bullhead City. Western Arizona Urban Wildlife Society, said ‘Tf you don’t feed them they’re not going to Supervisor Carol Anderson requested that the inexpensive building modifications can keep hang around,” Johnson said, issue be revisited after supporters of feeding pigeons from roosting in a messy, manner. Under the ordinance passed last month, peopigeons argued that supervisors heard only one Board Chairman Jim Zaborsky sided with pie caught feeding pigeons can be fined $ 100. 1 CSF Bible Study T h e C L U T C H F io * U iO i:v O il WEAR C L IT C K M S M A C S M i l / / Q [2 i \J ^ \y / » P e r A x le « S e m i M e t a llic H ig h e r P r e m iu m P a d s / S h o e s R e s u rfa c e R o to rs /D ru m s Many Vehicles “the C h ris tia n L ife is a S u p p lie d L ife ” C o u p o n / ( L. |; / \ T his W eek's T itle. E L L N E W SF rIic t io n L l 1 2 /3 1 /9 8 67 ) ( 1 i w 1 l: ih ) > 1 E S T . 1981 ■ v u e Tem pe 955-1996 731-9490 788-5443 1395 E. APACHE BLVD. (WEST OF MdCLINTOCK) 8820 N. BLACK 3310 E. THOMAS RD. NEW LOCATION CANYON HWY (32ND & THOMAS) OPENING SOON (DUNLAP & 1-17) Bring your lunch if you’d like Beverages and mack provided For More Information Call 921-7279 E x p ir e s ß 1 L f 864-8338 All Are Welcome! Christian Students Fellow ship L P h o e n ix God Creates M am o Supply Him S p onsored by: S M l ■ 1 P r e s s u r e P la t e D is c / 7 V / -R R eeile a s e B e a r in g 1—1 — 'rr ^ . i L«Ia b o r Many RWD Vehicles & P.U.'s $ O O R O O l l t LlLzLz © P Ô Î ï è V B I M 1 W Ô S T É G (i { A Thursday Noon Bible Study 12:40 - 1:30 • Memorial Union • Turquoise Room l m -B B A K E P u ? WATCH FOR OTHER METRO AREA OPENINGS ASKAPOUl Olili FULL I 'll 111 MARRANI VOÎJ COMPLETE CLUTCH Í DRAM. Fit PAIR; ! W it h p r i c e s a s lo w a s Used cds sound better than new » H im O h r iit i« m F illEvanpslistio Maeting * w e p a y CASH f o r CD s TheVursutt o f Clfe A» ty p e s o f m u s ic 8/28 Fri. 7:30 PMat GPCCC aEsstBW» « • r«B> W id e s e le c tio n 8/29 Sat. 7JO PM at ASU muomas 8/30 Sun. 8:00 A M A ** Xh « ä * nejk'FAR •* * w t i Buy .* M * jß * r - 8/30 Sun. 9:30 AMat GPCCC »B ±¥tm m ì wm (Muai! 8/30 I m i tri» AMat GPCCC \ M B J^ H — 19 f t * «GB» s e ll Guest Speaker: D r. P e te r Liu • Conyuterlnfonnattcn P H D T ra d e I i ManagerofComputerSoftware DoKtopnentCo * 1375 N. McClintock Drive , - X ChandhMT, A Z 85226 L o c a te d in t h e M .u . ^ * £ « * # < * « > Pastor Dorale Guan (EngUrh) P o lic e B ê â T ’ Tempe police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • A male student was arrested for possession of marijuana at Saguaro Hall. He was booked in the Maricopa County Sheriff Office's southeast jail. • An employee reported her purse stolen, along with its contents, from the Memorial Union. • A student reported his bicycle missing from the bike racks at Manzanita Hall, where it was secured with a lock. • Two men affiliated with ASU were involved in a twovehicle accident in Area 51. One man was transported to Tempe St. Luke's Hospital. • A student reported his bicycle missing from Best Hall, where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported that his car was broken into while parked in Parking Structure 5, and that a few items were missing. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested and released to Tempe Police Department for an outstanding warrant. • A man not affiliated with ASU, was arrested, cited and released for driving on a suspended license. He was arrest­ ed at 800 S. College Ave. • An employee reports that he lost two keys belonging to ASU. • An employee reports that she lost one key belonging to ASU. • A student reported that her car was damaged while it was parked in Area 50. Tempe police reported the following incidents on Tuesday: • A man robbed the Bank of America branch office at 1801 E. Southern Ave. Reports said he presented the teller with a note demanding money. Upon receiving the money, the man left the bank and eluded police. No known weapon was used according to reports. The FBI is also investigating the robbery. • A 49-year-old Indiana man was arrested and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia after being stopped for a pedestrian violation at McClintock Drive and Apache Boulevard. Reports said the officers found the man in pos­ session of marijuana and a crack cocaine pipe. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. • An 18-year-old Mesa woman was arrested at 8201 S. Hardy Drive after it was discovered she allegedly ordered more than $1,000 worth of merchandise from the Franklin Mint Company, using a stolen credit card number. Reports said the woman used a false name when placing the order. She was charged with theft and credit card fraud. • A 42-year-old Tempe woman was arrested at 2021 E. Apache Blyd. Reports said she was found with a glass crack cocaine pipe and a small, white rock police believe to be crack cocaine. She was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and other drug related charges. Compiled by State Press reporter Alicia A. Caldwell. If yo u so ld y o u r sou l in the 8 0 s, h e re 's y o u r chance to b u y it back* The New Beetle. A real bargain, as far as souls go. See your Volkswagen dealer for details. D rivers w anted.™ www.vw.com or call 1-800-444-8987 ©1998 V o lk sw a g e n Berge Volkswagen 1515 W. Broadway Mesa 833-0001 Biddulph Volkswagen 4611 W. Glendale Ave, Glendale 934-5211 Chapman Volkswagen 6601 E. McDowell Road Scottsdale 949-7600 Camelback Volkswagen 1499 E. Camelback Road Phoenix 265-6600 THE FIRST TRIPLE-BLADE RAZOR YOU TAKE ONE STR O K E IT TAKES THREE. Enter to Win f§ Grand Prize Gillette '*"i r n A C h fâ F ir s t P r iz e : P la y S ta tio n g a m e c o n s o le w ith D u a l S h o c k A n a l o g C o n tr o lle r . Call t o l l - f r e e t o e n te r 1-877-G0 -MACH3 The B est a Man Kan Get LOSEST SHAVE FEWER STROKES • LESS IRRITATION • Official Rules. 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Employees and theirfamilies of Gillette, BMW arid Sony Computer Entertainment America (‘SCEA“) and their affiliates, subsidiaries, agencies and suppliers of promotion materials, prizes and services are not eligible for entry in this promotion: All U.S federal, state and local laws apply Each winner must execute and return an Affidavit of Sigibility and Liabilify/Publicity Release and provide a Social Security number within three (3) days of notification attempt or prize wilt be awarded to an alternate winner. Return of prize'notification as nondeliverable will result in disqualifica­ tion and an alternate winner will be selected. Applicable taxes, fees, registration, dealer prep, insurance and other expenses not specified hereinare the sole responsibility of the prize winners. Gillette, BMWand SCEA are not responsible forprize utility, qualify or otherwise Gillette, BMWand SCEA are not responsible for any claims, damages, or losses arising in connection with this promotion or theacceptance of the prizes awarded hereunder By participating in this promotion, persons agreeto be bound by tee final decisions of Gillette on all matters relating to this promotion and winners agree to the use of their names and likenesses for publicity purposes by Gillette, where permitted. 5. WINNER’S LIST: To learn the namesof the winners, send a stamped, selNaddressed envelope to Gillette Mach3 Win a BMW M3 Sweepstakes Winners UsLP.O.Bax 3700, Dept. IL & Cloud, IvM56397-3700. Winners list requests mustbe receivedby 11/15/98. Promotion is conducted by Gillette, which is responsible for awarding the prizes. Noneof tee schools listed above is affiliated witelhis promotion in anyway. © 1998 The Gillette Company (USA), Inc. PlayStation arid the PlayStation logos are registered trademarks of SonyComputer Entertainment Inc Dual Shock is a trademark of SCEt > W h a t ’s t o E A T ? BUY ANY ENTRÉE “ AndGet P H T D the S e co n d ■ r of Equal or Lesser Value 1 ■ ■ * ■ ! ■ ■ ■ ■ with Purchase of 2 Drinks JUST MENTION THIS AD T h e H e a lth ie r C h o ic e ! Two scheduled to stand trial for death at bar YUMA (AP) — Two people are scheduled to stand trial in January for the 1997 death of a man at a bar. M ichael S haffer, a co-ow ner of Johnny’s Other Place, and Gabriel Massey, who handled its security, are'charged with negligent homicide in the death of Mark Wilcox, who was involved in an altercation at the bar. On Tuesday, Judge Phil Hall of Yuma C ounty Superior Court scheduled jury selection to begin on Jan. 12. W ilcox, a 4 2 -y ear-o ld UofA Agricultural Extension agent, died at a hos­ pital after being removed from the bar on March 21,1997. / Massey restrained Wilcox outside the bar, according to pretrial testimony. The medical examiner testified that the death was probably caused, by asphyxiation, probably due to being placed on his stom­ ach and restrained. Planning to STREAK the MU'? Call the State Press photographers at ^ 9 6 S -6 S 2 6 . TERIYAKI GRILL '55Ì3ÌL Remember to plan ahead! I N T H E C O R N E R S T O N E , R U R A L A U N I V E R S I T Y • 8 5 8 -0 0 1 1 Chicago Bagel Dog Kosher Bagel Dog Wrapped in our Great Bagel genoma AndFountain Drink 99 *J2h.. 1 -V N Regular 411 South M ill Avenue • Tempe wup? with COUPON PO S5039 Expires 10-31-98. Offer valid only at Einstein Bros a t 725 S. Rurat Ftd., Tempe, AZ AÍ1ZON **BONADIAMONDBAca SAt -, T tH ip t * Cornerstone M a O ■ Untvaralty a t Rural « 96S-7900 A R E YO U ■ INC IN a T A K E OUT Any W hole BEEN mb NO R WITH COUPON through 10-31-98, Not valid with any other offer. We offer two bedro within walkin in fact we are ASU on the rates startin IN THE CORNERSTONE Rural & University 557-8061 ENTERTAINMENT Harkins Theatre RESTAURANTS Boston Market 829-0348 350*9050 SERVICES Celebrity Tanning Einstein Bros Bagels 894-1711 3034606 945-9562 EDUCATION Media Probe No Appointment Jufce Stop . Samurai Sam’s 8580011 CLOTHING Campus Club 829-7009 5570081 Pacific Eye’s »T V 968-4668 New Horizons Z*TTCA Mexican Grill Performance Footwear 736-9300 966-7900 829-7473 966-5560 N to those who or 9680008 Z oo’* Subs R room units school, partments to campus, with 0 per month. to approval on waiting lists. Phase 1 Salon 9680537 • 968-2855 C O We will o 8/940768*. Matrix Educatimi Center T H E INN... 9666397 Hollywood Video 921-9877 ATI •con H O T O V E N -B A K E D A N D G R ILLED S U B SA N D W IC H ES M A D E TO O R D ER ! Six Shooters TO ENTER: C om pletely fill o u t Hie ticket w ith y o u r n am e an d p h o n e num ber. Ben & Jerry's reserves th e right to p ick another w in n er if th e w in n er d o e s n ot respon d to o u r p h o n e call. M E X IC A N G B I L L O FF Any Half Improvisation ENTER O U R RAFFLE FOR $1.00 T O W IN TH E TICKETS S H O W N A T LEFT. PROCEEDS T O BENEFIT "THE C HILDREN'S HEART FO U N D A T IO N " Z T E C A W elcom e A S U Students, Faculty & Staff! O FF Winner Receives D IA M O N D B A C K TICKETS! Drawing to Iw held on Sept23,1996 arid winners will be notified immediately. I---------- -------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- ---------------1 BMOQ1 P re s e n ts a F u n d ra is in g R affle R affle T ic k e ts A v a ila b le a t B en & J e rry 's B ig B u r r it o O n C a m pu s. Our extraiarge, gourmet burritos are made with the finest and freshest ingredients tike cilantrotemon rice, whole beans, Z«TECA signature s aises and grilled marinated meats and vegetables. They're made rigit before your eyes so you can customize 'em. And we have 13 burritos under $5.00 to choose from. Cold beers and margaritas, too. JERRY’S / E R S T O N E M a r m e r a i C o m e r o f R u r a l R a n a a n zi F ln iv e r sitv D r i v e T e m n e | APARTM EN TS 1015 E. University Dr., Tempe 9 6 6 -2 3 9 3 ms * M X! 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Q j ___________ IH X (Fri-Sun) 11:15.12:15.1:45, 2:45,4:20, 5:20, 7:00.8:00 0 * 2 SCREENS! 9:35.10:35 (Midnight. 12:55am Fri, Sat onM w r m i T S » whydoRxxs falúnLove w Z P A _ MILL N K 'w ----------------- — ___ _____ 6:45,7A6.9:45(10:45om. 12:36am A i Sat onM um noAjU A D EAD M AN ON CAM PU S m -— (Fri-Sun) 11 :S5.2:25. 4:50.7:25.9:55 M 2:35am Fri. Sat onM W R O N G F U L L Y A C C U S E D tpo.13.4 (A fS u rPT -4 0 . &00,4:15.6:50,9:10 (12:15am Fri, SatonM O M M TRLim t THE AVENG ERS fl 1055.125, 456,6:40,925.1225 mti ON2 SCRCENS! (SaO 1055,125.4,06,925.1! * - ^ 491055.125,455.6:4ft 9 25 p e r m i / m x HOW S T E L L A G O T H E R G R O O V E B A C K « _ (Fn-Sun) 1:10.4:10. 7:T5.10:15 W H m .j5 & m R E T U R N TO P A R A D IS E (Fri-Sun) 8:25pm (11:05pm Fri, Sat onM h — im « T55 ■ P ----- Ï1HÔ. 12:1ÖJ:50.2 : ^ * » , 7:10,8:10,950 (fO:SOpm, 12:40am A t HALLOW EEN: W S m ith s I SOUTHERN SOUTHERN Y fS S u n ; 11:25.12:40.1:40. 2:55, 3:55.5:10.6:10,7:50, ONa SCREENS! 8:50, 10:10 (11 : i 0ptn, 12:20am Frf, S ä t on M m i r m . 7 5 5 (Fri-Sun) 1 0:50.1:20.350______ _ -rrr= S M O K E S IG N A L S m 6:25. 9:00 f íf r l Oam A t Sat onhÁ TH E PAREN T TRAP SA V IN O P R IV A T E R Y A N 3232 S. Mill Ave. 801-3300 R ural & S o u th ern an d S o u th ern & M ill. ■ (Fri-Sùnì 11:0 0 ,12:00,1:00,2:40.3:40.4:40, 6:20. __ _ J 7 : 2 0 . 8 :2 0 .10:0Q (tl'bon m . Midnight Ori Sml onhÁ M M lTW LiH A ^ 0:05pm (Í 2:05am Fri, S tt orifi DIM ITM .15Í ™ * :------on I SCUCIMI (Fri-Sun) M :20,12:20,2:06,3:05.4:55,5:65, - ■ 7:40. B:40._10:2S(11:2SpfTi. 