Weather Partly cloudy; high 77, low 62 Volume 84 Number 45 Monday, October 26, 1998 Israelis protest against new West Bank peace agreement ASUfreshman Eric. Larkin places third at weekend meet E v e n t h its goal fo r le u k e m ia re se a rc h By H ayley Ringle S tate P ress The air was brisk, attitudes were jovial and fraternity guys were having water fights as hundreds o f people walked through campus Saturday to raise money for leukemia. Although the Around “A” Mountain for Leukemia Walk changed its course through fhe campus because of construction around the mountain, it was still able to reach its goal of $10,000. The walk raised money for leukemia research and a scholarship fund at ASU in m em ory o f Nikki S chloegel. an ASU senior who died of acute lymphoblastic leukemia three months prior to graduation: last year. . ■ “We’re absolutely gratified of the num­ bers that turned out," said Sally Schloegel, Nikki’s mother and committee chairwoman for the walk. Sally said she plans to have another walk next fall and hopes it will be double in size.''Tt’s only just begun,” she said. Half of the money collected will go to the ASU C an cer R esearch In stitu te , which is looking to nature for new and more effective drugs for improving can­ cer treatment. * “We are making very good progress and hope (the money raised from the walk) will help to find a cure,” said Dr. Dennis Dubek of ASU-CRI. The other half of the money collected w ill go tow ards the N icole T heresa Schloegel Scholarship Fund, for students pursuing a degree in special education. The th re e -m ile w alk began at B an d ersn atch B rew Pub, w here Schloegel had worked, down Fifth Street, over the University Bridge, through the cam pus and back to the re sta u ra n t. Groups from ASU and the community participated in the trek, including Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta, the L ead ersh ip S ch o lars P rogram , C hapm an C hevrolet in Tem pe, Felix C o n stru c tio n , the ASU B iology Departm ent of Grad Students and the ASU women’s volleyball team. Phi Delta Theta collected $805 and plans to give an additional $500, Sally said. Sigma Phi Epsilon had about 35 pledges participate, wearing shirts commemorating the walk. “We thought it was a good way to pro­ mote ourselves and leukemia.” said Dave Tardif, a Sigma Phi Epsilon pledge and a sophomore business major. Brian Goodman, another Sigma Phi Epsilon pledge and sophomore business major, said it was the least he could do. “I thought it would be nice to help out,” he said. Chapman Chevrolet in Tempe, which was also a sponsor of the walk, collected $1,116 and had 11 of its sales division employees walking. “We wanted to do something nice for someone,” said Norma “Mother Theresa” Todd, team leader of the Chapm an Chevrolet group. “We did this in memory of Sally’s daughter.” And some were there on a more perT u m t o W a lk page 02 % J e re m y W e is s o f t h e S ta te P re ss ASU alumni Mike Bourn (left), and Jack Wood (center), and humanities major Erin Mclntire lead the Around “A” Mountain for Leukemia Walk on Saturday. The walk was held to raise money for leukemia research and a scholarship fund in honor of Nikld Schloegel, an AiSU senior who died of leukemia last year just three months short of graduation. A rtist’s exhibit honors breast cancer ‘w arriors’ B y Jessica W olf S tate P ress Michael Hays walks through the small hallways and his gaze softens as he pauses before each photograph. His own image is reflected off the black background surrounding the shaded pale bodies of the scarred women. These walls tell the story of the brave women who fought battles with breast cancer — and won — with blackand-white nude images of women who lived through radi­ cal mastectomies and breast reconstruction surgeries. These photographs comprise the “I’m Still Beautiful” exhibit by Hays, a Tempe resident who received a humani­ tarian award from the Breast Foundation for his efforts. His photographs are on display at Alwen House, a reno­ vated historical home that serves as a cultural center for the Garfield neighborhood in Downtown Phoenix. The exhibit has been on display throughout October as part of Breast 4 4 Jdon't like the word 'survivors.' that word sounds like it refers to someone who just passively got through something. J y These women are literally beautiful warriors. M ichael Hays, Tem pe-based photographer Cancer Awareness Month. It is a tribute to survivors.of the life-threatening disease. “But I don’t like to call them ‘survivors,’” said Hays. “That word sounds like it refers to someone who just pas­ sively got through something. These women are literally beautiful warriors.” He said he now knows more about breast cancer than he ever thought he would, donating all his time and equipment to creating “I’m Still Beautiful.” Hays remembers each woman: their stories different, their struggles similar, their strength unique. “This woman used to be a ballet dancer,” he said, point­ ing to a picture of a woman with two reconstructed breasts. “She danced for the camera even though she also has diabet­ ic neuropathy and can’t feel anything from her knees down.” Hays can empathize because he, too, suffers from dia­ betic neuropathy, which causes severe nerve .damage. Sexual choices lecture m arks Respect M onth’s end By G anga S ubramanian State P ress Men are from Mars. Women are from Venus. So, who’s from our planet? Marty Klein, a renowned licensed mar­ riage and family counselor and a sex thera­ pist, will attempt to figure this out in two campus lectures Wednesday. He will focus his talk on sexuality and sexual choices. “I don’t believe in all this Mars and Venus stu ff,” said Klein, who teaches sex u a lity at the S ta n fo rd U n iv ersity M edical S chool and has w ritten tw o books and 150 articles about sexuality and relationships. “Men and women are both from Earth and now what are we going to do?” he asked. Sexual choice is a topic that is always timely on a college campus, Klein said. However, :it is always the most difficult topic to discuss, he added. Freddy Roman, a health educator for ASU Student Health, said the lecture will mark the culmination of Respect Month. Throughout October, Student Health orga­ nized lectures, panel discussions and other events to address issues of sexual respect, domestic violence, alcohol awareness and diversity awareness. In his two-lecture senes, Klein will talk to students about flirtation, seduc­ tion, attractio n and p ressure. He has drawn up the three Cs of good sex: com­ m