Flin in the hark for the State Press Magazine INSIDE P Weather-Scattered thunderstorms; high 99, low 79 Clâs$ifleds-2Ô Crosswords-06 Horoscopes*24 Opinion-04 Volume 84 Number 12 Thursday, September 10 , 1998 PoliceBeat-09 Tailback Marlon Farlow and two others won't play this season Yeltsin, Parliament keep Russia waiting for end o f strife Teaching, learning styles on A B O R agenda B y Ja y s o n P eters S tate P ress The way students learn in class and the way their instructors teach are just two of the issues that will face students, faculty and administrators at this month’s meeting of the Arizona Board of Regents. Sam Leyvas, executive director of thè Arizona Student’s Association and NAU graduate, said the regents could consider such issues as intellectual property and aca­ demic freedom in the meetings slated for Sept. 24 and 25 at NAU. Internet cheating also is about to come under consideration by the A cadem ic Senate, Leyvas said, and it involves the larger issue of intellectual property . He said there is concern among faculty over whether it is “appropriate for a student to buy the notes, read the bode and take the test” and not come to class, while other stu­ dents attend class regularly. There is a natural concern among faculty that students are using on-line materials as their own, Leyvas added. C h ris M cG uinn, ow ner o f C lass Quotes, a professional note-taking ser­ vice, said most of the students who pur­ chase notes attend class on a regular basis and use his product only as a sup­ plément. “There are some professors who have a very strong stance against us,” he sajd. “I think there’s been a trig misnomer that all the students who purchase notes don’t go to class: “A great deal of our business is derived from students who miss one or two days of class,” he added. M cG uinn said he has spoken to as m any as 35 in stru cto rs reg ard in g the practice of selling notes froth their class­ es, and all of them have given their per­ m ission. In addition, he does not sell quotes for the classes of professors wjio object wholeheartedly. F acu lty and re g en ts are also c o n ­ cerned about academic freedom. W illia m D avey, p re s id e n t o f the A cadem ic S enate and c h a ir o f the Arizona. Faculties C ouncil, said a new state law c a lle d P aren tal C h o ice for R ead in g S u ccess m an d ates th a t the College of Education teach a certain kind of course. “It’s the firsyttep in saying ‘you have to teach math in a certain kind of way,” ’ he said. Davey said faculty representatives are currently working with the University’s government affairs office to formulate a response to the legislation. Leyvas said another important issue that interests both faculty and students is working to achieve a balance between the responsibilities of ASU. While still being a major research university, ASU Spring e le c tio n p ro p o sa l may elim in ate w o e s B y Jessica W S tate -P ress M id -d a y cra m se ssio n Ofelia Madrid o f th e S tate Press S h a m Looney Harvey, a senior stu d y b « English, sits outside o f H ayden U b n u y on W ednesday afternoon reading C haucer for one o f h e r classes. Fed up with spam: A SU continues struggle with mass e-mail problem B y G a n g a S ubram anian S tate P ress An international drivers license that can never be suspended or revoked. A bachelor’s, master’s or Ph.D. degree on sale for as little as $f25. A mysterious bottled formula that guarantees sexual or romantic responses from women. In recent weeks, many ASU students have received these sales pitches in their e-mail. Unsolicited mass e-mails, which peddle products, have been a con tin u ing problem fo r ASU Inform ation Technology — a problem the University vowed to fix last semester. But according to Mark Royal, electronic messaging manager for Information Technology, there is no perma­ nent solution to the problem. The transporting of unsolicited e-mail, also known as “spamming,” can clog up a server and cause delays in electronic mail delivery, said William Lewis, vice provost for Information Technology. Royal said, “Nobody can really stop spamming. If you have to stop spamming, you have to cut off your connec­ tions with the world.” Spams are typically sent overnight and they are just waiting for you in tire morning, he said. “I just received 15 this morning,’’ he added. Royal said the only thing senders of e-mail messages are required to do legally is provide an address or telephone number that recipients could contact for removal of their address from the mailing lists. “But most of the time, those addresses are bogus in the first place. They just use it to cover themselves,” he said. Attempts by the State Press to contact the numbers pro- olf ■; .Two AS ASU senators are proposing a b ill,that-they hope will eliminate fiascos like last year’s student offi­ cer election. , /• Last year, seven candidates jan.fbr ASASU president. However, no single candidate obtained a majority of votes. A runoff election between the top two vote-get­ ters, Seth Deitchman and Paul Frost, was then scheduled two weeks later. But the runoff never happened. The Student Supreme Court responded to an appeal from Deitchman, who was disqualified from the elections because of issues regarding his campaign spending, and a new election was ordered. The new elections featured all seven original candidates and campaign spending limits were eliminated. • Paul Frost eventually won. During the time period before the run-off, losing candidates filed numerous complaints about campaign spending. “Basically, a lot of whining went on last year,” said Joshua Ackerman, senator for College of Law and chair­ man of the government operations committee. “The new code will eliminate some time-consuming complaints, but still allow enough time for people with real, serious com­ plaints to be heard.” The new code would allow 48 hours for people to file complaints with the elections commission. The bill, designed to eliminate problems during the spring elections, would re-vamp ASASU’s election code and will go to a vote in early October. It reads: “The ASASU senate is fully cognizant of the total collapse of the electoral process during the 1998 Association elections.” It also states: “The chaos surrounding the elections was a tremendous blow to the respect of the students for the Association. It will only be possible to rebuild respect and rejuvenate the Association by holding successful and orderly elections in 1999.” The new election code also proposes that the election process begin earliér, which will elim inate problems involved w ith elections running into the end o f the semester. Ackerman is sponsoring the bill and stresses the impor­ tance of a reformed code. “Officer elections are the most visible of ASASU’s Sene P resi «a for Thursday, September IO. I99B ABO R Friendship Association — Donations for Campus clubs and organizations may sub­ the flood victims in China will be taken at a mit written entries to the State Press in the table on Cady Mall from noon to 1:30 p.m. basement of the Matthews Center. Requests • C hristian Students Fellow ship — A will not be taken over the phone or via fax Bible study on “The Deep Significance of Deadline for requests is noon the day Being Supplied: Genesis - Revelation" in before publication and entries will not be the MU Turquoise room at 12:40 p.m, accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per • Habitat for Hum anity — A meeting will be held in the MU room 226B at 3:30 p.m. organization per day is permitted. A social will follow at Mama's Pizzeria. Entries must contain the full name of the —■A meet­ club.or organization, a description of the • Helping Hands o f A S A S U ■ ing about community involvement will be event, date, time and the full address of the held in the MU lower level Community location. All requests are subject to editing Service Program office at 11:40 a.m. for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or • H onors C olleg e C o u n cil — Elections illegible entries will be discarded. will be held in the MU Chrysocolla The Today Section is a daily calendar of room at 6 p.m. events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a • Latin A m erica n Studies C e n te r — Border Studies colloquium series, “The first-come, first-served basis and are print­ Trail North” film and discussion will be ed as space permits. held in the Language & Literature build­ •Am erican Indian Social W o rk Student ing AI8 at 3:40 p.m. Association ■— The first general meeting will be held in the MU Hopi room at noon. • L e a rn in g R e s o u rc e C e n t e r — ■A notetaking workshop will be held In the A Ijght lunch will be served. MU room 208D at 3 p.m. • A m erican M arketing Association — Brian Tokar, channel-strategy manager for • M arriage and Fam ily T h erapy C lin ic — Individual, couple and family therapy Pepsi Co., will be speaking the MU Pima is available for students, faculty and staff room 218 at 4:45 p.m. in th e C ow den Family R esources • B a p tis t S tu d e n t U n io n — A free Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 for lunch followed by a short message will more information. be held at 1322 S. Mill Ave. at noon. • B arren Mind Im prov — The comedy • Philosophy C lu b — An organizational meeting will be held in the Physical group will perform in th e MU Sciences building room A546 at 1:30 p.m. Programming Lounge at 12:15 p.m. • B e s t B u d d ie s — An organizational • S G I - U S A — A weekly meeting for anyone interested in the Buddhist view meeting will be held in the MU Apache of life will be held in the MU, in front of room 221 at 7 p.m. the Union Bakery & Cafe, at 5 p.m. • C am pus Crusade fo r C h rist — Slinky night, including free pizza, will be held in • Snow devils — A club meeting will be held a t th e R oadhouse B rew ery, th e Physical Sciences building room Apache Boulevard and Terrace Road, H150 at 7:30 p,m. at 6:30 p.m. • C a re e r S ervices — An interviewing skills workshop will be held in the MU • T .H .E .M . — The sci-fi/fantasy discus­ sion group will m eet in th e MU room 224 at 10:40 a.m. Havasupai room at 5:30 p.m. • C h in e se S tu d e n t and S c h o la r T h e to has the ob lig atio n to provide for the academic needs of all students. “It’s good to have graduate students teaching survey courses,” Leyvas said. But instructors need to return to the classroom after earning prestige for their schools in research and publication, he said. Davey said the demographics and eco­ nomics of higher education, as 'well as collaboration, among the three state uni­ versities are also likely to be discussed at the meeting. E le c tio n c o d e activities,” he said. “They also reach the most broadly-based sample of the student body.” A m ajor point in the new code is to revert back to a system that ASASU prac­ ticed for 31 years, until 1984. It is a non­ partisan version of the national primarygeneral election system. Candidates will know ahead of time they must place first or second in a primary to compete in a twoperson general election. “It’s like a forced runoff,” Ackerman said., “Because there are no limits on the number of candidates who can run in any given election, the chances are slim that any one candidate Will get a majority of the votes.” “I call it acknowledging reality,” he added, speaking across a desk stacked high with law books and bound volumes o f form er election codes. “W e always have to have a runoff. We might as well plan for it.” In the past, runoff election dates have not been pre-planned, leaving the elec­ tions coordinator and staff scrambling to organize. Another problem ASASU faced last year was the flood of complaints frpm disgrun­ tled losing candidates. College of Liberal Arts Sen. Allison Jones, vice-chairwoman oP the government from page 01 operations committee, said the only presi­ dential candidate who did not file a com­ plaint to the elections commission was Frost. He was also the only Candidate who had prior experience with ASASU, as a senator from the College of Liberal Arts. Ackerman added, “The complaints of last year helped give ASASU a bad image. But there is a distinction between the peo­ ple running for student government and those already in student government” Jo n es agreed: “C andidates need Jo accept the fact that there has to be a loser. You don’t see athletes or teams writing complaints whenever they lose. This idea should not just be an issue of sportsman­ ship, but o f professionalism.” A lth o u g h th e co m p lain ts re v o lv e d around campaign spending limits, the new proposal does not include a new limit. Ackerman said he believes there should only be limits if they are realistic ones that will help candidates conduct more effective campaigns. For now, last year’s Student Supreme Court ruling stands. Ackerman and Jones said the lack of spending limits should allow this year’s candidates to run quality campaigns, with­ out the pressure of financial reporting. The old requirem ents Surrounding financial reporting are ambiguous at best, Jones said. f o r 3 1 . N A ■ » University Dr. ASU W elcome ASU Students, Faculty & Staff) 00 O FF ¿ S U B 1 0 Any Half HOT OVEN-BAKED AND GRILLED SUB SANDWICHES MADE TO ORDER! WITH COUPON through 10-31-98, Not valid with any other offer. „ B . C B ig u m iito O n a m pu s . Our extra-large, gourmet burrttos are made with the finest and freshest Ingredients Hire dlantroiem on rice, whole beans, Z*TECA signature sa lsa s and grilled m arinated m eats and vegetables. They’re made right before your eyas so you can custom ize’em. 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S a p f m ba r t* . i f f i WBMRffl ¡¡¡M B M M i I M M H M M M H M M M N N M N I U B i M H H H M i S H Russia awaits presidential decision to end strife police officer who wouldn’t give his last name. “But I can’t change my money at a MOSCOW — R ussia spent another bank because there aren’t any rubles.” day without a fully functioning governM eanwhile, stores in Moscow were ment Wednesday, its economy unraveling restocking shelves and people .seem ed while President Boris Veltsin pondered less worried about food shortages, the next move in his political chess'game “I ’m buying but I h av en ’t been in with parliament. panic,” said Tatyana Shishkova, 57, a Yeltsin apparently was considering retired teacher. “We see people hoarding, altern ativ es to acting Prim e M in iste r but we don’t do it. There’s no reason for V ik to r C h ern o m y rd in , in c lu d in g a it. You can’t buy for your entire life.” Communist whose nomination undoubtYeltsin spent the day at his country edly would sail through the leftist-domi- house outside Moscow, meeting with top nated parliam ent. But there Were signs aides and deciding if he would agree to a th at Y e ltsin m ight in sist on compromise candidate for prime minister. Chernomyrdin after all. There was speculation in the Duma, The political stalemate is exacerbating the low er cham ber o f parliam ent, that Russia’s economic collapse, which was Yeltsin was considering Yuri Maslyukov, reflected Wednesday by rising prices and a S o v ie t-era econom ic Official and a a spread of emergency measures,*.such as m em ber o f the C om m unist P arty , price controls, in some regions of the M aslyukov h as'w o rk e d w ith Y eltsin country. before, resigning last week as trade and Surprisingly, however, the country's industry minister, tattered currency, the ruble, bounced back C om m unist and c e n trist lead e rs a bit. Rubles, which were selling at about praised M aslyukov, saying they would 20 to the U.S. dollar Tuesday, rose in back him for prime minister. Maslyukov street sales to as strong as 10 to the dol- met Wednesday with Yeltsin’s chief of lar. although rates varied widely. The staff. Valentin Yumashev, but there were official rate was 15.77 rubles to the dol- no details on what they discussed, the lar. ITAR-Tass news agency reported. 