12:56am Art. SatonhÁ “ ‘ " " ‘ ■ M (Fri, Sat) 10:35.1:55.5:15,8:30,12 55 am I A R M A G E D D O N r»tn (Sun) 1:55,5:15,8:30 PHMTTW.15& TH E M A S K 0 F ZO RRO T H E R E 'S SOM ETH IN G A B O U T M A R Y tmkvmmts! SIMON BIRCHrauSNEAKPHEVHWI C e n t e r p o in t V I 7:00pm 222-HARKINS 4^ M i l l a n d U n iv e r s it y 9 ; denotes M idnight shows only $ 3.7 5 .0 ih « in N lO V E ^ f f if l o n m th L 3EL IK im m m (Fri-Sun) 12:30.3:00,5:30, 6:00.10:30112:50«ni FriSntnnriÁ w h y d o F O O LS 1 SNAKE EYES Bring this Gift Certificate to either Smith's Food And Drug locations at 3255 S. Rural Rd. - Tempe or 3232 S. Mill Avenue - Tempe, before September 1,1998 and take an extra $5.00 off your next shopping order I of $25.00 or more, when you use your Fresh Values Card. ' I________________________________________ __________________ __________________l JFthSun)10:45.12:35,1:35.3:35,4:35, __E S35, 7*35.9:30,10:30 (feafamfri.SatonM3B I D A N C E WITH M E * om> a Gift Certificate ltlA ■ (Fri-Suh) 12:30,3:25,6:15.. 9:1 5 M 2:45am Frf.T- - - 1 ' (Fri-Sun) 11:35. 2:20. 5:25 E V E R A F T E R ipe-ie _/ 3255 S. Rural Rd. 829-7799 scn S è SatonhÁ _ O frm -T ñ » Ij B M l M nas n (Fri) 2:30, 5 :10,7:50,10:40.1:00am (Sat) 12:10,2:30,5:10,7:50.10:40.1:00wn d i b t w l 'Thx (Sun) 12:10. 2:30. 5:10.7:^0.10:40 S A V IN G P R IV A T E R Y A N n (Frfl 2:4 0.6 2 0.9 :5 0 OM2 SCREENS! (Sat,Sun) 11:20,2:40,6:20,9:50 d m i t m . (Fri) VM, 4:30,7:15,10«), 1230wn (Sat) 11« L1:40,4:30,71$ 1ft0& 1230am OMHTVH. a s s s s s » ^ * 0 © (¿un) 11« T i :40 4 « r r : l5 r IM O HOW S T E LLA GOT rr\ (Fri-Sun) 12:40.3:30,6:30. H ER G RO OVE B A C K M V 9:20 (12:05am Fri, Sat onM -1“ D A N C E w r m M E r . . . . 3«). 6:40.9:30 (12:15am Fri. SatarkA SIMON BIRCH (Sata/29) 7:O0pfT Co r n e r sto n e E Rural and University IC ^ S S ei3 !J ^ ? ( r 222-HARKINS IQ 10 10 ID A Harklaa Exclusive! (Fri) 4:45.7:15,9:4 (Sat Sun) 11:50.21:18.4:45.7:18.9:4 POLISH WEDDING A***** t*an*w*i (Fri)5 $ 0 ,73 0 .10 :0 0 (Sat, Sun) 12:10.2:30,5:00.730. 10:00 W R O N G F U L L Y A C C U S E Dl e e n _________________ (Fri)430,7Û0,9:30 (Sat Sun) 12:00,2:00,4:30,7:00,9:30 T H E N Ë àO T IA T O R m (Fri) 4:00,8:50,930pm (Sat Sun) 1JQO, 4:00,8:60,9 J O S M O K E S IG N A L S <•*-'« (Fri) 5:30.8:00, 1020 (Sat Sun) 12:50,3:00,5:30,8:00.10:20 T H E O P P O S IT E O F S E X m ^ (Fri) 5:16,7:45,10:10 7;4j; tÖ:1Ö (Sat, Sun)• 12:30, ¡ S h o w tim e s s u b je c t to c h a n g e. P le a se ca ll th e a tr e to v e rity . A DENOTES SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT wmm -2^,. Í 4 P 4 B o ys R anch lice n se ren ew al denied PHOENIX (AP) — The state announced Wednesday it won’t renew the license of Arizona Boys Ranch, a group of boot camp-style juvenile centers, .'following its investiga­ tion into the death of a California teen at one facility. The Department of Economic Security had temporarily extended Boys Ranch’s license to Sept. 1. Boys Ranch has 20 days to appeal the decision. In addition, DES D irector Linda J. B lessing said Wednesday that investigators found that child abuse and neglect by 17 em ployees contributed to the death of Nicholaus Contreraz, 16, of Sacramento, Calif. DES officials said the employees will be placed on the state’s child abuse registry, which will prevenRthem from taking jobs as caregivers or serving as foster parents in the state. Arizona does not have the authority to keep them from working in other states. The Pinal County Attorney’s Office has jurisdiction to bring any criminal charges against the employees, Blessing said. County Attorney spokesman Charles Ratliff said the agency is investigating alleged abuses at Boys Ranch going back to 1994. He said investigators would likely decide whether to bring charges within a few weeks. Contreraz collapsed and died March 2 at a facility in Oracle while being forced to do exercise. An autopsy showed he had an undetected, massive lung infection. Allegations of abuse proliferated as California, Arizona, federal and Pinal County officials opened investigations, some criminal and some of which continue. In Sacram ento, the youth’s grandm other. Connie Woodward, was pveijoyed at the news. “ They run a death camp there. They don’t run a Boys Ranch." Woodward said. “A torture chamber is what it was There is more to life than news and sports... Check out the rSfudenf* 5 Book* for my grandson.’’ . Arizona Boys Ranch President Bob Thomas did not immediately return a call for comment Wednesday morning. California’£ Social Services Department said its investi­ gators found abuse, declared the operation unsafe and cut off funding. California Gov. Pete Wilson recently signed legislation giving his state increased control over sending troubled youths to out-of-state facilities such as Boys Ranch. Since half to three-quarters of the about 500 youths once assigned to Boys Ranch came from California, enrollment dropped sharply after the Contreraz death, resulting in lay­ offs and retrenchment. Thomas disciplined several em ployees, closed the Oracle campus, pledged to improve training, medical pro­ cedures and independent oversight, then named a blue-rib­ bon advisory panel to help. Meanwhile, he acknowledged that Contreraz was mis­ treated but said that was an aberration that didn’t indicate broader problems. He said the subsequent allegations were the lies of troubled boys and exaggerations of disgruntled former employees. It’s not the first time Boys Ranch has come under fire or the first time one of its charges died — a Mississippi youth drowned in 1994 in what was ruled an accident while attempting to escape. , Arizona regulators put Boys Ranch on probation four times since 1971, allowing the program to continue operat­ ing while addressing state concerns. Investigators from California, Indiana and Illinois also have issued critical reports about Boys Ranch in past years. L A R C E S T S E L E C T IO N O F N E W & U S E D B O O K S P E R S O N A L , F R IE N D L Y A S S IS T A N C E 7 0 4 S . C o lle g e A v e . O n e B lo c k N o r t h o f A S U ARIZONA STWE •SUNDEVK. F u n n P0LU W 2S f i r ( Accepted Here & Financial Aid Checks e s EXTENDED HOURS O P E N IN G Page 18 Student D U R IN G SE M E ST E R Book C e n te r 1 H O U R FREE PARKING w ith m inim um p u rch ase - lo cated b eh in d th e store C o H * g * S t. Next to College Street Deli school Sat* Press for Tfeunday, A u g u st a?, 199* ^ :-;«i - , * >■•<*■*. *v* MS/H ^ agHBffifrv1 "XN »•* **. t | *3*5.* S$®j || In ve stig a to rs say foul-ups led to ch ild 's w rong su rg e ry PHOENIX (AP) -— Investigators say an inexperienced nurse and doctors who failed to check IDs contributed to a case in which a boy received the wrong surgery. The 8-year-old boy; who was scheduled to have a tumor removed from his neck, instead underwent exploratory surgery on his abdomen last month at Phoenix Children ’s Hospital. Phoenix Children’s has already taken steps to prevent such a mix-up from happening again, said Kimberly Ovitt, hospital spokeswoman. A report by state investigators, released Tuesday, addressed more than the surgical mistake. Investigators also questioned why Phoenix Children’s, which is licensed as a general hospital, doesn’t have its own operating room, emergency department, dietetic department, medical records, laboratory, pharmacy or radiology services, Phoenix Children’s, the state’s only children’s hospital, 7 rents more than two floras of Good Samaritan. It shares some employees with Good Samaritan and pays for services such as radiology and pharmacy. Phoenix Children’s officials say they don’t know why the state is now raising the question of its licensure status. The hospital has had general-hospital status since 1983. Hospital staff members were to meet with state inspectors Wednesday on the license question, Ovitt said. Investigators found that the nurse, surgeon and anesthesiol­ ogist violated hospital policy by not identifying the patient before the procedure. Good Samaritan fired the nurse and reported him to the nursing board. There was no evidence that the doctors involved had been disciplined by the hospital’s peer-review process or had been reported to the state Board of Medical Examiners. A new school year, a new prefix fo r campus phone numbers By Jayson Peters State Press Telephone Services, requested the change. necting to the same number as before the Jordan said this was a way to keep 4 as the “We gave (US West) back 5,000 numbers change. last digit of the prefix. The prefixes traded to US ASU doubled its inventory of available resi- from one prefix and took 10,000 from another,” The telephone system at ASU is based on West will be used for the city of Tempe’s main dene hall phone numbers by switching the 1st 3 he said. five-digit internal dialing. This means that a stu- office, replacing their current prefix, digits from 784 to 884. Jordan said students will stiD be able to call dent dialing the campus phone number such as ‘T think it’s good to have a clean slate,” said Gary Jordan, assistant manager of ASU from one on-campus location to another, con- 555-5555 would only have to dial 5-5555, Sarah Lovell, an ASU resident Student Talk Special « p er minute A jc u m t a u y t u n a p r e - p a i d 1998-1999 ASASU Graduate Student Affairs Vice President c e 11 u l a Activate Today! why w ait for local phone services Phones as low as $7 9 00 $ 3 9 ” Research Grant & Conference Travel Fund Information Includes 1,015 minutes (w ith valid stu d e n t/fa c u lty I.D.) H O CONTRACT # H O CREDIT CHECK NO D E P O S IT * H O M INIM UM /ICE % Location: Pima Room-MU Date: Friday, Aug. 28,1998 % Time: 1-3 p,m. «u im m * FREERefid 5 l jp e r Crii 965 .061 for more delate. P R £ s t 9« 7 < W K U t i tà c T C a n ld . 717 S. MILL * 9 6 6 -1 2 0 3 r Los Arcos Àuto Center 949-6370 PHOENIX WEST PHOENIX MESA NE Corner of Camelback 67th Ave ntte & Thomas inside Southwest Supermarket 691-6000 Broadway & Country Club inside Southwest Supermarket 635-0555 & 7*Avenue 664-1000 Bike to School m Spedai! ASU Guaranteed Lowest P rices I n T own On Custom Wheels RIPE A BIKE, DON’T WALK UPLAND M o u n tain B ik e EN K EI BBS FITTIPALDI R eeu á R $219.95 SPECIAL an d m any U ptown , cross campus , or down m ountain trails, G IAN T ARE THE WAY TO CO. 1999 MODEL BICYCLES ARRIVINC DAILY. A ll 1998 models are priced to sell. Bring In Your ASUID C l A N T * T R E K * RALE 1C H • U - L O C K Any Tire or Automotive Service Purchase ' CT Regular $19.95 0 0 $1o25 NOW Reg. *18.95 | adjust gears, brakes, hubs, b.b. wheel wmeaumesiASt ■ TRUING, LUBRICATION&CLEANNG WimCOUKM. Vo» v¥OHon« orna. E». 9/20/98 BICYCLE WHEELERS 968-8011 bikes FRONT T Ö M & -Ü P «laaB m M WKnv : Q flO “ ! *2 5 VMm coupon. 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A n d Feature FONCARD Feature JFONCÂRD no co m pariso n.To see Servicecharge 0* 0« f* 3 90* C ost per m in u te 20« 20« JW par ’ •.how much yo u ’ll save, read betw een the lines. : Total 8minutecall $ 1.60 $ 3.70 $ 1.60 $1.70 Sprint Sense College Plan Stand Alone FONCARD Option A. Rates as of 7/1/98. Use your AT&T Calling Card feature before O c to b e r 3 1, 1998 and get a free 19 98 —99 Student Adyantage m em bership good fo r savings at Amtrak,® Tower Records, Foot Locker and over 20,000 other places across the country. D o n 't have the AT&T Calling C ard feature? Stop by your card office today. Use your ID as a calling card. G et a FREE 1998 - 99 Student Advantage membership. www.att.com/col lege/n p. htm I *ReferstotheAT&TOneRate*CollegePlan.Planratesdonot applytoih-statecafeinAlaska.Otherin-state callingca»xlratesmayvarypendingstatetariffeffectivedates. Appliestodomesticcallingcardcallsyoudial yourselfusing1-800CALLATTAdditional 30fsurchargeapplie*.tocallingcardcaHsplacedfrompayphones. StudentAdvantages aregisteredtrademarkofStudentAdvantageLLC. 01998AT&T Election w orkers hard to find B y Pa u l D a v en p o r t A sso ciated P ress G e iie itl Education y o u n e e d is M C C is j u s t m in u te s a w a y . Mm 9 ^ 8 8 . W"’ H h| ^ m : 4t--' M e s a C o r a n u m it y C o lle g e h a s c k s s e s ^ a i l M p f o r f a l l in M a t h , H is t o r y , C o n n | | w riicatatta a n d l|ier<4Nk' B p cor ■ p H I t o n one o f I ■ fe r a n d r e g is t ìp u s . P ic k r e g is t r i : H o t lin e s ” 1 • B u s in e r’s S ite tp • S o c ia l ! t R e g is t r a r * * S ute .....-..... Q • I n d e r g r a d n a t e S e r v ic e s R e g is t r a r ’s S ( H | .s e i Call to Register! 4 6 1 -7 7 0 0 m ■’ One of the Maricopa Community College» The Maricopa Community College District is an EEO/AA institution. A paycheck and the satisfaction of mak­ ing democracy happen apparently aren’t enough for many would-be polling-place workers, not with Arizona’s primary elec­ tion falling right after Labor Day weekend. A sampling of county election officials around the state on Wednesday found sev­ eral reporting that some workers just don’t want to commit to reporting to work at 5:30 a.m. on Sept. 8. “There’s a shortage, and I’m sure that’s one of the aspects that it does fall on the day after Labor Day,” C oconino C ounty R ecorder C andace Owens said. “It just doesn’t work for them this time.” “People are going to be away,” said Y vonne R eed, executive assistan t to Maricopa County Recorder Helen Purcell. “We realized last week we had just run up against a stone wall,” Reed said. The tight labor m arket isn’t helping either. “They’re not clamoring as they have in the past,” Reed said. “There are a lot of people who have in the past said, ‘OK, I’ll work until I can find som ething.’ Now these people have found something,” Reed said. Maricopa County is 900 short o f the 7,000 people to fill out six-member election boards at 1,024 polling places. Pima County, however, still has people beating down the door. A reason for the hundreds of people waiting “on standby” may be that Pima County’s pay scales for election workers range between $108 and $145 — compared with $75 and $90 in Maricopa County. “You mean the labor market is influ­ enced by wages?” Dan Anderson, research administrator for the state Department of Economic Security, said with mock sur­ prise. “Gosh, golly. Supply rises with high­ er wages. There it is in a nutshell.” The Phoenix area’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for July was 2.5 per­ cent, compared with 2.6 percent in Tucson and 3.7 percent statewide. “Attracting peo­ ple for lim ited duration work with the wages you have to pay, it’s difficult,” Anderson said. “From a dollar perspective, you’re making fairly close to the minimum wage.” . , The federal minimum wage is $5.15 an hour. For the 13 hours between 6 a.m. and 7 p.m., Maricopa County’s base rate of $75 amounts to $5.77 an hour, compared with $8.30 in Pima County. Inspectors, the boss­ es at each polling place, get more. Coconino County as of early this week was short 100 of the 375 poll workers it needs, but has found a few more, Owens said. Mohave County also needs some addi­ tional poll workers, but that’s become a recurring problem in recent elections as its traditional base of poll workers — senior citizens — gets grayer, said elections assis­ tant Grace Brock. “Many of them are just plain ready to retire off the (election) boards,” Brock said from Kingman, adding that many younger retirees beg off, citing busy schedules. Maricopa County has some worst-case contingency plans th at include shifting county elections workers from other elec­ tion-day duties to work at the polls and enlisting voters on the spot. A troubleshoot­ er would go to a polling place lacking workers and ask waiting voters whether they want a job for the day, Reed said. There is precedent, Reed said, citing a 1996 polling place in Phoenix where elec­ tion workers “just decided they wouldn’t show up.” The troubleshooter was able to recruit replacements on the spot, Reed said. “He was able to get three people to work. I think he started out with the custodian who opened the building.” 'M d IA JO |U |O d lu o jo jjg p A | j i |9 ! | s e i i j i m s j s iij b A je jo d iu o ju o o 81 ^ u p e s e j d Now at the 1998 PHOENIX TRIENNIAL August 15 - October 4 Every three years, the Phoenix Triennial presents artists from the Southwest who are pushing contemporary art in a whole new direction. The result is one of the most cutting edge exhibitions anywhere. If you think you know what contemporary art is ail about, this show just might change your point of view. PH O E N IX A R T M US E U M Central and McDowell (6 0 2 ) 2 5 7 - 1 2 2 2 for 2 4 -h o u r Info rm atio n • T u e s d a y - S u n d a y 1 0 a .m . - 5 p .m . T h u rsd a y a n d Frid a y 1 0 a .m . - 9 p.m . A d u lts $ 6 , c h ild re n b e tw e e n 6 a n d 1 8 y e a r s $ 2 , s e n io r c it iz e n s a n d s tu d e n ts $ 4 . Fre e T h u rsd a y s. T h e Fu nines State Press fo r T hursday, A u g u s t 27, 1990 O ut of 18 By M ike C urran C ontrol S nacks 1 4M IM P O ßT d K lT eeP s o p p l V t o ic #L HMD is WHITE oof FOR t h e d u l l By C a r r ie L. B e h r e n s Explorer Henry Moreton Stanley reported seeing chimpanzees carrying torches in central Africa. OOM&HJ5-JAÍ C tflSS S é S f 'S* I A-tf J l ooW. [t» S * T y , IbiA <*ed V*«US y o u you *rt 301*9 *4o Vtell! A : ; ju i* '■ \ U K U k cm »'+ ^ 4lw A ? ¿mío you»* y ® » 541. k««! 4q heU,_**J rtiirr^ u7*ll...u»«' 15*7 Vo! AMEN S e r l in g U . CHA SE, YOUR m o o M ftV ltT i a F lu ff B R IN G I N ' A LOT O F C H IC K S T H R O U G H HERE .f l ig h t ? B y Ji m W odark N O .C H ftS tl'p rftl T H IC K A S ft B R I C K , RU OÑ N H IT T £ R l HOM C FK j j u s T LEAVE a ” ftC T U ftU X C H A S E , 'P o st e r 1 'H C r O N H f t S> £ O F "T H E i»O Y I S l i l N t ' l iT H lK lK T H O S E T O J O ARE A P A I R o ' H c s r n E S . C hicken -stick B ug Face S C O R I N 'A L u T H E t im e 1, v GOTCrtAt HANGER O N TH E DOORKNOB - -y _ Jim Wodark© 1998 All Rights Reserved HEY, m B y C arlos Ramirez B y A drian S ferle The Mad Cow Disease mutates Into an even more dangerous strain! S e a r c h a b l e A r c h iv e s • H a y d e n ’s F e r r y R e v ie w • a n d M o r e http://w w w .statepress.com 712 S. C o lle g e (C o lle g e & U n iv e rs ity ) 967-4049 i ‘ \1 ti C am pus C o rn er • Beer & Soda • Photo Developing • Health & Beauty A ids 609 S. Mill (A c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 858-0567 B e e r only at C o lle g e A v e . 100% C O T T O N s -x l w h i l e s u p p l i e s l a s t SALE EN D S 8 -30-98 F R E E D O U B L E S 2 4 E X P O S U R E C O L O R P R IN T 93 99 S e e s to r e fo r d e tails lP P ^ ^ iÍ H Í R I R ^ | | P | ^ P P I 9 v iP i( p n P v « ^ | H ^ n r :? Gutsy Tillman proves worth to Cardinals Ex-Sun Devil standout carries intensity Brad Lang of the State Press Arizona C ardinals safety P at Tilman (40) has displayed the same hard-hitting style in .NFL preseason games as he did during his ASU career. T he p e s s im is ts , com m only referred to as scouts or “talent evaluators”, claimed he was too small. They said he was too slow. They said he wasn’t athletic enough. They said he didn’t have what it takes to be a N a tio n a l F o o tb a ll L eague defender. * Y’all were wrong. Pat Tillman has what it takes to be a solid contrib u to r to the A rizona C a rd in a ls d efen se. The team has enough faith in the 1997 Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year to promote him to first-unit linebacker in nickel situations-— which it did on Wednesday. And to make him a second-unit safety. J u st ask A riz o n a d e fe n s iv e c o o rd in a to r D ave McGinnis. “(H e’s) one of my favorite guys,” M cGinnis said can d id ly afte r T h u rsd ay ’s m orning p ractice at the team’s Tempe training facility. “The reason we drafted Pat and the reason we like; him when we went to ASU to work him out is he’s a football player. And watching him play all his games last year, we knew the guy was a football player. We weren’t really too concerned with his stature. He made T u r n irw m i i i i i i i r ? Lowly OSU Beavers worst football team in Pac-10 in ’98 B y D o ug F lanagan S tate P ress Editor’s note: This is part one of a two-part series previewing the 1998 Pac-10 football season. Part two will appear in Friday’s edi­ tion. For the first time ever, the Pac— 10 football champion will not be looking to go to the Rose Bowl. Thanks in part to the Rose Bowl’s joining the Super Alliance that guarantees a true national championship game, 1998 will be the first year the champions of the Pac-10 and Big-10 will forgoe the "Grandaddy of them All” and head to the Fiesta Bowl if they end the regular season as one Of the two top tanked tarns. The Pac* 10 has two legitimate national championship con­ tenders in ASU and UCLA and four more teams Who have bowl potential (Washington, UofA, Oregon, am CSC).’ The following Ls a synopsis of the bottoi i five teams in the con­ ference, based on order of predicted finish: 10. Oregon State. 1997 record: 3-8; returning starters: 14; top returners: senior wide receiver Tim Alexander, senior defensive end Inoke Brecklerfield, senior linebacker Brian Rogers. To put into perspective the Beavers’ epic run of futili­ ty, their last winning season was 1970. That was before any of their current players were even bom. But hope springs eternal for coach Mike Reilly and his squad, who in addition to a favorable schedule have several other factors in their favor to improve on last year’s dismal 0-8 Pac-10 record. A strong recruiting class, a new athletic director (former Tennessee assistant AD Rick Barnhart) from a big-name pro­ gram, and 31 playos with starting experience, success might be imminent in Corvallis. But most likely not in 1998. With Alexander shifting to flanker from his quarterback spot, unproven junior Terrance Bryant takes over. Senior Jason Dandridge takes over at tailback in an effort to improve a rush offense that ranked last in the Pac10 and 108th nationally with 85 .3 yards per game. “One of our problems last year was that our defense played too much football,” Reilly said, “Offensivley, we’re going to tty to be a much more balanced team, one that can throw the ball with efficiency as well as throw it.” One defense, the Beavers return seven starters, including pre­ season second team All-Pac-10 selection strong safety Armón Hatcher and Breckterfield, who recorded eight sacks last year. Predicted ’98 record: 3-8. 9. Washington State. 1997 record: 11-1; return­ ing starters: 8; top returners: senior defensive tack­ le Larry Holmes; senior wide receiver Nian Taylor, senior comerback Dae Moronkola. Last year, die Cougars stunned die world of college football by blitzing through their confer­ ence schedule with just trne loss (to ASU) and advancing to their first Rose Bowl in 67 years. Wazzu fans hope it won’t be another 67 years before another return trip to Pasadena But all those Cougar maniacs won’t be booking another trip this year. With a senior-dominated team, WSU ran roughshod over the rest of the Pac-10 last year, utilizing a lethal passing attack led by Heisman candidate quarterback Ryan Leaf and a group of dynamic receivers nicknamed “The Fab Five.” Leaf departed after his junior year for die riches of die NFL. Four-fifths of the Fab Five are gone as well. So is 1,000 rusher Michael Black and nine other starters. So what is head coach Mike Price left with? “It’s time to reload,” he said. “I don’t think you can reproduce Ryan Leaf and the things he does, but we’re going to be pretty dam good this year.” Junior Steve Bimbaum will take over for Leaf at quarterback, and junior J’Juan Gilmore and sophomore Kevin Brown will replace Black in the backfield. On defense, five starters return, including Holmes, Who recorded two sacks last year, and sophomore free safety Lament Thompson, who picked off six passes. Junior Steve Gleason, who recorded 100 tackles last year, returns to lead a young, talented linebacker unit ’“Holmes is the main guy on the defensive line,” Price said. “(But) linebackers will be the real strength of this team. You might see us with five linebackers on the field. We are strong, deep and fast” Predicted ’98 record: 3-8. 8. California. 1997 record: 3-8: returning starters: 15; top returners: senior quarterback Justin Vedder, sophomore tailback Marcus Fields, senior left tackle John Welboum. The Golden Bears return 15 starters, a solid indicator of a winning season and a possible bowl berth. However, the schedule is not as favorable, with Nebraska loom­ ing large on Sept 12. Offensively, California will have to make up for the loss of All-Pac-10 wide receiver and center Justin Newberry. Vedder put up impressive numbers last season (2,718 yards, 20 TD’s), but Was never was considered a big threat of opposing defenses. Head coach Tom Holmoe said Vedder enters the ‘98 cam­ paign as a more confident quarterback. Tough inside runner Fields will be featured at tailback, and Cal might have another star receiver in the making With senior Dameane Douglas, who caught: 23 passes over the final two games of last season. “We moved the football last year,” Holmoe said, “but the bot­ tom line is scoring points and winning games, and that result wasn’t satisfactory. Having everybody on the same page for a second year is a big advantage. Chi defense, free safety Marquis Smith (72 tackles) and end Mawuko Tugbenyoh (five sacks) lead an improved squad. Predicted ’98 record: 4-7. 7. Stanford. 1997 record: 5-6; returning starters: 9; top returners: junior quarterback Chad Hutchinson, junior center Mike McLaughlin, junior wide receiver Troy Walters. Last season, the Cardinal were expected to content for a conference title. Instead, they finished 5-6. This year, they are expected to be near the bottom of the bar­ rel in the Pac-10. The Cardinal are hoping history of doing the unexpected repeats itself this year. However, it will be tough if they are without die services of Hutchinson, the team’s starter the past two years. Due to obliga­ tions to professional baseball, he is a question mark for die upcoming campaign. If he doesn’t go, junior Todd Husak is the probable starter. “ Hutchinson is our number one quarterback and will retain that position until someone takes it away from him,” head coach Tyrone Willingham said. “This is the strongest group of quarter­ backs since I’ve been here.” If Hutchinson leaves, the team’s only star will be the 5-foot-8 Walters, who caught 86 passes for 1,206 yards last year. Defensively, just three starters from last year return: sopho­ more tackle Willie Howard, senior linebacker Donnie Spragan, and junior comerback Chris Johnson. “Defensive line is an area where the losses (of experi­ enced players) really take hold,” Willingham said. “Our young players have to develop and get not only the mental side of the game under grips, but also the physical game and be able to make the transition from being a reserve to some­ one we expect to be a leader in our defensive team ,” Predicted ’98 record: 4-7. . 