unicate, com m unicate and com m uni­ cate. He will answer students’ questions on these issues. Klein said com m unication about sex could be verbal or by body language. “You should be able to talk about what you want,” he said. Young people should identify what makes this communication so difficult and what they should do to improve it, he said. “Sexual health does not mean just being disease-free,” Klein said. “It means being in good emotional health.” He said emotionally healthy sex means feeling good about oneself during and after sex, not feeling pushed into having sex or being worried about how sex might change a relationship. . Klein said he will also address issues of sexual orientation, self-esteem, self-concept and their effects on sexual relationships. The first lecture will be held 12:40 p.m. Wednesday at Agriculture building Room 250. The second lecture will be held 7 p.m. Wednesday at Murdock Hall Room 101. v ' 4 Campus dubs and organizations Trained Master’s and Doctoral f may submit written entries to the students offer free counseling for | full-time students, faculty and staff I State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests will not from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday I be taken over the phone or via hoc through Friday. Call 965-5067 to ! schedule an appointment Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and • F e llo w sh ip o f C h ris tia n I A thletes — A meeting will be I entries will not be accepted more held in the W ells Fargo Arena I than three working days before room 35 at 8:30 p.m. publication. Only one entry per • Golden Key National Honor J organization per day is permitted. S o cie ty — O fficer elections I Entries must contain the full will be held at the jazz Zen on I name of the club or organization, University Drive at 3 p.m. a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the •Japanese Student Organization j — A japanese/English conversation I location. All requests are subject session wiH be held ip the MU Hopi | to editing for content, space and room at 3 pm clarity. Incom plete o r illegible • K u n d alin i Yog a C lu b — A I entries will be discarded. meeting will be held in the MU I The Today Section is a daily Navajo room at 7 p.m. calendar of events printed as a and F a m ily 1 service to the ASU community. • M a rriag e Th erapy C lin ic -— Individual, 1 Requests are accepted on a firstcouple and family therapy is avail- j come, first-served basis and are able for students, faculty and staff j printed as space permits. in the Cowden Family Resources | • A d u lt C h ild ren o f A lco h o lics Building Room 140. Call 965- j — A meeting w ill be held in the 9373 for more information. MU Hopi room at 7:30 p.m. • A m erican Indian Council — A • Om ega D elta Phi — A gener­ al house meeting will be held in j meeting wilt be held in the American the MU at 7:30 p.m. Check the ! Indian Institute at 4:30 p.m. monitors for room location. * B i N e c e ssity — The bisexual discussion group will meet in • Phi Beta Lam bda — A meet- ' ing will be held in the MU Hopi the MU room 216 at 6 p.m. • C irc le K International — The room at 5 p.m. j S o c ie ty fo r C re a tiv e j community Service organization • Anachronism -— A meeting will §’ will meet in the MU room 215 be held in the MU at 6:30 p.m. T at 4:30 p.m. r Check monitors for room location. • Coalition o f ju stice & Peace — The weekly forum wiH take place • U n iversity T o astm asters — I, A meeting will be held in the j in the MU Mohave room at noon. MU room 206 at 6:45 p.m. • Counselor Training C en ter —» sonal note. “My grandfather had leukemia before he died,” said Jamie Felix, a UofA finance graduate and a Felix Construction employee. “It’s a good cause and good weather to walk in.” Kevin Ray, sportscaster for K M V P '8 6 0 AM/KTAR 620 AM; Joe M oeller, director o f development of the ASU College of Education; and Doug Mostrom, Sally’s son-in-law, handed out raf­ fle prizes and emceed the event. ; Participants were also encouraged to get on the national bone marrow donor list by the United Blood Services, who had a table set up and handed out information on how to become a donor. Warriors « hk He said was inspired to create an all-survivor exhib­ it when a woman came to him to be photographed at his Sensual Photography studio. She wanted to prove to herself she was still beautiful, Hays recalled. “I did this show for the people who would never come to me to be photographed, the ones who think they are ugly,” he said. The women in Hays’s pictures represent varying degrees o f breast cancer, reconstruction and chemotherapy experiences. One model is a four-time survivor, and another was diagnosed during her preg­ nancy. Hays photographed her with her infant son. Now in the final weeks of the exhibit, as Breast Cancer Awareness Month draws to a close, Hays continues to photograph breast cancer survivors. He said he wants to broaden his message by taking the exhibit to other cities and compiling a book. The proceeds from the “I’m Still Beautiful” opening were donated to the Y-Me organization, a national group that provides support and counseling for breast cancer survivors. Hays also is working with another breast cancer organization, Ribbon of Hope, to help women learn about survivor groups. “These women’s stories touched me,” Hays said. “It made me feel very small in comparison.” Authorities to demand D N A tests of nursing home employees BOSTON (AP) — Investigators plan to ask for DNA samples from all male employees of a nursing home where a comatose woman who was believed to have been raped gave birth to a baby. The 24-year-old woman gave birth to a prema­ ture baby girl on Friday, just four days after doctors at the Town Manor Nursing Home in Lawrence dis­ covered she was five months pregnant. The baby, who has not been named, remained in critical condition Sunday at New England Medical Center’s Floating Hospital in Boston. State Trooper Joseph R. G alantc told The Lawrence Eagle-Tribune that investigators will request DNA samples ffomfmale employees at the nursing home; where the jwoman has lived in a coma since shçubad a'drug overdose at age 19. OmekdCfrom the Essex County district attor­ ney’s office did not return telephone calls seeking comment on the investigation Sunday night. The w om an’s identity is being withheld by police because she is the apparent victim of a rape. C harlie Leonard, a spokesm an for Sunrise Healthcare Corp., the nursing home’s parent com­ pany, said the mood among employees “runs from