G a m b lin g on A S U a th le tic s d o e s n ’t p a y Sports betting is focus of seminar at Gammage By Steph a n ie Paterik Sta te Près» Ofelia Madrid o f th e S tate Press Malcom Lightner, a graduate student in fine arts photography, selects photos for his project. Lightner was recently selected to partici­ pate in the Telluride Film Festival. Colorado film festival features photography student’s w orks guests and personal influences. -This is not the first time attention has been given to Lightner’s work. He already has a bachelor’s degree.in Malcolm Lightner’s world is filled 'with images. fine arts, and his photographs have been featured in gal­ So is his house. In one comer, a bookshelf houses his library of video leries in the Valley and Savannah, Ga. He is also the tapes. In the other, a home theater system waits. recipient of numerous grants and awards. In October, Lightner’s photographs will be featured Photographs emphasizing the distinction between light and dark clutter his walls and floor —- the aftermath of his recent in a five-minute video at the Harry Wood Art Gallery. The exhibit is a visual narrative in three separate search for submissions to the Telluride Film Festival. video tracks, similar to looking at.three adjacent screens The search was not in vain. Lightner’s photography and dedication to his work at once, representing the past, present and future -of have helped him become the first student to represent Lightner-reuniting with his father in Texas. “It’s been a long time and I’ve traveled some’ very ASU at the Telluride 25th Anniversary Film Festival Symposium, which begins Wednesday in Telluride, Col. serious terrain,” he said. There is no dialogue, and. the soundtrack consists of an and continues through Monday. “They’ve really gone out of their way to establish a cacaphonic orchestra of “found” objects such a$ a car’s-gas tank and a rusty cheese grater, Lightner said the sound rep­ program for students,” he said. The 28-year-old photography graduate student will resents the them&of the f i l m ‘‘ajourhey-frottrthe exter­ take part in a series of intensive screenings and discus-' nal to the internal” -*- as it seems aLfiist td come from out­ side the exhibit and work its way Slowly inbo the film. sions with filmmakers and directors. Lightner said the state-of-the-stt, technology, such 3s He joins about 50 other students who submitted the nonlinear digital editing sjstdm He worked with at essays and samples of their work. “The process will involve less sleep or vacation time Scottsdale Community College, were essential to pro­ than work,’’ Lightner said. ducing his film. “So much technology is in the work that we directly But Lightner doesn’t seem to mind, because he will have the opportunity to meet Peter Bogdanovich, direc­ linked to conceptual elements,” he said. “It’s a hell of a tor of The Last Picture Show, among other celebrity treat” to work with such equipment, he added. By Jayson Peters State Press Michael Franzese, an infamous organized crime fig­ ure, asked ASU athletes to learn from his mistakes and re fra in from sp o rts g am b lin g M onday n ig h t at Gammage Auditorium. Franzese claims he was involved in organized crime in Brooklyn for 14 years and was heavily involved in gambling, particularly with athletes. “You need to realize that college athletes are targets to organized crime,” Franzese said. “I personally tar­ geted athletes, and it ruined a lot of people’s lives and futures.” His message came nine months after ex-ASU basket­ ball players Stevin “Hedake” Smith and Isaac Burton pleaded guilty to fixing games to settle Smith’s $10,000 gambling debt to a fellow student in 1994. “All athletes (were) required to attend the presenta­ tio n ,” said Betsy M osher, senior associate athletic director. “We are not sponsoring this because we think our athletes are involved in gambling, but we do know that it’s happened before and’ we need to keep our heads up.” ' Smith and Burton made tens of thousands of dollars fri î 994 bj^intentionally failing to score enough to cover the point spíeád. After getting caught, they were both cut from thëir professional teams, and the ASU basketball team had to retroactively fo rfeit its two NCAA Tournament wins in 1995. Benny Silman, the former ASU student who masterminded the point-shav­ ing scheme, was sentenced in January to 46 months in federal,prisQn>v" \6 Gambling has not only been an issue, at ASU, but at colleges across the nation. According to the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the FBI projected in 1995 that $2.5 billion was illegally gam bled on the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, a figure second only to the Super, Bowl. The University’s Intercollegiate Athletic Depatment has made it a priority to educate students about the real­ ities arid dangers: of gambling, according to Mosher. ‘•íFranzesérs presentation is part of our gambling edu­ cation series,’’ she said. FBI agents spoke to freshmen athletes during orien­ tation about gambling and fixing games. “Every college in the world has gambling going on,” Franzese said. “But you need to realize how seriously the NCAA and ASU are taking gambling.” State Press Sports Editor Ed O d e v e n contributed to this story. Rules unclear for bachelor degrees, provost says By Lid ia E. K elly State Press Defining the meaning of a bachelor’s degree and setting rules for receiving it should be the major task for the University in the current academic year, said ASU Provost Milton Glick. Glick, who spoke at the opening ses­ sion o f the A cadem ic Senate, said the present system of distributing bachelor’s degrees lacks clarity. ASU often allows stu d en ts who have a m ajo rity o f the required 120-credit-hours earned at dif­ ferent educational institutions to gradu­ ate. . ■■ “Unless we have clear rules on receiving bachelor’s degree,” Glick said, “we are not in a very good position (to m andate a majority of credits at ASU).” : He also said ASU should be assessing the rolë o f the main campus among the other two campuses, the marketing of the University and ASU’s relation to other providers of higher education. W illiam Davey, A cadem ic Senate President, said the Senate is going to work on the initiatives Glick presented. “Typically what we do in these kinds of issues we will have people look at them,” Davey said. “And during the next six months, we will collect as much informa­ tion as we can to see what we can do.” Overall, the year is going to be less complicated than others, he said. But it may get tough at times as the Senate is responsive to the ideas o f the Arizona Board of Regents. Nearly a quarter of 114-member body was absent from the opening session, but despite absent members, Davey, who has been affiliated with the senate for 13 years, said he is optimistic about the senators’ involvement in projects. “The first Senate meetings are usually a little slow in terms of attendance,” he said. “But the work of the Senate goes in the committees. People’s participation in their committee’s work is excellent.” NM HHM M M WÊKÊÊMÊKÊHHÊÊKHtÊÊBÊÊÊMÊÊÊÊH ••••] Campus clubs and organizations may submit w ritten e n trie s to th e S tate Press in th e basem ent o f th e Matthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone o r via fox. Deadline fo r requests is noon the day before publica­ tion and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. O nly one entry p er organization per day is perm itted. Entries must contain the full name o f the club o r organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete o r illegible entries w ill be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events print­ ed as a service to the ASU community. Requests ate accepted on a first-com e, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • A rizo n a O u tin g C lub — A general meeting will be held in the M U Pima Room at 7:30 p.m. • B aptist S tu d en t U nion — A worship service with speaker and free ice cream afterward will be held at 1322 S. Mill Ave. at 8 p.m. • H ille l Jewish S tu d en t C e n te r — Tuesday lunch, w ith Israeli/Middle Eastern food, will be served from 1 1:30 a.m. to I p.m. at 1012 S. M ill Ave. Cost is $2.50 fo r students and $3.50 fo r non students. • M arriag e and Fam ily T h erap y C lin ic — Individual, couple and family therapy is available fo r students, fac­ ulty and staff in the Cowden Family Resources Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 fo r m ore information. • M U A B R ecreation C o m m itte e — The first m eet­ ing o f the year w ill be held on the third floor o f the M U at 2:30 p.m. ■ O m eg a D e lta Phi — Rush tables will be set up on Cady Mall all week. • Phi A lp h a D e lta — The pre-law fraternity will hold the first meeting, fo r actives only, at 3 p.m. in the Life Sciences Building room 163. • P h ilip p in e-A m erican Students A ssociation — A State Press for Tuesday, S eptem ber 1 ,1998 Flight 800 investigators asked to hand in evidence fo r civil case By Larry N eumeister A ssociated P ress NEW YORK (ÀP) -— A judge has ordered the FBI and the National Transportation Safety Board to turn over docu­ ments from die probe of the TWA Right 800 explosiori to Boeing Co. and other participants in civil litigation. U.S. District Judge Jed R akofFs order, made public Monday, requires the agencies to release witness statements, summaries and other documents. The government will be per­ mitted to withhold witness names and personal information, Boeing spokesman Russ Young said the Seattle-based company was pleased to be able to view the files. “We think it’s important we have access, to all available information, which we think is a view shared by everyone interested in what happened and why,” he said. Boeing is a defendant in a lawsuit brought by some of the families of the 230 victims of the July 17, 1996, explosion o f the Paris-bound je t shortly after it left Kennedy International Airport in New York City. . j The civil trial was riot expected to start before next summer. The causé of the explosion has not been clearly defined by tile government despite an unprecedented civil arid Crim­ inal investigation. The FBI said a year ago that it had found no evidence to conclude terrorism or sabotage was behind the explosion of the Boeing 747 flight. The NTSB said it is centering its investigation on the possibility that a situation such as an electrical short and overheated gas-fuel mixture combined to touch off an explosion of the center fuel tank. Form er first dog Rex dead a t 13; was fixture o f Reagan presidency LOS ANGELES (AP) — Former first dog Rex, who made the Reagan White House his home, died Monday. He was 13. Rex died o f com plications from an enlarged heart and will be buried at Rancho del Cielo, Ronald and Nancy Reagan’s former ranch outside Santa Barbara in the Santa Ynez Mountains, said spokeswoman Joanne Drake. ‘ Rex, a King Charles Cavalier spaniel bom Dec. 16, 1984, came as a C hristm as present in 1985. It was reported at the time that Rex was a gift from the presi­ dent to his wife, but the dog was really a gift from com- w e lc o m e back m eetin g w ill be h eld in th e M U Coconino Room 224 at 5:30 p.m. • Rugby C lub — Practices are held every Tuesday and Thursday at the ASU bandfields, Sixth Street and Rural Road. Call 425-0783 fo r m ore information. State Press t ¥ 1 mentator William Buckley, Drake said. Once, in 1986, Reagan was heading off to a weekend at Camp David when he was confronted by questions shouted by reporters about threats from Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. The president grinned and pointed to the brown-andwhite spaniel straining at the end o f a leash. “Guard dog,” Reagan declared. In January 1989, ju s t a few days before G eorge B ush’s inauguration, W hite House staffers gave the departing Reagans farewell gifts, including a replica of the White House for Rex. L etters to th e E d ito r Diversity o f opinion and response. E-m ail: shades@ im ap4.asu.edu S T U D E N T S KNOW HOUR R IG H T S According to the guidelines of the Fam ily Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, University policy permits the release of directory information about any student who has not indicated that the information should not be released. Directory (releasable) information includes the following: BIG ED • Assassin • $13.99 •Student Name •Local and Permanent Address •Local Telephone Number •D a te and Place of Birth •Citizenship • Degrees and Awards Received • Residency Status •Academ ic Level •M ajor •College • Dates of Attendance • Participation in Officially Recognized Activities/Sports •W eight/Height of Members of Athletic Teams • Most Recently Attended Institution There are three primary ways through which your personal directory information can be released to anyone who wants it: LAURYN HILL • Miseducation of Lauryn Hill • $13.99 • Publication in the Arizona State University Directory, both the paper and WEB version,'which is automatic unless you take steps to prevent it. • Response to a request over the telephone or in person at the Registrar's Office, unless you take steps to prevent it. • Sale to an outside individual or agency, unless you take steps to prevent it. R E L E A S IN G T H IS IN F O R M A T IO N IS Y O U R C H O IC E . H E R E 'S H O W Y O U C A N P R E V E N T IT F R O M B E IN G R E L E A S E D . If you do not want your directory information released, you must fill out a non­ release card and submit it as soon as possible to Records Information or to any Registrar Site. MORE HITS ON SALE TOO! Locatori in the lower level of the Memorial Union 727 • USED T o prevent you r n am e and o th er p ersonal inform ation from b e in g p rin te d in th e 1 9 9 8 -9 9 A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity Directory, preventive action m ust be taken no later than 4 p.m . Friday, Septem ber 1 1 ,1 9 9 8 . In-person questions may be directed to Registrar staff in Records Information (Student Services Bldg. B 114) or in any R egistrar Site, Business BA 141, Undergraduate Academic Services Building UASB 140, Social Science SS 104, ASU-W est's Registration Services UVCTR 120, or to ASU East OASIS site (Academic Center Building). Telephone questions may be directed to Registrar staff at 965-3124. H U R R Y ! D E A D L IN E IS S E P T . Ill) W o r ld / N a t io n ill Si&SSs SSS c4A\ :&ä v Sate Pres fo r Tuesday, S e p te m b e r I. I t W É ffiH H H I M M I illlB IS IIIlI IS li V -Ì S to ck m a rk e t nosedives, w iping o u t 1998 gains By Bruce M eyerson A ssociated Press NEW YORK — The Dow industrials plummeted a near-record 512 points today, tumbling below 8,000 for the first time in seven months and more than wiping out the remnants of all of this year’s gains. The Dow Jones in d u strial av erag e, which rose 43 points in the opening min­ utes of trading, finished with a loss of 512.61 at 7,539.07. Trading was extremely heavy, with volume surging above 900 mil­ lion shares in a last-minute selling spree. It was the second-largest point drop ever, closely trailing the record 524.26 points of Oct. 27, 1997 and just above the 508-point “Black Monday” swoon of Oct. 19. 