'F o re ig n cu rren c y d ealers s a id the M asly u k o v ’s sp o k esm an said he improved rate suggested that people had hadn’t been offered any government post exhausted th eir ruble supply in panic yet, according to Interfax, buying and had begun to exchange more A compromise candidate could resolve of their dollar savings for rubles. Many a deadlock between the president and parRussians keep their savings in U.S. dol- Lament th at has paralyzed the political lars. system even as the Russian: econom y The lack o f rubles sent the currency’s founders, value up —- and added a new dimension O p p o sitio n and re lig io u s le a d e rs to people’s worries. warned that unless a solution is found “I’ve been trying in the last few days quickly, the political standoff could lead to buy more,” said 25-year-old Dmitry, a to civil war. By M itch ell L ansberg A sso c ia t e d P ress Misha Japaridze o f th e Associated Press A C om m unist su p p o rte r sh o u ts an ti-g o v ern m en t slogans d u rin g a d em o n stratio n outside th e K rem lin in M oscow, W ednesday. S everal h u n d re d C om m unists g a th e re d in ce n tral Moscow o n W ednesday, waving red Soviet flags a n d calling fo r th e resignation o f P re sid en t B oris Yeltsin an d th e resto ratio n o f Soviet rule. Bangladesh suffers flooding^feaking dikes B y F arid H o ss a in A sso c ia t e d P ress DHAKA, Bangladesh — Soldiers and residents used ro ck s and sandbags to plu g dozens o f breaches Wednesday in a 22-mile dike protecting the capital of Bangladesh from the swollen Buriganga River. At least 36 leaks were discovered early Wednesday, prompting authorities to ask for help over loudspeakers in mosques around the region. The intense, day-long effort to plug the leaks was successful, said Abul Kashem, an engineer at the staterun Water Development Board. “Hie situation is now under control,” he said. Earlier, disaster management officials had prepared to evacuate 600,000 people living near Dhaka, fearing that the earthen structure that encircles a large area south and east of the capital might give way. The Flood Forecasting and Warning Center had pre­ dicted that the dike, built in 1952, could collapse some­ time Wednesday and raise water levels by at least two feet. That would have been a disaster, for half the capi­ tal of 9 million people already is under at least kneedeep water. Some people with homes near the embankment fled. “We have passed many sleepless nights fearing that the embankment will give in,” said Shireen Akhter, who moved with four children to a relative’s house in Dhaka. Flood waters have submerged much o f this delta nation, roughly the size of Wisconsin. The deluge has claimed more than 800 lives and displaced more than a quarter of die country’s 124 million people. The flooding also has increased the: spread of water­ borne diseases and destroyed an estimated 2.3 million tons of rice. Hie government has asked for $889 million in for­ eign aid — but has only received pledges totaling $104 million. The U.N. World Food Program has diverted an aid ship with 15,000 tons o f w heat from A frica to Bangladesh and it was expected to arrive next week. Tens o f thousands Of fanners have lost their crops, and it is too late for them to replant. “We had hoped to start replanting the: crops if the waters receded by mid-September. Willi waters stiH risr ing, that hope is gone,” said Mohammad Kklam, a 55year-old farmer. .■/ ' . ) " . P ' Pavtllblhmw'orthvAttociwuirrvM Members of a family, looking for pm* drinking water, travel on the flooded water in Kenut^oyd district, 4 mile» southwest of Dhaka Wednesday. Hie longest devastating flood in Bangladesh dafaned store itautttB Bveaewii affected 30 mflHpit people. Claim s o f ex-inspector countered by Albright B y T om Ra u m A sso c ia t e d P r e s s - : | ■- W ASHINGTON — Secretary o f State M adeleine Atbrighi disputed contentions by a resigned American arm s inspector and R epublican critics th at she had backed away from a hard-line stance on Iraq, branding them “sincerely wrong.” . As A lb rig h t struck, back at c ritic s in a speech Wednesday to the American Legion in New Orleans, a top State Department official insisted to Congress that the United States “has not taken force off the table” in dealing with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Still, Martin S. Indyk, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, conceded hesitancy in confronting Saddam once he had moved to blocked an inspection. It was “a judgm ent call,” Indyk told a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee. Both Albright and Indyk defended the administra­ tion’s policies and rejected allegations by Scott Ritter, an American inspector who quit a U.N. monitoring commis­ sion last month asserting the adm inistration and the Security Council were going easy on Iraq. In her American Legion speech, Albright said the United States has been the strongest international backer o f the U.N. Special C om m ission, set up to conduct inspections of suspected Iraqi weapons sites. “We have pushed and pushed and pushed some mate to help UNSCOM break through die smokescreen of lies and deception put out by the Iraqi regim e,” Albright said, I Last month, Albright acknowledged under .Are that concerns about creating a deep split in the U.N. Security Council had prompted her to oppose certain inspections o f suspected weapons sites in Iraq. Ritter told two Senate panels last week that he quit his job in frustration because the United States and Britain had undermined efforts by U.N. inspectors to get to the bottom of Iraq’s arsenal o f weapons of mass destruction. O pinion M ä ^ -:. ■■.? .* ï& * )8 M i^â ^-2 m 8 m M H Ë Ê m Ê Ê Ê Ê K Ê ÊÊÊÊàmÊÊiÈÊÊÊÊiÊÊÊËËÊÊÊÊÊKÊËiÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÈÊÊÈÊÊKiÊsm m Ê m s m M ÊM Ê aÊm ÊÊaÊ nÊËÊÊ m m Ê Ê m W ild cat runs questionable cartoon; still had right | , UofA’s Arizona D aily W ildcat has been taking a j I lot o f heat lately for a controversial cartoon it ran. i T he strip at the center o f the debate depicts tw o j | bugs m aking up after a fight. They are embracing | | in reconciliation when another bug drives by and | j shoots them to the cry o f “Homos!” D epending on your interpretation, the cartoon J ¡ was either a statem ent about homophobia o r con- j | doning violence against hom osexuals. N o m atter J I what the interpretatidtt or intent o f the cartoonist, j ¡ the paper had the right to run the strip. Before you start your angry letters to the State I Press, recall that we, too, have weathered storms { over controversial cartoons. Technically speaking, j. w e had ju s t as m uch^right to run th o se as th e j j Wildcat did to run this strip. | T ech n ically sp eak in g , a perso n can say ju s t | about anything he or she pleases. Freedom always ; I comes with responsibility, though. W hen it comes j | to freed o m o f speech, th at re sp o n sib ility is to j employ wisdom and respect when communicating. We at the State Press are still in the process o f j ! learn in g these lessons. It is o u r hope th at this j W ildcat fire sto rm lead s to d ialo g u e ab o u t th e i i broader issues o f freedom o f speech and bigotry \ and results in lessons learned about w isdom and j | discretion. All o f us could stand to learn a thing or two about j j. tempering our speech. When you really think about I it, we use a lot of unnecessary language. Why is it that we feel the need, often, to identify our non­ white friends by their ethnic background? We are so inconsistent! O f course we don’t .say th in g s like, “ Yeah, I w as talk in g to this hairylegged girl the other d a y .. ” or “I ran into this guy ¡ with zits at the gym.” It’s silly. The information is com pletely irrelevant, even cruel to include. O f course, we like to be cruel at times. It’s possible | for us to rail for hours about some person we dislike. B u t i f th e re a re re a l is s u e s n e e d in g to b e f addressed with this person (as opposed to how much they annoy us) gripe sessions will accomplish noth- ) ing. B etter to take those grievances to the person instead o f allowing them to fester through gossip. So m aybe you have a really dreadful teacher this j sem ester. M aybe she d o esn ’t com m unicate well, ; even m akes inappropriate rem arks in class. Those are, perhaps, real issues. H er abysmal fashion sense is not. Including such details in the critique o f her person is mere spite. E v en if y o u r g ro u sin g a b o u t th is p e rso n to* friends focuses on the real issues, it w on’t accom- j plish anything. Sim ilarly, com plaining about our p o litical system and the state o f our leadership j accom plishes nothing. It’s tim e we stopped talking and started doing. [ It’s tim e for a little kindness when we do speak. | B ut are w e w illing, read y and d esiro u s o f true change? O r do we ju st like to talk about it? G etting older makes one wiser On Sept. 6, I celebrated my 19th birthday. W hat's significant about a 19th birthday? N othing really. However, somehow, I have a feeling that “someone” or “something” was out to prove me wrong. I had the most eventful weekend of my life, and I came out o f it with several pieces of valuable advice I’d like to pass on. I would first like to include a little disclaim er. I learned from my Journalism 201 professor that I should never write a “fluff piece.” By my definition, fluff includes anything even mildly humorous or interesting to read. Instead, I should write thought-provoking columns that ini­ tiate readers to go out and change the World or at least get them to think about doing it. But considering that this is a short week, I decided that it is okay for me to write one Column that is, shall we say, “less than profound,” Now that I have my detailed excuse out of the way, I can actual­ ly cut to the chase — my advice. T ip N o . I: If you see a car that has been in an accident, you should immediately stop and help. I thought this was an unw ritten, universal law known as being a “Good Samaritan,” but apparently I was wrong. On Friday, when it was raining, my car spun out of control and plowed into an SRP power boxi Granted, I was only going 15 mph at the time, but no one stopped to help me. I just sat there in my car for five minutes, watching all the motorists zoom by! T ip N o . 2: If you see a spider in your food while dining at a restaurant, tell someone. Saturday morning I was eating breakfast at Denny’s in the fine town of Page, Ariz. when something caught my eye. I saw a spider, the size of a pinmead, scamper across my hashbrowns, After a rather loud gasp, one of my dining partners proceeded to squisl}. it with his fingers while remarking, “It was just a piece of pepper with eight legs.” After that remark I felt like I had to eat my food or I would just look like a complainer. Boy was 1 wrong! The entire weekend I felt like I had betrayed myself by picking at that plate of food without making a comment to die waitress. T ip N o . 3: If caught in the middle of a lake during a severe thunderstorm, do not attempt to find a dock. Instead, head for the nearest cove and wait it out. After a fun-filled Saturday afternoon on Lake Powèll, I began to notice some dark clouds building up to the west. I casually mentioned it to my companions and after about an hour more of wake­ boarding, we decided it was time to head back. After reach­ ing the halfway point with waves crashing into our, little speedboat and wind nearly ripping the canopy clear off, we knew we were not going to make it back to the dock. In a split-seco n d we decided to follow another boat. Fortunately, thé boat headed into a small cove where four other watercraft were also waiting. We got to spend the next 20 minutes watching lightning strike nearly everything except our boat. I spent the entire time thinking we were going to re-create Titanic and sobbing uncontrollably at the thought that there wasn’t even a Leonardo DiCaprio for me. T ip N o . 4: The bar scene in Page is a lot more happen­ ing than must people believe. For my friend’s 21st birthday it was considered mandatory that we visit a bar. Not that any of us are rabid drinkers — in fact we’re all far from it. It’s just a fact of life — you turn 21, you visit a bar. Picture this: two groovy chicks (who shall remain nameless) get­ ting funky to the tunes of the ever-popular “Can’t Touch This” and the classic “Super Freak,” Are you picturing the episode o f Seinfeld where Elaine performs her thumb dance? Enough said. T ip N o . 5: Do not let any person of the male gender drive home from Page. The drive from Page to Phoenix should take approximately five hours. We made it home in three. In the course of the three hours, thè (male) driver ran over a porcupine, played chicken with an undercover cop and slammed on the brakes every few miles just for thrills. Not to say that men can’t be good drivers, of course. It’s just that they seem to have smaller bladders and feel com­ pelled to get home at a much quicker rate than females. All in ali, my weekend probably wasn’t that eventful. I’m sure lots of people eat spiders every day and come face to face with death more times than I did. But for me, my 19th birthday will go down in history as one of the most invaluable learning experiences of my young life. Stephanie D . Johnson is a sophom ore studying jour­ nalism and can be reached at sdjohn@ im ap4.asu.edu M Percy Ednalino Jr, Editor Jodi Bafiindo, Managing Editor Becky Bevins Cartoonists —.......—— -Night Editor Magazine Editor -City Editor David Woodfill -------— —---------------—— — Asst, Magazine Editor Reporters -T— ----- r- — — ---- — — Chris Kahn Jonathan Assistant City Editor A k a Cjktw dL Lida £ Kety. J.D Long Siephame Parenk. Jayson Peters, Kjm fta n d e y s t H n ity Rinde G e y SU san én h n .Jw d ta W Â A ttjh Y a ag tr. - —— Opinion Editor Sports Reporters----------------— -——- — -------—— Michelle Craig Christi Foist — News Editor Brad Ling —---------- Photo Editor Jeremy Hein Assistant Photo Editor EdOdeven ----- ;------Sports Editor S ca t Bradcen, Chris O rlock, Dovg Hana&n, Cario M m aldo, David Mywa Copy Editors — -------------—»---- -— — — M ario to p e r, Susan Schimmel. - Photographers---- ----------- ------- —— -— — -------- M ike C u rran , Soley Hantel, O felia M adrid, Jerem y W eiss. Columnists ———————————————— — Brian Ary, Andrea Jennifer Batsky, Scott Bennett. Ashlea D cahUtoss Bde, Scott D . G la tte , SaaphanieD. Johnson, Amber Knud), Nancy Kuo, C .G McCandfcss, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Poiiooff. ^ Brian Balchumas, Carrie L Behrens, Mike Curran, Brian Fairington, Carlos Ramirez, Adrian Sferie. Production —-—....----....— ....----- — —— ■—— Robert Deal, Keith Gerchick. Alyson H urt, H eather Nadi, Wayne -Nelson, Joanna Wike. Sales Representatives — —— — - — Brian Ary, Mike Giaflanza, David Goodwin, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievd, Jonathan N egretti, Sharon Robertson, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. Marketing Tearn——— -----——-------------- Rick Garhett, Angelee King Classifieds —— —— —- — - — - — Kate Desio, Amende Green, Paul Holey. Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. The State/Yess is published Monday through Eridav during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews C enter, Room 2, Arizona Suite University, Tempe, Ariz* 8S287* 1502. We d o n o t answer questions of a general nature. The State Aess is the only newspaper exclusively published fo r and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in. this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Student Media Phone Num bers---Information 965-7572 State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 On the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu O pinion ■ WM I i M M MfflM MI M M M W M i # H *'•■ H *13MSMI S e x , d r u g s , R a m e n n o o d le s : a f r e s h m a n s u r v iv a l g u id e "Woe to you depraved souls! Bury here and forever all hope o f Paradise: I columnist come to lead you to the other shore, into eternal dark, into fire and ice." — D ante Alighieri Dante’s Inferno is more than a masterful exploration of the nature of evil and a really neat horror story. It is also the first recognized freshm an survival guide in Western literature- The parallels between freshman year and Hell are striking. Both are dark, dirty places inhabited by roving bands of drunkards, fornicators and other seedy charac­ ters. Both seem inescapable and hopeless. But fear not, my freshman friends. Dante had Virgil to lead him out of the bowels of Hell unharmed — and you have me. I will be your tour guide through this terrifying and horrible cesspool of evil. I have talked with survivors of this dreadful experience and collected their words of advice. If you read and apply the suggestions, you will probably emerge from this year reasonably stable and coherent. R o o m m a te s... Think of your dorm room as a m axim um -security prison. It is very small and dark, designed specifically to destroy your sense of individuality. They cram you in with some crazy stranger who swills gin, yodels Jimmy: Buffett songs and seems to be planning to kill you. And they expect you to retain your sanity. Whatever. So treat your time in ASU’s delightful residence hall sys­ tem as a prison term. Be polite to the guards (RAs), do what you’re told and try to avoid any contact with your roommate. Listen to ASU sophomore Aaron Frazer — “The best thing to do is schedule your sleeping opposite theirs, so when they’re asleep you’re up.” This technique allows you to minimize exposure to your roommate, but also makes you extremely vulnerable if he or she decides to kill you in your sleep. Also, you should be aware of the tendency of college freshman to mate like minks in heat. As Brown University