World/Nation03 S p o rts l5 Pressurefor Yeltsin mounts as crisis' continues ASU women’s soccer squad kicks off season vs. Grand Canyon A S A S U s e e k s t o s h a k e s p r in g im a g e By Jessica W olf State Press ple of students focusing on issues that will affect everyone. “My goal is to not push aside the interest of students The new executive staff of the Associated Students of who are not involved in campus groups or organizations,” ASU is focusing on improving its image after a chaotic Peterson said. “I don’t want to neglect those people who spring semester. have other activities like jobs or families.” Continuing students may remember the thousands of Peterson also wants to put pressure on the administration dollars spent on a poorly-attended concert last semester or to provide funding for upgraded computer software that the controversy over candidate campaign spending and eli­ would allow for extended IriToucfi hours, making schedul­ gibility that followed last year’s officer elections. ing classes more convenient for all Students. _ . However, Paul Peterson, ASASU executive vice presi­ Student privacy is another big issue. and Peterson plans dent. said he is trying to begin this semester on a positive to aggressively pursue the idea of limiting the use of stu­ note by addressing some of last year's problems. dent social security numbers. He wants to take this issue to “Other than doling out money for clubs and student a state level, lobbying with the Arizona Board of Regents groups." Peterson said, “this year I want ASASU to become and the State Legislature. Statewide legislation would elim­ a more widespread source of student advocacy. For too inate conflicts with other universities and provide definite long, it hasn't been that way.” guidelines and deadlines for ASU to conform with. ASASU’s new goals involve a more comprehensive sam­ “This is mostly an argument of principle,” Peterson said. “I’m not trying to throw up road blocks to the university by changing student ID numbers. I’m just trying to protect the interests of students here at ASU.” Christopher Reinesch, ASASU activities vice president, plans to find out what students want and organize good activities that will be well-attended. “I don’t want to waste students’ money,” Reinesch said, “We’re not going to do cheesy activities that no one will come to.” : . ~ Reinesch said that there are big plans in the works for Homecoming activities and wants to start ASASU-sponsored football pregame patties, lunchtime concerts, games and giveaways, all with the underlying goal of getting stu­ dents involved. “We want to help create an improved college experience and promote campus involvement and volunteerism ,” Reinesch said. , C ity proposal would elim inate ‘Mill Rats’ By K im P rendergast State Press They spend th eir days lounging on Mill Avenue. They beg passers-by for money. These young, hom eless people have been called “M ill R ats,” and the M ill Avenue M erchants Association, Tempe police department and Tempe government wants them gone. The Tem pe C ity C ouncil decided Thursday to consider an ordinance prohibit­ ing people from sitting on sidewalks in front of businesses. “This is an ordinance that we are advocat­ ing the city to take a look at,” said Rod K eeling, executive director o f the Downtown Tempe Community. “It promotes civility in public space by requiring people to sit on benches and not the sidewalk.” But the so-called Mill Rats, who spend their days on the sidewalks of Mill, seem to be the obvious target the ordinance. Eddie Goitia, president of MAMA and CEO of Monti’s La Casa Vieja on Mill Avenue supports it, claiming that many of these young people are chasing customers away by loitering, panhandling and frustrat­ ing them. “During high season,” he said. “The snow­ birds come into town and, if they get approached by people asking for spare change, they may never come back again. It has been an increasing problem over the last four years. and it keeps getting wefse every year.” V“-r* Goitia said he has offered them jobs af M onti’s to get them o f f |h e streets, but nobody has taken him u^dii the offer. Jessica Greiner»; a w ell-pierced, mohawked 17-year-oltf airhirfrequents Mill Avenue, said this ordinance would be just another way of ostracizing “street people” like herself. G reiner adm itted that she makes her money by “spare-changing,” but claimed that she only asks for money if she needs to make a phone call or buy a drink. “The police often come up to me, open my backpack and dump out my stuff and then tell me to put everything back in it,” she said. •. Shawn McCoy, a shirtless 18-year-old with pierced nipples, agreed with Greiner. “They’re just trying to chase us out of here,” he said. Greiner said she is leaving town Friday and plans on hitch-hiking with a friend to Denver to get her GED. She explained that she can not go to a Tempe-area high school because the school district does not allow facial piercing and she refuses to have them removed. Greiner and McCoy say they eventually want to be strippers. Greiner wants to make enough money to own a nightclub, and McCoy’s only ambition is to strip. j ’ ~ Mike Curran of the State Press The Tempe City Council referred the Eighteen-yeár-old Jessica! Greiner, a local transient, sits on the córner of Mill Avenue and Fifth Street ordinance to a subcommittee Thursday and Thursday afternoon. If a new ordinance is passed, she along with other “Mill Rats” will be prohibited could vote on it at a later date. from both sitting on the sidewalk and panhandling: Akahansa project nets form er students international prize By Stephanie Paterik State Press What would you call a figure that stands 11-feet tall and three-feet wide, has a soft, circular middle, and makes nois­ es when you dance on it? Three former ASU students called it “Akahansa”. ASU graduates Iris Song, Jeff Cassano and Todd Ingalls designed the “electronic sound environment” as .their senior project in fall 1996. This project went on to win a $6,000 international award and a prototype is now being exhibited in Europe. Three pillars with loud speakers on top extend from the Akahansa’s platform. A sound is created by every move­ ment a person makes while standing on the platform. “When you position yourself on the pad and begin to move, your body creates sounds,” Song said. “It’s like cre­ ating musical accompaniments to the actions of your body. You dance and make music, and your soul listens,” Its name is fitting. Derived from Unpanishad mytholo­ gy, the w ord A kahnsa m eans “ sound and m o tio n .” According to the mythology, “Akasa” is the name of a vibration that m anifests as our sense o f hearing. And “Hansa” is the name of an Unpanishad god, symbolizing the rhythm of breathing. Under the theme “Life in Motion,” Song, Cassano and Ingalls entered their project in the Audi Design Competition, and won one of 34 awards out of 900 applicants All award-winning designs were sent to an exhibition in Germany attended by 300,000 people. Song also attended to demonstrate the Akahansa and meet with other design students. “It was interesting because all the international design students got to spend two days together to exchange ideas,” Song said. “We were all able to see ideas from different perspectives and different countries.” Akahansa was then exhibited in Berlin and is now in Italy. Although pleased by the exposure of their project, the three designers are waiting for the return of the Akahansa. Song said they hope to start building a more sturdy, mar­ ketable product as opposed to a working prototype by the end of the year. Rather than a product for individual use. Song said she sees the Akahansa as being useful to companies, museums and hospitals. “The music produced by movement could be a great reinforcement far popple in physical therapy. It can even be therapeutic fm the deaf because they are able to feel the Today A k a h a n sa Campus dubs and organizations may sub­ mit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon thé day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per orga­ nization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the Club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU com­ munity. Requests are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • All Saints Catholic Newman C enter Blessing of the School Year mass and dinner will be held at S pm. at the center, northwest comer of University Drive and College Street • ASASU G raduate S tudent Affairs VP O ffice — ASASU G raduate Student Orientation will be held in the MU Pima Room at I p.m. All graduate students are invited; refreshments will be served. • AsianVOICE — An introductory meet­ ing will be held in the MU Santa Cruz Room 213 at 3 p.m. • B ap tist S tu d e n t U nion — A back to school party, with free pizza; games and more will be held at 1322 S. Mill Ave. at 7:30 pm. Bring pillows for the pajama jammy jam. « C e n te r C om plex — Alternative Party, with 'a slip&slide, volleyball and pizza will be held in the Center Complex Courtyard at 6 p.m. • College Bible Fellowship — A weekly meeting will be held in the MU Coconino Room 224 at 7 p.m. • E ast T im o r A ction N e tw o rk — An opening meeting will be held in the MU Gila Room at 11 a.m. • Hillel Jewish Student C enter — Shabbat dinner and services will be held at 1012 S. Mill Ave. Cost is $5 for students and $8 for non-students. Please RSVP to 967-7563. • Men’s Lacrosse — Those interested in playing should contact team president Jon Minder at 968-6296. • W om en’s Lacrosse — Those interested in playing should contact team president Carrie Potter at 967-7971. • Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic — Individual, couple and family therapy is available for students, faculty and staff in the Cowden Family Resources Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 for more information. • Pi Sigma Epsilon — The Edge will be on Hayden Lawn, compliments of Pi Sigma Epsilon, from 11 a.m. to I p.m. • Ultimate Frisbee— The first practice of the year will be held on the bandfields, northeast comer of Rural Road and University Drive, at 6:30 p.m. Bring cleats if you have than, and one light and one dark colored shirt Young D em ocrats — A general meeting will be held in the MU Coconino Room 224 at 3 p.m. Rincon Mountain Blhe K B B .S 2 5 9 .9 5 77995c799 SPECIAL SPECIAL 95 95 21 spee0 - Shlmano crom o lyfram e & forH a lla y wheels F R E E : Lifetim e W a r r a n t y F R E E : T e m p e B ik e M a p F R E E : B ra k e & G e a r A d ju s tm e n t fo r 1 y r --------------------- ATER SUMESHOTS FREEW BOTTLE *4°° per wheel I <* I | Protect yoir fees from flats. I With coupon. Void on other offers. Expires 9/30/98. D o m e n ic s C y c l in g 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 j a | J USTF R/ JUST IO fT A w n w m 1004 S. Mill Ave. Tempe, AZ 967-7700 k ¿u 5T0PPING s r o m N G tYr D O M E N I C S 10* Si. C Y C L IN G □ | f | | | | 1 | f f | | f 1 | f ! | 1 | S unday’s E vents: • ,Hil|el Jewish S tu d en t C en ter — Fajita | Fiesta Extravaganza. Food, drink, music, I prizes and more will take place at 1012 S. | Mill Ave. at 7 p.m. R eb . $ 2 2 4 .9 5 _ | Saturday’s Events: • G PC C C C am p u s Fellow ship — An evangelistic meeting will be held in the MU Pima Room 218 at 7:30 p.m. The topic will be: “Pursuit of Life.” » Om ega Delta Phi & Kappa Delta C hi—■ A rush party will be held at Ckick-U, Eighth Street and Rural Road, at 9 p m Boulder r I ! ' J f I *7“ O # U Locks ! w/ $1,000 ( I &Carrying Bracket ! ■ Expires 9/30/98. OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK Prices good on instock items only Layaway vibrations of their movement,” Song said. Esther Ratner, an ASU industrial design professor, assisted the students in writing the proposal for the contest and forming the theoretical concept. “In these types of competitions, how you comm unicate your concept is critical,” Ratner said. “Once the students found an idea, I helped each group find resources to assist them in formulating a theory and explaining their design.” According to Ratner, the success of the Akahansa project and other student designs are opening Up many opportunities for cur­ rent design students. “Because of past success in design com­ petition, we’ve been invited this year to com pete in the Hoesch Design Awards international competition as the only school from the United States,” he said. Three additional bodies found in Texas flooding By Pauline A rrillaga A ssociated Press DEL RIO, Texas — Crushed cars and household appliances strew n outdoors greeted people who returned hom e Thursday as flood waters from the Rio Grande rolled farther downstream. “Everything was ruined — everything,” said Maria Adame, 75, as she carried mudcaked clothes, chairs and food from her home. Inside the house, her husband Onesimo used a small shovel to push piles of muck from the dining room. “We’ll try our best to rebuild, but we’ll need some help,” he said. The death toll from the flooding, which was blamed on a weekend tropical storm, rose to 17 Thursday after authorities con­ firmed finding three more bodies on both sides of the Rio Grande. Two o f the bodies w ere found in Mexico. So far, five of those killed were in Mexico and 12 in Texas. The Rio Grande, which forms the bor­ d er b etw e en th e U n ited S ta tes and M exico in so u th w e ste rn T ex as, w as expected to flood farther downstream . Damage was not expected to be as heavy since com m unities further to the south were at higher elevations. In Laredo, about 150 miles to the south, 30 homes were damaged by a crest of water that roiled downstream, authorities said Thursday. “We work hard to make money and have the things we have,” R osalva G ualito Carrizales said as she stood near her neigh­ bors’ submerged homes in Rio Bravo, near Laredo. “You feel sad ... to see that in a lit­ tle while they have lost everything.” The river crested at Laredo on Wednesday before moving on toward Rio Bravo. In Del Rio, dozens of people were miss­ ing in the city of 34,000. Search teams were looking for other victims in piles of debris. Authorities believed many if not all of the missing were safe, however. “We’re trying to remain hopeful that the number of fatalities won’t increase,” said Judy Altom, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety. M artin M ata returned to his father’s flooded creeksidc home, carrying out fami­ ly photographs. W òrld/Nation Russians look to past for economic solutions By M aura Reynolds A ssociated Press Misha Japaridze of the Associated Press Clients of a downtown branch of the SBS-Agro, a leading Russian commercial bank, jostle as they enter the bank in hopes of withdrawing their deposits in Moscow early Thursday. Many Russian banks have found themselves on the verge of collapse following the ruble’s devaluation and have suspended withdrawal. MOSCOW — Pressure m ounted on Borrs Y eltsin to resign T hursday as Parliament leaders proposed Soviet-style measures — currency controls, fixed prices and state ownership — to contain Russia’s escalating financial Crisis. Y e ltsin spokesm an S erg ei Yastrzhembsky vehemently denied that the president was preparing to step down. Both W ashington and the Kremlin said T hursday th a t next w e ek ’s Y c ltsin C lin to n sum m it, set fo r T u esd ay in Moscow, Was still on. The president’s new prim e ministèri Viktor Chernomyrdin, claimed Thursday night that “although (the situation) is cer­ tainly not simple, it is absolutely control­ lable.” But there was no sign Yeltsin or his lieutenant had begun to contain the crisis. ■ - -J5 , As exchange riiarkets remained offi­ cially frozen but the ruble’s value contin­ ued to collapse in street trading, ordinary Russians struggled to make sense of the situation. Should they withdraw savings in rubles? Stock up on groceries? Or assume they'll get by somehow as they have dur­ ing other post-Soviet crises? It was clear that the Kremlin is now willmg to Consider solutions previously reject­ ed — steps the West is likely to see as mov­ ing backward from a free market. Chernomyrdin and other government fig u re s h e ld c o n su lta tio n s w ith top P a rlia m e n t lead e rs — m ost o f them C om m unists and o th er h ard -lin ers — who presented a draft plan for fixing the economy by bringing back Soviet-style econom ic co n tro ls. The p o ssib ilitie s include nationalizing m ajor industries, controlling prices and fixing currency exchange rates, “Privatization didn’t lead to a restructur­ ing of the economy and has failed to create an effective class of property owners,” the draft said. “The situation demands increas­ ing the role of the state in regulating the economy.” Kremlin officials took part in the delib­ erations, but it was unclear how much Sup­ port the specific proposals may have from Yeltsin and his team. Yeltsin’s spokesman indicated that the proposals contained some “fresh, nonstandard” ideas, although he called law­ m akers dem ands fo r p o w er-sh arin g “Clearly overstated.” The Kremlin, meanwhile, issued a state­ ment appealing to the foreign news media “not to spread inaccurate inform ation” about Yeltsin’s status. “Arty inform ation citing inform ed sources about supposed plans for a resigna­ tion of the Russian president are fictitious and untrue,” the statement said. In Washington, White House spokesman Barry Toiv said Thursday there would be no comment until officials figure out what is happening. Embassy bombing suspects to face charges ih U.S. By Larry N eumeister A ssociated Press NEW YORK — Two suspects in the bombing of the U S. Embassy in Kenya were sent to the United States to face charges that could carry the death penalty. One told the FBI he planned to die as a martyr in the attack. Kenya, Wary that a trial might invite new terrorist assaults, allowed the trial to take place in the United States, where terrorist laws cover attacks against American citizens on foreign soil. :,, “We will not be intimidated by terror ... and we are determined that sooner or Jater, one way or other, terrorists will be held accountable for their crimes,”; Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said. Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-’Owhali appeared Thursday in federal court in New York City. He was one of two sus­ pects released by Kenyan authorities to the United States; officials wouldn’t say whether the other, Mohammed Saddiq Odeh, had arrived by Thursday afternoon. Authorities say the two suspects are linked to Islamic mili­ tant Osama bin Laden, whom U.S. officials blame for the Aug. 7 attacks on American embassies in the capitals of Kenya and Tanzania in east Africa. The bombings left 258 people dead, including 12 Americans, and more than 5,000 people injured. Several suspects remain in custody in Kenya and also could be sent to the United States for trial, officials Said. “No matter what it takes, how long it takes, or where it takes us, we will bring to justice those responsible for the murder and maiming of American citizens,” President Clinton said in a statement. “We will defend our interests, our people and our values.” Al-’Owhali’s capture resulted from “the most extensive overseas investigation” in U.S. history, Attorney General Janet Reno said. “We have linked arms with law enforce­ ment around the world, and today we have results,” The FBI complaint, which named each U.S. victim, charged Al-’Owhali with murder, murder conspiracy and the use of weapons of mass destruction. Conviction could carry a potential death penalty. According to the criminal complaint, Al-’Owhali told the FBI that on the day of the bombing he rode in the pas­ senger seat of a bomb-laden van to the embassy in Nairobi and tossed a grenade at a guard outside. He said the attack “was supposed to be a martyrdom oper­ ation, which he did not expect to survive,” the papers said. Al-’Owhali was injured in the attack and was treated at a hospital for cuts on his hands and face and a large wound on his back. In a hospital bathroom, the suspect allegedly discarded two keys that fit the padlock on the back of the vehicle and three bullets for a gun left in it. Al-’Owhali was arrested by Kenyan officials two days after the bombing. He told the FBI he was trained in explosives, hijacking and kidnapping in camps in Afghanistan, including camps affiliated with bin Laden, the court papers said. The other suspect, Odeh, was arrested on the day of the bombing in Karachi, Pakistan, and had been held by Kenyan authorities since Aug. 14. He is said to be either a Jordanian or Palestinian who obtained Kenyan citizenship in 1994. The com plaint, which dealt only with A l-’Owhali, alleged that planning for the embassy bombing began in March. It said Al-’Owhali traveled from Lahore, Pakistan, to Nairobi on July 31 and checked out the embassy four days later with others. FBI joins S. Africa bomb inquiry B y Pau l H arris A ssociated Press tâmmïkÈÈàÊHÊ* Reel B ig Fish Don Seabrook of thé Associated Press Cameron Higgins, 10, of Renton, Wash., looks like he is hauling in a big catch at the Mardon resort dock near Moses Lake, Wash., Wednesday. Cameron is actually checking his bait before casting out again into the Potholes Reservoir. The fish sculpture is made of metal. CAPE TOWN, South A frica — FBI agents com bed through the debris o f a bombed-out Planet Hollywood restaurant in Cape ToWn on Thursday, and President Nelson Mandela offered his sympathies to victims of the attack. Mandela visited the site where a bomb killed one and injured 27 people, including five members of a British family enjoying their first night in Cape Town. South A frican officials have linked T u e sd a y ’s re s ta u ra n t a tta c k to la st w e e k ’s U .S. m issile strik e s on A fghanistan and Sudan, but A ttorney General Janet Reno said Thursday she knew “o f no inform atio n co n cern in g South Africa at this point that would be relevant to the other matters.” “We continue to pursue it,” Reno said in Washington. The State Department said Wednesday that the South A frican-ow ned Planet Hollywood, which was founded by a group of U.S. celebrities, may have been targeted because of its American links. “I have f e lt... this sense of deep shock that human beings can slaughter and injure and maim so many people who are abso­ lutely innocent,” Mandela told reporters. “If the idea was to hit against the United States of America, it is highly misplaced to attack an institution of this nature.” Four FBI agents arrived Thursday to help South African police. Two came from the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, where they were investigating bombings earlier this month of the U.S. embassies there and in Tanzania. The U.S. missile strikes were in retaliation for those attacks. The only claim o f responsibility for the re sta u ra n t bom bing cam e from a caller to a radio station who said he rep­ resented the anti-American, anti-Israeli group called M uslim s A gainst Global Oppression. The group later denied being behind the attack. Opinion S a te Presi f o r F r id a y , A u g u s t 2 8 , 1 998 Boos & Bravos DRAIN CHART B r a v o — T o th e s t a r t o f a n o t h e r s c h o o l j ! y e a r a t A S U . C la s s e s m a y s ta r t to s u c k i a f t e r a f e w w e e k s , b u t in t h e m e a n t i m e 1 | i t ’s n ic e to b e b a c k a m o n g f r ie n d s a n d j I fe llo w c la s s m a te s . L e t th é p u r s u it o f i I a c a d e m ia a n d a th le tic s b e g in a n e w . S u n j I D e v il f o o tb a ll? C a n ’ t w a it fo r th a t, [ e ith e r — e s p e c ia lly th e s e a s o n - e n d e r | | #O O O tO O O b .c . ) a g a in s t th e U o fA M ild c a ts in th e g h e tto , I e r, T u c s o n . S o m e o f th e S ta te P r e s s s ta f f a r e g l a d to b e b a c k in t h e g l o o m y d u n ­ g e o n w e c a ll a n e w s ro o m , to o . O u r n e w s r o o m m a y b e a p i t , b u t a t l e a s t i t ’s - B ra in h a d c a p a c ity a ir- c o n d itio n e d t o co m p reh en d s m a lt B oo — T o th e J e f f e r s o n C o m m o n s . t a s k s * c o n c e p ts . M a k e th a t th e s till- u n f in is h e d J e f f e r s o n C o m m o n s . S o m e r e s i d e n t s o f t h e a p a r té m e n t c o m p l e x h a v e n ’t b e e n a b l e t o m o v e in b e c a u s e o f c o n tin u in g c o n s tru c tio n , w h ile o th e rs h a v e b e e n liv in g o u t o f h o te ls . A s lo n g a s th e C o m m o n s fo o ts t h e b i l l , i t ’ s b e t t e r t o s t a y i n a h o t e l th a n o n th e s tre e ts . Y e a h , r ig h t . . . B ra v o — . T o b a s e b a ll s lu g g e rs M a rk J M c G w ire a n d S a m m y S o s a , w h o a r e th is The 20th century is drawing to a C lo s e t o b e a t i n g R o g e r M a r i s ’ s i n g l e ÜM— — P fn n c o m n s e a s o n M a j o r L e a g u e r e c o r d o f 6 1 h o m e j close. A new decade and century columnist aw ait; a new m ille n n iu m is rig h t ; ru n s . W ith 5 4 h o m e rs , M c G w ire is lik e ly t o r e a c h t h e r e c o r d f i r s t . B u t a t 5 2 j a c k s , j a ro u n d th e c o r n e r. A n d , as th e S o s a i s n ’t t o o f a r o f f M a c ’ s m a rk .. I t ’ s I w orld readies itse lf to cross these j t h e p u r s u i t o f M a r i s ’ r e c o r d t h a t h a s j th resh o ld s, th e A rizo n a B o ard o f j e n e r g i z e d h a r d - c o r e f a n s a n d c a s u a l f a n s { Education is leading the w ay . A nd w ho better to do it than the | a l i k e . B a s e b a l l h a s n ’t b e e n t h i s i n t r i g u - j ! i n g s i n c e C a l R i p k e n J r . t o p p e d L o u J p e o p le We t r u s t to e n s u r e t h a t I G e h r i g ’ s c o n s e c u t i v e g a m e s p l a y e d j y o u n g sters a re prep ared fo r w h at lies ahead?, T h e future belongs to ( s tre a k a fe w y e a rs ag o . .1 B o o ■— T o th e o n - g o i n g U S W e s t s t r i k e , i the children o f today, so it’s only right for educators | N o t t h a t w e ’re ta k i n g s id e s in th e m a tte r , ? to give them a head start into the next century. Only ¡ b u t t h e a d v e r t i s e m e n t s o n t h e r a d i o a r e j problem is, fo r kids in the G rand C anyon State, the f s t a r t i n g t o w e a r t h i n . T h e d e r o g a t o r y j next century will be the 20th. T h is w eek, th e B oard v oted 6-3 to le t A rizo n a r e m a r k s f r o m b o th s id e s r e m in d u s o f th e j | G e o r g e B u s h - M i c h a e l D u k a k i s e l e c t i o n s j high schoolers learn a groundbreaking, controversial f r o m 1 9 8 6 . G e e z , M T V ’ s C e l e b r i t y J new science like the theory o f evolution and the big| D e a t h m a t c h l o o k s t a m e c o m p a r e d t o t h e 1 bang theory. A pparently, som e upstarts com plained a w h ile b a c k t h a t s c ie n c e s ta n d a r d s a d o p te d d is p u te a t U S W e s t. B r a v o — T o H o o d l u m s f o r g i v i n g a w a y 1 statew ide last year m ade no m ention o f such cuttingf r e e H . O . R . D . B . t i c k e t s . B e t w e e n f r e e j edge ideas. A nd after six m onths o f heated debate, a special com m ittee appointed by the board decided to b a g e l c o u p o n s fro m B ru e g g e rs and H o o d l u m s ’ g e n e r o s i t y t h i s w e e k , t h e l i v - i recom m end taking a chance on the m aterial, which is i n g ’ s n o t s o b a d f o r p e n n i l e s s c o l l è g e 1 already accepted in national standards. A nd the rest s t u d e n t s t h e s e d a y s . A f e w m o r e d e a l s | o f the world. I t’s a risk y m ove. A fte r all, d o w e re ally w ant l i k e t h i s a n d w e m i g h t b e a b l e to a f f o r d te e n a g e rs lis te n in g to th e c o n je c tu re o f D arw in th a t n ew V o lk s w a g e n B e e tle . N o w if o n l y H o o d l u m s w o u l d d i s h o u t t i x f o r | and his scien tific c o h o rts? N ex t thing you know , th e y ’ll be startin g to doubt th at the w orld w as c re ­ t h e u p c o m i n g B e â s t i e B o y s c o n c e r t ... B r a v o —— T o th e S t a t e P r e s s , f o r l i t e r a l l y < ated in seven days o r th at the an cesto rs o f all the a n i m a l s p e c ie s o n E a r th c o u l d r e a l l y h a v e g e ttin g a fr o n t- p a g e fa c e lift th is s e m e s te r, n o t t h a t t h e r e w a s a n y t h i n g w r o n g w i t h t sq u eezed in to one boat. O r th a t the E arth is th e t h e p a p e r ’s o l d l o o k . R e t u r n i n g s t u d e n t s { ce n te r o f the universe. Sadly, those opposed to acceptance o f these theories m a y h a v e n o t i c e d t h a t th e p a p e r h a s t a k e n j lo st th eir holy skirm ish. B ut they fo u g h t the good o n a b o ld e r, m o re -c o lo rfu l lo o k th is y e a r. A n e w lo o k — b o t h o n p a p e r a n d in th e f fight, these defenders o f the faith. They argued that creationism should be taught alongside these dubious n e w s ro o m — w a s s o re ly n e e d e d . S u re , hypotheses so kids could see clearly w hat evidence t h e r e a r e t h o s e w h o d o n ’t l i k e i t o r d o n ’t C are, b u t in g e n e r a l th e r e s p o n s e h a s b e e n j exists on either side o f the argument. T hey co rrectly p ointed out th at the th eo rie s o f p o s i t iv e to w a r d th e s w itc h . CRO-MAGNON CRE-ATIONIST - stone sMe. ancestor o f tnociem^rnan -Stone age predecessor o f rational thinking man 1 9 9 8 AD. - B ra in has no c a p a c ity io c o n c e iv e o f .fa c tu a l e ^ u t io n a r y s c ie n c e b ein g ta u g h t In public schools - Brain gets la rg e r* grows in tim e. -Brain is shrinking fa s t E v o lu tio n th e o ry a rriv e s w ith 'b ig bang* StatePressStaff Caryl-Sue Micalizio Becky Bevins — C ity Editor Cartoonists Jonathan Inge -------- —----------- —Magazine Editor David W o odfill ——— — — Reporters • ----------------- —A s s t Magazine Editor -Assistant C ity Editor Alicia Caldwell, Lidia E Kelly, J.D. Long Stephanie Raterik,Jayson Peters, Kim frendeigasc, Haytey Ringle, Gang? Subramanian, Jessica Wolf, Angela Yeager. —— —Opinion Editor Sports R eporters —— Michelle Craig — -------- — -------— Scott Bracken, Chris Cariock, Doug Ranagui, CarioMercaldo, David Myers. C hristi Foist —— — N ew s Editor Brad tang — ---------Photo Editor Jeremy Hein -Assistant Photo Editor Ed O deven —— —— —Sports Editor C opy Editors— — ------- -——— — --------- ...— — Mario Lopez, Susan Schimmel. Photographers- Mike Curran, Soley Hartel, Ofelia Madrid, Jeremy Weiss, Columnists G regor M cG avin is a senior studying journalism and can be reached a t avdaddy@imap4.asu.edu. Percy Ednalino Jr.. Editor Jodi ßafundo, Managing Editor -N ig h t Editor Chris Kahn evolution and the big-bang are precisely that -— the­ o ries. W h a t th ey n e g le c te d to m e n tio n w as th at, w hile never-ending evidence by countless scientists substantiates these theories, not one iota o f evidence exists supporting creationism . T here’s an ancient book penned by shadowy fig­ ures that ju st happens to be the all-tim e b est seller, but th a t’s not proof. T h ere’s the faith o f countless individuals w orldw ide, dow n through the ages. B ut th at’s not p ro o f either. F act is, it all boils dow n to faith. And there’s no need for religious faith and sci­ entific belief to be m utually exclusive. In fact, m ost scientists believe in God. It m ay not be the sam e god in all cases, o r the sam e beliefs but they do believe. They ju st d o n ’t ignore overw helm ing evidence that there are other natural forces at work in our World. A nd if an all-pow erful deity exists, couldn’t this god have set these forces — like the big-bang and evolution — in m otion? A less-literal interpretation o f th e B ible,: o r w h a te v e r h o ly w rit o n e fa v o rs , leaves plenty o f room fo r b oth scientific and r e li­ gious belief. T he p o in t is, faith can be a w onderful thing. It can support and strengthen and enliven. It can also s u f f o c a te w h e n th e f a ith f u l try to s h o v e th e ir b e lie fs d o w n th e th ro a ts o f o th e rs . A n d th a t is exactly w hat those opposed to h igh school science classes covering this u n iversally accepted m aterial w ould like to do. K eep in g th e b e n e fit o f fu n d a m e n tal sc ie n tific p rin c ip le s fro m h ig h sc h o o le rs a ro u n d th e state because it d o e sn ’t fit in w ith y o u r relig io u s beliefs is ev ery b it as bad as fo rc in g o th ers to w o rsh ip y o u r god. It’s an em barrassm ent that it’s taken until 1998 fo r these theories to be allow ed into science stan­ dards at A rizona high schools. B ut Better late than never. All you can say is ... well, thank God. — — — — -— ------ — Brian Ary, Scott Bennett, Ashlea Deahl, Ross Eide, Scott Gillette, Stephanie Johnson, Nancy Küi, C.C. McCandles, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff. — — - — — —— — Brian Balchumas, Carrie L Behrens, Mike Curran, Brian Farrington, Carios Ramirez, Adrian Sferie. Production —— — -— - — . — — — — ----------------- - Robert Deal, Keith Gerchick, Alyson Hurt, Heather Nash, Wayne Nelson, Joanna Wike. Sales Representatives — — — — — —— Brian Ary. Mike Giaibnza, David Goodwin, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievd, Jonathan Negretti, Sharon Robertson, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. M arketing T e a m — - ------ ~A------------------------ -------- ------- - Rick Garbetfc Angelee King Classifieds— ----- — — ----------.— — ------- — — _ Kate Desk), Amanda Green. Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 2, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz., 85287- |502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administrar tion, faculty, staff or student body. Student Media Phone Num bers----Information 965-7572 State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 On the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu inion rnmmmmmmmmmmm College ‘tips’ for ASU frosh Last year at MBHt this tim e I wrote a fresh­ man-year guide for all the incom ing stu ­ dents in an attempt to help them with that Jy & g H e v e r-d iffic u lt transition from high-school life : to college life. I felt the guide really helped out our incoming students at the time. For exam ple, we saw roughly half the number of highschool letterman jackets on campus last year compared to the previous year. That may not sound like a lot, but when you see the former cool guy walking around in his lettermen jacket trying to grasp on to any fleeting fame or coolness he once had, you will see not only how embarrassing it is for that individu­ al, but for ASU as well. So with that, here is the new-andupdated Freshman Guide for the 1998 class. And as always, upper­ classmen can benefit from this. If you’ll notice, during the first week of classes all your professors and TA/GAs are dressed. Well that w on’t last much longer. On the same note, most of the women on the ASU campus will stop wearing their Sun dresses and most o f the sorority members will stop wearing th eir rush T -shirts in couple of weeks. ( “Think T h eta” — I ’ve already seen 20 of them!) W e do have a nice S tudent Recreation Complex here at ASU, but don’t become one of those peo­ ple who are always in there. If you start working out ntore than you study or go to class, you might want re-prioritize things in your life. There are also a lot of people on campus who want to give you a free T-shirt for simply signing up for a credit card. Trust me, ruining your credit rating for a T-shirt is not a good trade-off. Manzanita is not the party you think it will be. It might be the coolest residence hall in the world, but it is still a residence hall. Read the State Press, it makes class go by faster. There is no equation out there that says if you have a new Mustang convertible you are cool. If you were a dork before the Mustang, then you are dork after it. Every weekend there is a party somewhere inside the Quads and the Commons. Your professors will try to get you to believe the biggest myth •about college, "For every one hour you arc in class, you will spend three hours studying.” It is a hoax, don’t fall for it. If you get a chance to meet Matt Flansberg, get to know him! If you are at any computing sight and you think you are all discreet as you dow nload porn from the Internet, someone will always catch you. I ’ll say it again; the sticker of Calvin Peeing on things in your car’s back window is never fresh. You might think it is hip to dec­ orate you room with all your empty liquor bottles, but it only makes you look like you have psychological problems that must be solved with alcohol. ASU is not the party school it once was; it is now more of a bar school. Hoochies are an indigenous and protected species on campus. Hie first ASU football game is Sept. 5 against the University of W ashington; show up and wear gold. And for all those students from the Chicagoland area; you go to ASU now. When we play ASU you are not to c h e e r fo r Notre^ Dame! Web, 1 hope this guide Will help you a Mule bit. 1 knew that for a let of you out there, you were cool and popular in high school and you just assume you will have the same sta­ tus here at ASU. I’m sony, but you will never again gain that status. Instead, you will go through life acting the same way you did in high school and trying to hang out with anyone you graduated with, trying to recapture that. You can do that or start over w ith a new slate and develop your personal skills that you have read so much about. But any wdy you do it, good luck. Ross E ide is a graduate stu­ dent In general studies and can be reached a t elde@asu.edu. D rin k a glass o f ‘ D o c to r H o lty ’s’ a n d c a ll h im in th e m o rn in g eMcSweeney columnist 1 had high hopes for my first column. I’ve been think­ ing lately that Hillary Clinton should receive a nomination for best actress in a comedy. I’ve also wanted to express my plan to organize a boycott against any “news” station that reports on the Spice Girls, but then 1 was inspired to w rite about som ething completely different some­ thing that some college students know a lot about ... alcohol. But not just any alcohol. I’m talking about an energizing alcohol —- cleverly named “Doctor Holty’s Cyclone Lager.” (This one was just waiting for me!) The ad appeared in Monday’s edition of the State Press and I started shaking my head back and forth when I first saw it. Let me paint the picture for those o f you unlucky souls who missed it. A m idst a black-and-w hite background emerged a half page of red with a picture of a “doctor” holding a stethoscope to a mug topped with a frothy substance. The “doctor” had one of those, “I’m really clean-cut, so obviously you can trust me” smiles. You know, one of those Ted Bundy smiles. At the top of tins huge red advertisement (com­ plete with the cheesy, sleazy doctor) was a large “thum bs-up” draw ing w ith the words “The Alcohol Energizer ... Fortified w ith Herbal Stimulants to Arouse your Senses” next to it. Needless to say, as a connoisseur o f advertise­ ments, I was oh so impressed. They had to be kidding. Alcohol is a depres­ sant. It numbs cells in die human body. That’s why people speak more slowly when they drink. That’s why people shouldn’t drink and drive. That’s why people eventually pass out if they W h a t D oyou Rosie M cSw eeney b a graduate student studying journalism add can be reache d at mcswee@map3.asu.edu. th in k / E-mail: shados@imap4.asu.edu W ebsite: ' http://www.statepress.com T he State Press w elcom es and en co u rag es w r itte n re s p o n s e fro m o u r r e a d e r s on any topic. All le tte rs m ust be typed, double-spaced and no longer than tw o pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full nam e, ID n u m b e r, class s ta n d in g , m a jo r (o r affiliation with th e University) and phone n u m b e r. R e q u e s ts f o r an o n y m ity w ill be G ripe Une: 965-6881 Fax: 965-8484 Mail: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University Room 2 Matthews Center Tempo, AZ 85287-1502 A S -se c w o become too drunk. Alcohol makes the human body want to go to sleep. My question is this. Who’s the genius who thought, “let’s confuse the body even more by adding ‘herbal stimu­ lants’ to alcohol?”’ ■ I can’t imagine ,that combining two sub­ stances with completely different objectives and effects would be a wise idea. They are mixing a depressant with a stimulant. Where have I heard that that’s dangerous? Probably just about every wacky health class I have ever taken. I have to hand it to the marketing people, though. What could be better? Lose your inhibi­ tions while staying “energized.” Just think of the possibilities. Now people can become “ener­ gized” drunks. I bet DPS will love this. Not that our society doesn’t already have a huge problem with drunk people abusing property and other people. Now they-can be “energized” while they’re doing damage. Gotta love that. At the bottom of the ad was a phone number for Dr. H olty’s Beer Company. I thought I would call to ask exactly whom they were tar­ geting this product to and how successful it’s been so far. I got a recording saying that the num ber had been disconnected and.no new , information was available. Hmmmm. Dbn’t they want to take responsibility for their product? Why advertise a phone number that has been disconnected? I bet they didn’t think any opin­ ion writers would actually call it. So, college students of ASU, there is a new product on the market that promises to “arouse your senses.” Don’t worry about the effects. Don’t worry about the combination of compet­ ing substance^. I’m sure the “doctor” would tell you that it’s a safe and good product ... he were in. gran ted only with an appro p riate reason. Letters are subject to editing by th e opinion page e d ito r fo r factual e rro rs and print space availability. L etters containing obvious factual e rro rs will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use e-mail, Gripe Line, Fax o r o u r w ebsite for response are able t o do so by providing th e same information required for w ritten purposes. / SjjjBapj M , GripeLine I*’ - m Got a problem? A story idea?. Something you just want to complain about? C all us. MK,' tWSBW ISM id * ' MÈRI ii i. 1 .JuSi l l j mmg ; ;>•■ - : ... . ■'Pi '■'■'■'A « Bonnie becomes hurricane as it nears sea B y P a u l No w ell A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. — Bonnie intensified and became a hurricane again late Thursday night as it slogged out over the Atlantic. Forecasters said hurricane-force winds would remain offshore, but the storm would continue to lash the coast. Bonnie was downgraded from a hurricane to a tropical storm Thursday morning as it spent much of its fury over North Carolina. But as it fed on the warm waters of the Atlantic, its sustained winds increased to 75 mph, and the National Weather Service redesignated it as a hurricane at 11 p.m. After drenching the coastline for more than a day, Bonnie was moving toward the northeast and out to sea. Tropical storm warnings remained in effect from North Carolina to Rhode Island. “They’re really just gonna get it. ... This will be like a good winter Storm for most people up there,” said Max Mayfield, deputy director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. There were no reports of any deaths, serious injuries or widespread damage from the storm, although officials say agricultural losses could be great. “This storm was a breeze compared to Fran,” said Wilmington-area construction worker Johnny French, refer­ ring to the 1996 hurricane that killed 24 people in North Carolina and caused $5.2 billion in damage. Richard Moore, North Carolina’s secretary of public safety, said: “We could not be more relieved this morning. It seems, for whatever reason, the winds did not do as much damage as expected.” , Moore said Bonnie’s damage total may equal Hurricane Bertha’s in 1996, which ranged from $1 billion to $2 bil­ lion. “It will be close.” Moore said. “Bertha was primary an agricultural damage storm. We won’t really know the dam­ ages until we can get out in those rural areas.” The 400-mile-wide storm sloshed ashore Wednesday afternoon at Cape Fear with 115 mph w inds. Early Thursday evening, winds had dropped to 65 mph before strengthening to above hurricane-force 74 mph. As of the evening, Jacksonville had gotten more than 10 inches of rain, Wilmington 9 and Greenville nfearly 8. A 20-mile stretch of State Road 12 on North Carolina’s Outer Banks was buried under 3 feet of water and 4 feet of sand Thursday night and was impassable, authorities said. “Believe it or not, we’re going to take this hit pretty w ell,” said John Elardo, a forecaster at the National Weather Service office in Newport. “Anywhere else in the world, this kind of rain would be a bad situation,” he said. “But we have flat land, and dry, sandy soil which is good for absorbing rainfall.” Also, the weather had been dry recently in North Carolina, ancj rivers and creeks were low, Elardo said. At 11 p.m. Thursday, Bonnie was near Kitty Hawk, about xx m iles south o f the V irginia state line. The Maryland and Delaware coasts braced for rain as it passed a good 40 miles offshore. Tom Atwood emerged from his home when the rain and wind eased and saw streets filled with tree limbs and debris, but everything else intact. “Seems like we got very little damage, considering the night we had last night,” he said. “I’ve got water in my house, but wc actually made it out pretty good.” “I thought after Bertha and Fran, our luck had run out. But we dodged it,” said Cecil Logan, Brunswick County’s emergency management director. Still, about 1,600 people remained in shelters across the state, and 243,000 remained without power. About 218,000 customers in southeastern Virginia and 3,200 in South Carolina also were without power because of Bonnie late Thursday. U S W e s t expands In te rn e t site to ease co n su m er co m p lain ts B y S an dy S h o re A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s DENV ER - US W est Inc. began accepting phone installation orders via the Internet on Thursday am id increasing consumer complaints about slow service as a labor strike neared the tw o-w eek mark. Utility regulators across the company’s 14-state region have reported a jum p in co m p lain ts from cu sto m ers who are unable to get a quick response to repair and installation orders. C om pany spokesm an D avid B eigie said executives hope to alleviate some of the problems with the expanded Internet site, where consumers may order services or make arrangements to move to another location. “O ur estim ate is 75 percent o f the installations, we think, can be done via computer,” Beigie said. M ean w h ile, fe d era l m ed iato r Jim M ahan and bargaining team s for U S West and the Communications Workers of America met for a fifth straight day to try to find common ground on three key issues: mandatory overtime, performance pay and health-care benefits. Both sides have agreed not to discuss specific proposals publicly, and there have been no reports of progress. Late Thursday, the union accused US W est o ffic ia ls o f ille g a lly re cru itin g Canadians as replacement workers. Union officials claim ed a contract agency is telling Canadians “to lie to border author­ itie s and say they are com ing to the United States ‘on holiday.’” US West denied any illegal activities. A bout 34,000 w orkers in 13 states walked off the job Aug. 16 after the two sides were unable to agree on a new con­ tract. It is the first strike in US West’s 14year history. The drawn-out CWA talks have frayed the nerves of the strikers and an estimated 15,000 U S West managers who are work­ ing 12-hour days, seven days a week, to meet customer needs. Union spokesman Lew Ellingson said many striking workers are looking for part-time jobs as the strike continues. The workers will begin receiving $200 a week from the union if the strike hasn’t been settled by Monday. A lso, re g u la to rs in O regon and Washington say they are holding US West to service agreem ents that require the company to complete repairs and orders w ith in a p re d e te rm in e d tim e p erio d . Regulators in other states say their stan­ dards don’t apply during a strike. US W est has about 25 m illion cus­ tomers in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, M ontana, M in n eso ta, N eb rask a, New M exico, North Dakota, O regon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. 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T h e s e S a le P ric e s! -— fjjw r ffl< u AMERICAN EXPRESS ) :J0 V/, U lli’/O « 'J li/ ( ' l i Ulliv Ji' j i r / 'A Ir'1110 1\ Sut« Press to r Friday, August 28, I t w Z ia ’s M em orial Union store replaced by Hoodlum s Records By H atley Ringle State Press “I ’ve always wanted to open a record store,” Luce said. “I’ve lived within a mile of ASU for eleven years. I ASU students will no longer be able to “demand Zia love the location.” records" on campus, since the store closed its doors in the Luce was in charge of all Arizona bands while work­ Memorial Union this summer. ing for Zia, and with his connections he said he hopes to Zia’s managers would not comment on why the music get some bands to play at ASU. store closed at ASU. “It’s basically up to the MU for who we can have play Brad Singer, the owner of Zia, died last May, and the here,” Luce said. “But I’d like to get some swing and ska ownership is now under the supervision of his brother bands.” Wayne. Galls to Wayne Singer were not returned. With most of the used music in the store coming from "His brother had different ideas than Brad,” explained the ow ners’ own personal collections, Hummel said Lloyd Hummel, co-owner of Hoodlums, anew store that Hoodlums offers a wide variety of everything, with some will take Zia’s place. “He made the decision to close the excellent jazz and blues music. store.” “We’d like to Work hard on special orders,” said Steve Hummel, and two other former Zia employees jumped at Wiley, another co-owner, who was Zia’s general manager the chance to start a new music store when they found out for three years. the space would be available. Zia left at the end of July, and Hummel added: “We’ve even called Zia to track down Hoodlum s got an approval to move in on A ug. 17. music for customers.” Hoodlums opened its doors Monday in the basement Wiley said he’s excited about the new store because he of the MU. Like Zia, the store will offer new and used can give his attention to only one store instead of eight. music, and cash or credit for trade-ins. Wiley, Hummel and Luce said they hope to get more “This store requires a lot of attention,” said Hummel, involved in the campus than Zia, and work on customer who worked on marketing for Zta. “Zia didn’t devote the service. < resources or the time needed to the campus.” * “Zia does a lot of things right,” Wiley said. “But we’d Hummel graduated from ASU four years ago with a like to be more aggressive on marketing for the campus.” broadcasting degree, and worked in the MU for five Future plans for Hoodlums include a listening post, years, so he is very familiar with the campus. more imports and a greater variety of music. Kristian Luce, who co-owns Hoodlums, also attended “If you get a freshman who likes the store, you have a ASU seven years ago as a music major, and said he’s four- to six-year customer,” Wiley said. “The college excited about the new store. campus is a great place to have a store.” Im F OOT WE A R IN THE CORNERSTONE RURAL & UNIVERSITY 829-7473 w m iM iiifi I» mmnmtm HVT età* me stmt* w u ii i« |w > ji(ii> i i i i * r ihffiyfttnt i *b*f t tin jifMTQirf Our customers w ill call you for directory assistance. You simply ask for th« “city and listing'*and givd them the;requested information.Absolutely no ' */ Sejling is involved. Plus, we offer Something’s new at our house! A S U S tu d e n t M edia • a variety of FT and PT work schedules • weekly pay periods • paid training • 401 (k) and more i ? Up-Coming Events: • Aug. 29th-Power 92 AZ Mills outside of the IMAXTheaters, 12,2:30 with Kracy Kid and Ruben S. - Ptea&e visit on o f our four convenient locations throughout the valley: Mesa 1906 B . Main (NW comer of Main & Gilbert) Phoenix ’re s s Your m orning daily newspaper. newsroom news fax advertising ad fax 965-2292 965-8484 965-6555 965-4706 Arizona State University ASU S tu d e n t M e d ia Welcome! www.statepress.com 4250 E. Camelback, 3rd Floor, STe. 300K (Camel Square Atrium) PIOTAI PRESS Ifempe 1919 W. Fairmont i t fof£48th St. between Broadway & Southern, near I-10) Peoria I D E A L S | IS W w m 9 8 0 2 W. Peoria (NE comer of Peoria & 99th Ave.) The only coupon book made for students by students! 965-6945 965-6555 Take C over0 HAYDEN'S FERRY ASU’s nationally recognized literary magazine 965-1243 RHA’s premium cable channel for campus residents. 