m F lip to th e b a c k fo r th e S ta te P r e s s M a g a z in e ' t md e p ende n't met n i n e da Hit, m Classifieds- 16 INSIDE Horoscopes-19 s e r v i n g mrizmmm 'state » mivcrsitg. Weather-Partly cloudy; high 92, low 67 Volume 84 Number 28 Thursday, October 1,1998 PohceBeat-06 Opinion-04 W orld/Nation 03 Sports 13 Clinton announces $70 million budget ¡surplus, firstsurplus sinceNixon All-American Claiborne set tolead USC defense into battle A S U ’s bike olicy hard to enforce By A licia A . C aldwell State P ress S o le y H a r te l o f t h e S ta te P re ss T -m fTiTflilt r ^ ^ i T * * " ** 11 " f * - — * zo ne t o fr o n t o f th e M e m o r ia l l.'nion w hile a n A S U B é p a r t m e n t o f P u b lic S a fe ty o ffic e r w atch ­ es. S tu d en ts can receive a fine o f u p to $ l £ fr o m A S T J police i f th e y d ò n o f'ah id e b yT h e b ik e rid in g ra les o n ca m p u s. ' ^ Survey show s LSA T scones may be biased By J essica W olf Sta te P ress A survey released last week shows that the Law School Admission Test (LSA T ) may be racially biased. The Testing for the Public survey probed L S A T scores for students applying to the Boalt Hall School o f Law at the University o f C alifo m ia-B erkeley from 1996 to 1998. A ll o f the students surveyed were gradu­ ates from Harvard, Y ale, Stanford, ,U C Berkeley and U C L A . A ll were within one tenth o f a 4.0 undergradu­ ate grade point average. The only significant difference between the appli­ cants was race — 1,366 o f the total respondents were minorities. “ W e wanted to investigate whether bias exists in test­ ing,” said David White, director o f Testing fen the Public. The results showed the average L S A T score fen an A frican -A m erican test-taker was nine points lower than a white student. The average seme for a Latino student was six points lower and for an Asian student, three points. “The people who make up the test do not necessari­ ly come from diverse cultural backgrounds,” said Paul Bender, an A S U law professor. “ The wording o f the questions and the way die choices are presented may make it easier to answer for people with that same background.” Tins can also involve issues outside erf race, Bender said. “ For exam ple, someone without a great deal o f sports knowledge may have a hard time with# question that uses a football example,” he said. Although law schools emphasize L S A T scores for a d m issio n , it is n ’ t the sole determ inant w hen it comes to getting in. A S U ’ s C ollege o f Law admis­ sion requirements also include G P A , quality o f writ­ ing, and the extent o f work, community service and N e a n d e r t h a l o f O c t . 3 D 1 ~ Cyclists have more to worry about than just finding a park-, ing space, according to A S U Police C hief Lanny Standridge. Although the “ bike traps” — when several officers sit and watch one location for bicyclists who violate campus traffic policies —: will not happen often, Standridge said A S U police are watching. A S U police staged a “ bike trap” 4as£week a tC a d ^ M a ll. Standrige said officers can and will Cite students for rid­ ing their bikes recklessly, in the wrong places and in dis­ mount zones. There are traffic rules on campus, he said, and students need to follow them. A S U police enforce bike policy in random areas, watch­ ing campus traffic at different places and different times. The department occasionally sends officers to various cam­ pus locations with high bike populations for enforcement. Standridge said enforcement occurs when the depart­ ment has enough .officers available and in areas that the community has requested enforcement. Usually, there will N A c a m p u s s tu d y t o p ic c o n fe r e n c e B y G a n g a S umiamanian St a te Press Believe it or not, the study o f D N A is not limited to ana­ lyzing soiled clothes and presidential conduct. S c ie n tis ts h ave e xa m in e d m ito ch o n d ria l D N A in Neanderthal fossils and found Neanderthals to be markedly different from modem humans. Such recent advances in the study o f Neanderthals will be the topic o f a public symposium to be held O c t 3 in Neeb Hall. Neanderthals roamed parts o f Europe and Western Asia far mote than 100,000 years arid died out just 30,000 years ago. fa : 1856, their fossils were foundin the Neander Valley in what is now Germany — the first ever fitxxre distinct population of pre-humans. ' “ The latter part o f human evolution, despite being very close to us in time, is one o f the most controversial periods in the fiv e m illio n years o f e v o lu tio n ,” said R ich a rd Kim bel, science director o f die Institute o f Human Origins. The conference, sponsored by die ASU-based Institute o f Human Origins (DiO) will feature scientific researchers from A S U , Northern Illinois University, Universidad Complutense de Madrid in Spain, Duke University and the U o fA . Anne Stone, a postdoctoral research fellow at the U o fA , will present her study o f ancient Neanderthal D N A .. In the study, Stone a id other scientists ground up the bones from die upper right shoulder o f a Neanderthal fossil. Then, they compared the mitochondrial D N A from the fossil With D N A from more than 2,000 different specimens o f homo sapi­ ens among Europeans, Asians, Native Americans arid Africans. “ W e found Neanderthals pretty different,” Stone said. There are 27 differences between Neanderthals and m odem humans, while there are only eight differences, between various species o f modem humans, she e xp la in e d '“ I f m odem humans in Europe have descended freqh Neanderthals, you would expect to find them more similar to Neanderthals,” Stone said. According to Eric Miekle, faculty research associate at IH O , die Saturday symposium will bring researchers in contact with the members o f the public who can actively participate in die question-answer sessions scheduled at the end o f die conference. Other speakers include Juan Luis Arsuaga, a professor from the Universidad Com plutense de M adrid, who is Æ Êh. . . O f d i a M a d rid o f th e S ta te P re ss D r . E r ic M eik le, a faculty research associate w ith the Institute o f H u m a n O r ig in s , h o ld s a c a s t sk u ll o f T e sh ik T a s k , a 40,000-60,000 y e a r o ld N ean derthal. T h e I H O w ill present a sym posium On S a tu rd a y featuring th e stu d y o f N ean derth als an d how their D N A is d ifferent fro m hum ans. studying Atapuerca, a set o f caves in Spain that contain b e a u tifu lly preserved N eanderthal bones, and Steven Churchill, a Ehike University professor who w ill discuss Neanderthal predatory behavior. WÈÊBSË .. . I..... 185:7. ’ vZí ; Bike Campus clubs and organizations may sub­ mit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests wHI not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. O n ly one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the A SU community. Requests are accepted on a first-co m e , first-serv ed basis and are printed as space permits. • A ll S a i n t s C a t h o l i c N e w m a n C e n te r — A hands-on class to learn to decorate photo albums will be held in the C en ter at' 7 p.m. The cost is $ 10 and will benefit the Newman Center. • Alpha Epsilon Delta — The pre-medical honor society will hold the third meeting of the semester in the Physical Sciences build­ ing room H152 at 6:30 p.m. The Princeton Review will offer a free M CA T seminar. • Am erican Marketing Association — Doug Jones o f Northwestern Mutual Life teachers how to succeed in the business world in the MU Mohave room at 4:30 p.m. • B a p tist S tu d e n t U n io n — Creative com m unication artist Brian Randone will perform on Hayden Lawn at 11 a.m. • Barren M ind im p ro v —- The troupe will perform in the M U Programming Lounge at 12:15 p.m. • C a m p u s Bible Fellowship — A Bible study will be held in the MU Gila room at 6:30 p.m. • Cam pus Crusade for Christ — The Fall getaway preview will be held in the Physical Sciences building room H I50 a t7:30 p.m. • Christian Stu dents Fellowship — A Bible study on “How" G od W ill Supply: The Prophets” will be held in the MU Turquoise room at 12:40 p.m. • C o u n s e l o r T r a in in g C e n t e r — Trained Master’s and Doctoral students offer free counseling for full-time stu­ dents, faculty and staff from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday. Call 9655067 to schedule an appointment. • Financial M anagem ent Association — A social will be held at M cDuffy’s, Sixth and Ash streets at 5 p.m. • H onors C o lle g e Council — A meet­ ing will be held in the McClintock Hail TV Lounge at 6 p.m. • J S A S U — A general meeting for Justice Studies majors will be held in the MU Yuma room at 4:45 p.m. • Latin A m erican Studies C e n te r — “ La Patagonia Rebelde” will be shown in the Language and Literature building room C57 at 3;40 p.m. • M a r r ia g e a n d F a m ily T h e r a p y Clin ic — Individual, couple and family therapy is available for students, faculty and sta ff in th e C o w d e n Family Resources Building Room 140. Call 9659373 for more information. • Phoenix Union Devils — A meeting will be held in the MU Pinal room at 4 p.m. • Public Relation Stu d e n t So cie ty o f A m erica — Robert Johnson, director of the Riester-Robb Agency, will speak in the Stauffer Hall Reading Room at 4:30 p.m. • Religious Studies C lu b — A discus­ sion will be held at H igher G ro u n d , 1032 S. Terrace Road, at 7 p.m. • R e sid e n ce H a ll A s s o c ia tio n — A meeting will be held in the MU Mohave room at 6:30 p.m. • S G I - U S A — A meeting on the Buddhist way of life will be held in the MU by the Union Bakery and Cafe at 5 p.m. • T .H .E .M . — A meeting will be h ad in the M U Havasupai room at 5:30 p.m. fr e w ip a je W ^ — ■ /.|WÊË- Hi be more than just one or two officers wait­ ing for students violating traffic policies. Students riding their bikes through areas marked as dismount zones could face up to $18 in fines, Standridge said. A n d those who receive a citation for bicycle violations have the option o f paying the fine or attending a bike safety course. Officers also have the option o f determin­ ing if a student should receive a citation, a Written warning or a verbal warning. “ (Citations being issued) is discretionary on the part o f the officers,” Standridge said. “ It depends on the circumstances.” W hile some Students see bicyclists in dismount zones as a problem, they said a citation isn’t the best answer. Jo e l Robinette, a jun ior anthropology m ajor, agreed w ith H a y d e n , sa y in g he doesn’ t fe e l a citation should alw ays be given but rather à warning. Stu d en ts rid in g at slow speeds that watch opt for pedestrians should not receive a citation, said Matt H ill, a business fresh­ man who ridés his bike on campus. “ But if someone is reckless, they deserve a ticket,” he said. Jenti Hayden, a junior child development major, said as a matter o f respect bicyclists should get o ff their bikes and walk through areas on campus that are busy or marked as dismount zones. Standridge said citations and warnings are given to students to help avoid acci­ dents. ■ The enforcement o f bicycle regulations should be more educational than punitive when the situation allows for that, he said- activities o f a student while in college. Ryan W oodco ck, a senior journalism major, took the L S A T last Saturday and said he didn’ t feel his status as a white male made answering the questions any easier. “ T h e re w ere som e S c ie n c e -re la te d questions that messed me up a little bit, because I don’ t really know a lot about science,” he Said. But W oodcock said the testing environ­ ment itself could possibly be intimidating to a minority student, “ O ut o f 30 people in my testing room, only two o f them weren’ t w hite,” he said. White suggested that W oodcock’ s expe­ rience is an exam ple o f one factor co n ­ tributing to lower minority scores. “The L S A T testing procedure can artifi­ cially depress scores by. putting minority students in situ atio n s w here there is a stereotype threat” ’ White said. “ This is not just physical, but psycho­ lo g ica l,” he added. “ For exam ple, i f you tell, a fem ale student that women usually sco re lo w e r than m en in m a th , the w om an’ s math score tends to go down. T h a t’ s how it is for m inority students. They may feel they have to prove some­ thing, which adds a lot o f pressure.” B ut Bender said L S A T scores cannot alw ays predict minority students’ future performances. , . ■j “ M inority groups tend to do better i n ; their future law school careers than their L S A T scores may indicate,” he said. W orld/N ation State frets fo r Thtir»d«v. O c tofcvr I, H N f ■M B ! *u •• “ ^ *u 11 C linton calls $70 billion surplus gift for future By Robert B urns A ssociated P ress D o u g M ills o f th e A s s o c ia t e d P re ss P resident C lin to n gestures w hile ta lk in g a b o u t the b u d g et su rp lu s in the O ld E x e c u tiv e O ffic e B u ild in g in W a sh in g to n W e d n e sd a y . T h e go v ­ ernm ent this y ea r w ill post a b u dget su rp lu s o f ab o u t $70 b illio n , th e first su rp lu s in a gen eration. W A S H IN G T O N -— The government will run a surplus o f about $70 billion this year, the first black-ink budget in 29 years, President Clinton said Wednesday. Eager to claim cred­ it, he called the turnaround after years o f huge deficits “ a gift­ giving achievement for generations to come.” Republicans were quick to say the surplus was mostly their work, that it came about despite Clinton and that it was time to put part o f the extra money back in the pockets o f taxpayers. . “ We stopped the flow o f red ink and balanced the budget,” said House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R -G a. He accused Clinton o f wanting to spend billions more on “ big liberal bureaucra­ cies.” For all the crowing about the first budget surplus since 1969, when Richard N ixon was president, N eil Armstrong walked on the moon and a can o f Coke cost 15 cents, little was said about the possibility that an economic recession could wipe out projections o f continued black-ink budgets. The Congressional Budget O ffice predicts an eye-popping $1.6 trillion in surpluses over the next 11 years. Looming after that are potentially deep budgetary troubles because o f the huge drain retiring baby boomers are expected to make on Social Security. Medicare and other federal programs. Appearing at a White House ceremony beside a sign flash­ ing the word "surplus” in orange lights, Clinton said the door is now open to sustained American economic prosperity into the 21st century. “ Tonight at midnight, America puts an end to three decades o f deficits and launches an era o f balanced budgets and sur­ pluses,” Clinton said told a handpicked audience o f Democrats — including several who lost their congressional seats in 1994 after voting for Clinton’ s deficit-reduction plan. Clinton used the opportunity to press his top domestic priorities: setting aside the budget surpluses until Congress enacts long-term fixes to the Social Security system, resisting using the money for tax cuts and making investments in educa­ tion that can be paid for without dipping into the surpluses. Violence erupts in W est Bank on tails of stalemate end B y Ja c k K atzenell A ssociated P ress H E B R O N , W est Bank — Undercutting the latest U .S . peace efforts, an assailant on W ednesday hurled two grenades at Is r a e li troop s g u a rd in g a d ow n tow n square in the volatile W est Bank city o f H e b ro n , in ju r in g 11 so ld ie rs and 11 Palestinians. The attacker was shot in the leg before he van ish ed into the P alestin ian -co n trolled area o f the city. The Israeli army poured reinforcem ents into Hebron and imposed a curfew on the area it controls. C o m in g at a tim e when the U n ited States is trying to conclude agreement on an Israeli troop withdrawal in the W est Bank, the attack gave a boost to Israeli claim s that the Palestinian Authority is not doing enough to prevent attacks on Israelis. Is r a e li P rim e M in is te r B e n ja m in N etanyahu has said he would not hand o v e r m ore W est B an k lan d u n til the Palestinians rein in militants. Troops also set up roadblocks around Hebron, barring Palestinians from leaving or e n te r in g the c ity o f 130,00 0 Palestinians and 450 Jew ish settlers. Tensions in Hebron have been m in i since the A u g. 20 killing o f a settler raf apparently by a Palestinian militant. In a related development, Israel T V ’ Channel Two, said that Palestinian securi­ ty forces raided a Hamas .bomb factory in Hebron on Tuesday, seizing 640 pounds o f explosives and bom b-m aking materi­ a ls. T h e report said it w as the largest Hamas laboratory uncovered. W ednesday’ s violence erupted during Y o m K ip p u r , the h o lie s t d ay on the Jew ish calendar, as Israeli troops enforced a blanket closure on the W est Bank and G aza Strip. The bloodshed cam e am id intensive U .S . efforts to broker an agreement on an