sophomore Dan Shindell advised — “Don’t let your room­ mate ‘sexile’ you and don’t do the same to him.” (Note: “sexile” is a term meaning banishment from one’s dorm room to make way for a roommate’s, uh, extracurricular activity). Food... : Despite what the Puritans at Student Health might tell you, it is entirely possible to live on beer. It’s made from grains and other good, wholesome things. It’s like liquid oatmeal, only more fun. It also goes wonderfully with that other college staple, Ramen. Ramen was designed for college students. It is exception­ ally cheap and easy to make. And Ramen is more than just a food. Take it to class and make Ramen people when you get bored. If you form it into bricks and let it dry in the sun, you can make an entire dwelling out of it. Perhaps even build an igloo on Hayden Lawn when you have been “sexiled.” H angovers... The morning comes in every freshman’s life when you wake up clutching the toilet with your head on the bath­ room'tile. Your first thought is, “Who am I?,” followed by, “Why did I drink so much?” and “Where exactly is my underwear?” Everyone had quite a bit to say on this topic. ASU sophomore Dan Piatkowski suggested drinking mass quan­ tities of water. “Drink a lot of water — that’s all I have to say. When it hits 3 a m. and you’re still drunk, just drink a lot of water.” His roommate, Frazer; recommended a way to make your water-drinking more fun. “You'gotta go with the seltzer water; it still feels like beer, but it’s hydrating.” M oney... As NAU sophomore Emily Klandrud so eloquently stat­ ed-— “Don’t spend all your money because then at the end of the semester you’ll have none.” She has obviously taken an economics class. , There are at least two ways to get funds. The best waj§is to call your parents to explain how you Spent all your money on study guides and school supplies and need just a few more dollars to get you through the week. Be sure to moan softly once in a while and when your parents ásk what’s wrong, tell them you are just a bit light-headed from lack of food. Then sit back and wait for the cheek. The second-best way is to get your roommate drunk, cut out his kidneys and sell them on the black market. But perhaps the best advice I can give is to try not to take college too seriously. No one else does. S co tt B en n ett is a ju n io r studying journalism and can be reached at colum nist@ asu.edu. II I Cause fo r disagreement : It is apparent to me that we have a lot more work towards true peace and freedom after I read the letter to the editor entitled “Solution to Terrorist Attacks” from Shah Khatri (Sept. 1). It is d iffic u lt to u n d e rsta n d the motives of the Islam ic m ilitant groups because th ere are so m any “sp lin ter” groups; some more radical than others. However, one thing is clear — Islamic militant groups despise the West and feel it is necessary to destroy Western prop­ erty by terrorist attacks. Included in this group is Israel because of their relations with the United States and other Western powers. Some would consider Israel a Western power as well. Khatri suggests that the United States end its support of Israel in order to stop ter­ rorist attacks. This does not make any sense as the United States would still be consid­ ered an arch enemy of Islamic militants simply because it is Western power, Sorry to disappoint Khatri once again, but there is no such thing as an A m erican-Israeli Political Coalition that hand picks represen­ tatives for government positions around the world. Governments and government' offi­ cials see the need to have a strong relation­ ship with the only democratic government in the Middle East. Israel gets its support from the United States because there are citizens of the United States who care to get involved in the po litical process, not because of huge monetary donations from the “Zionists” as Khatri states. 1 would suggest that he gets m ore involved in the political process before making such unsubstantiated and ridiculous comments. Joshua L. C o le 1998 G rad u ate C o lle g e o f P u b lic P rog ram s Strip not funny Not to be p rissy o r a n y th in g , but where does the State Press draw the line between humor and poor taste when it comes to the comic strips? I felt prompt­ ed to write after the Sept. 1 selection of comedic references to mucus, violence, nudity and profanity, if memory serves. But when the following day fetched the h ilarity o f pornography, the ever-sotasteful “Groin Punching Midget” and a fairly unmistakable depiction of copula­ tion, I was pretty sure there’s no line drawn at all. Maybe I ’m overreacting. I guess it depends on what we consider funny — snot, private parts, bad words and sex! What a hoot ! What grade are we in no.w anyway? How much more puerile can we ex p ect the laughs to get? Such gags might be expected in elementary school bathroom s, but I certainly have m ore elevated expectations from the publica­ tion of an institution for higher learning. O m a r D avid C a ll So p h o m ore C o m p u te r Engineering Optional cure to road rage 1 am an impatient person. I am often easily frustrated. “Irkable” is the word a past boyfriend delicately coined in my honor. That’s why I thought I’d respond to Ashlea Deahl’s article on road rage (Sept. 2). Although I can relate to the fact that “Dr. D riving’s Tips for D riving with Aloha Spirit” would make anyone want to chuck (“D rive w ith A loha in your heart”? Gimme a break.), I must share one nugget of wisdom I’ve recently dis­ co v ered — d riv in g is a n e a r-p e rfec t oppoftunity to practice the fine art of patience. Why bother, you ask? D on’t we all have a certain inalienable right to gripe, rage and make obscene gestures at least once a day? Doesn’t this relieve stress and m ake us a little h ap p ier with our w o rld s? W e ll, in a w ord, no. As a staunch supporter of the right do bitch, this is indeed a startling discovery. But one thing modern psychology has found is th a t i t ’s the little ag g rav atio n s o f everyday life th at eventually give us h eart attacks and strokes — learning how to relax and let things go is definite­ ly a worthy goal. One day, in the not-too-distant past, I decided I’m much too emotionally reac­ tive. Standing in the financial aid line, computers that freeze up, rude Customer service workers; a slow person in the line ahead of me at the grocery store, discov­ ering I’m out of gas, being late for class — these m inor annoyances cause that vein in my neck to pop out and my stom­ ach to churni. I f I leav e m y se lf unchecked, any little thing can ruin my m orning — or even my w hole day. I abashedly admit that perhaps I too, am a product of the MTV generation — I want what I want; and I want it now! In an effort to remedy this situation, my first order of business was to choose one thing that aggravates me and active­ ly chill out about it. I chose driving. I find that m any situations (red lights, crazy drivers, some idiot who won’t let me merge) prompt a deep inhalation of b re ath and an ex te n d e d “Paaaaatieeeeence” on the exhale — but som ething interesting has happened. I don’t stress out quite so much when my bank sends me an overdraft notice. I am not quite so peeved when I get to my favorite restau ran t two m inutes after closing time. I find myself believing it more often when.I tell myself the annoy­ ance of the moment won’t matter next year or even next week. When driving with friends who get irate for the same reasons I do, I find myself soothing them w ith my new d riv in g m antra: “Paaaaatieeeeence...” — and I’m never sure if I ’m advising them or reminding myself. / .The point is that patience takes prac­ tice and while I am far from being a pro, I do appreciate the general lowering of blo o d p re ssu re . B e s id e s , I h o n estly believe that the way you behave when buffered from normal social responsibili- 1 ties and repercussions by the perceived | anonymity of your car is an indication of the kind of person you have chosen- to be. So, keep that in mind and try riot to puke as you drive with Aloha in your heart. ; ; A m y W in g ■ Ju n io r Exercise Science W h at D oyou Think? E-mail: shades@ im ap4.asu.edu Website: http://vvww.statepress.com G ripe Line: 965-6881 Fax: 965-8484 Mail: •' Letters to the Editor A rizona State U niversity 15 M atthew s C enter T e m p e .A Z 85287-1502 T he State Press w e lc o m e s and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than tw o pages to be eligible for publica tio n . P le a s e in c lu d e y o u r fu ll j ] | | J j I | n a m e, ID n u m b e r, class sta n d in g , 1 m a jo r ( o r . a f f ilia t io n w it h t h e I U n iv e r s it y ) a n d p h o n e n u m b e r. I Requests for anonymity will be granted only with ah appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and p rin t space availability. L e tte rs containing obvious factual erro rs will be rejected. ,. Individuals wishing to use e-mail, G ripe Line, Fax o r o u r w ebsite for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for written purposes, J | | I | 1 I | I * i tO r iq u f w w y , I I H I I Il l l l l t y , I t W ' Ì . ’J P H P K t *N*| Senator proposes bill to abolish A S A S U salaries B y Robert B o o s S pecial t o the S tate P ress Mike Sosso doesn't want your money. He wants to give it back. Sosso, an Associated Students of ASU senator for the College of Liberal Arts, introduced a bill that would abolish sena­ tors’ salaries at an ASASU general senate meeting Tuesday . Senate Bill 7 would amend the ASASU bylaws and repeal a law passed last spring that aljocated $3,800 from the student organizations fund to pay for the 24 col­ lege senators’ service. If passed, this bill would go into; effect im m ediately and return the $3,800 to the student organiza­ tions fund. Sosso motioned to discuss the bill in priority review, but received no second motion from the approximately 20 other senators. The bill was given to the senate finance committee for further review. “1just don’t think that it’s right for sen­ ators who are working for students to take a ¡ralary for what they are doing,” Sosso said. “I just want to give the money back to the student activities fund where it will serve the students like it is supposed to.” Currently, each senator is expected to work eight hours a week outside of senate meetings, and keep office hours. Senators are paid $75 per semester, and receive an P R I N C I P L E S of Serving A rizona Since 1987 1505 W. University #103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 additional $100 when they serve as com­ mittee chairs. However, Senate Bill 7 is a moot point, said R obert B achand, senator for the College of Business and a member of the finance Committee. It was understood last spring when ASASU allocated the salary that the bill was to be effective for one year only, he said. “We are only getting paid for this term anyway, and then the law is supposed to come back for a re-evaluation,” Bachand . said. Sen. A llison Jones for the C ollege Liberal Aits said there is nothing written in current law to say that ASASU must review the bylaw after a year has passed, “The bill has been in effect for nearly a month, and is now a part o f the bylaws,” she said. “You can’t put time restraints in . the bylaws.” Although Sosso’s bill isn’t widely sup­ ported in the Senate now, he said he expects more support as the semester pro­ g resses. Some: sen ato rs have already declined to receive a salary. “I’m not giving up, I ’m going to push this jsstxe all year if I have to,” Sosso said. “I plan on gathering support from the stu­ dents, and I’m on the finance committee,' so I’m going to work on this.” SO U N D R E T I R E M ENT We make km expenses a top priority. As the largest retirem ent system in the world1—a nonprofit company focused exclu­ sively on the financial needs of the educational and research communities—our expenses are among the lowest in the insurance and mutual bind industries.2 ; In feet, TIAA-CREF’s 0.31% average fund expenses are less than half of die expense charges o f comparable funds.1 It’s why Momingstar— one of the nations leading sources of annuity and mutual fund information — says, 'At that level [TIAA-CREF] is cheaper than any other V is it O u r G ia n t S h o w ro o m ! Z cnet™ S ystem 6 4 X T PomuM® It P rocessor w ith M M X ™ Z en ET™ Homo Office™ II P ro c e s s o r P e n t iu m ® wH> M M X " Tid w nln y ll l T « ch n # l« fy !!! • Intel 440BX Architecture • ATX 5 -Bay Tower Case • 64 mb RAM, 1 44 FDD .• 32X CD Multimedia Kit • Yamaha 3D Sound . • WD 8.4gb UDMA Hard Drive • Dual High Speed Serial • Bi-Directional Parallel • Intel 1740 Video w/8MB • ViewSonic 17“ SVGA Mònitor • 56K Internal Fax/Modem • MS Windows 95 or 98 • NMB 104 Keyboard • Microsoft PS/2 Mouse Intel 440LX Architecture ATX Mid-Tower Case 32 mb SDram, 1.44 FDD 32X CD Multimedia Kit Yamaha 3D Sound $£3 4.3gb UDMA Hard Drive Dual Enhanced UDMA Bi-Directional Parallel AGP TrueColor Video w/4MB 15" SVGA Color Monitor 56K Int. Fax/Modem w/Voice MS Windows 95 o r 98 NMB 104 Keyboard S tudent D iscount S pecial!!! | Microsoft PS/2 Mouse P-ll 266Mhz É k Complete System $998.00!!! 350Mhz $ 1 8 8 8 . °° 400Mhz $2 0 8 8 ." • • • • • • ? *■ • • • • • • 300MHz $1288.°° 333Mhz $1 4 3 8 .0< CSStS ts th e Volley's Prem ier PC. Network. Sales a n d S ervice S olution/ Since / 967. CS&S h as b u t/t A rizona's fin e s t netw ork business systems. C om e see o u r g ia n t show room a n d te ll us how we c a n serve you; JEfflL C anon S p io g n m O K JD A IA W k pa c w SS* COMPAQ M -F 8 :3 0 A M -5 :30 PM & Sat 10-3 C all fo r Custom PC P ricin g i9 0 6 - 8 5 8 S I N V F. S T I N G RECENTES, MORNINGSTAR CALLED US CHEAP. IT’S NOT EVERS DAY SOU GET A COMPLIMENT LIKE THAT. AU financial companies charge operating fees X j L and expenses—some more than others. O f course, the Iowa- the expenses you pay, the better. T hat way, more of y o u r money goes where it should—towards building a comfortable fixture. P h o n e :(6 0 2 )9 6 8 -8 5 8 5 w w w .css-co m p u ters.co m Com puter System s [variable annuity] policy, and is even com pet­ itive w ith the cheapest m utual fund complexes, though it offers fer more benefits.”'* “TIAA-CREF sets the standard in the financial services industry.” O f course, expenses are .only one factor to consider when you make an investment decision. M om ingstar also noted our commitment to “consum er education, service” and “solid investment performance." Because that can make a difference in the long run, too. At TIAA-CREF, we believe people would like to spend more in retirement, not on their retirement company. Today, over two million people count on that approach to help them build a comfortable and secure future. So can you. To find out more, call us at 1800 842-2776. We’d consider it a compliment. Visit us on the Internet at www.tiaa-cref.org Ensuring the future for those who shape it* 1. Based on $256 billion in assets under management. 2* Standard c f Poorj Insurance Rating AnaLyjLf, 1998; Lapper Analytical Services, Inc., Lipper-Directtov ’Analytical Data 1998 (Quarterly). 3- O f the 4,829 variable annuities tracked by Momingstar, the average fund had total fees combining annual expenses of 0.82% plus an insurance expense of 1.27%. Source; Momingstar, Inc.* for periods ending 7/31V98. 4. Source: Momingstar Principia Variable AnnuiticiLife 4/30/98. TIAA-CREF expenses are subject to change and are not guaranteed for the future, Past performance is no guarantee of foture results. TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services distributes GREF certificates and interests in the TIAA Real Estate Account. For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call 1 800 842-2776, extension 5509* for the prospectuses. Read them carefully before you invest or send money. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS 1 Free from doubt 5 A.L. batting champ Rod 10 1944 battle site 14 Turkey or fox follower 15 Pavarotti's “— mlo” 16 Miami team 17 Star of TV ’s “The Defenders 19 Besides 20 Legume 21 Part of a list 22 Hairy, in botany 24 Author Hunter 25 Not at all 26 Type of engine 29 Nonsense! 32 Feature of a meet 33 Ceremon­ ies 34 Baseball stat 35 Chantilly 36 Weighty volumes 37 Cut 38 Akkadian god 39 Praise 40 Place for eleves 41 Complainer 43 Juries 44 Jumbo leader 45 Compos , mentis 46 San Luis 48 Ndfeimova 49 Turkish title 52 Moist, htimid 53 Author of 56 57 58 59 60 61 “The Catcher in the Rye” “Picnic” author City in Minnesota Starr of Green Bay Cozy residence Camp sights Native American DOWN 1 “Watch your — !” 