965-5376 M a tth e w s C e n te r B a s e m e n t G eneral in form ation 965-7572 We ALSO CARRY: futon frames • Rugs * Bean Bag Chairs New nam e. New fam ily member. Y ou u s e d to k n o w us a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s . A s a re s u lt o f o u r n e w e s t fa m ily m e m b e r, C h a n n e l 2 , w e ’re n o w S tu d e n t M e d ia . It is o u r p le a s u re to s e rv e th e A S U c o m m u n ity. W e lc o m e to o u r h o u se . • Pillows • Tables • TME FUTON STORE TEMPE«966-8031 • 637S.McClintock Oud Northof Uriversity) SCOTTSDALE• 596-1231 • 6969E. ShooBlvd. CSVComer of 70th &Shea) OPEN7m i m DELIVERYAVAILABLE. igll I* ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: • A student was arrested for possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia at Manzanita Hall. The subject was booked into jail. • A bag containing a green leafy substance believed to be marijuana was impounded for destruction at Palo Verde East. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol, driving with a blood-alcohol concentration more than 0.10, and being an underage driver with alcohol in his system. He was reportedly arrested at the intersection of East 10th Street and South Mill Avenue. • An employee reported that a camera and stereo were missing from a room in the Languages and Literatures Building. • A student reported that her wallet was missing from her room at Manzanita Hall. • A student reported that his car was involved in a hit-andrun accident in parking Area 40. • A student reported that his car was'damaged while it was parked in Area 16. • A student reported his wallet missing from the Student Recreation Complex. • Two students were arrested for possession of marijuana and possession o f drug paraphernalia at Irish Hall. They^ were released with charges pending. • An employee reported that her car was broken into while it was parked in Parking Structure 3. Items were reportedly missing from the car. • An employee reported that her car was broken into while it was parked in Area 58; items were missing. • A student reported that his bicycle was missing from the Languages and Literatures Building, where it was secured with a lock. •A student reported her bicycle m issing from the Art Building, where it was secured with a lock. • A man not affiliated with ASU reported his bicycle missing from the Tempe Center, where it was not secured with a lock. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for criminal trespassing at 215 E. 7th St. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: • A man reportedly entered a home at 1309 W. 5th St. and displayed two semi-automatic guns. According to police reports, the man demanded money and jewelry and .then left the home on foot. Officers found a 1985 purple Chevy S-10 Blazer, which dropped the man off, at a nearby residence. The vehicle was reportedly impounded. • An unidentified man reportedly entered Circle-K, 939 W. Baseline Road, and robbed it at gun-point. He demanded money from the registers and safe, receiving $195 in cash and food stamps. The man left the store on foot, heading east on Baseline Road, according to reports. The incident was reportedly captured on the store’s surveillance video; • A 51-year-old Mesa woman was arrested and charged with aggravated DUI. Officers found her sitting in a car at 2020 E. Apache Blvd. According to reports, officers smelled alcohol and the woman appeared to have bloodshot and watery eyes'with Unsteady balance. The woman was reportedly driving on a suspending license. She was taken info custody and booked into Tempe City Jail. • A 35-year-old Mesa man was arrested and charged with possession of narcotic drugs, possession of drug parapher­ nalia and misconduct with a weapon. The man was report­ edly a passenger in a vehicle stopped for a traffic violation when officers saw a white rock on his lap that was believed to be crack cocaine. Officers reportedly found a crack pipe, a small 22-caliber handgun and a second rock, also believed to be crack cocaine. The man was taken to Tempe City Jail and released pending a Department of Public Safety lab result of the suspected crack cocaine. Compiled by S ta te P r e s s reporter Alicia A. C aldw ell, Canyon Forest V illage hires fo rm e r C lin to n a tto rn e y as lobbyist FLAGSTAFF (AP) — Proponents of Canyon Forest Village, a controversial development proposed for near the Grand Canyon, have hired a lobbyist who used to work for President Clinton. Opponents of the project say foe hiring of Jack Quinn, who was Clinton's attorney until a year ago, isCFV’s way of removing locals from the decision-making process. “They failed locally, so they’re trying to take a shortcut nationally,” said Jason Rose, spokesman for the Grand Canyon Improvement Association, a group that opposes foe proposed development. The U S. Forest Service, which must sign off on the propos­ al, last month endorsed a smaller version of Canyon Forest Village than proponents had hoped for. Tom DePtiolo, Canyon Forest Village’s managing partner, said the allegations are untrue and that Quinn’s firm, Arnold and Porter, has represented the proposed development for three years. “We believe that this isn’t just a local issue,” he said. “We believe that this is a national issue, even an international issue.” DePaolo wants to build a development near the south entrance to foe Grand Canyon including hotel rooms, shops, housing and other services. The National Forest Service is currently considering his proposal, because it would have to exchange federal land for his partners’ pri­ vate land within foe National Forest to make foe proposal viable. Searchable A rchives • H ayden ’s F erry Review • and M ore http://www.statq5ress.com S tu d e n t T a lk Special lEL L E X p r e - p a id per m in u te *39 KEGS *39” c e 11 u I a r w h y w a it for local p h on e services Phones as low as $79 °° » KEGS *34” S a m S m ith 's W in t e r W e lc o m e ActivateToday! 99 n f S 6 -P K bottles Includes 1,015 minutes (w ith V a lid s tu d e n t/fo e u lty 1.0.) $ 2 9 9 4 - NO CONTRACT « NO CREDIT CHECK NO DEPOSIT • NO M IN IM U M ACE g jp E R S T O ^ As 70ÜÁ- tic Meodd 71 7 S. M ill • 906-1203 PHO ENIX WEST PHO ENIX MESA NE Career of Comelbock ft 7* Avenue 464-1000 67th Avenue ft Thomas inside. 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New 1998 Cabrio Convertible Ju stice D e p a r tm e n t, W e n d y 's re a c h w h e e lc h a ir a g re e m e n t By A nn e G earan A ssociated Press King restaurants over lane barriers. by the Justice Department and the attorneys general of “We see these queue lines in quick service restaurants, A rizona, F lorida, C alifo rn ia, Illin o is, K ansas, WASHINGTON — A sweeping out-of-court settlement banks, in places where you line up to buy tickets ... and all M assachusetts, M innesota, P ennsylvania and W est with Wendy’s restaurants sends a message that the disabled too often it’s just impossible for wheelchairs to maneuver,” Virginia. cannot be literally pushed to one side at fast-food restau­ Bell said. It is the first such joint attempt to force better compli­ rants or elsew here, Attorney General Janet Reno said Wendy’s typically used separate wheelchair lanes at its ance with the ADA, and the first national effort to .target Thursday. approximately 1,700 company owned or leased restaurants lane barriers. The agreement that will widen or remove the zigzag to comply with the 8-year-old law. The federal-state task force visited newly constructed lanes at many Wendy’s counters follows agreements to But shunting people in wheelchairs around the line and older Wendy’s restaurants in 12 states, including the improve access at other restaurants, movie theaters and merely reinforces stereotypes about the disabled, Reno said. nine where state attorneys general participated. sports stadiums as the latest example of the Clinton admin­ “Before today, customers in wheelchairs had to cut in line “The task force found that most Wendy’s restaurants had istration’s aggressive enforcement of the Americans with or wait for an employee to notice them, and that only added custom er queue lines th at w ere too narrow for Disabilities Act. to the stereotype that people with disabilities need special wheelchairs,” the Justice Department said in a statement. It should be a model for banks and other businesses treatment,” Reno said. Wendy’s restaurants had very few other compliance prob­ where customers line up for service, Reno said. Dave Thomas, founder of the restaurant chain named for lems, the statement said. “Integrating people with disabilities into society, even his daughter, said the company-controlled stores will com­ Wendy’s agreed to allow the task force to conduct spot into a fast-food line, is what the ADA is all about,” Reno ply with the agreement within 18 months. ‘T o work things checks of restaurants covered by the agreement. said. “People with disabilities do not want special treatment out is really the right thing to do,” Thomas said. “We think “Banks, retail stores and other restaurants should follow — they just want to be treated like everyone else.” it’s good business to do this.” Wendy’s example and see if they, too, can become even The barriers for customers standing in line at Wendy’s The agreement does .not directly affect about 2,900 more accessible,” Reno said. and other businesses are often so close together that Wendy’s restaurants owned by franchisees, but the compa­ Last year, in what was then the largest ADA enforce­ wheelchairs cannot pass or create corners too tight for ny agreed to notify its franchise operators of die agreement ment action against a restaurant chain, 704 Friendly’s wheelchairs. and of the chain’s w ider obligations under the ADA. restaurants agreed to eliminate steps and modify entrances “It continues to be a problem,” said Julia Bell, executive Wendy’s International Inc», based in Dublin, Ohio, had that are too narrow for wheelchairs, among other changes. d irecto r o f the D isability Rights C ouncil o f G reater more than $6 billion in sales last year. The chain also paid a $50,000 fine, the maximum under Washington, which last year settled a suit with local Burger The agreement stemmed from a two-year investigation the ADA. D ocum ents: A m eric a W e s t put u n in terru p ted flights over safety PHOENIX (AP) — Investigators said maintenance problems that led to a $5 million fine against America West Airlines stem from a corporate culture that values uninter­ rupted flights over safety, a newspaper reported today. The Federal Aviation Administration said last month that America West, the nation’s ninth-largest airline, violat­ ed aircraft maintenance and-operating rules. The fine, believed to be the second-largest ever imposed on an air­ line, was part of a settlement with America West. The fine was based on a number of findings, including cases in which 17 America West jets were flown after they were overdue for structural tests. Executives at Tempe-based America West blamed the problems on procedural oversights, and the airline admitted no wrongdoing under the settlement. The Arizona Republic, citing FA A records obtained I I LIVEON CAMPUS? through a Freedom of Information Act request, reported that the documents say the airline “grossly mismanaged” its maintenance operations. One inspector concluded that the problems cited suggest a bottom-line corporate focus “that safety and regulatory requirements are secondary to the continued movement of aircraft within the carrier’s route system.” The inspector continued: “This culture, which permeates the carrier, lends credence to the employees who Conduct the day-to-day operations of the carrier that it is OK to con­ tinue an operation even when there may be a significant factor that could impede safety . This fact alone could lead to a significant event resulting in a loss of life or property.” America West President and Chief Executive Officer Richard Goodmanson told The Republic he has not Seen the reports but said the FAA’s conclusions were wrong. He said the reports were written by “apparently junior FAA We Iiave p o s it io n s ava Ha ì >Ie fon: Hick School MatIi & Science Tuto« (You MUST br aWe TO TEACk bork SUbjECTS) Fo« in Fo r m a t io n on Fall o p B v m q s , pU asE call 951*1070 ISJUSTFORYOU! Movies • Prizes « Student Info • Programming« & More C h anne l 2 w ill be running these g re a t m ovies thro ugh S eptem ber 23. M ore m ovies every m onth! •Alien Resiirrection •Anastasia •Austin Powers •Crash •Dark City •Deconstructing Harry •The Edge •Feeling Minnesota •The Full Monty •Hope Floats •A Life Less Ordinary •The Newton Boys •The Object of My Affection •One NightStand •Soul Food •Wag the Dog •The Wedding Singer Watch ASU Channel 2 everyday! Brought to you by ASU Residence Hell Association ft Student Media A ug. 24 - 28 M on - Fri 9 - 5pm MU G A LLE R Y Sponsord by MUAB LOW PRICES Great Masters of Art Musicians, Personalities, Movies Poster & GIANT sizes investigators” and said he was amazed that their tone did not match the FAA’s pronouncement that the airline was operating safely. An FAA spokesman who called The Republic after being alerted to the story by America West, called the inspectors’ reports “old news.” “The FAA’s position about America West is reflected in our press release on July 14,” Tim Pile said. “And as of today, they’re in compliance with the settlement agreement, they’ve met all of the require­ ments to date, and I hope your article reflects that.” Goodmanson said the company never urged employees to skirt maintenance duties. Although the company had some rough going after its controversial December 1995 decision to lay off its mechanics and send heavy mainte­ nance work to outside contractors, Goodmanson said things had improved markedly by mid-1997. State Press Opinions Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tom orrow Land and Fantasy Land. . See page 4, / H idden cam eras cap tu re ju ry -ta m p e rin g in fe d e ra l c o u rtro o m By Rachel La C orte A ssociated Press FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. Tiny cameras hidden in fake briefcases and document boxes captured the signal that the fix was in: First, at the defense table, the defendant took a sip of water and put his empty glass on (he table, upside-down. Then, Juror No: 11 took off her green jacket and folded it neatly over her chair. That was the signal, federal agents said, that die juror had agreed to take a bribe to fix the case. Juror Angela Chiles, 27, and two men are accused of seek­ ing a $175,000 bribe in exchange for a hung jury. The charges could bring 30 years in prison and $1-million fines if they are convicted. “This sort; of thing really rips the system apart,” said U.S. Attorney Thomas E. Scott. ‘Trust in the system is questioned. That’s why we take this so seriously.” ; Thomas Schwab. 43, who was on trial for allegedly launder­ ing $770,000 in drug profits through his demolition business, was approached Friday by Ray Hernandez and Ricardo Canwoid during a break in the trial, investigators said. One of the men, Hernandez, told Schwab he had a cousin on the jury, an “ace in the hole” who could deadlock the jury and deliver a mistrial, investigators said. Schwab notified his lawyer, who alerted the court and pros­ ecutors. Then Schwab agreed to cooperate with the federal investigation. “He didn’t do it so he could cut a deal. He did it because it was the right thing to do,” said Marc Nurik, Schwab’s attorney. “I’ve never seen anything like this in 27 years on the bench,” said U.S. District Judge Norman Roettger. “What you have here is a man who by day is defending himself against these very serious charges at trial, and by night he’s wearing a wire and working with his prosecutors.” In a meeting with Hernandez and Gan word on Sunday, Schwab agreed to pay the men $175,000, but said he first want­ ed proof the men could deliver. They allegedly agreed that Chiles, a bartender-waitress, would wear a green jacket to court Monday and remove it when Schwab signaled her with the glass of water. When Chiles did her part, cameras hidden in files on the prosecution and defense tables and in fake briefcases caught her on videotape, investigators said. Schwab paid Hernandez and Canword $5,000 Monday night and $20,000 the next day during meetings at a Hooter’s restaurant, investigators said. After the second payment, agents arrested the two men. Chiles was arrested Wednesday on charges of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and bribery. Canwoid and Hernandez, both 24, face identical charges. It could not be determined Thursday whether Chiles and the two men had attorneys. All remained in custody. The judge declared a mistrial Wednesday in Schwab’s money-laundering trial. He still faces a retrial on the charges. flew Delhi ?alace V e ★ Laad Uftit 11-2:31 ★ Bliair 5-iOpm GRAND OPENING ★ Sat-Sai 11-4 Open 7 Days A Week! Indian Cuisine Restaurant Lunch Buffet 557-7882 ★ Near asu 1125 E. 