6. USC. 1997 record: 6-5; returning starters: 14; top returners: junior wide receiver R. Jay Soward, free safety Rashard Cook, linebacker Chris Claiborne. It seems like everything is new about USC football except for the splendor of the L.A. Coliseum and the Trojan horse mascot, New coach Paul Hackett, previously the Kansas City Chiefs’ offensive coordinator, takes Over the helm from John Robinson. In addition, there will be new players, new assistant coaches, and new alignments. “First, we must earn back our respect,” Hackett said. “Our next goal is to go to the Róse Bowl. When that happens, you set yourself up for good things.” Despite the fact that junior John Fox Started nine games last year at quarterback, Mike Van Raaphorst had nudged himself into the starting role. Fox passed for 1,940 yards and 12 touchdowns last year, but several intangibles, including poise and decision-making ability, push him to second string. Other offensive returning starters include Soward, who scored eight touchdowns while hauling down 48 passes and senior receiver Billy Miller. Taking ova- at tailback is junior Chad Menton, an injury-prone back who Hackett is counting on to run about 15 times a game. On defense, Claiborne (seven sacks) to lead a solid lineback­ ing unit, and defensive end Sultan Abdul-Malik tied Claiborne for die team lead in sacks. Predicted ’98 record: 6-5. Sosa, McGwire homer again which is on the fifth floor o f «he ICA tournament in April. T he A SU w om en’s ruby team en co u rag es p ro sp e c tiv e p lay ers to a tte n d p ra c tic e on T uesdays and club sports events reported in the State P re ss, e -m a il th e sp o rts e d ito r at crazyed@asu.edu or call 965-2292. CINCINNATI (AP) — Chicago’s S am m y Sosa hit his 52nd homer today, leaving him one behind Mark McGwire as they close in on Roger Maris’ single-season record of 61. Sosa hit an arching solo homer off the top of an advertising panel in the third deck in left-center field of the Cubs game against the Cincinnati Reds. The drive was estimated at 438 feet. The third-inning homer off Brett Tomko — who had struck out Sosa all four times he had faced him — gave Sosa a streak o f 13 consecutive series with a homer since a twogame set against Montreal on July 22-23. It was Sosa’s 23rd homer on the road, matching the club’s single-season record shared by Hack Wilson (1930), Ernie Banks (1960) and Dave Kingman (1979). His 29 homers at Wrigley Field rank third in club history, trailing Wilson (33 in 1930) and Banks (30 in 1958). The 52 homers are the second-highest total for a Cub, trailing only Wilson’s 56 State Press for T hunday, August 27, IMB Ü Wf B Bradley loses I st start Ex-ÀSU pitching standout Ryan Bradley m ade his first M ajor League start last night for the New York Yankees. The Yankees lost 6-4 to the Anaheim Angels in the opening gam e of a doubleheader. Bradley m ade the quick ju m p from colle­ giate baseball to the pros in one year. Brad Lang of the State Press From Staff Reports Ryan Bradley made his first Major League start for the New York Yankees Wednesday. The form er ASU pitching sta r, who h ails from C hino H ils, C alif., was handed the loss after surrendering six runs in fiv e -p lu s in n in g s as the Anaheim Angels defeated the Bronx Bombers 6-4 in the first game of a rare day-night dou­ bleheader at Yankee Stadium. The 6-foot-4 right-hander earned his first career victory on S atu rd ay , m aking his Y ankee d eb u t in a re lie f appearance. B radley (1-1) hurled four Scoreless innings Wednesday, but he allow ed three runs in bo th th e fo u rth and fifth innings. Iro n ically , A naheim third basem an T roy G lau s, who s ta rre d at UCLA and w as a member o f the 1996 Olympic b a se b a ll team , w as fan n ed twice by Bradley. Die-hard ASU baseball fans m ay rem em b er G laus as the Bruin who was nailed by one o f B rad ley ’s inside fastb alls two seasons ago. A fter being p e lte d , G la u s c h arg e d b r a w l f o llo w e d . Before being called up from the D ouble-A N orw ich N av ig a to rs o f the E astern League, Bradley was 2-0 with a m icroscopic 1.44 ERA in 25 in nings o f w ork. He walked eight and struck out 25. B radley, who was consid­ ered one of collège baseball’s top closers, was selected by the New York Yankees in the June 1997 free-agent draft. The Associated Press con­ tributed to this report. You T h o u g h t You Had E verything . » You’ve got money in the bank. A roof over your head. A great family. Wonderful friends. We have t h e la r g e s t s e le c tio n o f premium cigars,fla v o re d cig a rs, im p o rte d c ig a r e t t e s , clo v e s, chewing . to b a cco and pipe to b a c c o in Tempe, .. all a t t h e g u a ra n te e d lo w e s t p rices. A good job . . . Something’s missing. All the money in the world can’t buy you happiness. - S.W. corner of Mill & 6 t h S t , in Centerpóint, around 'th e corrter fro m Coffee, P lantatio n . , - Fulfillment doesn’t come from friends and family. True happiness is a gift. The Ultimate Gift is yours for the asking. COHIBA VITAL Impact arid receive the Ultimate Gift. Visit us this week at learn how to m m * Fri-Sai iO-Midnigit• Sunday\\\ Sundays at 10:30am (11:1 Sam beginning Sept, 13) and TuesdaySat 7:30pm. 731-5300 Computers V I T A L Im p a c t ! C o l l e g e -A g e M i n i s t r i e s G race C o m m u n it y C hI irch 1 2 0 0 E. S o u t h e r n A v e ., T e m p e (b e t w e e n R u r a l & M c C l i n t o c k ) W h o le s a le .c o m Brought to you by: Elite PC T O W ¿¿G A & Learn the Application Process from A to Z. Form er A ssistant D ean of A dm issions, U .C. San D iego School of M edicine Maria Lofftus, J.D. Kaplan D irector of Student Services, and A dm issions Consultant ASU T u e sd a y , S e p t e m b e r 1 6 :0 0 p m Call 1-800-KAP-TEST to reserve a seat! th e m o u n d a n d a b e n c h -c le a rin g Back to school special! •AMD K6 300MHz Processor with Cooling Fan • Triton T X Pro II Chipset Motherboard with 512K C ache •15" ,28mm Non-Interlaced Digital S V G A Monitor • 4.3G B UltraDMA IDE Hard Drive • 32M B S D R A M 168Pin Memory • 56K V.90 Internal Voice/Fax Modem w/ Voicemail •1.44M B Floppy Drive • 32X UltraDMA IDE C D -R O M Drive • 16Bit SIS 3D Audio Sound onboard • Pair of 100 Watt P M P O Amplified Stereo Speakers 8 4 M B Em bedded 64 bit Video • Mini Tower C a se with 250W Power Supply • 104-Key Windows 95 Keyboard •Logitech 2-Button M ouse •Windows 95 Version II Installed (Win 98 upgrade available) • Antivirus and Voicemail/Communication Software O N LY $795 Call 969-8919 or visit http://computerswholesale.com to order. 1-MO-KAP-TEST •Mention this ad and receive a 600 dpi Laser Printer for only $199* Tillman CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH part ACR O SS 1 Shopping 39 Detect 40 Movie aid pooch 5 Fly catchers 41 Rung DOWN 9 Verdi 1 Fast-food creation quaffs 11 Menotti 2 Highest tide point character 3 Harvey 13 Finishes Keitel outofthe movie money 40nemore ,14-Flm than due suppianter 5 Breakers 15 Mature 6 Actor 16 Out­ Jannings standing 7 Harvey 18 Father's Keitel speeches movie 20 Fury 8 Barber’s 21 Turn need aside 22 Pianist 1 2 3 4 Myra 9 23 Stable particle IS 24 Greek letter 15 25 Pace 18 27— Novo 18 (Benin's capital) 29 Hockey legend 25 26 30 Tabascosauce 29 ingredients 32 33 32 Dessert wine 35 34 Catch 35 Home 38 36 Clay product 38 Number 10 Classify 12 Folk stories 17 Booming stuff 19 Ham or lamb 22 Angelic instrument 24 Come— (occur) 25 Lose it 26 Lawrence’s milieu 27 Apiece 28 Ultimatum end 30 Michel­ angelo work 31 Brew 33 Fix copy 37 Tor— a jo lly * r): i 8 ■ B ‘ 12 10 1 ■ 17 ’’ * - f l So 31 36 37 39 ■1 41 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work i t AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W 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 áre ail hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE EMHEJY H EY H BA U ED F LOMN XAO EN CN'Y C D . NRO with the attitude that he’s deflections, fumble recov­ not g o in g to m ake th e eries, interceptions or quar­ team’s final cut,” said the terback sacks. It d o esn ’t p o p u la r q u a rte rb a c k . make a difference. As long “ . . . I ’m lik e , ‘y o u ’re as No. 40 is there doing crazy!’” what he does besL i.e. giv­ “ H e ’s k in d o f lik e ing it his all all the time. myself, not built really for You s till need to be the gam e. B ut he cornés convinced? Tillman doès. and p lay s. He lo v es the “I ’m trying,” he said, to gam e. H e’s got instincts earn his paycheck and a and he ju s t goes out and p e rm a n e n t sp o t on the r e a c ts ,” and ru n s in to A rizona roster, “but I’m whoever is in his way. not going to get too excit­ The A rizona coaching ed yet.” s ta ff en v isio n s T illm an The fans at Sun Devil becoming a special teams S tadium fans w ill every demon— a kamikaze with tim e he ste p s o n to the sh o u ld e r pad s. A nd the gridiron. fans yearn for more of the Ed Odeyen can be reached same: big plays from all via e-mail at oyer, whether they be pass crazyed@asu.edu. from pagaie “ 1L 1 ■ ■ ■■ 1 ■ ■ i■ j1 1 WL J C ’PO and ASU h ead coach Bruce Snyder think alike, S n y d er p ra ise d Tillm an’s work ethic, gofor-broke m entality and leadership countless times last season, He is anything but complacent. “ He w ants to do it r ig h t,” M cG in n is said , “He wants to do it well, M istakes bother him. He plays all out. H e’s a very tough, physical guy...” Still, Tillman’s not con­ vinced he w ill m ake the team, according to his exASU team m ate and cu rre n t A riz o n a team m ate Jake Plummer. “He com es down here “ J■ M plays.” • T h at c h a ra c te ris tic remains as much a part of the co m p ac t 5 - f o o t - l l , 2 0 4 -p o u n d T illm a n ’s u n iq u e p erso n a as his shoulder-length hair and down-to-earth demeanor. “ I love his in te lligence,” McGinnis said. “I like his approach to the ball game. I don’t want to put too much pressure on Pat Tillm an saying ‘h e’s going to be this, or h e ’s going to be that’ but he’s done e v e ry th in g w e ’ ve asked him to do so far. H e’s ju st what I thought he was. He is a football player.” . A pparently M cG in n is ODXMEDF TMEZO ED ESFCODZO N B C YMEDF ZED ’N homers in 1930. RBIs in 1987. ST. LOUIS (AP)— Mark McGwire" moved closer to Roger Maris’ home run record and stayed two long balls ahead o f C hicago’s Sammy Sosa Wednesday night, hitting his 54th of the season against the Florida Marlins. A fter Sosa hit his 52nd hom er Wednesday afternoon, McGwire con­ nected in the eighth inning off Justin Speier with a drive that landed just above the wall Used for background beyond center field at Busch Stadium. He warmed up for the effort with eight homers in 15 batting-practice swings, including one that banged off the scoreboard beyond the left-field wall. He had been 0-for-3, hitting two towering pop-ups and taking a called third strike, before homering on an 0-1 pinch. McGwire has 30 games to reach Maris’ record of 61 homers in 1961. Nineteen of those games are at home, where McGwire has obliterated the sta- dium record with 28 homers already Jhk-segson. G artner hangs up skates TORONTO (AP) — Mike Gartner of the Phoenix Coyotes, the fifth lead­ ing goal scorer in NHL history, retired today after 19 years in the NHL. Gartner, 38, had 708 goals, 627 assists and 1,335 points, the 18th most in NHL history. The right-wing Gartner played in 1,432 games for Phoenix, the Washington Capitals, Minnesota North Stars New York Rangers and Toronto Maple Leafs, Gartner has 12 goals and 15 assists last season for Phoenix. G artner was drafted in the. first round by the Washington Capitals in 1979 and still leads the franchise in career goals (397) and points (789). In 1994, Gartner became the first NHL player to score 30 or more goals in 15 consecutive seasons. Houston, Phoenix tip-off tonight PHOENIX (AP) — The Houston Comets had the longest winning streak in the WNBA this year, scored the most points and crushed their first-round playoff opponent. They have C ynthia C o o p er' the Michael Jordan of women’s basketball, and the league’s second-best ballhawk in' Kim Perrot. And they are the only champions the 2-year-old WNBA has had. Houston brings its daunting combi­ nation of talent and momentum into the America West Arena — site of one of the Comets’ rare losses — Thursday night for the first game of the best-of-3 finals against the Phoenix Mercury. Game 2 will be Saturday in Houston, and Game 3, if needed, will be Tuesday in Houston. The Mercury, who finished the regu­ lar season with a 19-11 record, were seeded third in the playoffs, but got the advantage on second-seeded Cleveland by having that first game at home. They upset die Rockers, lost on the first try in Cleveland and then closed out the series with a 71-60 victory. 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, I b t State Press cannot assume responsibility for die validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more” information and assistance regarding the investigation o f an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 204-1721. xm im im x Mart Trivia... The earliest document i* Latin in t women'» handwriting (lit eentiry A.9.) it ta invitation ta a birthday APARTMENTS 1 & 2 BD apts. for rent. Latindry. 1 block from campus; quiet, sm all com plex. 933 S. Farmer 675-0928 lfcD /lB A '4 -P L E X . Pool, a/c, cov. prkng. $400/mo. Dwntwn Tem pe. 2b d /lb a, new carpet. Util- includ. $650/m o. lbd, $525/010. Orange/Tetrace. 