shock to outrage.” It’s unclear who will have custody of the baby. October is MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD lo o k w h a l ’s MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURS: FRIDAY: g o la n o n th is w e e lt! • College Bowl practice 7-9pm in the Gila Room on the 2nd floor of the MU • Recreation presents Halloween Karaoke at 7:30pm on the MU Starlight Terrace (2nd Floor) > Recreation Committee meeting at 2:30pm on the 3rd floor of the MU • Gallery Committee meeting at 3:40pm on the 3rd floor of the MU • College Bowl Committee meeting at 3pm on the 3rd floor of the MU Socials Committee meeting at 12pm on the 3rd floor of the MU Coffeehouse and Poetry Series presents Pianist Alex Grant followed by an open mic poetry reading at 7pm in the MU Gallery Barren Mind Improv at 12:15pm in the MU Programming Lounge Coffeehouse and Poetry Committee meeting at 2pm on the 3rd floor of the MU Farce Side Sketch Comedy Hour at 12:40 in the MU Programming Lounge "ASU School o f A rt MFA A lum ni Ju ried E xhibition" O ct 19-Nov 18 in th e MU G allery M il 965-6822 TO HUB OUT MOBI ABOUT MBÜT ♦ COFFEE HOUSE AND POETRY ♦ ♦ COLLEGE BOW L ♦ COM EDY ♦ FILM ♦ ♦ GALLERY ♦ RECREATION ♦ SOCIALS ♦ at ASU FOURTH W EEK ■ DIVERSITY AWARENESS W EEK TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27 (Contact person: Silvester Chesnut, 965-5536) 5:00-9:00pm ■ The Tunnel of Oppression WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28 (Contact person: Freddy Roman, 965-8276) 12:40-1:40pm Program: The 3 Cfc of Good Sex Commuuic ate. Commu nicate Communicate Agriculture Bldg Room :so 7.00-8:00pm Program: Murdock Hall Room 101 5:00-9:00pm Seduction, Attraction, ying the Game so Loses Saguaro Hall The Tunnel of Oppression THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29 (Contact person Dale Noonkester, 884-0816) 4.00-6:00pm Closing Ceremony: ‘Take Sayckn Lawn i World/Mation W est Bank: Jewish settlers protest land accord By D ina Kraft A ssociated P ress OFRA, West Bank — Jewish settlers took to the streets across the West Bank on Sunday, vowing to scuttle a new Mideast peace deal that gives more land to Palestinians. The demonstrations came several hours before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to Israel, hoping to convince hard-liners that the deal he made with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was the best possible. Arriving back in Israel to a red-carpet welcome, the Israeli leader said security concessions won from the P alestin ian s during the nine-day sum m it outside Washington would justify ceding more West Bank land. “We are returning ¡after a long and difficult effort to bring ... security and peace to Israel,” he said. “We achieved such a deal — we achieved the best deal ... We did something good for the state of Israel.” At least 20 settlers -**- once Netanyahu’s staunchest supporters — were arrested and two police officers were hurt in Sunday’s widespread demonstrations, including one outside Israel’s international airport after Netanyahu’s arrival. “With the Lord's help, we will use all of our powers to break this agreement,” Said settler leader Ahron Dombe. Near the settlement of Ofra north of Jerusalem, about 50 settlers and their supporters rushed past Israeli police and sat cross-legged on the highway, blocking die route. Some settlers wrapped in prayer shawls held morning ser­ vices at the roadside. Settlers also burned tires at the Karme Tsur settlement north of Hebron, police said. “I’m here to show that this is a sad day,” said Natan El, •38, an engineer, sitting in the middle of the main northsouth highway through the West Bank. “We are in danger of losing our land, the land we have returned to after 2,000 years.” ' Tensions also boiled over in the West Bank town of Ramallah, where infighting broke out among Arafat’s sup­ porters. Members of the Palestinian leader’s political fac­ tion, Fatah, battled Palestinian security forces with rocks and bullets. One 16 year-old youth was shot in the head and later died in a Jerusalem hospital. The confrontation broke out after Palestinian intelli- Israeli border police forcibly remfcve Jewish settlers who sat down and blocked a main highway in the West Bank at the Jewish settlement of Ofra Sunday. Jewish settlers, angry over the Netanyahu’s agreement to turn over part of the West Bank to the Palestinians, blocked roads throughout the West Bank, with over 30 arrested by police. gence agents searched Fatah headquarters, looking for ille­ gal weapons. A crackdown on unlicensed arms is one of the provisions of the agreement. After meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo, Arafat said Sunday he hoped the agreement would be “accurately and faithfully implemented so that we can say that we have pushed forward the peace process and protected the peace of the courageous people.” In Israel, p o liticians across the board predicted Netanyahu would face political turmoil as a result of the agreement when he brings it before his right-wing Cabinet on Monday. Senator to hold hearings on C IA ’s new Middle East role B y J o seph S chuman A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — The Senate intelli­ gence com m ittee will hold hearings on the CIA’s mediating and monitoring role in th e M id d le E ast la n d -fo r-se c u rity accord to determine the cost of tracking Palestinian anti-terror efforts and whether American agents are at risk. Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., the com­ mittee’s chairman, said Sunday he is trou­ bled because the CIA, under the agree- ment, would play “a visible role.” “What is the role o f the CIA? Is it to enforce a policy? Is it to be an arbitrator? Is it to be bodyguards? I think n o t,” Shelby said on “Fox News Sunday.” “I think we have to look at this.” But Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said the agency is no stranger to providing onthe-ground intelligence support to diplomacy. “The CIA has played roles previously in term s o f m onitoring and verifying o th er ag reem ents ... in the re g io n ,” Albright said on CBS’s Face the Nation. She said the CIA has been fighting terror­ ism there since the 1996 anti-terrorism conference at Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. Under the U .S.