1987, when the market had its biggest percentage fall, a tumble of 22.6 percent. T oday’ s loss w as 6.4 percent, the biggest daily percentage drop since last October. In last week’s global stock market . rout, the Dow plunged 481.97 points, or by 5.6 percent, its biggest percentage drop for a calendar week since 1989. In the sharp selloff today that gained momentum in the final hour, the Dow gave up the last of this year’s gains. It ended 1997 at 7,908.25. The last time the Dow closed below 8,000 was on Jan. 30. The la s t tim e it was this low was Nov. 13, 1997. Broader indicators also plunged and the Nasdaq composite index lost a record 140 points, or 8.6 percent, as traders scrambled out of once high-flying technology shares. At July’s peak, when the Dow was at 9,337.97, it had been up 18.1 percent. The drop of 19.3 percent from the July record is the biggest retreat since a 21.2 percent slide triggered by the Persian Gulf crisis in the summer and fall of 1990. In the heady bull market that began in O ctober 1990 and saw the Dow nearly quadruple, setbacks were routinely viewed as buying opportunities. Lately, however, traders have been Viewing any attempts at a recovery as a selling opportunity. Doubts about R ussia’s economic and political stability kept pressure on financial markets around the world. Russia’s parlia­ ment today overwhelmingly rejected the Ed Bailey o f th e A ssociated Press Passersby look at a oversized stuffed teddy bear chained to the rear leg of the bull statue near the New York Stock Exchange Monday. The toy bear, apparently a reference to the threat of a bear market how facing Wall Street, apppeared mysteriously over the weekend. The Dow Jones industrials were still deeply into nega­ tive territory Monday amid news of a parliamentary showdown in Russia and North Korea’s apparent firing of a missile over part of Japan. appointment of Viktor Chernomyrdin as prime minister. Share prices fell in Europe, undercut by Wall Street’s sharp morning retreat. Major stock indexes fell sharply earlier in Hong Kong and Singapore, but Japan posted a modest gain after dropping to a 12-year low Friday. In Europe, a key index of German stock prices closed down 2.3 percent and leading m arket gauges also finished low er in F rance, Italy , S w itzerland and the Netherlands. M arkets in L ondon, the larg est in Europe, were closed for a holiday. Hong K ong’s key Hang Seng Index sank 5.7 percent in the first seven minutes of trading today and ended the day with a 7.1 percent decline, falling 554.70 points to 7,275.04. In Singapore, the benchmark index fell 28.83 points, or 3.25 percent, to a new low of 856.43 after ending below the 900-point level on Friday for the first time in 10 years. H ow ever, stock prices rose on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, where the bench­ mark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average gained 192.26 points, or 1.38 percent, to close at 14,107.89. Elsewhere in Asia, the key stock index in Taiwan fell 2.8 percent to finish at a 22- Britons, royals remember Diana By Kristin G azlay A ssociated Press LONDON — With thousands of flowers, heartfelt notes and hymns in London’s great cathedrals, Britons marked the first anniversary of Princess Diana’s death Monday. Her somber young sons and tire royal family prayed together, away from public eyes. Wearing black ties as a symbol of their mourning, Prince William, 16, and Prince Harry, 13, entered the tiny stone church near Balmoral Castle in Scotland flanked by their father. Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth II and other royal relatives. In London, outside the palace where Diana lived, and in Paris, near the mouth of the traffic tunnel where she died in a car crash, crowds gathered to pay their respects or merely to view the spectacle. Many left behind flowers, stuffed animals and lovingly rendered portraits of the princess, just as they did — though in vastly larger numbers — in the days after her death. “It’s the thing to do,” said Maureen Poole of London, clutching a bunch of carnations at Kensington Palace. ‘To just come when she dies and to never come again, especially this first year, would seem empty.” At Diana’s ancestral home in Althorp, 75 miles north of London, her brother, Earl Spencer, and her sisters, Lady Sarah McCorquodale and Lady Jane Fellowes, planned a service overlooking her burial site on an island in an orna­ mental lake. More than 1,000 people packed London’s Westminster Cathedral for a special afternoon Requiem Mass, while St. Paul’s Cathedral — site of Diana’s 1981 marriage to Charles — scheduled an evening service for the public. Hundreds also flocked to Harrods department store to sign books of condolence for owner Mohamed A1 Fayed, whose son Dodi was Diana’s boyfriend and died with her in the crash. It has been a horrendous day,” said A1 Fayed, who min­ gled with visitors to Harrods after spending the morning with his family at his son’s tomb on the family estate at Oxted, 20 miles south of London. “I just came here because thousands of people were waiting for me.” In deference to Diana, the queen ordered the national flag, the Union Jack, to be flown at half-staff Monday on government buildings and royal residences. Findby K em ber o f th e A ssociated Press Jo Nicol, standing, wipes away a tear as she and her daughter Lisa, kneeling, look at the floral tributes at the gates of Althorp H ouse, N ortham ptonshire, M onday. M onday was the first anniversary of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales who is buried in the grounds of the family estate. month low and prices fell 1.4 percent in Australia, but stocks ended up 1.8 percent in South Korea. Across Asia, Europe and the Americas, many stock markets fell by big percentages last week. That left some people wondering if the year-old Asian financial crisis, and the recessions it has caused in regional pow erhouses such as Japan and Hong Kong, could spread to the West and sour its economies. On Sunday, Japan’s ch ief economic planner, Taichi Sakaiya, proposed an emer­ gency sum m it o f m ajor in d ustrialized countries to address the chaos roiling world financial markets. India: Floods strand 1.5 million villagers By H ema Shukla A ssociated Press NEW DELHI, India — Overwhelmed rescue workers battled floodwaters Monday that have swept away entire villages and left some 1.5 million people marooned in northern India, officials said. At least 32 people drowned in Uttar Pradesh state Sunday and Monday and 34 others died in a cholera epi­ demic caused by the flood, state official Ram Kumar Yadav said. The death toll from more than three weeks of flooding stands at 1,086. Aid workers pulled bloated bodies from the turbulent waters Monday. But they found no trace of 20 isolated hamlets submerged in the unending stretch of water in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state and one of its poorest. Jeetendra Singh, a government administrator in the town of Gorakhpur, at the center of the disaster area, said an esti­ mated 1.5 million villagers were trapped by floodwaters. Authorities were trying to fly in at least 300 sturdy motorboats from Calcutta and Bombay on air force planes. Only 11 motorboats were in use, Singh said, forcing search teams to use hundreds of old cracked rowboats. . Thousands of acres of crops were submerged, along with tens of thousands of homes. Officials had not begun estimating the amount of damage to property and livestock. Singh admitted the administration was overwhelmed by the magnitude of the problem. Rescue work has been slow, he said, but several hundred residents have been brought to dry areas and were being housed in government shelters. “The destruction is so overwhelming that rescue efforts seem futile,” said Kripa Shankar Pandey, a reporter who lives in Gorakhpur. Being ftinky, groovy may 1 com e back to haunt us j Aww . . . freak out! For anyone who hasn’t been paying attention to popular culture the past few years, here’s a news flash; ’70s revival is alive and kicking — in platforms or clogs, preferably. Everything from m ovies to m usic, TV to fashion is reflecting the resurgence o f ’70s flavor. Want to see the life o f a ’70s porn star? Check out Boogie N igh ts — and try not to feel intimidated, guys. Curious about sex, drugs, rock and roll and “the glamorous life” o f the ’70s N ew York City club scen e? Park your butt in front o f the newly-released 54. If m usic’s your bag, baby, then there’s at least a dozen com p ilation sets out there — Pure Disco, Sounds o f the ’70s and numerous ‘ soundtracks, including the infamous Saturday Night F ew TV is loaded with ’70s program m ing for j your v ie w in g pleasu re — i f reruns o f The B rady Bunch or C h a r lie ’s A n g els a r e n ’t enough, now Fox has That ’70s Show, which not only glorifies the era o f Andy Gibb, but j makes fun o f it, too. Fashion is dominated by ’70s -based cloth- ; ing with a ’90s twist. Platform sneakers, bellbottom jeans, halter tops, butterfly collars and anything with Koundstooth print are “all the rage.” That is, if you shop at Contempo and read Glamour D o’s and D on’ts. So, w e’ve established that the '70s are still influencing our lives, like it or not. But isn’t this j whole revival concept going too far? Sure, it’s been a tradition for quite a long time ! j to bring back the old stuff and make it new. After j j all, Grease was a ’70s product o f a ’50s revival j and it’s still one o f the most popular movies of j all time. But there are some things that just don’t j | need to be resurrected. (Pet Rock, anyone?) And | there comes a time when a culture needs to stand j on its own, without rehashing previous trends { and fads. That is where the problem lies. How much o f | the ’90s is really new and unique, and how much is based on the past? We Generation Xers are j always accused o f being lazy and lacking moti- j vation; this revivalist thinking just perpetuates j | that perception. ( There are those who are, in fact, breaking new I J, ground in all areas o f pop culture. We need to | support those artists, so that our generation (and j the ’90s) can be defined by more than sampling j j the past and re-presenting it as our own. Otherwise w e ’ll end up a bunch o f Puff Daddys j ; in acid-washed jeans and green high-tops. StatePressStaff ym ff& s/A sfrm M zrm n cim ) Youth should have rig h t to stay The Tempe City Council decided Thursday that it would consider passing an ordinance that would make it illegal for people to sit on sidewalks in front of businesses. Supported by both the Downtown Tempe Community organization and the Mill Avenue Merchants Association, the ordinance is a veiled attempt to eradicate the homeless element on Mill Avenue. A pathetically veiled attempt: “It promotes civility in public space by requiring people to sit on benches and not the sidewalk,” Rod Keeling, executive director of the Downtown Tempe Community said in Friday’s issue of the State Press. Whatever. Sounds like sidewalk fascism to me. Although some people have referred to them as “Mill Rats,” I won’t. It seems to me a pretty insensitive and mali­ cious way to identify and describe disenfranchised youth — and an easy way of dehumanizing them. On a purely humanitarian level the proposal is loathsome. It reeks of a Victor Hugo novel, a situation in which the “haves” stick it to the “have-nots” in a particularly low-hand­ ed way. It speaks of the sad way that business will crush the little guy and the lengths to which someone will go to turn a profit. These are kids without homes and if DTC and MAMA had their way they wouldn’t even have a sidewalk to sit on. Eddie Goitia uses the kids as scapegoats for declining business. In the same aforementioned article, the president of MAMA claims die homeless kids are an increasing prob­ lem, saying that snowbirds visiting town are approached by the kids for spare change mid become disenchanted with Tempe. So instead of trying to find a productive solution at the source of the problem, Goitia instead advocates a sweeping-the-dust-underneath-the-rug approach. Maybe Goitia thinks that as long as he doesn’t have to see these kids and witness the poverty they grapple with daily, then they don’t need to be helped. The “what I don’t know can’t M ario Lopez is a senior studying journalism and can be reached a t m aralop@ im ap2.asu.edu. Percy Ednalino Jr., Editor Jodi Bofundo, Managing Editor Caryl-Sue Micalizio Becky Bevins • -Night Editor • ■ .——- —Magazine Editor Chris Kahn David Woodfill ----- _____._Qty Editor — ——— —— —— — — ——Asst. Magazine Editor Jonathan Inge Reporters -------— -------— -Assistant City Editor Alicia Caldwell, Lidia E Kelly, JD. Long Stephanie Paterik, Jayson Peters, Kim Prendergast, Hayiey Ringle, Ganga Subramanian, jessica Wolf, Angela Yeager. Michelle Craig Editor Sports R eporters— ---------------------------------— — Scott Bracken, Curtis Carlock, Doug Ranagan, Carlo Mercaldo, David Myers. Christi Font Copy Editors —T- ~— —-w— — i——— —-News Editor Mario Lopez, Susan Schimmel. Brad Lang Photographers— ~ -------—~ ——-----------— — ------—Photo Editor Mike Curran, Soley Hartel, Ofelia Madrid, Jeremy Weiss. Jeremy Hein Cojumnists ------------------------------- ———— — -Assistant Photo Editor Brian Ary, Andrea Jennifer Balsky, Scott Bennett, Ashlea Deahl, Ross Ed Odeven Eide, Scott Gillette, Stephanie Johnson, Amber Kouth, Nancy Kui, ------ — —Sports Editor C.C. McCandles, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff. ...—-Opinion hurl me” school of social work. (Or maybe I give Goitia too much credit, and the goy just doesn’t care). But what about the constitutionally guaranteed right to peaceably assemble? The last time I checked, there was no clause in the First Amendment that says anything remotely like “as long as everyone sits on benches.” Maybe MAMA and DTC think that since these kids are destitute they are not wor­ thy of or don’t have the same rights as the rest of us, or maybe the organizations just think no one will notice them stripping rights from the lower ranks of the disposable citizenry. And why would we? I’m not sure that I’m any better than DTC or MAMA, sitting here in a well-equipped and air-conditioned educational facility, the next big worry looming over my head (aside from getting this column done) being whether 1 can catch a late movie and if it’ll allow me a reasonable amount of sleep — writing about the problem rather than actually doing anything about it. My point is that I’ve seen these kids, we all have, and we walk by them without a second glance, grumbling something about not having any change when they out­ stretch hands. “I barely had enough to eat today,” I’ve caught myself thinking as I’ve turned my head and averted my eyes, mastering the art of looking through people rather than at them, the way wc all do these days. And now, to add insult to injury after being ignored and mistreated their whole lives (because who runs away from a happy home?) these kids will suffer the injustice of being herded off the sidewalk so some lady with blue hair from Iowa will not have her sensibilities offended and so some downtown Tempe merchant can pretend to be clean and make another buck. And I think that’s a sad thing. C artoonists———— ————————————— Brian Balchumas, Carrie L Behrens, Mike Curran, Brian Fairrington, Carlos Ramirez, Adrian Sferle. Production — ———— --------— — Robert Deal, Keith Gerchick, Alyson Hurt, Heather Nash, Wayne Nelson, Joanna Wike. Sales Representatives Brian Ary, Mike Giallanza, David Goodwin, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan Negretti, Sharon Robertson, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. ^ Marketing Team———------- — ----- — Rick Garbett, Angelee King Classifieds---------------------------- ...—....——...—.... Kate Desk), Amanda Green, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ptoium. 