5261806 1BD/1BA, 2 blocks from cam­ pus, p o o l, spa, laundry, c o v ­ ered prkng. No pets. $445/mo. 1700 S. College 967-7212 VERY NICE, lrge, clean, 2bd/ l ba, walk to A SU . $569/rao. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238 H O M ES FOR RENT H O M ES FOR RENT H O M ES FOR RENT H O M ES FOR RENT 1BD/1BA. HUGE front & back yard, SRP irrigation, gardener, w/d, pets ok w/dep. $500/mo. + sec., cleaning & pet deposit. 10 mo. lease. 2018 N . 23rd S t, Phx. Dave or Marge @ 267-t 0619 or Toni 585-0291. 3B D , 2BA HOME in great Scotts. area. Q uiet away from main streets. Ideal for prof, or grad students. A vail now. $1050/mo 497-5678: 3BD/2BA HOUSE, Broadway/ M cC lintock, $993. A lso 2bd/2ba house with w /d, dw, p ool. etc. $823. 966-2627 or 692-0844 TEMPE HOME. 4bd/2ba, liv ­ ing, dining & family rooms w/ frplce, 2130 sq.ft., pool, 2 car garage. $1400/mo. 893-0767 T h is sh o u ld b e y o u r a d C e ll965-6735 HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL C im a m if/ « d m C la s s ifi& c J s 4BD/2BA HOME, living, din­ ing & family room w/frplce, car­ port, close to ASU, $1200/mo. 893-0767 0 O S -0 7 -3 S 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FO R RENT 3B D T H , m in. from A SU , pools, rqtball, etc. A vail 9/1. $900/m o. Please Iv m sg: 800229-5823 or 508-643-1155. / HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER A L HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL C e ra m ic« I n str u c to r s O pportunities to in stru ct youth, parent-child, and ad u lt com m unity c lassés & w orkshops for Fall ‘98 a n d W inter ‘99 sessions. Previous teaching experi­ en ce required, 111.58/hr (5-20 hrs/w k). IWelcome Back ASU students, Looking for a part time jo b ? | Come and check put the opportunities at the Sun Autom otive Qroup in Scottsdale. We are looking for: \ \ • Valct/ICar Washers Ü C e r a m ic s T e c h n ic ia n s A d v e rtis e y o u r In tern et b u s in e s s o r W e b s it e in th e Classifieds. Call «654731 for wore information Ability to provide su p p o rt service to instructional staff a n d su p erv ise open-studio for p articipants. P revious experience with gas & electric kilns, m ixing glazes, and stu d io m aintenance. $8.75/hr (20 h rs/w k). Send resum e & referen ces to C ity of T em pe C ultural Services 3340 S. Rural Rd. T em pe, AZ 85282 - X , . /v -a > V - y É *«$«■** f; / r v ->'T * 1*—' / up of k|xuiycar dealerships in Arizona : Please call Kelly D. Davis at 675.0015 or apply in person at Rd. Scottsdale. ¿ TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR 3BR/2BÀ CONDO. Very nice, close to campus, all appliances included, including w/d. $950/mo. Call Jeff, 893-1651 AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS, 3bd/2.5ba condo, 2 c .g ., w/d, comm, pool, water inclded, $1050/m6. Wendy, 456-2398 HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, alc r patio. W alk/bike to ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/m o. A lso, 3bd/2ba with new carpet, $875/mo. 966^0987 MESA/TEMPE ÀREA - 2bd/2ba, w/d* pool,, spa, $700/m o. + dep„ elec, only. 777-1925 HELP WANTEDGENERAL TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT NICE 1 br. condo w/d, pool, ' spa, C lose to M ill/U niv. Ref. req. $490. 532-4260 PAPAGO PARK V illage I, avail, now! 3bd/2ba, 1536 sq ft, $1250/mo; Call 496-8939. PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba con­ do. New paint, clean carpets. Very nice. Call 432-3636. PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba’ 1 mi. from ASU, fireplace, pool, 1 , covered parking space, avail­ able now. $ l,2 7 5 /m o . 9473917 or 945-5845. HELP WANTEDGENERAL nrixcn*r country K E Z 9 9 .9 , O w ens B ro a d c a s tin g C o rp . :R e s e a rc h D e p t. Now Hiring TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT PAPAGO PARK - Large Ib d /lb a condo. X lnt cond. $61Q/mo. Call Ken, 351-6812. QUIET LUX 2br condo, 15 min. from A SU at 56th St. & Thomas. New carpet & paint, tile, frplce, d/w, balcony, pool, Jacuzzi, sauna. $585/m o. Call 265-2066 or 777-0916. UNIV/ HARDY, 2bd/2ba upper level condo. V -ball, BBQ ’s, weight room, pool, spa, bike to campus. $625/mo. 945-7986 UNIVERSITY RANCH gor­ geous 3bd/2ba, all Spanish tile, full size w/d, frplce, Vault­ ed c eilin g s, cov'd patio, $99Q/mo. 945-7986 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Reliable students wanted to distil bute materials on campas. Flexible schedala $6/hr Call 705-76951er more information * E x c e lle n t e n t r y le v e l RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING 2BD , IBA , $350/m o + 1/2 util. 1255 E. U niversity. Call 921-7866. RMMTE NEEDED Ahwatukee house w /p o o l.' Must like young dog. $425/m o in cl eve­ rything but telephone. 7530194. 7 MIN FROM A SU , 3bd/2ba w/pets, fully furn, n/s, respon­ sible, positive and considerate. $375 + 1/3 util. 913-9265. 2BDRM MOBILE hm on 5 acre farm So Mth area, yard, rural, secluded. A/C, lg kitch/Iiv rm. P r e f.stu d e n ts/fa c u lty 2769385. M /F WANTED to share 2bd/2ba condo near A SU. Must like pets, NS pref. $350 +1/2 utilities. Call 303-0970. RMMTE NEEDED: laid back but. mature NS female to share 2bd apt., w /d, separate bath, cvd pkng, pool. Must like cats, vegetarian pref. $405+1/2 util. Chandler border. 726-9728 RMMTE NEEDED ASAP to rent room 18 00 sq. ft. patio hom e. Has w/d, comm, pool, $330 + 1/3 util. Call April 897-6906. ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2bd/2ba apartment c lo se to ASU. $350+l/2utl. 961-9135. M/F WANTED to share 2bd/2ba condo near A SU. Must like pets, NS pref. $350 +1/2 utilities. Call 303-0970. ROOM S FOR RENT HELP WANTEDGENERAL 4BR/2BA HOME, McClintock & Broad way, pool, m/f, avail­ able now! $325/m+util Walt or Paul, 921-9046. BUILDING NEW FUTURES ONE CHILD AT A TIME P ositions available to w ork With y ou th w ith m ental and b ehavioral problem s in a residential setting. Call Laura @ 861-0625 or Fax resum e to 331-0990 HELP WANTEDGENERAL NEW RESORT RESERVATION CENTER Coordinate Tours/ Reservations • Guarantee $7-$15.92/hr. • 37 Permanent Positions » 9-1 or 5:00-9:00 (24 & 30+ Hrs) • Training Provided, No Selling , • P e r fe c t f o r B r o a d c a s t in g , M a r k e t in g a n d C o m m u n ic a t id n . m a jo rs tions available, part-tine or fa ll- tin e , flexible schedule. • F le x ib le s c h e d u lin g Competitive ho a rlf salary. Please call Ethan at A rizan a • L e s s t h a n a m ile Land A d vise rs at 9 4 7 -1 4 6 8 ASU or e -n a ii ne at if interested^ colt: EEO \ otban@ azland.aom for more info. Service Tech A T T E N T IO N English, B iology, Sociology, Psychology, A n th ro p o lo g y, H isto ry , C o m m u n ica tio n s Majors & Grad Students: H ig h -p a y in g , c a m p u s-o r ie n te d , research-related positions available. Pay range: $ 7 .5 0 -1 15/hr. Set you r own hours. N o sales work involved. Study while you work Sr earn. Call our friendly staff for more info. IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE, YOU’LL LIKE THIS JOB If y o u 'r e a p e r s o n a b le in d j v id u a l w h o e n jo y s S e rv ic in g p e o p le , th e n w e h a v e th e jo b to s u it y o u r te m p e ra m e n t. It w ill su it y o u r w a lle t to o . W ith a fre e c o m p r e h e n s iv e tra in ­ in g p r o g r a m , c o m p e t it iv e s a la ry , h o sp ita l/ d e n ta l in s u r­ a n c e , r e t ir e m e n t b e n e f it s a n d s t o c k o p tio n s , fr e q u e n t re c o g n itio n p ro g r a m s a n d a p ro m o t e - fr o m - w it h in p o lic y . B y j o in in g T e r m in ix y o u ’ ll a ls o b e c o m e p a r t o f a f a s t g ro w in g F o rtu n e 5 0 0 S e r v ic e com pany. N o e x p e r ie n c e is n e c e s s a ry . J u s t th e d e s ir e to h e lp p e o ­ p le , in c lu d in g y o u rs e lf! A p p ly in p e rso n : 2 4 0 0 W . S o u th e rn #102 Tem pe, A Z 85282 o r fa x re s u m e to 4 7 0 -4 6 0 9 TERMINIX. S u c o r m B re e d s S u cc e ss CafLloday 754 LOOKING FOR mature Student to exchange room & board for daily help w /hom ew ork & 3 nights/wk babysitting for 10-yrold boy. Occasional wknd care req. Please contact Jytte (Uta) Cureton 706-1761. # ROOM AVAIL, nice 2bd/ 2 story house, private spa, fire­ place. $365 + utils & deposit. Call Glenn @ 432-0097. ROOM IN 3 ,0 0 0 sq.ft. 3bd home. All util. incl. Spa, w/d, dining, liv in g , den, library, backyard deck. Baseline/Rural. $400/mo. Call 456-4189. ROOM WITH house privileges, microwave, w/d, $300/mo. 8297551, home or 965-3671, wik. TOW NHOMES/ C Q N D O S FOR SALE ALL PRIVATE rooms, S Tem­ pe, in 4br, 2ba tow nhouse, Rural between Guadalupe and Elliot. Quick access to campus by bus or car. Serious n/s stud­ ents, Pref grads. $300-350, +1/4 electric 430-2422. SPRINGTREE CONDO, 2 mstr bdr/ 2ba, M cClintock/ Broad­ way, avail 1/1/99, all appl, w /d, fridge, xlnt çond. $72k. Contact 515-1966. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Borco Board Cover low est prices. D r a f t in g E q u ipm en t W a r eh o u se I « S E. Apache I «52$ E. A#eek* (near McClintock) H ^Y -/V L T S E 8 0 0 Í4 8 5 8 -0 0 * 4 Maplafa. We have 2-3 posi­ ebvi ro iio ie n t • M ake you r hours GRAD STUDENT wanted for rmmte, $390/mo. incld all util. S. Scottsdale, 3bd house w / bkyrd & pool. Larry 874-2399 We need motiveted\ • P r o f e s s io n a l • $550 to $790 p lu s b o n u s ' F PREF,, cute 4 bd house, close to campus, $325/mo + 1/4 util, & security dep. Laundry facili­ ties^ "Two rooms available Susie 946-0527. help digitize tax parcels using o p p o r t u n it ie s Now Hiring for Fall RESPONSIBLE MALE, N/S to share new home. Ray/56th St. Quiet neighborhood. Perfect for. young prof, or grad. Frplce, spa, laundry. A vail, immed. $425 inclds. utils., $485 w / ga­ rage. 753-9344. /< Geography (*r related field) f t • A dvancem ent 705-7695 BEAUTIFUL 4BD /2BA home, Southern/Rural w /pool, cable, fireplace & Crystal water. Fern, prefd. A vail, now, $350/m o,+ utils. Lisa Marie, 692-3085. hardworking students of *• S u p e r b r e s u m e a d d i t i o n 7 3 1 -6 5 0 5 ROOM S FOR RENT Ellen 491-4921 b r o a d c a s t ! h g o p p o r t u r iit y fro m ROOM S FOR RENT Com m erc ia l C re d it Part Time D ata Entry • $ 7 .2 5 /h r to start • Flexible AM Gc PM schedules • Casual Dress • N o Sales • Paid Weekly • Schedules Adjusted Each Sem ester • Close to Cam pus • Year-round Position • Additional Hours During th e Sum m er To qualify you m ust type 45 w pm , be wilL ¡rig to w ork w eekends, have reliable trans­ portation a n d enjoy a fast-paced atm o s­ phere. Call today 4 1 4 -7 8 0 0 -E O E DISCOVER THE PEOPLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! •Telephone Operator • Host/Hostess •Receptionist • Juice/Coffee Bar Attend. • Pool Server • Cocktail Server • Spa Attendant • Bussers • Room Service Cashier F or M ore Information C a l l : 991-9670 DRAFTING FURNITURE- DRAFTING L IP P U E S I N e w / U s e d t a b le s - Pencils, m m T-eqwares. vellum, dot« triangles templates. a ll s iz e s . C h a ir s , la m p s , a c c e s s o r ie s . Drafting Equipment W m baaoe B D W I328E. Apaehe Experience the benefits at the Hyatt R egency Scottsdale: HELP WANTEDGENERAL Applications are accepted Mon. 9am-Noon and lu e s. 3pm-6pm; At the Human Resources Office. 7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. Please enter at the west end of the building next to the loading dock. Certain positions may require testing. Eq u ip m e n t areh o use 1 5 2 5 E. A p a c h e (nearMisCSintock) |jj K . 8S8-00M • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) Plan • V acation/Sick Pay • Tuition R eim bursem ent • F re e Uniforms • Complimentary Room R ates r a f t in g ( n e a r M c C lin t o c k ) 858-0024 HELP WANTEDGENERAL A sse m b le r clobs-$8/Hr. F/T & P /T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park C a ll T e rry : 9 9 8 - 0 3 2 5 Hyatt supports a drug free workplace. AA/EOE/M/F/D/V CHASE ALL it HAPPENS. RIGHT HERE Great benefits. Convenient schedules. An environment where employees are supported and appreciated. It all happens rij^it here at Chase in downtown Tempe. As our operations continue to grow, we have motivating opportunities for bright well-spoken individuals. Come see for yourself. • Account Representatives • Collection Representatives • Customer Service Representatives • Fraud Representatives Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus • Telemarketing Sales Representatives • Supervisors Payments &Statements Service Representatives • AdministrativeAssistant Our top-notch benefits indude medicaVdental coverage (effective the first day of hire), up to 100% tuition reimbursement, 401 (k) plan, access to an on-site fitness center and free covered parking. Interested individuals may apply in person, Monday-Friday, 8:30am4:00pm or send your resume, indicating position of interest, to: Chase Cardmember Services, 100 W. University Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281. You may also apply on-line at: www.chase.com: Jobline: (602) 902-6000. \Afearean Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer M/F/D/V. CHASE. THE RJGHTÄELATlONSHtP IS EVERYTHING.1“ 24 REAL ESTATE FORECLOSED G ov't foreclosed homes from pennies on $1. Delinquent tax. repo's, REG'S. Your area. Toll free 8 0 0 -2 1 8 -9 0 0 0 Ejct. H1676 for current listings. COLOR t v s ; all remotes. 