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M ill (A c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 B eer only at C ollege Ave. Sports ÜK State Press fo r F rid a y, A u g u s t 28, IM S A SU soccer squad looks to hunt Antelopes S u n D e v ils f a c e G C U f o r f i r s t tim e and the p re p a ra tio n fo r the sea so n , because if you don’t have eggs, you can’t ’ The Grand Canyon Antelopes stampede make omelets.” Whether the Antelopes spent too much across town tonight to take on the ASU tim e in the kitchen last season or not women's soccer team. The Antelopes, who finished a dismal 4- enough time defending goals, they blame 14 last season, face off with ASU for the last year’s poor performance on injuries that, seemed to plague them until the very end. first time, ASU (11-7-1 in 1997). will host the first- But everyone seems to be healthy this year. Well, almost everyone. ever cross-town showdown against Grand Canyon at Sun Devil Soccer Field, located ' “We have a few minor injuries,” co-head coach Peter Duah said, stressing, the word off Rural Road and Sixth Street. : •‘I hope a lot of people will come out minor. “Just sprained m uscles, pulled and support u s,” injured Sun D evil quads and stuff like that, but by Friday we Antionette Marjanovic said. “It's our first should be ready to go.” Grand Canyon coaches think the team game of the season and I think we’ll do really well. We have some talented trans­ can compete with the Sun Devils, if it fers on our team this year. I think we’ll plays its game. "If we can focus, get into the swing of definitely beat them.” ' : Marjanovic, who suffered a torn ACL things and concentrate on our style of in the first practice, still plays a major play, and hopefully our all-A m erican role from the sidelines with her leader­ standout Sou Moussa does what she does ship skills and undying confidence in her best, we should do all right,” Duah said. “ If we can to ta lly atta c k and to ta lly teammates. “We actually don’t know much about defend we should do all right because Grand Canyon. We really haven’t talked soccer should be fun.” ASU is planning on spoiling that fun about them too much,” Marjanovic said. “We’ll just go out there and play our game with their aggressive style of play. “Our style of play is more attacking, and we should beat them.” Grand Canyon, on the other hand, is tak­ scoring quick and o ften ,” M arjanovic ing a more relaxed, good-spirited approach said. “ And defense ju s t com es w ith everybody working hard and w orking into the game. “The most important thing about this together.” Sun Devil head coach Terri Patraw is game is that it’s fabulous for Phoenix and the co m m u n ity ,” said P eter B roskin, just ready to get the season started after all Grand Canyon’s director of soccer. “ASU the preparation. “After playing against each other in is a great team and they’ve really done a lot with their program, but when its all practice,” she said, “this match against Jeremy Hein of the State Press over it’s not important who wins or loses. Grand Canyon will be a great opportunity Junior Jennifer Peterson, shown competing against Minnesota last spring, and the rest of the ASU women’s soccer team open the season tonight at 7 against Grand Canyon, It’s the relationship between both schools to see who we are and how we look.” By Sc o tt Bracken State Press Sun Devils, Bruins vie for Pac-10 crown and beyond Fortunately for Tomey, the components are in place for the Wildcats to improve on last year’s mark. UofA will boast an experienced, tenacious defense and enough skill players on offense to contend for the Pac-10 title. UofA will put points on the board with an experienced offense led by Jenkins (who is expected to receive the start­ ing nod over junior Keith Smith), Candidate (804 yards, 4 TD’s) and junior wide receiver Dennis Northcutt (767 yards, nine TD’s). Defensively, McAlister has blossomed into a legitimate All-American candidate, and junior Marcus Bell returns to his inside linebacker spot where he racked up 80 tackles last year. Everything appears to be in place for UofA to make a real run in ’98. However, the schedule is not in its favor. With four of their first five games on the road, including a trip to Hawaii and an Oct. 3 game in Seattle against the Huskies, the Wildcats’ future — as well as Tomey’s — might be decided early on. By D oug Flanagan State Press Editor’s note: This is pan two o f a two-part series previewing the 1998 Pac-10 football season. 5. O re g o n . 1997 record: 7-5; starters returning: 15; top returners: junior linebacker Peter Sirm on, senior left tackle Marco Aguirre, junior wide receiver Tony Hartley. * In the span of just three years, the fabled “Gang Green” defense of the Ducks has become seriously infected. In winning the Pac-10 and advancing to the Rose Bowl in 1994, Oregon established itself as one of the better defensive teams in' the country. However, last year, the same unit tumbled to 102nd in the country, surren­ dering 440 yards per game. In response, the Ducks have named former CalifomiaDavis defensive coordinator Bob Foster to the post in an effort to shore up the once-formidable Duck defense. “On defense, we want to develop a sense of enthusiasm, confidence and desperation to get to the football,” head coach Mike Bcllotti said. “We’re still searching for the answer on defense.” The good news is the Ducks will return nine starters on defense, including Sirmon, who recorded 115 tackles and 4.5 sacks, senior defensive tackle Leie Sualua, and sophor more eomerback Rashad Bauman. On offense, the Ducks would like to scrap the quarterbacking rotation they employed last year and see either Akili Smith or Jason Maas claim the job outright. Smith appeared in seven games last year, Maas five, with Maas putting up slightly better numbers (1.631 yards, 18 TD’s). However, Smith has the slight edge to start their Sept. 5 opener against Michigan State. “Hie quarterback situation will be very competitive and I’m excited about that,” Bellotti said. “Competition makes us better, and I really do believe the person who wins the job will be among the best quarterbacks in the conference.” P re d ic te d *98 re c o rd : 6 -5 . *98 p re d ic te d re c o rd : 7-4. 3. W a sh in g to n . 1997 record: Brad Lang of the State Press Husky quarterback Brock Huard, seen here in the clutches of ASU linebacker Larry Johnson last season, is one of three Heisman Trophy candidates in the Pac-10. 4. UofA. 1997 record: 7-5; returning starters: 11; top returners: junior running back Trung Candidate, sophomore quar­ terback Ortege Jenkins, senior comerback Chris McAlister. I Head coach Dick Tomey can hear the footsteps behind him. He knows if he doesn’t produce a Rose Bowl team soon (the Wildcats are the only Pac-10 team never to go to Pasadena), he might be out very soon. Tomey, in the last year of his contract, saw his team post a second consecutive 6-5 season last year and attendance drop to die lowest total it’s been Since 1975. “Dick knows where we stand,” athletic director Jim Livengood said. “He knows we need to have a good season.” 8-4; starters returning: 10: top returners: junior quarterback Brock Huard, senior left tackle Tony Coats; senior strong safety Nigel Burton. O lin K reutz — gone. Benji Olson — ditto. So with his two top lineman departed for the NFL draft, there seemed no real reason for Husky quar­ terback Brock Huard to stick around. But he did. And that decision has Husky faithful dream­ ing of returning to glory. Winning national championships. Heisman trophies. : “There were quite a few reasons for me to stay,” Huard said. “I’m expected to be the leader, a captain. I’m a fourth year guy looked upon to build everyone else’s confidence. (Former Husky and current Seattle Seahawk quarterback) Warren Moon told me I’ll have the rest of my life to be a professional, but only four or five years to play college football. That meant a lot to me.” With the departure of running back Rashaan Shehee to S a » Press fo r r riday, August I t , I M M MK State Press Sports Preseason Football Picks Staffer From Staff Reports Simpson hired 1 . Photo e & i, I not * available « Jgjpj§ m Florida St. B ig 10 Michigan B ig 12 Kansas St Kansas St Kansas St Nebraska LSU LSU Florida Florida sec Colorado St Colorado St ASU S C o n feren ce y IFlorida St. i.[i Florida.-St , , -1r*-Florida > gSt+ Florida St. * i Michigan Ohio St Ohio St. ; Ohio St ACC u ■ g WAC 1* 9 P ac-10 Mb ASU E. Carolina E. Carolina Air Force Florida St. Penn St. Nebraska Nebraska • LSU LSU Colorado St Colorado St Colorado St ASU ASU ASU ASU Louisville S. Mississippi Tulane S. Mississippi USA H e is m a n w in n e r Dante Culpepper (C. Florida) Ricky Williams (Texas) Tim Couch (Kentucky) Ricky Williams (Texas) J.R. Redmond (ASU) Ricky Williams (Texas) LSU Florida St Ohio St. Ohio St ASU Florida St N a tio n a l c h a m p io n A S U re c o rd / bowl placement U o fA re c o rd SportsBnefs \* ! i\ ‘ -r: :«g^^Í; j !0-2 ll-l 10-1 ltd Rose Bowl Rose Bowl ! Rose Bowl 1 Fiesta Bowl, i 8-4 7-4 7-4 4-8 ^ j 11-0 | 11-1 Fiesta Bowl Fiesta Bowl 3-8 4-8 — ASU has named former Sun Devil AllAmerican Aaron Simpson as its newest assistant wrestling coach, head coach Lee Roy Smith announced Wednesday. Simpson replaces former ASU assistant Zeke Jones, who accept­ ed the assistant coaching position at West Virginia last month. “Aaron will be a big asset to our program,” Smith said. “He was an exceptional leader as a student-athlete and has all of the skill, passion and desire to be an effective coach.” Fan Photo Day - — The ASU athletic department will host its annual Football Fan Photo Day Saturday, beginning at 10 a.m. A new addition to Fan Photo Day w ill be the ASU Fan Fair, which begins at 8:30 a.m. ASU ticket office employees will be available to answer ques­ tions regarding seating information and, will have a “Select-ASeat” opportunity available to all fans. Players and coach» will be available from 10-11 am . for photo opportunities and autographs on Frank Kush Field. Following Fan Photo Day festivities, fans will have the opportunity to watch the Sun Devils practice, beginning at 11:30 am . The first 50ffTans in attendance will receive an ASU Spirit Pack, which includes an ASU gold T-shirt, pom pom, poster and a football magnet. Volleyball squad feces alumni team — The 1998 ASU women’s volleyball team will open the season against an ASU alumni team Saturday at 7 p.m. in the P.E. East Gym, Admission is free. ASU’s first regular season game will against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Wells Fargo Arena (former­ ly known as the University Activity Center), Baseball walk-on m eeting — The ASU baseball team w ill have tw o mandatory meetings for those interesting in walk­ ing on to the team. The first walk-on meeting will be held on Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. on the 5th floor o f the ICA Building in the Hall of Fame Room. The second meeting will be held on Oct. 15 in the same place. Clarification —— The ASU women’s ruby team encourages prospective players to attend practice on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. at the W est Band Field. State P r ess N O ONE TALKS TO C all ASU THE WAY WE DO! 965-6555 to pla ce a n a d ! 'NesaCoanlM uty College has elassesavailable for Pall i i H f t r i i , Math, History, Com intiicaÉM fiBd r^onnH^W usfer and registr^Égli info it on tH ^ ^ n a m p u s. Pick up an MCG m Ione o f l||p jH B b in g registrad sjfes and l o m m u n ^ ^ B Hotlines” íjjjlenroll b; • B u sin eflH I^ n a r's Sito • Social S • U n d e r g r c ^ ^ H p r v i c g l R e g i s t r a r ’s S ^ H wÊKMSÊSËSL W m Sail to Reflleü 461 -7 m l One of the Maricopa Community Coltegli The Maricopa Community College District is an EE0/AA institution. if S tate F arm In su ran ce w o u ld like to w elco m e all in co m in g a n d re tu rn in g s tu d e n ts b ack to school. Look for our representatives to be on cam pus in the upcom ing m onths at the follow ing events: - C areer Week (Oct 5 - O ct 8) STATI FARM - Super R ecruiting Days If you w an t to leam m ore about INSURANCI State Farm , please visit our >J w ebsite at: w w w .statefarm .com ,, or contact Kurtis Strauel, State Farm Recruiter @ 784-3562 Mercury upset Comets in Gam e I of Finals PHOENIX (AP) — The MVP controver­ sy didn’t come up until the final minutes of Game 1 of the WNBA Finals. U n til th e n , H o u s to n ’ s C y n th ia Cooper, who won her second straight MVP aw ard this season after av erag ­ ing a leag u e-record 22.7 po in ts, was the clear winner. But Jennifer Gillom of Phoenix, who averaged 20.8 points and 7.3 rebounds and finished second in th e y o tin g , Won o u t w h en the Mer'cury outdueled the C om ets down the stretch. Gillom blocked a shot by H ouston's diminutive Kim Perrot late in the game, then made the w inning basket as the M ercury beat the C om ets 54-51 on Thursday night for a 1-0 lead in the bestof-3 championship series. AD # AG E N C Y: C LIE N T: RUN D ATES : P U B LIC A T IO N : S IZ E : # O F C O LO R S : L in e S cre e n : Love the coverage? H ate the coverage? “I d o n ’t want to take alt the credit Griffiths was fouled with 1.5 seconds to here,” Gillom said of her 15-point, 10- go and made a free throw. rebound performance. “But I felt really ■ Cooper, who scored 31 points, missed good, especially after the blocked shot. I a 28-foot shot at the buzzer. wanted to let my teammates know that I The serie s sh ifts to H o uston on was there for them.” Saturday. Game 3, if needed, will be G illo m ’s made a turnaround layup Tuesday night in Houston. with 8.9 seconds left after a pass from G riffith s had a c a re e r-h ig h 12 Michele Timms. rebounds to go with eight points. “We were playing in hopor o f Jen, Swoopes had 11 rebounds and eight because she has been the MVP for us all points for the Comets, who were 27-3 in season.” Timms said. “We knew that she the regular season and brushed aside had carried the team on her back at times Charlotte by 14- and 16-point margins in this season, so this was a special game the first round. emotionally for us.” The Mercury were 19-11 during the After a timeout. Sheryl Swoopes took season, and their playoff with Cleveland a 15-foot jum per that went in and out, went to three games. and the Mercury got the ball. But they had the h o m eco u rt edge A fte r an in b ounds p ass, M ich elle again, and it paid off Thursday night. Jo b #3268 O S .A d ve rtisin g , P h o n e : (60 2 ) 279-9636 S C O T T TO Y O TA O F S C O TTS D A LE S a tu rd a y-A u g . 29, 1998 A S U S ta te P ress 8 co l x 19” 2 /c (B la ck-0 3 2 ) 65 LPI TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS N O T P A R T r a Send your comments on W eek I of the semester to the sports editor at c ra z y e d @ a s u .e d u n n p W e Nave posuioivs O F Hick School MATh& A D V E R T IS E M E N T ! (You must be Abfe F o r ¡ n I o r m a tío n to on a va i U b le (o r ; S c ìe n c e Tutors TEAch both subjects) FaU opENimqs, pieAse caU 9 5 5 -5 0 7 0 98COROLLA AS LOW AS DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS ✓ OUT OUR HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES! ’8 9 CHRYSLER 9 2 MERCURY *91 HONDA CIVIC WAGON NEW YORKER COUGARLS _ ’9 4 CHRYSLER I HONDA .SOL SI C P E LEBARON GTC ’9 2 NISSAN 2 4 0 SX . STK: . 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ALTERNATIVE CREDIT CENTER • NO CREDIT • NO PROBLEM 994-9922 TO YO TA TO YO TA 1 Twosomes 6 Christened 11 Pony’s tidbit 14 Dot in a river 15 Kind of stage 16 — Annie: “Oklahoma Prole 17 1998 Broadway attraction 19 Observed 20 City near Whiteman Air Force Base 21 1998 Broadway attraction 23 Longing 24 Painter's prop 25 Bleat 28 Ring monogram 30 Astronomer Sagan 32 Whiteplumed wader 34 Sheep's coat 36 Rakes 40 1998 Broadway attraction 43 Pin or padlock partner 44 Marine mammal 45 Jose’s buddy 46 Full of wonder 48 Paul’s title 50 Compass 64 1998 Broadway attraction 66 Yours, to Yves 67 Horace or Catullus 68 Waste maker 69 Ending for Canton 70 Certain turns 71 — alia DOWN 1 Cherry stones 2 Tennis name of fame 3 ‘— Three Lives" 4 Track event 5 Kind of heel 6 Zola novel 7 Biblical refuge 8 Eshkol’s successor 9 City in central Sicily 10 “Macbeth” weapon 11 Desert island 12 “There Is Nothing Like —" 13 Dryer, sometimes nr JL£ ¥ T 3 ¥ £ □O DO BD EE H IT S i a Q 6 £ i ojT H0 T H V£ n 0 □D SD □ S E E £ Xnr■ 1 3 NS a.£ 0 E .1, N E g OV □ □ □ □DB □SQD ram ena □ □ S E □ □ □ □ □noni □ □ □ 3a a E□ □ 3 □ □□□E2 3 a o]»! 1 a a E a a 13a a a X 1 ¡aa i l [H£ □ □□□□ U ra m a O □ Y PE¡£ V a ;3 8 □ □ □ ON 1¡£ H pTi £ £ X □ □ □ 1 N 1 ¡¥:V ÌT £ £ £ Jr □ □ □ i £ NË N E ti T m £ 1 18 Sty sound 22 Popular powder 25 Jo’s sister 26 Turkish title ' 27 War god 29 Possessed 30 Refrigerates 31 Landon of Kansas 33 M adrilefto’ sland 35 Harem room 37 Tag words 38 Shovels 39 Flatbottomed boat 41 Take advantage of 42 Mexican dance music 47 Pop artist Andy 49 “— each life a little ra in ..." 51 Kind of angle 52 Big name in computers 53 Belittle 55 British actor Cox 57 Contents of cultures 58 Letters for the weekend 59 JFK sights 60 Trial 61 Novel ending 62 Memorable folk singer Richard — -Bennet 65 FDR follower P»51 Capital of Guam 54 Pen part 56 1998 Broadway attraction 59 Began 63 Hagen of the theater WE OFFER AFFORDABLE ALTERNATIVES WERE EVERYDAY PEOPLE DOING BUSINESS WITH EVERYDAY PEOPLE...iM M m W ! ByNancy S. Ross © 1998 Los Angeles lim es Syndicate 8/28/98 Pac~ I the Kansas City Chiefs, the Huskies will rely even more on the arm of Huard to deliver victories. Huard (2,140 yards, 234 TD’s) himself will rely on a Hooker and a Looker to be on the receiving ends of his bullet throws. Hooker, who is a national-class sprinter with 10.27 100meter speed,'will slide into a starting receiver spot this year. As a freshman, he got his hands on the ball eight times and hit paydirt four times. Hooker, along with junior Dane Looker, sophomore Patrick Reddick, and sènior Andre DeSaussure will provide Huard with a plethora of options to rack up yardage. The Husky defense returns six starters, including junior Lester Towns, junior defensive tackle Mac Tuiaea and junior comerback Jermaine Smith. "We feel good about the players we have back and mov­ ing into the starting positions on the defensive line,” head coach Jim Lambright said. P re d ic te d ’98 re co rd : 7-4 . 