2 Impel 3 European capital 4 Zeta follower 5 Pertaining to ribs 6 Wan 7 Wander 8 Building addition 9 Greets with pleasure 10 Soft, pliable . leather 11 “Seven Pillars of Wisdom” author 12 Endure m PEE M B ■□BEI □BEE ! □CEB a □OS □ □ □D □ □ □ B BBBB □□□D B □□□□□ □□□□ □ □ □ □ am □ □□□□! □ OBBB B □□□□ 13 See.; 61 Across 18 Metal fastener 23 Résistance units 24 Feudal toiler 25 A flat and C sharp 26 Procras­ tinate 27 A Trump 28 Author of “the enormous room” 29 Indonesian island 30 Bay window 31 Records 33 Copland ballet score 36 Fast aircraft ' 37 “Auld La n g — “ 39 Politician Jack 40 Don Ho’s porch 42 Weapon of yore 43 Bright asteroid 45 Virgule 46 Wotan 47 Opposite of boon 48 “It’s — to tell a lie’ 49 Culture medium 50 Actor Richard 51 Comic Johnson 54 ET O ’s boss 55 T V monogram 10 il 12 13 1 2 3 4. ' 5 6 7 8 9 10 15 w 19 18 17 22 23 21 sr 24 25 30 31 29 26 27 28 34 32 33 37 38 35 40 39 38 42 43 41 45 49 50 51 48 47 44 55 53“54 52 58 57 56 6 0 éi 59 By Harvey L. Chew G 1998 Loe Angeles Times Syndicate 9/10/98 D u e t o in c r e a s e d c o s t s w e h a v e d is c o n t in u e d C R Y P T O Q U O T E S . W e h o p e y o u e n jo y th e n e w C r o s s w o r d s . Q u e s t io n s : 9 6 5 -6 7 4 1 m Senator proposes bill to abolish A S A S U salaries B y R obert B o o s S pecial t o th e S tate P ress Mike Sosso doesn’t want your money. He wants to give it back. Sosso. an Associated Students of ASU senator for the College of Liberal Arts, introduced á bill that would abolish sena­ tors' salaries at an ASASU general senate meeti ng Tuesday. Senate Bill 7 would amend the ASASU byiaws and repeal a law passed last spring that allocated S3.800 from the student organizations fund to pay for the 24 col­ lege senators' service. If passed, this bill would go into effect im m ediately and return the $3,800 to the student organiza­ tions fund. Sosso motioned to discuss the bill in priority review, but received no second motion from the approximately 20 other senators. The bill was given to the senate finance committee for further review. “1 just don’t think that it's right for sen­ ators who are working for students to take a Hilary for what they are doing,” Sosso said. “I just want to give the money back to the student activities fund where it will serve the students like it is supposed to.” Currently, each senator is expected to work eight hours a week outside of senate meetings, and keep office hours. Senators are paid $75 per semester, and receive an P R I N C I P L E S o f S O Serving A rizona Since 1987 1505 W. University #103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 U N D R E T I R E M E N T I N We m ake lo w expenses a top p rio rity . As the largest retirem ent system in the world1—a nonprofit company focused exclu­ sively on the financial needs of the educational and research communities—our expenses are among the lowest in the insurance and mutual fund industries.2 In fact, TIAA-CREF s 0.31% average finid expenses are less than hair of the expense charges o f comparable funds.1 I ts w hy Momingstar— one of the nations leading sources of annuity and mutual fund information — says, “At that level [TIAA-CREF] is cheaper than any other V is it O u r G ia n t S h o w ro o m ! ’ S ystem 6 4 X T” Pstnum’ A P rocessor X emet™Homo Office™ P intium 8 II P ro c e s s o r with MMX™ Technology !!! w ith MMX™ T e c h n o lo g y ! ! ! • Intel 440BX Architecture • ATX 5-Bay Tower Case • 64 mb RAM, 1.44 FDD > 32X CD Multimedia Kit • Yamaha 3D Sound • WD 8.4gb UDMA Hard Drive •■Dual High Speed Serial .. • Bi-Directional Parallel • Intel 1740 Video w/8MB • Viewsoiiic 17" SVGA Monitor • 56K Internal Fgx/Modem • MS Windows .95 or 98 • NMB 104 Keyboard • Microsoft PS/2 Mouse 350Mhz $ 1 8 8 8 . ° ° 400Mhz $ 2 0 8 8 . M Intel 440LX Architecture ATX Mid-Tower Case 32 mb SDram, 1.44 FDD v/ 32X CD Multimedia Kit ¿Vji, Yamaha 3D Sound BBBk 4.3gb UDMA Hard Drive Dual Enhanced UDM A Bi-Directional Parallel AGP TrueColor Video w/4MB 15" SVGA Color Monitor 56K Int. Fax/Modem w/Voice MS Windows 95 or 98 V' S tudent D iscount S pecial!!! | P -ll 266Mhz Com plete System $998.00!! ! ¿ t ’K • • • • • * • • • • • • ' 300MHz $1288.°° 333MHz $1 4 3 8 . m CSAS/s th e Valley's Prem ier PC. Network. Sales a n d S ervice S o lution/ Since 1987. ÇSAS has b u ilt Arizona's fin e st netw ork business systems. C om e see o u r g ia n t show room a n d te ll us h ow we ca n serve you. M Canon (Eprogram ONDATO COMPAQ. E £ 3 p !c ™ ro M -F 8 :3 0 A M -5 :3 0 P M & Sat 10-3 Call fo r Custom PC 0 r \ ù n q i9 ó 8 m8 5 8 S V I S T I N G RECENTLï ; MORNINGSTAR CALLED TJSCHEÄR EPS NOT EVERT DAT TOU GET A COMPLIMENT LIKE THAT. A 11financial companies change operating fees and expenses--som e more than others. O f course, die lower the expenses you pay, the better. T hat way, more of y o u r money goes where it should —tow ards building a comfortable future. P h o n e :(6 0 2 )9 6 8 -8 5 8 5 w w w .css-co m pu ters.co m Com puter System s additional $100 when they serve as com­ mittee chairs. However, Senate Bill 7 is a moot point, said R obert B achand. senator for the College of Business and a member of the finance committee. It was understood last spring when ASASU allocated the salary that the bill was to be effective for one year only, he said. “We are only getting paid for this term anyway, and then the law is supposed to come back for a re-evaluation,” Bachand said. Sen. A llison Jones for the C ollege Liberal Arts said there is nothing written in current law to say that ASASU must review the bylaw after a year has passed. “The bill has been in effect for nearly a month, and is now a part of the bylaws,” she said. “You can’t put time restraints in the bylaws.” Although Sosso’s bill isn’t widely sup­ po rted in the Senate now, he said he expects more support as the semester pro­ g resses. Som e sen ato rs have already declined to receive a salary. “I’m not giving up, I’m going to push this jssue all year if I have to,” Sosso said. “I plan on gathering support from the stu­ dents, and I’m on the finance committee,: so I’m going to work on this.” [variable annuity] policy, and is even compet­ itive with the cheapest mutual fund complexes, though it offers far more benefits.”'1 “TIAA-C R EF sets the standard In the financial services industry.” O f course, expenses are only one factor to consider when you make an investment decision. M om ingstar also noted our commitment to “consum er education, service” and “solid investment performance.” Because that can make a difference in the long run, too. At TIAA-CREF, we believe people would like to spend more in retirement, not on their retirement company. Today, over two million people count on that approach to help them build a comfortable and secure fiiture. So can you. To find out more, call ns at 1800 842-2776. We’d consider it a compliment. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe 1 doubt 5 A .L . Ensuring the. future for those who shape it.* 1. Based on $236 billion in assets under management. 2. Standard <3Poors Insurance Rating Analysis, 1998; Upper Analytical Services, Inc, Upper-Director*'Analytical Data 1998 (Quarterly) . 3. O f die 4,829 variable annuities tracked by Momingstar, the average fund had total fees combining annual expenses of 0*82% plus an insurance expense of 1.27%. Source: Momingstar, Inc., for periods ending 7/31/98. 4. Source: Momingstar Principia Variable AnnuitUs/Lifc 4/30/98. TIAA-CREF expenses are subject to change and are not guaranteed for the future. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services distributes CREF certificates and interests in the TIAA Real Estate Account For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call 1 800 842-2776, extension 5509, for the prospectuses. Read them carefully before ypu invest or send money. 56 b a ttin g champ Rod 10 1944 b a ttle s ite 1 4 T u rk e y o r fo x fo llo w e r 15 P a v a ro tti's “— m io " 16 M ia m i te a m 17 S ta r of T V 's T h e D e fe n d e r s 1 9 B e s id e s 20 Legum e 21 P a r t o f a list 2 2 H a iry, in botany 2 4 A u th o r H u n te r 2 5 N o t a t a ll 26 Type of e n g in e 29 N onsense l 3 2 F e a tu re o f a m eet 3 3 C e re m o n ­ ie s 3 4 B a s e b a ll sta t 3 5 C h a n tilly 3 6 W e ig h ty v o lu m e s 37 Cut 3 8 A k k a d ia n god 3 9 P r a is e 4 0 P la c e fo r e le v e s 41 C o m p la in e r 4 3 J u r ie s 4 4 Ju m b o le a d e r Visit us on the Internet at www.daa-cref.org “T h e ACROSS F r e e fro m 45 Com pos , m e n tis 4 6 S a n L u is 4 8 N c b im o v a 4 9 T u rk is h title 5 2 M o is t, h b m id 5 3 A u th o r o f 57 58 59 60 Catcher in the Rye” "Picnic" author City in Minnesota Starr of Green Bay Cozy residence Camp sights Native American SB SB a ITT g ] N 1_ 5 ] p i ft 3 g g g g M N a a g r G IT E g i a V ■ o d S 1 i 0 N V ’s] ■ 0 g M n g g d 1 d g E g Ng g A ft N g 1 s] o a E g g 0 g i 8 ¥] N o i A g d N a g g g g x_ H m a g a 7] a Hi 0 JJ g o N N g A a. Ng L T g a d N Oi V 1 V HÍ 8 d W\ N g g 3 H [tr 0 HVa 1 g o N 1 g V1 p i a \N . 0 A □ n N 8 □ m 3 1■ D Q d A Mg s SD V SB 1 DD a H SB i 8 1 m ■nE N È B a T\a] nd 18 5 1 la O ¥j 1 0 M] a d a 0 13 See 61 Across 18 Metal fastener DOWN 23 Resistance 1 “Watch units your— !" 24 Feudal 2 Impel toiler 3 European 25 A flat and capital C sharp 4 Zeta 26 Procras­ follower tinate 5 Pertaining 27 A Trump . to ribs 28 Author of 6 Wan “the 7 Wander • enormous 8 Building rooiri" addition 29 Indonesian 9 Greets island with 30 Bay pleasure window 10 Soft, 31 Records pliable 33 Copland : leather ballet 11 “Seven score Pillars of 36 Fast Wisdom” aircraft *■ author 37 “Auld 12 Endure Lang— ’ 61 39 Politician Jack 40 Don Ho’s porch 42 Weapon of yore 43 Bright asteroid 45 Virgule 46 Wotan 47 Opposite of boon 48 “It’s — to tell a lie' 49 Culture medium 50 Actor Richard 51 Comic Johnson 54 ET O ’s boss 55 TV monogram 10 11 12 13 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 4 16 15 14 16 17 19 21 22 23 20 25 24 30 31 29 26 28 34 33 32 i ■ 36 35 i m 39 38 ■ 42 d g ■ 4 44 « 3 J î m J 49 50 51 46 47 « ■ J » 54 52 F , 57 56 fl*;. 60 •1 58 ■ By Harvey L. Chew G 1998 Los Angeles Times Syndicate I « 9/10/98 D u e to in c re a s e d c o sts w e h a v e d is c o n tin u e d p R Y P T O Q U O T K S . W e h o p e y o u e n jo y th e new C ro s s w o rd s . Q u e stio n s: 965-6741 Police still seeking suspects in C ircle K hold-ups B y A u c ia A . C aldw ell S tate P ress Tempe police are looking for two men in connection with the robberies of two Tempe Circle K stores this week­ end. ' Sgt. David Lind, of the Tempe Police Department, said while there has not been an arrest yet, the department is continuing to gather information on the two reported sus­ pects. He added that leads in the investigation have not yet led to a positive identification of the suspects. Descriptions of the suspects were not available. The reports indicated these crimes amay also be con­ nected to a Phoenix Circle K robbed on Saturday. The initial robbery occurred Sunday morning when the two suspects reportedly entered the store at 7530 S. Priest Drive, displaying small, chrome handguns. They demanded the clerk give them the money from the register and the keys to his car. The two left the store in the clerk’s car and were not found by police. A similar robbery occurred at the Circle K at 1323 W. Southern Ave. later that day. According to reports, two men entered the store and went behind the counter. One of the men reportedly pointed a small, silver semi­ automatic handgun at the clerk ahd demanded money while the other man stood by the second register. The two demanded the clerk’s car keys, but the clerk said he did not have a car. V The men left the store and were not found by police. According to Tempe police reports, the men arrived at the store in the car stolen in the first robbery. Julie Igo, public relations manager for Tosco Marketing (owner and operator of Circle K) said her compàny is fully cooperating with police. “We have given the police surveillance video (from our stores),” Igo said. “We help in any investigation any way we can.” Igo said the store employees are made aware of situa­ tions such as this in an effort to heighten their own aware­ ness while working in the stores. “Our employees are trained in what to do and what not to do in a robbery,” Igo said. S earchable Archives • H ayden ’s F erry Review • and M ore ress.com li you sold your soul in the 8 0 s, here's your chance to buy it back. The New Beetle. A real bargain, as far as souls go. See your Volkswagen dealer for detaiIs. D r iv e r s w a n te d .™ www.vw.com or ca II 1-800 -444-8987 © 1 9 9 8 V o lk sw a g e n Berge Volksw agen 1515 W. Broadw ay M esa 833-0001 Biddulph Volksw agen 4611 W. Glendale Aye. G lendale 934-5211 Chapm an Volksw agen 6601 E. 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S p r in t P C S ’ To find out more or to order your phone, call 1-800-480-4PCS, visit www.sprinqics.coni/college or stop by one of the locations below: Sprint PCS Center Paradise Valley 12837 N. Tatum Blvd. 493-4500 Sprint PCS Center Tempe .1844 E. Southern Ave. 752-2300 For Business Customers: Phoenix Corporate Center 3003 N. Central, Suite 1950 (602) 651-7400 The Sprint StoreAt (g ) R a d io S h a c k . Also available at T he Activation Conter AcuPage Audio Express AzCoin Batteries Batteries For Everything Beep Arizo na Beeper O ne Best Buy V-Cellular Depot Circuit City CommsOurce Coops Audio. Creative Communications Discount Cellular Frys Electronics Infiniti Paging Kustom Kar Sound OfficeMax O ne Source Communications Pagenet Pagers Etc. Quality Communications Ritz Camera Robinsons-May Sams Club Scottsdale Cellular Signals Small World Communications Smittys Marketplace Southwest Cellular Superstore Weiss Gays Car Wash Wireless O ne arid 500 minutes, a m onth to be used customers who on identified harges apply , rum.L.P. All rider’ license. ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested for under­ age possession of alcohol and providing false informa­ tion to police at Lot 37, on McCallister Street south of Apache Boulevard. He received a citation while in Cus­ tody and was booked into the Madison Street Jail. • A student reported her bicycle' missing from Cholla Hall where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported his bicycle missing from Manzanita Hall where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported his bicycle missing from Hayden Hall where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported her bicycle missing from Cholla Hall where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported receiving harassing phone calls St his residence. • A student reported his bicycle missing from Irish Hall where it was secured with a lock. • A student reported his b icy cle m issing from the Classroom Office Building where it was secured with a Fit-Sat i ■ ■ i times with a coffee mug, reportedly leaving a cut on the lock. • A boy not affiliated w ith ASU was arrested, cited and man’s forehead. She was taken to Tempe City Jail where released fo r shoplifting at Tow er R ecords. He was it was discovered the woman had given a false name to officers and had two outstanding Tempe warrants. She reportedly released to his parents, • A student reported his bicycle missing from the south was booked and held. side of Physical Science H-wing where it was secured • A 20-year-old Tempe woman was arrested Monday at 1900 E. Don Carlos Ave. for an outstanding warrant for with a lqck. • A student reported her bicycle missing from the south p o sse ssio n o f drug p a ra p h e rn a lia . W hen o ffic e rs side of the North Architecture building, where it was searched the woman’s purse, they found a syringe. She was charged with another count of possession o f drug secured with a lock. • A student reported that the driver of a gray-and-red paraphernalia. The woman was booked into Tempe City Ford pickup truck hit her vehicle while it was parked in Jail. • Police arrested a 20-year-old Kansas man Monday for Structure 5. • A man not affiliated with ASU reported that his cellu­ theft of services. The man reportedly ordered and ate a lar phone w as taken from his UPS truck. The truck was meal at 414 S. Mill Ave. and did not pay. He was taken to Tempe City Jail and booked. reportedly parked at 350 E. University Drive. • A student reported her bicycle missing from 350 E. • A 49-year-old Tempe man was arrested Tuesday on charges of possession of narcotics and possession of University Drive where it was secured with a lock. T em p e p o lic e re p o r te d th e fo llo w in g in c id e n ts drug paraphernalia. The man was arrested at his home in the 600 block of West Fifth Street after officers found . Tuesday:; • Officers arrested a 21-year-old Tempe woman Monday what they believe to be crack cocaine in his apartment. on charges of assault, reporting false inform ation to He was taken to Tempe City Jail and released pending police and other charges related to outstanding credit positive identification of the substance. card theft warrants. The woman was arrested at 1610 E. R eports com piled by S ta te P ress reporter A licia A . Apache Blvd. after she reportedly hit a man several . Caldwell . J6 Q 0 LARGE 1TOPPING GRAND OPENING SLICES n SË C o r n e r o f M i l l S o u th ern I II e ¿ Peppm osöfterexpiressoon,notvalidwithany^the*of Mustpresan!couponal Unieofpurchase ★ Lunch Buffet 11-2:39 ★ Dinner 5-lOom ★ Sal-Sun 11-4 .ill THETIME 4usi presentcouponattim eofpuicnase FREE DELIVERY! Indian Restaurant m FREI Open 7 Days A Week! ★ Dine-ln/Take-Out ★ ra il M em Indian Cuisine Restaurant L u n c h B u ffe t I 2 LITER OF COKE I ANY LARGE PIZZA ★ Catering 557-7882 ★ Hear ASU 1125 E. Apache (Between Rural & Terrace) VA W o f A M E R IC A , IN C. V«A.W. of America Inc., a world leader in the aluminum extrusion and fabrication industry and an important part of the VIAG Group is seeking to fill the following positions: r. I ------ \ INSIDE SALES QUALITY ASSU R AN C E M AN AGER P.C. TECHNICAL/NETWORK AN ALYST W e are seeking for a Sales* The qualified candidate must have a The qualified candidate must have 3 years Marketing professional to sup­ Bachelor’s Degree (BA or BS) & 3 years experience in troubleshooting and repair of port our Sales Department. Ideal experience in Q A environment in a man­ P C ’s. candidates must have at least agerial role. Strong ability to comprehend Microsoft Word, Excel and Access in a sup­ three years experience in: & apply engineering/metalurgical technolo­ portive role for our users. Additional, respon­ • Direct or telephone sales gy. QS/IS09000 certification experience is sibilities include maintaining phone sys­ • Account management required. Bilingual English/Spanish is pre­ tems, time clocks, AS/400 and wiring, as • Customer Relations ferred. The ideal candidate reports to the well as providing technical support to the V.P. of Operations & plans, directs, & con­ entire facility. Strong knowledge of Windows Business or related field and ducts 95, N T and Novell networks, and thin client must be computer literate. Develops and implements .Q A key mea­ Also requires a Degree in all quality control program s. Software responsibilities include technology is highly desirable. surements. V _______ _____________ VAW offers an excellent compensation and benefit package . that includes medical/dental, life insurance, 41 OK, profit sharing and much more. Please send resum es to: VAW of America, P.O. Box 6726, Phoenix, AZ. 85005 Attn: HR Dépt. O r fax to: (602) 269-0220 Two escaped Navajo County Jail inmates remain at large Dem - Primary ^ J lr3 6 8 fA * * A ,i 5:45, o.