27" w /stereo sound. $ 125, 25" $100,19" $90 Call Bob 238-9238. AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES M OTORCYCLES BICYCLES WATERBED. QUEEN" size, metal f ratti e ; good c ond it ion. 1994 VW Jetta GL- moonroof. premium sound, automatic, low m iles. Sale priced at $10988 Call Camelback VW @ 265-6600. 87 TOYOTA Tercel stationwagon, 5spd, 105K. M echan­ ically sound, aH service records. $1500 obo. 674-0316 SUZUKI GS500-1994, purple, less than 10k m iles. $2950 obo. Call Kelly 225-0940 SCOTT ROAD bike 60cm, Shimano RSX components, mavic w heels, like new, $300 obo, 545-1084 1996 VW Cabriolet- full power options, immaculate condition, perfect top down Phoenix cruis­ er! $16988 Call Camelback VW @265-6600. 88 HONDA Accord DX. 5spd, a/c, 2nd engine, only 85k m. very reliable, look sharp, axe. car for student. $3150 obo 675-9915 92 VW ietta GLI. 16 valve, blk, lowered, BBS rims, gray recaro seats, a/c, tilt, pw, tint, 102k m. $8500. Amy 4917640 94 JEEP WRANGLER, blue, 4cyl, power & tilt steering, new 31" mud train tires, custom w heels, cd, custom exhaust. ‘ $11,700 obo. Ask for Todd 730-5447 (eves). DIAMONDBACK 19" mtnbike, very light frame. Deore LX & XT components. Mavic wheels Like new, $300 obo. 5451084 $75 obo. 968-2060 COMPUTERS AMD K6 300 MMX - Mini Twr, 64 SDRAM, 4.3 Gig HD. 32x CD Rom, Í5".28 SVGA, Win98, Office ’97 Pro, 56K mo­ dem, 16 bit sound, 2 M 3D video, keyboard, mouse, free deliv. & setup. $999. 839-8082 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. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FURNITURE MONITOR SVGA 14" Brite, -new $80. Epson Matrix printer in box $90. Will deliver 996-4817 68 VOLVO 122S- new tires, brakes, belts, hoses. $1500 obo. Scott@858r9372. TICKETS FOR SALE: 13" color TV w/ remote, $50; microwave, $50;adjustable drawing table, $20. Call Joe at 813-6561 (eves) or 965-5013 (days). BEASTIE BOYS-SEPT 7th Great lower lev el seats. $40$65 each Call Steve 678-0932 Find it FASTin the Classifieds BOOKS 74 VW BUG for sale!! Orange; body in great shape, interior to o ll l 76k-irutts good. $25 0 0 obo #967-2481. 85 BMW, at, ac, cc, pwr locks, new paint, tires w on’t last at this pnee, 53700. 517-0298 $$$ FOR BOOKS! Cash or credit for your quality used books, at Changing' Hanidit Bookstore! 2; locations 434 M ill Ave.; 966-0203 & SW . cirrier of . McCljntock/Guadalupe: 730r0205 39- JETT AS, GOLFS, ’9 4 -9 7 , ÖLS, GTS, Treks; 30- '85 ’92 Jettas; 2- '98 Passats; '98 GTI VR6; '98 Beetle, $18,995. AZ’s unauthorized VW dealer. LeSuéur Car Co. 968-661L HELP WANTEDGENERAL 89 CELICA GT convert. Xlrit condition, a/t, a/c, new brakes, top, tires. $5900obo. 596-3836 90 MITSUBISHI mirage sedan 4 dr, new eng. & tires, at, cool ac, am/fm cass, alarm. $2950 call 839-2698. 92 MERC Capri XR2 conv. 76k, a/c, pw, turbo, am/fm ca$s, cruise $3500 obo #970-3954. C la s s if ie d s W O R K I 95 HONDA C ivic EX coupered, autom atic, power window s/lock s, tilt, cruise, moonroof, premium sound Save at $11988 Cali Camelback VW @ 265-6600. HONDA CIVIC, reliable, 100K, new clutch. $800 obo. Runs great. Call Chase 578-7417 , C h ia s s if i& d s 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Immediate Opening aagiaiBnlBiijafaBgraaiBiBiiÉt FURNITURE M A tT R ES SES-- QUE^N set $ 125, fyll set $.110; twins. $89/set. In plastic, free deliv­ ery. 649-2625. T e m p e 's m o s t e x c itin g & p o p u la r M e x ic a n R e sta u ra n t ts lo o k in g f o r e x c e p tio n a l p e o p le t o jo in o u r e x c e p tio n a l te am ! SOFA $199; bed $59; bunk bed $179; dinette $95; futon $119; dresser $50 962-0749 • D a y Ser v er s • H o st/ H o stess • ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Casual Tempe office. Phones, ■filin g, data entry, light accounting., $8/hour. C a ll Jennifer fo r more info at CSI 838-3238 Earn Extra $ • Fu n W o r k E n v iro n m e n t F le x ib le H o u rs • D is c o u n t e d M e a ls AUTOMOBILES A p p ly in p e rso n : M o n - T h iir s fr o m ; 2 p m t o 4 p m C A S H TO D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. 1 HR Recruiting Internship Available!!!! Ç ^ g a r 4 J i BAKERY & CAFÉ is now hiring at our 2 busiest locations SKY H ARBOR AIRPORT - TERM 4 483-1862 YOU NEED A COMPUTER! Scream ing system s a t p rices students can afford. 46 8-285 9 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Ju s t m inutes from cam pus, free parking a n d m eals and S CO TTSD A LE FASHION SQUARE 614-9523 a t C am elback a n d Scottsdale Rd. Totally remodeled! G rand opening in Sept, with the new N ordstrom s’ addition. Our m arket style bakery cafe s are the b e st of their kind, and we a re fam ous for out service b e ca u se of people like you! All positions available FT/PT Hiring and Training Immediately G reat pay! G reat perks! G reat fun! .• Learn all aspects o f w o rk in g in a R ecruiting D ep a rtm en t • Areas o f ex p erien ce w ill in clu d e th e h irin g process, training, a d m in istra tio n , a n d m ore. • W e are lo o k in g to fill th is p o s itio n im m ed ia te ly V • Flexible w ith sc h o o l 1 sch ed u le, w ork in g 15 -2 0 h ou rs per w eek • Paid - $ 8 / Hr I B M C o m p u t e r S a le s / APPLY TODAY: M a r k e t in g A s s t fo r E nterprise la r g e s t m a in f r a m e r e s e lle r in A Z . W e tra in . R ent-A -C ar C all 9 5 4 -7 5 0 0 o r Fax resu m e 9 5 4 -6 8 1 1 A + if y o u h a v e e x p w / co m p u te rs . M u s t ha v e g o o d c o m m u n ic a t io n s k ills . 1 5 - 3 0 d a y t im e h r s p e r w k , M -F . $ 7 -$ 8 /h r. N e a r P a r a d is e V a lle y M a ll. C a ll 9 7 1 -3 8 3 0 ^162S1SE1 LelnenHugels Ballyanl Brewery at the Bonk One Ballpark N o w H ir in g for all kitchen positions and Hosts Up to $12/hr! Open interviews M-F Non-game days between 3-4pm Come be a part of the team in our 20,000 square foot restaurant located 20 yards from BANKONE BALLPARK GOOD USED bikes, approx 50mountain, road & cruisers. $30$180. Pgr 266-8720. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL $8.05/HR Phone verifiers. No s e llin g , no appt. setting. M-F, no W ee­ kends. Start now. McClintock /Broadway location. 784-2270, call now. Classifieds WORK! I ASU Downtown Center needs 1 o r 2 student workers for classroom setup on I afternoon shift o f 3pm - 6pm, T-W-Th. f Occasional Saturday. Location is one block I north o f Bank One Ballpark in downtown I Phoenix. Ow n transportation needed. ! Parkins provided. Some flexibility with class I • schedules accommodated. Primary duties: furniture moving, equipment, and beverI age/snack setup & cleanup. $6.50-$7/h<^ Call Cheryl or Sandra, 965-3046 I WE NEED FUN, FRIENDLY PEOPLE! Surf City Sq ueeze, A SU -SR C accepting applications for 3 0 0 S. A s h A v e n u e — 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 _ J COMPUTERS BICYCLES Employment Opportunity J u ic e b a r a tte n d a n ts. O n cam pus, AM -PM -W eekend shifts available, Call 7 2 7 - 6 2 2 6 , Libby, for m ore info. Students: Webmaster Sr Web Editor needed! Join the A S U Student Media W eb Team A p p lica tio n s availab le at the State P ress reception d esk, b a se m e n t o f M atthew s C e n te r or call Julie, 965-0982 for details Local com pany seeks positive personalities tp help support growing travel market. • Work in competitive environ­ ment with career potential • Average $10-$20 hourly • Big incentives (contests) • Study at work • Fun, casual work environment • Close to ASU • Business Marketing students will excel • Night and weekend positions available Call for interview Kurt/ Damion 220-0122 or drop in at 3700 E. Washington • Phoenix http-J/redhotcars. com http://resortcars. com Join 1 our winning E A /VI ! m tio n T em pe-based Insight is a $ 6 2 8 m illion , publicly-traded te le sa le s o rg a n iza tio n m arketing co m p u ters, hardw are an d so ftw a r e to b u sin ess cu sto m e r s n a tio n w id e. W e n e e d p ro fessio n a ls to J o in o u r 1 2 0 0 + e m p lo y e e s in a fast-p aced a n d fu n en viron m en t. Insight o ffe rs a c o m p e t it iv e sa la ry, b o n u s p la n s a n d e x c e lle n t b e n e fits p ro g r a m s in c lu d in g 4 0 1 K a n d S to ck p u r c h a s e p la n . , in te re ste d c a n d id a te s m a y F A X re s u m e s to (6 0 2 ) 9 0 2 -1 1 5 7 o r m a il re s u m e s to 6 8 2 0 S o u th H a rt A v e n u e , T e rrip e , A r iz o n a 8 3 2 8 3 - P le a s e in d ic a t e s a la r y r e q u ir e m e n t s . S m o k e - fr e e w o rk p la c e . D r u g testin g. E O E m/f/h/v. 6 8 2 0 S o u t h H a r l A v e n u e (N e a r 1 -1 0 a n d E llio t R d .) T e m p e , AZ 8 5 2 8 3 ■N atio n w id e sa ls* ■Paid /ab training • B a rn + B o n u s + B e n e fits + S to c k O p tio n s 1 First yea r Incorno opportunity is front S30-35K • T tln a lu a n é /o r computar solo» CKporlonco is p referred HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ADMIN. ANALYST PT for Real Estate finance firm. Accounting background prefd . $ 8 -1 0 / hr. Fax resum es to 4 2 5 -0 7 9 6 ór çall Debbie at 425-0795. ARIZONA SHORTS is looking to hire hard working & reliable sales assoc. Day and evening positions available. A pply at 5th & Mill 966-9199 BE A mobile DJ. PT weekends. Good income + OT & tips. 8208220: AIDE NEEDED for student with CP. Contact lan at 884-9437. ASSEMBLER JOBS- $8/hr. FT & PT lighting & electronic as­ sembly work at Scottsdale Air Park Call Terry, 998-0325. CHASE IS hiring: Acet. Reps, C ollection R eps, CSR, Fraud Reps (Bilingual a +), Tele Sales Reps, Supervisors, Payments & statements Serv. Reps, Admin Assist. Great benefits, conveni­ ent schedule, up tp; 100% tui­ tion reimbursement, dwntwn Tempe w / free cov'd parking. Apply in person, M-F 8:30am4pm, or send resume (indicate position) tp: Chase Cardmember Services, 100 W. Univers­ ity Dr., Tempe; AZ 85281. Or apply pnline @ www.chase.cpm. Jpbline: 902-6000 COLLEGE OF Fine Arts Box O ffice^ E fficient, motivated workers that strive for accuracy in record keeping. Sellers must have flex hrs for day, eve & wknds. Xlnt customer service & phone skills a must w / ability to use common sense. Starts at $5.25, raise to $5.75 2nd sem. Contact S eelye Smith or drop by Galvin Playhouse at Nelson Fine Arts Center. APPTOINTMENT SETTERS needed p/t, competitive wages. Cindy, 646-7385 APPT. SÈTTER $9/hr.+ bonus! FT/PT avail. Great Tempe loca­ timi. Contact Kim 517-1977 This should be your ad Call 963-6735 is now nfring fhr lalifir m riftin In our new , location across from the Battìi ATTENDANTS NEEDED for fe­ male in Quadrangle Apts. Must be 21 or over w/ good driving record. No lifting req’d. 7:30am & Mon. afternoon & evenings, Approx. 15 hrs/wk. Ellen. 968-6284 AZ GOLF pub, needs 5 writers to write course review s and cover AZ golf events. E-mail to pubiisher@ cactusgolf.com or fax clips 303-432^9449; to AZ STATE Senate accepting ap­ plications for Pages for one im­ mediate opening & the L egis­ lative session beginning in January. Call Tina 542-5969. Call Troy/Noah fo r Info 92M 278 BILTMORE AREA lawfirm needs m essenger immed. for court filings/errands/general of­ fice duties. p t/flex hrs, Jill Bricker 468-8900 . BUSINESS/ MKTNG: Get the exp with an int’l cp that w ill help you get ahead. Call 553-3193. CHEVRON Foodmart now hiring Ft/Pt cashier. Wage DOE. Apply in person SW corner of Rural/Apache or 7th st & Camelback. CAREER OPPORTUNITY- 20 yr old barter organization has openings for pt trade broker & full or p/t sales reps. Basic com­ puter & good comm, sk ills a must. Flex. hrs. Opportunity to make big $$$. Call Lori at 4430322 ext. 225. AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to .talk to people' and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort is the place to be! • Eve. H rs/S eo ttsd ale Location ; » N o E xp . N e ce ssa ry Security FT-Great Pay Concierge Front Desk FT/PT Fiesta Inti 2100 S. Priest Tempe Jobline: $8/H R GUARANTEED +BONUSES > UP TO $1000/W K 333-0103 Ask Jo r Irene . (Leave message for same : d a y interview): You're smart. Do thè math! $$$ Full-time money. Part-time hours. $$$ 1SS/hr. base + comm. 1Dee AM & PM hours 1Convenient locations D obson & G uadalupe 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 A Z Ave. & W arner 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 DISABLED MALE seeks re­ sponsible, dependable indK viduals to assist with personal care activities. Laid back envi­ ronment, great experience, Call 884-9283. Ask for Andy. 804-5285 if) ' > . P “ CB Q <0 o ¡2 c 3 x X O O > * IB á 2> (B IB a co © HI b T * > * a> * O to (B o UJ O EDUCATIONAL MAIL Order Co. has FT & PT positions in all depts.: cust. service, graphic design (MAC photoshop or Quark), w ebsite d esign , net­ work m aint., marketing, pur­ chasing & shipping. $8/hr. to start. Raises every 90 days. Sal­ aried management opportunities for exceptional individuals after 6 mos. join a grow ing corp. that accom m odates student hours! Near ASU. 438-4400 ESTABLISHED BROKERAGE firm Seeks exp: indiv to contact prospects to attend sem inars. N o selling req. $8i50/hr base, potential o f $ 1 3/hr. Flex hrsdaysj eves & Sat avail. Call Mike Hayes 952-6818. EXC. OPP. avail, for students w/good writing skills & those who enjoy using computers, i f you're a person who works well w/o supervision, this is an exc. opp. to earn tip to $15/hr. Call 705-7695 for info, F/T RECEPTIONIST/ASSISTENT, computer/phone skills, Tempe area fax resume to Jess Lucas 491-0718. FILM INTERVIEWERS needed p/t to conduct surveys in per­ son about new major, motion pictures. Must be self-m oti­ vated, w / excellent written & verbal com m unication skills. Also looking for in-theater staff to help cojiduct periodic screen­ ings. Flex. hr$. mostly wknds. $8-$12/hr. Please call purjobUne at 213-9334. FUN PEOPLE Wanted! Appointment setters for U niversal Portraits. $7$lZfhr. 