2 . U C L A . 1997 record: 10-2; returning starters: 12; top returners: senior quarterback Cade McNown, junior left tackle Kris Farris, junior wide receiver Danny Farmer. 10-game winning streak to end ‘97, which led to a Pac-10 co-cham­ pionship. A fifth-place final rank­ ing. A Heisman Trophy candidate. A pre-season top-10 ranking. Indeed, it seems all is good in Los Angeles. With expectations as high as ever, the Brains will field perhaps one of the better UCLA teams ever in '98. Talk begins with McNown, a leading candidate, if not the leading candidate, for the Heisman Trophy. He is durable, has a strong arm. and possesses a never-say die attitude, which1was evident in last year’s Cotton Bowl, when he rallied the Brains to a 29-23 victory against Texas A&M after being down 16-0. : “If there is a better Heisman Trophy candidate, I’d like to meet him." head coach Bob Toledo said. "He has the complete package — he possesses a strong arm, quick feet and outstanding leadership abilities. He knows the offense like a coach and developed a comfort level with our sys­ tem. But, above all else, he is driven to succeed." McNown (3,116 yards, 24 TD's) will most likely suc­ ceed in an offense specially designed around his capabili­ ties. Last year’s leading receiver. Jim McElroy, is gone, but Farmer is expected to slide in without too much difficulty. Replacing Skip Hicks at tailback will be junior Keith Brown and sophomore Jermaine Lewis Senior strong safety Larry Atkins will be the unques­ tionable leader on defense, recording 44 tackles, four sacks and six picks last year, all team-highs for returners. P re d ic te d ’98 re c o rd : 9 -2 . There is more to life than news and sports... Check out the Full Set of Nails $ Lm 2 5 0"0" Comics •• Computers "** Wholesale.com Back to School Special EDUC ATI ON 829-7774 Call 969-8919 to order Only $795 th e HAIR & TAN » AMD K6 300M H z Processor with Cooling Fan • Triton TX Pro II Chipset Motherboard with 512K Cache • 1 5 " ,28mm Non-Interlaced Digital SVGA Monitor • 4.3G B UltraDMA ID E Hard Drive • 32MB SDRAM 168Pin Memory • 56K V.9Û Internal Voice/Fax Modem w / Voicemail • 1,44MB Floppy Drive • 32X UltraDMA IDE C D -R O M Drive • 1 6Bit SI9«8l>Audio Sound onboard • Pair of 100 Watt PM PO Amplified Stereo Speakers • 4 MB Embedded 64 bit Video • Floppy Drive, Mini Tower, Win 95 Keyboard, Logitech Mouse • Windows 95 Version II Installed (98 upgrade avail : able) E lite PC FOR Regularly 40 H/fvtf tv K M 403W.UniversityDr. Page 14 “ Mention this ad and receive n n rf RESEARCH C OMMUNI T Y OVER ONE MILLION OE THE BEST MINDS IN AMERICA HAVE ALREADY CHOSEN THE BEST RETIREMENT SYSTEM. I . A S U . 1997 record: 9-3; starters returning: 13; top returners: junior running back J.R . Redm ond, sophom ore quarterback Ryan Kealy, senior wide receiver ; Lenzie Jackson. I One at a time. The simple statement is more than a m eaningless slogan plastered on various lo cale s such as the Sun D evils’ workout shirts and the playing field at Camp Tontozona. It is die team’s axiom, their own SportsCenter catch-phrase. The players believe in it. They expect to take each game one at a time and not look too far down the road to things like a national championship, which they could very well win. “One at a time, that’s our motto,” junior comerback J’Juan Cherry said. ‘That’s our motto, and that’s our philosophy. Our goal is the Fiesta Bowl, the national championship game.” Kealy added, “Before, we were looking at Rose Bowls and Pac-10 championships. Now, our goals are higher. We’re gonna settle for nothing less than a national championship.” The offense looks to be among the nation’s best, with Redmond getting full-time duty in the backfield (along with part-time gigs at wide receiver, free safety, and kick return­ er); Kealy, an emerging star as a sophomore; and a talented receiving corp, led by Jackson, an All-America candidate. However, questions are abound on defense. Just four starters return to the unit ranked third in the Pac-10 last season and the front seven will feature six fresh faces. But defensive coordinator Phil Snow feels as though he’s filled in the gaps with players such as junior college transfers Junior Ioane and Erik Flowers, and there should not be a significant drop in their play. Junior comerback Courtney Jackson and senior strong safety Mitchell “Fright Night” Freedman will spearhead a talented secondary. If things fall into place, and the Sun Devils remain true to their creed, then die team could be spending the holidays at home. 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Read them carefully before you invest or send money. 8 /9 8 ■ these scenes :M from last year's show, tMsyoar's DAMN! Crystal M GD M U S IC 4444 ■ w W ■ Classifieds 20 IB—a—jfiiniiiiilni, iminu M, 1998 • i i n iw in iM N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information aid assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264* 1721. « j g g A Í A iy u y M ,,' HO M ES FOR RENT £ |A R T M |N T S = 1BD/1BA, 2 blocks from cam­ pus, pool, spa, laundry, cov­ ered prkng. No pets. $445/mo. 1700'S. College. 967-7212 3BD/2BA HOUSE. Broadway/ McClintock. $995. Also 2bd/2ba house with w/d, dw. pool, etc. $825. 9 6 6-2627 or 692-0844 GUEST HOUSE type apartment for i. 1 m ile from ASU. $375 includes util. Irene 968-6394. TEMPE HOME* 4bd/2ba. liv­ ing, dining & family rooms w/ frplce. 2150 sq.ft., pool, 2 car garage, $T40(Vmp. 893-0767 VERY NICE, Irge, clean. 2bd/ 1ba, walk to ASU. $569/mo. Gape Cod Apts. 968-5238; HO M ES FOR RENT Mere Trivia... Thar« vili be 2 WALK T 0 ASU-.l bd/iba $450, 3bd/2 5ba '$875, 3bd/2ba $850, 2bd/lba $550, 4bd/2ba $1100, 3bd/lba $915, Room for rent, all utils, $500/m o. Studio w/ all utils. $450/mo. 894-0288 IB D/IB A, HUGE front & back yard, SRP irrigation, gardener, w/d, pets ok w/dep. $50Q/mo. + sec.^ cleaning & pet deposit. 10 mo; lease. 2018 N. 23rd St., Phx. Dave or Marge @ 2670619 or Toni 585-0291 corueeutive full moons, making 2 b ln moons, in 1999 (1/2 & t/31, ant 1/2 & 3/31). Tbo TO W N H O M E S / C O N D O S FOR RENT lost timo tbot bapponot 3BD/2BA HOME in great Scot­ tsdale area. Quiet, away from main streets. Ideal for prof, or grad students. A vail now. $1050/mo. 497-5678 was 1915. A ^ R T M |N T g _ I & 2 BD apts. for rent. Laun­ dry, I block from campus, quiet, sm all com plex. 933 S. Farmer. 675-0928 I BDRM apartment for rent, fu lly equipped, 1 bfck from ASU $550/mo. 524-3902 1B 0 / 1BA 4-PLEX. Pool, a/c, cov. prkng, $400/mo. Dwntwn Tem pe, 2bd/l ba, new carpet, utiI. includ. $650/m o. 1bd, $525/mo. Orange/Terrace. 526-1806 2 BLKS TO A SU , efficency $475 or 2bdr. 1 ba. $700/mo. Jane, owner/agent, 831-9024 3BD TH, min. from A SU, pools* rqtball, etc. A vail 9/1. $900/mo. Please Iv msg: 800229-5823 or 508-643-1155- 3BDR, 2BA, 3.5 mi to ASU, 2 car garage, fenced yard, ac & evap, $1200/m o. Jane, owner agent, 831-9024. 4BD /2BA HOME, living, din­ ing & family room w/bplce, car­ port, close to ASU, $1200/mo. 893-0767 3BR/2BA CONDO. Very nice, close to campus, all appliances included, including w/d. $950/mo. CaU Jeff, 893-1651 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL You Couldn’t Ask For A Better PT JOB B B B -B 7 3 6 We we a busy commercial Seal estate firm in need of an individual to do mar­ ket research, word process­ ing, an d receptionist work. This is a great opportunity to learn more a b o u t a business office an d th e Phoenix te a t estate market. Starting pay IS I6.50/hr; your hours may be sched­ uled to suit your class schedule. If a relaxed, but high ener­ gy, work environment is important to you, you will enjoy this position. Please call Coxina Lange a t R and C om m ercial Brokers at 94S-2822 immediately. B u s! Great PT norie at $8.96riw. 20/tw/wk min. Driva before and after classes. Paid Training aval. now. App Tempe C b a w la y School pWricf #3, 3205 à. Rural Rd 00 Ö0 Lxt 7861 7001 1 or cat 360-8188, ExL tor won» Worma■Hon. Vlon. I HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Must b» 21 to apply. TO W N H O M ES / C O N D O S FOR R |N T _ _ _ TO W N H O M E S / C O N D O S FOR RENT AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS. 3bd/2 5ba condo. 2 c.g., w/d, comm. pool,, water inclded, $!G5(Vrao. Wendy, 456-2398 PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba con­ do. New paint, clean carpets. Very nice. Call 432-3636 HAYDEN SQUARE 2bd/2ba. A ll appliances, next to pool. $H00TJ Carty 831-0322 HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c; patio, Walk/bike to ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/m o. A lso, 3bd/2ba with new carpet, $875/mo. 966-0987 MESA/TEMPE AREA - 2 bd/2ba, w/d, pool, spa, $70O/mo. +. dep., elec. only. 777-1925 NICE 1 br. condo w/d, pool, spa. 700 W. Univ. #134. Open house l-7pm thru Aug 31. $490.532-4260 PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba, 1 mi. from ASU, fireplace, pool, 1 cove re d parkin g Space, avail able now. $l,275/fn o. 9473917 or 945-5845. QUIET LUX 2br condo, 15 min, from ASU at 56th St. & Thomas. New carpet & paint, tile, frplce, d/w, balcony, pool, jacuzzi, sauna. $585/-mo. Call 265-2066 or 777-0916. RENTAL SH A R IN G RENTAL S H A R IN G 7 MINS, from A SU, 3bd/2ba, w / pets, fu lly fum 'd, n/s, re­ sponsible, positive & consid­ erate. $375+1/3 util. 913-9265 2 BD m obile home on 5 acre farm* S. Mtn area, yrd, rural, secluded. A/C, lg kitch/liv rm. Pref. students/faculty. 276-9385 ATTRACTIVE RESORT condo masterbedroom $325, comfort­ able semi-private loft $225 +". utilities ea. 351-8683. GRAD STUDENT or professional pref d to share 6bd/4ba house, pool* w/d. cable. $300+ util, deposit req'd. Broadway/McClintock area. 897-6087. RMMTE NEEDED ASAP to rent room 1800 sq.ft, patio home. Has w/d, comm, pool, $330 + 1/3 util. Call April 897-6906. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL UNIV/ HARDY, 2bd/2ba upper level condo. V-ball, BBQ’s, weight room, pool, spa, bike to campus. $625/mo. 945-7986 PAPAGO PARK V illage I, avail, now! 3bd/2ba, 1536 sq ft, $1250/mo; Call 496-8939. UNIVERSITY RANCH gor­ geous 3bd/2ba, all Spanish tile, full size w/d, frplce, vault­ ed ceilings, cov'd pàtio, $99Q/mo. 945-7986 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL You're sm art. The Gorilla is looking for interactive tsammatas to be the Phoenix Suns newest entertainment team • Tire Zoo Crewi Zoo Crew members will help the Gorilla entertain Phoenix fans and more! Applicants must be at least tB years old, outgoing & energetic. Interviews will be held on Full-tim e m oney, Part-time hours. $$$ loin the Fiesta Fun! S e c u r it y FT-Great Pay • SS/hr. b ase + co m m . • f lex AM à PM h o u rs • C o n v e n ie n t locatio n s C o n c ie r g e FT Ceramics Instructors Opportunities to instruct youth, parent-child, and adult community classes & workshops for FaU *98 and Winter "99 sessions. Previous teaching experi­ ence required, $11.58/hr (5-20 hrs/wk). Ceramics Technicians Ability to provide support service to instructional staff and supervise open-studio for participants. Previous experience with gas & electric kilns, mixing glazes, and studio maintenance. *8.75/hr (20 hrs/wk). Front Desk FT/PT Fiesta Inn Dpbson & G uadalupe 777-8757 2100 S. Priest Tempe AZ Ave. & W arner 2 miles from ASU Jobline: Send resume & references to City of Tempe Cultural Services 3340 S. Rural Rd. * Tempe, AZ 85282 735-0000 804-5285 Tempe*! most exciting (i popular Mexican Restaurant is looking for exceptional people to join our exceptional team! • D ay Psych & Social Work Majors Scnvuts • Hosr/Hosnss • Earn Extra S * Fun Work Environment Rexibie Hours • Discounted Meak Apply in person: Mon -Thun from 2pn to 4pm 300 S. Ash Avenue Gain Valuable Experience DSC nseds people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Deveiopmentally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Graduate Students tor Tutoring W e ItAVE p osiïioN s Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential. Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Be On The Court With The Gorilla! Do the math! $$$ mstnmn Earn $750 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents is n u c n v s fS M K M K U R I M/F WANTED to share 2bd/2ba condo near A SU , Must like pets, NS pref. $350 +1/2 utilities. Call 303-0970/ TidwBli'OgXIfrksiJ To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. *9 Tempe. AZ 85282 756-1223 avaìIa U e To ri Hick School M atIí & S c íe n c e Tuto« (You MUST i)E a MÉ TO lEACh boib SubjECTS) Foe ¡n ío r m a tío n on FaU opcN jN qs, p I ease c a II 9 5 3 -5 0 7 0 Saturday, August 29,1990 from 10am to 1pm at America West Arena 210 E. Jefferson St. Phpènix, AZ 85004 TUITION REIMBURSEMENT s em i-a n n u a l m e r it r e v ie w s Call 800-646*1110 for more information. Get a good, dose look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FACS provides finandal, credit, and administrative services to Federated Department Stores, Inc., including Macy's and Bloomingdale's. Full and part-time opportunities are currently available in the following areas: EMBASSY SUITES RESORT scomcwDT' ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, Tu. and F 8:30 - 10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm I COLLECTIONS * CUSTOMER SERVICE « CREDIT GRANTING rapan tha following Saturdays I - 3pm : Aug. 29 Sept. 12 Sept. 26 • C o c k ta il S e r v e r ($3.5Q /hr + tip a ) • R o o m S e r v ic e ($ 4 .2 S /h r + tip s ) • S e r v e n ($ 3 .5 0 /h r + U pe) • B a r te n d e r ($ S /h r *■O pe) Additional advantages include: >20% discount on most Macy's purchases >Casual dress every day • Competitive medical benefits for full-time FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT • P 9 X O p era to r ■ • Paid benefit days • Paid weekly • Hrly rates are $8,25 or more (DOE) A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon.-Fri, 8am-Spm or call toll free: 1-888-28+3227. (Northeast comer of 52nd St. and west 14th St between Broadway and University Drives.) 1345 S. 5 2 n 4 J t Ü 8 a p fw w fc i-w w c . , W Ê j wt f BpwBrt RsBWppBS ao o i N. S c o t t e » » « . Scottsdale Embassy Suites auppuris à Dreg-Free Workplace. “ in Toppe ^ ’ Equal Opportunity For AM mm. m m RENTAL S H A R IN G ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2bd/2ba apartment c lo se to ASU. $350+l/2utl. 961-9135 W ANTED: RESP. f to share 2bd/2ba apt. w/21 yr. old stud. & dog. 15 min. from A SU .. $362 + utils. Call Kara 753-6653 R O O M S FOR RENT 4BR/2BA HOME, McClintock &Broadway, pool, m /f, avail­ able nowl $325/m+util. Walt or Paul, 921-9046. Call 965-4715 ja f l —» y»«r R O O M S FOR RENT R O O M S FOR RENT H O M ES FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS F O R J A L | _ ;==s BEAUTIFUL 4BD/2BA home, Southern/Rural w /pool, cable, fireplace ft Crystal water. Fem. prefd. Avail, now, $350/m o.+ utils. Lisa Marie, 692-3085. ALL PRIVATE rooms, S Temp e , in 4br, 2ba town house, Rural between Guadalupe and Elliot. Quick access to campus by bus or car. Serious h/s stud­ ents, Pref grads. $300-350, +1/4 electric 430-2422. H U P HOME sale! 3% down. Call TJ Carty Realty Executives for weekly ,list $ info 831-0322 COLOR TVS, all remotes. 27" w /stereo sound, $125, 25" $100,19" $90. Call Bob 238-9238. Iow nhom esT C O N D O S FOR SALE FOR SALE: 13" color TV w / remote, $50; microwave, $50; adjustable drawing table, $20, Call Joe at 813-6561 (eves) or 965-5013 (days). F PREF, cute 4 bd house, close to campus, $325/mo + 1/4 util, ft security dep. Laundry facili­ ties. Two rooms available Susie 946-0527. LOOKING FOR mature student to exchange room & board for daily help w /hom ework ft 3 nights/wk babysitting for 10-yrold boy. Occasional wknd care req. Please contact Jytte (Uta) Cureton 706-1761. Find it FA ST in the Classifieds HELP W A NTEDG ENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL AMERICAN VALET CO. HIRING VALETS. Earn $7 to $12/hr. P/T eves or Day shifts. Must be clean cut, courteous & have a good attitude. Apply at American Valet Co., 34 W. Dunlap. (Directions from Tempe: Squaw Peak Freeway north to Glendale Ave, left to Central Ave., right to Dunlap Ave, go left. Look for American Valet about 1/2 block ahead on th e right.) Applications taken Mon-fri, 1pm - 4:30pm. Mall. Call 971-3830. ext. 16 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. SPR1NGTREE CONDO, 2 mstr bdr/ 2ba, M cClintock/ Broad­ way, avail 1/1/99, all appl, w/d, fridge, xlnt cond. $72k. Contact 515-1966. GOLF CLUBS for sale! Never been hit drivers and woods. Callaway Big Berthas, AVDP, Top Flite. Call BUI 517-1180 R g / U L J |l A r g ^ j BO O KS ROOM FOR Rent 3bd 2ba house w /pool baseline ft mill. $32(Vmo 650-342-3441, John FORECLOSED $$$ FOR BOOKS! 0 6 :V*t foreclosed hom es from pennies on $1. Delinquent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free 800-218-9000 Ext. H1676 for current listings. Cash or credit for your quality used books at Changing Hands Bookstore! 2 locations 414 M ill A ye,: 966-0203 ft SW cirner of M cClintock/Guadalupe: 730-0205 ROOM IN 3,0 0 0 sq.ft. 3bd home. A ll util. incl. Spa, w/d, dining, livin g, den, library, backyard deck. Baseline/Rural. $40Q/mo. Call 456-4189; ROOM WITH house privileges, microwave, w/d, $300/mo. 8297551, home or 965-3671. wik, GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1. D elin ­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. T oll free 8 0 0 -218-9000 Ext H-1676 for current listings. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL FLEXSCHEDULES ■FTS, FT Must be 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free ft pass background check. We offer • Medical/Dental benefits • TUition Assistance • Uniforms supplied ft maintained • Monthly, Quarteriy Bonuses C all Terry: 9 9 8 - 0 3 8 5 H IG G IN B Ö T H A M A S S O C IA T E S I ..... ............. ?