-brokered agreem ent concluded Friday between Israel and the Palestinians, the CIA would keep track of Palestinian efforts to arrest and punish terrorists as a way of assuaging Israeli security concerns. The deal would create a three-party mediation system in which Palestinian and Israeli security officials could present disputes to a CIA arbiter. Isra e li Prim e M in iste r B enjam in Netanyahu said on CNN that the CIA would be there to ensure “that the things are done ... that terrorists do not come in and go into ... Palestinian jails and then leave by the proverbial revolving door.” The S en ate S elect C om m ittee on In te llig e n c e does not have pow er to directly change the Israeli-Palestinian agreement, though it has some authoriiy over U.S. intelligence spending. Chilean senators fight Pinochet's arrest; radiers support seizure Santiago U an q u in o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss Anti-Pinochet protesters hold up a puppet of the form er Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet in ” called “Party — i for f Justice,1 ' ‘ " i n Santiago, Chile, Sunday. Pinochet is under prison uniform during a rally arrest in a London hospital under the instigation of a Spanish magistrate seeking to extradite him on charges of genocide, terrorism and torture. By Mara D. B ellaby A ssociated P ress LONDON — A delegation of rightwing Chilean senators arrived Sunday to warn that the arrest of former Chilean dic­ tator A ugusto P inochet could destroy democracy in Chile and “seriously imperil” relations with Britain. O utside the London C linic, where Pinochet is under police guard, scuffles broke out when a visitor, reportedly Chilean Sen. Ignacio Perez Walker, left after seeing Pinochet and made taunting gestures toward protesters yelling for atrial. Several demonstrators climbed over bar­ riers but were blocked by police. Others were held back by fellow protesters. Police reported no arrests. “We have come to represent to the British authorities that as long as they keep their hands in Chilean affairs, they are seri­ ously damaging the process of transition in Chile,” said Carlos Bombal, a right-wing senator who arrived with six other senators seeking Pinochet’s release. Pinochet, 82, was arrested Oct. 16 on a warrant from a Spanish magistrate seeking to extradite him on charges of genocide, terrorism and torture during his 17-year rule. Thousands disappeared during his 1973-90 dictatorship, including some Spanish citizens. The C hilean governm ent has urged Britain to release Pinochet on humanitarian grounds, arguing he is entitled to diplomat­ ic immunity because he is a senator. Britain says he does not have immunity and the government cannot intervene. Meanwhile, Sunday in the Chilean capi­ tal, Santiago, about 5,000 anti-Pinochet demonstrators gathered peacefully in a park. On Saturday, a rally by more than 20,000 Pinochet supporters ended in scat­ tered clashes with police. In Stockholm, a group of Chilean immi­ grants who lost family members during Pinochet’s rule sought Sunday to have the former dictator charged with murder and kidnapping in Sweden. The Sw edish group A ssociation of R elatives o f D isappeared P olitical Prisoners filed three relatives’ complaints of murder and kidnapping. Opinion t. ,! !W e shouldn’t be told w h at w e already know | Poverty, abuse, neglect, early pregnancy and | juvenile delinquency. | These are ju st a few o f the problems that affect ‘ youth in our society and they are the biggest prob( lems that affect young people in Arizona. 1 On Sunday, a group o f about 200 people headed ( to the South Rim o f the Grand Canyon as part o f an j A rizona Town H all to talk about these problems. ) But their focus over the next three days w on’t be ( discussion o f how they can correct the problems. : In s te a d th e y w ill b e c o n s id e r in g “ W h o Is ! Responsible for A rizona’s Children?” And it’s about time. j F o r to o m any years, p e o p le h av e passed the ! buck when it com es to explaining reasons for high | statistics on problem s that affect our youths. I A s d iv o rce b ecam e m ore p re v a le n t an d tw o | w orking-parent households grew in num bers, we ( saw more and more kids left to fend for themselves, j In the ‘80s, latch-key kids increased at an alarming rate. In the ‘90s, our children are exposed to many things, including graphic depictions o f violence and sexuality, they were not exposed to 20 years ago. W ith each passing year w e hear o f more families w ho sit at or below the poverty level, some doing their best to correct the problem, others not really caring. W ith each passing year we hear reports o f parents taking their frustrations and hatred out on their children, leaving defenseless children scarred and troubled for life. A nd with each passing year w e see more and more people trying to blam e par­ ents fo r a child’s persona, regardless o f how the 1 child turns out. , A child may turn but to be impoverished, abused ( or neglected. A young teenager may become preg­ nant, join a gang o r end up in the prison system. A j child may even grow up with “no problems,” have a ] perfect childhood, get the best grades and ultimate- j ly become successful in life. Regardless how a child turns out, parents are not always to blam e — and j | they shouldn’t always be the ones to assume credit. There is more to a child’s outcome than the par- j ents. His o r h er friends, neighbors, com m unity, teachers, clergy, relatives, politicians, leaders and role models all have bearing on how he or she turns out. So why shouldn’t these sam e people be the ones to take responsibility, collectively, w hen a child is affected by society’s problems? H illary R odham C lin to n began p ro m o tin g a great idea a few years ago: “It takes a village to raise a child.” If we want the future o f our world to be a good one, j we should think about it. If we realize that today’s children are our future, we must believe i t And if we want to make a difference in just one person’s life — whether it be a spouse, a friend, a relative, a colleague or our own child — we must embrace it. We as a nation, as a state, as a community need to s ta rt a c c e p tin g re s p o n sib ility an d w o rk in g j | toward addressing the absence o f responsibility. Do we really need a Town Hall to tell us what j we already know? StatePressStaff Change in perception may affect grade R ecently I received a forwarded message on e-mail and I thought it profound enough to share with others. It was the story of a teacher who had started to enjoy flunking a little boy in her class. He was a poor student and did not seem to be grasping anything she was teaching and she could not get through to him. In her mind, she labeled him a bad student and whenever he would hand something