777-1054 : GQ/VOGUE New co. seeking 10 people who want to make a change. Fun, freedom & finance. 956-8495. GRADUATE STUDENTS & un­ dergraduate upperclassm en, High .paying, campus-oriented, research related positions avail. Flex, hrs.; on campus during the day. Pay range $7.50-.$ 15/ hr.705 7695. H ilt o n Scottsdale Resort &Villas W e a re im m ediately .hiring for: Join our p assionate team of professional for the b est w ages and benefits in the area. Now hiring e x p e rie n c e d full se rv ic e w ait staff, b a rte n d e rs , b u s staff, s o u s c h ef, line, p a stry & p re p c o o k s a n d d ish w a sh e rs. Apply in person in the mall at the concierge desk M onday through Friday from noon to 5pm or fax resum e to 991-6811. C la s s R e u n io n I ✓ Front D esk A gent PM V R estaurant Servers AM ✓ Human R esources Intern V f^ O ç w r a to r . •V G uest S ervices PM ✓ R eservation A gent AM ✓ H ost/H ostess AM-PM Drive a r . i A pply in p e rs o n M on-Fri, 9 a m - 3 p m a t th e S cottsdale H ilton In th e H u m a n R eso u rces O ffice 6 3 3 3 N . S co ttsd ale Rd. S cottsdale, AZ 8 5 2 5 0 r You’ll see lots o f your frien ds.. DOMINO’S PIZZA A S c h o o l Bus! G re a t PT w ork a t $8.96/hr. 20/hr/w k min. Drive be fo re a n d a fte r c la s s e s . Paid T raining avail, now. Apply at: T e m p e E lem entary School District #3, 3 2 0 5 S . R ural Rd. 00 Earn up to $192 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit our friendly, modern center and find out more about the opportunity to earn cash while helping others. As part of a Company research program, an experimental test Will be performed on your plasma which could potentialy benefit plasma product recipients in the years to come! Your research par­ ticipation is entirely voluntary; however; it is required if you want to donate plasma. a 00 150-9186, Ext. 7001 ] no re in fo rm a tio n . n ir M u st b e 21 to a p p ly. C o m e Join the E x c ite m e n t with the #1 D elivery Te a m fo r the A S U A re a ! W ith th e a d d itio n o f h o t w in g s , s a la d s & b re a d s tic k s , th is 968-6139 D o m in o ’ s is o n e o f th e to p c a m p u s s to re s in th e co u n try. C € N T € O N B io -S e rv ic e s, W E NEED 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 • Tempe Must be 18-49 years of age. possess a vafed ID and proof of local address & Social Security number. Who Says You Can’t Have Fun At Work? • At the F A C S Group, Inc., we have found a way to combine work and Fun. FuH and part-time openings exist fo r Part-time days, with alternating Saturdays W e o ffer tuition reimbursement, semi annual merit reviews, [ M acy’s discount and much, much more! 0 * w = . Q) © C ..3 "O * © Hawaiian Day Activity • Golf Day • Father’s Day Celebration F T & P T work available P le a se apply with Hum an Resource«, 5001N. S cottsdale Rd. Scottsdale E m bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. HELP WANTEDGENERAL GREAT JOB! Caregiver for active quad. 3-4 eves/w k. Seeking healthy, smoke/drug free ass't. w/ posi­ tive attitude. Good pay, w ill train. Tom at 949-2789. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL MALE DISABLED student in need o f persbnal care assistant. Contact Ian at 884-9437. P/T HELP wajitcd. Appt. set­ ting for free security alarm sys­ tem. M -F, 12-4pm or 5-9pm . Hourly + comm. + bon uses.. Call Mike O’Shea, 507-9577. ACROSS FROM ASU- phone sales, all reps make $300-$400 p/t, 4r30-9:00pm , M-F, start infuned, 736-0034. SALES MGR/ 3 aggressive sales people needed by AZ dai­ ly g o lf pub to mkt on-line adv to local business. Nwspr sales bckgrnd a +. Fax to 303-4329449. E-m ail to publisher@cactusgolf.com STIJDENT WORK! Up to $8.90. Flex PT/FT sched. No exp nee, All majors considered. Scholarships available. Pho/ Scottsdale 212-0551. E Valley/Ahw 844-1860. TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights & w eekends, fun job, 947-6562.2013 N. Scottsdale Rd. SECRETARY/ RECEPT./ Ad­ min. Assist, for sports law firm. B ilingual p refd for filin g , phone & correspondence. 24th St. & Camelback, 957-0083 STUDENTS W ANTED with good verbal & writing skills for w kly publication staff. Pt/ft pos. avail. $7.50-$ 15/hr. Flex hrs around your course sched avail., near ASU. 705-7695 MECHANICAL TECH ft/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school of college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU. Flex. his. Call 956-8200, days GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic & w illin g to learn * new ways o f teaching kids a g es. MGRS NEEDED Spaghetti 3-12. S8-S1 (Vhr doe. 443-8817 Company, 414 S. M ill Tempe 85281 M aiLor fax resume to GYMN ASTICS COACH needed 966-5265. f/t or p/t in central Scotte. Leave messagew/ Robin991 -6880. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, GYMNXs TICS INSTRUCTOR Good w / children. Experience & enthusiasm a m ust/ 8-20 hrs/wk. State's Top Gymnastics Program. 940-4041. GYMNASTICS TEACHER En­ thusiastic, fun coach for 3-12 yr olds. Éxp, ptef. $8-12/hr. 955-7805. HELP W ANTtD: P/T, nights, .weekends, ice skate rinkguards, skate attendants, pizza cooks, retail equipment sales.. Apply 'in person, daily ila m -5 p m . Ocèanside Ice Arena, 1520 N: McClintock t>f„ Tempe. HOSTS/ BUSSERS and servers needed at Mike Pulo's Spaghet­ ti Co. on Mill Aye..; in Tempe. Full & part-time avail; Stop by bet ween ' 2 4pm at 4 f 1 M ill / À ve. to. pick up application. m/f needed inunedv for natl com­ mercials/ print! 941-6922. MOTHER’S HELPER to run er­ rands, pick up kids, clean & grocery, shop for busy mom. Extrem ely flex , w / schedule. Must have dependable trans­ portation. Sharon, 736-2628 NEED WORK? Kyrene School District is seeking Club Leader positions working directly w/ children ages;4 -1 1 . PT & FT position s avail, in the Tem-/ pe/Chahdler area between the : hours o f A :30a-6:15p, M-TP. Submit resume .to: Kyrene School District, 8700 S, Kÿrené Rd., Tempe, 85284 (corner Of Kyrene & Warner Rd.*) or fax to 783-4051 or v is it our w eb. . site at: www.kyrene.kl2.az.us P/T HELP for Tempe area print­ er. General w hse, flex . hrs. Good pay; Call 438-2219 Kathy P/T PERSON need»! to help w/ packing pharmaceuticals, order checking & some data entry. Must be dependable. Flexible hrs. Call 470-8119 P/T PERSON needed to help w/ packing pharmaceuticals, order check ing & som e data entry. Must be dependable. Flexible hrs. CaR 470-8119 PAYROLU BENEFITS Admin­ istrator: FT position, M-F, some Sats. Previous exp. preferred. Pay commiserate w/ exp. Please send resume to: Promark One, 3136 S. M cC lintock, Ste. 7, T em pe, AZ 85282. Fax: 602777-8850. ProMarkOne.com Appointm ent Setters G r e a t jo b - N o s e llin g G r e a t p a y - $8-$10/h r. G r e a t lo c a tio n - N e a r c a m p u s G r e a t b o n u s p ro g ra m W e e k ly c a s h in c e n tiv e s G r e a t h o u rs - A M / P M sh ifts 894-9884 f I PT POSITION for Scottsdale in­ surance marketing co. Compet­ ency in Windows environment & numeric pad. Duties include providing underwriting & pre­ mium assist. Flex hrs. Fax re­ sume to 951-2318 or call 9512338. Ask for Barbara. P/T RECEPT., must be avail­ able holiday breaks. Icon Hair Architexture, Scottsdale Fash­ ion Square. 941-8656 PT/FT CUSTOMER service/cashier eves & . wknds. Apply in person at Water 'n Ice at 3141 S. McClintock. PERSONAL ASSISTA N T for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/t, $8. 10/hr, no exp nee. Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe. Cindy, 777-1054. PERSONAL TRAINER-EXP. req'd, p/t, 3:30pm -ciose, M-F. p ossible w eekends. Call for appt; 786-1020 SALES ASSOCIATES wanted for AZ Mills candy store/ flex, hrs. Fun job , good pay. C all Sweets from Heaven, 777-7307, |r Psych & Social Work Majors Gain Valuable Experience HR RECRUITING Internship Available! Apply today: Enter- ? ■ B e i a g f f l g i prise Rent- A -C a r..Cal I 954^7500 or fax resume: 954-6811. . LERNER NEW York at S cot­ tsdale Fashion Square is seek-: ing sales associates for it's new store. A pplicants cali Alysa Smith at 996-6140. Interviews held at Fiesta Malt. PT, M-TH 6-9pm $7/hr. Near ASU. Survey telemarketing, no pressure presentation. No exp. née. Call for interview with Norm Gifford at 829-3460 DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentalty. Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Kyrene School District in Tempe seeks instructional assistants for special education students. F/T and P/T positions available with excellent benefits. Please fax resume to 783-4071 or m ail to 8700 S. Kyrene Rd., Tempe, AZ 85284. incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package V STUDENT COURIER: hours 12:30-4:30pm, M-F. Previous driving exp. AZ drivers license required. Call Distance Learn­ ing Technology, 965-6738. . C a ll 9 6 5 -6 7 3 $ fa p la ca your ad FLEET SERVICES AIDE City of C handler 3 openings for tem porary, part-tim e p o sitio n driving City vehicles to d ealerships. Two h o u r Shifts m orning a n d /o r afternoon, M-F. applicants to w ork in programs mental disabilities. W e offer a variety o f positions w orking w ith individuals C O A C H ES & O FF IC IA L S Boys & G irls Flag Football Volleyball $7JO • $9.75 p er hour in their o w n hom es or residential set­ tings. W e offer o ve r 40 hours o f paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. W e have fle x ib le schedules w ith FT, PT and o n -call positions a vailab le im m ediately. O u r p ay ranges from $ 7 .0 0 - $ 8 .0 0 D O E / E O E . Please call 431-9511 for m ore inform ation. it V~..........= ------ 7 P/T CUSTOMER SERVICE Several WT CSft |po*itk>n**ratt.R«x industry. $8*/hr. C«H 998-7585, ext Classifieds 9 5 5 -6 7 3 5 You Couldn’t Ask For A Better PT JOB We are a busy "commercial real estate firm in need of an individual to do mar ket research >word process­ in g , and r e c e p tio n 1st w ork. T h is is a great Opportunity to learn more a b o u t a b u sin e s s o ffic e an d th e P h o e n ix real estate market* Starting pay is $6.50/hr; your hours may be sched­ u led tp su it y p u r cla ss schedule. If a relaxed, but high ener­ gy, work en viron m en t is important to you, you will enjoy this position. P lA se call C orina Lange a t R a n d C o in n te i'c ia l B r o k e r s at 9 4 5 - 2 8 2 2 immediately. Looking for Mgrs, Aset Mgrs 8 Hrly C o n t a c t B ra n d o n o r J e rr y 491-9500 or e-mail BBEAR77041 Gaoi.com CITY O F SCO TTSD A LE R e cre atio n L ea d er I Starting salary will b e a t the minimum. 20 hrs/w eek flexible, Includes evenings & w eekends. Previous exper. in Parks & Recreation preferred. A ssists R ecreation L eader II in planning & conducting park & recreational activities for youth/adults a t community facilities; C onducts organized g am es; a ssists in a rts & crafts activities and m aintains safety. R e cre atio n L ea d e r II Starting salary will b e a t th e minimum, 20 hrs/w eek flexible, includes evenings & w eekends. R equires 6 m os. exp. in a p ark s or recreation related field. Plans/conducts spec, events, gam es, Sports activities, arts/crafts activities for youth/adults a t community facilities, A City application is required. Apply by Sept. 2 8 ,1 9 9 8 to: Human R esources 7575 E. Main S t , #205 Scottsdale, AZ 85251 24 hr Jobline: 602-994-2395 24 hr TDD line: 602-994-2359 W ebsite: w w w .ci.scottsdale.az.us EOE : uUnHHUU^^H ticipation for in dividu als w ith d e ve lo p ­ tv H a a g e n D a z s Ic e C r e a m a t th e A r iz o n a M ills m a ll HIGGINBOTHAM m ASSOCIATES ; WANTED: designed to prom ote co m m u n ity par­ , TICKET AGENT: part-time af­ ternoons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 VALËT PARKING attendants, must be clean cut, $6-$9/hr. (in­ cluding tip s.) P/T eve., shifts, 5pm-1 lpm. 548-0599 Iv. msg. J Gty ofScottsdale CommunityMaintenance andRecreationDivision Social Service agency seeks THE SCOTTSDALE B oys & Girls Club is hiring for Foun­ tain H ills branch and Grey Hawk Branch for team coordi­ nators and; area directors. Please call Valerie at 816-1974. E-mail re q u e sts for p o stal m ailed app licatio n p a ck e ts to joan.stoy@ ci.chandler.az.us Su b m it A p p lica tio n s To: k ST Aft SEARCH New co. seek­ ing 5 people who want to make a change. Fun, freedom and finance. Call now, 690-5911. C ity o f C h a n d le r H u m a n R esources 25 S. A rizona Place Suite 201 C handler, AZ 85225 602-786-2290 Earn $7.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents D B C R e s id e n tia l S e r v ic e s 2 4 0 5 E . S o u th e rn A v e . #9 Tem pe, A Z 85282 7 5 6 -1 2 2 3 SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emplymt. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon for interview between 2pm4pm, 921-8282. US GOV’T Jobs hiring now entry lev el to advance p osi­ tions. Paid training, benefits. $ ll- $ 3 3 /h r C all free 1-800406-1434 x 938. For application informationcontact the¡Student Employment Office, Jobreferral Applications will be accepteduntil Friday, September 18,1998. 