-»o (M idn ig h t Fri. Sat onM SN AKE EYES m t i : o u . 1 J U , z . J U , * t. «/I» 4 (12:15am Fri. Sot onM n — 5:10. 6:50. 7:50. H A L LO W E E N : H 20 . (Fri-Sun) 11:40, 12:40. ’:15. 0:15. 0:40 (ld ;4 0 o m . night I nf J DiaiTWLlEX I T H E N E G O T IA T O R « BVEH AFTER S:£T&‘%UiSS *£ s*i%i& T H E P A R E N T T R A P po) (Fri-Sun) 11 OS. 2:05. 5 :05 n m r r P W - iiÆ S A V IN O P R IV A T E R Y A N w JO T S , (Fri-Sun) 11:10. 12:10. 1:10. 2 : 5 0 3 :5 0 .4 :5 0 6 :3 0 m a r r a i T = j 7:30. 8:30, 1 0 : l o < 1 1 :ÌQpm . 12:1 0a m FW; S i t o n M (Fri-Sun) 11:15. 5:20pm T H É M A S K O F Z O R R O « ■">■(11:25om Fri. Sot onM 0,1 T H E R E 'S S O M E T H I N G A B O U T M A R Y „ _ (Fri-Sun) 11:20. 1 :0 0 . 2:00*3:45, 4:45. . 8:35. 7:35. 8:20. 10:20 f12:Q $gm Fri. (Fr i S un ) 1 :50, 5:25, 8:40 ARM AGEDDON « (12:15am Fri. 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SUITE #118 ' TEMPE, AZ. 85281 State Fresi fo r Thursday, S e p te m b e r I#, 1998 Snyder: Sun Devil trio w on’t play in *98 B y D o u g F lanag an S tate P ress While it is not set in stone, the likelihood that seniors Marlon Farlow, Ricky Boyer, and Larry Johnson will take the field for the 1998 ASU football season appears bleak. “If you asked me (if) we were going to have a huge earthquake in A rizona, I'd probably say it doesn’t look like we will,” ASU head coach Bruce Snyder said. “I don’t know. I don’t know whatev­ er else might happen. I would hate in three days for somebody to say something and it’s different. But everybody tells me this is the way it is.” ' T/-.-' All three are not on the gridiron for academic reasons, but each player’s scenario is different. “In all three cases, they' have a , plan, they have an academic plan, and their own athletic plan is based on their own individual situation/’ Snyder said. “That’s what it is at this moment, and that is what the plan is right now,” : Boyer, a wide receiver, is not currently attending ASU. He is at a local junior college taking classes in. an effort to regain admittance to ASU either this Spring or next fall, and play his senior season in 1999. Farlow, a tailback, is; also not à student at ASU. He is aiming to take classes in the spring and obtain his degree, which he is approximately 25 credits short of doing. , Johnson, is attending ASU and does have an athletic related finan­ cial aid scholarship, but is not eli­ gible to play. Snyder said he spoke to each athlete separately yesterday to make sure they understood that school is their first priority. He said he was im pressed with the educational ;commitment each ath­ lete has made. “1 think if they didn’t or we didn ’t have that,” he said, “then I think this whole thing is a bad -deal,” . /v Hé also added that whether his team views the cases of Boyer, Farlow, and Johnson as a positive or negative will depend on how much they learn from it. “It’s kind of that ‘I can’t yet believe that it’s happening to me,”’ he said. “Like one of the players saw a freshman with his number bn it, and it’s like ‘oh no.’ That made it real. Somebody else in yourjersey. “I t ’s not unlike the game Saturday night. We had a lousy result and it will remain lousy and a total loss if we don’t learn from it. But if we do take the lessons that are there and correct our mis­ takes — “my bads,” as the players would say then it becomes at least partially positive.” Working out the kinks After allowing 431 total yards to Washington in Saturday’s sea­ son-opener, the ASU defense real­ izes changes must be made. A ccording to free safety; Christen Ranee, the defense needs to “h it harder” than they did against the Huskies in Saturday’s game at BYU. “W e’re jelling right now,” he said. “Pretty soon, we’re going to be a really strong unit. That’s what we're looking for right now.” Defensive tackle Albrey Battle said the unit's lack of adjusting to unfam iliar schemes run by the Huskies hurt them, and they must improve that area of their game to be successful, “We just got to prepare our­ selves and be able to adjust on the move for things that we might not have game planned for that they throw at us.” he said. “So that's our biggest thing is being able to adjust to any kind of situation that can be thrown at us. Basically, we have to prepare ourselves to win the game.” Battle also said a key will be the ability to contain Cougar quar­ terback Kevin Faterik. who shred­ ded the Sun Devils’ secondary for 328 yards in last y e a r’s 13-10 upset of ASU. "We have to keep pressure on the quarterback and keep him in the pocket because last year we let him get out and scramble a little bit, and then the cover guys would come off the coverage and that’s when he’d dump a little pass off and they’d ran for extra yards,” he said. “T h ey ’re alw ays a good offensive team , so we got our work cut out for us.” State Press, sports editor Ed Odeven contributed to this story. H ein o f th e State Press (Above) R a th e r th a n gaining gro u n d y ard ag e while spelling J R- R edm ond like h e d id d u rin g th e Sun Devils’ 9-3 season last y e a r, M arlo n F arlow , who is n o t c u rre n tly enrolled a t AS.U, will focus his en erg y th is fall o n receiving his political science d egree elsew here. F arlo w h ad 450 y a rd s ru sh in g on ju s t 57 c a r r ie s la s t seao n a s w ell a s five touchdow ns. (L e f t) L in e b a c k e r L a r r y J o h n s o n (25) is c u rre n tly enrolled a t ASU an d is o n a th le tic sc h o la rs h ip , b u t’ h e is ineligible to su it u p fo r th e S un Devils th is season. T h e ju stice studies m a jo r a p p e a re d in 10 gam es last season an d s ta rte d six tim es. T h e R ia lto , C alif, nativ e finished w ith a career-h ig h 39 t o t a l t a c k l e s , a n d c o lle c te d t h r e e sacks, tw o in tercep tio n s a n d one fu m ­ ble recovery. ‘S ta rt o f so m eth in g big’ began w ith w in o v e r B Y U B y E d O deven S ta te P ress T h e re ’s still som ething ab o u t that autum n day th at m akes B ruce Snyder smile. While recollecting about ASU’s memo­ rable 29-21 defeat of visiting BYU on Oct. 14, 1995, the ASU head coach vividly painted a picture about the winning envi­ ronment which propelled the Sun Devils into the national limelight. After the game, Snyder declared that it was “the start of something big.” Boy, was he right. A S U ’s has co m piled a 24-6 record since beating BYU. “ You know w hat I rem em ber a lot about it, it was a crystal day,” said Snyder after Wednesday’s practice. “One of those crystal clear days and the mountains almost jumped out.,. It was a special pretty day. Our team had a lot of life. Our legs were fresh. Just one of those days when you just feel better than other days. So we went out, I don’t know if BYU was looking past us in some way because we weren’t playing particularly well.” Indeed. The young Sun Devils entered the game with a 2-4 record and were com­ ing off a dismal 3-8 season. But led by the defensive contributions o f junior linebacker Scot Von der Ahe’s 31 -yard interception return for a touch­ down, junior rush end Brent Burnstein’s two pass deflections and one sack and the brilliance o f quarterback Jake Plummer (22 of 28 passing for 177 yards and two touchdowns), ASU was able to snatch an important victory for the program. “We had a lot of youngsters,” Snyder said. “And we were playing like we were young. And I just remember just how crisp we were. We intercepted a touchdown. We made some plays offensively. We hadn’t been that way for quite some time. It was really a neat day. I remember almost every play o f it. And of course we felt really good after it.” A feeling which has mostly carried over for 2 1/2 seasons. ASU’s 24-6 record in its last 30 games is among th e to p 1 0 m arks in th e country over that time span. Here’s a look at the top teams in the country over the last 30 games: iSSl ¡g if ’ 1. N ebraska 28-2 2. Tennessee 26-4 R o rk b .2 6 -4 Florida State 26-4 5. Kansas State 25*5 . 6. A S U 24-6 I | N orth Carolina 24-6 O hio State 24-6 Penn State 24-6 :. ! Young, Bonilla homer to lift Dodgers to 6-2 victory Sampras Slammin L* No. 1 seed Pete S am pras, o f T am p a, Fla., re tu rn s th e ball to S lovakian K arol K u cera d u rin g th eir m atch a t th e U.S. O pen tennis to u rn am en t in F lushing M eadow s, N.Y. W ednesday. S a m p ra s defeat­ ed K u cera 6 -3 ,7 -5 ,6 -4 to advance to th e sem ifinals. ■ pID 'JA GET THEJ SCARE YET? Auto insurance is the LAM! W hy not call us for a quote for your auto insurance? •PROGRESSIVE INSURANCE plus 12 other competitive companies. • Convenience, we're dose to the campus • N o AG EN Cy poficy fees! • Low dow n & m onthly payments. • Payments can be bffled to your hom e address. • M otorcyde insurance too! • O ver25 years experience in car 6t motorcycle insurance. A L i A l¿ f£ & HOME INSURANCE / Shoes. \ ■Hr Fine Jewelry. r E Major Home Appliances Electronics & Hardware. MIME COMMISSION S A U S ASSOCIATES X Help sell our customers on the many sides o f Sears, and we’ll sell you on a great career with great benefits, great schedules, great incentives. • Target Earnings - *10-*22 hour • P/T Hours 25-per week { I ■ ■v APPLY IN PERSON FIESTA MALL 1425 W. Southern Ave. (602) 833-6756 fX ^P S . I XI n. C om e c h e c k o u t th e C areer S id e o f S e a n . i Eq u a l O pportunity/Affirm ative A ction Em ployer A a jM jam ,U / 11: H / y f PHOENIX (AP) — Eric Young and Bobby B o n illa h om ered as th e Los A ngeles D odgers b eat thé A rizo n a Diamondbacks 6-2 Wednesday night for their sixth win in eight games. Carlos Perez (9-13) scattered nine hits in his second straight complete game, his fifth overall. “Perez, who struck out six and walked none, had gone 0-3, with three no­ decisions, in his first six starts after the Dodgers acquired him from Montreal on July 31. Young put the Dodgers ahead 2-1 in the third w ith a 37 1 -fo o t hom er o ff Amaury Telemaco (6-9). Bonilla hit his 11 th homer for a 3-1 lead in the fifth. ■A fter Tony B a tis ta ’s six th -in n in g homer pulled Arizona within a run, Los Angeles scored three runs in the ninth off Ben Ford on Y o u n g ’s RBI g ro u n d er, Tronidad Hubbard’s RBI single and Eric Karros’ sacrifice fly. Arizona starter Amaury Telemaco (6-9) allowed three runs and four hits in seven inningsHubbard hit a sacrifice fly in the first, but. Travis Lee tied the score with an RBI double in the second. Juan Castro threw out Lee at the plate when he tried to score on Bernard G ilkey’s grounder to short­ stop. M artin passes 1st test FOX BORO, Mass. (AP) — New England P atrio ts rookie ru n n in g back R o b ert Edwards had his first test. And he passed, rushing for 50 yards on 13 carries in the team’s 27-21 loss to Denver on Monday night. ' But Edwards himself will be the first to tell you — or the second, after coach Pete Carroll — that it was just one game in a long season of games. A test? Call it a quiz. The y ardage to tal w asn ’t the m ost impressive thing about Edwards’ perfor­ mance; it was the short gains — a 1-yard run for a touchdown, a 2-yard gain on 3rdand-1; a 3-yard pickup on 2nd-and-2. That’s what a coach looks for in a back, to get the job done. Edwards was drafted, by the Patriots with their first o f two first-round draft choices this year. The pick came from the New York Jets along with a third-round pick as co m p en satio n for the loss o f restricted free agent Curtis Martin. A pop quiz for C arroll: W hen will Edwards get his chance to make everyone forget Martin? This Sunday’s home open­ er against Indianapolis, perhaps? On Wednesday, Carroll wouldn’t say Who Sunday night’s big back would be. Of even if there would be a big back. He hinted that he might again have Edwards split time With Sedrick Shaw, who gained 25 yards on seven-carries against the Broncos. “Like I said, we will wait until tomor­ ro w ,” C arro ll said o f the d ecision on Edwards’ workload. “I like the way he played. I like the way Sedrick (Shaw) played as well.” In other words, the tryout isn’t over yet. T h at’s OK w ith Edw ards. H e’s not ready to play every down. “I haven’t gotten to that point yet,” Edwards said on his way out of Foxboro Stadium on Wednesday. “I ’m still work­ ing on that. I’m emphasizing that in prac­ tice this week, building up my endurance. I was kind of winded out there” at Mile High Stadium, where winded is par. **>.. ea.._ A.«..-... ^ ... St*®e » re ts fo r f ^ w p g i ^ awippipiwiwr f i s »aenroiis. . ■>-, T S 3« * ' 1. y Mighty Venus overpowers Sánchez-Vicario NEW YORK (AP) —. Once she adjusted to the wind and cold, Venus W illiam s was able to play her game. And there are few players in women’s tennis who can handle that kind of power. A rantxa S án ch ez-V icario certain ly w asn’t able to W ednesday night at the U.S. Open. As spectators huddled beneath blan­ kets, Williams used an awesome display of power tennis to reach the semifinals. U nderm ined by repeated errors in the first set, the fifth-seeded Williams over­ powered No. 4 Sánchez-Vicario the rest of the match in a 2-6, 6-1, 6-1 victory . “In the first set I was missing a lot, 1 w asn’t patient. I stayed away from my game plan,” Williams said. “I just had to stop missing. I just had to make up my m ind that I w a sn ’t going to miss any more.” Williams, a finalist at the U.S. Open la s t y ear, w ill face No. 2 L indsay Davenport in the semifinals. Davenport’s power was too much for No. 13 Amanda C o etze r in a 6 -0 , 6-4 v ictory e a rlie r Wednesday. Statep ress DALLAS (AP) — The D allas Stars have signed goaltender Marty Turco, the all-time NCAA leader in victories and a lead er on tw o natio n al cham pionship team s at M ichigan, to a two-year con­ tract. hid fu rth e r c o n tra c t term s w ere released. T u rco , 23, led th e W o lv erin es to national titles iiH-996 and 1998. He start­ ed four years at Michigan, becoming the nation’s all-time victory leader at 127. Turpo was a fifth-round selection of the Stars in the 1994 NHL Entry draft. H e’ll report to Dallas on Thursday and participate in the Stars’ rookie camp, the team said. O V ER LA N D PA R K , Kan. (A P) — NCAA President Cedric Dempsey plans to discuss sports-wagering problems in college athletics during a Sept. 30 sports g a m b lin g c o n fe re n c e at D ePaul University in Chicago. B ill Saum , the N C C A ’s agent and gambling representative, also is sched­ uled to make a presentation about the N a tio n a l C o lle g ia te .A th le tic A ssociation’s work to raise awareness ion Congratulations to Shah Khatri the winner of the inaugural Readers’ Reaction poll, fast week's question was: “W hat should Iron Hike Tyson’s punishment be?” Khatri, an information technology major, offered these words of wisdom: 1) Tyson should win the Man of the Ear award for 1997 ' 2) Iron Mike should be given an earful. 