Israeli troop pullback from 13 percent o f the W est Bank. Under a com promise, 3 percent o f that land is to be set aside as a nature reserve in which Israel retains con­ trol over security. Earlier this w eek, President C lin to n hosted Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Y asser A rafat separately and then in a three-way summit. Israeli and U .S . o ffi­ cials were upbeat, saying the land issue had been resolved. However, Palestinian negotiators said W ed n e sd a y that som e d iffe r e n c e s rem ained. H assan A b d e l R ahm an , the Palestinian representative in Washington, said one point o f contention was whether Palestinian police could enter .the nature reserve. Secretary o f. State Madeleine Albright and U .S . envby Dennis Ross are to return to the region Tuesday to prepare another M ideast summit in W ashington in midOctober, Palestinian negotiator^, said. The grenade blast injured five soldiers and six officers from the paramilitary bor­ der police, as well as 11 Palestinians, the army and Palestinian doctors said. One Israeli was seriously wounded. In other developm ents W ed n esd ay , som e 400 Palestinians threw stones at Israeli soldiers near the West Bank village o f B iddou. T roops fired rubber bullets, injuring six Palestinians. The clashes erupted after the funeral o f a Hamas activist, Zahran Ibrahim Zahran, w h o w as k ille d T u e sd a y w hen a ca r rigged with powerful explosives blew up in die village o f Beitunia, near Ramallah. A s s o c ia t e d P re ss P ale stin ia n y ou th s th ro w stones to w ard s Isra eli tro o p s, fo llo w in g th e fu n e ra l o f Z a h r a n Ib ra h im Z a h r a n , a n a ctiv ist fr o m th e m ilitan t Isla m ic gr o u p H a m a s , w h o w as killed T u e sd a y w hen a c a r rig ge d w ith pow ­ e r fu l e x p lo s iv e s b le w u p in th e W e s t B a n k v illa g e o f B e i t u n ia , in th e n e a r b y v illa g e o f B id d o u , W e d n e sd a y . Sri Lankan mi litary dai ms m ajor vi ctory, significant casualties Journalists haven’ t been allowed near the battle. Few G u n aw arden è,4said the Lib eration T ig e rs o f T am il Eelam returned the bodies at M allavi, 25 miles southwest details were available on the nature o f the fighting, and N EW D E L H I, India — Sri Lanka’s military claimed a o f K ilin o c h d fi, a key town at the northern e n d ,o f the . why the reported number ctf casualties was so high. S ri L a n k a n m ilitary o ffic ia ls said the m ilitary on m ajor battlefield prize W ed n esd ay, Jw t reports o f the h ig h w a y , w here fig h t in g re p o rte d ly ootitinufed Wednesday took over M ankulam , a town straddling the Wednesday. staggering cost o f the victory — às Ston y ak 1,300 sol­ highway ju st 60 m iles ffo n i Ja f^ ia , R ebels had dug in G u n a W a n ta É 1spoke by telephone from Colom bo to diers and Tam il rebels dead f r underfined how difficult it The Associated f*ress in New D elhi, the capitaj o f neigh- behind ¿bunkers; hn|lffie»ceiy fe silte d ' the onslaught, but will be for either side to win the 15-ÿêar war. I f rIftnaWy 'withdrew’mom the battered town, ¿150 miles north The battle occurred along a strategic* h ighw ay that boringIndia. o f Colom bo, as government troops encircled it. The Red Cross toll is in addition to 262 soldiers whose links Colom bo, the capital, to the government-held north­ There was little, public reaction to the carnage, sinae ern town o f Ja ffn a . The m ilitary cam paign, w hich has s bodies the military, recovered itself. In Colom boj hospital Jcept new s o f the fig h tin g out o f local proceeded inch by bitter, bloody inch .since M ay 1997, officials speaking on condition o f anonymity « ¿id ’anoîbqr censorships 53 soldiers have died in hospitals. The military also said new spapers. D esp ite the news b lack o u t, signs o f the has wrested two-thirds o f the highway from rebels. fighting were evident at the city’ s hospitals. C olom bo’ s it killed 477 rebels in the fighting. T-' . | j- * ; R ed C ro ss sp okesm an H arsha G u n aw ard en e said huge state-owned National Hospital was one o f several The Sri Lankart government has imposed censorship, reb els han ded o v e r the b o d ie s o f 600 s o ld ie rs on Wednesday, apparent casualties o f the highway fighting restricting what local and foreign correspondents can sending home all but the most seriously ill to make room for hundreds o f wounded soldiers. report about the war and casualties. that began Sunday. B y D o n n a B ryson A ssociated P ress * O pinion N ew bill brings attention to issues that affect many S tu d e n ts acro ss the n atio n sh o u ld h a v e b een cheering today at the news from C on gress. In ca se y ou h a v e n ’ t h eard , the Sen ate passed H .R . 6 T u esd ay, a b ill that should low er student loan interest rates, am ong other things. It’s those “ other things” that m ake the b ill truly in te r e s tin g , th o u g h -- th in g s that m ak e the b ill w orth re a d in g , lo n g as it is. H e r e ’ s a sa m p lin g , b a se d on the su m m ary o f th e b ill a v a ila b le at http://thom as.kK.gov/hom e/thom as2.htm l. • Section 419 w ould establish on-cam pus ch ild care program s sp e cifica lly geared at h elpin g low income parents get a college degree. W hile the pro­ gram sounds like a worthy endeavor, how responsible should the government be for child care? It’s impor­ tant to consider whether or not such an institution is a c tu a lly w ith in the b ou n ds o f the g o v e rn m e n t’ s authority and whether it should have such power. • Section 434 concerns the forgiveness o f loans for ch ild-care providers. B asically it's an incentive for more people to get in the business o f ch ild care, sp e cifica lly “ m ore h igh ly trained in d ivid u als,’’ to quote the Engrossed Senate Am endm ent version o f the b ill. But isn ’t ch ild care the c h ie f concern o f parents < and the im m ediate fa m ily ? Furtherm ore, this idea o f children being raised by "h ig h ly trained profes­ sio n als,” -if carried to its lo gical end, cou ld e ffe c ­ tively “ oust” parents from ch ild care altogether. It seem s o u r govern m en t is tryin g to rem ove ch ild -re a rin g from the fa m ily structure by turn­ in g it into a bu sin ess. T oo bad, co n sid e rin g c h il­ dren b e n e fit fa r m ore fro m lo v e than e xp e rtise . E x p e r ie n c e c o m e s w ith tim e . L o v e , h o w e v e r , c a n ’ t be b ou gh t. • S e c tio n 7 9 9 F e rico u ra g e s s c h o o ls to p la c e greater em phasis on “ the developm ent o f charac­ ter.” describing this as “ one o f the prim ary goals o f higher education.” Interesting. T h ere's som ething a bit ironic that the country w hich dism issed character as a non-issue in the last tw o presidential elections is now being exhorted by its governing o fficia ls to teach character. O f course, that w ould im ply there’s som e o b je c ­ tive source o f m orality out there — 1 w hich w ould further im ply the existence o f absolutes. It’s som et thing worth thinking about. O u r dism issal o f m orality hasn’ t exactly brought glory to A m erican citizenship these days. O u r relaI tiv is m is c a u s in g us to m ak e d istin c tio n s ab ou t | w hich crim es w hile in o ffic e are actually worthy o f j \ im p e a c h m e n t , -th ou gh a n y c r im e w a s w o rth y j enough 20-som e years ago. It’s tim e w e thought a little harder about what our governm ent’s here for and w hy we accept what we believe. P ay attention to what your governm ent is d o in g . P a y atten tion to the n o tio n s y o u ’ re so re a d ily e m b ra cin g . Y o u m igh t a c tu a lly d isc o v e r som ething capable o f im pacting your life . StatePressStaff C o o r more deserving of pay increase sch ools are sending the w rong m essage. T h ey are in C a l l me n a iv e , but i f so m e o n e essence saying they value a few talented football stars over . asked me to g u e ss w hether B ru ce the general student population. Snyder or Lattie C oor had the higher I, for one, believe it is the individual football players s a la r y , I w o u ld have u n d o u b ted ly who make or break a team, not the coach. If you don’ t haVe p ic k e d C o o r . B o y , w as I w ay o f f the talent, you’ re out o f luck. O f course the players need base. some guidance, but do they really need $595,000 worth of A S U ’ s football coach makes more guidance? Personally, I ’d prefer $595,000 worth o f educa­ than d o u b le the a m o u n t o f h is tional benefits instead. esteemed president. Quite sim ply, the Surprisingly, Coor is one o f the higher-paid university man who leads a bunch o f overgrown presidents. President Peter Likins, from the “ school down brutes is paid excessively more than the man who is responsible for guiding our students’ yonder,” ranks 41st on U o fA ’ s payroll. This is primarily due to the fact that U o fA has a medical school and A S U education. - '*■* Is it just me or does this fact seem completely disheart­ does not. A S U is fortunate to have a president like Coor. He is ening? Now, don’t get me wrong, 1 absolutely adore foot­ one o f the main reasons I chose to attend A S U over U o fA ball. It is definitely my favorite sport, A S U is definitely my favorite team and Snyder is definitely my favorite coach. and I ’ m sure many students would agree. He is responsi­ But by no means does this justify a salary o f $595,000 a ble for the recruitment o f top Arizona scholars. A nd as a year. And with incentives, Snyder could be earning up to native with roots deeply im bedded in A S U ’ s history, Coor is undoubtedly the best man to fill the big shoes, o f $675,000. These salary figures come after the Arizona Board o f our president. For the past few years our enrollment has increased Regents unanimously approved a $45,000 a year salary steadily. A S U ’ s focus has shifted from recruiting outincrease for Snyder last Friday. of-state students looking for a great party school, to in­ This salary makes Snyder the highest-paid state employ­ ee in Arizona. That means he makes more than our gover­ state scholars with real promise. Additionally, the num­ nor, our attorney general and heck, even our beloved ber o f N a tio n a l M e rit sc h o la rs and F lin n sc h o la rs en rolled at A S U con tin u es to in crease. O v e r a ll, the Sheriff Joe. How much does Coor actually make? According to The brain power o f our student body is probably at its high­ Arizona Republic, Coor is only the fourth highest-paid fac­ est level ever. Perhaps the Board o f Regents should reevaluate their u lty m em ber at A S U , re g iste rin g in at $ 1 9 5 ,0 0 0 or priorities. With all A S U ’ s recent academic glory, it’ s Coor $243.750 (with benefits) a year. who deserves the raise. “ It doesn’ t.bother me: it’ s a part o f life,” Coor said in the • Republic article. “ I’ ve spent 40 years in this business and Stephanie D . Johnson is a sophom ore studying it’ s been like this at every school I’ ve been at.” You mean every school thinks this way? By paying foot­ journalism and can be reached atball coaches considerably more than university presidents, sdjohn@ im ap4.asu.edu. Percy Ednalino Jr., Editor Jodi kafundo, M anaging Editor Scott D. Gillette. Stéphanie D . Johnson. Am ber Knuth, Nancy Kuo. C C . D o u g Flanagan Caryl-Sue Micalizio — ---.A ssista n t Sports Editor ----------------N ig h t Editor Becky Bevins C h ris Kahn — ..............— Magazine Editor -------------- — C ity Editor D a vid W o o d fìll Jonathan Inge -— . — -A sst. Magazine Editor —Assistant C ity Editor Michelle C raig --------...O p in io n Editor Christ) Foist ---------- — N e w s Editor Brad Lang — -Assistant P hoto Editor Ed O d e ve n — ---------Sports Editor Carto on ists ------- -— — ------—......................................- — - Brian Baicbumas, C a rrie L. Behrens. M ike C u rra n . Brian Farrington, C a rlo s Ram irez, A dria n Sferfe. P rod u ctio n --------------------------------------------------— R o b e rt Deal, K eith G ereb ick , A ly so n H u rt, H ea th e r Nash, W ay n e R eporters — — ------------------ — ------- — N elso n, Jennifer Swinford, Joanna W ik e . A k a Caldwell. Udia E kelly, J O . Long Stephanie P a w * . Jayson Peters.Kim Sales Representatives — — — — —------------------ — - — — Prendergast, Hayiey Ringle, Ganga Subramanian, Jessica W o K Angela Yeager. Brian A ry , M ik e Glallanza, David G o od w in , Jennifer Haddan, Sports Reporters — — — ---- — ------- ------------ — -— — Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Shane Siren, K athy W e lsh . Scott Bracken, Chris Carfodc, David Myers. Marketing T e a m -— ■ »— C o p y Editors ---------— - — ~ — — - • — ------- ------ -------------------------------------------P h oto Editor Jerem y Hein McCandless, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff. ------ — ———— —— - r — -— A ng eiee King M a rio Lop ez, Susan Schimmei. C lassified s----- — —-— -,— —— ------ -- — — Photographers------- ---------— — — —— -— - — — .................. Kate Desks, Amanda Green, Paul Holley, Katie M cG ee. Jeanette Ploium. M ike C u rra n , Sotay H artal. OfeB a M adrid, Jerem y W eiss. Colum nists — — — ■ ---------— — •— w*— — - — Bran A ry. Anrkea Jermiler Baisky, Scott Bennett. Ashlea Deahl, Ross Bde. --------— , T h e State Press is published M onday through Frittar during th e academ ic year, e x ce p t holidays and exam p eriods, a t M atthews C e n te r, R o o m 2, A rizo n a State University. T e m p e , A r il.. 85187- 1502. W e d o n o t answ er questions o f a general nature. Th e State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated bn the A S U campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the A S U administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Student Media Phone Numbers Information 965-7572 State Press Newsroom965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 O n the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu O pinion mmm Over the years, the Greek system at A SU has improved by becopriing more community aware and involved. Do you feel there is still a negative connotation when it comes to sororities and fraternities? To vote, visit our website at http://www.statepress.com. 05 S o t* l^ h r T liw « I^ O < * B W r |,t W I ASU provides great escape for students Arizona State is not a school that is conducive to those with attention deficit disorder, which is the politi­ cally correct term for slacker.There are just way too many distractions. The temperature nears Utopian. T h ere are b ird s s in g in g sw eet m elodies against picturesque blue . skies. Scantily clad eye-candy is a t every head-tum. Yesterday, m Hayden l a w #»*>5 l ^ p i M ic h a d Bolton ( If that isa't •distracting, I'm not exactly sure what is .) V *?«"8?% Let’ s be honest: unless you’ re one o f those regentscholared freshmen w iw cotne t o this school because 'o f tuition waivers, an annual meal and a key to a fa tty furnished H onors dorm , education may not be your top priority. '' “ M y brother told me tttat b^idg &oht a colder climate in M in n esota . . . g o in g to sch o o l fn A r iz o n a ,.y o u encounter a fun and educational environment,” said R ichard Raym ond, a freshm an from M ap le G ro v e , M inn., whose older brother is an A S U graduate. Tfaaf s also what addicts say about crack houses. M ich ael R eisel, a sophomore ju stice m ajor from C hicago, proclaims he ultimately decided upon A S U “ because o f the weather and the Sun D evilso eial life,” In reality he c a n » here for the girls in halter tops. There are how ever, advantages to attending A S U v e rs u s a s c h o o l in th e M id w e s t o r b a c k E a s t. O b v io u s ly , the w eather is a h u ge ad v a n ta g e out W est —- not only a draw for potential students, but a reason for fam ilies to settle here. Sch oo ls along the South A tlantic are preparing fo r hurricane dam ­ ag e, w hile we’ re preparing for 85-degree w eather. D uring the winter tim e, students goin g to schools along the Great Lakes c a n ’ t even see the ground. Another draw is that everyone is fairly relaxed here. Stressed during exam time? Y es. But we really don’ t have to deal with the stresses that are associated with the East Coast, like disgruntled cab drivers or govern­ ment-building bombings. ^ A S U is a good place to go to school; it‘ a ju st, at times, a difficult place to team. Ehen you're living in the official home o f the “ pretty people.” Sarah Jack so n , a sophomore photography major from New York, said she came to A S U “ because when I visited 1 fe ll in lov e with A S U and could not see myself anywhere else.” > ' V ,; M e too, . v „ , v In , Brian A ry is a sophom ore studying joornalUtU ^ . . - and can be reached a t w am ing@ im ap3.asu.edu. W hat D olS u T K in lT l E-mail: shades@imap4.asu.edu W ebsite: http://www.statepress.com G ripe Line: 965-6881 ' Fax; 965-8484 Mail: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University 15 Matthews Center Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 r The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, ID number, class standing, major (or affiliation with th e University) and phone num ber. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters contain­ ing obvious factual errors will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use e-mail, Gripe Line, Fax or our website for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for written purposes. Domestic Violence Awareness Month Every 15 seconds, someone in America is battered in a partner violence situation. These victims and their batter­ ers come to work. Domestic violence costs businesses over $5 billion a year in medical expenses, lost wages, sick leave, absen­ teeism and lost productivity. Sadly, one cause o f lost pro­ ductivity is premature death -— homicide is the leading cause o f on-the-job death for women and 20 percent o f those who die are murdered by an intimate partner at the workplace. O ct. 1 is national W ork to End Dom estic V iolence D ay and marks the beginning o f October as Dom estic V iolence Awareness M onth. Em ployers in your com ­ munity and across the country w ill join on that day to stand against dom estic v io le n c e . In the w orkplace, these com panies have policies that ensure employees are safe at work and have access to needed services. In their communities, these businesses partner with local domestic violence programs to provide much needed assistance and support. O n O c t . 1 and throu gh ou t D o m e s tic V io le n c e Awareness Month, let us all be aware that ending partner violence is everybody’s business. K im berly K . W ells Executive D irector C o rp o ra te A lliance to End Partner V iolence Supports W right There has been some Tim W right bashing going on around town. I am one o f his current renters. I cannot say what is true or untrue in regards to what others are saying. I can only say that he has dealt fairly, honestly and justly with me. He worked with me so I could move in and has kept things in repair, as needed. I am grateful to know him. He is a fair and just man. C a ro l P eet G rad u ate Stu d en t C o lle g e o f Education toms will never go away as long as these root causes are so prevalent here in the U S A . Cla yto n Javurek E E Lab M anager D ep a rtm e n t o f Electrical Engineering Food critic Something needs to be done about the food service that students at A S U are subjected to. This is my fourth year attending A S U and each year the food service declines further and further. M y freshman year I lived in Sahuaro and the food ser­ vice was great. I had a fully operating cafeteria, buffet style all-you-can-eat and I made full use o f it Now, after three years o f decline, I come home after Lacrosse practice to find that the only meal that they have is healthy cheese­ burgers and fries. On top o f that, if I were to break down and order this meal, I could only get it once for a certain price; not all-you-can-eat. This place now looks like a bar­ ren wasteland o f empty display trays and empty salad-bar type stands. N o area to make a sandwich; hope — just beach gear to try and give that “ at-the-shore” feeling. A couple o f reasons I have heard for the decline in the Sahuaro food service was the shortage o f customers and because it did not make good business sense to keep it open or retain the style o f food service. I f you eat there now, you would be lucky to have company. From what I understood my freshman year, students came from every­ where to eaf at the Sahuaro cafeteria. Sonora, the frat houses and the dorms north o f Apache all came to eat here. Now , no one comes. N o one wants to come. And why should they — it ’ s bad enough the residents o f Sahuaro have to deal with the food. I know in the big scheme o f things, I am but a student paying his way to get the best education that he can. The opinions o f such a small percentage o f the school proba­ bly won’ t amount to anything, but I know I am not alone. Nathanael H ; A lexand er Senior C o m p u te r Science Shuttle service needs help I would like to agree with 90 percent o f Jose Galindo’ s tetter on Sept. 28. The A S U West shuttle is out o f control. In the past three weeks, ridership has not decreased as A fte r m any angry phone calls' and e-m ails repri­ was anticipated by A S U Transit Services. In fact, it has manding the A S U athletic department and ticket o ffice , for retroactively charging each alumni band member increased. The number o f passengers being turned away $20 extra for the Notre Dam e gam e, plus some help at the peak time o f 7:30 a.m. is starting to increase. Last week it was only about five. On the day o f Galindo’ s let­ from D r . S u sa n C lo u s e D o lb e r t, the tic k e t o ffic e reneged and decided to allow the alumni band to keep ter, it was around 10. This situation is what has led to what Galindo refers to their tickets at the price that had been agreed upon. as a “ shark feeding frenzy.” It is not that people are afraid I ’d like to offer a b ig bravo to Dr. Dolbert for standing up for the A S U band program and ticket holders in gener­ to sit on the floor it is that they are afraid that they will al by fighting the Alumni Band ticket price increases fo r . not get on the bus and consequently miss their classes. According to A S U transit the solution to this problem the Notre Dam e gam e. In a football program that has become consumed with selling the most tickets at the is “ take a different bus.” I was told by A S U transit to take highest rate possible, I ’ m glad to know she’ s watching out a 6:10 or 6:20 a.m . bus to get to my classes. I have resort­ ed to doing this, as I don’t like what happens on the 7:30 for the alumni. Sta c y H o lm ste d t bus. The transit department has told me that they do not A S U D evil’s H o m s A lu m n i Band have the budget to improve service and the fare revenue < - Graduate/M ass Co m m u n ication s does not com e close to paying for the service. I ask, “ What about the times when the bus runs with fewer than five people?” M y next point is safety. I have been on the shuttle bus What causes such obscene and vulgar confrontations between m en and women as encountered by A n drea with a particular driver that enjoys tailgating. O n Sept. Jennifer Balsky and commented upon by her in the Sept. 21, on the 5:15 p.m. bus from A S U M ain to A S U West, the bus driver had to slam on the breaks and quickly 28 edition oftb e State Press! change lanes to avoid hitting a car at high speed. O n the Here they are: 1. A vailability and popularity o f pornography to all 8:10 a .m . run on S e p t. 2 2, at around 8:3 0 a .m . on persons at every level o f society, which conveys (espe­ Interstate 17, the same bus driver accomplished his task cially to adolescents and teenagers) the idea that women o f rear-ending a vehicle. The occupants were forced to sit w ho w a lk the streets at n ig h t are sim p ly ju s t sex on the non-air conditioned bus during rush hour, white it was backed o ff the highway (which is extremely danger­ . machines. 2. A v a ila b ility and popularity o f both alcoh ol and ous). W e had to sit in a vacant lot and fill out a seating drugs to all persons at every level o f society, which break­ report including our name, address, phone number, age down personal inhibitions and restraints and encourage and seating location. I arrived at school just in time for people to let their (sexual) passions run loose in whatever my class to let out. I did have time to catch the 10:35 a.m . bus back home though. they think, say and do. F in ally, I would like to disagree with and question 3. Absenteeism o f fathers in their own fam ily house­ hold Who will not instill or are unable to instill any kind Galindo on a two o f his assertions. One, I am a “ rich com­ puter geek” and I have never pushed anyone aside to get o f moral backbone in their own children. I believe that Cause 3 could be severely curtailed if on the bus. I do not drive a pickup truck nor would I ever somehow Causes 1 and 2 were first curtailed. Causes 1 drive a pickup truck. I ride the shuttle bus because the I Arizona transportation infrastructure is beyond pathetic, and 2 bring about Cause 3! G iv e n these cau ses (and there are others a lso ), not to mention more dangerous than a combat zone. Second, I have never seen anyone knowingly force a what can you expect from people on the streets o f A m e ric a anym ore . . . e s p e c ia lly in a c o lle g e town pregnant woman to sit on the floor. I know that the A S U student body has not slipped that far into moral decay. w here m any teens g e t their first ch a n ce to fr e e ly indulge them selves in sex, alcoh ol and drugs without T h o m a s Sill ' Sen ior „any parental supervision? Econom ics and Business | Andrea, get to the root o f these problems. The symp­ A big thanks Possible reasons for rudeness S t r a P ie c i f o r T h u r s d a y , O c t o b e r I, 1998 0 0 Career Fiesta to help students, employers meet B y L idia E. K elly Sta te P ress Stephanie Draper is looking forward to M ay, when she graduates,;- .. . . ' • One thing she would like to have then is a job, So , she’ s already thinking about life after school arid looking for job opportunities. Next week Draper hopes to take advantage o f the A S U Career Services Career Fiesta. “ I’ m really hoping my schedule will let me go there,” said Draper, a senior political science major. “ I think they are going to be helpful with finding ideas on possible jobs.” To help students like Draper, Career Services has spon­ sored Career Fiesta for the last 10 years. The event brings companies on campus to discuss jobs and internships with students and is free o f charge. This year it takes place from 1- 5 p.m. Oct. 5, 7 and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . O ct. 6, 8 in the Memorial Union Arizona and Ventana Ballrooms. Career Services decided to extend this year’ s fiesta from two to four days so students have more opportunities for conversation with potential employers. “ Last year it was jampacked,” said Karin Ammerman, a Sénior career specialist for Career Services.. “ W e want to give both, the companies and the students, more space.” Already 168 companies are signed up for the first two days, 90 companies for the last two, Ammerman said. The companies include local, regional and national employers, such as W ells Fargo Bank, The Vanguard Group and the Sierra Vista Police Department. Last year, about 250 Companies came and about 5,000 A S U students participated in the event. “ The fiesta is just an opportunity for students to talk to employers and see what they are looking for,” Ammerman saidDraper, who hasn’ t attended previous Career Fiestas, said frierids told her the event might help her find a a job or an internship. “ Even though I ’ m graduating and would pre­ fer a real job, an internship wouldn’t be bad either,” Draper Said. However, Ammerman said Career Services doesn’t have a way o f measuring the event’ s success in terms o f job placement. “ W e don’t keep numbers on that,” she said. “ These are only initial talks here and we know many stu­ dents are invited for further interviews.” Septem ber 29 A S U police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Tuesday: • A student reported that her vehicle was broken into in Lot 50 and her stereo taken. •, A student reported her bicycle taken from the L a n g u a g e and L iteratu re b u ild in g , where it was secured with a lock, • Two students were arrested and released for possession o f drug paraphernalia and possession o f marijuana at 1201 S . Forest A ve. • A student was arrested, cited and released fo r underage p o sse ssio n o f a lc o h o l at Cholla Apartments, • Someone pulled two fire alarms at 402 Adelphi Drive. • A man not affiliated with A S U was arrest­ ed for aggravated driving under the influ­ ence o f alcohol, possession o f marijuana and drivin g with a suspended licen se at 13th Street and Fariner Avenue. • A man not affiliated with A S U was arrest­ ed, cited and released fo r e xh ib ition o f speed at M cAllister and University Drives. • A student reported his vehicle damaged while it was parked in Area 17. • A student reported his bicycle taken from the Bateman Physical Sciences building, where it was secured with a lock. • A man not affiliated with A S U was arrest­ ed for possession o f marijuana a t Sahuaro H all. He was released pending review by the county attorney. In a related incident, a m a le stu d en t w as a rre ste d , c ite d and released for possession Of drug parapherna­ lia . Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Wednesday: • Officers arrested a 33-year-old M esa man on ch arges o f third-degree trespassin g Sunday, The man was arrested at 2137 E . A p a c h e B lv d . a fte r an in v e s tig a tio n revealed he had trespassed on private prop­ erty at 2196 E . Apache B lvd, H e was taken to Tempe C ity Ja il and held to see a judge. • A 34-year-old woman was charged with assault on Saturday. O fficers arrested the woman after an investigation revealed she h it a T e m p e m an w ith her purse and scratched his face. The woman told police that nothing happened. She was taken and booked into Tem pe C ity Jail. • • Police arrested a 26-year-old Tempe man on charges o f assault Sunday after he and two other men assaulted a fourth man. An in v e s tig a tio n re v e a le d the»three m en assaulted the victim by kicking and punch­ ing him on University D rive just west o f South M ill Avenue, causing two cuts on his face. The three men confronted the victim again at 510 W . University Drive and then fled. One p f the men was located by police at the 700 block o f West Seventh Street. R ep o rts co m p ile d by S t a t e P r e s s reporter Alicia A. Caldwell Pharmacy employee admits she stalked women trying to conceive B y Karen T esta A ssociated P ress W E S T P A L M B E A C H , Fla. — A pharmacy employee has admitted making hundreds o f harassing telephone calls to customers in an attempt to get them to adopt Children rather than conceive on their own, police said. The calls were horrific and personal, striking women at their most vulnerable as they sought medical treatment to try to get pregnant. “ You would have more luck fertilizing your law n,” the caller would say. The angry young woman on the other end sometimes would urge the women to adopt, police said. She knew per­ sonal details, m edical inform ation. She even seemed to know when one victim had a miscarriage.. Police thought maybe the caller was a snitch in a doc­ tor’ s office, a computer hacker or a member o f the religious right opposed to fertility treatment. But a month-long inves­ tigation revealed one thing the victim s had in common: their pharmacy. Qn Tuesday, 22-year-old pharmacist assistant Veronica Smith admitted she made hundreds o f harassing calls to at least 20 customers at the Eckerd pharmacy, police said. A ll the victims were trying to get pregnant or were taking pre­ natal vitamins, police said. Smith told police she was abused as a child and lived m foster homes until she was adopted. She raged at those who sought to have their Own children instead o f adopting one, said Palm Beach County sheriff’s detective Donna Wright. “ It was horrific, explicit language to every one o f the victims,” Wright said. Smith was released on her own recognizance after being charged with 87 counts o f harassing phone calls arid six counts o f stalking. Some victims she called more than 40 times. The charges, all misdemeanors, cany up to a year in jail and a fine. This winter, get a head start on spring. Provided by licensed massage therapists Available to ASU students, staff & faculty. Appointm ents available weekdays & most eveninss. D e c . 2 9 Full tim e students *34*00 per hour Part-time students/Faculty & Staff *44*00 per hour th r o u g h J a n . 1 5 Earn three credits in three w eeks! M ore then 60 w a ys to fulfill G eneral Studies, major a n d elective cou rse requirements. Gift Certificates available To schedule a massage at Student Health call 965-4721 OR page Leanne Wilkins to set up an appointm ent in the SRC Massage Therapy Room at 306-9610. Register now through Dec. 24 at Ritter B-132 or call 965-9797 with Visa or MasterCard. Registration not available through InTouch. •. im A r izo n a State U n iv er sit y E x ten d ed C am pus ■■MU S a iB r P B 8 TOT im n 'S C w f, V l l ü D C r t» I ™ 1 mm mm wmm wem i M i B M iiB B W M M siia!