in, she would be overly critical of it because he was a “bad student,” after all. Later in the year, she had an opportunity to look over the records of the students in her class. She was surprised to see that in the past, the little boy had been an excellent stu­ dent. Yet, his mother had become terminally ill and after she passed away, the boy began having more and more trouble with school. The teacher felt terrible and decided she wanted to encourage the little boy to do well in her class and help him to succeed. She started paying more attention to him and by the end of the year, die little boy who had once been a “bad student,” had become one of the best students in the class, I have no idea if this e-mail is a true story or not, but regardless, this type of scenario happens in real life,, in ele­ mentary schools, middle schools, high schools and univer­ sities all over the country — including ASU. Have you ever noticed in any of your classes that teach­ ers will rarely call on the students that they don’t perceive to be “good students?” I have seen this in my own classes time and time again. A teacher will- pass over calling on a student who they believe will answer a question incorrect­ ly. Often, instead, the teacher will call on one of the better students in the class — a student who will give the appro­ priate answer. When you think about it, what sense does this make? Who is learning anything this way? Students who don’t understand the material are not going to grasp it any easier by just hearing a Correct answer. Also, students will get dis­ couraged when they, are not called on by a teacher in class. I have had this experience myself and it certainly didn’t make me any more eager to, learn. I felt that the teacher rec­ ognized I wasn’t doing well in the subject and by ignoring me the majority of the time, she wasn’t giving me the opportunity to gain a better understanding of the material being taught. I think teachers often bypass the so-called “bad stuSÈ&£ -N ight Editor -Assistant Sports Editor Becky Bevins C hris Kahn ------ .—Magazine Editor -C ity Editor David W oodSII Jonathan Inge -A sst. Magazine Editor -Assistant C ity Editor Reporters • Michelle Craig ------- Opinion Editor C hristi Foist -----——-News Editor Brad Lang -Photo Editor Jerem y Hein -A ssistant Photo Editor Ed Odeven .. c__ ___ an.a.. : , »--- p o r t s ito r Andrea Jennifer Balsky is a senior studying journal­ ism and can be reached at andrea.balsky@ asu.edu. - « 4 * 3 V .> Percy Ednalino Jr., Editor Jodi Bafundo, Managing Editor Doug Flanagan Caryl-Sue Mlcalizio sî * dents” and by doing so, make the student’s class perfor­ mance even worse. I think a lot of “bad students” could improve their grades if they only received some encourage­ ment from the teacher. Once a student begins receiving' more encouragement and attention from a teacher in class, I am betting their performance in class will improve. They will see that the teacher wants them to learn and believes they Can learn. This week, I am asking all teachers to give more acknowledgment to that “bad” or neglected student in your class. By doing so, you may be helping that stu­ dent. Some students ju st have a more difficult time grasping certain subjects or they may be doing poorly in class due to extenuating circum stances. You ju st don’t know. I ask that you reach out and help, encour­ age and challenge this student to learn. Yes; I realize some students don’t deserve to pass a class .. the reason they are doing poorly is because they would rather be sunbathing or drinking beer than going to class, studying and doing homework. But, there is probably an equal number of students on this campus, doing badly in a class, who truly do want to learn and do well. All they may need is your encouragement and your help. Students if you feel you are being ignored in class by a teacher or you are not doing well in a class, I ask you this week to reach out to that teacher. Explain that you do want to do better and ask the teacher what you can do to achieve this. Or explain-to the teacher that you feel ignored by him Or her in class and you do want the chance to participate. There is still enough time in the semester to turn a failing grade into à passing one. Remember that teachers aren’t perfect and may not be aware that a student feels they are not getting what they should out of a class. You need to bring this to their atten­ tion, If they are good teachers, they will want you to learn and will do anything they can to help you out. A student may only do as well as a teacher perceives them to. do. I think more teachers need to start perceiving their classes as all “A” students ... students who have the desire and the ability to learn. The positive results of this might astound mem. Alicia Caldwell, Lida E. Kelly, Stephanie Paterik, JaysonPeters, Kim Prendergast, Haytey Ringle, Ganga Subramanian, Jessica Wolf, Angela Yeager. Scon D. Gillette, Stephanie D. Johnson, Amber Knuth, Nancy Kuo, C.C. McCandless, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff. 1502. W e d o n o t answ er Questions of a general nature. Cartoonists The State Press is theonly newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are n ot necessarilythose of the ASU administration, faculty, ftaff o r student body. —~ Brian Balchumas, C arrie L Behrens, Mike C urran, Brian Fairington, C arlos Ramirez, Melissa C arr. Production ——————— —— Sales Representatives Sports Reporters Brian Ary, Mike Giallanza. David G oodw in, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Shane Siren, Kathy W elsh. Copy Editors —-----— ----------- --------------- ------ Angelee King ScotrBracken, ChrisCariock, ClintCume, DavidMyers. M ario Lopez, Susan Schimmel. Photographers ----- — --------------------------- —- Mike C urrari; Soley Hartel, O feliaM adrid, Jerem y W eiss. Coltimpi^ts — ---- ------------------------ ---- Brian Ary, Andrea Jennifer Bahky, S&ottBennett, Ashlea Deahl, Ross Bde, — R o b e rt Deal, Keith G erchick, Alyson H urt, H eath er N ash, W ayne Nelson; Jennifer Swinford, Joanna W ike. l: Marketing Team ---------Classifieds —— — —— —- — Kate Desk), Amanda Green, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during th e academ ic year, e x c ep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atfhqpv C en ter, Room 2, Arizona State University, T em pp, Ariz., 85287- Student Media Phone N um bers---Information ' 965-7572 State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 O n the web http://www.statepress.com A « fo |lj/L . o / ’ .L Opinion wiÊ»ÊKÊËÊÊÈËÊiÈËÊimmÊKÈHÊÊKÊÊm m te^t< m !i3 m g »». On Monday, the Nevada Athletfc Commission slated 4 -1 to reinstate form ir^seavyweight champ f*1ike vfyson’s licenje. As yfcu fbay remembeffTysorfe license to T$tt in Nevada was yanke^l after he bi^Evaj^ler HplyfteW’s ear in a championship match at Caesar's (^alacejin LasjVegas* Do - / l— ..