3 Tyson should be cloned and forced to share a dorm room with his clone for a semester. IT’S INTERACTIVE! Stars sign ex-Wolverine goalie Depaul to host gambling conference o n l i n e http://www.statepress.com and educate college officials, student-ath­ letes and others about sports-wagering. Others scheduled, to participate in the conference include prosecutors involved in th e re c e n t A riz o n a S ta te and Northwestern universities sports-wager­ ing cases, tjie FBI, a form er organized crim e m em b er a n d fo rm e r stu d e n ts involved in the Northwestern case. ble faults the rest of the match. And, as she regained control of her shots, she was able to turn up th e power. The game o f the match came late in the second set. On the 22nd point of the gam e, W illiam s finally converted her sixth set point to even the match. . W illiam s broke S án ch e z-V ic ario ’s serve in the first game of the third set, and ag ain in the fifth on a sh o t th e S p an iard th o u g h t w as go in g o u t and w a tc h ed as it h it the lin e . W illiam s closed out the match w ith yet another break, wrapping up the victory with a backhand down the line. In the m en’s quarterfinals, defending champion Patrick Rafter had 44 winners and only 14 unforced errors in a 6-2, 63, 7-5 v ic to ry o v e r N o. 12 Jo n as Bjorkman. Rafter, seeded third, will face the win­ ner of Wednesday night’s match between top-seeded Pete Sampras and No. 9 Karol Kucera in the semifinals. Williams began the match wearing a bright-yellow hooded sweatshirt, but still seemed bothered by the chilly evening. She was trailing 3-2 and had already lost her serve twice when she stripped to a light-blue tank top. Williams seemed to lunge for shots the rest of the set, battling the, swirling wind as much as her opponent. But then she decided to become more careful with her shots, and began to turn the match around. “It was windy. I wasn’t hitting my big serves. I jdst had to spin them in,” she said. A fte r 18 unforced errors a n d ’three double faults in the first set, W illiams had just 17 Unforced errors and. two dou­ This week's readers* reaction contest: In 25 w o rd s o r less, give you r com m en ts, grip es, sug­ g e stio n s, r ea c tio n s o r feelin g s a b o u t W a sh in g to n ’s s e a s o n -o p e n in g u p s e t o f A S U la s t S a tu rd a y . R em em b er to b e c re a tiv e . B e st r esp o n se s w ill be p o sted in n ex t Thursday’s paper. E-mail your responses by Sept. 15 to crazyed@asu.edu. R ecycle mm UR S i rft TE If l (ESS vo D IS C O U N T A IR W h o le s a le D ir e c t HONG KONG ««._____ ««$597 OSAKA«««««..«..«_____ « $$4? MANILA««.___««.««.««$537 TOKYO ¿5 7 7 LONDON«..««..._______ «$477 SEOUL«...*______«««««$547 BANGKOK;___ « ....« ..« .4 6 4 7 TAIPEI«*___ .««___««««$527 LIMA PERU .....____«..««$477 SINGAPORE..._____________ ..$627 _ 1 ^ 1 C A N SUBMIT... FALL PRICES - R O U N D T W P FR O M PHOENIX! W O W ! 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BLACK CANYON HWY (DUNLAP SI-17) 9 5 5 -1 9 9 6 7 8 8 -5 4 4 3 3310 E. THOMAS RD. NEW LOCATION (32ND & THOMAS) OPENING SOON Simply the BEST MEXICAN FOOD in the Valley! ...Try us and see why. Kids Menu ,Available FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS Tem pe - 7 3 1 -9 4 9 0 1395 E. APACHE BLVD. (WEST OF IUcCLIN TOOK) ■■ L“ N O W I N O U R 3 6"' Y E A R 1 2/3 1/9 8 FR EE 8 POINT DIAGNOSTIC C H EC K 8 6 4 -8 3 3 8 jii Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week K _____________ P hoenix____________ L- ] ■ 1 /2 P R I C E D I N N E R WATCH FOR OTHER METRO AREA OPENINGS „ W ith the purchase o f one dinner o f equal o r greater value. N ot Good W ith Any O ther O ffer • Expires 9-17-98 Mesa ASK ABOUT OUR FREE LIFETIME WARRANTY ON COMPLETE CLUTCH & BRAKE REPAIRS. PI F in e Mexican 2023 W . G uadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 H appy H our B u ffe t 4-7 p.m. Monday-Frtdoy Fofld Tem pe 9 6 0 W . U n iv e rsity (N ortheast Com er U niversity & Hardy) 986-0852 < Ski Breaks I w!’"iMl His Airness may rettirn, agent tells paper The Bulls have hired Tim Floyd as their coach-in-waiting, giving him the title of director of basketball Operations until the NBA lockout ends and Jordan announces his decision on whether to stay or retire ;;| ReiUSdorf alsò said he would try one’ last time to coax Jackson to return, but •Musburger has said that will not happen. Redskins up for sale ASHBURN, Va, (A P) — The Cleveland Browns deal is done. Next on the block: the Wàshington Redskins. One day afte r the NFL ac cep ted a record $530 m illio n o ffer for the Cleveland Browns, the estate of the late Jack Kent Cooke formally opened the bid­ ding Wednesday for the sale of the ohe of, the major franchises in professional sports. The announcem ent cam e in a b rief press release from investm ent banking firm Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, which thdHiRate’s trustees retained to coordinate the sale. The release gave few details, although a legal source close to the pro­ cess said he expected the team, along with the new Jack Kent Cooke Stadium, to be sold shortly after the end of the NFL sea­ son. If the sale is expedited, it would not be good news for Cooke’s son and Redskins president John Kent Cooke, who wants to buy the team but lacks the personal wealth to do so. The will of the elder Cooke, who died in April 1997, left his son just $10 million and directed that the bulk of his estate, estimated at more than $800 mil­ lion, be sold to fund a foundation that would provide scholarships for exceptional and underprivileged children. By law, the trustees have six years before they have to sell the team , bu t C ooke’s will dictated that the sale take place without considerable delay. All of Cooke’s other assets, such as New York’s landmark Chrysler Building, have already CHICAGO (AP)—There still may be a chance that Michael Jordan and former coach Phil Jackson would both return to the Chicago Bulls, Jordan’s agent told a newspaper. * The C hicago Sun*Tim es rep o rted Wednesday that agent David Falk said Jordan “definitely wants to come back. “But only in a situation where he feels he has a chance to win another champi­ onship. So, he wants to see what happens with Scottie Pippen, who else will be on the team and who the coach will be. “Personally, without being too much o f a wide-eyed dreamer, I still believe there are some scenarios where Phil Jackson can come back despite the fact he has said he won’t come back,” Falk told the newspa­ per. Calls to Falk's office Wednesday were referred to his public relations department, where a woman refused4»comment on the accuracy of Falk’s reported remarks. “There will be no further comment on this story^” she said. A m essage le ft at the o ffic e o f Jackson’s agent, Todd Musburger, was not immediately returned. Falk told the Sun-Times that if Jordan would let him get involved, he believes he could work out an arrangement with Bulls chairm an Jerry R einsdorf w here both Jordan and Jackson could return, “But right now, Michael wants me to stay out of it,” Falk said. “He warns things to unfold naturally. He wants to see what die Bulls do on their own and what his 14 years of service really means to them.” Jackson left the six-time NBA champi­ ons in June, and Jordan has long said he will oply play for Jackson. Scottie Pippen said in August that die doesn’t expect to return to the Bulls after the NBA lockout ends and he d oesn’t think Jordan will either. been sold. Even before W ednesday’s announce­ ment, there was already a bid on the table. New York entrepreneur Andrew Penson has offered $450 million for die team and the. stadium, although his offer would not assume die stadium’s $161 million debt. •- “Mr. Penson has made a very serious offer,” M aryland real estate developer N athan L andow , who is ac tin g as Penson’s local liaison, said Wednesday. “W e’re anxiously aw aiting some word from the trustees as to what the next step will be.” Coyotes re-sign Doan » SCO TTSD A LE, A riz. (AP) — The Phoenix C oyotes re-signed rig h t wing Shane D oan to a o n e-y ear co n tract Wednesday, just two days before the vet­ erans are scheduled to report to training camp here. M eanw hile, th ere was no re p o rted progress in co n tra ct ex ten sio n talks betw een the team and cap tain K eith Tkachuk. , Doan, who was the first-round draft pick of the Winnipeg Jets in 1995, had five goals and six assists in 33 gam es for Phoenix last season. Three of his goals were game winners and he also scored one goal in the Coyotes’ first-round playoff loss against the eventual Stanley Cup chamion Detroit Red Wings. Doan, 22, also played 39 games last season fo r the S pringfield Falcons — Phoenix’s American Hockey League affili­ a te —-and had 21 goals and 21 assists. He had seven goals and 10 assists in 74 games as a Jets rookie in 1995-96, then had four goals and eight assists in 63 games for the Coyotes in 1996-97 when the franchise relocated to Phoenix. Term s o f D oan’s contract were not announced. . •“ * t McGwire takes hit show on road CINCINNATI (AP) — No day off for baseball’s new home ranking. A capacity crowd wouldn’t allow it. A day after he hit No. 62 in front of an adoring home Crowd in St. Louis, a sleep­ less Mark McGwire took his home run show on the road Wednesday. He didn’t get to bed until the early morning hours and then found he couldn’t nod off as his­ tory played out in his mind. When he got to Cinergy Field for a gam e against the C incinnati Reds, he resisted the temptation to sit out and let it sink in. There were too many fans for that. “I’m going to have one or two at-bats.” he said. “When you’ve got 50,000 fans out there, you’ve got to make some sort of showing.” The Reds sold out both games of the series and were expecting their biggest weekday crowds since Sept. 10-11, 1985, when another of baseball’s most revered records was falling — Pete Rose passed Ty C obb as the ca ree r h its lead e r in Cincinnati. Fans showing up to see Big Mac were disappointed that No. 62 had gone out in St. Louis, but figured it was appropriate that he did it at home. B esides, every homer from now on is another record. “When he hits one, it’s still history,” said 15-year-old D errick S m ith, who brought a fishing net to Section 237 in left field hoping for a homer. “I was hoping he would play and I figured he would because he is a fan person.”, “Hey, we wouldn’t be here on a school night if it w asn’t for him ,” said M ark Brown, 42, who made the two-hour drive from Columbus with his 12-year-old son, A lex. “I was h o p in g he w ould play because it was sold out. I thought he would, although I hate to take advantage of his good nature.” / Our custonjgrs will call you for directory assistance. You simply ask for the “city and listing”and give them the requested information.Absolutely no selling is involved. Plus, we offer SUNDAYBREAKFASTALLÚCAN EAT! 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Spain: $5975/$6275 Application deadlines: .^ . • April 1 for summer session • April 30 tor faM semester • October 15 for spring semester For further information contact: Toll free: 1-800-342-1725 E-mail: StudyAbroad@uwplatLedu W eb: http://ww w .uw platt.edu/program s/study_abroad/ +TAX ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS 1.00 EA. IN THE CORNERSTONE RURAL & UNIVERSITY 829-7473 THE FIRST TRIPLE-BLADE RAZOR YOU TAKE ONE STROKE IT TAKES THREE. m B É É fí it§ e r to Win the Grand Prize: BMW M3 and Cash. Wm; ■ $5/0 0 0 I G illette v‘~'1 m A C H j j (f “ *> ! fc . v t F/rsf Prize: PlayStation “M vigame console with Dual Shock Analog Controller. Call toll-free to enti G illette GO’ MACHS The Sc*t a M a n C o n Get CLOSEST SHAVE • FEWER STROKES • LESS IRRITATION ftM i M w pewftlftRftd n i n McM ly tai» 1. HOWTO ENTER: To«tor, call toll free using a touch tone telephone, 1-877-60 MACH3 or vteft www.MACH3.comand follow thedirections by providing your name, complete mailing address, phone number, last six (6) digits of your Social Security number, tint three letters of your mother's maiden name, whether you are male or female and what shaving system you currently use. If you are a registered student at one at the 25 schools listed betow, please also provide the nameof the school you attend. Only complete entries received between £00 amEOT on 8V17/98and 1159 pmEST on 11/15/98will beeligible. Timeand date of your entry will be recorded automatically. Only one entryper person, group or organization. Gillette.is notresponsible tor entries that are inaudible, umnteHigibte, Me. incompMe, misdirected, lost due to disconnection, telephone system or computer equipment or software failure or data loss. All entry information becomes the property of Gillette. Gillette reserves the right to verifyall entries. 2. PRIZES: One (1) GrandPrize and a total of thirty-five(35) First Prizes pill beawarded. The Grand Prize Winner will be selected in a randomdrawing fromail eligible entries received. The Grand Prize Wbmer will receive a 1999 BMW M3 (standard equipment including destination and handling charges within the continental United States) and 15,000 in cash. Estimated value: $49,000. Twenty-five (25) First Prize Winners will be selected in randomdrawings fromall eligible entries received from students registeredat University ofAlabama, Arizona Stele University, Universityof Arizona, San Jose State University, Universityof California Los Angeles, Universityof Southern California, University of Connecticut. Florida State University, University of Illinois, Universityof Kentucky, Louisiana State University, Boston University, University of Massachusetts, Michigan State University, University of Michigan, Rutgers University. University of NewMexico, .Ohio State University. Oregon State Univereity, Pennsylvania State University, University of South Carolina, University of Tennessee, University of Texas, University ofWashington and University of Wisconsin Madison. Therewill be one First Prize Winner per listed school. Additionally, Tbn (10) First Prize Wimwrs will be selected in a randomdrawing fromail othereligible entries received. Each First Prize Winner will receive a PlayStation gameconsolewith Dual ShockAnalog Controller, an additional Dual Shock Analog Controller, a PlayStation brand 15 block Memory Cardand RFU adapter. Estimated value each: $250.00. Gillette, in its sole discretion, reserves theright to substitute similar prizes ofequal or greater value. Maximumprize liability for Gillette Mach3 Wina BMW M3 Sweepstakes is one (1) Grand Prize and thirty-five (35) First Prizes. S. DRAWING: Winner Drawing; will be held on or about 11/30/98. Drawings will be conducted by Fulfillment Systems, Inc , an independent judging oqaoization whosedecisions arefinal in aHmat­ ters relating to this promotion. Odds of winning will,depend upon the number of eligible entries received for each drawing. Winners will be notified by phone or by mail. Cash will not beawarded in lieu of prize wonand prizes are not transferable. 4. ELIGIBILITY: Sweepstakes is opento legal US residents, 18 years of age or older. Legal proof of age and valid proof of college registration, whereappucahto. will be required. Limit one prize per person. All entries must originate from within the USA/ This promotion is intended for viewing only in the USA. Employees and their families of Gillette, BMWand Sony Computer Entertainment America ("SCEA") and their affiliates, subsidiaries, agencies and suppliers of promotion materials, prizes and services are not eligible tor entry in this promotion. AH U.S. federal, stale and local laws apply. Each winner must execute and return an Affidavit of Eligibility and LiabUity/PuMcily Release and provide a Social Security number within three (3) days of notification attempt or prize will beawarded to an alternate winner. Returnof prize notification as nondeliverable will result in disqualifica­ tion and an alternate winner will be selected. Applicable taxes, tees, registration, dealer prep, insurance and other expenses not specified herein are the sole responsibility of the prize winners.Gillette, BMWand SCEA ate not responsible tor prize utility, quality or otherwise. Gillette, BMWand SCEA are not responsible for any claims, damages, or losses arisingin connection with this promotion or the acceptance of toe prizes awarded hereunder. By participating in this promotion, persons agree to be bound by the final decisions of Gillette on all matters relating to this promotion and winners agree to the use of their names and likenesses for publicity purposes by Gillette, where permitted. 