— h m Symington’s appeal to be heard by federal court B y T im M o llo y A ssociated P ress P H O E N IX — A three-judge panel w ill hear former Arizona G o v . Fife Sym ington’ s appeal on his conviction and sentence on N ov. 4, but don’ t look for a decision anytime soon. Sy m in gto n was co n v icted on six w ire- and bankfraud charges in September 1997 for lying on financial statements to obtain loans and stave o ff creditors as a developer'before he was governor. He was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison, but the appeals court allowed him to remain free pending his appeal. D avid Schindler, the lead assistant U .S . attorney in the g o v e rn m e n t’ s ca se a g a in s t S y m in g to n , sa id it wouldn’ t be unusual if the judges took six months to a year to rule on Sym ington’ s appeal. “ I ’ d be astonished” at a quick ruling, Schindler said. Critics have noted that the court takes an average o f 14 months, four more than the national average, to decide appeals once they have been filed. Jo h n D o w d , S y m in g to n ’ s lead a tto rn e y , said he expects the judges to move faster because they’ ve sped the case along so far. H e said he cou ld n ’ t guess how soon they would rule. Sym ington, who lost his post when convicted, con­ tends he should have been giv en a new trial when a ju ro r was d ism issed , that U .S . D istrict Ju d g e R oger Strand’ s instructions to the ju ry were flaw ed and that Strand’ s findings related to his sentence were erroneous. The judges w ill also hear a motion from government attorneys during the hearing arguing that Strand was too lenient in sentencing Sym ington. Government attorneys w ill argue that Strand sh o u ld n ’ t have d ism issed 11 counts on w hich ju rors d ead locked during the tria l, Schindler said. I f the ju d g e s rule that Sym in gton deserves a new trial, Schindler said the government would retry him on the six counts and the 11 d ead locked co u n ts. I f the judges don’ t grant the new trial, Schindler said the gov­ ernment w on’ t retry the former governor on the dead­ locked counts. Schindler said he’ ll file a motion to have Sym ington begin serving his term immediately i f the judges reject Sym ington’ s appeal. But he said Sym ington’ s attorneys could appeal to the Supreme Court. D o w d sa id S y m in g to n ’ s appeal ra ise s im portan t Constitutional issues, but that talk o f appealing past the 9th C ircuit is premature for now. The judges w ill have a lot to think about in a little time, Dowd said. H e said attorneys on both sides w ill have 20 minutes between them to make their points. I f you sold your soul In the 9 0 s, here's your chance to buy The New Beetle. A real bargain, as far as souls go. See your Volkswagen dealer for details. Drivers wanted.™ www.vw.com or call 1-800-444-8987 ©1998 Volkswagen Berge Volkswagen 1515 W. Broadway Mesa 833-0001 Biddulph Volkswagen 4611 W. Glendale Ave. Glendale 934-5211 Chapman Volkswagen 6601 E, McDowell Road Scottsdale 949-7600 11S « * ? î Camelback Volkswagen 1499 E. Camelback Road Phoenix 265-6600 A ' . ' À W t V f i ■*'* « » V.4 S V Nine indicted for m urder in Texas carnival death Merten Sr., his w ife, Shara Merten, and their son Robert Merten II, said the indictment was a mistake that “ not even A U S T IN , Texas — The death o f a 15-year-old girl who a first-year law student would be fooled by.” “ However, we now understand that this indictment has fell from a carnival ride was an accident — not murder at the hands o f amusement company workers, as prosecutors little to do with justice and more to do with warping public a lle g e , a d efen se law yer and industry o ffic ia ls said opinion,” Y eager said Wednesday. “ This case is another example o f abuse o f the grand jury process.” Wednesday. The Himalaya is a ride with about 19 cars that travel in a Prosecutors took thè extraordinary step o f indicting nine amusement company executives, employees and inspectors circle in undulating movements amid scenery painted to on charges o f murder in Leslie Lane’ s death six months look like mountains. A lap-bar secures riders into the .seat. Leslie was riding with her 9-year-old brother and a 16ago. Holding executives criminally responsible for the death . year-old friend. Her father watched from outside the ride as o f a rider may be unprecedented in the nation’ s amusement all three children were catapulted from the car. Leslie struck a wall and died on the platform. The other two chil­ ride industry, the district attorney’ s office said. B ob Joh n son o f the O utdoor Am usem ent Business dren were treated for minor injuries. The indictments charge that the ride was operated too Association also said the Austin indictments were the first o f a kind for the'industry. “ I think they are being held scape fast, that the restraining lap bar was fastened by a pin that was too small and that the lap bar’ s latch Was inadequate. goats for the entire industry,” he said. The ride was inspected March 9 by a safety consulting A grand jury on Tuesday indicted nine people o f Yuma, Ariz.-based B & B Amusements on charges o f “ knowingly firm hired by B & B ’ s insurers. The inspector noted the and intentionally” causing Leslie’ s death on the Himalaya ride’ s maximum recommended speed at 10 revolutions per ride March 19 at thè Austin-Travis County Livestock Show minute. Investigators told the Austin American-Statcsman that the ride could reach at least 15 rpms — more than 20 and Rodeo. John Y eager, representing ride owners Robert D ale mph — when cranked up to full speed. By Renae M erle A ssociated P ress - T he new spaper reported that p eo p le who rode the Him alaya before the fatal accident said it seemed to be going too fast and that one person who was on the ride with Lane told police the ride operator asked customers whether they wanted to go faster. The indictments also allege the ride had not been ade­ quately inspected and that it continued to operate after those responsible had been notified the ride was unsafe. Attorney Joe Crews said Leslie’ s parents were devastat­ ed to learn that a grand ju ry found enough evidence to indict nine people on murder charges, Which carry 5 to 99 years in prison. David Norton o f Coldwater, M ich., who has been auc­ tioning carnival equipment for more than 30 years, said negligent hom icide is a more com mon charge for fatal amusement ride accidents. “ I frankly think this is ridicu­ lous,’’ Norton said. “ This .is a tragic case, but there isn’t any point to a murder indictment.” Amusement park and carnival rides kill slightly more than five Americans a year on average, based on 25 years o f sta tistics from the U S . C on su m er 'Product S a fe ty Commission. There have been 133 ride-related deaths since 1973, including seven in Texas. About one-fifth, 24 deaths, involved whirling rides such as the Himalaya. A rizon a firm w on’t be fighting N ew York fires fo r long A rea firefighters resented a for-profit, R Y E B R O O K , N .Y . (A P) — The first p r iv a tiz e d F ir e D e p a rtm e n t in the non-union com pany trying to enter their Northeast is leaving Westchester County ranks, introducing an element o f mistrust into the traditional suburban mutual-aid on T h u r s d a y , a c k n o w le d g in g it w as unable to ensure an adequate response to system , in w hich neighboring towns help each other with major fires. blazes in a small New Y ork Suburb. R u ra l/M e tro had tro u b le re c ru itin g Arizona-based Rural/Metro Corp. runs , reservists, and in Decem ber 1997, a fife' fire or ambulance services in two dozen states; but its two-year run in R ye Brook d evastated a house o n R o c k in g H orse Trail when only nine firefighters showed was troubled from the start. Y ou ’re o u r type! NO CONTRACT • NO CREDIT NO DEPOSITS pre-paid ir » • Y o rk State or W estchester.” Kurt Krumperman, regional president for Rural/Metro, said the arrangement in R ye Brook did not work out because the com pany was not accepted by area fire­ fighters. “ W e w eren’ t able to solve that prob­ lem and it was in everyone’ s best interest for us to end our services in R ye B roo k ,” Krumperman said, up, despite the com pany’s guarantee o f 25. Firefighters from Greenw ich, C o n n ., eventually put out the flam es. R ye B rook terminated the com pany’ s contract. “ Rural/Metro was trying to do som e­ thing here that ju s t d id n ’ t w ork ,” said R y e B ro o k T ru stee D o n D e g lin g . “ A t another tim e, another p lace, the system w orks fin e , b u t it d id n ’ t w ork in N ew cellular N o M in im u m A g we 77 f/ /VOiriA g a p NewLowerPrices! Student Talk C D M O N TH Œ N T Ê O N B i o * S e r v i c e 8 , In c . Includes 60 minutes / Y fc j U P E R S T O R ç V J7 * ' 1 TEMPE 717 S. Mill, Tempe, Az 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 966-1203 M u s t b e 1 8 - 4 9 y e a r s o f a g e . p o s s e s s a v a f id I D a n d p r o o f o f l o c a l a d d r e s s & S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r . T e e k e n d M in u te s! * Earn up to $1 9 2 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit our friendly, modem center and find out more about the opportunity to earn cash while helping others. As part of a Com pany research program, an experimental test w ill be performed on your plasma which could potentialy benefit plasma product recipients in the years to come! Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate plasma. 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 Tempe W O N L Y -W ^ d ilio n a l Student/Faculty I.D. Required ‘ Certain restriction apply/lim ited time offer. P H O E N IX NE Corner of Comelbock & 7 ; Avenue 664-1000 MESA Broadway & Country Club inside Southwest Supermarket WEST P H O E N IX - 67th Avenue & Thomas inside Southwest Supermarket 655-0555 691-6000 S ta te P ress O n lin e | | | § W E E K 'S M O V IE S ë http://vwvw.statepress.com P R O G R A M M I N G S e p t. 28 MON 6PM 7PM 9PM Vfm> m TKÜRS SAT SÜN I T 'S I N T E R A Ì 3 T C Ì I ASU B U P IY B E A R M U S IC G R EAT M ONEY NATIONAL ROM EO É WHITE TALKS LAMPOONS JOLIET THEAVENUE DEFJAMTOUR V ID E O S FIRESTORM TW O GIRLS ÉAGÜY NEW SW ATCH GREAT EXPECTATIONS MUSK VIDEOS m can s u iM lt;.. I - ’ -' t a f t t a T e l t e SENIOR TRIP HYPE ASO ILEGAL NEWSWATCH PROGRAMMMG B A R R EN FARCE MIND SD CE BLOOD LA ST M AN BEST O f STANDING THE B E S T 2 GREAT EXPECTATIONS FIRESTORM AND WINE NÜKEM TOXIC TW O GIRLS high ROMANCING THE STONE SPAW N AVENGER III GREAT EXPECTATIONS I0PM ISAM TUBS - O ct. 4 ÉAGUY MUSK VIDEOS io n e t m r ; N ewsdesk TW O GIRLS £ A GUY FIRESTORM ®ta!l from the comfort of your very own home (or from the Commons) m State Press for Thurtday, October I, ITYi Boston restaurants serve up cold shoulder to smokers B y B ill P orter A ssociated P ress B O S T O N — Smoke ’em if you got ’em. But somewhere else, please. Starting W ednesday, about 1,400 Boston restaurants went sm oke-free to com ply with new regulations that require physically separate areas for smokers and nonsmok­ ers. Joey Wilkinson o f Canton enjoyed the last cigarette he m ight ever have at the bar at V a d o P azzo restaurant Tuesday night. Butt in hand, Wilkinson said the city would better serve its people by focusing on other problems. “ The last time I looked, smoking was not illegal,” he said. “ Less than half a mile from here, you have youths smoking plastic pipes and then turning around and shooting their friends.’’ Superior Judge Mitchell J . Sikora Jr. on Monday denied a p relim in ary in ju n ctio n file d by the M assach u setts Restaurants Association. The injunction would have post­ poned the starting date for the restrictions while the ban is being challenged in court. California drew national attention this year with its firstin-the-nation ban on smoking in most bars, casinos and restaurants, a prohibition that inspired similar legislation around the country. W hile the Boston ban has some smokers and restaurant owners fuming, it has others — including some smokers — breathing freer. “This is the greatest thing that Menino has done for the city o f Boston,” said Walter Fiore o f Leominster, referring to Mayor Thomas M . Menino, who first proposed banning smoking in restaurants in February . “ I want to quit,” said Fiore, who sat on a bench outside the tiny Trattoria II Panino. “ M aybe this w ill help me to stop.” II Panino, which seats about 25 in each o f its two dining rooms, initiated its own ban Sept. 1 in anticipation o f the city-wide regulations. The laws don’ t affect restaurant bar areas that are behind partitions or 6 feet from eating areas. A n estimated 200 establishments will only allow smoking at their bar areas. The laws also don’ t apply to bars or to private clubs. M any o f the approximate 150 restaurants in the city’ s North End are either too small or oddly shaped to accom­ modate partitions. II Panino had no choice but to send smokers out on the sidewalk — or somewhere else. A t Vado Pazzo -— Italian words meaning “ Going Crazy” — they’re not cràzy about the ban. “ This is going to kill our bar business/’ said manager K elly Shaughnessy. “ N o one can sit there and sip and smoke.” She said $12,000 worth o f smoke-eating ventilators over the bar are useless now. Victims’ nose pollen implicates Soviets in massacre By A lex D ominguez A ssociated P ress T h e m ystery o f w ho k ille d 32 m en found in a mass grave in Germany in 1994 has apparently been solved by examining the pollen in the victims’ sinuses. The identities o f both the victims and their killers were unknown when the bod­ i e s , w ere d isco v e re d in the tow n o f Magdeburg. But the massacre was thought to have been carried out by either the Gestapo during the spring o f 1945 or the Soviet secret police, following a June 1953 revolt. Researcher Reinhard Szibor’ s analysis points to the Soviets. H e and c o lle a g u e s at the O tto von G uericke University in M agdeburg took samples from two o f the skulls and found pollen from plantain and other plants that flower in summer. “ W e concluded that some o f the victims had in h aled large am ounts o f sum m er pollen shortly before death,” Szibor report­ ed in T h u r sd a y ’ s issu e o f the jo u r n a l Nature. That would rule out the Gestapo, which controlled the area until the spring o f 1945, when the Soviets took over M agdeburg. The victim s apparently were So viet sol­ diers executed after refusing to put down a German revolt in June 1953. H isto ria n s had alread y fa v o re d the S o v ie t scenario b ecause the grave was found in the center o f the city, an area they said would have been an unlikely site for the Gestapo to have carried out a massacre. The Soviets were also known to have inter­ rogated and executed spies at a prison in the area. It is not know n whether the v ictim s were killed on the spot or at the prison. Dr. Vaughn Bryant, a botanist and head o f the anthropology department at Texas A & M University, said Szib o r appears to have ruled put the possibility that the sam­ ples taken from the skulls were contami­ nated or that the pollen entered the'sinuses as the bodies lay in the ground. H ie researchers reported that the Sinus­ es contained much more summer pollen than the surrounding ground, Bryant noted. “ S o , it lo o k s lik e the p o lle n Was inhaled,” Bryant said. “ I would think he probably did a good job and that it’ s proba­ bly accurate.” > Jo n N ord b y, a fo ren sic consultant in Tacoma, W ash., and a professor at Pacific Lutheran U n iv e rsity , cautioned th at the soldiers m a y have breathed in summ er pollen at another tim e o f year, possibly from material stored in a warehouse. ‘‘What the authors here suggest is their conclusion fits with other historical knowl­ edge, and I think they are probably right/’ Nordby said. “ But for a forensic analyst, you need more than just the pollen. 19 m o n t h s i n p r i s o n a f t e r u r i n a t i n g i n a i r l i n e a i s l e M a n g e ts G R E E N S B O R O , N .C . (AP) — A man got 19 months in prison for picking fights during an airline flight and urinat­ ing in the aisle. W alter Andrew E verhart, 36, told a fed eral ju d g e Monday that he remembered none o f the episode, saying painkillers and alcohol caused him to black out during the U S Airw ays flig h t from G erm any to P hiladelphia last November. .. H e also did not recall kicking the seat o f a pregnant woman so hard that she fell out and feared She would have a miscarriage. Witnesses said it took six ¡Polish police officers to sub­ due Everhart after he urinated into a condom and became unruly. .' “ I cannot imagine a more volatile Situation than what occurred on that flight,” U .S . District Judge Frank Bullock Jr. said. Everhart pleaded guilty to interfering with a flight atten­ dant. The case was transferred to North Carolina because he was Jiving here. CSF Bible Study Call to find out about our great offer forA SU students! “the Christian Life is a Supplied Life” À Thursday Noon Bible Study 12:40 - 1:30 • Memorial Union • Turquoise Room ■ 1 T oday's T itle? \ How God W ill Supply T he Prophète Sponsored by: ffirkrtan Students Fellowship For M ore Inform ation C all 921-7279 712 S. C o lle g e (College & University) 967-4049 .1,1 '• ift iiS S S All Are Welcome! Bring your lunch if you’d like Beverages and snack provided Expires 10-4-98 BRING YOUR LD.s * WHILE SUPPLIES LAST FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALI 1 -6 0 2 -9 6 9 -1 0 2 5 C ampus C orner A8UOOLDT-SHIRT • Beer & Soda • Photo Developing • Health & Beauty Aids m C rystaT The source o f pure water? i 100% C O T T O N S-XL WHILE SUPPLIES LAST SALE E N D S 10-4-98 609 S. M ill (A cro ss from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 B e e r only at C o lle g e A v e . 