Ü WSOt - Affirmative Action is good This letter is a response to Jim Poorbaugn’s letter enti­ tled “Quantitative vs. Qualitative” (Oct. 20). He seems to believe that Affirmative Action only lowers standards to allow otherwise unqualified minorities to enter Arizona State. This could not be any farther from the truth. It may be true that minorities consistently score lower on standardized tests than whites, but think about that for a minute. If one group consistently scored lower than another, then a logical person can draw only one of two conclusions. One. the group scoring lower is inferior to the other, or two, the test is biased. The first describes a prejudiced ideol­ ogy, the second describes the current situation in America,. I would like to suggest to Poorbaugh (or others who share his views) that he research the economic and social situations and the discrimination against minority groups in America before he makes statements about Affirmative Action or the need for diversity. Arizona State has done so. That is why they celebrate their Affirmative Action program. Giovanni Tu rn er Senior Justice Studies “A ” good question At least a week or more ago a local fraternity used the “A" on A mountain for one of their Greek letters in an advertisement to all of campus and downtown Tempe. Isn't the University or the city of Tempe going to hold them responsible for cleaning this up? Shouldn't they take the responsibility upon themselves to clean it up? Kevin Hogg Senior Germ an Voice for students I am responding to an colum n w ritten by Rosie McSweeney, on Oct. 9. A group of students has been frus­ trated, like Rosie McSweeney, with the lack of informa­ tion provided by mainstream media outlets about alterna­ tive political views. So, we have decided to educate our­ selves about what choices exist for us. We’re the Political Education Coalition and exist to provide a voice for students interested in radical, minority and other under-represented politics. Democratic and Republican candidates, generally, gain widespread media coverage, while other candidates fail even to get their foot in the door. Traditional media outlets will not cover candidates in non-traditional political parties» whose lack of coverage is then reflected at the voting booth. Meanwhile, those who feel betrayed and cynical about our current political process, not knowing any alternatives, fail to get involved or even exercise their right to vote. The truth is that many media outlets that should serve to edu­ cate the electorate and stimulate political discourse, haven’t done so and have failed the people of the United States. This is where we come in. Anyone can join PEC. We have brought several speakers to ASU, representing a broad spectrum of political issues and ideologies. We’re here to help provide a forum for students’ voices that usu­ ally aren’t heard. This forum, like good journalism, strives to combat ignorance and stave off problems that ignorance spawns. As students, we know that knowledge is power and empowerment of the student community is our goal. An informed, politically-active student community will help revitalize the democratic process. If anyone is ever interested in contacting us, e-mail us at pec@asu.edu. M att Furlong Junior Religious Studies Football over parking unfair The signs went up a week or so ago, Warning ASU com­ muter students of “Outside Event Parking -— October 22,” but like most, I didn’t give it a second thought I park in Lot 59 anyway, so how much more inconvenient could it possibly be? Thursday, when I drove in circles looking for a spot I didn’t get angry. Even after I had to park out by the riveibed, already late for class, I didn’t harass the parking employee who was keeping watch over a sea of roped-off, empty spaces by the stadium. But when I saw the buses and motor homes and Ma and Pa Sun Devil hosting a barbecue in a viable parking spot I got a little upset. I was not die only one. Commuter students are often inconvenienced in this way. We pay to park in these lots, but we are always last priority. Not only should we get what we pay for, we deserve a little respect. We are dedicated students. We make this institution consistently look good while the teams are losing and die Greeks are binge drinking. The cold, hard facts are these: As a university, ASU’s first responsibility is to all its students. And while all students attend classes, all students do NOT attend football games. yjpufed the dofTfhissiop made the right deqstyfl? T o v o te , visit o u r w e b s ite a t h ttp ://w w w .s ta te p re s s .c o m . Mid-semester stress Yet each fall, we find it more difficult to park and attend classes in order to accommodate game-goers and alumni. This is more than just making an already chaotic park­ ing situation even worse. This is yet another example of ASU catering to the campus periphery and disrespecting its students in the process. ASU should care less about its sports fans and more about its students. Katrina Sew ell Senior Com m unication Upon arriving on campus Thursday morning, Oct. 22, many students who usually park in Lot 59 found their parking privileges had been revoked in favor of football ticket holders (who would not actually be on campus until Thursday afternoon). I, along with hundreds of other students, proceeded to create a major traffic jam and parking fiasco. When call­ ing the parking division to complain, the information offered was that it was the athletic department’s fault for scheduling the game at 3 p.m., forcing the parking divi­ sion to shut the lot at 8 a.m. Next I was told that signs were up all week in the lots that would be affected. This is essentially not true because the signs were only in the lots that would be closed and not in all the lots that would be affected. The lot 1 usually park in was not closed, but was full. Additionally I was told that the newspapers had printed information regarding the closed lots. Thank you, but one does not usually read the newspaper to determine if the usual parking will be available or not available on campus the next day. Nor do all of us have the football teams game schedule memorized. Some suggestions for the next time: Post