8. WINNER'S LISTi To learn the names of the winners, senda stamped, self-addressed envelope to Gillette Mach3 Win a BMWM3 Sweepstakes Winners List, R 0. Box 3700, Dept. H, St Cloud, MN 56397-3700. Winners list requests must be received by11/15/98. Promotion is conducted byGillette, wpich is responsible for awarding tfie prizes. None of toeschools listed above is affiliated with this promotion in anytrey. © 1998 The Gillette Company (USA), Inc. PlayStation and the PlayStation logos are registered trademarks of Sony Computer Entertainment Ihc. Dual Shock is a trademark of SCEI. ' Classifieds H i 1 ■ WÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊKÊÊÊÊKÊÊm Ï l¡llIl¡B»iill ¡ SISsi Notice to our readers; Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. 97770777979 Mare Trivia... The See Francisco Cable Cars are the only mobile National Monuments. k APARTMENTS 1 BR- 2 blocks from campus, pool, spa, laundry, covered prkng. No pets. Avail, now 1700 S. Collage 809-8300. HOMES FOR RENT 4BR/2BA, 1700 sq.ft., fam. rm. + liv. rm. Very nice & very . clean. College/Southern area. $1325/mo Call Jeff, 893-1651 MARLBOROUGH PARK 3/bd house near campus tile rpof, $179,900 Bob Bullock from Realty Executives 998-2992. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BR, POOL, cvd park, dw, w/d, Broadway&Elm, $675/mo. 1-800-977-0803. : 3BD/2BA CONDO All appl. Close to ASU 5850/m o. 5578161 v: ■V ; ; TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c. Near ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/ mo; 3bd/2ba avail. 966-0987 ONE BD Hayden Square. Wash/dry, pool/spa. Walking distance to ASU, shops & res­ taurants. $740/mo. 607-3641 PAPAGO PARK Village 2bd upper unit, spiral s ta irc a s e ,' overlooks pool.TJ. 966-1555. PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba con­ do. New paint, clean carpets, •Very nice. Call 432-3636. RO O M S FOR RENT 3BR/2BA CONDO. Very nice, close to campus, all appliances included, including w/d. $950/mo. Call Jeff, 893-1651 3BD/2BA APT. Enclave Apts. $350/mo.-f 1/3 util, w/d, small dog. Bill or fodd, 820-4727 HAYDEN SQUARE Deluxe condo, 2bd/2ba, fireplace,' walk to Mill Ave. shops, ASU & res­ taurants, $1100/mo. Call 9668729, ly. msg, HELP WANTEDGENERAL FiEStnmn loin the Fiesta Fun! C o n c ie rg e FT Front . D e sk FT/PT B e llm a n FT Fiesta Inn 2100 S. Priest Tempe SA V IN G S U P T O $ 3 5 0 O FF! 5A If id M A D ) B T . Ú a î I HELP WANTEDGENERAL 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. ...... FURN’D SMALL bd & private ba in nice cntrl Phx TH. S/T or 1 yr. Seek M/F clean, visitor, student, intern. 667-1353 LOOKING FOR someone to take over 9 mo. lease @ The Commons on Lemon. $305/mo. $325 sec. dep. Shared condo. Furn’d. Call Davee @ 968-6427 MALE GRAD has furnished room & office to rent in 3bd. house w/ pool. $375/mo. + utils. Near ASU, shopping. Cali Lynp, 491-7201 QUIET! $300 + utilsv pool, 1 mi from ASU, own br, m/f, grad/prof pref. 736-2948. RESPONSIBLE, EASYGOING female room mate wanted to share 3bd/2ba condo in Papago with w/d. $367/mo. 7360719 or 894-6685 2 TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE NEW MKT: remod 2br/2ba con­ dos On Rio Salado, 5 min ASU. $65K+ 966-8323. Your ad should be here! C a ll 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE SPRINGTREE CONDO, 2 mstr bd/2ba, McClintock/B road way, avail. 17:1/99, all appls., w/d, fridge, xlnt cond. $72K. Con­ tact 515-1966. REAL ESTATE . FORECLOSED Gov’t foreclosed homes from pennies on $1. Delinquent tax, repo’s, REO’s. Your area. Toil free 800-218-9000 Ext. H1676 for current listings. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Welcome Back ASU students. Looking for a part time job? Gome and check out the opportunities at the Sun Automotive Croup if) Scottsdale.;We are looking for: Valet/C ar Washers TS ANDCaSHI| • GBEETERS }X ^areth€T arge^gi • Profit Sharing • Health insurance • Career Advancem ent O pportunities Jobline: • Paid vacation -.McDowell Rd. Join our team! P lease apply in pereon, anytime, at: at Southern in M esa F o ra G U A R A N TEED interview, apply M -Th from 2pm-10pm. If unable to apply in person, m ail/fax resum e to: D enny's HR, P.O . Box 17591, San Diego, C A 92177-7591. Fax (619)’ 571-0060. EO E/M FD V D o m in o 's P iz z a FT position includes purchas­ ing/ re-buy duties. Must have basic computer skills & attention for detail. M R P expe­ rience helpful. Fax resume to: JA D O ¿mg Free O rg a n iz a è ^ à z ^ B B ^ ^ 1150 S. Country C lu b Dr. 804-5285 INVENTORY CONTROL PLANNER at 675. • Flexible Hours/Various Shifts 2 miles from ASU Arizona golf daily publication needs: 1 sates manager and 3 xaarrmtw « l e s rent tn sell on-line banner advertising and w eb hosting. (Newspaper sales/directory background a plus). Make $1,500/mo arid u o .Niqht sports editor ($8/hr - w ork from home). Two golf writers to cover AZ golf events. M arketing Assistant ($7.50/hr) to accom plish public relations with golf courses. Interviews being held this w eek bn campus. Call 303-432-9494 E-Mail; pubiisherOcactusgolf.com a HUD HOMES 4 sale! Chandler Tempe, Mesa, Gilbert, Phoenix. 3%dn, free list. T J. 831-0322. LIMITED O K I! STUDIO ONE BEDROOM f. TWO BEDROOM HOMES • WALKING DISTANCE TO ASU AND DOWNTOWN TIM Pt fAVI 'ON O T ttlT iE i - HOT WATER INCLUDED AlAR/A SYSTEM AVAILABLI PRIMKTL »ALCONT/PATiO ' - . i POOLS « HEATED) . - . tA MEQUE AREAS ■ : CEILINC FANS - CUSTOM VERTICAL/AMNI »LINDS KMDMjr EUROPEAN CABINETRY; ■■ LARCE STORAGE AREAS- a RESPONSIBLE MALE, N/S to share new home. Ray/56th St. Quiet neighborhood. Perfect for young prof, or grad. Frplce, spa, laundry. Avail, immejd. $425 inclds. utils., $485 w/ ga­ rage. 753-9344. Denny’s! APARTMENTS Ii m f»«r (4 HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL 1985 HONDA STATION wag­ on, 5 spd, exc. cond. low miles 3500 or obo 254-4001 1989 CHRYSTLER La Baron, convert, new top, look/runs great. $3,800 obo 966-7190. ASU VS Notre Dame- 2 tickets wanted, price negotiable. Call Jay 800-358-3244 ext 6490. 1989 WHITE Mercury Topaz, perfect college car, needs some brake work. Nice!! $1600. Call Katie/Matt 456-4893 or 898-6617. HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL AUTOM OBILES 92 Î O YOTA Tercel, depend­ able, original owner & well m aint., 4 spd, fm cass. New tires & f/b breaks. 956-8168 94 PLYMOUTH Sundance, V6, Red, CD stereo, 73K miles, sunroof, 5-spd, excellent con­ dition, $5300 obo. 875-0768 94 VW Jetta GL- m oonroof, premium sotind, auto, low miles. Sale priced @ $10988 call 265-6600: AUTOM OBILES BICYCLES 97 CAVALIER, low miles, fact, warr, auto, a/c. Call Jason at 7999433, GOOD USED bikes, approx 50mountain, road & cruisers. $30$180. Pgr 266-8720. 97 JEEP WRANGLER Sport, V6, ;sft top, grn w/tan, std, am/fm, cass. Shauna 275-4103 $16,800 obo Must sell, mov­ ing! SCHWINN 26" 10-speed. Mens, world sport model, extra nice, $125. 991-3740. CARS $100-$500 - police im­ pounds. Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps & Sport Utilities. NiUST SELL! 1-800-522-2730 x4740 SEIZED CARS from $175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free, 1-. 800- 218-9000 Ext. A-1676 for current listings. M O TO R C Y C LES"" 91 KAWASAKI Ninja ZX6 runs/looks great low mi., bike cover, new tires, leather tank m EMBASSY SU ITES HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL $8.05/HR Phone verifiers. No selling, no appt. setting. M-F, no wee­ kends. Start now. McClintock /Broadway location. 784-2270, call now. ADtlLT CHOIR director needed 8am worship. Practice wklyv .Salary negotiable. Exp. des’d. . Send res: Staff Support Com­ m ittee. St. Peter Lutheran Church. 1844 E. Dana, Mesa. 85204 BETHANY CHRISTIAN School is hiring teacher: assis­ tants, playground assistants, bef. & aft. school care givers, & sub. teachers. Tempe at Price/Guadalupe Call 752-8993. HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL CAN YOU build&run a web site? We're young entfeprenuers! We have clients & experience. 9706161 www.bizplanit.com 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 reimbursement, dwntwn Tempe w/ free cov'd parking. 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.com. Jobline: 902-6000 CHRISTIAN PRE-SCHOOL & child care center positions avail, for a.m. &/or p.m. 8382440, Price & Guadalupe. COLLECTIONS $9 57/HR start. Flex shifts. Bckrnd in cust. serv. helpful, not req'd. Many ’benefits. Fax resume to Bankfirst at 308-5110. RESORT SCOTTSDALE A C C E PT IN G W ALK-IN INTERVIEW S M , Tu, and F 8:30 - 10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm N o w o p e n th e fo llo w in g S a tu rd a y s I 9am - 3pm : Aug. 29 Sept. 12 Sept. 26 • Bqt. Setup Staff • Room S0 rvio0 ($4.25/hr + tips) • Servers ($3.S0/hr + tips) | » PBX Operator • Bqt. Servers • Steward FT & P T w ork available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. City of Scottsdale Community Maintenance and Recreation Division AMERICAN VALET CO. HIRING VALETS. Earn $7 to $12/hr. P/T eves or Day shifts. Must be clean cut, courteous & have a good attitude. Apply at American Valet Co., 34 W. Dunlap. (Directions from Tempe: Squaw Peak Freeway north to Glendale Ave, left to Central Ave., right to Dunlap Ave, go left. Look for American Valet about 1/2 block ahead on the right.) Applications taken Mon-Fri, 1pm-4:30pm. Managers and Smoothie Makers we need you! Wear a cool shirt, make fun smoothies, play with public. Flex hrs and schedule, decent Wage for fun easy work. Call today and explore the hip and happening Frozen Fusion fruit smoothie, fast food world. Now hiring for Scottsdale Fashion Square. Call 948-5604 ext. 320 W A N TED : C u sto m e r S ervice D ILLA R D NATIONAL BANK COACHES & OFFICIALS Boys & Girls Flag Football Volleyball $7.30 - $9.75 per hour NOW HIRING CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATES To Assist wlik INQUIRIES REqARdiNq DillARds D tp i. S tore CARdMEMbERs > N u m e r o u s P a r i - U m e o p e n i n g s a v a Ha U e w iih start u m i s bervvEEN 1 1 : 5 0 a m & 4 pM, woRkiNq 4 -5 (tour shifrs, 5 (Uys a w uk. SAiundAy o r SuNdAy RFQuiRFd. >WEEkENd ONly posirioNS avaHa Me, worck SATuRdAy Arvd/oR SurvdAy (or a 4 to 6 (tour shift. . . ' || Up to $9/Hpur • Salary Review @3 months I jj F/T & P/T, varied hours, including Evenings I and Weekends • Excellent Benefits For application information contact the Student Employment O ffice, Job referral Applications will be accepted until ¡p/Ve need people with strong communications! & problem solving skills to work with |! potential clients and attorneys. Incoming | I calls. Leadership skills a plus; opportunity to § i advance. Bilingual (Eng/Span) skills strongly | desired. Apply in person: Goldberg & Osborne 4423 E. Thomas Rd. or FAX 808-6950 Friday, September 18,1998. 994-7642 >SiARilNq pAy $7 > $9 (ir, PAid every FiridAy. >T(wee potentia! Sa Iary Increases ¡n F’irsi Y ear bASfd on per (ormance. • Mtdk.Al/DtsiAl B e n e Mts >G enerous DitlARd's D iscounts up to 25% . •Avoid Freeway coNqEsrioNlli G reat locAiioN I®* East V a Uey reskIents. Psych & Social Work Majors A p p ly rodAy m p e r s o n , by m a H o r Ia x youR R es u m e t o # 5 0 5 -5 5 0 7 We’re hiring for the following positions at our fullservice dining room and our casual them e grill. Enjoy an excellent starting wage, flexible schedul» >. ing. on-shift m eals, early out tim es and employer v) provided uniforms and uniform laundering. Ma||¡NfoRMAliON to: DILLARD NATIONAL BANK locATEd Ijeiween A rizona A ve. & M c Q ueen off Elliot Ro«d 5,96 N. WUIiam DillARd D rive • GilbERi, A rizona 8 5255 EOUAL OPPORTUMIY EMH.OYER ^ Looking for a career opportunity that affords you FLEXIBILITY? . Jewelers National Bank, credit center for theZALE CORPORATION, the world’s largest jewelry retailer, is seeking individuals fo r the following FT and PT positions: • PM Dinhigftoom Servers & Bussers ($5.15/hr + tips) • Banquet Servers ($8.50/hr) • Banquet Set-up ($8.50/hr • Grill Servers (All Shifts) • Line & Prep Cooks ($8.50-$ 10/hr) Located in south Chandler at Riggs Rd. & Sun Lakes Blvd. (1 mi. east of HO a t Riggs Rd., Exit 167). Only 15 m inutes from ASU. 4 Help us to re-educate our non-paying customers and you can • A tten d classes full-time and work • Earn a monthly incentive up to $500 • Receive a 6-month performance-based increase • Select a schedule to meet your needs day or evening, FT or PT No experience is necessary. Apply in person 9am-5pm. M-F for an immediate interview or call to schedule one at your convenience 2035 W. 4th St„ Tempe, AZ 85281 Less than 2 miles from ASU Campus 829-5804 Drug-Free Environment/Equal O pportunity Employer iw r ’ National Bank Incentives: ' Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Apply in person at Clubhouse for immediate inter­ view and consideration. 895-4329 EOE (M/F/D/V) Submit Applications To: k M-F, Flex m orning and evening schedules M-Sun, Flex afternoon, evening & w eekend schedules DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmen­ tal^, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $7.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents Skip Trace Specialists Credit Analyst - Gain Valuable Experience D B C Residential S e rv ic e s 2405 E. Southern A ve. #9 Tem pe, A Z 85282 756-1223 H ere’s W here You Can Shine! As a national service center for one of the best names In th e appliance industry, General Electric, Advanced Services, Inc. (AST) seeks dynamic and self-motivated individuals to p rovide telep h o n e a ssistan ce to GE appliance custom ers. Your superior custom er service skills will aw ard you these benefits..., • $8/hr (after successful completion of paid training) • Raise potential after 6 weeks • Fun, motivated, professional work environment • Available shifts: 3pm-8pm o r noon-Spm • A dvancement opportunities • Excellent benefits for FT & PT • Convenient ceritraliocatipn ■ Please apply in person (MondayFriday, 7am-4pm) at 3137 E. Elwood St., Suite 100, Phoenix, AZ 85034 (University, east of 1-10). For more information/ directions, please call; 414-2592. EOE You can find State Press Classifieds ■♦ on the World Wide Web! http://www.statepress .comlclassifiedsl classifieds.html Æ , 21HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL COMPANION FOR lady in wheelchair. Hours flex-nights, afts, morns, would consider live-in. Fiesta Mall area. Call Ann Days 967-5062, Eves & wknds 838-5137/ HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL D R A F T IN G 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. COULD YOU use an extra EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES $220/mo.? The State Press available at Gumby’s P izza,. needs an ASU student to dis­ Days and eVenings. Apply after tribute the paper to the Mill 5pm oreà» 921*3278 Aye. area starting at 6 a m. No vehicle needed, paperi will be EXPANDING COMPANY left at key spots. For more info, . needs laminatore.. Must be able call Beth at 965-2145. Or pick to lift 70 lbs. P/t o r f/L $7/hf, up. a reféfral form for Job drug test. Apply @ 710 W #ì 296H & bring it, to the base­ Broad way » #508 / tylesà (E. of ment of Matthews Center. , Extension), -very back of busi­ ness complex. .CRUISE SHIP employmentworkers earn up tò $2,000/mo. (w /tips and b en efits)/ World , FT YOUTH director pós open immed. Send res to Staff Sup­ Travel! Land tour jobs up to $5,Ò0Q-&7,000/summer. Ask port Com m ittee., S t/ Peter .us how? 517-336-4235 Ext. Lutheran. Church. 1844 É. C59181 Dana, Mesa 85204 M ake y o u r advertising $ $ $ $ w ork harder! P u t i t in tiie C la s s i f ie d s ! PT General W arehouse Men Fri, 1 1 - S p a P o lit ic * . - ro n u m , Telem arketers Wanted In Gainey Ranch. Earn S 8/hr quality assurance duties, janitorial West fide Pheenb HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ERAL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ERAL GOTTA TRUGK? It s not nec­ essary for the job, but it helps. ASU student needed for offcampus delivery person for the State Press. Great pay’ Call Beth @ 965-2145. HELP WANTED sales person ft & pt. Old Town Scottsdale. Good wages. 481-8285 MECHANICAL TECH, fi/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15 min«, to ASU. Flex, hrs. Call 956-8200, days TEENAGER HELPER to run er­ rands,-be a companion & tutor for busy mom. Extremely flex, w/ schedule. Must have de­ pendable . transportation. Sharon, 736-2628 PART TIME help needed to an­ swer phones and file M-F after­ noons. $7 p/hr call 243-1880. GYMNASTICS COACH want­ ed, boys & girls. Must enjoy working w/ kids. Need energe­ tic individuals w/ positive at­ titudes. Hours available M-F, after 3:15 pm + wknds. Great pay, flexible hours, exp. pxefd but not nec. Call 451-1011. GYMNASTICS COACH look­ ing for an exp, xlnt coach who can inspire boys to do gym­ nastics in a recreational setting. Will teach boys & girls 3-14. P/T. Top .pay .for top .person. Dependable people need only apply/955-7805, HELP WANTED - pt at The Pic­ ture Place - MU- LL 965-4322 $9/hr, potential month­ ly bonus $$. No selling required. P/T flexible INTELLIGENT, RELIABLE per­ son w/own truck to clean swim­ ming pools. P/T, 15-20 hrs./wk. $ 150/wk. Flex, sched. , MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, 992-0264. m/f needed immed. for nat'l com­ mercials/ print! 