12 P K . B O T T L E S Expires 10-4-9 8 ® . . j P R M H J BRING YOUR l.a s * WHILE SUPPLIERLAST / F R E E D O U B L E S 2 4 E X P O S U R E CO LO R P R IN T S3 " See store for details | Sate Press for Thursday, October I 1998 IO Lubbock, Texas stages Y 2 K ‘doomsday* drills B y C hris N ew ton .'Associated .Press L U B B O C K , T exas —■H igh-tech doom sday arrived ■earfy in this west Texas city. With just 457 days before the so-called “ Y 2 K ” bug hits, city officials speeded up the clocks to test their readiness for the chaos many believe could occur i f essential city computers fail to recognize the new millennium. C ity crews, including police, fife and utility workers, were assembled to simulate massive computer failures in the midst o f mock natural disasters. A lso planned were computer failures so serious they could cause disasters themselves. , The drills involved test conductors sending e-mail mes­ sages to city officials notifying them o f problems or failed systems while another system was set up to judge response time. Exactly what or when the “disasters” would occur was kept secret until the drills started Wednesday evening. The only thing announced was a four-hour window, starting at 5 p .m „ when anything could happen. "This is not about us trying to prove we are ready for this, this is about us seeing the holes that may exist because w e've never faced anything like this before,” said city spokesman Tony Privett said. “ There is absolutely no man­ ual on how to handle this.” ^ In the hours leading up to the simulated midnight, emer­ gency officials grappled with all sorts o f mayhem unrelated to computers. M ock circumstances included a cold front that blew in from the north, chilling temperatures into the lower teens, icing over streets and causing power outages. O fficia ls responded by ordering workers to sand the streets. Drill operators also sent a report that a man had drowned in a small pond, and a mock riot broke out at a prison unit just outside o f town. In what may have been the first Y2K-related crisis, the city’ s 911 emergency system was said to have failed just as the drill period began. Officials quickly switched over to a county system and broadcast two new police fire department emergency num­ bers on television. C ity officials said the imaginary day o f disaster high­ lighted the need to refine communication between emer­ gency agencies. It also revealed potential problems with the way natural gas is administered. When fake gas outages left hundreds o f homes without heat, officials devised a plan to set up shel­ ters in the parts o f town that still had power. Mayor Windy Sitton said the city needs to study how to better respond to gas shortages. The city also ran low on police, because o f the mock riot and several traffic accidents caused by malfunctioning traf­ fic lights. M em b ers o f C o n g re ss h ave asked o ffic ia ls from Lu b b ock to testify about the results o f their drills in Washington on Friday. Some computer scientists say the so-called Y 2 K bug could cause water supplies to shut down, traffic lights to go haywire, and life-support systems to fail. When a Chrysler plant ran a Y 2 K test on a computer system, it was discovered that security doors were stuck closed. Lubbock C ity Manager Bob Cass said even such minor failures on a citywide level could paralyze a commu­ nity. . , • “W e all had better figure out what it will be like to oper­ ate in a city where many computers have failed,” Cass said. New method may ease breast cancer surgery for patients B y D aniel Q. H aney A ssociated P ress B O S T O N — A new procedure m ay allow surgeons to reduce dramatically the number o f lymph nodes they remove dur­ ing breast cáncer surgery, sparing women some o f the pain and possible com plica­ tions. D u rin g operations to rem ove breast cancer, doctors also routinely take out the lym ph nodes around the arm pit in case the cancer has spread to these glands. Rem oving the nodes may improve the chances o f survival. The presence o f can­ cer there also tells doctors how aggres­ sively to use cancer drugs. Ju st as doctors have learned that they can o ften s a fe ly rem ove ju s t the lump rather than the w hole cancerous breast, they are now experimenting with the idea that not all the lymph nodes need to come out, either. In a study in Thursday’ s issue o f the New England Journal o f M edicin e, do c­ tors from the University o f Vermont pro­ vided encouraging evideneç that a far less drastic procedure may work. T h e p ro c e d u re in v o lv e s in je c t in g radioactive material around the tumor and then removing only the nodes that even­ tually absorb it. “ It’ s quick and easy to precisely locate the node before ever making an incision. That’ s the key advantage,” said D r. David K rag, who helped pioneer the technique. Krag trained 11 other surgeons to use the method. They reported the results o f testing on 443 patients. D ucts in the breast carry fluid to the lymph nodes under the arms. Each area o f the breast drains to a different node. The doctors inject technetium-99 into the breast around the tumor. Eventually, about 1 percent o f this radioactive materi­ al makes its way to the lymph nodes. The d o c to r s u se a h a n d h e ld g a m m a ray counter to find which ones absorbed it. D octors then rem ove o n ly these socalled sentinel nodes and see i f they are cancerous. In this study, however, they also took out all the remaining lymph nodes so they could see how accurate the procedure had been. T h e y fo u n d that i f the g am m a ray counter picked up a signal, the procedure was 97 percent accurate at pinpointing all the cancerous nodes. How ever, the proce­ dure missed cancerous nodes in 13 o f the 114 women with spreading cancer. In an accom panying an alysis, D r. V . Suzanne K lim b erg o f the U n iversity o f A rkansas and others said the chance o f m is s in g c a n c e ro u s n odes is the m ain drawback. K rag said that by doubling the dose o f radioactive material, it may be possible to low er the number o f m issed cases sub­ stantially. D octors w ill test this idea in a large study, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, that w ill get under way in about three months. The sentinel node proce­ dure w ill be teste d a g a in s t stan d ard ly m p h n od e re m o v a l in a b o u t 4 ,0 0 0 women. T h e p rim ary a d v a n ta g e o f the new ap pro ach is that it rem o v es a b ou t 50 times less tissue than standard surgery. K rag said doctors take out one to three grams o f tissue instead o f the usual 100 to 150 grams. This , means the technique can be done under local rather than general anesthe­ sia, and recovery is much faster. Patients are also likely to avoid many o f the possi­ ble com plications, such as arm sw elling, lim ited shoulder m otion and lin g e rin g pain from damaged nerves. K rag said some surgeons are already using the procedure, but he recommends lim iting it for now to medical studies. Toddler dies after bee attack T A M P A , Fla. (A P) — Authorities are in v e stig a tin g w hy it took seven hours before paramedics were called to a mobile home park where a toddler was fatally stung more than 200 times by a swarm o f yellow jackets. The reasons fo r the delay in m e s c a l attention for 2-year-old Harrison Johnson aren’ t known yet, S h e riffs Detective Lisa Haber said Tuesday. “ The parents aren’ t answering any questions, which is making the investigation more difficult,” she said. H arrison and h is parents, K e lly and W ylie Johnson, were visiting friends Glen and Nicole Van De Veere on Monday at the densely wooded m obile home park near Tampa when the attack happened. The toddler was stung probably 75 times around the head and face and as many as 150 times on the body, Haber said. Experts estim ated that as many as 1,000 insects W attacked the boy. V an D e V eere said the toddler was in pain, but the adults never thought he was in seriou s d a n g e r u n til it w as too la te . “ Because he didn’ t appear to have any kind o f trauma, we didn’t do anything,” he said. “ Obviously, he was itching and hurting because o f the stings, but he had something to eat, had som ething to drink and was watching T V . When he started to vomit and things didn’t look right, we called for help right away,” Van D e Veere said. T h e c h ild was u n re sp o n siv e when paramedics arrived and tried unsuccessfully to revive him. He died later at a hospital. The Johnsons were acquitted in March after being charged with failing to report the 1996 death o f a month-old girl whose par­ ents were members o f a religious sect in which they participated. A N T E D » Freelance Technology w riter/w e b I review er fo r a new o n-lin e cam pus p u b lica tio n . Looking fo r a w rite r w ith personality, som eone w h o can p o in t students tow ard the best w eb sites, review new so ft­ ware, exp lain how to g et free stuff on-line, etc. W ritin g experien ce p re­ ferred. M u st be able to turn a co lu m n every week. A pplications are available at th e State Press reception desk, M atthew s Center Basem ent room O Z For m ore inform ation call Paul M atthew s, 727-6941. W a n t s o m y o u r e t h in g c o ffe e y o u ’v e t a b le g o t t e n Hayden’s Ferry Review A S U ’s Literary Magazine Much çhe^Rer, and it won't b té â k w h e n ’ÿo u < W i^ ^ iln th e i living room. g JNew edition on sale! Ask for it at your local bookstore, or call 965-1243 for more information. H A Y D E N 'S F E R R Y . R E V I E ■HH to p u t o n th a t s h o w s o m e c la s s ? s Future’s hope: a town, $ 100,000, some Schnapps, and a new name B y T ed A nthony A ssociated P ress M c G I L L IC U D D Y C I T Y . N .D . — Just ask, and folks around here w ill spin the tale h app ily: D r. A lo y siu s Percival M cGillicuddy, writing his will on June 28, 1891, revealed the secret recipe for his beloved vanilla and mint schnapps — the elixirs he purveyed down at the Shady Eye Saloon. He made quite an impression. A century later, the ^town’s only grocery Store grills up a McGillicuddy Burger for $2.50. The good doctor's “ country fresh” schnapps arid iced root beer are served up and down Main Street. /Signs at the edge o f town mark the man's immortality. That is the tale. Now consider these facts;: • Dr. M c G illic u d d y never existed . There áre no McGillicuddy bones buried in the hillside cemetery east o f town, no McGiliicuddys in the local history printed during the Bicentennial. Nor are there any in the vicinity; the nearest one (Daniel) lives in'Grand Forks, 180 miles east. • The liqueur the doctor "bequeathed" to the town is" Concoeie .) -ouK'w her ( anaua, : hen imported to jivmpanv tor hou li na he to re Kennics'. hv. ,i Liuim natum’ it' av. iv nack tor.ti, iore ‘nan a - - ntufy. ,until rhi^ past arma. Uns ( ii.im iIle,' a. ,'time eatt te-raneli : frontier a raiicoU' ruMorv „¡j i us Vu h arid 70 neo me toi as cotitinueu extstence. pints importer tncarn.ition was imented h\ Who,thought renaming a town would he a heck of'an advertising gimmick. It was embraced by a community struggling with a hare-bones economy and a thinning pop­ ulation -Y a community that campaigned for its new name and got a promise of 100.000 corporate dollars in return. So it happened that in April, city fathers turned out. state lawmakers came, the importer sent a representative and they all had a parade. Granville, settled by ascetic pio­ neers who forged into nowhere to tame this pocket o f the Great Plains, was put away for four years. And M cGillicuddy City, brought to you by Sazerac Corp. o f New Orleans, was born. G r a n v ille - c u m - M c G illic u d d y is q u ie t. A n d A n g ie Granville’ s annual budget last year was $13,212. A handful o f communities responded, and the field nar­ Bachm eier, proprietor o f A B ar C and B ig S k y , drives around town to tour the civic resurrection. She is o f the row ed to tw o — G r a n v ille and Stre e ter, N .D . T hen Granvillians got the news: T h ey’ d won. T h ey’ d be that new breed, the younger generation w orking to ensure Granville endures. much closer to getting the new civic center they wanted. L o o k , she says — there’ s where our new $800,000 Signs went up on Ü .S . 2 outside town: “ M cGillicuddy C ity U S A — Where The Fun Never Ends,” C ity H a ll’s civic center will be. There’ s the old hank building, which Web site now says, “ W e used to be Granville.” Overnight, closed years ago; it’ s been bought, and a bed-and-breakDr. M cGillicuddy Root Beer —^ another o f the company’ s fast may open. N ext year, she enthuses, an 1890s-style tent fair is planned. And after so long, the town’ s popula­ products, a syrupy, pleasing concoction not at all like tion is rising again — if only by a handful. Hires — became de rigeur on Main Street. Mayor Hilman Ulland. who as school principal saw too C a lv in M ed ler, proprietor o f the B randing Iron -—* • : : v ma ny kids grow up and where pickled turkey gizzards leave, sees a bright, future, too: more housing, more 4 4 "P e°p le know it's not going to people, more jobs, like the change them. They're not going days when U . S . 2 was a stoplight on M ain Street, to let their heritage get replaced not a four-lan e outside by something that's packaged. " ^ ^ town. . To spend -eventi min­ utes around an An eie From Anvtow n to A nybrand Y , , Bachmeier or a Gai Medler It almost ,could he an olu .u A 'C '- .n e r, to pe converted to the T w ilig h t Zone e p iso d e : Xverage Joe from' 1961 (played hv Burgess Meredith, Granville Gospel: they emanate comeoaekkarmà; But it is maybe Jack Klugmam ivakes up m ithe early 21st century an unusual kind, blending thè,subtleties of brand identity to find ail places have corporate sponsors. Planes speed with the intricate transaction that occurs between country from Coke sylvan là to M cD onaidsburg. Yuppies ski people and their histories, both real and wished. And lurking amid it all is Dr. M cGillicuddy • on Snapple Valley: hikers climb Rolling Rock. The Marlboro Thru way roils past New Clinique and Chryslerviile to signs, on bottles, on Granvillians' tongues: a man who Gillette Heights arid, finally. Niketown (O K . that one never existed, recrui ted to help their own existence contin­ ue. "We're not just going to blow out with the wind,” says actually exists, but it's a store, not a municipality). In real life . M cG illicu d d v ’ s siblings dot the land. Nancy Mueller, the city's auditor and half o f its full-time Suburban Boston has Premium Outlets Boulevard. San Work force. “W e’re going to survive.” Francisco's venerable Candlestick Park is now 3Com Park; in Jackson. Tenn., money from Procter & Gamble Legacy o f the survivors People generally assùme continued existence is a good will name a minor-league baseball stadium Pringles Park. Each puts a corporate name on the tongue, and thing. But in any permutation? One M cGillicuddy City Granville is no exception. When folks say McGillicuddy may be cute and cool and innovative, but how many does City, they’ re offering - intentionally or not — an adver­ America need — especially here, far from the madding Y ■ ■Y G " Y Y Y y Y ,,;V'''-h' tising plug as blatant, if not as recognizable, as the Nike mall? “ Giving any place — or anyone or anything — a grand swoosh. Sam e com m unity, new identity Granvillians, abundantly optimistic, see McGillicuddy name is not going to help its chances o f success or sur­ Dr. McGiflicuddy's isn’t the most popular schnapps in the land. But it has its aficionados, many of them on the as a hook that leads visitors to their prized traits; small­ vival.” says Donald Harington. author o f Let Us Build Us wintry, thinly populated plains o f Dakota and western town living, bed-and-breakfast hospitality, buffalo ranch- A C ity, a chronicle, of 19th-century Arkansas settlements ing, street dances. They've that am bitiously named themselves so-and-so ‘‘C ity .” M in n esota, That was the ; : seen too many towns dry- up; Most faded away: region Sazerac. a fam ilyPost office, school, official road signs still use the old they want outsiders to leave owned importer that dates to "G ivin g any place — or anyone with good memories — and name. City Hall letterhead hears both. And behind it all, the mid-19th Century, had in or anything — a grand name is descendants of pioneers scrap out a future — another gen­ leave their dollars here, m ind when its president eration of intrepid folk devising ways to prosper in an “ T h a t ’ s w hy th e y ’ re tossed out T he Idea at a not going to help its chances o f willing to do something a lit­ unyielding land. 1996 m eeting down in success or survival/' y ^ These are the sort who w ill always be here, long after tle d iffe r e n t ,” sa y s S te v e Louisiana. Cost S 1 and the tap-beer menu features Busch L ig h t. Bud L ig h t, M ille r L ite . Coors Light, Schmidt Light and, for a little v a rie ty, Keystone Light — became proprietor of the ShadV Eve. - u S a z e r a c issu e d a press Donald Harington, author re le ase: It w anted a little of Let Us Build Us A City town with at least six months o f snow and a tavern willing to ren am e it s e lf the S h a d y E y e S a lo o n , a fte r the M cG illicudd y bottle-label legend. T h e com m unity had to be near an airport and have lodging “ in case we wanted to use the city for a promo/tional contest or sweepstakes,” explains Rebecca Green, Sazerac national brand manager. For four years, it had to be — in spirit, self-promotion and signage if not in legali­ ty — M cGillicuddy City. The town would get $100,000 in. four annual payments fo r c iv ic im p ro vem en t — no p itta n c e , c o n sid e rin g Schou, the Lutheran minister here. “ People know it’ s not g o in g to c h a n g e th em . They’ re’not going to let their heritage get replaced by something that’ s packaged.” Am erica has always had company communities, from the coàl-baron patch towns o f Appalachia to the firm that builds a factory somewhere and effects economic recov­ ery. B ut now the service economy drives Am erica, not the production economy, so the details change. Companies no longer build just factories; they build brand names. W ho’s using whom? T h e d ay b e fo re the fir s t a n n u a l B u ff a lo D a y s , the sch n ap p s runs out and the fo u r y ears o f M cGillicuddyhood are a memory. “ In some W ays; the greatest Sign o f success on thé Great Plains is to be buried here,” says Schou, the minis­ ter. “ That’ S why you see so many cemeteries here and so few/ towns. Because i f you’ re buried here, you-’ ve sur­ vived.” ': Buried. Like those before them who endured blizzards, droughts, grasshopper infestations, crops pounded by hail. Buried in the hillside graveyard east o f town, the one that contains no M cG illicu d d y bones, The one with the sign etched in big block letters, a sign Of two simple words. The second word is C E M E T E R Y . A n d in this most eternal o f places, the first one, still, is G R A N V IL L E . iMUNiTY G H A Y D E N 'S F E R R Y I l V I I W j u id e • :a n d M ore P o s itio n s a v a ila b le on s ta ff ~ H a y d e n 's F e rry R e v ie w A S U ’s national literary m agazine is accepting applications for poetry editors, fictio n editors, art editors, associate editors, and editorial assistants for the Fall/W inter 1997 and Spring/ Summer 1996 issues. D I G I T A L Ili G O tp :/ / w w w .s t a t e p r e s s .c o m T o a p p ly y o u m u st: MILLENNIUM 2000 DOWNUNDER! • B e a n A S U s tu d e n t in g o o d -s t a n d in g • A t le a st a 2,5 c u m u la tiv e G P A • B e a v a ila b le fr o m O c t o b e r 1996 th r o u g h M a y 1998 Your invitation to a fantastic and unique experience where you w ill experience the new millennium first - in Australia & Fiji - 8 days/7 nights $2499. E d ito r s are c h o s e n fo r a o n e -y e a r te rm o r t w o issu e s. W o r k o n th e m a g a z in e is o n a v o lu n te e r b a s is . D E A D L IN E F O R A P P L IC A T IO N S : S e p te m b e r 13 (Return applications to Student Publications information desk, Matthews Center basement,) A p p licatio n s an d job d escriptions are availab le at the Stu d en t P ublication s' inform ation d esk , HFR o ffice, (M atthew s C en ter basem ent), an d the b u lletin board located across from room 325 in the L an gu age and Literature b u ild in g. 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Fax/M oderri w /V oice M S W indow s 9 5 o r 9 8 NM B 104 Keyboard | M icrosoft PS/2 M ouse • • * • • • • • • • • • • • Betsy couldn't believe tt.lt w as a s if the author was describing her life moment by m om ent Hey Students! Got a web site you’d like to show off? Enter the weekly Web Devil contest at State Press.com featuring the university’s top student-designed web sites. Send your U R L arid a brief explanation of 3 5 0 M I» $1 788.** 404Mhz $1 9 8 8 .M P-ll 266 Mhz C om plete System S998.00!!! 300Mhz *1 2 8 8 .” how you developed your site to Paul 333MHz • 1 3 8 8 * Matthews at Pm atth@im ap3.asu.edu. CS& S Is th e VdH efs Prem ier PC. Netw ork S ales a n d S ervice Solution! S in ce 1987. CSSiS h a s bunt A rizon a's fin est netw ork business system s C o m e se e o u r g ia n t show room a n d te ll us how we c a n serve you- JSSL netS p i * M Canon o tg c w iA ■ E 3 PACKARD l-F 8 :3 0 A M -5 :3 0 P M & Sat 10-3 C all fa r Custom PC COMRAa\ V t\ù n v ^ - .9 ó 8 - 8 S 8 S W e’ll provide a link to your web page on our web site and let viewers decide the winners. For m ore inform ation call Paul Matthews at 727-6941 U S C linebacker uses physical skills, mental toughness to succeed he said. “ I just kinda leave football to the side until 1 second thought.” ' have to take care o f business. But I ’ m very reserved. I N ot easily d istracted T h e id e a has e n tered C la ib o r n e ’ s m in d . H e ’ s For Chris Claiborne, a month-long trip to Okinaw a, try not to bring football home, win or lose. I try to leave bounced it around in the back o f his brain. H e can’ t say Japan, in the summer o f 1996 was much more than a football away from me.” it hasn’ t tempted him. L iv in g up to expectations relaxing, sightseeing vacation. B ut for now , thoughts forgoin g his senior season According to members o f A S U , the team Claiborne In fact, it turned out to be a key reason why the U S C and U S C will line up against Saturday, two reasons are in I.os A n g e le s in fa v o r o f the g lit z , glam ou r and lin e b a c k e r is am ong the 1C to be attributed to his success sim ply stated, his instant riches that lure so many talented underclass­ nation’ s best. men to the N F L w ill be put on the back burner while speed and his size. H e w ent there to “ C h r is C la ib o r n e is , in my C la ib o r n e attem p ts to tak e U S C to a c o n fe r e n c e visit his father, Emmitt, opinion, the best linebacker in the cham pionship. who is a master gunnery “ I ’ m just worried about my team right now,” he said. Pac-10 maybe in the country,” se rg e a n t in the U .S . A S U o ffe n siv e coordinator D an •“ I think if we win games, it w ill make it à lot easier for M a rin e s. W ith his dad Cozzetto said. “ H e was a high­ me to make that choice. People w ill definitely look at serving as a mentoring me m ore and things lik e that, so i f we w in ly-recruited athlete, and p r e s e n c e , C la ib o r n e gam es, it w ill make it a lot easier for me to he’ s lived up to every ^ „ went to extreme m ea­ make that decision. e x p e c ta tio n . W e sures to better himself. “ (I want) ju s t fo r this team to w in. th o u g h t we w as H e jum ped rope. Ran That’s my main goal. I f this team wins, a g o in g to be as alon gside the beach. lot o f my goals w ill be taken care of. The g o o d as (he is ) . L if t e d w e ig h ts . more you w in , the better recognition H e ’ s b ig (6-footPushed h im self until he literally 3> 250); and the m ore h y p e (you could take no more. g e t) . You know , But the excruciating work he endured during that 30- and he can run. Maybe everyb od y w ants day span in the Land o f the Rising Sun wasn’t all bad, you m ig h t p ro je c t to be a star. I f for several reasons. Besides keeping in shape and getting him being a down ¿ jfi» we can w in , g u y , y ou k n o w , stronger, he learned about other aspects o f the game— hopefully the gam e played inside your head, rather than on the b e c a u se h e ’ s so on e d ay I field. W hile killing him self under excessively draining, b ig , b u t h e ’ s ca n be a exhausting humidity. Claiborne became a much stronger sh ow n a ll the star.” characteristics o f player mentally. “ I (got) to be in that humid clim ate,” he said. “ So being a great inside when we went down .to Florida State last w eek, that linebacker.” Sun D e v il center actually wasn’ t a factor. I’ ve been there before and done that, so it’ s definitely helped me. It definitely helped me G r e y R u e g a m e r ad d ed , “ ( H e ’ s) a as a football player. ' “ It was like a boot cam p... M y father always told me real b ig , athletic that you can’ t use excuses. You play the game, and you guy. H e runs real w ell (and) has a get a result.” Approximately halfway through Claiborne’ s illustri­ nose for the ball. ous Trojan career, the results have been, for the most H e makes plays. H e s n iffs out part, in Claiborne’ s favor. counters and he C o n flic tin g p ersonalities out Claiborne, a 1997 A ll-A m erican, is a legitimate con­ s n iffs ■ tender for the Butkus Award, given out to the nation’ s reverses like he alread y best linebacker. In four games this season, he leads the w as Trojans with 37 tackles, 10 for losses. He has also has m eant to be th ere. H e ju s t two sacks and two interceptions. According to Claiborne, his aggressive style o f play has a real knack is a reason for success, even though he doesn’ t always for finding the ball. H e ’ s just take it onto the field with him. “ I ’m learning each gam e, so I think each day my style g o o d at w hat changes a little bit,” he said. “ I ’m trying to learn how to he does. “ You ju s t adapt to each team and watch film and things like that. I have to be at your think each week my game definitely changes. “ I ’ m v e ry c a lm . I d o n ’ t let th in g s ra ttle m e. best (again st h im ). Y o u Throughout the game, I just kind o f take in everything h a v e to tak e the rig h t (the opponent) does and work on my mental game. I ’ ve angles on him and make tried the hardest to work on my game as a mental play­ sure you’ re up on him, and you have to make er.” sure your feet are in Trojan head coach Paul H ackett agrees, saying the the right place so you biggest reason for Claiborne’ s success is his approach to d o n ’ t trip y o u r s e lf the game and his intense preparation. up. Y o u have to go “ H e ’ s a big man who has tremendous m obility and after him hard. You had the ability to m ake tackles from sideline to side­ h a v e to do e v e ry­ line,” Hackett said. “ But what I think sets him apart is — his intensity and his desire to be a good player. I think thing that much bet­ his com m itm ent... his focus, his concentration in prac­ ter with that much tice, (and) the way he understands football (is key). He m ore t e c h n iq u e , has a natural feel for what’ s being done by the offense. I and i f you aren’ t mean, those are the intangible things that 1 believe great able to do that, he’ ll put you on players have.” ass Conversely, Claiborne is a relative pussycat when he y o u r D an C o z z e tto , without a leaves the field and resumes a normal, college life. A S U offensive co o rd in a to r “ I’ m really laid-back and I ’m really family-oriented,” B y D o u g Fla n a g an St a t e P ress C hris Claiborne is, in my opinion, the best linebacker in the Pac-10 maybe in the country. Career totals Tackle« 192 Tackle«for to« 20 Deflection»# 14 Sensational S m oltz overpowers C u bbies K ic held o f th e A s s o c ia t e d Kress A tla n ta B rave s p itch er J o h n S m o ltz is co n gratu la te d b ÿ team m ates as he heads to th e d u g o u t in th e eighth inn in g o f gam e one o f the N a tio n a l L e a g u e D ivision S érié s. T h e B rave s defeated th e C u b s 7-1. A T L A N T A (AP) — John Smoltz’s dominat­ ing performance on the mound was expect­ ed. M ich ael T ucker’ s power at the plate wasn’t. Smoltz became die winningest pitcher in postseason history, allowing only five, hits in 7 2-3 innings as the Atlanta Braves cruised to a 7-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs in Game 1 o f the N L division series Wednesday. “ H e ’ s ju st straight nasty this time o f year,” said Ryan K lesko, who turned the game into a rout with a seventh-inning grand slam. “W e jumped on them early and John shut them down.” Tucker, who had just two home runs in the past three months and was dropped to eighth in the batting order, got the offense going with a two-run homer in the second inning. “The second half o f the season was pretty depressing,” Tucker said. “ But you have to put the regular season behind you. This is the postseason. You have to look ahead.” Klesko made it 7-0 with his grand slam, but the runs really w eren’ t needed with Smoltz on the mound. He pushed his record to 11-3 in 21 postseason starts, breaking the record for wins shared with Whitey Ford and Dave Stewart. “ It’ s been a magical career, having the opportunity to pitch in so many postseason games,” Smoltz said. H e was picked to begin the best-of-5 series based on his playoff success and a 121 record in the second half o f the season. The Braves’ pitching is so deep they have 20-game winner Tom Glavine and four-time C y Young winner Greg Maddux ready to go in the next two games. Smoltz was 17-3 and had the best win­ ning percentage in the majors during the reg­ ular season — a remarkable performance co n sid e rin g he had elbow surgery in Decem ber and went on the disabled list twice early in the season. “ Many times this season, I was thinking I wouldn’ t be able to make my next start,” Smoltz said. The Cubs, weary from a three-team wild­ card race and forced to win a one-gam e playoff against San Francisco on Monday, were in a full-scale letdown mode, going down m eekly in their first p la yo ff game since 1989. Spencer propels New G ooden ejected; Tribe ties series at C L E V E L A N D (A P) — M aybe losing their manager, York to 2-0 advantage their starting pitcher and their cool in the first inning was N EW Y O R K (AP) — Add the name o f Shane Spencer to the long list o f New York Yankees legends. An unknown a month ago. the compact rookie capped his amazing September by homering in his first postseason at-bat to lead Andy Pettine and the Yankees past the Texas Rangers 3-1 Wednesday night for a 2-0 lead in their A L division series. Pettitte atoned for a season-long struggle and pitched perfectly into the fifth inning. Texas led the league in bat­ ting this year, but managed only five hits in a G am e 1 shutout and got only five more against the A L ’ s top staff. The Yankees will try to sweep the best-of-5 playoff on Friday night at Texas. David Cone (20-7) starts for New York against Aaron Sele (19-11). Spencer got his chance to start in left fie ld partly b ecau se o f an o m in o u s m e d ica l report on D a rry l Strawberry. Told that doctors had “ found something” on his c o lo n , Straw berry le ft the team fo r m ore tests Thursday. It is not known when he will rejoin the Yankees. Spencer seemed to catch the Rangers by surprise, much the same way he startled Yankees fans with his power down the stretch. H e hit a solo home run o ff R ick Helling in the second inning, then singled ahead o f Scott Brosius’ homer for a 3-0 lead in the fourth. The sellout crowd o f 57,360 rewarded the rookie with standing ovations all night, the way fans used to respond to the likes o f Reggie and M ickey. A t 26, the humble, awshucks Spencer had to be urged by his teammates to take a curtain call. Spencer had spent eight fu ll seasons in the minors before finally getting his chance in the majors this year. He made three roundtrips between T riple-A Colum bus and New York. I ony Ltejak of Che Associated Press C le v e la n d In d ia n s slu g g e r D a v id Ju s tic e celeb rates a fte r b lastin g a th ree -ru n h om e ru n in th e secon d in n in g o f f B osto n R e d S o x reliev­ e r J o h n W a s d in . C le v e la n d w on 9-5. just what these Cleveland iRd&ns needed. Dave Burba, rushed infoService when starter Dwight Gooden was ejected after 22 pitches, made it into the sixth inning, and David Justice homered and drove in four runs Wednesday as Cleveland defeated Boston 9-5 to even the A L playoff series. After being routed 11-3 in Game 1, the Indians needed a lift. And although they certainly didn’ t plan to spend the rest o f the day watching T V in C levelan d’ s clu b ­ house, manager M ike Hargrove and Gooden sparked the Indians and their fans by getting kicked out in the first by plate umpire Joe Brinkman. “ It sure did get us fired up,” Cleveland first baseman Jim Thome said. “ Especially since the last week or so we haven’t played real well. And with the way they played yesterday, we needed something.” The best-of-5 series continues Friday at Fenway Park with Cleveland’ s Charles Nagy facing Bret Saberhagen. Gam e 4 is set for Saturday, and the teams would return to Jacobs Field for Gam e 5 on Sunday if necessary. G am e 2 w ill be best remembered for a w ild, 39minute first inning that included three runs, the ejections, two passed balls, three walks, two stolen bases, a hit bat­ ter, two controversial calls and a lot o f heated words. There was more tension in the ninth when both bench­ es and bullpens emptied briefly after John Valentin took exception to an inside pitch from Indians reliever M ike Jackson, who picked up the save. M o Vaughn, who had a postseason record seven RBIs in Gam e 1, went l-for-4 with two strikeouts and a walk. Gooden, seeking his first postseason win, was in trou­ ble with Brinkman