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- 1502. W e 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 n ot necessarily those of the ASU administra­ tion, faculty, staff o r student body. S tu d en t M ed ia Phone N u m b ers - -- -Information 965-7572 State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 O n the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu O p in io n StttePr«*#»rToesdeqr,Si*|K»*t*e*J, fW*. M EM H H H . ■,*. . . . * . . « - ■ In the m ovie The W izard o f Oz, D orothy Gale makes an arduous journey to the Em erald City in hopes that the great and powerful Wizard of Oz can help her find her way home. Unfortunately, the only way to get to the Emerald City is by following the long and winding Yellow Brick Road, a path containing various discouraging obstacles such as evil, fruit-bear­ ing trees, menacing witches and flying monkeys. Yet despite these o b stacle s. D orothy m akes it to the doorstep of the wizard’s lair, only to be turned away by a pompous, unintelligent doorman — an experience that parallels that o f the many students that found themselves homeless, after making a journey to the Jefferson Commons. I was one of these students, and like Dorothy, I was in search of a home. However after my experience, I began to feel more like the Scarecrow. “If I only had a brain,” 1 might have realiz.ed that the Jefferson Commons was not the awe-inspiring projection I saw before me and would have paid more attention to the man (whose job was to blow smoke and make lots of thundering noise) behind the screen. Like the Emerald City, there is only one path to the Jefferson Commons, a long and winding Fine Print Road, filled with various discouraging obstacles, such as getting qualified, accepting liability and dealing with flying mon­ keys which are under the spell of the Wicked Witch of the Paycheck. Yet, after enduring these trials, the Wizard still says, “Go Away!” Go away?! This is just the icing on the complimentary cookies for some students. The company has proven itself dis: organized and unreliable in numerous ways, the most recent being the failure lo provide the services they prom ised to their residents. Does this story sound fam iliar to anyone else who signed a lease at the Jefferson Commons? The agent tells you that you will be notified about the status of your application in approximately one week. Two weeks later you find out that “your file looks good and everything is in o rd e r.” but only because you took the initiative to call them yourself. Then, just when you think everything is set up, you (or one of your roommates) get a call and either: a) your credit was not approved, b) your cosigner’s credit was not approved or c) you have a new room m ate(s) because one (or more) of them wasn’t approved. If you experienced “a” or “b,” you probably spent a lot of tim e and effort trying to find another way to get approved. If you experienced “c,” then you may be stuck with some psycho who prefers a stuffed corpse to a teddy bear; the lease clearly states that it is the right of the Jefferson Commons to relocate any resi­ dent at any time. It is not right for a company to lie to its customers. They should not say (me week when they mean two. They should not give you the impression that you are approved before they have even processed your applications. They should not send you a note stating that they would appre­ ciate it if you would bear with them while they put the fin­ ishing touches on the apartment (since when were walls considered finishing touches?). They should not mislead students into thinking that a shuttle bus is easily accessi­ ble, when the truth is it is over a mile away. The Jefferson Commons has done all these things. They pretended to be wizards, when they were only mere illusionists. They do deserve some credit if they are footing the bill at Microtek but they need to do more. One resident that was signed for a four-bedroom apartment was relocated to a two bedroom apartment instead. A service-oriented company should charge him the same price he had bud­ geted to pay for the four bedroom. At Jefferson, they are making him pay the two bedroom price — nearly $100 more! Yet he is willing to pay it, he is just happy to. As for myself, 1 am glad I canceled my lease before the headache began, although a month has passed and they have not yet sent me my deposit. I decided that “There’s no place like home,” and headed for Ma’s house. This, however, is not an option for many of the M icrotel dwellers, who will have added stress when they have to move again in September -— right around the time when they should be preparing for that first big exam. As for the Wizard of Oz, the movie is far better than the real experience. In the movie, everybody, gets what they want and the Wizard sails away in a hot air balloon. In real life, the Jefferson Commons (who also advocate the use of hot air) are here to stay. K atie M cG ee Sophom ore Business Channel 2 is here for students In Lidia Kelly’s Aug. 25 article, “Student publica­ tions changes name, gets Channel 2,” she writes, “In July, Residence Hall Association relinquished control of Channel 2.” The article greatly oversimplifies the proceedings aimed at expanding Channel 2 and is, in fact, inaccurate. L ast y ea r, m em bers o f the R esid en ce H all A ssociation, S tudent P ub licatio n s (now “ S tudent Media”) and Residential Life mutually decided to form a partnership for providing a higher-quality television station for ASU students (primarily those students living in residence halls). All parties were interested in expanding student-produced program ming and programming aimed towards providing students with academic assistance (i.e., over-the-air tutoring and supplemental instruction), while maintaining student input in entertainment programming (i.e., movies). Through a mutual decision, Student Media was granted the task of managing Channel 2; specifically, the opera­ tional and financial aspects of running the station. To do so, Student Media will provide guidance via a graduate assistant to ensure that the involved students can learn how to effectively operate a student-run television station while maximizing its potential. RHA and Residential Life, meanwhile, will continue representing the voices of the students, as well as providing a student to serve as the director of Channel 2. Channel 2 has enormous .potential for growth as a provider of quality programming for students living in residence halls, a forum for student produced program­ ming and a workplace where students can develop skills in a number of communications disciplines. As such, Student Media, RHA and Residential Life have formed this partnership dedicated to making Channel 2 a better student medium — a student-run operation that ASU can be proud of. H o y t H ill G rad u ate A ssistant A S U C hannel 2 j j j | | I j j J I | I I f | I | ] Solution to te rro ris t attacks Here’s the obvious solution for the United States to end terrorist attacks by Islamic militants on its interests: Stop supporting Israel unfairly. Unfortunately, that won’t happen anytime soon because all of the influential figures in the U.S. administration,(i.e., the Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense) tend to be hand-picked by the insidious American-Israeli Political Action Coalition. Even the head of the United Nations tends to be a “friend of Israel.” George W ashington, who adm onished Am ericans against “foreign entanglements,” must be turning in his grave. Obviously the American-Israeli Political Action Coalition has learned a thing or two from Hitler, who said (paraphrased), “If you tell a lie long enough, loud enough and often enough, people will believe it.” Fortunately, they can’t fool all of the people all of the time. So here’s my advice for the dumb Islamic terrorists: Stop hitting American targets. You’re just playing into the hands of your real enemies. H ere’s my advice for those who are bankrolling strikes against America: You can’t beat us, so join us. In particular, get involved in the American political process in the form of cam paign contributions or votes. China did. The Zionists, did. Look what Israel is getting for it. As Carl Sagan would say, “billions and: billions” of American taxpayers’ dollars, military support and vetoes in the United Nations. I’m neither a Palestinian nor a Muslim. I’m just a concemed American. What I can’t understand is how earn the Palestinians and Muslims be so politically disenfranchised in America? Is a special affirmative action program needed for them? Shah K h atri G rad u ate S tu d en t Engineering and A p plied Sciences v, . ‘ * — i * '< os K eep in g in to u ch is food fo r th e soul LettersEditor T h ere’s no place like home §- j | | I j 1 I | I I f 1 j j j “K.I.T.” (Keep In Touch), “Stay Sweet!,” and “Have a kick @#$ summer!” Remember those generic phrases scribbled all over our junior high and high school yearbooks? Remember way back in the dark ages when we were part of the most popular (or not so popular) cliques? Remember when we felt like we had to have a frag­ ment o f coolness, wavering on the edge o f being “ in ” and b eing the laughing stock of the entire school? Remember when we had to have the prettiest girl or the hottest guy at school sign our yearbook in hopes that maybe they’d pour out their undying love or perhaps give out those seven little digits whicl} we’d engrave in our Beverly H ills 90210 address boo k ?' Well, I don’t know where you were in those glorious days of adolescence and frankly, I don’t think we’d all like to sit around listening to “Adventures o f Off-Campus Lunch Times” either. We’re in college now (if you haven’t realized it already) and those memories of junior high and high school are long gone- But have we said good-bye to yesterday for good? When was the last time you reached an old high school buddy? In fact, when was the last time they even came dancing through your mind? 1 was flipping through my old address book a few weeks ago and came across a name I hadn’t seen in years. This person was the one who was brave enough to approach the “new girl” (that being me) in fifth grade and was someone who I’d been friends with for seven years. Unfortunately, she and I graduated from different high schools, which sadly drew us apart. But I was determined to reach her and see how she was doing in her life after high school. 1 called my friend and before I knew it, I made plans to visit her the following week. She was doing fine; a full time job, living in a beauti­ ful apartment and taking care of her baby. Yes, it sur­ prised me that she had had a baby — and without consult­ ing me first! But my friend looked so happy with her son that I was genuinely happy for her. She and 1 spent a few hours glazing over recent events in our lives. It was the most beautiful feeling in the world to finally reunite with someone I had shared so many memories with. Since then,.! have contacted a few other close friends I had from junior high and high school. I can’t deny that we have all changed, throughout the years. But our “new” friendships have blossomed into something extraordinary. W e’re closer than we were before. Perhaps next time we should keep to our promises and “Keep in Touch.” N an cy K uo is a ju n io r stu d ying v io lin p e rfo rm a n c e and jo u rn a lis m a n d can be reach ed a t n a n c yk u o @ im ap l.as u .ed u . What Dóy¿u'Yliiñfc? E-mail: shades@imap4.asu.edu ■ Website: http://www.statepress.com Gripe Line: 965-6881 Fax: 965-8484 M a il: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University 15 Matthews Center Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 1 j j 1 I I .j 1 j I j The State Press welcomes and encourages w ritte n response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eli­ gible for publication. Please include your full name, ID number, class standing, m ajor (o r affiliation with the University) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use e-mail, Gripe Line, Fax Or our website for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for written purposes. THï ONE® Caïd subject to approval Alpha Drive fraternities to receive additional structural inspection LIVE ON CAMPUS? By K im Prendergast State Press THIS WEEK'SMOVIES Monday, Aug. 31 thruSunday, Sept. 6 7pm 10pm 12am MON The Wedding Singer Hope Floats Crash TUES Anastasia Thè Full Monty Dark City WEP T h e Object The Edge of My Affection One Night Stand Hope Floats Dark. City The Wedding Singer A Life Less Ordinary The Newton Boys Decon­ structing Harry SAT Decon­ structing Harry : A Life Less Ordinary The Newton Boys SUN The Newton Boys Decon­ structing Harry ~ A Life Less Ordinary TH U R B ro u g h t to you by ASU R esidence H all A sso ciatio n & S tu d en t M edia Today and Wednesday, the fraternities on Alpha Drive will undergo a re-inspection by the state fire marshal for structural problems in their buildings. The inspection is to ensure that long-existing problems, such as shabby windows and doors, holes in the ceilings and loose floor boards, have been fixed. If the fraternity buildings continue to show problems, they could be ¡shut down. In 1996, the fratern ities w ere found to not m eet Arizona’s minimum safety standards for residential build­ ings, when the fraternity sprinkler systems were being checked. Jim Geil, the deputy state fire marshal, gave them two years to bring the fraternity houses up to code. The fraternities were told they had until Aug. I, 1998 to fix their sprinkler systems. However, the deadline passed and no upgrades were made. An extension was granted to the fraternities by Geil after they submitted a pian of completion. “The plan must outline a time-line, date of completion and cost,” said Bob Francis, executive coordinator for Greek Life. The houses that do not cooperate face being shut-down. The fire sprinklers are estimated to cost $50,000 per house. Asbestos removal will cost an additional $20,000 to $40,000 per house. Francis said ASU is going to give from $33,000 to $150,000 to each fraternity house to install the needed sprinkler systems and remove asbestos. The University is taking this money from the fraternities reserve funds. Surgical fire at U o fA ’s U n iv e rsity M edical C e n te r resu lts in law su it By A rthur H . Rotstein A ssociated Press TUCSON — A law suit filed Monday accused University Medical Center and its; employees of negli­ gence and carelessness in a surgical fire that burned a former university journalism professor. The m edical malpractice lawsuit contends that Wallace Beene, 73, “sus­ tained severe, permanent, debilitating and life-threatening bum injuries and other injuries” in the July 23 fire. The fire broke out during brain surgery and burned Beene’s head and shoulder. Beene, a form er new spaper reporter, Hollywood publicist and journalism professor at the UofA, has remained in intensive care. He was listed Monday in serious condition, UMC spokeswoman Nancy Guthrie said. But she said that Beene’s bum injuries had not kept him in the hospi­ tal. She declined to elaborate. UMC attorneys said they had not seen the lawsuit yet and had no com­ ment, she said. Dr. Steven Barker, chief of anesthesiology at UMC who is in charge of the investigation into the fire, did not return a phone call immediately Monday. R ichard G rand, one o f the two attorneys who filed the law suit on behalf of Beene and his family, said B eene was back on a v en tilato r because of “some kind of a setback.” ‘"The injuries that resulted from the fire are what is keeping him in the E h rh a rd t’s Sch w in n SA LE SALE SCHWINN DIAM0NDBACK Frontier O u tlo o k hospital,” Grand mid. “If they end up burning a 73-year-old man, then they are responsible for whatever injuries result in that body. Mr. Beene got along quite well, was golfing and lead­ ing a very good life before UMC did what they did to him.” Beene recognized him Monday and spoke for the first time, despite being on the ventilator, Grand said. Beene was undergoing surgery to rep air subdural hem atom as, or swellings under the outer lining of the brain, when the flash fire erupted under the sterile drape covering his face and Upper body. Surgeons were using an electrical device to stop bleeding at the time of the fire. Its cause remains under investigation. NEED EXTRA MONEY? EARN $18,000 PARTTIME! Sure, you could use the extra money-who couldn’t? The Army Reserve can help you earn more than $18,000 during a standard enlist mént, part time, plus some great benefits, with Opportunities to qualify for even more money to continue your education. You’ll also be getting valuable hands-on skill training that will last you a lifetime. Good extra money. Lots of opportunities. A place to make new friends. Give the Army Reserve your serious consideration. Think about it. Then think about us. Then call: 1-800-USA-ARM Y w w w .g o a r m y .c o m BEALLYOUCANBE? ARMY RESERVE with bike purchase: • T e m p o B ik e R o u t e M a p • W a t e r B o t t le a n d C a g e %3 0 - D a y C h e c k u p • L if e t im e W a r r a n t y • 1 y e a r G e a r and B ra k e A d ju s tm e n t I f D V D T O K i IT C f% lw ¥ 1 " §■V W I l¥B> ■lock s p e la L . 1 B IK E T U N E -U P W h m F ■ • v f - f P 7 ’' * I - ■» Clean and Adjust Brake and Bear CeMmi !» Check » u Ji dliwit AI Wlme la k e an additional $ 1 0 .0 0 j ! and Crank Cones ¡ > Minor Wheel Alignment J O F F any o f o u r U-LOCKS w hich | ! • dean and Lubricate Al ¡ Moving Parts ¡fi E h r h a r d t ’s U -L o c k s i l l W. University M B ' University 2 Blocks West of ASU Fast repairs our speciality! E h r h a r d t ’s T u n e -U p 08 State Press for Tuesday, September G et 100 FREE mifiutes. T h e n c a ll a n y w h e r e in t h e U .S . f o r o n l y 1 0 ^ a» m i n u t e . Sign up for an AT&T One Rate® plan and your first 100 minutes are FREE* Whatever your calling heeds are AT&T has a One Rate plan that’s right for you. AT&T O ne Rate® Plus: 10i a minute— one low rate all the time on state-to-state calls you dial from home. W hoever Whenever W herever you call in the U.S. And just a $4.95 monthly fee. AT&T O ne Rate® O ff Peak: 10(f a minute on your state-to-state, direct dialed calls from home from 7pm -7am and all weekend long; 25^ a minute all other times. And there's no monthly fee.