941-6922. LAWN SERVICE p/t help. No exp. nec. $6.50/hr. 966-3269. NANNY: M-F (days) loving in­ Flexible hours/ dividual to care for children- & home iii Scottsdale while moth­ MADE IN Arizona is now hir­ er at work. 443-4999 or pgr. 1ing p/t sales near Fashion 800-816-6968 Square Mall. Will work around school schedule. : Call Kerrie at NEED CASH? Earn $7.25 + bo­ 945-3370. nuses, paid weekly, low stress,, weekends off, evening hours. Call 646-7385. F in d it FAST in th e C la s s ifie d s TELEMARKETING $10/hr base to $20 9-year-old company • We Train • AM & PM Shifts •Weekends Optional Closeto ASU 350-9336 hours. Call for appoint­ 75 Positions, hriy + bonus NEEDS ] DATA ENTRY • S17.68/hr. average •9-1 or 5-9 • No Selling, Training Provided • Start immed,, growth, wkly pay Dobson/Baseline E lle n 491-4921 ONSITE VIDEO seeks a P/T video production assist. Ethusiastic personality, good cust, relations, phone, basic comp, skills, and camera exp. are de­ sired. Training included. Col­ lege and Southern area. Call Betsy at 967-5062. P/T .SALES- Communications Indust., flex hrs. $2000 1st wk potential, call 407-8782. Appointment Setters Great job - No selling Great pay - $8-$10/hr. Great location - Near campus Gréât bonus program Weekly cash incentives Gréât hours - ÀM/PM shifts 894-9884 PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/ti $8.10/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req’d. 804-0300 PR INTERN - unpaid position w/unconventional PR firm. Gain experience!!! 840-2959 C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Non-profit agency recruiting to conduct housing surveys, req 1-2 hrs each at $ 2 5 .. Applicants must be com­ mitted to Fair Housing. Send name, address & telephone to 3431 W. Thunderblrd, #13A, Phoenix 85053: P ersonnel N/E Scottsdale Airpark Location Must Type 55 wpm. Relaxed Work Environment. Flex hours. $10+ per hour FAX resume Attn: Viki 922-4669 ment - 607-1069. Great environment. 3 ASU F ea n Market Research Ultra Products Co. Attn: HR D ept grads •mptoyad now. Help Wanted Start Building Your Resume & Business Skills Now! 96*4874 S S a n d fu n l G reat opportunity for A RESORT RESERVATION CENTER IKON/DLS [ FUN PEOPLE Wanted! Appointment setters for Universal Portraits. $7 $12/hr. 777-1054 WKyBHppt < State Press far Thursday, September 16,1998 Korean/American representatives desired immediately for an exciting career in ATM salés and Service. W e currently have tw o different opportunities available w ithin our company: 1. Sales team m em bers to m arket products and ideas to potential customers. 2. Qualified individuals to translate text and Interpret conver­ sations w ith in th e Korean com m unity. EXCELLENT PAY & FLEXIBLE HOURS available!! Join our energetic and successful company today! Contact John Page at 838-1500, or E-mail me at: johnpage@cgicash.com Becom e a Market Research Interviewer o r a Client Qualitative Assistant W e offer: • $7.50/hr (eve. shift) + Bonus Plans • Flexible schedule • Convenient Location- about 4 m iles lip m ASU • A bsolu tely N O Sales! N o experience Necessary I F Y O U A R E L O O K IN G F O R A F U LL-TIM E O R P A R T -T IM E JO B , Call Ray at 874-2714 - Focus Market Research DONOR H e r e ARE T H E T O P TEN REASONS S t r a ig h t fr o m T e m pe W h y y o u s h o u l d call EG G S N EED ED Healthy women (ages 21-30, all ethnic groups) needed Q SM , INC. to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 T op T en L ist clinic visits and injections involved. A cce p te d d o n o rs com p en sa ted $2,000. emedx For more information call (602) 860-4792 N e e d C a sh ? Career O pportunities!!!! Rem edy Needs You!!!! H il t o i i Scottsdale Resort &Villas We are im mediately hiring for: Full an d P art T im e A vailab le ✓ Guest Services Agent • Flexible Hours in th e Tempe Area • Market Research for th e Republican Party, $8 per h r ‘ • C redit C ard Activation, Entry level $7.95 per h r • Telesales for US West, A fternoon and evening shifts $8.50 plus bonuses ✓ Reservation Agent V Restaurant Server - AM /PT ✓ Room Service - A M .V B usser - AM. \ Apply in p erson Mon-Fri, 9 am - 3pm at th e Scottsdale Hilton th the H um an R esources Office 6 3 3 3 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 8 5 2 5 0 Getting a tan just doesn't pay We pay $7/hr guaranteed Physical labor gives you the willies Professional (& air-conditioned) Office Environment "Would you like fries with that?" - enough said! Job advancement potential after 30 days You may NOT have already won $10 million Close to ASU The beer tasting job is still taken It's a free call! 894-9816 1310 E. Broadway, #103 Tempe, AZ Call Jan or DeeAnna at 557-8483 for inform ation We are just around th e com er in the Banc One Building Mill an d University ^frust A nother Way To Say R itz-C arlton. W hen style, class an d prestige are the issues, we are always m entioned first. And w hen you think of a com pany that can give you the success >and dignity you want— the answer is always The Ritz-Carlton, Phoenix. We have a genuine care and concern for the comfort of our employees. Now Is the tim e to get the preferential treatm ent you deserve. Join a com pany that will make you feel on top of the world in one of these positions: H ^Y -A -X T DISCOVER THE PEOPLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! • Telephone Operator • Cocktail Server • H o s t/H o s te ss • Spa Attendant • Receptionist • Bussers • J u ic e /C o ffe e B a r Attend . • Room Service Cashier • Pool Server Por M ore Information C a ll : 10. 9. 8. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1. 991-9670 Experience the benefits at the H yatt R egency Scottsdale: • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401(k) Plan • Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition Reimbursement Our customers will call you for directory assistance. You simply as for th e ‘ city and listing” and give them the requested information. Absolutely no selling is involved. Plus, we offer: • a variety of F T and P T work schedules • weekly pay periods , • paid training • 401 (k) and more M C SU . • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates A pplications a re accepted M on. 9am -Noon and T u b s . 3pm-6pm; A t the Hum an R esources O ffice 7500 E . D oubletree Ranch Rd. P le ase enter at m e w est end o f the building next to the loading dock. Certain position s m ay require testing. Hyatt supports a drug free w orkplace. AA/EO E/M /F/D/V 1906 E . M a in (N W co m e r o f M a in & Gilbert) P h oen ix 4 25 0 E . C am elb ack, 3rd Floor, Ste. 300K Tem pe 1 9 19 W . Fairm ynt (Broadway/Southem, near 1-10) P eoria 9802 W. Peoria (N E co m e r of P eo ria & 99th A ve.) • Banquet Server ♦ Banquet Set Up >Administrative Asst, ♦ D ishw asher • Cook >Carpet Cleaner ♦ House Attendant »Dry Cleaner • Front Office Staff • Laundry Attendant ♦ Overnight PBX Operator »H ousekeeping ♦ Retail Attendant .♦ PBX Operator Supervisor « Server Attendant » Room A ttendant • Security Officer • Valet » Staff Engineer LEAOCRSHIP POSITIONS * Assistant Director of • A/V Manager • Nat’l Sales Manager Human Resources • Executive Meetings Manager Style, class and prestige has its advantages—like attractive compensation, com pre­ h ensive benefits, appealing w ork environm ent and exceptional growth opportu­ nities. Send your resume or apply in person to: The Ritz-Carlton, Phoenix, 24Q1 E. Fax: (602) 957-0248. Phone: (602) 468-0700. C am elback Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85016. Fa EOBM/F/D/V T h e R it z -C a r l t o n P h o en ix HELP W ANTEOG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL 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 ROTHER'S BOOKSTORE now accepting applications for pt positions apply in person. 625 E Apache 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. RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun* outgoing. Tem­ po. Cindy. 777-1054. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED. Wed/Fri for Crimpers Salon in Ahwatukee. C ontact Jill or Frank @ 704-1808 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 460-0859 VALET PARKING attendants, must be clean cut, $6-$9/hr. (in­ cluding tips.) P/T eve. shifts, 5pm-1lpm. 548-0599IV. msg. WE'RE BACK! Dark side, the second Coming. Top pay in haunted house in­ dustry. Exp +. Interviews held 9/21,22, 7 1Opm @ Native Hands, 8806 E. MeDoWell Rd. (McDowell & 101, Scotis.ji Seeking: cashiers, parking aU tends & charac actors. 966-5616 STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch & din­ ner servers & dinner hostess. Apply in person, 1pm-5pnV, Mon.-Fri. 5001 E. Washington. RESTAURANT BURN out? New co. seeks 8 people who want to make a change. Fun, Freedom, & Finance. Call Casie @957-0785 TENNIS SHOP attendant $6/hr eve., wknd.^ flex., p/t. Must be 19 yrs+, 946-7509. 1 8 / h r., F u n fo b , g re a t p a y . P re -sch o o l g y m n a stics te a c h e r n eed ed . P /T , w o rk a ro u n d sch o o l s ch e d u le . V a n / tru c k a p lu s . C a ll 821-4640, T a m i o r M ik e . A d v e r t is e y o u r I n te rn e t b u s in e s s o r W e b s it e in th e ' C la s s if ie d s . TOP DOLLAR Need 3 energetic individuals. Make F/T income, P/T flex. Call Dusty, 858-9745: . •; C e il 965-0731 tor more information F in d it FAST in th e C la s s ifie d s - ' HELP W ANTEDSALES HELP W ANTEDSALES SALES STUDENT REP $9-$20 OR more per hour! This is not telem arketing. In-store sales at Target stores. Set your own schedule. To schedule an interview call Laura at 508-6100. AT&T authorized agent needs 20 students now! No exp, Will train. $100-$300/wk. PT/FT, 800-592-2121 ext. 133. ART GALLERY frame shop, wknds, N. Scotts, art back­ ground a +. 951 -8907 LENSCRAFTERS AT Arizona Mills location now hiring for perm, p/t & f/t sales assoc's. Paid tràiriing. flex. hrs. Com­ petiti ve wages + incentives. If you're committed to quality & cu$L serv. call Dale or Lenny at " 820-2198 , -y PUT YOUR money where your mouth is. Set appts'. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. Near ASU. $8/hr, to start guar. + comm. $12/hr. àvg. 829-6222 HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP W ANTEDCLER ICAL ADMIN. ASSISTANT- responsible, computer knowledge, accounts recieivable/payable, work along­ side owner, nice working envi­ ronm ent $8-10 p/hr call 4533940 or fax resume 453-3949. ADMIN. ASST, needed to sup­ port growing high-tech co, Comp, literate & self-motivated. Fax res: Attn: Valerie 829-7704 RECEPTIONIST/ CALL Coordihator-P/T, 13-15 hfs./wk., i. wk. nites & wknds. Must have front office & multi-phone, cteitK puter ¿xp. Mature w/professional appear. $6.50/br. Cen­ tury 21 A.M. Realty, 831-1114. HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL NNMUtrömocMMiHte You CairtAskfor a Better Student Job! HIGGINBOTHAM ASSOCIATES I I \ ' Tuìiìon Asskiamce ' PhONE Bill CreeJits ' UNbEÜEVAblEBeneRis ' FunWonk Environment ' Earn full tímeWAqcswoRkiNq pari tíme (sours! M CI TO Apply ANd ¡NTERVÍEW COME TO OUR PhOENIX loCAliON AT 1801 E. CAMEÜMck Ro*d, SuiiF 210 (I n tMe CoUoNAdE PIaza) MqN'FrÍ 9AM'6pM Sat 9aM'2pm We Reel motivated, harlworkiag «Udenti af 6eo;r over 25; topipipgs) All Fall Semester Sm all - $ 5 .4 9 with + .504 topping ASU ID Large - $ 9 .W ,+ .904 toppling Arizona Shorts 5th & Mill FREE DELIVERY 966-6339 T O R S A R :E N O T A L IK E We offer tutorial for th e following classes: Registration for Fajl semester is going on now. CALL US FOR INFORMATION Find it FAST m Call for information on Classified the Classifieds Display advertising - 965-6555 MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER Matthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 • Classified Ad Order Form Nam e Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. A — E Q M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117 M A T 119 M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 Q B A 221, PSY 230 PH Y 111, PH Y 112 FIN 300, 0 P M 301 C H M 113, C H M 1 1 5 /6 CON 221, CON 323 A lg e b ra F in ite M a th C a lcu lu s /P re c a lcu lu s S ta tistic s Physics Business C h e m is try E n g in e e rin g A S U Box 871502 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 p ... S u c c e s s f u lly H e lp in g S t u d e n t s S i n c e 1 9 8 0 . State Press Classifieds P le a s e b e s u r e to c h e c k y b u r a d . M a k e s u r e it re a d s e x a c tly a s y o u w is h it to a p p e a r in th e S ta te P r e s s , in c lu d in g p u n ctu a tio n . P le a s e c h e c k y o u r a d th e first d a y it a p p e a rs -th e lia b ility o f th e S ta te P ress s h a ll not e x c e e d th e c o s t o f th e a d a n d c re d it m a y b e g iv e n fo r th e first in s e rtio n o n ly . M in o r s p e llin g e rr o rs d o n o t q u a lify fo r m a k e ­ g o o d s . N o re fu n d s w ill b e g iv e n , bu t if y o u n e e d to c a n c e l y o u r a d a c re d it w ill b e h e ld o n a c c o u n t fo r fu tu re a d v e rtis in g . TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS Private P arty 1-4 d ays, $1.70 per lin e, per day 5-9 d ays, $1 .6 5 per lin e, per day 10+ d ays, $1.49 per lin e, per day Commercial 1 d ay, $2.60 per line 2-4 d ays, $1.99 per lin e, per day 5-9 d ays, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ d ays, $1.60 per lin e, per day /3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lin es. "SIMON" • Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 ASTR0L0&ICÁL FORECAST by Sidney Omarr Thursdays S e p te m b e r 10, 1998 ARIES (M arch 21-Apri! 19) Financial puzzle solved — what appears to be lo ss will boom erang in your favor. Marital status figures prominent­ ly. Dinner prepared by Cancer native who views you as special. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Cycle high, scenario features nights of love and laughter. Take initiative, highlight originality, creativity, dressing and looking chic. Sagittarian plays top role, GEMINI (M ay 21 - June 20) Individual you admire creates aura of disillusionment, fails to keep appointment Relates series of mitigated circumstances, is telling troth. Scorpio is in the picture. CÁNCER (June 21-July 22) Moon position guarantees that good time will be had by all. Study Aries m essage. S elf­ esteem moves up, you will be loved by dynamic, dramatic per­ son, very good-looking. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Focus on family, career, ability to over­ come obstacles, including dis­ tance and language. You could be on precipice of fame and for­ tune, Gift received, could be jewelry. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be analytical, make inquiries, don’t be satisfied m erely to be told something happened. Answers found as result of meditation. You experience mystical hap­ pening. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Learn more about accounting proce­ dures, find out where the profits went and how to make financial comeback. Meet and beat dead­ line, love and be loved. Capricorn will captivate. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Look beyond the im m ediate, individual destined to play major role in your life w ill appear under mysterious circumstances. Focus on p artnership, legal rights, marriage. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Make firesh start, let go of pre­ conceived notions, stress origi­ nality, willingness to take chance on love. Fitness report good, take plunge into future. Leo fig­ ures prominently. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Scenario highlights direction, motivation, decision relating to m arriage. Good food, Cancer native involved. Moon position emphasizes style, creativity, sex­ ual attraction. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Some will claim you are con­ fused. Others will admire your artistic ability, originality, intel­ lectual curiosity. Refuse to be stymied by mediocre individuals who are envious. PISCES (Feb, 19-March 20) Being with a Taurus today will mean good luck for both of you. . Emphasis on travel, writing and publishing, disseminating infor­ mation. Take special care while fixing household Objects. IF SEPTEMBER 10 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:. Current, cycle relates to fresh start, new direc­ tion, possibility of creating emo­ tional problem by falling madly in love. Leo, Aquarius persons play outstanding roles in your life, could have these letters, ini­ tials in names —- A, S, J. You have marvelous knack for cre­ ative criticism. You are an indi­ vidual all the way, adore color, glamour, people who act in plays and don’t hide emotions. Marital status dominates during October. ' 0 1998, Los Angeles Tunes Syndicate