closure notices on all the lots so those of us who don’t use the lots being closed will know that we are not going to be the only ones looking for our usual parking spaces. Post alternatives. If privileges are being revoked for the day, at least put up a sign indicating where parking is available that day. Open parking on the entire campus should be on a first come, first serve, basis for the day. Why should only the stu­ dents who park in the closed lots have to scramble for spaces. There were lots other than 59 that were half full, while many students scurried for parking trying to get to class on time. If students have tickets to the game, let them park in the “closed” lot. These students paid for tuition, parking and game tickets. They should be the first ones allowed into the lot for the game. This would leave more spaces open for the rest of us outside the closed lot. . Notify the students who have Lot 59 parking passes per­ sonally via mail, e-mail, notes on the windshield, whatever. We paid to park in the lot and deserve to be personally notified when we can’t park there on a specific day and should be given advice on other available parking areas. The students deserve more consideration than they received on Thursday morning. Arriving on campus for class is not the time to be informed that there is no parking available. w ill s o o n * b e o v e r • You would think that being a * . M rf'o n sjlp cc final-semester senior should be all [.iu„,niSt the motivation I need to succeed academically this fall. And 12 credits certainly is a more-than-manageable course load But right now all of that is irrelevant because it's happened to me again - as it does every semester I've hit die wall Right on cue, at this juncture, every semester, 1 hit the academic wall and simply can’t take it anymore Every class, every assignment and basically everything related to college life becomes almost unbearably ardu­ ous. I know I'm not the only one who feels this way, because I see many classmates trudging through their required work just as lethargically as I am This problem is certainly more prevalent in the fall than the spring. At this point last semester we’d just returned from our rejuvenating spring break. And that’s really how it should he. because spring break always arrives at the time when hard working students like us need it the most. Why can’t we have the same treatment in the fall? Sure, we get a few sporadic days off here and there and a mint-break for Thanksgiving Who needs that? Yes. it's nice to have a couple ot days to recover from the inevitable hinging on Ihanksgiving dinner, but umc-wisc it’s really not that much help to us Hunk about it. Sute, we’ll he loving those days olf next month, hut I’d gladly trade them in for a week of vacation right now The mere act of getting out of bed til the morning is fat tougher now than it was two months ago. Classes become more frustrating. Assignments are more difficult and more important, Which inherently j makes them more stressful. And I know it’s wrong, but j the attraction of skipping an occasional class looks I scmxI p ^ appealing I really don’t like to miss those all-important lectures, but a well-timed ditch at this ijuncture is sometimes just what the tired student needs.' But we will make it through this. We always do. Hopefully lime will fly and Thanksgiving break will be upon us soon. And after that, the semester really is almost over There will be a couple of stress-filled weeks leading up until final exams, but the pace always picks up and then the days run together quickly. The bottom line is this. Do whatever it takes to help you make it through. Cross the days off on your calen­ dar. Count the days remaining until your last exam Bag a class and sleep in some Monday morning. Simply, don't let the stresses of student life get you down. Really, the worst days are behind us. And I’ll just keep telling myself that until that last exam is done C .C . M cCandless is a senior studying broadcast­ ing and can be reached at ccm cc33@ aol.com . A n n A resco Senior Business inform ation System s Helping hand in translation While I find it admirable that the Theta Chi fraternity plans to be alcohol-free by the year 2001 (State Press, Oct. 23), I wish to point out an error in the “translation” of the fraternity’s name. Theta and Chi are merely letters in the Greek alphabet and signify nothing more in and of themselves. Perhaps the author meant to state that the letters stand for Greek words that mean “helping hand” (e.g. “therapeutes cheir”). D r. Lisa Rengo George Faculty A ssociate G reek and Latin All about politics My, how the times have changed ... When told to remove my hand-painted sign stating “Your dad lies Chelsea” from Sun Devil Stadium last week, I couldn’t help but think of the irony. Liberals in the 60s and 70s promoted political free speech on campus. Yet now that they hold political positions; it seems that such expression on campus is no longer allowed. What gives? The C. Spann (player) supporters should be thankful that there is an extra letter in his last name or they too might be escorted out of the stadium. All of this because two Stanford cheerleaders complained to Stadium management? What would have happened had my sign stated “John 3:16?” Jim Parsons A lu m n u s/C lasso fl994 Business E -m a il: shades@imap4.asu.edu Website: http://www.statepress.com Gripe Line: 965-6881 Fax: 965-8484 Mail: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University 15 Matthews Center Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 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 eli­ gible for publication. Please include your full name, ID number, dess standing, major (or affiliation with the University) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters 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. Mission reunites Crorikitè, Glehn I ' 1 I- { J e re m y W e is s o f t h e S ta te P re ss Walter Cronkite (above) and John Glenn were linked to history in 1962, when Cronkite broadcast Glenn’s ' orbit into space. Thirty-six years later, the two will be reunited on Thursday, when Glenn becomes theoldest person ever sent to space. . I . By iBauliMatthews - > ■ » * . « « Mr* . * -NASA; an Opportunityt© cash in tan Olenri’s statepress.com reputation, Glenn bristles at the notion and Thirty-six years ago CBS correspondent chastised the press for focusing so much on Walter Cronkite broadcast astronaut John him and not enough on the mission’s 80-plus Glenn Jr.’s historic flight into space. It