* Sign up w ith AT&T and get 100 m inutes FREE. Call I 800 654-0471 and mention offer code 59917 or visit www.att.com/cpllege/np.html I t ’s al l * Terms and conditions apply. Free minutes promotion applies to first full monthly bill. Unused minutes cannot be carried over. Offer expires 10/15/98. Offer based on choice of AT&T One Rate Plus or AT&T One Rate Off Peak Plan. Plans subject to billing availability In-state rates vary $3 monthly minimum usage applies to One Rate Off Peak Plan. Call for details; © 199Ò AT&T within your I , 1998 A SU police reported the follow ing incidents Sunday: • Two students were cited and released for underage pos­ session of alcohol at 606 Alpha Drive. • A student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at Area 63. • A student was contacted at 414 Adelphi Drive, where he had become ill. He was transported to a local hospital. • A student was arrested for possession o f marijuana at Palo Verde West. He was later released. • A student was arrested for DUI at Rural and Terrace roads. • A minor not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 601 Alpha Drive. • A student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 401 E. Stadium Drive. • A student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at Palo Verde West. • Tw o m inors were arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol. • A m inor not affiliated with ASU. was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol, unlaw­ ful lise o f a license and giving false information to police at 414 Adelphi Drive. • Three students were arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 601 Alpha Drive. • Two boys were arrested, cited and released for curfew violation at 700 S. Rural Road. • A student was arrested, cited and released for provid­ ing false information to police, possession of a fictitious drivers license and underage possession of alcohol at Sonora Hall. • Two minors not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 414 Adelphi Drivé. • A minor not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 418 Adelphi Drive. . . • A minor not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited, ahd released for underage possession of alcohol at 500 E. University Drive. • Three minors not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for Underage possession of alcohol at 620 Alpha Drive • A minor not affiliated with ASU was arrested,, cited, and released for underage possession of alcohol at Sahuaro Hall. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents. Sunday : • A Tempe man was car-jacked while exiting his 1999 Mustang at 7450 S. Priest Drive. As the man was getting * out of his car, another man reportedly approached him with a Glock handgun demanding his keys. The owner of the car gave the other man the keys and he reportedly left the scene going south on Priest D rive. O fficers searched the area but did not find the car or the suspect, according to reports. • Officers arrested a 19-year-old Tempe man on charges of using a false identification to get into a bar, providing false information to police and false use of a drivers license. The man was arrested outside a bar at 680 S. Mill Ave. The man reportedly gave officers a false name when asked and then later admitted to having lied. • Two Mexican nationals, 21 and 37, were arrested and charged with possession of narcotic drugs anJ e ther related charges after a search w arrant iron police revealed a total of 6.2 grams of crack cocaine m the apartment the two men were staying in. The 2 1-year-old man was reportedly found by officers hiding in a closet near a .45 caliber handgun and a small amoun it crack Cocaine. Officers also found $880 in cash on the floor and a small Amount of marijuana. R eports com piled by State. Press reporter A lu ia A. Caldwell Searchable Archives • H ayden’s Ferry Review • and More http://news.vpsa.asu.edu DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE You'll never know unless you read your HOBO SCOPE. In the CLASSIFIED section Page 22 Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS 52 -1960’s dance green 55 Bambi's 5 Poisonous aunt snakes 58 Songbirds 9 Role for -.60'HouseMadonna • keeper's 14 Line — bane veto 62 Role in 15 New York “The baseball Tempest” stadium 63 Card 16 Georgia game bet city 64 Part of a 17 Group of Chinese replacem meal ent 65lmpertinent players 66 The say19 Blood­ hey kid of hound’s baseball clue 67 Holly 20 Between Winnie and Pooh DOWN Agenda 21 Made a Yearning speech Ordinary 23 Functions Big bird 24 Skyrocket 25 Parisian Off the water path 6 Cut, a s 27 All arm s wool and legs 29 Atwood 7 moss 8 Identical heroine's occupation 9 Dorothy’s Aunt and 34 Human others R esources transactions 10 Meat case wrappings 35 Sly one 11 Sherbets 36 Gerald's predecessor 12 Muscle condition 37 Nobelist 13 Formicary Wiesel residents 38 got nothing to 1 2 3 4 ■; hide!” I 39 Israeli 14 1 novelist 17 1 Shade of Oz 40 Talented 42 “ Miserables" 43 Vista 44 Spring holiday 46 Ja b s 47 Pair 48 Service station meas. 49 silly question 20 " ■ 27 28 1 □BOD BOOB E3BBBB 3.I l [N VI r a n \m □BB □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ El □E □ Q□DEC E d 3 N3 is 3j □ [3 a V S a 1 ■H 3 3 Tjï Si OJLI Hu H XS M .3 S H ;i jm'S [nI vj ■ * MY «]» Ô1y E V□ ML®sin s® 0 9 mE 3 3 1 □ t® a ? a Ele I □ Q B B C j □BBS BBDD Bi 2Ì a 18 Ubrary tomes 22 Leonine abode 24 Big money games 26 Classified items 27Memorable comic Radner 28 Sign of spring 29 Hang around 30 Paul Bunyan implements 31 ^ Semple 43 45 46 48 49 50 Unbroken Oath Adhesives Breezy Bummer! Actress Gilbert 51 Actor/ musician Kristofferson 53 Arkin, the Younger 54 Food fish 55 Malevolent 56 Pleasant 57 “Jeopardy” host Trebek 59 Shrewd 61 Lincoln’s Cap’n — McPherson 32 Actor Jeremy 33 Measured portion 34 Pile 35 Do an Office job 41 Drag 8« S om ething’s new at our house! ASU Student Media Tess Your m orning d aily new spaper. newsroom news fax advertising ad fax 965-2292 965-8484 965-6555 965-4706 Arizona State University w w w .statep res8.co n i DIGITAL PRESS 0 1p 965-6945 e a l s I The only coupon book made for students by students! 965-6555 HAYDEN'S FERRY. R E V I E W . ASU Student Media W elc o m e! 6 7- 8 10 9 12 13 ASU’s nationally recognized literary magazine RHA’s premium cable channel for campus residents. 965-1243 965-5376 16 19 18 ■ I" * 22 Matthews Center Basement 23 26 30 31 32 33 General information 965-7572 36 37 40 44 38 42 41 39 45. 46 48 47 49 50 51 58 62 65 By Nancy S. Rons €> 1998 Los Angeles Times Syndicate 52 56 60 63 1 I 55 56 517^ ■ i 6"4 1 ■ 67 1 9/1/98 New name. New family member. You used to know us as Student Publications. As a result of our newest family member, Channel 2, we’re now Student Media. It is our pleasure to serve the ASU community. Welcome to our house. Price hike on Yuma- S o m e c a n d id a t e s u s e c a m p a ig n to-Phoenix flights fu n d m o n e y f o r p e r s o n a l a f f a ir s angers customers YUMA (AP) — More than a month after the cost of a round-trip flight front Yuma to Phoenix shot up by $110, some travelers are venting their anger by refusing to fly America West Express. AgTech owner Kenny Evans used to fly to Phoenix on weekly business trips, but now he drives three hours one wayt “It has so incensed me that I am not getting on that air­ line." Evans said. “I’m doing it in protest because it’s absolutely unreasonable. As a practical matter, their ser­ vice has gone to hell and their prices have gone through the roof.’’ The July ■28 •fare increase —■from $248 to $358 roundtrip was the latest in a long list of community complaints against Mesa Airlines, which provides the com­ muter service as America West Express. Area business leaders have criticized Mesa because of a rash of delayed and canceled flights. “If I had a viable alternative. I would take it,’’ said Bob Citllis of Fisher AutOplex. ‘T just don’t have i t ” Yuma Mayor Marilyn Young said she is discussing the situation with representatives of America West,-which conrols fare prices and scheduling for the commuter service. America West spokeswoman Patty Nowack said the fare increase could not be prevented. America West Express offers seven flights each way between Yuma and Phoenix Monday through Friday. “That America West Express route was losing money,” she said. "So our choices were to remain profitable or eliminate service.” PHOENIX (AP) — Say you’re a politician with a hefty legal bill or an unemployed gubernatorial hopeful, but cash is in short supply. What do you do? Get a second job or rob a bank? No, just dip into your campaign kitty. Arizona law gives candidates virtual carte blanche when it comes to spending campaign funds. The Arizona Republic reported Sunday. State campaign finance laws are lim ited when it comes to controlling how candidates spend donations. The only specific ban is on turning over surplus cam­ paign funds for personal use which means candidates are allowed to use them for a wide range of campaign purposes. For example, after two teenage pages accused him of making improper sexual advances, state Rep. Richard Kyle hired an attorney. And he used campaign funds to pay $360 in legal fees. Kyle, an Ahwatukee Republican, also used contribu­ tors’ funds to hire baby-sitters, rent golf clubs, pay his AAA membership, travel to New Orleans and California, and buy $ 125 worth of Christmas gifts. “Everything’s fair game,” Kyle told The Republic. Tom Rawles, Libertarian candidate for governor, is paying himself a $48,000 annual salary from his cam­ paign war chest. It’s legal, according to an opinion from his lawyer, paid for With $1,000 from the campaign fund. Democratic Rep. John Loredo used contributors’ money to pay $40 in penalties from the Secretary of State’s Office for filing his campaign reports late. “It’s directly campaign-related,” Loredo said. Legislators who rise to leadership positions often dip into their campaign funds. House Minority Leader Art Hamilton, D-Phoenix, paid more than $1,300 last year for trips to Washington, D.C., and Massachusetts. As a member of the Democratic National Committee’s legislative campaign committee and the State Legislative Leaders Foundation, Hamilton said he gains knowledge and influences decisions in those groups that benefit fel­ low lawmakers and the public. House Majority Leader Lori Daniels, R-Citandlcr, reported $55 for flowers for the speaker’s wife. “Somebody did that for me without asking,” she said. “I was caught off guard on that one.” rC A M P U S-| LC o r n er s 7 1 2 S . C ollege 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 ON YOUR PAGER n ex t to C ollege S tr e e t Deli Receive 3 months of airtim e and FREE voice mail for $22.35 (plus tax) State-wide coverage - Unlimited Calls While You Wait! activation fee! charge for recrystaling 6 0 9 S . M ill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s fro m C offee P lantation Everyday Low Price D IS T A N C E State P ress \ N O O N E TALKS TO A SU ! DOUBLE PRINTS T H E W AY W E D O ! C a ll 965-6555 18” 2 4 exposure B E LAR s e e s to r e fo r d etails Color C -41 P ro c e s s to p la c e an a d ! BASELINE & HARDY SE Comer • ABCO M-F 10-6 S a t. 1 0 -5 B e st P rice in Town m S E P T E M B E R P E R F O R M A N C E S P R O D U C T IO N STUDIO A Part of KAET-TV/Phoenix Ulhere a driuer uiith a east still has a future. B roadcast on KBAQ, 89.5 FM (602) 965-3606 Our weekly concert-preview program returns September 16. Join Richardson Taylor for recordings by artists soon to appear on Arizona stages including flutist James Galway; pianists Bemadene Blaha, Yakov Kasman, Toni-Marie Montgomery and Lydia Artymiw; the Miami String Quartet and the Tokyo String Quartet; guitarist Flavio Cucchi, and more. . . *« Southwest Season T icket JfogsiMg§Ar 7 ?u , . YRbesj of the SoutjnçesViptroducaj by tjost §t*rtin * Jkeaff , ■, S eptember 1 Even if you don’t have a perfect driving record, GEICO has a place for you. Every year, w e offer renewal to*bver 98% o f our policyholders. From Sedona: a Beethoven cello sonata, a Brahms quintet for strings, and a piano trio by Joaquin Turina from members and guests of the A m adeus Trio September 8 From La Jolla, California’s SummerFest: bassist-composer Edgar M eyer is among the musicians playing his own work— as well as Dvofak, Mendelssohn, and more ♦ Low down-paym ent S eptember 15 From Tucson: explore the German and Italian Baroque with the three violins of T hree Parts upon a Ground September 2 2 From Scottsdale: pianist S tephen Hough offers Mendelssohn, Liszt, Beethoven, and variations by American composer Ben Weber September 2 9 From Sun’City: the Leontdvych String Quartet performs Schubert; Shostakovich, and Tchaikovsky ♦ M onthly paym ent plan ♦ M oney-saving discounts ♦ 24-hour claim service + Im m ediate coverage ♦ Free rale quote -¡su A S U I N Preferred at ASU Call today or stop by our local office: (6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 Concert Thursdays a t 7 pm mm September 3 Bach, Brahms and Gershwin are on the bill as Richard Strange conducts the ASU Symphonic Band S eptember 10 Tim othy R ussell leads the ASU Symphony Orchestra in Tchaikovsky’s fourth symphony and two works by Valley composer Eugene Anderson S eptember 17 Oboist M artin Schuring and friends present sonatas by Bach, Hairy Dutilleux, and Jan Dismas Zelenka S eptember 2 4 The Sirius Ensem ble ranges horn music of medieval Italy to traditional tunes of Nova Scotia and France P a rtia lfu n d in gfo rth e s ep ro g ra m sp ro v id e db yth eA rizo n aC o m m lslo no nth eA rtsa p p ro p ria tio n sfro m th eA riz o n aS ta teL e g isla tu rea n dg ra n tsfro m th eN a tio n a lE n d o w m e n tfo rth eA rts. Stock plunge scares investors; many choose safer investments By Rachel Beck A ssociated P ress in August the first monthly outflow from equity funds in Among those with worries are investors who have been five years, said spokesman Edward Giltenan. buying stocks for their 401(k) retirement accounts at work. “Investors are taking precautions against a further market They have been told repeatedly to sit tight during market drop by moving increasingly into money-market funds,” he swings, but are finding it tough. said. “It’s a standard step to take in uncertain times.” “Many employees are calling to check their account bal­ These investors are the men and women who bought ances. They are nervous about what to do,” said William F. stocks while investment professionals were bailing out after Dowd, director o f com pensation and benefits at New the record 554-point fall of last Oct. 27. They then drove the England Electric System in Westborough, Mass. “But we Dow past 8,000 and then 9,000 to an all-time high o f are telling them to hold on and accept this as one of the 9,337.97 on July 17. things that will happen in the market from time to time.” Monday’s selloff left the Dow below 8,000 and at levels Investors have been transferring money from mutual last seen in November 1997. In addition to giving up all of funds into money-market funds at Dreyfus Corp., a large an 18 percent gain this year, the blue-chip average is now mutual fund company. But Dreyfus spokeswoman Patrice 19.3 percent below its all-time high. Kozlowskr also said that as the Dow’s plunge worsened For Anthony Pappas, a customer service employee at Monday afternoon, “ many customers were looking at this as Airborne Express in New York, the summer slide is enough a buying opportunity back into equities.” to scare him away from investing. Houston Bolles, a paralegal in Portland, Ore., is among “I was about to invest some money in mutual funds,” he investors not about to throw in the towel. said. “But today, I changed my mind. I’ll just wait a little “I’m not ready to can it, certainly not ready to jump out and see how it goes.” any window,” he said. “What other choices are there but to Many Others are trying to decide whether to ride out the stay in?” current decline or flee now before filings possibly worsen. Marvin Rosengart, a jeweler from Oradell, N.J., sees the Both new and experienced investors have been clogging selloff as reason to buy. phone lines at Denver-based Janus Funds for die past week, “If something goes lower, I’m going to buy,” he said, said spokeswoman Jenni Pieratt. while watching stock prices zip by on a screen above Times “There is concern by investors, especially new investors, Square. “I just feel over the long term things will get better. since this is the first time they’ve been through any market If things go down, I’ll keep buying as long as I have the upheaval,” she said. money.’ NEW YORK — Small investors, the mainstays of Wall / Street’s raging bull market, are starting to get cold feet as they re-evaluate their commitment to stay in stocks through thick and thin. M onday’s near-record fall óf S12 points in the Dow industrials and a record 140-point plunge in the Nasdaq composite index were part of a worsening scène on Wall Street that has people like Olivier Blot seriously thinking about getting out of the stock market. ' “I’m probably going to sell very soon,” said the mechan­ ical engineer from Huntington, N Y. “It’s starting to be very scary.” Others already have stepped away from stocks and shift­ ed their money into less-volatile bond and money-market funds, A ugust m arked the first month in eight years that investors took more money out of stock funds than they put in, reported Trimtabs.com, which tracks 3,400 mutual foods. The.Santa Rosa, Calif.-based firm registered a prelimi­ nary $1.9 billion outflow from stock funds in August, com­ pared with a $20.8 billion average monthly inflow for die first seven months of the year. “I’m characterizing this as a buyer’s strike,” said Carl Wittnebert, Trimtabs director of research. T. Rowe Price registered a similar milestone, recording Planning to STREAK the MU'? Call the State Press photographers a t 965 - 6826 . Student Talk Special < 4 Pulliam Journalism Fellowships p r e - p a i d Graduating college seniors are invited to apply for the 26th annual Pulliam Journalism Fellowships. We will grant 10-week summer internships to 20 jour­ nalism or liberal arts majors in the August 1998-June 1999 graduating classes. Activate Today! 95 *3 9 L L E X /S E why wait for local phone services Phones as low a s s7 9 °° * month In c lu d e s 1 ,0 1 5 m in u te s Previous internship or part-time experience at a newspaper is desired, or other demonstration of writing and reporting ability. Winners will receive a $5,250 stipend and will work at either The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News or The Arizona Republic. ( w it h v a l id s t u d e n t / f a c u l t y I.D .) NO CONTRACT • NO CREDIT CHECK NO DEPO SIT » NO M IN IM U M AGE PHOENIX g U P E R S T O R ç 7 tm U T O U Í t ic H r S . M IL L • 9 6 6 -1 2 0 3 WEST PHOENIX MESA Broadway NE Corner of 67th Avenue Comelbqck A Thomas inside & Country Club & .7“ Avenue Southwest Supermarket inside Southwest Ò64-1Ó00 691-6000 Supermarket Early-admissions application postmark deadline is Nov. 15,1998. By Dec. 15, 1998, up to five early-admissions winners will be notified. All other entries must be postmarked by March 1,1999, and will be considered with remaining early-admissions applicants. To request an application packet, write: Web site: www.stamews.com/pjf E-mail: pulliam@slamews.com 655-U555 Russell B. Pulliam Pulliam Fellowships Director The Indianapolis News P.O. Box 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 Home of the 'Killer" Calzone Performance Car and Sport Truck U ltra Perform ance carries a huge inventory fo r your one-stop highperform ance needs. C all todav! 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T E R R IB LE I HAVE O f K A T H ,A N l ESSAY, A N t> T u ) 0 C H A PTER S T O POOR?A6ES WLAI> POR r T f E N & L\S rt^ K Fluff B y A drian S ferle w N SW f G I n &K i c H An p OBOH HAifcH ATAj V O H A T v OAS -1 W T ? -t h a t VOAS-Yo u p COHÍSOVéNCg' SPEAtctlOG. MEWT.we QOftAAsW?; ____ 5°M£ MoEE-. UPT^HlIE Ä M e -PríiM ie?.. .HflMígey. CoUSPIWO/ .. VJHKTt^oTtxj S A T /S Sometimes Dr. Dolittle's ability to talk to the animals was not such a blessing ■«müH Go ahead. Judge us. * W There ere pieces to go and then thorn ire places to §o. This it THE plaee to go -Yen'll knee whan you arrive. coffees * blends * teas • desserte • salads * sandwiches 2 Campus locations: 5.W. corner o f Mill & £3th S t, in Centerpoint, around . . :; th e corner from C offee P l a n t a t i o n ■ ;' ,:.. Pi Im Walk & Tyler Mall East aide af Business Building Downtown Tempo: oe Mill Avenue We have t h e la r g e s t s e le c tio n o f premium c ig ars, fla v o re d cig ars, im p o rted c ig a r e tt e s , cloves, chewing to b a c c o and pipe to b a c c o in Tempe, ail a t th e g u a ra n te e d lo w e st prices. ^ C O F F E E # PLANTATION. C O H IB A where the world meets iced coffees • teas • mochas • lattes • cappucinos • sodas M-írnO-9» Fri'Sat lÓ-Miítii# * 5mdayM 7 3 1 -5 3 0 0 State Press I b r Tuesday, September I, 1998 * V o lle y b a ll squad s e t to sp ike Y e llo w Jackets By D avid M yers State Press They have the talent, chemistry and the confidence. Now, it's time for the ASU women’s volleyball team to show it Off to the rest of the nation. These are the thoughts coming from the Sun Devils as they open the season tonight at 7 against the G eorgia Tech Yellow Jackets at Wells Fargo Area. “We have such incredible confidence right now,” junior co-captain Jamie Peck said. “We feel that we aren't going to lose to anybody.” The Sun Devils (13-16, 4-14 in the con­ ference last season) have experienced some ■;minor injuries this last week but nothing top serious. Peck has a pulled groin muscle and is listed as day-to-day, while freshman Robyn Mattingly has a mild ankle sprain and is also listed as day-to-day. ■it has been hard getting some things done in practice when you don’t have a full team.” ASU head coach Patti Snyder-Park said, "but everyone should be fine (tonight) and ready to go.” Although the Yellow Jackets (19-15, 106 in the ACC in 1997) aren’t the most tal­ ented team the Sun Devils are going to play this year, they are a very tough season­ opening test. , “They are definitely a very respectable program and a very good match to start off our season,” Snyder-Park said. “They are consistently in the top 30 and they always play a very tough schedule. This game is going to be a great indicator about where we are.” The Yellow Jackets arc returning nine players from last year’s team including three-time All-ACC selection Carla Gartner. She led Georgia Tech last year with 299 digs and was second with 375 kills. The person with probably the most praise for Gartner would be Yellow Jacket head coach Shelton Collier. “I think Carla has the opportunity to be the best player in the ACC this season,” Collier said. “She has made improvements in her defensive game and we will look to her to be a leader for us this season.” Gartner, a senior, is also from Phoenix and is a graduate from Cortez High School. Tonight’s game will be the first time that her family has seen her play since she has left for school. “Carla’s situation was one of the reasons why we wanted to play Georgia Tech,” Snyder-Park said. “We always do our very best to make sure our seniors have at least one game in their hometown and we also want to be able to help players from other schools who want to do the same thing. This should be an exciting night for her and her family.” Gartner is not the only member of the team that might give the Sun Devils some problems. Junior Carolyn Clevenger is the starting setter for the Yellow Jackets and should be looking to improve on a great second half of last season where she was named to the ACC all-tournament team while leading the team to the conference championship game. She led Georgia Tech in assists with 1,398. “Carolyn matured a great deal as the sea­ son progressed last year.” Collier said. “She played great during the second half of our season.” Collier has a tradition of scheduling dif­ ficult games in hostile environments during the early part of the season. After this game, Georgia Tech will play in the Pacific-Nike tournament in northern California. 'This event will feature a handful Of NCAA par­ ticipants. So why is that coach? “One of my commitments to our players is that we will play top teams in a variety of regions in our non-conference schedule,” said Collier. “I enjoy our yearly West Coast trip, and I know our players do as well.” : Jerem y Hein o f th e State Press Juniors Jolynn Faatulu (left)» Laura Hibsman and the rest of the ASU women’s volleyball team begins its regular season tonight at 7 against the visiting Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. ASU soccer squad kicks off season Preseason hype meaningless to ASU By Sc o t t Bracken Sta te Press The ASU women’s soccer team will be taking the ride up I-17 to Flagstaff tonight to open up their regular season against the Northern Arizona Lum berjacks. And even though NAU is coming off a miser­ able 3-12-0 record in 1997 Sun Devil head coach Terri Patraw is not stepping lightly into the high altitude for their season opener. "They (NAU) have a second year coach th at’s bringing back some talent, but I’m not really sure where their strength lies.” Patraw said. "We looked really good in our 4-0 shutout over Grand Canyon Friday and if we can take some o f that m om entum up to F la g sta ff we should take the game,” Patraw said. The Lumberjacks are relying on experience that will hopefully be up to the challenge o f stopping the capable and proven goal scoring ability of ASU. “We’re going to go in there and try to play ’em straight up,” NAU head coach Tracy Custer tentatively said. “ We re a liz e th at the Sun Devils have a strong squad coming back in ‘98 and have acquired a few transfers in the off-season so if a win comes out— great. If not, we’ll try to focus on what needs to be improved and get ready for the next one.” By D o ug F la n a g a n Sta te P ress Jerem y Hein o f th e S tate Press Junior midfielder Kerrie Kulak and her Sun Devil teammates will face in-state rival NAU tonight at 6 in Flagstaff. Weather or not NAU has already sealed th eir fate in to n ig h t’s matchup and are more concerned with analyzing the game films ver­ sus ASU then the actual outcome, they are optimistic about one thing. “We’re really excited to be open­ ing the season at home against such good competition,” Custer said.” y Coach Patraw and the ASU girls insist that this is an important game. “O ur team is not overlooking this game at all,” Patraw said. “This game will set the pace going into UM ass on S atu rd ay . So if we played like we did on Friday we should do good.” The Sun D evils w ill certainly appreciate the climate change up in F la g staff w hich should be ideal around game time. “W e’ve heard the (temperature) highs up there have been around 83 degrees; perfect w eather to fine tune,’’ Patraw said. All the preseason hype has officially gone out the window. The depth charts are set firmly in place, the players will begin watching game film today, and the game plans will soon be set. All this can mean only one thing — college football season is here, with ASU kicking off its regular season schedule Saturday against W ashington at Sun Devil Stadium. And according to ASU quarterback Ryan Kealy, it couldn’t have come soon enough. "We just can’t wait to get out there and hit some other guys,” he said at Monday’s news conference. “It gets boring after a while hitting ourselves.” ASU head coach Bruce Snyder, heading into his sev­ enth year at the helm of the Sun Devils, said things have progressed smoothly at practices so far and are eagerly awaiting the challenge W ashington will put forth. “We had a terrific practice (Sunday) night, started the practice right about the time kickoff will be this coming Saturday,” he said. “So that went really well. The young kids were really spirited, we got our legs back, I think w e’re relatively healthy. W e’re ju st as anxious as heck to play. “We know that it’s a big game, a lot of hype, which is great, because th a t’s w h at-w e’ve been w orking toward. So we’re not regretting or fearful of any of that. But it really adds to the number of heartbeats in a day, I’ll tell you that.” Snyder also addressed the health of star all-purpose player J.R. Redmond, who has been held out of recent practices with tendentious in his patella tendon. He said the m inor in ju ry has slig h tly d elayed R ed m o n d ’s C o n feren ce W 'O W17 the defensive side of the ball. “(Today) is when we put in our third-down package,” he said, “and that will tell us how much we should use him.” Husky coach Jim Lambright said word has rapidly spread throughout the Pac-10 about Redmond, who will be ready to make his second career start Saturday. "T h ere’s a lot o f talk throughout the conference about J.R. Redmond,” he said; “It just falls right in line of decorated players that carry your team. J.R 's one of those that you can truly play at maybe four, five, six different positions on a football team and he’s one that you look at as returning and able to carry your team early.” Lambright is also impressed with other key compo­ nents o f the Sun D ev ils' offense, even com paring ASU’s current group of wide receivers to Washington State's vaunted "Fab Five” quintuplet of yardage-chew­ ing ball catchers from a year ago. “ I think this (ASU’s receiving core) is an entirely better group of athletes (than W SU's last year),” he said. “If you take a look at what Washington State did with their Fab Five, none of them were drafted in the NFL. None. They had a quarterback- (Ryan Leaf) and they got a scheme going and they did great things with that scheme. “Ijere, you have players here who aje-going to be draftable that have the stats to go out and make those sorta things happen. You’ve got some seniors who are 4 4Ryan Kealy, he's the sheriff of the p osse there. H e ru n s thin g s. I t's the same th in g with Brock Huard... % Jim L am brig ht, W ashington head coach when he suffered a major knee injury. “Ryan appears *to be really healthy,” Snyder said. “In fact, I find m yself going through an entire practice, watching a lot of the offense, and it never even dawns on me that he had been injured. That’s how comfortable he is playing. It’s not on my mind, and it doesn’t appear that it’s on his mind either.” Lambright added, “Ryan Kealy, he’s the sheriff of the posse there. He runs things. It’s the same thihg with Brock Huard and Ryan, they know going into these games that when you’re in a conference game, you’re in for a heck of a fight. If your quarterback isn’t ready for it and ready to carry the whole thing, then you’re liable to come up short.” ' N ew s a n d n otes going to give leadership. I think this is a group that tremendously complements Ryan Kealy and what Bruce Snyder wants in an offense that can have great balance to it.” ' Both coaches also commented on the Kealy, who is making his first start since the UofA game Nov. 28, •Redmond will be featured on FOX Sports Net’s “The Slant,” which airs tonight at 7:30 p.m. Also on tap is a feature on the Heisman candidate in USA Today, writ­ ten by Dick Patrick. •The ASU Football Season Preview Show, which fea­ tures footage from Camp Tontozona, will air on FOX Sports Arizona tomorrow from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. and again on Saturday from 11 a.m. to noon. Sprewell refiles lawsuit; claims NBA refs destroyed evidenee SAN FRA N CISCO (AP) — Latrell Sprewell refiled his dismissed lawsuit on Monday, with new accusations that three NBA security employees shredded evi­ dence that would have exonerated him. Sprewell's original $30 million lawsuit against the NBA and the Golden State Warriors was dismissed July 30 by a feder­ al judge. At the time, the judge left room for the suit to be revived but urged the player to drop it. Instead. Sprewell refiled the.suit in U.S. District Court, bolstered by charges that NBA security chief Horace Balmer and two associates destroyed notes of inter­ views with S prew cll’s team m ates and “intentionally suppressed important evi­ dence for the purpose o f perpetrating fraud.” Said Jeffrey Mishkin, the NBA’s chief legal officer: “Every one of Mr. Sprewell’s increasingly bizarre claims has already been raised ànd rejected by both an arbitra­ tor and a federal court. This has now become a pathetic sideshow.” Sprewell admits he choked Warriors coach P.J. Carlesimo during a Dec. 1 prac­ tice. and that he returned to the gym about 15 minutes later to confront Carlesimo. He claims he never hit the coach, or tried to hit him, during the second confrontation. “I came back out to basically let P.J. know I wanted to be traded, I wanted out,” Sprew ell said at a new s co n ference Monday. “I got close to P.J. and guys start­ ed grabbing me to keep me from getting close to P.J.” Sprewell said Balmer and his associates got a similar version of the