after his third pitch. He disagreed with the umpire on a 2-0 pitch to leadoff hitter Darien Lew is, yelling when Brinkman called ball three. Pulliam Journalism Fellowships Graduating college seniors are invited to apply for the 26th annual Pulliam Journalism Fellowships. We will grant 10-week summer internships to 20 jour­ nalism or liberal arts majors in the August 1998-June 1999 graduating classes. Previous internship or part-time experience at a newspaper is desired, or other demonstration of writing and reporting ability. Winners will receive a $5,250 stipend and will work at either The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News or The Arizona Republic. Early-admissions application postmark deadline is Nov. 15,1998. By Dec. 15, 1998, up to five early-admissions winners will be notified. All other entries must be postmarked by March 1,1999, and will be considered with remaining early-admissions applicants. To request an application packet, write: Web site: www.stamews.com/pjf E-mail: pulliam@starnews.com Russell B. Pulliam Pulliam' Fellowships Director The Indianapolis News P.O. Box 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 Soward: special concern for special teams By E d O deven S tate P ress D oug F lanagan and A S U 's special teams will have a special task Saturday: containing U S C ’ s R . Jay Soward. The younger brother o f e x -A S U cornerback Marcus Soward is well-known for his blazing speed and sensa­ tional explosiveness. The junior wide receiver/retum spe­ cialist has averaged a touchdown every 6.2 times he has touched the ball during his collegiate career (21 times on 130 plays). Those scores have averaged 52.3 yards per play. Senior Seanan K e lly said halting Sow ard’ s forward progress is paramount to a successful special teams per­ formance. “ W e ’ ve ju st got to keep running,” K e lly said after W ednesday’ s practice. “ W e’ ve been working on that. I f there’ s one thing we’ ve been trying to do, it is getting the guys running down the field. T hat’ s the biggest thing. When there’ s a guy coming at you with sp eed— and he’ s got a lot o f moves. Everybody knows he’ s a threat— The only tiling you can do is go down there and run,” The Sun Devils didn’t exactly accomplish that feat in the thrilling double-overtime game against the Trojans two years ago. Sward broke lose for a 98-yard k ick o ff return in the Sun D evils’ 48-35 triumph. “ H e ju k ed about four or fiv e ta ck le s,” K e lly remi­ nisced, “ and that’ s also poor tackling as w ell.” C a p a b le replacem ent W ith inside linebacker Stephen Trejo sidelined for the past two games with a sprained right knee, redshirt fresh­ man E ric Fields has gained valuable playing tim e. He started against N orth T e x a s two Weeks ago , and also played against Oregon State Saturday. “ It’ s great,” the 6-foot-3,225-pounder said. “ Y o u want to be a part o f the team. I ’ m gaining some experience at the college level. It helps a lot and I just feel like I ’ m part o f the defense noW and I just want to play my part. Play consistent and make plays.” Despite the switching o f defensive schemes—- utilizing two linebackers and five defensive backs instead o f the standard three linebackers and four defensive backs— Fields was happy to play in a more limited role in the last game. “ W e ’ ve been giying a little variety on defense,” the Las V egas native said. “ W hen I got in I was fortunate enough to make a couple plays. I just feel if my defense is doing good, it’ s doing good. W e are all a unit. I f I get in, I jlist want to make a play.” Fields feels A S U ’ s defense is starting to finally play as a cohesive unit. “ I think we ju st realize assignm ent-w ise everybody needs to play their part,” he said. “ Everybody can’ t wait for somebody to make a play. I f the d-line does what they have to do, if the linebackers do what they have to do and if the secondary does what they have to do, then we don’ t have to worry nothing else. It’ s just there, and it’ ll work together as one.” L a te flig h t Rather than leaving for a road trip on Thursday night or Friday morning, as is custom, the team w ill depart for Los Angeles on Friday night. Head coach Bruce Snyder said there were two good reasons for the change in plans. “ (W e’ ve) found it very difficult to get to the Coliseum (with) traffic, and it seems like every time we go over there, there’ s someone painting the field and we can’t get on it when they told us we could,” he said, So to avoid all that, I said ‘It’ s only an hour fligh t.’ W e ’ ll work out here (on Friday), we’ ll eat dinner here, get on a flight about 7 b h h h A LL N IG H T & EVERY N IG H T $2 M G D P O U N D E R S $ 2 F O S T E R S - 12o z p.m. G et to L A X (airport) at 8 p.m ., hotel by 8:30 or 8:45. (And we’ ll) meet at 9:15. "A n d now also you’ ve eliminated fam ily, girlfriends, buddies, and stuff. There’ s no time to do it. So I think it serves a couple o f purposes.” W hile Snyder noted that the late flight time will most lik e ly not be repeated arty tim e during the season, a blowout victory this weekend could quickly change his mind. ' “ W e are superstitious too,” he joked. We need help. The State Press seeirs dedicated, experienced sports reporters to cover winter and spring sports. Stop by the Matthews Center and picl-up an application. NO COVER WITH THIS AD d r in k sp ecials a t th e b a r eve ry n ig h t p lu s B ra d L an g of the State Press S o p h o m o re w ide re ce ive r T a r iq M c D o n a ld an d the A S H offen se hope to p u t u p b ig n u m b e rs ag a in st P a c-1 0 riv a l U S C . I 'jljl B i'lC Harkins luxury Theatres STUDENT NIGHT $1 YOU CALL IT lH S i M0M Sotmd+»»count Admissionto afieh©««before 6pm+Advance Ticket Soft1 FREE Refill on large Popcorn and largo Drink * Award Winning Gourmet Snack Bprl r Party night, DJ s, fun & gam es with JACK PANIC & THE CRASH A d o o rs @ 8 :30pm M r iz o n a 1-10 a n d i u Ladies no cover all night! Zowie Bowie & Am anda Star W t iA T g H | | l] L Í S [ 0 [Q [ 0 12:30.1:15,2:00, OHS sanasi I 1■2:45, 3:30,4 :i5,5:00.5:45,6:30) 7:15. ■ 8:00,8:45.9:3o, 10:15,11:00, Midnight I 15uni 11:45.12:3(1,1:1¿,2:00,2:45,3:30,4:15. ___ I 5:00.5:4S, 6:30,7:15,8:00.8:45, 8:30,10:lä o i s m i L j i t t | D reams M A Y G c M E r . 1 « • A NIGHTA T 1 H E R O X B U R Y ,^ d o o rs @ 8:30pm COIíIíEGI'ATtE M ch a rg e-b y -p h o n e r222 HARKins A à lc- State Press Opinions (Fri. SaH 11:00,11:45, An i L A D IE S N IG H T 2 4 s th e S u p e r s t it io n F w y . Q [ A T IN E 1 7 U t.il i u u ìu l L O n Pa* a ¿ o . Q Pa iF ^ i ! :5?do. 7 . % Ä 9?Si (10:40pm, 1 2 :10am Fri, SatonM d i b i t h l í ü & ». (10:50pm, 12:05am Fri, SatonM D i s i m i , ihx Your passport to a m ag ic kin gd om , in clu d in g A dventure S T R A N G E I A N 0 ~ Y O K O L O V E w i CLAYMORES +TOLERANCE & Digital Free GARBAGE all ages 8pm show E ven in g S ta r P resen ts Inside G ib so n ’s EAGLE EYE CHERRY D O O R S @ 10 P M A LL A G E S T v C ro c J c e r p re s e n ts 1THURS 10/8 (Fri-Sun) 1220,120;2:35,3:35.4:50,5:50,725, O W X s a œ W 8:35,9:55 (10:¿5pm, 12:2Òam Pò, SatonM n a n u . 1 i 5 (Fri-Sun) 12:55.3:40.6:25. . — EVER AFTER 6:15 (12:20am Pii. SatonM OdBrnN-iUS SAVING PRIVATE RYAN m (Fri-Sun) 1125,12:40, OH*stMBBI ^ - 8PM Etsen in* S ta r p resen ts . d o o rs CENTERPOINT 1 I f t Mill a n d U niversity ^ 8pm ÀNTZ™*© it) 12:1o. 2¿0.4:$0.6:4û. ö.w. « (Fri) 220,5:10, 7:50,10:30 omI (Sat, Sun) 12:00,2:30,5:10,7:50,10:30:. (Fri) f:3 0 .4:10.6:50.9:30,12:30am o M ay G om e a*»» (Fri) 1:15,3:30,5:40,8:00,10:20,12:35am (Sal) 1125,-1:15,3:30,5:40,8:00,10:20,12:35am (Sim) 11:05,1:15,3:30,5:40,8:00,10:20 ANIGHTAT1HER0XBURY (Sat) In Hayden S quare lor Evening Sta uilable at Dillai (Fri-Sun) Rural a n d U niversity 12:50,3:40, 620,9:10 (12:05am Fri, fS (0 Í0 0 AHarkinsExclusive! E V E R A F T E R ww.» SAVING PRIVATE RYAN n N E X T STO P W ONDERLAND '■ f w ' (F/f) 4:45,8:15 (Sat Sun) 1:15,4:45,8:15 (Fri) 5:00,7:30,9:50 (Sat, Suri) 12:15,2:30,5:00,7:30,9:50^ Showtimes subject to change. Please call theatre to verify. A Mesa. ' \ .1906 E . M ain (N W comer o f M ain & Gilbert) Phoenix 4250 E . Camelback, 3rd Floor, STe. 300K (Camel Square Atrium) Sat onM (Fri) 4:30,7:15,10:00 (Saf, Sun) 1:45.4:30.7:15,10:00 (Fri) 5:30,820,10:10 (Sat, Sun) 12:45,3:00,5:30,8:00,10:10 (Fri) 420,7:00,9:40 (Sat, Sun) 1:30,4:20,7:00,9:40 R O U N D ERS« '' Please visitors o f our fo u r convenient locations throughout the valley: 2 2 2 -H A R K IN S Badalo 66, *-■■■ :-r' o in n iL 1:50,4:40,720.10:10,12:50am (Saf) 1120,120.4:40,7:30,10:10, Í2:50am (Sun) 11:20.1:50.4:40.7:30.10:10 (Fri) 2:50,5:20,8:15,10:40,1:00am (Sat) 11:50,2:50,520,8:15,10:40,1:00am (Sun) 11:50.2:50.5:20.8 :f 5.10:40 (Fri-Sun) 1:00.4:00,7.-00,10:00 (12:45am Fri, Sat onM SLUM S O F B EV ER LY HILLS m 410 S. Mill Ave., Tt information 967-12 SatonM (Fri) R O N IN m O Co r n e r s t o n e 6 ~ >a variety of FT and PT work schedules »;weekly pay periods • paid training •401 (k) and more (Sin) li>:30,fc4O,fc0O,Y:1S.9:40 TH ER E'S SOMETHING A B O U T M A R Y * 0 (Fri-Sun) 1:20,3:50,6:30,9:20 (12:15am Fri, O N E T R U E THING « 0 SIMON BIRCH cni 0 SU N V O LT scmbhsi (Sao 11:00,1:á0.4:10.6:é0.9:30.12:30am (Sun) 1 1 :0 0 ,1 :3 0 ,4 :1 0 ,6 :5 0 ,9 :3 0 ......... d i b i t r l . UR B AN L E G E N D m 0 E is e s iis ta S t a r P re s e n t s i Our customers will call you for directory assistance. You simply ask for the “city and Iisting”and give them the requested information. Absolutely no selling is involved. Plus, we offer (Saf, Sur»; 11:10,1:10,3:20,5:30,7:40,9:50. .g W h A T Ü R fA M S a 1“ In) 12:10,220,4:30,6:40, ftOÛ.. [rii) 1:10.320,5:30,7:40,9:50 STRANGElANDm® . v A ll A g e s - 8 p m Ski Breaks n 1) 220,4:30JB:40JMX). I -A L L A G E S M XPX 1*800*SUNCHASE 1 1 afri th e w h i t wwvk .Min c h á M co m ■ 2 2 2 . H A R K IN S [W ffal i l l i f l denotes Midnight shows only $ 3 .7 5 !“ ■ " * TOLL FREE INFORMATIONAND RESERVATIONS IFiFSimì) ISS. 5:20.8:40 (Muntalo Fri. SatonM « w n n - j a s | (Fri-Sun) 11;30.125,225.4:10.5:10,6:55, OUZSCKBB&E 7:55,9:45 (10:45pm. 12:3Óam Fri, SatonM d n m t u l j u s , I ARM A GED DO N mo-m R O N IN m In H a y d e n S q u a r e @ See pages 04-05, 3 2 5 .4 2 5 , T 10 fi 10 n i 1"|irn n f i É f nnftì n ajifR I l î î i i TH ER E'S SOMETHING A B O U T M A R Y * _ , . . OUlsCMEEMSl I (Frf-Sur?) 1125, 1:10l 2:10.3:55,425. — 1 6:40,7:40,925,1025 (12:15am Fri, Sat only) MSITO l I B s | SH O W CHERRY P O P P IN D A D D IE S Land, HALLO W EEN: H20 * HIEROGLYPHICS ALL A G ES Land and Fantasy (Fri-Sun) 1:00,3:50,6:45.10:00 DN UTflLitix (Fri, Sal) 1120,2:30.525,7:45,1020 n M n a i 17117 (Sun) 220.525.7:45.1020 DIW ," l‘ Jü a RO UND ERSn SNAKE EY ES n 7:30 pm Doors - ALL AGES Land, T o m o rro w (Fri-Sun) 12:25,320, 0:20.9:20 M2:05ain RÍ. SatonM S M O N BIRCH (pa. band onto the EDGE compilation CD. The winners perform in HAYDEN SQUARE on SAT, OCT 24. y *1 720, tmlsOBEUS! 62 0.1 0 & (ÏÏÆSpm. 12á5amFri Sat onM m i m s / n « ON E T R U E THING * Lonerbov Come to the show and vote your favorite Eve*u*ia Sta j- P resen t* In Hayden Square (FiiSigi) 11:50.1250,2:15,3:15,4:40,5:40, URBAN L E G E N D * * presents LOCALSONiy DENOTES SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT - Tempe Iu jm Ml K 1919 W . Fairmont ‘ j P a B ^ M S t . hetw een B ro a d w a y & S o u th e rn , n ear I-TOT & y • *■ . Peoria 98 02 W. Peoria H S i ' (N E com er o f Peoria & 99th Ave.) *>V- State fVéss fo r T hu rid ay, O ctob er I, IW 8 m N o tic e to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement nsquesting money be sent or mvested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. State cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section, For more information and assistance regarding the investigation o f an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. The Press More Trivia... The /d v y C T M g N T S _ _ R |N ^ LSH AgN G G R E A T 1 BR * to ta lly rem o­ deled in secure, quiet area with p ool. A v a il, now , $495/mo. M . Vargas, 786-9489. F S T U D , p re fd - FunI H appy! $ 4 0 0 + u tl., lm from cam p us! Real cool condo! 894-5118. TO W N H O U SE 2BD/1BA- 2 blocks to A S U , $700/mo. Jane Rogers, O/A. 831-9024 TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BR/1BA T O W N H O U S E , all applnces included, w/d, like new. ■ $650/mo. C all Je ff, 893-1651, C L O S E T O A S U 2bd/2ba den condo w/ all appl, tile, carpet, fireplace $820, 557-8161. infinity sign is called a HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d* a/c. Near ASU: 2bd/2ba, $675/. mo;3bd/2baavail. 966-0987 lemniscate. 'PAPAGO PARK, 3bd/2ba con­ do.. Newpaint, clean carpets, Very nice. Call 432-3636. ' APARTMENTS EL DIABLO Apts. NE corner of Apache/McC1iot.ock, quiet Lux­ ury living, 1bd $50G/mo,. 2bd $590-S70fì/mo. 921-0699 Q U A D R A N G LE S VILLAGE APAR TM EN TS This should be your ad CaU 965-6735 APARTMENTS SAVINGS UP TO $350 OFF! S T U D IO . O N I B ID R O O M Si T W O B E D R O O M WAiKING.DISTANCE TO ASU \r ANO DOWNTOWN TEMPE SAVE O N UTILITIES•- HOT WKTÈR INCLUDED ALaraa ' sÿîTEm a vai lab le PRIVATE BALCONY/PATIO . . { PQ ÖIVU HEADED) ■ BARRIQUE AREAS -• .CEILING FANS • ' CL/STÖM Vf RTICAL/MINI BLINDS . - EUROPEAN CABINETRY LARGE STORAGE AREAS . R O O M S FOR jy N T _ _ _ _ _ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to take 8 mo lease @ Jefferson Com m ons. 4bd/2ba, $397+utl, one mi from A S U , fu lly fu r- . nished. Cynthia 699-5353, C lassifieds APARTMENTS 1 1 f f BAST UNIVBRSmr DRIVE TEM Pt. ARIZONA 1 1 ) 1 1 ;-v_ W ORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE A U T O M O g lL g _ N E E D R E S P O N S IB L E student to rent room in 4 bedroom house. Master bedroom private bath o n ly 375m o, in c l u tils, must like cats. 929-0446 91 C A N O N D A L E SM800- black with orange lettering. Bought new in 92, exc cond $500 obo, call 362- M A T T R E S S E S - Q U E E N set $12 5, fu ll set $11 0,' tw in s $89/set. In p la stic, free d e liv ­ ery. 649-2625. C A R S $100-$500 - p la ic e im ­ p ou n d s.' H ottdas, : C h e v y s . Jeeps & Sport U tilities. M U S T S E L L ! 1-800-522-2730 X4740 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D : mstr bd, sunny, huge, house w/pool, util's, incl'd. $500/mo. 668-0548 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE T E M P E A SU Townhouse 3bd/2ba, patio. New carpet/paint, 1264 sq, ft., c e ilin g fa n s, private parking, $74,000 obo. Jason 804-1417 , Clare Bridge of Tempe, specializing in assisted living for dementia care, is seeking caring part time and full time Resident Assistants, Dietary A id es and a P M Resident M anager to work in a non-climcal setting. W e offer: 4 and 12 hour shifts; full benefits after 3 rhonths,■P T O ; starting salaries include a shift differ­ ential; weekend and weekday shifts,- meals included,and opportunities for advancement. If you are inter­ ested in a great job, stop by 1610 E. Quadalupe R d , on the N W side o f Quadalupe and M cC lin tock in \ Tempe. For directions call 777-9334. ▲ if ■Monr . f HUMAN RESOURCES CLERK s 18 UKyouf\ & QSM 10. 9. 8. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1. State Press Magazine HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL E v e ry T h u r s d a y HELP WANTEDGENERAL KID ZONE B efore & A fter S c h o o l P r o g r a m s A RESORT Program Manager positions RESERVATION CENTER $9.76-$10.25/hr, 20-30 hrs/wk, morning and/or afternoon hours available. Paid training. Req. 6 m onth exp, w o rkin g w ith ch ildren grades K-6. Kid Zone is looking fo r enthusiastic and energetic individuals. Jo b descriptio ns available w ith application; O ther Kid Zone posi­ tio n s a lso a v a ila b le . Be a Kid Zone "'WBL Employee! Apply Now! 75 Positions, hrly -f bonus • $17.68/hr. average •9-1 o r 5-9 • No Selling, Training Provided • S ta r t im m e d ., g ro w th , w k ly p a y Dobson/Baseline Ellen 491 - 4921 1 T elem arketers W anted in G a liw y R anch. Earn $9/hr, p otential m onth­ ly bonus S|B. No soilin g required. P/T fle x ib le City of Tempe Social Services Dept. 3500 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, AZ (602) 350-5423 EOE hours. C a ll fo r appoint­ m ent • 607-1069. G roat am dronmant. 3 A SU g rad s em ployed now . G roat opportunity fo r SB and fun! 215 W. Lodge, Tem pe, A Z 85283. Fax: 730-4132, Attn: H R Supervisor EEO/pre employment drug screen li CoiU a LOT to HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL 9 6 S -6 7 3 5 874-3268 1990 J E E P W ran gler, R ed w/ tan top, 4x4. new- tirés, clutch, and tran sm ission . $3500 obo, call Dan 785-1632. H R team members. Filing, input, Mail or fax resume: T C H , F O IN HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL C la s s if ie d s I BUY A LL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. AUTOMOBILES A pply at: Office exp. pref. $7.50-$8.50/hr D O E . G E T M O IN E http://www.statepress.com/ classifieds/classifieds.html C A R A U D I O , low est p rices! K enw ood; P io n e er, O r io n , Sony..; w w w .IN FICA D .CO M / -momentum/ CASH TODAY!!! N Ô T R E D A M E / A S U student tick ets w anted w ill pay b ig $$$! 