-------------------------------- Yhe valley's fìtte si m arket research firm is expanding into Tempe (RttralJm BroadwayX We need individuals j j B f conduct telephone surveys; no selling. ¡ j with excellent benefits. Please fax resume to 783-4071 or mail to 8700 S. Kyrene Rd., Tempe, ÂZ 85284. AAktno Research Project Mgmt If you’re a personable indi­ vidual who enjoys servicing people, then we have the job to suit your temperament. It will suit your wallet too. With a free comprehensive train­ ing p ro g ra m , c o m p e titiv e salary, hospital/ dental insur­ a n c e , re tire m e n t b e n e fits and stock options, frequent recognition programs and a promote-from-within policy. By jo ining T e rm in ix y o u ’ll also becom e part of a fast growing Fortune 500 Service company. No experience is necessary. Just the desire to help peo­ ple, including yourself! Apply in person: 2400 W . Southern #102 Tempe, A Z 8 5 2 8 2 . or fax resume to 470-4509 Succe— Breada Success If I ’M *! Data Collection Data Processing IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE, YOU’LL LIKE THIS JOB TERMINIX. FOR SALE: Sleeper Sofa, like new! White w/blk fttan design, sleeps 2. $295 obo. 730-8341 Kyrene School Diatrict in Tempe seeks instructional smistante for special education students. F/T and P/T positions available Service Tech F/T & P /T lighting and electronic assembly work at Scottsdale Air Park IM MEDIATE AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to p e o p le and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort is the place to be! • Eve. Hro/Scottsdale Location A U T O M O g lL |S _ SOFA $199; bed $59; bunk bed $179; dinette $95; futon $119; dresser $59. 962-0749 68 VOLVO 122S-new tires, brakes, belts, hoses. $1500 obo., Scott @ 858-9372 WATERBED, QUEEN size, metal frame, good condition. $75 obo. 968-2060 74 VW BUG for sale!! Orange, body in great shape, interior too! 176K. Runs good. $2500 obo. 967-2481 COMPUTERS AMD K6 300 MMX Mini Twr, 64 SDRAM, 4.3 Gig HD, 32x CD Rom, I 5 \ 2 8 SVGA, Win98, Office '97 Pro, 56K mo­ dem, 16 bit sound, 2 M 3D vid eo, keyboard, m ouse, free deliv. & setup. $999. 839-8082 MONITOR SVGA 14" Brite, new $80. Epson Matrix printer in box $90. W ill deliver 996: 4817 85 BMW, at, ac, cc, pwr locks, new paint, tires won't last at this price, $3000.517-0298 85 DODGE C onvertible. A ll power, a/c, good mechanical condition-going back to school car, $2595.657-8700 88 HONDA Accord D X, 5spd, a/c, 2nd engine, only 85K. Very reliable, looks sharp, exc. car for studenL $3150obo. 675-9915 89 CELICA GT convert. Xlnt condition, a/t, a/c, new brakes, top, tires. $5900 obo. 596-3836 TICKETS BEASTIE BOYS-SEPT 7th Great lower level seats. Starting @$35. Call Steve 678-0932. AUTOMOgjL|S__ •91 FORD TEMPO, xint cond, 4-dr sedan, auto, ac, ps,pb, $2400 obo, 303-9848. '96 VW JETT A , 21,000 m l, 5 spd, ac, pi, pw, moonrf, spoil­ er, fogligh ts, $ 1 4 ,3 0 0 obo. 774-9877 94 VW Jetta GL-moonroof, pre­ mium sound, autom atic, low m iles. Sale priced at $10,988. C all C am elback VW at 2656600. 96 VW C abriolet- fu ll power options, immaculate condition, perfect top clown Phoenix cruis­ er! $16,988. Call Camelback VW @ 265-6600.. 39- JETTAS, G O LF£, ,94-'97, G LS i G TS , Treks; 30- '£$<92 Jettas; 2- '98 Passats; '98 GTI VR6; '98 Beetle, $18,995. AZV unauthorized VW dealer. LcSueur Car Co. 968-6611. 90 MITSUBISHI mirage sedan 4 dr, new eng. ft tires, at, cool ac, am/fm cass, alarm. $2950 call 839-2698. 91 FORD Aerostar-^Iightop, passenger cargo combo, a/c, a/t, high miles, $2995.657-8700 9 2 MERC. Capri X k f conv. 76k, a/c, pw, turbo, am/fm cass, cruise. $3500 obo. 970-3954 9 2 VW Jetta GLI, 16 valve, Mk, lowered, BBS rims, gray recaro seats, a/c, tilt# pw, tint, 102km. $8500 Amy 491-7640 9 4 JEEP WRANGLER, blue, 4cyl, power ft tilt steering, new 3 1 ” mud train tires, custom w h eels, cd, custom exhaust. $ 1 1 ,7 0 0 obo. A sk for Todd 730-5447 (eves). 95 HONDA C iv ic EX coupered, autom atic, power window s/lock s, tilt, cruise, moonroof, premium sound. Save at $11,988. Call Camelback VW @265-6600. HONDA CIVIC, reliable, lOOK, new clutch; $800 obo. Runs greaL Call Chase 578-7417 COMPUTERS YOU N EE D A COM PUTER! Scream ing system s a t prices students can affo rd . 4 6 8 -2 8 5 9 C A S H T O D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. L 874-3268 ' M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE - ^ M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE • N o Exp. Necessary $8/HR GUARANTEED +BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK 3 3 3 -0 1 0 3 Ask for Irene (Leave message for same day Interview) ' DRAFTING FURNITURE- F rie n d ly ^ We will offer: $7.00/hr. full time or Spanish bi-lingual FURNITURE • Big $$$$$$$$$ Dependable Motivated ~ HELP W ÀNTEDGENERAL AjnDjral: Worldwide Security Am o c . Inc. <27 South 48th S t >U5 Tempe 966-0141 Assem bler Jo b s-$8/h r. FURNITURE M ATTRESSES - QUEEN set $125, fu ll set $110, twins $89/set. In plastic, free deliv­ ery.649-2625. Security Officers ad Airport Security Officers M m w fflÊ K Ê m ■■.'■/¿v.: DOMINO’S PIZZA New/Used tablesall sizes. Chairs, lamps, accessories. D rafting Equipment W arehouse 1525 E. Apache (near McClintock) 8 5 8 -0 0 2 4 $6jO/hr. part time (12 or more hrs/wk) Flexible schedule to fit your U itern tM in & evenings) Friendly, relaxed „ atmosphere ,jS| SOW È.McDowell Excellent advancement lg possibilities : Suite 20S I Two week training Scottsdale « M efy p ay Come Join the Excitement with the #1 Delivery Team for the ASU Area! ■ sb W m 19Ê W S 3SL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL With the addition of hot wings, salads & breadsticks, this Domino’s is one of the top campus stores in the country. WE NEED • F/T & P/T Phone Help, Pizza Makers, Drivers • Drivers- $ 12-$16/hr. (including mileage and tips) • Safe Driving Gash Bonuses • Very Flexible Hours (around your school schedule) • Late Night & Lunch Shifts Especially Needed We support a drug-free work environment. mediately. yrmation call HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Apply In Person After 11am at: 903 S. Rural Rd. « Tempe Or Call 968-5555 EOE T h e C o o les t Job in T o w n Haagen Dazs Ice Cream at the Arizona Mills mall. Looking for Managers, Asst. Managers and Hourly Contact Brandon or Jerry at 491-9500, or E-mail BBEAR77041@ aoi.com ■ H AUTO M OBILES SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, C adil­ lacs, C hevys, BMW 's, C or­ vettes. A lso Jeeps, 4W D’s. Your area. Toll free, 1-800-2189 0 0 0 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. M O TO RCYCLES SUZUKI GS500-1994, purple, less than 10k m iles. $2950 obo. Call Kelly 225-0940 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL S8.05/HR Phone verifiers. No selling, no appt. setting. M-F, nó w ee­ kends. Start now. McClintock /Broadway location. 784-2270, • call now. . ' I M HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTED- HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W A NTEDGENERAL HELP W A NTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL BE A mobile DJ. PT weekends. Good income + OT & tips, 8208220. DISABLED MALE seeks re­ sponsible, dependable indi­ viduals to assist with personal care activities. Laid back envi­ ronment, great experience. Call 884-9283, Ask for Andy. F/T RECEPTIONIST/ASSiSTENT;' computer/phone skills, Tempe area fax resume to Jess Lucas 4914)718. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic Sc w illin g to learn new ways o f teaching kids ages 3-12. $8-$10/hr doe. 443-8817 HELP WANTED: P/T, nights, weekends, ice skate rinkguards, skate attendants, pizza cooks, retail equipment sales. Apply in person, daily 11 am-5pm. Oceanside Ice Arena, 1520 N. McClintock Dr., Tempe. LERNER NEW York at Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square is seek­ ing sales associates for it’s new store. A pplicants call A lysa Smith at 996-6140. Interviews held at Fiesta Mall. BILTMORE AREA lawfirm needs m essenger iirimed. for court filings/errands/generril of­ fic e duties, pt/flex hrs. Jill Bricker 468-8900 BUSINESS/ MKTNG: Get the exp with an int'l c o that w ill help you get ahead. Call 553-3193. BICYCLES GOOD USED bikes, approx 50mountaih, road Sc cruisers. $30$ 180 PgT 266-8720. H CHEVRON Foodmart now hiring Ft/Pt cashier. Wage DOE. Apply in person SW corner o f Rural/Ap­ ache or 7th st & Camelback, CAREER OPPORTUNITY- 20 yr old barter organization has openings for pt trade brbker & 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. DISC JOCKEYS AZ’s #1 mobile D.J. service is looking for DJ's (w ill train). Transportation & weekends a must. Earn $ 10-$20/hr. 9669900, call after 5pm. DRIVER, OWN veh icle PT mom., aft; ève. shifts avail. Ca^ lypso Couriers 756*1667. - fun peo ple EDUCATIONAL MAIL Order Co, has FT & PT positions in all depts.: cirsi, service; graphic design (MAC photoshop or Quark), w ebsite design, 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 eorp. that accom m odates - stu d en t. hours! Near ASU. 4384400 . CHASE IS hiring: Acct, Reps, C ollection R eps, GSR, Fraud Reps (Bilingual a +), Tele Sales Reps, Supervisors, Payments & ESTABUSttED BROKERAGE statements Serv. Reps, Admin firm seeks exp indiv to contact prospects to attend seminars. Assist. Great benefits, conveni­ No selling req; $8.50/hr. báse, ent schedule, up. to 100% tui­ AIDE NEEDED for student with potential o f $ 13/hr. Flex hrstion reimbursem ent, dwntwn CP, Contact Ian at 8$4-9437, days, ev es & Sat avail. Call Tempe w / free cov'd parking. Mike Hayes 952-6818. Apply in person, M-F 8:30amAPPTÒINTMENT S ETTERJS needed p/t, Competitive wages. , 4pm, or send resume (indicate EXC. OPP. avail, for students, position) to: Chase CardmemCindy. 646-73j85, ; w/good Writing skills Sc those bef. Services, 100 W .UniVers- . who enjoy using computers. If APPT SETTER $9/hrA- bònus! : you're a person who works Well ity Dr,, Tem pe, AZ 85281. Or FT/PT avail. Great Tempe loca- : w/o supervision,'this is an exc. apply •; Online (§> (ion. Contact Kim 517-1977 . opp. to earn up to $ 15/hr. ;Call wwW.chase.com. Jobline: 902-6000 705-7695 for info. ARIZONA SHORTS is looking O yE R N IG H T CLIENT Care to hire hard working & reliable F/T RECEPTIONIST/ Assistant, Worker fdr Girls group home in : sales a ss pc. Day arid evening Mesa P/T Fri.;Sc Sat. Must be . computer/phone skills,. Tempe . positions riVatlaWe. Apply at area; fax resume to Jess Lucas, v : 21+. Stacey or Mary, 854-8559 5th & Mill 966-9199,. 4914)718. COLD STONE Creamery„ 5th Sc ASSEMBLER JOBS- $8/hr FT M ill, is hiring strong, reliable; Sc PT lighting & electronic as­ sembly work at Scottsdale Air Sc fun employees. Must be avail: Parie Call Terry, 998-0325. wknds. Day Sc even positions avail. E xc tips.. A pply today! ATTENDANTS NEEDED for fe­ 921-7456. male in Quadrangle Apts. Must be 21 or over. w/. good driving DELI HIRING counter help & record. No lifting req'd. 7:30am sandw ich makers. M-F days. Lelnenkugels B a llya rd & Mon. afternoon & evenings. Phx/Tempe border. 921-7827 B rew ery a tth e Approx. 15 hrs/wk. Ellen, 968Sank One B a llp a rk DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now 6284 hiring courteous order takers Sc N o w H irin g expedient drivers.; Driven; must AZ GOLF pub. needs 5 writers have own car Sc. insurance. to write course review s and PT/FT. Extra $$. Call 2204)000 cover AZ g o lf events. E-mail to publi sher @ cactusgolf.com or A p p o in tm e n t S e tte rs fax clips to 303r432-9449. ADMIN. ANALYST PT for Real Estate finance firm. Accounting background prePd. $ 8 -1 0 / hr. Fax resum es to 4 2 5 -0 7 9 6 o r . call Debbie at 4254)795. AZ STATE Senate accepting ap­ plications for Pages for one im ­ mediate opening & the Legislati Ye session beginning in January. Call Tina 542-5969. Great job - No selling Great pay - $8-$1Q/hr. Great location - N ear campus Great bonus program Weekly cash incentives Great hours - AM/PM shifts 8 9 4 -9 8 8 4 NEW RESO RT RESERVATION CEN TER Coordinate Tours/Reservations V IT • Guarantee $7-$15.92/hr. • 37 Permanent Positions ■ •9-1 or 5:00-9:00 (24 & 3 0 t Hrs) • Training Provided, No Selling E lle n 491-4921 m a m t m m r ------- llH ÍPM P|W iáí \ W, m l Wtitttto, Nl úrtaHtiaj ih Ju li it CMfriphy (m »total fieli) to kelp dijitize tax girelli atto] Mattato. H t km 1-3 fatitieei enilekie, pert-tiae er fall-dim, fialidi, tekadala. Ceapetitive keerly salary. Plaata call Etkee al JtoixtM Uto Adriaara al N 7-M U ar a-mil aia at etkeirfHzleaLeea far mra lata. DISCOVER THE P EO P LE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! •Telephone O perator *0001(1811 Server • Host/Hostess • Spa Attendant • Receptionist • Bussers • Juice/Cotfee Bar Attend.' » Room Service Cashier • Pool Server F o r M o re I n to r m a tio h C a l l : 9 9 1 -9 6 7 0 Experience the benefits at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale: : • • • • • • M edical/D ental Insurance L ife Insurance 401 (k) Plan Vacation/Sick Pay T uition R eim bursem ent Free U niform s • C om plim entary Room Rates Applications are accepted Mon. 9arri-Noon and Tties. 3pm-6pm; . At the Human Resources Office 7500 E . Doubletree Ranch Rd. | Please enter at the’west end of the building j next to the loading dock. .] Certain positions may reciuira testing. Hyatt supports a drug free workplace. AA/EOE/M/F/D/V FILM INTERVIEWERS needed p/t to conduct surveys in per­ son about new major motion pictures. Must be seif-m o ti­ vated, w / excellent written & verbal, com m unication sk ills. Also looking for in-theater staff to help conduct periodic screen­ ings, Flex. hrs. mostly wknds. $8-$ 12/hr. Please call our jobline at 213-9334. for all kitchen positions and Hosts Up to $ 12 /h r! Open interviews M-F Non-game days between 3-4pm Come be a part of th e team in o ur 20,000 square foot restaurant located 20 yards from BA N K ONE BALLPARK Wanted! Appointment setters for U niversal Portraits, $7$12/hr. 777*:1054 GRADUATE STUDENTS & un­ dergraduate upperclassm en. High paying, campus-oriented, research related positions avail.' Flex, hrs., on campus during thè day. Pay range $7.50-$ 15/ hr.705-7695. GREAT JOB! Caregiver for active quad. 3-4 eves/w k . Seeking healthy, Smokè/drug free ass't. w / posi­ tive attitude. Good, pay, w ill .. train. Torn at 949-2789. Reliable students wanted to distrib­ ute materiale on campus. Flexible schedule $ 6 /h r CaU 705-7695 for more information Immediate Openings. YMCA seeks reliable, fun individuals, 18+ years, to work with kids. Full and parttime. Daycare teachers and assistants for kindergarten age, sports and after school counselors. Ahwatukee Foothills YMCA 3233 E. Chandler Blvd. GYMNASTICS COACH needed fA or p/t in central Sdotts. Leave message w/ Robin 991-6880. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Good w / children. Experience Sc enthusiasm a must, 8-20 hrs/wk. State's Top Gymnastics Program. 940-4041. GYMNASTICS TEACHER. En­ thusiastic, furi coach for 3-12 yr o ld s. E xp. pref. $8-12/hr. 955-7805. LOOKING FOR high energy, positive personal trainejrs, nu­ trition & sales people. Call Graceful Fitness, 893-8041. HOSTS/ BUSSERS and servers needed at Mike Pulo's Spaghet­ ti Co. on M ill Ave. in Tempe. Full Sc part-time avail. Stop by betw een 2-4pm at 411 M ill Ave. to pick up application. MALE DISABLED student in need o f personal care assistant. Contact Ian at 884-9437. HR RECRUITING Internship Available! Apply today: Enter-: prise Rent-A-Car. C all 9547500 or fax resume: 954-6811. MARKET RESEARCH-grow­ in g Tem pe com pany, several different positions. 967-4441 C h ia s s i f i e d s Classifieds WORKI Make your advertising $$$$ work harderI Put it in the Classifieds! N on-profit agency recruiting to conduct housing surveys, req 1-2 hrs each a t $25. A pplicants m ust be com ­ m itted to F air H ousing. Send nam e, address & telephone to 3431 W. T hunderbird, #13A, Phoenix 85053. ASU Downtown Center needs 1 or 2 student workers for classroom setup on afternoon shift o f 3pm - 6pm, T-W-Th. Occasional Saturday. Location is one block north o f Bank One Ballpark in downtown Phoenix. Own transportation needed. Parking provided. Some flexibility w ith class schedules accommodated. Primary duties: furniture moving, equipment, and beverage/snack setup & cleanup. $6.50-$7/hr. Call Cheryl or Sandra, 965-3046 FLEET SERVICES AIDE City of Chandler RESORT® RENT-A-CAR 3 openings for temporary, part-time : position driving City vehicles to dealerships. Two hour shifts morning and/or afternoon, M-F. F U N A N D E X C IT IN G T R A V E L IN D U S T R Y N O W H IR IN G Looking For: 1Aggressive Sellers • Customer Service City of C handler H uman Resources 25 S. Arizona Place • Competitive Personalities We Offer: Advancement Opportunities • Average S10-S12 per hour Suite 201 • Top sellers up to S20/hr • SS Big incentives, vacations Chandler, AZ 85225 602-786-2290 • Study at work • Comfortable working environment * Night and weekend positions available E-mail requests tor postal mailed application packets to joan.stoy® ci.chandler.az.us • Close to ASU at SKY HARBOR AIRPORT Call today for interview 220-0122 o r d ro p in a t 3700 E. W ash in g to n Welcome Back ASU students. Looking fo r a part time job? Come and check out the opportunities at the Sun Automotive Group in Scottsdale. We are looking for: \ Phoenix YMCA Now Hiring for Fall You’re iÆ S 7a • SS50 to $790plus bonus • Make your hours CaÄToday type! ow e h o Earn up to $192 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit our friendly, modem 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 participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate plasma. ■ lilppp®® ASU Siin D ial Fund 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 Tempe C é NTGON B i o - S 6 f v i c 0 8 , Inc. 968-6139 M usi be 18-49 years of age, possess a vald ID and proof of local address & Social Security number. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL MECHANICAL TECH ft/pt, some mechanical èxp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ s ir e d . Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. IS mins, to ASU. Flex. lire. Call 956-8200, days MORS NEEDED Spaghetti Company, 414 S. M ill Tempe 85281 M ail or fax resum e to 966-5265. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m/f needed immed. for nat'I com­ mercials/ print! 941-6922. MOTHER'S HELPER to run er­ rands, pick up kids, clean & grocery shop for busy mom. E xtrem ely fle x , w / schedule. Must have dependable trans­ portation. Sharon. 736-2628 C a ll 965-6735 to place your classified ad y HELP W A NTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL NEED WORK? Kyrene School District is seeking Club Leader positions working directly w / children ages 4 -1 1 . PT & FT positions avail, in the Tempe/Chandler area between the hours o f 6:30a-6:15p, M-F. Submit resume to: Kyrene School D istrict, 8700 S. Kyr­ ene Rd., Tempe, 85284 (comer o f Kyrene & Warner Rd.) dr fax to 783-4051 or visit our web site at: Www.kyreoe.kl2.az.us PAYROLL/ BENEFITS Admin­ istrator FT position, M-F, some Shts. Previous exp. preferred. Pay commiserate w/ exp. Please send resume to: Promark One, 3136 S. M cC lintock, Ste. 7, Tempe, AZ 85282. Fax: 60 2 777-8850. ProMarkOne.com P/T HELP for Tempe area print­ er. General w hse, flex . hrs. Good pay. Call 4 38-2219 Kathy P/T HELP wanted. Appt. set­ ting for free security alarm sys­ tem. M-F, 12-4pm or 5-9pm. Hourly com m . + bonuses. Call Mike. O'Shea, 507-9577. P/T PERSON needed to help w/ packing pharmaceuticals,, order checking & some data entry.; Must be dependable. Flexible hrs. Call 470-8119 (® ) Hilton Scottsdale Resort A m ia s ✓ R estaurant S e rv e rs B p iB p Resources ■ H lk a AM ✓ H ost/H ostess AM-PM Apply in person Mon-Fri, 9 am - 3pm a t the Scottsdale Hilton In th e H um an R esources Office . 6 3 3 3 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale. AZ 8 5 2 5 0 SALES ASSOCIATES wanted for AZ M ilts candy store, flex, hrs. Fun job,, good pay. Call Sweets from Heaven, 777-7307. r LIVE MUSIC K e ltic C o w b o y s S * » * hfe 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. RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe. Cindy, 777-1054. M & lfà fiÊ Ê K à iiÊ à È Ë Ê \ ASU. Survey telemarketing, no pressure presentation.- No exp. nee. Call for interview with Norm Gifford at 829-3460 Cu s t o m e r service/cashier eyes & wknds. Apply in person at Water 'n Ice at 314 I S . McClintock. PM - No Cover - SALES MGR, 3 aggressive sales people heeded by AZ dai­ ly g o lf pub tó mkt on-line adv to local business. Nwspr sales bckgrnd a +. Fax to Í 0 3 4 3 2 ? 9449. E-m ail to publisher@cactUsgolf.com SECRETARY/ RECEPT./ Ad­ min, Assist, for sports law firm. B ilingual p refd for filin g, phone & correspondence. 24th S t & Camelback, 957-0083 5th St. & Forest • 966-4438 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Sidney Om arr 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. STAR SEARCH New co. seek­ ing 5 people who want to make a change. Fun, freedom and finance. Call now, 690-5911. STUDENT COURIER: hours 12:30-4:30pm , M-F. Previous PERSONAL TRAINER-EXP driving exp. AZ drivers license req'd, p/t, 3:30pm -close, M-F, required. Call Distance Learn­ p ossible weekends. Call for • ing Technology, 965-6738. appt. 786^1020 STUDENT WORK! Up to ACROSS FROM ASU phone $8.90. Flex PT/FT sched. No sales, all reps make $300-$400 exp nec, All majors considered. p/t¿ 4 :3 0 -9 :00pm, M -F, start Scholarships available. Pho/ immed, 736-0034. Scottsdale 212-0551. E Valley/Ahw 844-1860. PT, M-TH 6-9pm ,$7/hr. Near p t /f t ^ tD c U A g e n , W ir*** PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/t, $ 8 .10/hr. ho exp nec. Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 P/T R.ECEPT., must be avail­ able holiday breaks. Icon Hair Archi text ure, Scottsdale Fash­ ion Square. 941-8656 W e are immediately hiring for: HELP W ANTEDGENERAL SHOW ME the money ! Are you earning $500/Wk.? Local mar­ ketin g company is hiring 6 people to fill direct; sales posi­ tions. Work evening hrs. pro­ moting local video stores & res-" taurants. Equals $20+ per hr. Call Tom at 460-0859. STUDENTS WANTED With good verbal & writing skills for wkly publication staff. Pt/ft pos, avail. $7.50-$l 5/hr. Flex hrs around your course sched avail., near ASU; 703-7695 THE SCOTTSDALE B oys & Girls C lub is hiring for Foun­ tain H ills branch and Grey Hawk Branch for team coordi­ nators and area directors. Please call Valerie at 816^1974TICKET AGENT: part-time af­ ternoons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): W hat you left behind w ill be returned, with slight embarrass. ment. Spotlight on love relation­ ship that grows warm, could lead to m arriage. M oon p o sitio n stresses publicity: GEM INI (M ay 21 -June 20): Co-worker stuns by whispering passionate words. Maintain equi­ librium, sense o f humor. You’ll be complimented on a job well done. D on’t make federal case out o f those whispered words. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Obstacle removed; love relation­ ship can continue minus pangs of, conscience. You have paid your dues. Be happy, creative. Open lin e s o f com m u nication with absent family member. LEO (July 23-Aug 22): Open dialogue with individual associ­ ated with real estate. Flirtation lends sp ic e , leads to cla sh o f id ea s and fin a lly to p o ssib le change o f marital status. Virgo involvedVIRGO (A ug. 23-S ep t. 22): Obtain hint from Leo message. S p o tlig h t on w here you l i ve, ability to beautify surroundings, en tertain in g g u est w ho plays m u sic a l instrum en t. Taurus, Libra persons are featured. L IB R A (S ep t 2 3 -O ct. 22): Steer clear o f one who promises som ething for nothing. Define terms, outline boundaries, give credence to ydur psychic impres­ sions. Pisces will play meaning­ ful role. , SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov: 21): Focus on priorities, lesponsibility o f overtime assignment. Short trip necessary f ? involves locate ing m issing legal docum ents. Capritmrn, Cancer natives figure in scenario. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21): R efu se to be mired dow n in details ^ gain overview, study language. Overseas adventure is . more than figment o f the imagi­ nation. Doubts erased t— you know you are loved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19); People tell you, "Stop living in the past. V Make fresh start, but refuse to erase marvelous rhemo; ries. Highlight style, panache, derring-do. Léo will, play dra­ matic rolé. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): People say, "Surprised to see you áre s till at hom e. " Response: " I ’m not going any­ where until I complete project.” Focus on ex citin g proposals, including partnership, marriage. PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): Approach people, situations with hu m o r—-- ingratiate y o u rself with Sagittarian who wants you to succeed: You’ll be entertained by one who transforms bright sayings into profundity. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTH­ DAY: You are perceptive, attrac­ tive, highly intelligent and exude an aura o f sex appeal. L eo, Aquarius persons play astound­ ing roles in your life, could have these initials, letters in names: A, S, J. Current cycle relates to trav­ e l, dealings with organizations, p eo p le in foreign land s. R elationship s are warm, and som e becom e heated, perhaps too hot not to c o o l dow n. November extraordinary . © 1998 T he Los Angeles Tim es Syndicate HELP W ANTEDr o o D ji^ ic ^ TELEPHONE SALES, setting appts. for sales rep. for water purification units. Working for major co. Make up to $250/w k., 4 hrs./day. Call Jerry at 829-9255. Aqua Chill HlRING P/T waitstaff at Pete's 19th Tee, 1405 N. Mill Ave. at the Rolling Hills G olf Course. I mi. N. o f Mill Ave. bridge. WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, ft/pt, base + comm., benefits, drug-free work­ place. A pply in person only, Space A ge, 707 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa. ADMIN. ASST., phone/clerical pt mornings $ 7 .5 0 p/hr 52nd st & Univ. Call 968-3360. OFFICE MGR- must be posi­ tive,. personable, and have com -. ’ puter knowledge. P/T $7-9p/hr doe. Call 443-8817. > PARTTIME OFFICE work, Tues and Thurs. 9-5, Computer exp pref Apply @ 3100 S Ru­ ral. PABTTIME RECEPT/TYPIST Tues. and Thurs, needed. Flexi­ ble to m eet your school schedNear ASU! Need reliable trans. for errands. Emily @ 967-1405. US GOV’T Jobs hiring now entry le v e l to advance p osi­ tions. Paid training, benefits. $ ll- $ 3 3 /h r Call free 1-800406-1434 x 938. T RECPT./ SECRETARY - small Scottsdale law office. Need com­ puter sk ills. Varied duties. 95pm, Tues. & Thurs. 990-9586 WAITSTAFF FOR fun neighbrhd sports rest/bar, 3-4 shifts p/w, good$, busy & stable. Apply the W oodshed H D obsonAJniv. HELP W ANTEDSALES S400AVK. EZ 25 hrs., 4pm-9pm, casual, fun atmosphere. Tempe, 966-8410. FRESH START: Motivated peo­ ple needed to open new offices. Travel, training avail. No exp hec. Call 840-9282 S tu d e n ts : Webmaster 8 c Web Editor needed! Join the ASU Student Media Web Team A pplications available at the State Press reception desk, basem ent of M atthew s C enter or c a ll Ju lie , 965-0982 for d e ta ils SERVERS NEEDED ASAP. Ft/ pt days avail. Flex. hrs. Great $. Dwntwn Phx, near Ballpark. Call 252-4682 for interview. Needs team players w / right at­ titude. Top wages + incentive. ADMIN. ASST, needed to sup­ - Flex, schedules, no weekends, nights or holidays. FT & PT port grow ing high-tech co. positions avail. If ready to have Comp, literate & self-motivated. fun, call 453-0842. Fax res: Atm: Valerie 829-7704 PERSONAL ASST- Scottsdale real estate o fc . Exp'd in MS Word, E xcel, Quicken would help. Good handwriting & spelling. Hex hrs. 951-8666. WAITSTAFF FOR fun neighbrhd sports rest/bar. 3-4 shifts p/w, good$, busy & stable. A pply the W oodshed II DobsohAJuiv. RUBY T U ESDA Y S, 4843 E Ray Rd. Hiring servers, cooks, hosts & bartenders. 940-3504 SPORTS DELI HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights & w eekends, fun job , 947-6562. 2013 N . Scottsdale Rd. ■. y ;.v-. ■;.. Friday, August 28, 1998 ARIES (March 21^ApriI 19): Scenario spells adventure- Focus on travel, language, temporary separation from one who means so much to you. You’re due for fresh start, greater freedom o f thought, action. HELP W ANTED* SALES HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE THE LANDMARK Restaurant. Great pay for s e lf m otivated cooks. F/T or P/T positions available. Call 962-4652, 809 •W. Main in Mesa. HELP W ANTEDC H ILD CARE BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ dise V alley M all, $8/hr, own transp. needed. 788-6333. CHILD CARE in my Tempe "home. M -F 3-6:30pm . 2 kids ages 7 & 10. Deb 966-2263 CHILD CARE needed 3 days /w k (2 -fu ll days, 1-h lf day), trans req. 820-3772. CHILD CARE provider needed, II :30am-5:30pm, T & Th, our home. Refs req. Kristi 947-9499 BABYSITTER NEEDED, flex, hrs., own. trans., Camelback & 24di St. 957-0772. LOOKING FOR p/t child cafe assist., M-Th: 1-5; F: 8:30-5. Call 838-4271, Kim, NANNIES NEEDED, full & parttime, in my home for twin 4 yr. old boys. 952-2059. CORK'NCLEAVER A ccepting apps. for lunch; NANNY NEEDED 30-40 hrs/ host(ess), lunch food server & wk. in 32nd St/Shea areav Reli­ dinner cocktail. Will train, p/t. able transp. needed. 945-9559 Concern w / appearance, reli­ or 493-7574. ability & personality are im­ portant. Apply in person M-F, NANNY needed for 6 mo old ,2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. ■ baby. Mon-Thurs 9 to 4. Close 44th S t (952-0585) to ASU . $6 p/hr. Exp and ref­ erences req'd. Call 829-9411. COUNTER HELP, bussers. Cooks needed- All shifts avail­ NANNY able. Stop by between 2-5 M-F Working mother of 2 (6 & 4yr for application. Mama's Pizzeria, , olds) needs creative, fun loving 106 E. Uhiversity Drive (con; person, M-TI], 2:45 - 6-7pm . Myrtle). Good trans req, $8/hr. + gas$. Patty 840-5751 (eyes). DELI WORKER needed at busy cafe. M-Th, 7-2, 2-8 & 4P/T CHILDCARE in my home 8, & Sat: 7am -lpm . O ff Uni­ before/after school + some over­ versity. $6-$6.50/hr. Call 96’7nights; C onsider live^ih. For ■141* ■v-. V;info call, 897-82001 VDILLY S DELI: Busy D eli PT N A NNY wanted. Start needs day help. Ask for Leanne immed. Tempe family-2 girls, 4 or Nicole @ 491-1196 or apply & 5. M-F,. 2-6pm . Must h a v e ;; in person after 2pm. transp. & r e f s. $5/hr- Call the Clarks; 730=6402. THE LANDMARK Restaurant. Friendly, team-orientated food , TAKE CARE o f 2yr. old twins servers ,needed. F/T or P/T, to & 4yr. old. P/T, flex sched, earn $ 11 -$ 16+/hr. Call 962good pay, own trans. CPR & 4652; 809 W; Main in Mesa. FA cert. Exp. pref. 3r2nd St.,/ : Shea. Lauren/Steve. 788-6838 NOW HIRING exp'd line WORKING MOTHER o f 4 cooks, bussers & dishwashers. needs help, M-F from 3-7pm. A pply in person AZ Road­ Car provided for the children. house & Brewery, 1120 E. Ap­ $8/hr. 840-1006 ache Blvd, 929-9940. INTERNSHIPS RESTAURANTS/ BARS FALL INTERNSHIP in financial district at Sutro Sc Co. in Scot­ tsdale, Motivation & articulate speaking skills required. 423-2272 ! W O O D SH ED I ! RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS j*O W #s tn e W > b o rtK » d t» rin > Tem pe - Est. 1979 !• N ew Times award winner ¡• C h e a p B e e r & $ 1 .2 5 Shots !♦ MLB-ESPN Game P lan-N Ft ¡•G re ek s W elcom e- 3 pool ! tSbteS X' >'> ] ! ! ì I f !♦ 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE ! ¡ Sun. & Mon. ! HAPPY H 8 3 1 -W O O D Baseline & Mill 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. RESTAURANTS/ BARS I ': # •6 JO B “ OPPORTUNITIES COACHES heeded, after school sports 4th-$th graders. Avail. 36pm M-Th. Call 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 $250/SÀ L E - $25 star-t-up. Computers-Internet-Web pages. C all Robb or Jim 258-9308. wwW; vibc.cmn/fip 1.html CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader, com RESTAURANTS/ BARS CROCODILE CAFE has imme­ diate opening for host p osi­ tion. $6.50/hr + tips & food runners Apply at 525 S. M ill Ave, Tempe. MILL AVE. Beer C o.- J.W. Dundee's Honey Brown Lager, 990, 8-1 lpm , Wed. 605 S. MiUAve. RUTH'S CHRIS Steak H ouse has openings now for hostess & busser. A pply daily, 2pm4pm. Exp. preferred, p/t even­ ings. 2201 E. Camelback Rd. STOCKYARDS R ESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. Apply in person, lp m -5pm, Mon.-Fri. 5001 E. Washington. SUNNY'S PIZZA In house & delivery positions avail. Flexi­ ble hours, fun atmosphere. Come join the Sunny's team. Apply, at .1301 Ê. University, 968-6666. M U S IC ACOUSTIC GUITAR student needed to accom pany Jew ish . R enewal Synagogue in NE Phoenix/PV area at Holiday and occassional Shabbat serv­ ices. Call Richie Andler 996-4959. FOR GOD S SAKE call nowBass player needed for SwingC ountry thing. Together We can pay the rent. Call 202-7169. SEIZED CARS from $175. Porsehes, C adillacs, C hevys, BMW’s, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free, 1800-218-9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings: FREE ~ LO ST/FO U N D FOUND: SMALL portable radio on campus Monday night. Please call 949-8502; Describe radio and possible locations lost. PERSONALS LOOKING TO adopt a boy named B illy. If you have a boy named B illy then please call 482-2463. SERVICES LOOKING FOR Spanish tutor. 2 eve's a wk. Call Matey 413-9898 MATH TUTOR I S af s f |F ; 1301 E. University • Tempe • 968 -6 6 66 INTERNSHIP: MUST have de­ sire for career in financial serv­ ices. Learn all facets o f busi­ ness. Serious inquiries. Ron Willoughly, 912-5127. TUTORS Ch o ic e : PIZZA^&^ASTA) INTERN @ Merrill Lynch, work w /financtal consult, doing re­ search, m ailing, woodshop prep, telem rkting, etc. Great exp. for resume. Call Chris 8986654 FREE PAGERS & cell phones. Cellular airtime low as 40. We activate pagers. 966-1203 re e ! r Bottle ^ & Shots INTERNSHIPS d e u v e r ÿ 9 6 6 -6 3 3 9 I tutor A lgebra, Precalculus, Calculus, Statistics, Finite Math & more. Andrew; 730-5904 Find it F A S T in th e C la ssifie d s ¡m ¡¡ SEE MOVIES FREE A strological Institute 423-9494 Read the State Press for free passes to some great advance screenings of soon to be released movies! Astrology combined with psychology ina two-year diploma program. Call now for a Fall Catalog U.. THESES DISSERTATIONS TERM PAPERS RESUM ES APPLICATIONS A PA /l-day Service Kathy@262-5454 Sprint PCS... The Clear Alternative to C ellu lar"1 Beeper Arizona 3510 W. Bell 548-1379 Beeper One 1751E. Broadway -Tempe 829-8801 THE PIZZA ALTERNATIVE Grilled Subs «Hot Wraps* Rice Bowls »Wings Open late Th.,Fri., Sat til 2am 403 W. University (Just west of Mill) SAMMY"S DUI-CRIMINAL Member: National College of DUI Defense No 'N o money dow n' scams ED Loss—Atty Tempe 258-7800 Glendale 931-6362 DUIs CAN BE BEATEN 'Friends d on't let friends plead guilty' BAZILLIONS OF POSTERS BE THE LIFE OF THE PARTY PAINTBALL! Party Decorations, Rent Costumes, Theatrical MakeUp, Novelty Gags, Wigs, Clown Apparel. 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