994-7642 CouchPotatoesNeedYeul The valley's finest market research firm is expanding into Tempe (Rural! Broadway). We need individuals to conduct telephone surveys; no selling. M ktiiv Research E y e # ¡ |g § f Data Collection Data Processing We w M o f f e r i^ (12 or more hrs/wk) Flexible schedule to fil, your needs (afternoon evenlngsg- ' : ✓ FT/PT afternoon schedule to work around your classes ✓ $7.75 plus Bonuses . ✓ Advancement Opportunities Friendly relaxed J j atmosphere 8010 E.McDowell Excellent advancement Ideal candidate w ill have previous custom er service experience and lig h t com puter skills. Suite 208 Interested candidates please stop by Scottsdale 1310 E. Broadway Suite #103 « Tem pe Two week training a tjf Wm 8 9 4 -9 8 1 6 85257 QSM or Project M gm t Custopmer Service Reps Needed Immediately To assist the Nation's second largest Distributor o f satellite services R e sp o n s ib ilitie s in clu d e : P ro v id e su p e rio r c u sto m e r se rv ice T ro u b le sh o o t A n s w e r B illin g Q u e stio n s Dependable Friendly M anuel a t Stau: ñ w » f c r H u r r t | , A u g u s t 2 7 , !9 9 8 HELP WANTEDGENERAL WAITSTAFF FOR fun neighbrhd sports rest/bar. 3-4 shifts p/w, g o o d $ b u s y & stable. Apply the W oodshed II Dobson/Univ. WAITSTAFF FOR fun neighbthd sports rest/bar. 3-4 shifts p/w, goodS, busy & stable. Apply the W oodshed II Dobson/Univ. Find it F A S T in the Classifieds RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDSALES $400AVK. EZ 25 hrs., 4pm-9pm, casual, fun atmosphere. Tempe, 966-8410. FRESH START: Motivatedpeo­ ple needed to open new offices. Travel, training avail. No exp nee. Call 840-9282 T e l e p h o n e s a l e s , setting appts. for sales rep. for water purification units. Working for major c o . Make up to $250/w k., 4 hrs /day. Call Jerry at 829-9255. Aqua Chill WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, ft/pt, base + comm., benefits, dnig-fitee work­ place. A pply in person only. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE ADMIN. ASST., phone/clerical pt mornings $7,50 p/hr 52nd st & Univ. Call 968-3360. RECPT./ SECRETARY - small Scottsdale law office. Need com­ puter skills. Varied duties. 95pm, Tues. & Thurs. 990-9586 HIRING P/T waitstaff at Pete's 19th Tee, 1405 N. Mill Ave. at the Rolling Hills G olf Course. 1 mi. N. of Mill Ave. bridge. NANNIES NEEDED, fall & parttime, in my home for twin 4 yr. old boys. 952-2059. HELP WANTED- SERVERS NEEDED ASAP Ft/ pt days avail. Flex. hrs. Great $. Dwntwn Phx, near Ballpark. Call 252-4682 for interview. OFFICE MGR- must be posi­ tive, personable, and have com­ puter knowledge. P/T $7-9p/hr doe. Call 443-8817. PARTTIME OFFICE work, Toes and Thurs. 9-5, Computer exp pref. Apply @ 3100 S Ru­ ral. PARTTIME RECEPT/TYP1ST. Tues. and Thurs. needed. Flexi­ ble to meet your school sched. Near ASU! Need reliable trans, for errands. Emily @ 967-1405. SERVICES Try Am azing New Hair Removal Technique FR EE! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL O n ce Rem oved™ h a s recently n trod u ced the n ew est, m ost advanced hair removal system ever. It is F D A approved. It is better than shaving, tweezing, waxing, and even electrolysis. It’s pain-free, fast and as precise as a laser. Plus this new method has been successfully used on every part of the body. It even works on ingrown hair. And for a very limited time you can try this a m a zin g new te ch n iq u e for removing unwanted hair for free* without any cost or obligation of any kind. For more information call this free recorded message at 222-6285 anytime, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. ©OnceRernpvecF F O O D J I ^ I C ^ CORK'NCLEAVER SPORTS DELI A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail. Will train, p/t. Concern w / appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N, 44th S t (952-0585) Needs team players w/ right at­ titude. Top wages + incentive. Flex- schedules, no weekends, nights or holidays. FT & PT positions avail. If ready to have fan, call 453-0842. THE LANDMARK Restaurant. Great pay for s e lf motivated cooks. F/T o r P/T position s available. Call 962-4652. 809 W. Main in Mesa. COUNTER HELP, bussers, cooks needed. AH shifts avail­ able. Stop by between 2-5 M-F for application. Mama's Pizzeria, 106 E. University Drive (con. Myrtle). HELP WANTEDC H j^ C A R E _ _ DELI WORKER needed at busy cafe. M-Th, 7-2, 2-8 & 48, & Sat. 7am-1pm. O ff Uni­ versity. $6-$6.50/hr. CaU 967-1411. $6.50 4/HR. Preschool or afterschool teach­ er, F lexib le hours. Training avail. Children's Village Learn­ ing Center, 949-5552. DILLY'S DELI: Busy D eli needs day help. Ask for Leanne or Nicole @ 491-1196 or apply in person after 2pm. BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ dise V alley M all, .$8/hr, own trarisp. needed. 788-6333. THE LANDMARK Restaurant. Friendly, team-orientated food servers, needed. F i t of P/T ; to : CHILD CARE needed 3 days earn $1 l- ii6 + /h r . Call 962^ /w k (2-fu ll days, 1-h lf day), 4652.809 W. Main in Mesa. trans req. 820-3772. NOW HIRING exp'd line CHILD CARE provider needed, cooks, bussers & dishwashers. 11:30am-5:30pm, T & Th, our A pply in person AZ Road- . home. Refs req. Kristi 947-9499 house & Brewery, 1120 E. Ap­ BABYSITTER NEEDED, flex, ache B lvd, 929-99^R). hrs., own trans., Camelback & PEPPINO'S PIZZA needs driv­ 24th St. 957-0772. ers &• other help, flexible hrs. Great for students, benefits. : LOOKING FOR p/t child care assist., M-Th: 1-5; F: 8:30-5. Call Domenick, 858-1660. Call 838-4271, Kim. ¡N T | R N S H IP ^ _ NANNY NEEDED 30-40 hrs/ wk. in 32nd St/Shea area. Reli­ able transp. needed. 945-9559 , or 493-7574, NANNY needed for 6 mo old baby. Mon-Thurs 9 to 4. Close to ASU. $6 p/hr. Exp and ref­ erences req'd. Call 829-9411. NANNY Working mother o f 2 (6 & 4yr olds) needs creative, fan loving person, M-Th* 2:45 - 6-7pm . G ood trans req, $8/hr + gas$. Patty 840-5751 (eves). P/T CHILDCARE in my home before/after school + some over­ nights. C onsider liv e-in . For info call, 897-8200. PT N A N N Y wanted. Start immed. Tempe family-2 girls, 4 & 5. M -F, 2-6pm . Must have transp. & refs. $5/hr. Call the Clarks, 730-6402. TAKE CARE of 2yr. old twins & 4yr. old. P/T, flex sched, good pay, own trans. CPR & FA cert. Exp. pref. 32nd S t./ Shea. Lauren/Steve. 788-6838 WORKING MOTHER o f 4 needs help, M-F from 3-7pm. Car provided for the children. $8/hr, 840-1006 INTERNSHIPS FALL INTERNSHIP in financial district at Sutro & Co. in Scot­ tsdale. M otivation & articulate speaking skills required. 4232272: ATTN: JUNIORS & Seniors. Explore exciting Internship Op­ portunities with the largest em­ ployer o f college graduates in America! Enterprise Rent-A-Car. Call 954-7500 or fax resume to 954-6811. INTERNSHIP: MUST have de­ sire for career in financial serv­ ic e s. Learn all facets o f busi­ ness. Serious inquiries. Ron Willoughly, 912-5127. MERRILL LYNCH seeking p/t interns to market investm ent seminars. Great resume builder. Bonuses available. Call Larry 607-8776. JO B £ I OPPORTUNITIES COACHES neédèd, after school sports 4th-8th graders. Avail. 36pm M-Th. C all Carmen 6442767 or Jennifer 644-3368. Public relations/com m unications/marketing pd. intern po­ sition for int'l firm near ASU. Good people skills, work w/media, events and product launch­ es. 20 hrs/wk- flex, hrs.; Fax let­ ter & resume to attention. DMM/KM1 @244-8977. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES $ 2 5 0 /5 ALÉ - $25 start-up. Computers-Internet-web pages. Call Robb or Jim 258-93Ó8. www. vibc.cpm/fipl .html CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporat ion : To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423rl700. www.protrader. ; com RESTAURANTS/ BARS MILL AVE. Beer C o> J.W. Dundee's Honey Brown Lager, 994, 8-11 pm, Wed. 605 S. Mill Ave; RUTH’S CHRIS Steak House has Openings now for hostess & busser. A pply daily, 2pm4pm. Exp. preferred, p/t evertr ings, 2201 E. Camelback Rd. STOCKYARDS R ESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. A pply in person, lpm -5pm , Mom-Fri. 5(X)1 E. Washington. SUNNY'S PIZZA In house & delivery positions avail. Flexil ble hours, fun atmosphere. Come join the Sunny's team. Apply at 1301 E. U niversity #968-6666. ASTK0Ü0QCAL FORECAST b y S id n e y O m a rr Matthews Center, Basement Thursday, August 27,1998 ARJES (Mardi 21 -April 19): Break with tradition in connec­ tion with stock market invest­ ments.. Libra advisor is sincere but could be sincerely m isin­ formed. Love relationship is redhot. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You will have much in common with Aries. Dig deep for infor­ mation — you could locate bear sure map. Focus on hoine, secu­ rity, family, marital status. Leo plays, role, GÈMINI (M ay 21 -June 20): Follow hunch. Emphasize diver­ sity:, versatility.; w illingness to explore and experim ent. You • encounter Sagittarian who stimu­ lates mental process. Question of marriage looms large. CANCER (June 21-July 22): ' Test the waters. Taking co ld plunge into romance might not be w ise. P assionate Scorpio involved, could sweep you o ff yóur feet. Strive to maintain emotional equilibrium. LEG (July 23-Aug, 22): Y ou’ll be in touch with those fascinated by timepieces. Repairing watch­ es could fig u re prom inently. Mechanical defect in automobile req uires prompt attention. Scorpio involved. VIRGO (A ug 23-Sept. 22): Analyze situation in which you are bein g taken for grantedj Sibling in v o lv ed — ■air com ­ plaints with humor. Message will get across. Gemini, Sagittarius persons play roles. LIBRA (S ep t. 23-O ct. 22): Focus on diplomacy, ability to perceive investments that could pay huge profits. Lost article will ; be located — Aries person does groundwork. Another Li bran also in picture. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Do not equate delay with defeat. Designate where action will be, realize you are exuding aura o f sex appeal. Pisces, Virgo persons w ill p lay outstanding roles. , You’re told, "You look great.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec 21): D ebts catch up, but you w ill have the money at last possible m om ent. Organize priorities. Q uìét effo rts pay dividends. C ircum stances are m oving in your faVor -— be selective. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You could not have wished for ; more —7- scenario includes love, money, health. Keep travel plans Under wraps for tim e being. Aries individual stimulates cre­ ative juices. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Finally you get proverbial sec­ ond • chance. C ontinue with unorthodox procedure —r- you will be vindicated. Member of opposite sex confides, '' At times 1 can hardly keep my hands off you” PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): It Was predicted that if you moved away, you would be back — it ’ comes true. Focus on proposals that include partnership, mar­ riage. Excellent dining experi­ ence featured. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTH­ DAY: Your interests range far and w ide. You participate in humanitarian projects, are no amateur in political arena, travel more than most. A ries, Libra persons play exciting roles in your life, could have these let­ ters, initials in names: I and R. Current cycle relates to pressure o f big business, intensified rela­ tionship, marriage. September most exciting, profitable. ©1998, Los Angeles Times Syndicate A S U Box 871502 State P re s s Classifieds MUSIC Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Office: 965-6735 Fax: 965-4706 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Address City, State Business Phone. FOR GOD’S SAKE call now* Bass player needed for Swing- . Country thing. Together we can pay the rent. C all 2027169. ' ■ SEIZED CARS from $175. Porsches, C adillacs, C hevys, BMW's, Corvettes. A lso Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free, 1800-218-9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words, P g j8 0 N A £ ^ ^ LOOKING TO adopt a boy named B illy . If you have a boy named B illy then please call 482-2463. SERVICES FREE PAGERS & cell phones. Cellular airtime low as 44. We activate pagers. 966-1203 TUTORS LOOKING FOR Spanish tutor. 2 eve's a wk. Call Marcy 413■9898 Please be sure to check your ad- M ake sure it reads exactly a s you w ish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Ple ase check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. N o refunds will b e given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. ß A Y Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per Une, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day Commercial 1 day. $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.60 per Une, per day 3 tine minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. - MATH TUTOR Algebra, PreCalculus,- Calculus, Statistics, Finite Marti, 4L more. Andrew 730-5904. Tithe a LoohThe C la ssifie d s 1 mm illlp are on the W eb i ■ _.......... ' ■.■- » H I........ I. « . — I ‘ tarry an _______________________________ daily in html! www.slatepress.com/ classifieds/ dassifieds.html A S U 's O N LY M a ro o n and G o ld P izza D e liv e ry O p tio n ! ASU Calls Domino ' s >0 ^m CHOICE 968-5555 © Prafarrad at ASU CUSTOMER APPRECIATION WEEKEND SATURDAY, AUGUST 29th SUNDAY, AU G U ST 3 0 th CARRY­ OUT O N LY LARGE PEPPERONI ORDER AS M ANY AS PIZZA YOU LIKE! H an d -T o sse d O R Thin Crust O n ly WINGS S m a ll O rder Large Deep Dish & Specialty Crust $1 More Domino’s Pizza-The Pizza Delivery Experts! $099 O Offers Valid at This Location Only. 903 S. Rural Rd. 11:00am - 1 :30am Sun-Thurs. 11:00am - 2:30am Fri & Sat. Our drivers carry less than $20