incident from telephone interviews with Golden State teammates, but destroyed notes of those interviews. Instead, Sprew ell’s lawyers contend, the NBA told arbitrator John F eerick that Sprew ell tried to attack Carlesimo a second time. “The most crucial thing that was wrong was the shredding of documents by the NBA. They prepared a document for the arbitrator that wasn’t fair to me,” Sprewell said. “The league and the Warriors haven’t played by the rules.” The suit also seeks to cap Sprewell’s punishment at $1 million, the amount the form er A ll-S tar guard claim s he lost because of a 10-game suspension by the Warriors. VAW 6 t A M E R IC A , V.A.W , of America Inc., a world leader in the aluminum extrusion and fabrication industry and an important part of the VIA G Group is seeking to fill the following positions: INSIDE SALES We are seeking for a SalesMarketing professional to sup­ port our Sales Department. Ideal candidates must have at least three years experience in: • Direct or telephone sales • Account management • Customer Relations Also requires a Degree in Business or related field and must be computer literate. QUALITY ASSURANCE MANAGER P.C. TECHNICAL/NETWORK ANALYST The qualified candidate must have a Bachelor’s Degree (BA or BS) & 3 years experience in QA environment in a man­ agerial role. Strong ability to comprehend & apply engineering/metalurgical technolo­ gy. Q S/IS09000 certification experience is required. Bilingual English/Spanish is pre­ ferred. The ideal candidate reports to the V.P. of Operations & plans, directs, & con­ ducts a ll quality control program s. Develops and implements QA key mea­ surements. The qualified candidate must have 3 years experience in troubleshooting and repair of PC’s. Software responsibilities include Microsoft Word, Excel and Access in a sup­ portive role for our users. Additional respon­ sibilities include maintaining phone sys­ tems, time clocks, AS/400 and wiring, as well as providing technical support to the entire facility. Strong knowledge of Windows 95, NT and Novell networks, and thin client technology is highly desirable. VAW offers an excellent compensation and benefit package that includes medical/dental, life insurance, 41 OK, profit sharing and much more. Please send resumes to: VAW of America, P.O. Box 6726, Phoenix, AZ. 85005 Attn: HR Dept. Or fax to: (602) 269-0220 Gillom vows to bounce back; help Phoenix win W N B A title HOU STO N (AP) — Jen n ifer G illom ex p ects m ore physical play from the Houston Comets “— and a better game from herself — as the Phoenix Mercury try to win the WNBA championship Tuesday night. “We are used to physical play. I have to expect that,” Gillom said Monday. “You won’t see the Jennifer you saw Saturday, believe me.” Gillom, the Mercury.’s top scorer, was bottled up and blitzed by the Comets in Game 2 and managed to score only eight points as her team lost 74-69 in overtime. The result tied the hest-of-3 series at 1-1, setting up Tuesday night's final game. G illom had one of her worst perfor­ mances of the season, shooting 3-for-15. The Mercury won the opener 54-51 in Phoenix, and had the upper hand in Game 2, but Gillom didn’t respond well to the double-teaming and the pushing and shov­ ing inside. “I ’ll be ready for double- and triple­ teaming and the unnecessary rough stuff,” Gillom said. “It frustrated me Saturday, but I won’t let that happen again.” Despite losing a 12-point lead in the final eight minutes of Game 2, the Mercury haven’t lost their confidence. “We’re looking at this positively, that we did get 12 points up on them,” guard Michele Timms said. “We’re going to see it as a positive thing rather than we got 12 points up and they came back and bit us.” For thé Comets, it gave them a shot of confidence. “They blew the lead because we started playing defense," the Com ets’ Cynthia Cooper said. “During the timeout, we said, ‘let’s rebound and get the job done on ; defense and everything else will fall into place.’ “ Coach Van Chancellor put the Comets through their regular workouts Sunday, while the Mercury took the day off. Both teams worked out at Compaq Center on Monday. Chancellor anticipated an all-out battle in the finale — and a better game from Gillom. “I think Jennifer will play better in the next game, but somebody isn’t going to get all of those shots,” Chancellor said. “They played well but I think we’ll be relaxed Tuesday.” Phoenix coach Cheryl Miller is positive, considering that her team only lost by five Pat Sullivan o f th e A ssociated Press points in Game 2 despite an off-day from Phoenix M ercury head coach Cheryl Miller chats with the media prior to the team ’s practice. The Mercury will face the Houston Comets in the third and final game of the WNBA Finals Tuesday night. her best player. rCAMPUS-j Raiders cut e x A S U defensive lineman A m ey LC From Staff and W ire Reports o RN ER- i Former ASU defensive end Vince Amey was released by the Oakland Raiders, the team announced Monday. Amey was a seventh-round draft choice, of Oakland in 1998. He was unavailable for comment Monday evening. Meanwhile, back in the Valley of the Sun, exASU offensive lineman Kyle Murphy has joined radio station KMVP (860 AM) to work on its pregame and postgame football shows. Murphy, who was invited to Oakland’s presea­ son training camp but never signed with the team, said Monday that he will continue training this year, but he hopes to sign with another team next season. 7 1 2 S . College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C ollege S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S. M ill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s from C offee P lantation Everyday Low Price 2 4 exposure Police clear Cowboy DOUBLE PRINTS s e e s to re for details Color C-41 P ro c e s s B e s t P rice in Town DALLAS (AP) — Police on Monday cleared Dallas Cowboys All-Pro offensive lineman Larry Allen of a topless dancer’s sexual assault accusa­ tion. “We have concluded our week-long investiga- tion and found there is insufficient evidence to file declined to indict Nate Newton after a Grand charges against the suspect,” Dallas police Prairie woman told police he raped her. In spokesman Sgt. Jim Chandler said. “The case will December 199)5, a former dancer told police that not be referred to the grand jury and has been wide receiver Michael Irvin threatened her with a cleared.” .'-v » -, gun while lineman Erik Williams and another man The 37-year-old woman said last week that raped her. The accuser, Nina Shahravan, later Allen forced her to have sex at knifepoint Aug. 24 recanted and pleaded guilty to peijury. in the parking lot of Kings’ Cabaret dance club. Rangers sign Zalapski Asked if charges would be filed against her, NEW YORK (AP) — Free agent defenseman Chandler answered: “There are no charges against Zarley Zalapski has agreed to contract terms with either party.” the New York Rangers, the team announced Teatn owner Jerry Jones, who has had to deal Monday. with this type of accusation against other players A veteran of 10 seasons in the NHL, the 6-footbefore, said last week nobody should jump to any 1, 215-pound defenseman has totaled 99 goals and conclusions. “It’s really not appropriate for anyone to make 283 assists along with 678 penalty minutes in 625 a comment or a judgment, at this time,” said Jones. games with four teams. Zalapski, 30, had three goals and 12 assists “It’s more appropriate to make any comments along with 63 penalty minutes in 63 games with when all the facts have been examined.” Allen is the fourth Cowboy in less than two the Calgary Flames and Montreal Canadiens last years to be accused of sexual assault. No charges season. Pittsburgh’s first pick in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft, Zalapski has played for the Penguins were filed in any of the cases. Last summer, a Dallas County grand jury . and the old Hartford Whalers. C la s s ifie d s ; Notice to our readers: Before responding to aiiy 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 and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia..» Ballroom APARTMENTS APARTMENTS I BD/j.BA 4-PLEX: Pool* a/c, coy, prkng. $4.Q0/mo. Dwnfwn Tempe, 2bd/I ba, hew carpet, util, includ. $65b/mo. lbd, $525/mo. Qrange/Terracet 731-9460 TAKE OVER LEASE A55AP One bdrm 6ino. lease $503/mo no move in fees. Only util, connctn. fees Apaehe/Price 2mi frm ASU, 892-7133 iv msg. IBD/1 BA, 2 blocks from cam­ pus, pool, spa, laundry^, cov­ ered prkng-. No pets: $445/mo.. 1700 S. College-967^7212 TEMPE: 2 BR apts, great Idea­ tion, remodeled, a/c, cov’d park­ ing, $550/mo. Ask about movein special; assistive animals only, avail now. 804-0537 2BR/1 BA, SMALL complex, quiet, walk to ASU (Rural/Apache). $50(Vmo. 223-4641, pgr. MILL/BROADWAY 1-2 bd apts, $525-625/mo. util, paid, pool,- cov’d pking, 829-7368 VERY NICE, Irge. clean. 2bd/ Iba, walk to ASU. $5<;>9./mp. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238 .■ Classifieds WORK! HOMES FOR RENT 3BD/2BA HOUSE, a/c, water cooler. Good, condition within walking distance of ASU. $930/mo. + utils. Please call 968-3695. 3BDR, 2BA, 3.5 mi fo ASU, 2 car garage, fenced yard, ac & evap, $ 1200/mo. Jane, owner agent, 831 -9024 major at APARTMENTS Brigham Voting U niversity.- QUADRANO» VILLAGE A PA RTM EN TS S A V IN C S U P T O $ 3 5 0 O TP! ' LIMITED OFFER STUDIO, ONIamROOMatwo bedroom homes ANNOUNCEMENTS TOP-RANKED ASU Waterski Team Tryouts, Sept- 4th at 3pm. C om petitive experience desired. For appt., call Sheila at 897.6088, ext. 233. 7 7» /» mhouêd bmyour md Cm* M6-4ÍT35___ - M ALKIN C DISTANCE TO ASU a n d d o w n t o w n Tem pi . ■ S A V i O N UTIUTIiS - HO T WATEfe.INCLUDED A L A R M SYSTEM AVAILABLE • PRIVATE 8A t CON Y/PATIO 3 POOLS(1 HEATED) . BARBIQUI AREAS . C tiLIN C FANS CU STOM VtRTICAL/M INI 8LINDS EUROPEAN CABINETRY ; LARCE STORAGE AREAS LLACE M tw ra a m t i l l EAST U N IV IIU ITV D R IV I U M P E . ARIZON A R E M I 4 0 2 .9 * 8 .8 1 1 8 2 BLKS TO ASU, efficency $475 or 2bdr, 1 ba, $700/mó. Jane, owner/agent, 831-9024.. HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c. Near ASU, 2bd/2ba, $675/ mo; 3hd/2ba avail. 966-0987 PAPAGO PARK Village I, ayaiL now! 3bd/2ba, 1536 sq ft, $1250/mo; Call 496-8939. Call 965-6735 t» p lace jf w r »4 dancing is a Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT APARTMENTS PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba, 1 mi. from ASU, fireplace, pool, 1 covered parking space, avail­ able now, $1,275/mo- 9473917 or 945-5845. HELP WANTEDGENERAL TELEMARKETING $10/hr basé to $ 2 0 9-year-old company • We Train • AM A PM Shifts • Weekends Optional Close to ASU 350-9336 RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING 21 YR.+ female wanted to share 2bd/2 l/2ba twnhme, 13th St,/ Hardy. $350 + $200 dep. + 1/2 utils. N/S, must like cats, avail. now. Robin, 921.-4134. FEMALE ROOMMATE prefd to share 3bd house w/ fun people. Master bd/ba, w/d, walk to ASU. $325/mo. Call 967-7199. GRAD STUDENT or professional prefd to share 6bd/4ba house, pool, w/d, cable. $300+ util, deposit req’d. Broadway/MeClintock area. 897-6087. MALE PREFD, resp n/s for Ig rm in 4bdr house on Priest & Bway, w/d, bottled H20, $325+1/3 utl Iv msg 966-3670. This should bo your ad Call 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Non-profit agency recruiting to conduct housing surveys, req 1-2 hrs each at$25. Applicants must be com­ mitted to Fair Housing. Send name, address & telephone to 3431 W. Thunderbird, #13A, Phoenix 85053. FEM. RMMTE needed, master bd/ba, w/d, water incld., pool, 8 mins, to ASU. 637-9289, pgr. WANTED: RESP. f to share 2bd/2ba apt. w/21 yr. old stud. & dog. 15 min. from ’ASU. $362 + utils. Call Kara 753-6653 ROO M S FOR RENT 4BR/2BA HOME, McClintock &Broad way, pool, m/f; avail able now! $325/m+util. Walt or Paul, 921-9046. Classifieds WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL NEW RESORT RESERVATION CENTER Coordinate Tours/ Reservations • G uarantee $7-$15.92/hr. • 37 Perm anent Positions • 9-1 o r 5:00-0:00 (24 & 30+ Hrs) • Training Provided, No Selling Elba 491-4921 20 WMIlWiüBw» lioTimiim s&pmr*mafeiwo ROOM S FOR RENT MALE GRAD has furnished room & office to rent in 3bd house wt pool. $3 75/mo. + utils. Near ASU, shopping. Call Lynn. 491-7201 < . ALL PRIVATE rooms, S Tem­ pe, in 4br. 2ba townhouse; Rural between Guadalupe and Elliot. Quick access to campus by bus or car. Serious n/s stud­ ents,. Pref grads. $300-350. +1/4 electric‘4311-2422. RFSPONS1$ LE MALE, N/S. to share new home.. Ray/56th St. Quiet neighborhood. Perfectfor y oung -prof ., :pf grad.. Frplee. . spa, . laundry. Avail, immed. . $4-23 ih cids.utils.,$485 .w/ .ga­ rage i,753-9344. ;' ROOM FOR Rent; 3bd 2ba house w/pool baseline & mill $320/Hia 650-342-3441. John MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE MATTRESSES - QUEEN set $125, full set $110, twins $89/set. In plasjic, free deliv­ ery. 649-2625. . SPRINGTREE CONDO. 2 m.str bdr/ 2ba, McClintock/ Broad­ way, avail 1/1/99, all appi, w/d, fridge, xlnt cond. $72k. Contact 515-1966. SOFA $199; - bed $59; bunk bed $ 179; dinette $95; futon $ 119; dresser $59.962-0749 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE WATERBED. QUEEN size, metal frame, good condition. $75 obo. 968-2060 GÓLF CLUBS for sale! Né ver been hit drivers and. woods. Callaway Big Berthas, AVDP, to p Flite. Call Bill 517-1180 Find it F A S T in the Classifieds FURNITURE FOR SALE: Sleeper Sofa, like new ! White w/blk &tan design, sleeps 2- $295 obo. 730-8341, ; MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE NEED A COMPUTER But don’t have the cash? Com­ plete systems w/ FREE ISP! Low pymts. All credit types welcome. 1-800-600-0343 ext 2262, TICKETS FOR SALE: Metallica tlx. Sept. U # Desert Sky 394-0128 Classifieds WORK! COMPUTERS Screaming systems a t prices students can afford^ MICROSOFT OFFICE 9 7 Professional, Full version, unopened, unregistered, $75 DRAFTING FURNITURENew/Used tablesall sizes. Chairs, lamps, accessories. 800-416-3594 D r a f t in g Eq u ip m e n t HELP WÀNTEDGENERAL DRAFTING SUPPLESPendis, « N n T-squares, vdkan. dots, You're sm art Do the math! $$$ M m ÿ R ts n g iiim D rafting Equipm ent W arehouse W areho use 1525 E Apache (near McClintock) 8 5 8 -0 0 2 4 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Full-tim e m oney. Part-time hours. $$$ Telem arketers Wantad • $8/hr. base + comm. $9/hr, potential month­ • Flex AM & PM hours ly bonus S$. No soiling 1S2S E Apache (near McClintock) 8SS-0O24 In G ainey R anch. Earn • Convenient locations AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES ’88MAZDA RX7,MUSTsee! New paint job, ac. pwr everything, 88K mi, $3950,699-9969 96 VW Cabriolet- full .power 39- JETTAS, GOLFS. ‘94,*97. options, immaculate condition, . GLS, GTS, Treks: 30- ’SS^92 Jettas; 2- '98 Passats; ‘98 GTI perfect top down Phoenix cruis­ VR6; '98, Beetle, $18,995. AZ's er! $16,988, Call Camelback unauthorized VW dealer/L eVW @ 265-6600. Sueur Car Go. 968-661L ’91 FORD TEMPO, xint cond, 4-dr sedan, auto, ac, ps.pb, $2400 obo, 303-9848. -96 VW JETTA, 21,000 mi, 5 spd, ac, pi, pw, moonrf, spoil­ er, foglights. $14,300 obo. 774-9877 94 VW Jetta GL-nioonroof, premium sound, automatic, low miles. Sale priced at $10,988. Call Camelback VW at 265-6600, HELP WANTEDGENERAL 468-2859 D rafting Equipment Warehouse HELP WANTEDGENERAL COMPUTERS YOU NEED A COMPUTER! MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE B otve Board C m r m s e -A r m r , C jM v IM k M ) FURNITURE HELP WANTEDGENERAL Marketing/SalesIntern Junior; senior, or grad student 20 hrs/wk, $6.50/hr. Advertising sales for industry publication, trade show promotions and booth sales, possible ad creation. 