736-8041. P T up to 32hrs/wk. Support all recruitment, hiring, reference checks, switchboard. Com puter literate. State Press Classifieds O n the Web daily - in html! TICKETS B R A N D N E W computer hutch w/ lots o f file and printer space $125 obo. Call 840-4509. HELP WANTEDGENERAL MAIN i 8374; •; -;: . y . ' ■ / C ity o f Tem pe 9xm am Q U A D RANGLES V IL L A « ! 6 0 1 .9 6 8 .8 1 ty i R O O M A T E N E E D E D to share 4bd/2ba house w/pool 3mi from A S U Rural/Southem $300mo .+1/4 utilities Call 456-1942 RO O M S FOR RENT J uh L o o k in g f o r a p a rt tim e jo b ? Come and check o u t the opportunities at the Sun Autom otive G roup in Scottsdale. We are looking for: Vwe'bHjt! Earn extra cash as a part-time Assistant District Manager lor The Tribune. Deliver replacement newspapers in a timely manner and professional fashion. Fill In as needed on down routes. Approximately 20 hours per week, 6am - 10am. Starting $7 per hour plus mileage. Requires reli­ able transportation, AZ driver’s license and proof of insurance at time of hire. Please fax resume to, Attn: HR/LB 898-6401 or mail resume to The Tribune, 120 W. First Ave., Mesa, AZ 85210. No phone calls please. EEO • Jobline: 898-5600 IF YOU A R E LOOKING FOR A FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME JOB, H ere are the top ten reasons Straight erom T empe W hy you SHOULD CALL QSM, INC- Top T en List The ATM just laughed at you We start at $7/hr guaranteed Interning at the W hite House isn't a job for you Job skills to take with you after graduation Flipping burgers makes you break out Job advancement potential after 30 days You may NOT have already won $ 10 million Close to ASU You finally got a date (& now you need $$)! It's a free call! V \ • Valet/ Car W ashers i R eceptionists a n d Cashiers • l o t /^ tendAnts / . • G reeters iWe are the largest group of k|«iiy .car^fealerehi|^lh Ari^@rta, and offer exe^iOTt^pportitfiities fo r.g rb v ^ ^ i. Please call Kelly D. Davis at 675.0015 or apply in person at ^ / , ^S^S'RifiCcDowell Rd. Scottsdale. ______ _ _ • D t^ Free Organization TUITION REIMBURSEMENT SEMI-ANNUAL MERIT REVIEWS Get a good, close look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FACS provides financial, credit, and administrative services to • Federated Department Stores, Inc., including Macy's and Bloomingdale's. Full and part-time opportunities are currently available in the following areas: COLLECTIONS CUSTOMER SERVICE • CREDIT GRANTING Additional advantages include: • 20% discount on most Macy's purchases • Casual dress every day' • Competitive medical benefits for full-time • Paid benefit days • Paid weekly • Hrly rates are $8.25 or more (DÓE) FACS FINANCIAL A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon.-Fri, 8am-5pm or call toil free: 1-888-284-3227. (Northeast comer of 52nd St. and west 14th St between Broadway and University Drives.) Call today & find out why our Call Center is the place for YOU! and CREDIT SERVICES 1345 S. 52nd St. 1310 E. Broadway, #103 • Tempe, AZ Department S to res 894-9816 Sarvlñg M acy 's 6 Bloom ingdale’s in Tempe Equal Opportunity For All HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL TRAVEL F R E E S K IS !! Ski Breck, V ail & Keystone, Jan. 3-10. From $99 - 2 nights, $199 - 5 nights. Includes lift tickets, nightly parties, races & free skis while they last. 1-800^TOUR- $8.05/HR Phone verifiers. N o selling, no appt. s e ttin g . M - F , no w eeJ kends. Start now . M c C lin to c k /Broadway location . 784-2270, call now. U SA. www.studientexpress.com HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL A I D E N E E D E D yesterday fo r disabled girl! Female aid. T , Th, & F : 3-9pm , Sat: am. $7rl0/hr, own car. 423-5903. J lO / H R . - S a t . & S u n . 9am 4p m . H u m an sign ho ld ers fo r Continental's adult com m unity. C all Adam , 968-5514. B E A mobile D J . P T weekends. Good income + O T & tips. 8208220. B L U E J E A N position avail. C it­ rus nursery seeks F T or P T o f­ fice & sales help, computer exp. e s s e n tia l. $7+/hr. D O E . C a ll 830-8000 or fax 833-5705. AS U Sun Dial 1 Fund a Now Hiring B $6 to $8* plus bonus P C H A S E IS h ir in g ! O p e n ho u se. M ee t w ith h irin g m an­ agers! M o n . O c t. 5 , 9am -7pm . C h a s e card m em bers service s: 100 W est U n iv e r s ity D r iv e ( U n iv . & M ill) T e m p e (p rk g. avail, on Ash). Make your hours HELP W ANTEDG |N |R A L__ HELP W ANTEDG EN ERAL HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL C O W B O Y C IA O restaurant & wine bar, Scottsdale, 946-3111. A M & PM positions available: cook, pantry, dish, host, singer. "Y o u simply won't see Cow boy Ciao's one-of-akind fare anyplace else in town." Howard Seftel, New Times. F IL M IN T E R V IE W E R S needed p/t to co n d u ct surveys in per­ son about new m ajo r m otion p ic tu re s, M u st be s e lf-m o t i­ vated , w/ e x c e lle n t w ritten & v e rb a l co m m u n icatio n s k ills . F le x . hrs. m o stly w knds $ 8 $12/hr. Please c a ll our jo b lin e at 213-9334. M A R R I O T I S hiring. W e need food servers, cooks, retail, cler­ ical* & h o u se k e e p in g . Jo b s close to A S U . C all 667-3388, P A R T -T IM E W O R K - full-time pay. M onday-Friday, 4pm-8pm, $9/hr. Tempe, University & Priest. C all M r. Brooks, 517-1977 S A L E S A S S O C IA T E S wanted for A Z M ills candy store, flex. hrs. Fun job, good pay. Sweets from Heaven, call or stop in! 777-7307. M O D E L S / A C T O R S , all types, m/f needed immed. for nat'l commercials/print! 941-6922, P E R S O N A L A S S I S T A N T fo r male wheelchair user in Tem pe, p/t, $ 8.10 /h r, no e x p n e c. Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 S E E K IN G A PPOIN TM EN T Setters (no selling involved). Earn $7-$15 /hr. 9am-2pm or 4pm-9pm shifts available. Call recruiting department at 273-1998. C U S T O M E R S U P P O R T Repre­ s en tativ es, fu ll and part tim e. First U $ A a Ban k O n e com pa­ ny. For more information please call 1 -8 7 7 -C A R D lU . E D D I E M A T N E Y ’ S is b u s y h irin g host/hostesses im m e ­ d ia te ly . $8/hr F t & pt a v a il; F le x s h ifts (W k n d s & e v e s). A p p ly 2398 E . C am elb ack . In­ terview s co n d u cted im m e­ d iately . 957-3214, ask fo r A n ­ gela. E X P 'D P C T ech . W indow s .3.1, 95 , N T , hardw are, netw orking k n o w le d ge a m ust. F T or P T . Contact Richard, 831-0339. Call Today i 965-6754 H aw t ■ ■ ■ hunting ju s t a UTTLE CONFUSING? W ere LooHing For Someone To Spread The News! D o y o u h av e p re v io u s e x p e rie n c e as a n e w s p a p e r c a rrie r? A r e y o u a v a ila b le f o r w o rk 1 :3 0 a m -6 a m ? D o y o u h ave re lia b le tr a n s p o r t a t io n , a v a lid A Z d riv e r's lic e n se a n d p r o o f o f in s u ra n c e ? Earn S7 p e r h o u r p lu s m ile a g e b y d e liv e r ­ in g T h e T rib u n e . T h is p o s itio n d o es n o t r e q u ire any c o lle c tio n s . For m o re in fo r m a tio n , p le a se ca ll L in d a at 8 9 8 -6 3 4 7 . N E E D E D : I N D I V I D U A L S to work w/firefighters from Tempe & Phx for 3 hrs. in the morning & 3 h rs. in the aftern oo n on N o v . 3. $50/3hrs. help in g c o l­ le c t sign a tu re s in support o f T em pe fir e fig h te r s . M u s t be T em pe resid en ts. C o n ta c t Adrian at 265-7332 . K E N N E L W O R K E R needed PT; flex hrs. Must be neat & de­ p en d ab le. 7314 E . T h o m as Rd.* Scottsdale, 945-7692. P/T H E L P heeded, front o ffic e dental lab. $7/hr, M -F 2-6, Tem­ L A W N S E R V I C E p/t help . N o e x p . n e c. $6,50/hr. 966-3269. Flexible hours. L I N E C O O K S , & S erve rs ifor T h e D o w n sid e R is k , am/pm , PT/FT apply in person at: 7419 E Indian Plaza, Scottsdale. I is jo b jn e r JO U R N A L IS M S T U D E N T S W E 'R E lo o k in g fo r a w riter to write several commencement-re­ lated articles fo r a special State P ress issu e that w ill be p ub ­ lished in early December. Please call A ngela at 965-6620 today! T E M P E S U P E R 8 fro n t desk c le r k p/t. A p p ly in person 1020 E . A p a c h e B lv d . T em pe 967-8891 ~ P T , M - T H 6-9pm $7/hr. N ear A S U . Survey telem arketing, no pressure presentation. N o exp. n e c. C a l l fo r in terv iew w ith Norm Gifford at 829-3460 PAPA JOHN’S P T R E N T A L agent needed, M F , l:3 0 -6 p m , S at 9^5. M u st be 2 1 + . H r ly w a g e + ih e e n tiv e s . C all Tom or Jennifer 994-9555 Pizza now hiring in-store and drivers. Drivers can earn up to $12/hr, including tips. Ç all 829-3434 or 831 8500 for details or apply in person at Broadway & Roosevelt or Southern & M cClintock, R E T A I L S A L E S cle rk wanted T& Th, 9am-5:30pm @ local Tempe co. to work in factory outlet store. Casual environment, close to A S U , $8+ /hr. Call Brad 967-2678. po. C a ll 730-5998. T E N N IS S H O P attendant $6/hr e v e ., w kn d., fle x ., p/t. M ust be 19 yrs +,946-7509. UP TO $12/HR $9/hr gu aran teed + c o m m is­ sio n . 20-25 hours per w eek. Survey, m arketing in a p rofes­ sional: en viro n m e n t. C a m e l­ back & Scottsdale location. N o b o ile r roo m . 2pm -7pm M - F w ith fle x ib ility . C on tact C had 949-1088. U S G O V 'T . Jo b s h irin g now entry le v e l to ad v an ce p o s i­ tio n s . P a id tra in in g , b e n e fits . $1 l-$ 3 3 / h r. C a l l free 1-800406-1434 x 938. F i n d m e s r a r e P r e s s o n r/ ie i n t e r n e t - . iv w w ^ r a r e p / T e s s .c o m This should be your ad Call965-6735 AR I Z ONA STATE UNI VERSI TY r One place to apply for jobs at over 50 Marriott locations Valievwide Food Servers • Cooks Retail • Clerical • Security M aintenance • A n d M o re ! P R O F E S S IO N A L M A R IA C H I S in g e r w anted to tea ch v o ic e lessons. T & T h aftns. E-m ail: aliciamaria@yahoo.com RESEARCH PARK I I ntern posirioN I The ASU R esearch P ar |c, a premìer Iocatìon Ior | R&D FacìIìtìes, seeIcs intern to execute MARkETÌNq & RESEARch pROjECTS. E x C eU e NT WRÌTTEN s k ills , ACCOUNTÌNq skills ASSOCIATE a plus. P osìtìon REPORTS DÌRECTOR ANtl You Cant Ash for a Better Student Job! avaìIa M e . tI«E CooRdiNATOR. For full job dEscRiprioN, to tIie MARkETÌNq * * TviriON A ssistance MCI * * PltONE Bill CREdiTS ** UNbEliEVAblE BENEFhs * * Fun W or Ic E nvironment * * Earn full rm e waqes uioRkiisq pari rm e Ikxirs I contact vìa To Apply A N d ¡NTERviEW CO M E TO OUR PhoENiX loC A liO N AT EMAÌl jfiNUy@iMApF.ASU.Edu. F a X yOUR RESUME TO 1801 E. C ameUmcI( RoAd, SuiTE 210 (In tIie ColloNAdE PIaza) |^491'227?. EM P LO Y M EN T CEN TER MON'FRi ? A M '6 p M 9&M/9nM jobs available close to campus! Call today. Our custom ers will call you for directory assistance. You simply a s for the “city and listing” and give them the requested information. Absolutely no selling is involved. Plus, we offer: * a variety of FT and PT work schedules »Weekly pay periods ►paid training *401 (k) and more N ow op en the follow in g S aturdays A C C E P T I N G W A L K -I N IN T E R V I E W S M.Tu, and F 8:30 - 10:30amor 1:30-3:30pm I Psych & Social Work Majors ^ \ Gain Valuable Experience D BC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who*are Developmentally, Em otionally, and Behaviorally challenged. 9am - 3pm: Oct. 10 Oct. 24 M eSB • B q t. S e tu p S h d f • P B X O p e r a to r t • B u sser ■ * S erver ♦ jp Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour ' Working With Adolescents 1906 E. Main (NW comer of Main & Gilbert) P h o e n ix 4250 E. eamelback, 3rd Floor, Ste. 300K Tem pe 1919 W. Fairmont (Broadway/Southern; near 1-10) P e o ria 9802 W. Peoria (NE comer of Peoria & 99th Ave,) Cocktail Server Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Tim e Off, Advancem ent Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Subm it A p plication s To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 F T & P T w ork a v a ila b le P lease apply with Human R esources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free W orkplace. Couch Potatios NeedVeil Customer Service Reps Needed Immediately To assist the Nation's second largest Distributor of satellite services our ✓ w in n in g X E /V /V I ! Responsibilities include: Provide superior custom er service Troubleshoot Answ er B illin g Q uestions Attention ASU Grads Tem pe-based in sight is a $ 6 2 8 m illio n , publicly-traded telesales o rgan isatio n m arketing co m p u ters, hardw are and so ftw are to business cu sto m e rs n ation w ide. W e n eed professionals to jo in o u r 1200 + em ployees in a fast-paced an d fu n en viro n m en t. In sigh t offers a co m p e titiv e salary, b o n u s p la n s a n d excellent b en e fits p ro g ra m s in c lu d in g 4 0 1 K a n d sto c k p u rc h a se plan, interested ca n d id a te s m a y F A X re su m e s to (6 0 2 ) 9 0 2 - 1 1 5 7 o r m ail re su m e s to 6 8 2 0 S o u th Hart A v e n u e , Tem p e, A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 3 . P le a se in d ic a te s a la ry re q u ire m e n ts. S m o k e -fre e w ork p la ce . D r u g testing. £ O E m/f/h/v. ; ^ 6 8 2 0 S o u t h M a r l A v e n u e ( N e a r 1-1 0 a n d I l l i o t R d . ) T e m p e , A Z 8 5 2 8 3 PT schedule to work around your classes ✓ $7.75 plus Bonuses ✓ Advancement Opportunities • N a tio n w id e t a la * • Paid job training • G asa + B o n u s + B e n e fits + S t o c k O p t io n s • First year income opportunity is from S30 -35K • Telesales a nd /or com puter sa le s exp erien ce is p referred Wmm Ideal candidate will have previous customer service experience and light computer skills. Interested candidates please stop by 1310 E. Broadw ay Suite #103 Tempe SM 8 9 4 -9 8 1 6 HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE V I R T U A L R E A L I T Y training c o . Positions avail for degreed p ro fs . P ro d u ctio n m anager, media expert, sftwre developer, virtual reality develop er. See www.modistt.com for details. M O V IN G C O M P A N Y needs tel­ ephone custo m er service .per­ son. P/T & F/T, flex hrs. Tempe near A S U . C all R ick 838-2722. C O O K S W A N TE D : M ill A ve Beer co. Apply in person @ 605 S M ill Ave P/T C O M P . oper. Flex* hrs, $8/hr. E xe l. & W ord A + , G o o d intern exp. Bob 952-5149 W O R K O R s ch o o l? Try both! Earn $ 1 -2 K learning b usiness skills! 1-888-390-0862 _ _ B A R B A C K P / T , nights, exp. prefd. Eli's Bar and O rill, 4519 N . Scot­ tsdale Rd. 949-1100 _ P U T Y O U R m oney where your mouth is . S et appts. fo r travel agenices. N o selling. F le x . hrs. Near A S U . $8/hr. to start guar. + comm. $ 12/hr. avg. 829-6222 HELP WANTEDG EN ER AL Inc. I National Alarm Comptót^ Y 3 S e e k in g 2nd Shift Data Entry 3:30-midnight $8/Hr 6-8 Week Go. in Tempe Call Stivers 966-1100 \ í¿ 'S : 4 A ppnintnien^fe \ S ***™ j H v (no sales i n v p l v e d ^ i^ P j i Earn $7-$15/Hr! I P u t it in th e HELP WANTEDG EN ER AL TEEN TUTOR HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL A m e rica , $$ $$ work harder! C la ssifie d s! HELP WANTEDF O O D SERVICE HELP W ANTED- Make your advertising j W è o ffe r : >* 4 M (9-2) a n d PM (4-9) sh ifts. J • Base Salary S h ift f-3 . £ M fS a r a itia l. E i (.»•.GENEROUS Bonos Plan | >• Bald T ra in in g •£: v| f e A dvancem ent Opportunities : ( m rom ote fro m w ith in ) c " needed, City of Scottsdale. We are currently recruiting for a challenging position working with teens. Spanish speaking is desirable. Must have previous tutoring, supervisory exp, and experience working with teens/youth. Hours are 3:30pm6:30pm, M-Th. Salary is $7.50/hr. Contact Christy Demas at 994-2331. HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE C O R K ’N C LE A V E R A c c e p tin g appsi fo r lu n ch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner co cktail. W ill train, p/t. C o n c e rn w/ a p p e aran ce , r e li­ a b ility & p erso n a lity are im ­ portant: A p p ly in person M - F , 2-5pm or b y appt. 51.01 N , 44th St. (9524)585) HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP W ANTEDCm LD CAR |__ HELP WANTEDCHILP C A R E L I N E C O O K S w anted. E x p , nec. A p p ly at C a se y M oore's 850 SA Ash Ave; T 100 S ervices ’ 081 Sports i Recreation 058 Tickets 031 T ownb U tes/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomes/Condos for S a le 0 6 0 ’ftansportation 067 Travel ^08 T u to ri* * . 105 Typing/Word Processing + T l5 W anted ' y. ,L H500 CASH BACK EVEN MORE THAN SOME OF YOUR OVERDUE LIBRARY BOOKS. ■ ENTER TO W IN A NEW T IBU R O N AT THE H YUNDAI BO O TH O N CAM PU S. This is the ‘98 Tiburón F X . Sport-tuned suspension. Tinted windows. H alogen headlamps. A M /FM stereo. A n d a standard warranty package that rocks the industry. G e t into the car Road & Track says, “...fears no w inding mountain road...’ A n d for fl lim ited tim e receive $1,500 cash back. Use the cash for som ething fun. O r, finally pay o ff that book yoii’ve had since freshman English. G e t to your H yundai dealer today. A n d see why D rivin g is Believing. H YU N D AI TIB U R O N w w w .h yu n d aiU S A .c om 1-800*826-C ARS *Limited-time factory rebate See dealer for details.