263-0015 HELP WANTEDGENERAL POLICE SERVICE ASSISTANT m ant - 607-1069. G reat environm ent. 3 ASU Ceramics Instructors Opportunities to instruct youth, parent-child, and adult community classes & workshops for Fall ‘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 Idlns, mixing glazes, and studio maintenance. We Groat opportunity for 735-0000 $8.28 Per Hour $$ and hint Maintain vehicles 8 make deliveries. Requires some physical work. *18yrsof age • A2DL • Poly &background investigation Our customers wiH call you for directory assistance. You simply a s for the “city and listing’ and give them the réquested information. Absolutely no selling is involved. Plus, we offer • a variety of FT and F*T work schedules • weekly pay periods • paid training •401 (k) and more City of Mesa app. req. Apps available: www.ci.mesa.ai.us Apply by 9/4 to City of Mesa Persom i 20 E. MainSi Ste.250 .v M esa P.O.ieÉÉr 1906 E. Mam (NW comer of Main & Gibed) Geography (or related field) to help digitize tax parcels using Maplnfo. We have 2-3 posi­ tions available# part-time or full-tim e, flexible schedule. Competitive hourly salary. Please call Ethan at Arizona la n d A d v is a ri at 947*1468 or a-meil ma at L ethan@ a 2 land.aam for more info. Iì a v e p o s m o N S a v a ì Ia ò Ie Io r : Hieb School MATh & Scìence Tutors (You must be a W e to TEAch both SubjECTS) For ìnìormatìon on FaII openìnqs, p Iease caII 955-5070 *8,75/hr (20 hrs/wk). Send resume & references to City of Tempe Cultural Services 3340 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, AZ 85282 EMPLOYMENT CENTER N ow H iring for F all F IN A L L Y ! • $5*° to $7*° plus bonus One place to apply for jobs at over 50 M arriott locations Valleywide • Make your hours M aintenance • S e cu rity Food Servers • Cooks • R etail C lerical • H ousekeeping CaiLToday ^ ^ r r io tt grads em ployed now. AZ Ave. & Warner i need motivated\ herdworking students of G r a d u a te S t u d e n t s f o r T u t o r i n g roquirod. PIT flaxib la 777-8757 HELP WANTEDGENERAL The University of Advancing Computer Technology is hiring P/T acctng clerk to work 4-9pm, 3-4 evenings a week. Duties will include data entry, implementing payment plans and hiring. Please fax resume to 383-8250 or e-mail jobs@uact.ed hours. C a ll for appoint- Dobson & Guadalupe AUTOMOBILES 965^6754 667-3388 Jobs available clo se to cam pus! C all today. Phoenix 4360 E. Camelback, 3rd Floor. Sto. 300K Tm pC 1919 W. Fairmont (Broadway/Southem. near l-io) Peoria 9002 W. Peoria (ME comer of Peoria & 99th Ave.) Mesa, AZ8S2ÌV1466 EOE/AAE Aug. 29 - Power 92 AZ Mbs (outside of IMAX theaters), 12-2:30 with Kracy Kid & Ruben S a r CITY OF M ESA J o in 1 our i w in n in g retti rjJj.f'S EM BASSY M , Tu, and F 8:30 - 10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm ►1 Now open the foliow ing Saturday! A C C E P T IN G W A L K -IN IN T E R V IE W S E < X RESORT it 1 SUITES fc o rrs riM ì- I 9am ■3pm : A ug. 29 S e p t 12 . .S ept. 26 Attention ASU Grads >B q t- S e t u p 'S t a f f ’ • R o o m S e r v i e * ( S 4 .2 5 / h r + t l p s ) , i • S e r v e r * ( $ 3 .S 0 / h r ; • 0 iff Servons- H H m i l l ’M m îi FT & PT work available f>lea sa apply with H um an Ftesourcee, 5001 N . Scottsdale Rd. S cottsdale Em bassy S uites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. T em p e-b ased In sigh t is a $ 6 2 8 m illio n , p ub licly -tra d ed te le s a le s o r g a n iz a tio n m a rk etin g c o m p u te r s, h a rd w are an d so ftw a r e to b u sin e s s c u s to m e r s n a tio n w id e . W e n e e d p r o fe ssio n a ls to jo in o u r 1 2 0 0 + e m p lo y e e s in a fa st-p a ced and*fun e n v ir o n m e n t. In s ig h t o ffe rs a c o m p e tit iv e sa la ry , b o n u s p la n s a n d e x c e lle n t b e n e fits p ro g ra m s in c lu d in g 4 0 1 K a n d s to c k p u rc h a s e plan.. In te re s te d c a n d id a te s m a y FA X re s u m e s to ( 6 0 2 ) 9 0 2 -1 1 5 7 o r m a il r e s u m e s to 6 8 2 0 S o u th H a r l A v e n u e , T e m p e , A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 3 . P le a s e in d ic a t e s a la r y r e q u ir e m e n t s . S m o k e - fr e e w o r k p la c e . D r u g te s tin g . E O E m / f / h / v . 6 8 2 0 S o u th H a r l A v e n u e (N e a r 1-10 a n d E llio t R d .) T e m p e , AZ 8 5 2 8 3 N a tio n w id o solos Paid job tra in in g B aso + B ò n u s + B e n e fits + S t o c k O p tio n s First y o ar incorno o p po rtunity is from S 3 0 -3 5 K Tolosalos a n d /o r co m p utar solos experien ce is p ro fo r rod msram* so S hns HELP WANTED­ GEN ERAL CACTUSSPORTS Is now hiring forP TS ales position. Energetic people In a fun M ill Aire, areas Call Troy/Noah 921-1278 IMMEDIATE AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to people and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort is the place to be! • Eve. H rs/S cottsdale Location v No Eiqp. Necessary • B ig $$$$$$$$$ $8/HR GUARANTEED -»-BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES BICYCLES 68 VOLVO 122S-new tires, brakes, belts, hoses. $1500 obo. Scott e 858-9372 90 FORD Probe HB, ps, tilt, cruise, 5spd, cold a/c, pw. New tires, 2nd owner, exc. cond, very clean, $3450 obo. Day 350-8435, nght/wkd 468-0509 95 EAGLE TALON, awd, TSI (turbo), immaculate, black, must sell, fully loaded, leather, moon roof, Infinity sound, 37K mi, $15,000 obo. 759-7409. GOOD USED bikes, approx 50mountain, road & cruisers. $30$180. Pgr 266-8720. 89 CÉLICA GT convert Xlnt condition, a/t, a/c, new brakes, top, tires. $5900 obo. 596-3836 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Appointment Setters G reat job - No selling G reat pay - $8-$ 10/hr. G reat location - N ear cam pus G reat bonus program W eekly cash incentives G reat hours - AM/PM shifts 894-9884 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS • Customer Service • Data Entry • Flex Hrs PT/FT •$ 8 -$ 1 2 /H r • 1 0 min from A SU • Professional Environment 92 VW J e tts GLI, 16 valve, black, lowered, BBS rims, gray recaro seats, a/c, tilt, pw, tint, 102K m i $7995. Amy, 4917640 93 NISSAN PU, 2x4, ac. Prolock anti-theft, am/fm cd, nice buck. $5000 obo. 967-5522 94 JEEP WRANGLER, blue, 4cyl, power & tilt steering, new 31" mud train tires, custom wheels, cd, custom exhaust. $11,700 obo. Ask for Todd 730-5447 (eves). C all 965 6735 f t place year ad 333-0103 C ornerstone Ask for Irene Human Resources "H ave Fun, W ork H ard, j r Enjoy the Success' ----:— | .. — "■ 95 HONDA Civic EX coupered, autom atic, power wiftdows/locks, tilt, cruise, moonroof, premium sound. Save at $11,988. Call Camelback VW @ 265-6600. 95’ SUNFIRE, 2dr, 27k m, auto, white, a/c, ps, cc, am/fm cass, abfV exc. cond. $9300 785-9788 97 DODGE NEON ACR, com­ petition pkg, red, immaculate, must sell, 5 spd, Pioneer cd, alloy whls. neon mats, trunk liner/net, $9200. 759-7409. EVENT ATTENDANTS FOR A SU & CARDINALS GAMES 894-0770 x105 ARIZONA BIUMORI ✓— HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Call (Leave m essage for same . day interview )' . A U TO M O glLK ^ Call the ASUA thletic Departm ent a t 965-3933, o r pick up an application in the Wells Fargo Arena, Rm. 142. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $8.05/H R Phone verifiers. No selling, no appt. setting. M-F, no wee­ kends. Start now. McClintock /Broadway location. 784-2270, call now. 100,000 T R A V EL Questions answered in Italian, German, French, etc. Sky Har­ bor Airport. 3pm-11 pm. EOE. $7-$8.75/hr. 267-7994, Milt. ATTENDANTS NEEDED for fe­ male in Quadrangle Apts. Must be 21 or over w/ good driving record. No lifting req'd. 7:30am & Mon. afternoon & evenings. Approx. 15 hrs/wk. Ellen, 968-6284 AZ STATE Senate accepting ap­ plications for Pages for one im­ mediate opening & the Legis­ lative session beginning in January. Call Tina 542-5969. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BEfHANY CHRISTIAN School is hiring teacher assis­ tants, playground assistants, bef. & aft school care givers, & sub. teachers. Tempe at Price/Guadalupe Call 752-8993. Apply in person, M-F 8:30am4pm, or send resume (indicate position) to: Chase Cardmember Services, 100 W. Univers­ ity Dr., Tempe, AZ 85281. Or apply online . @ www.chase.ikMn. Jobline: 902-6000 BILTMORE AREA lawfirm needs m essenger immed. for court filings/errands/general of­ fice duties, pt/flex hrs. Jill Bricker 468-8900 BQOKKEEPER/ ACCOUNT­ ANT, permanent P/T. Must be in a degreed program, have a working knowledge of ac­ counting & theory & be me­ thodical with excellent follow through. MBA, Inc. is a grow­ ing N.E. Scottsdale public com­ pany. Call CFO at 860-2288 x 323. EOE. CHASE IS hiring: AcCt. Reps, Collection Reps, CSR, Fraud Reps (Bilingual' a +)* Tele Sales Reps, Supervisors, Payments & statements Serv. Reps, Admin Assist. Great benefits, conveni­ ent Schedule, up to 100% tui­ tion reim bursem ent, dwntwn Tempe w/ free cov'd parking. DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now hiring courteous order .takers & expedient drivers. Drivers must have own car & insurance. PT/FT. Extra $$. Call 220-0000 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. , D R AFTING Part-time for metal roofing con­ tractor. Must be able to read ar­ chitectural plans and have draft­ ing experience. Approx. 20 hrs/wk. Phone 437-9323. Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 D o m in o 's P iz z a $ Put cash in yo ur pocket $ W eekly paychecks! Join the excitement With the #1 food delivery team for the ASU area. With the addition of hot wings, salads & bread-' sticks, this Domino’s is pne of the top campus stores in the country. We need more f/t & p/t, phone help, pizza makers, & d riv e rs , (e s p e c ia lly late night and lunch shifts) to help us m ake, b ake , & ta k e all these orders. Our drivers can make $12-$16/hr, including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can a lso be earned. We are very flexible & can work around your school schedule. We support a drug free work environment. Apply in person after 11am at 903 S. Rural, Tempe, or call 9685555.EOE DELI HIRING counter help & sandwich makers. M-F days. Phx7 Tempe border. 921-7827 ncstnmn loin the Fiesta Fun! C oncierge FT Front Desk FT/PT F ie sta In n 2100 S. Priest Tempe 2 m ile s fro m A S U jobiine: 8 0 4 - 5 2 8 5 ~ AMERICAN VALET CO. HIRING VALETS. Earn $7 to $ 12/hr. P/T eyes 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 the right.) Applications taken Mon-Fri, 1pm - 4:30pm. CREATE YOUR O W N SCHEDULE! Have fu n c a llin g V alley singles to in vite th em in fo r a fre e to u r o f S co ttsd ale’s m ost W e’ll be on campus in the mall by the MU prestig io u s singles service, Great Expectations! Tuesday & Wednesday, 8am-2pm $ 10 / H R G U A R A N T E E D !!! Recruiting for: Banquet Servern » Valet Parkers • Spa Reception Come meet us! ’ or '■ plu s b o n u s e s ($12 - $ I 5/h r avg.) no e x p e r ie n c e req'd Call our Job Hotline for other opportunities 9 5 4 -2 5 4 7 941-0500 TUITION REIMBURSEMENT SEMI-ANNUAL MERIT REVIEWS Get a good, dose look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FACS provides financial, 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: COLLECTIONS • CUSTOMER SERVICE « CREDIT GRANTING Additional advantages include: • 20% discount on most Macy's purchases »Casual dress every day «Competitive medical benefits for full-time • Paid benefit days • Paid weekly • Hrly rates are $8,25 or more (DOE) FAGS FINANCIAL A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon.-Fri, 8am-5pm or caU toll free: 1-888-284-3227. (Northeast comer of 52nd St. and west 14th St between Broadway and University Drivés,) and CREDIT SERVICES 1345 S. 52nd St. Serving Macy's a Bloomingdale's Department Store* Equal Opportunity For All in Tempe emedx Leinenhugels Ballyard Brewery atthe Bank One BallparH Need Cash? N o w H ir in g fo r a ll k itc h e n p o s itio n s a n d H osts C areer O p p o rtu n ities!!!! R em ed y N eed s You!!!! Full and Part Time Available • Flexible Hours in th e Tem pe Area • Market Research for th e Republican Party, $8 per h r • C redit Card Activation, Entry level $7.95 per h r • Telesales for US West, A fternoon an d evening shifts $8.50 plus bonuses Call Jan or DeeAnna at 557-8483 for inform ation W e are just around th e com er in the B a n c O n e B u ild in g Mill an d University U p t o $ 1 2 /h r ! Open interviews M-F N on-gam e days betw een 3-4pm Come be a part of the team in our 20,000 square foot restaurant located 20 yards from BANK ONE BALLPARK Need Bucks for Books? .. .donate Plasma. 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 he 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 1 you want to donate plasma. | 968-6139 CG N TEO N Bio-Services, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Ste. 102 •Tem pe ALGEBRA ART HISTORY B io lo g y FRENCH Geography E n g lis h 101 M ust be 10-49 years o f age, posse ss a va lid ID and p ro o f o f lo ca l add ress & S o cial S e cu rity num ber. HELP WANTED­ GENERAL _____ HELP WANTED­ GENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL EDUCATIONAL MAIL Order Co. has FT & PT positions in all depts.: cust. service, graphic design (MAC photoshop or Quark), website design, net­ work maint., marketing, pur­ chasing & shipping. $8/hr. to start. Raises every 90 days. Sal­ aried management opportunities for exceptional individuals after 6 mos. Join a growing corp. that accommodates student hour§! Near ASU; 438-4400 GYMNASTICS COACH want­ ed, boys & girls. Must enjoy working w/ kids. Need energe­ tic individuals w( positive at­ titudes. Hours available M-F, after 5:15 pm + wknds. Great pay, flexible hours, exp. prefd but not nec. Call 451 -1011. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m/f needed immed. for nat'l com­ mercials/ print! 941-6922. HELP WANTED: P/T, nights, weekends, ice skate rinkguards, skate atteodants, pizza cooks, retail equipment sales. Apply in person, daily 1 1am-5pm. Oceanside Ice Arena, 1520 N. McClintock Dr., Tempe. FUN PE O PLE Wanted ! Appointment setters for Universal Portraits. $7$12/hr. 777-1054 G R E A T JOB! Caregiver for active quad. 3-4 eves/wk: Seeking healthy, smoke/drug free ass't. w/ ¡posi­ tive attitude; Good pay, will train. Toro at 949-2789. NEW PHX Co. seeks 12 goaloriented indiv. to aid local growth. No exp. nec. FT/PT avail. Call 553-3193. P/T HELP wanted. Appt. set­ ting for free security alarm sys­ tem, M-F, 12-4pm o r 5-9pm. Hourly + coram. + bonuses. Call Mike O'Shea, 507-9577. MARKET RESEARCH- grow­ ing Tempe com pany, several different positions. 967-4441 P/T PERSON needed to help Mi/ packing pharmaceuticals, order checking & some data entry. M ust be dependable . Flexible hrs. Call 470-8119 MECHANICAL TECH ft/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU. Flex: brs-Cail 956-8200, days : PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/t, $8.10/hr, no exp nec; Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ACROSS FROM ASU- phone sales, all reps make $300-$400 p/t, 4:30-9:00pm , M-F, start immed, 736-0034. PT, M-TH 6-9pm $7/hr. Near ASU. Survey telemarketing, no pressure presentation. No exp. nec. Call for interview with Norm Gifford at 829-3460 PT WHSE near ASU, M-F, 4 hr. days, $7/hr. Lift 401bs. Contact Becky 921-1373 RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe, Cindy, 777-1054. HELP WANTEDGENERAL SECURITY PERSONS, wait staff, & bar staff wanted at Pom­ peii. Please apply within Mon & Tues 12-5.919 E. Apache. SHOW ME the money! Are you earning $500/wk.? Local mar­ keting 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 4604)859. SPO RTS M INDED 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. SALES ASSOCIATES wanted for AZ Mills candy storey flex, hrs. Fun job, good pay. Call Sweets from Heaven, 777-7307. nil! HELP WANTEDGENERAL STU D E N T W ORK! Back to School! Up to $8.90. Flexible PT/FT schedule. No exp nec., all majors considered. Scholarships available. Phx/ Scottsdale, 2 12-0551. E. Valley/Ahwatukee, 844-1860. AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM needs teacher ass't. in N. Scot­ tsdale. Group activities. 2:456pm, M-F. $7/br. 852-2852 or 563-8599. TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights  weekends, fun job, 947-6562.2013 N. Scottsdale Rd. „ ■ n ^ JL, ^ jm ~ jr NOW HIRING CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATES To Assisi wirk ¡noiiirhs REQARdiNq DillARds Dept. S tore CARdMEMbERS • N umerous Pari'TSme openings AVAiUbit w iik start times Between TT: ?0 am & 4pw, woRkiNq 4 '5 houR skifrs, 5 dAys A w ick. SAiuitdAy or Suiwky nrQuiRfd. • Wn-ktNc) ONly POSITIONS AVAiUblF, WORk SATURdAy ANd/OR SuNdAy Tor A VALET PARKING attendants, must be clean cut, $6-$9/hr. (in­ cluding tips.) P/T eve.^ shifts, 5pm-l 1pm. 548-0599 lv. ipsg. WATTSTAFF FOR fun neighbrhd sports rest/bar. 3-4 shifts p/w, good$, busy & stable. Apply the Woodshed II Dobson/Univ. City of Scottsdale F in d it F A S T in th e C la s s ifie d s =■ . .._5LE |P ~ Psych & Social Work Majors DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behavlorally challenged. Earn $7.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents US GOV’T Jobs hiring now entry level to advance posi­ tions. Paid training, benefits. $1 l-$33/hr. Call free 1-800406-1434 x 938. Community Maintenance and Recreation Division COACHES & OFFICIALS Gain Valuable Experience D IL L A R D Ü A T l C Ä L B A N K HELP WANTEDGENERAL , Boys & Girls Flag Football Volleyball $7 JO • $9.75 per hour For application information contact the Student Employment O ffice, Job referral Applications will be accepted until Friday, September 18,1998. Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package 994-7642 4 10 6 (tour s k ill. • StarrNQ pAy $ 7 - $ 9 kR, PaicI EVERy FRidAy. f TkREE poteNtiaI SAURy increases in First Y ear bASEd on PErTormance. • M i dicAl/D< nia I B eneKis » C.f wfBOiis DillARd s D iscounts up to RESORT® Subm it A pplications To: DBC R esidential Services 2405 E Southern Ave. #9 Tem pe, A Z 85282 756-1223 RENT-A-CAR FU N A N D E X C IT IN G T R A V E L IN D U S T R Y 2?% . NOW • Avoid Frttwav roNGFSTioN! 1! G reat locAiioN Tor East VAllEy REsidENis. Apply iodxy in by mai! or Tax yooe Resume to #505'5507 M aA ¡NfoRMATiON TO; DILLARD NATIONAL BANK lotAied bfitwEEN person, A r'i/ ona Ave. & McQ ueen o ff E llio i RoAd >96 N , WUHam DillARd D rive • G ilbtR i, A ruona 85 2 >> LODAIOPTORTUNITYEM PLOYER H IR IN G Looking For: 1Aggressive Sellers • Customer Service • Competitive Personalities Responding to the behavioral health needs e f children, adults, end fam ilies. We Offer: Advancement Opportunities • Average S10S12 per hour Top sellers up to S20/hr • SS Big incentives, vacations Outstanding candidates interested in career growth and development wanted, Study at work ' Comfortable working environment • Night and weekend positions available • Close to ASU at SKY HARBOR AIRPORT " MAY Full tim e PM A overnight direct care posi* tions working with at-risk youth. Extensive training A excellent benefits provided. Salary $ 1 6 ,0 0 0 . Call today for interview 220-0122 o r d ro p in a t 3 7 0 0 E. W a s h in g to n THE MAY DEPARTMENT STORES COMPANY H IG G IN BO TH AM PART-TIME N O TELEMARKETING ASSO CIATES ^ $7.50 PER HOUR IN C. Create Your Own Schedule Mbs W E GAN W ORK A RO UND MOST CLASS SCHEDULES The May Credit Service Center is expanding our center in Tempe. W e are looking for seasonal associates to work through Christmas. ACCOUNT T7ir V a lie v's fin e s t m a r k e t research fir m ts e xp a n d in g in to Tem pe (R u ra l/ B ro a d w a y). Mr lave fun calling singles to invite them for a free visit in our center REPRESENTATIVES F o r im m e d ia te c o n s id e ra tio n p le a s e a p p ly in p e rs o n M o n d a y -F rid a y 9 :0 0 a .m . - 4 :0 0 p .m . M a y C r e d it S e rv ic e C e n te r It you n Dependable Friendly Motivated H Wew|]f offer M k tn g R esearch V Jk U b t foil Ml»f nr “ipantnh teUngual D a ta P r p c e ^ n ig * .* ' •*,<6J6/lit part hotU e r P r o je c t M g m t » \ • N O SELLING • Permanent Part time Day/evening shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d • Women Excell • Casual Dress • Automated Dialing System • Fun Atmosphere * S O I0 /:.A4c'-D o w e ll S u ite 2 0 8 S c o tts d a le T e m p e , A Z 85281 P lea se call (6 0 2 ) 858-4578 w ith any q u estio n s o r for m o re inform ation. A /. Call 718-1050 11 . mxddudidi m to fit yen need, tafter m fe m dogd Mwtdly itltaMd dteoephete . 16 I S S . 5 2 n d S tr e e t EOE r D a ta C o lle c tio n Account Representatives handle inbound calls from our retail sales associates for assistance with customer credit purchases. B en efits include: • 25% employee discount at Robinsons-May • Convenient location near ASU • Flexible work schedule • Opportunity to earn additional $.50 per hour for completing the season need in d iv id u a ls to conduct telephone su rveys, n o selling. Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale's leading dating service located in O ld Town Scottsdale. 8S2S7 fc -. ,*■ •. j , '* ‘ Excellent advancement • ytwibilihe» TWo week ’i A' •a 0 § ifn g -7 ‘ Weekly pay H iring im m e d ia te ly F or m o re in fo r m a tio n c a ll M a n u e l a t W-I31S * HELP WANTED­ SALES HELP WANTEDCLERICA L HELP WANTEDCLERICA L TELEMARKETING, 20HRS7WK. Flexible schedule: Earn $$$ while you learn!!! Call Pinnacle Healthcare Institute, Inc. at 8332445. ADMIN. ASST, needed to sup­ port growing high-tech Co. Comp, literate & self-motivated. Fax res: Attn: Valerie 829-7704 OFFICE MGR- must be posi­ tive, personable, and have com­ puter knowledge. P/T $7-9p/hr doe. Call 443-8817. ADMIN. ASST , phone/clerical p/t m ornings $7.50/hr. 52nd St & Univ. Call 968-3360 PARTTIME OFFICE work, Tues and Thurs. 9-5, Computer exp pref. Apply @ 3100 S Rural. ASSISTANT NEEDED for busy author/ businessman, 2030/hr/wk. Must be self-starter, computer & phone skills, must enjoy working with people. $712/hr. Call Stan 941-4384. REAL ESTATE assistant- Scot­ tsdale ofc. Ex pc in MS Word, Excel, Quicken would help. Good handwriting & spelling. Flex hrs. 951-8666. WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, ft/pt; base + comm", benefits, drug-free work­ place. Apply in person only, Space Age, 707 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa. This should be your act Cell 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE TEMPE CO. hiring qualified in­ dividuals for data entry posi­ tions. Excellent typing & com­ munication skills required. Weekend hours needed. Pay rate $7/hr. Please contact All Sport Entertainm ent, 2120 E: 6th St. #6, Tempe, 85281, or call 967-0089. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE GARCIA'S 44TH S t & Camelback now hiring pt/ft food serv­ ers, cocktail waitresses, & host/ hostess for am & pm shifts. Apply in person. C O R K ’N C LE A V E R Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail. Will train, p/t. Concern W/ appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (952-0585) LITTLE CAESAR S Pizza- bit­ ing management, shift leaders & delivery drivers. Thomas/ Hay­ den 945-8920; Southern /MeClin lock 897-8114; Rural/ Guadalupe 831 -6199; Warner/ M cClintock 820-9480; Base­ line/48th St. 431-1202. COUNTER HELP, bossers, cooks needed. All shifts avail­ able.' Stop by between 2-5 M-F for application. Mama's Pizzeria, 106 E. University Drive (con. Myrtle), HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE DILLY’S DELI: Busy Deli needs day help. Ask for Leanne or Nicole @ 491-1196 or apply in person after 2pm. AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM for kids K-6 gr. in central Phx is looking for dynamic staff, MF, 2-5:30-6pm. Call today for a great opp. 340-1100. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CHILD CARE for 2 year old twins needed for single mother. Fri-Sun days, Mon 2 -1 1pm. Exp pref d. Call 785-0383. CHILD CARE in my Tempe home. M-F, 3-6:30pm. 2 kids ages 7 &10 Deb, 966-2263. HELP WANTEDCHjLD_CAR^____ NANNIES NEEDED, full & parttime, iii my home for twin 4 yr. old boys. 952-2059. NANNY NEEDED 30-40 hrs/ wk. in' 32nd St/Shea area. Reli­ able. transp. needed. 945-9559 or 493-7574. N A NN Y Working mother of 2 (6 & 4yt olds) needs creative, fun loving person, M-Th, 2:45 - 6-7pm. Good trans req, $8/hr + gas$. Patty 840-5751 (eves). NEED RESPONSIBLE, female ASU student to care for 3 child­ r e n ^ 1/2, 9 & 12) 1 or 2 nights/wk. & occasional geta­ ways. Needs to love kids, enjoy playing & helping w/homework. Must be firm, but fun & have great time mgmt skills. Will be asked to drivé on occasion. $7/hr. Central Ave/Bethany Hm. Kathy, 265-5757 P/T CHÍLDCARE in my home before/after school + some over­ nights. Consider live-in. For info call, 897-8200. TEACHER Aides needed for child care center p/t afternoon and morning hrs avail. Mesa/Tempe border. 839-5953 HELP WANTEDGENERAL INTERNSHIPS Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote community par­ ticipation for individuals with develop­ mental disabilities. We offer a variety of positions working with individuals in their own homes or residential set­ tings. We offer over 40 hours of paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. We have flexible schedules with FT, PT and on-call positions available immediately. Our pay ranges from $ 7.00 - $8.00 DOE/EOE. Please call 431 -9511 for more information. Kyrene School District in Tempe seeks instructional assistants for special education students. F/T and P/T positions available with excellent benefits. Please fax resume to 7834071 or mail to 8700 S. Kyrene Rd., Tempe, AZ 85284. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS A D VENTU RO US m i £. University • 968-6666 Dont Forgetnm H a p p y H o u r D a ily 4 -6 p m & i ip m - 12a m Buy One - G et One F R E E u Rough edges smoothed — you will be in company of one who is bilingual, world traveler. You Will know what it is to fall madly in love. Long-distance call veri­ fies views. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21* Check Cancer message for added wisdom. Emphasize inventive­ ness, originality, fresh start in new direction. Darker, blurred areas of life will receive benefit of greater light. CAPRICORN (Dec. 224an. 19): Designate where action Will be. Let the world know, " I am not defeated. I will stay on." Focus on public relations, conference with management representative. Choose quality. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Someone really is following you. Purpose not necessarily evil, merely desires to talk with you. Be kind, know when to say enough is enough." Sagittarian helps open locked closet. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Suddenly you could find yourself among the high and mighty, Lunar position accents creativity, style, ability to make wishes come true. Taurus, Leo, Scorpio in picture. IF SEPTEMBER 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: You are-dynamic, creative, tem peram ental and have been kboym to be stubborn. Led, Vquari'ús persons play exciting roles in your life, could have these letters, initials in names -- A, S, J. Current cycle relates to intensified relationship, marital status, participation in pioneering project. You’ll be dealing with color coordination, entertainment programs, show­ manship, During September you could encounter future soul mate, © 1998, Los Angeles Times Syndicate CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call423-1700. www.protrader. com STOP LOOKING! Work from home or dorm! Over 150 legit­ imate companies need honest homeworkers desperately! No exp- req'd! Dozens of homebased positions avail, immed! F/P time! call now 1-800-3172346 x321 RESTAURANTS/ BARS CROCODILE CAFE has imme­ diate opening for host posi­ tion. $6.50/hr + tips & food runners Apply at 525 S. Mill Ave, Tempe. MILL AVE. B eer Co - J.W. Dundee's Honéy Brown Lager, 990, 8-1 lpm , Wed. 605 S. Mill Ave. STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. Apply in person, lpm-5pnii Mon.-Fri. 5001 E. Washington. MUSIC ACOUSTIC GUITAR student needed to accompany Jewish Renewal Synagogue in NE Phoenix/PV area at Holiday and occassional Shabbat serv­ ices. Call Richie Andler 9964959. SEIZED CARS from $ 175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free-, 1800-218-9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. PERSONALS MISSEY CHANEY Please Gall Diana Thomas ASAP, 678^ 1361 TUTORS LINUX CONFIGURATION (hardwre + softwre) help needed for home system. $30/2hrs. (max) 968-3584 7pm-10pm H E A L TH & $$$$ LOOKING FOR Spanish tutor. 2 eve's a wk. Call Marcy 413-9898 ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S tate P ress Classifieds Matthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 $250/SALE - $25 start-up. Computers-Internet-web pages. Call Robb or Jim 258-9308. www.vibc.com/fipl .html COACHES, needed; after school sports 4th-8th graders. Avail; 36pm M-Th. Call Catmen 644. 2767 or Jennifer 644-3368. Want to get healthy and make money doing it?: Work your own hours & make as much money as you want. Call Jen­ nifer @726-9402 Tuesday, September 1, 1998 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Family, gets behind you in con­ nection with business, career. • C an cer native confides, " A t tim es I can hardly keep my hands off you," Fine wine, fine dinner tonight. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): D iversify, accent versatility, transform humor into profundity. Attention evolves around com­ m unication, publishing, sentii m ent in rom ance. G em ini, Sagittarius play redes. GEM INI (May 21-June 20): Mercury ruler emphasizes need to be kind to writers this month. You'll participate in local writing club. Special project eventually will pay dividends. Scorpio plays role. CANCER (June 2 1J u l y 22): Push aside inhibitions. No need to be shy, obsequious. Prepare dinner for special friends, also make crystal clear yotf are no ■Slouch in the area o f Eros. Sagittarius involved. LEO (July 23-Aug, 22): Focus on diplom acy, m aking home beautiful, melting resistan-e to romance. Highlight etisie, style, panache d u rin g exciting courtship. Relative astonished by your energy. VIRGO (Aug JrS ep t. 22): Moon position ghlights stirring o f creative i 'ices. People talk and write a; j>ut you —love that fizzled will again sizzle. Questions concerning: partnernup, marriage loom large. LIBRA (Sept 23-O ct 22): Some will ask, "How can a gen­ tle soul like you be so tough in business?" You say, "Deadlines are my resp o n sib ility , and 1 intend to meet them.” Capricorn native declares, "Y ou aré won­ derful." SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): MERRILL LYNCH seeking p/t interns to market investm ent seminars. Great resume builder; Bonuses avail. Greg 607-8808. Can you walk? Can you talk? Can you make : $500 next week? Only i f you call 491 5136 between hoon/9pm. No phone wk. .' . F a t Tine • Honey Brown by S id n ey Omarr INVESTMENT FIRM needs 2 interns for mktrig & rsreh. Pow­ erPoint exp a plus. Learn all as­ pects of industry. Apply to Walter at 912-5129. JO B OPPORTUNITIES RESTAURANTS/ BARS $ 4 6S ' S ie rra Nevada • ASTC0C0&ICA& FORECAST FALL INTERNSHIP in financial district at Sutro & Co. in Scot­ tsdale. Motivation & articulate speaking skills required. 423-2272 BUSINESS o p p o R T U N m j^. M A T H T U TO R 1 tutor Algebra, Precalculus, Calculus, Statistics, Finite Math & more. Andrew, 730-5904 TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G Classified Ad Order Form SERVICES Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you w ish it to appear in the State Press, in cluding punctuation. Please check your ad th e firs t day it appears-the lia b ility of the State Press shall not exceed the cost o f the ad and cre d it m ay be given fo r the fu s t in sertio n only. M inor spelling erro rs do not q u a lify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cre d it w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. p A j Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+days, $1.49 per line, per day Commercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.60 per line, per day E § 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost o f 2 lines. Try Amazing New Hair Removal Technique FREE1 OnceRemoved™ has recently Introduced the newest, most advanced hair removal system ever. It is FDA approved, It is better than Shaving, tweezing, waxing, and even electrolysis. It’s pain-free, fast and as precise as a laser. Plus this new method has been successfully used on every part of the body. It even Works on ingrown hair. And for a very limited time you can try this amazing new technique for removing unwanted hair for free, Without any cost or obligation of any kind. For more information call this free recorded message at 222-6285 anytime, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. , ©OnceRemoved™ State Prcis Cor Tuesday, September I, H You’re invited! Wednesday Games! September 2 Prizes! 10am to 2pm in the Info! Memorial SPONSORED BY: Campus Dining by Marriott American Express Follett’s MU Recreation ASU Mail Services Bahama Bucks AZ Credit Union ASU Fast Copy Bank One ASU Bookstore State Press Phuong’s Cleaners The Picture Place ASU Police Adult re-Entry Child & Family Studies Community Service Program MUAB Sports Cutters Hoodlum’s Union OPENHOUSE (not in credit cards) In tro d u c in g th e N e w A m e ric a n Express” C re d it C a rd fo r S tu d e n ts . L iv e fo r to d a y . B u ild fo r to m o rro w . :r T h e N ew A m erican Express C red it C ard fo r S tudents is a resource you can depend on. W ith benefits like big a irfa re savings, free cred it in fo rm atio n , and no annual fe e , it'll help you g et the m ost fro m yo u r student years— arid help you build a solid fin a n c ia l fo u n d atio n fo r th e fu tu re . CALL TOLL FREE 1-877-IMO-FEE-4U TO APPLY.