was a experiments, particularly his experiments momentous occasion, America’s most trust- related to aging. ed journalist linking the world to one of the “We have 34 million Americans oyer 65 country’s greatest heroes. right now,” Glenn said. “That figure is supNow, in the tw ilight of their lives, posed to, according to demographers, go up Cronkite and Glenn are back where they to 100 million by 2050. The graying of started. nations is going on all over On Thursday, Glenn, ^ the world, now 77, will become the S F C N T m o r e “I just hope 1 can bring oldest man ever sent to - j& o w V V & lie V back very good informa" space. He will be a pay‘ , tjfe tion in this area so there load specialist, one of. SUjpfl- t i l © ^ won’t be any doubt about... seven astronauts who will B f|g |g g i' ’! con.t *nuec* experiments in board the space shuttle . this area.” Discovery for a nine-day . C ronkite, the veteran STS-95 mission aimed at, ^ ' reporter for whom ASU’s among other things, study^ > •"-•' kSi Walter Cronkite School of ing the physiological simi’ 1 Journalism and larities between the aging process and space Telecommunication, was named in 1984, flight. views the mission is an opportunity to rekinCronkite, 81, will co-anchor the event for die; interest in the space program. CNN, who wooed the broadcast legend “I think there is a whole generation out away from CBS where he remains under there of under 29ers who are hardly aw.are contract after 49 years with the company. we are in space,” Cronkite said during a “I asked CBS, since I’m still under con- recent conference call. “The public has tract therc.Jf they had any plans to cover the become blasé. Missions have become sucmission live,” Cronkite said. “They thought cessful and are scarcely covered anymore.” not and released me to do this with CNN.” Discovery is scheduled to launch from Somé have suggested the mission is noth- Florida’s Kennedy Space Center Thursday at ing more than a public relations boost for noon Arizona time. Discovery mission more than you-know-who By Marcia D unn A ssociated P ress CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — John Glenn and his geriatric experiments may be grabbing all the headlines, but the flight of space shuttle Discovery will feature all sorts of scientific stuff - r and six other people. The crew will test-fly a computer and other devices intended for the Hubble Space Telescope, and release a sun-gazing satellite that got hung up in orbit last year. Dozens of cockroaches also are flying, as well as two oyster toadfish. The countdown for all this and more begins Monday. “We've got 83 different research projects on board. We’ll be running them as a team, and I would like to see the whole team get that recognition.” said Glenn, the first and soon-to-be oldest American to orbit the Earth. The 77-year-old senator is bothered, even a little embarrassed, by the world’s attention focusing almost exclusively on him. “But 1 don’t know what to do about it,” he said, chuckling. “I’ve tried to disembody myself and stand back and look at this thing as to why all the interest this time, because this is almost sort of a tidal wave of interest.” ( About 3,(XX) journalists are expected for Thursday’s launch of what’s been dubbed “The John Glenn Flight.” The typical draw for a shuttle liftoff: 300. The six others on Discovery’s crew pilots, engineers and doctors in their 30s and 40s who come from three countries — are» happy to hand Glenn the spotlight. D avid J. Phillip o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss America’s first astronaut to orbit the Earth, Sen. John Gienn prepares for a training session Aug. 27,1998, at Johnson Space Center in Houston. At age 77, Glenn goes back into space O ct 29,1998, aboard the space shuttle Discovery. “Everybody understands,” said shuttle commander Curtis Brown Jr. “This is natural. It’s human nature because he’s such a hero. I know I haven’t done anything for anybody to remember my name.” Take away John Glenn and NASA still would have an “incredibly challenging” nineday mission, said the lead flight director, Phil Engelauf. “We couldn’t go do this mission without every single member on this flight.” Brown stressed. “There's too much to do.” As soon as they’re in orbit, the astronauts will turn on three instruments in Discovery’s cargo bay: a computer, data recorder and high-tech icebox to be installed on Hubble by spacewalking astronauts in 2000. NASA wants to expose the equipment to 345-mile-high cosmic rays to make sure they’ll still work when they’re attached to the telescope that high up. It’s risky one of the instruments might break aboard Discovery. But that’s preferable to sending something to Hubble that might conk out and cripple the prized telescope, Said Rud Moe, a NASA payload coordinator. “We don’t usually fly stuff in space to see if it’s good in space,” Moe said. “But this one is so critical that they’re doing exactly that just to really make sure.” Then .there’s NASA’s Spartan satellite, making its second shuttle flight in less than a year. Spartan was supposed to spend two days studying the sun last November in an orbit near the shuttle, but never got the chance — a series of mistakes by astronauts rendered the satellite useless. Two of the crew had to go out on a spacewalk to get it back. NASA promises that won’t happen again. The computer software for Spartan and the directions for its release from the shuttle have been improved. What’s more, a better-trained crew will be at the controls. Some other payloads aboard Discovery: a small Navy communication satellite to be set loose by the crew; ultraviolet telescopes to scan the solar system, miniature greenhouses, crystal-growing furnaces, and cell-culture kits. Spartan’s mission manager, Craig Tooley, welcomes any publicity spillover from Glenn’s presence. So does Russell Alderson, the chief cock­ roach handler at DuVal High School in Lanham, Md., which supplied Discovery with a boxful of baggy test subjects at three stages of development. The box, mind you, is sealed inside a container out in the cargo "bay. V «* “It’s automatic publicity,” said the savvy 17-year-old. Reporters keep asking, “Oh, you’re going up with John Glenn, how does that feel?” So how does it feel? *In a word: great. 18thANNUAL C Y C L E S A L E 4 DAYS ONLY! F rid a y , O c t o b e r 2 3 , 9 am to 9 p m S a tu rd a y , O c to b e r 2 4 , 9am S u n d a y , O c to b e r 2 5 , 11am to 5pm M o n d a y , O c to b e r 2 6 , 9am to 6pm to 8pm We have w hat you w ant ON SALE! Shop early - SAVE BIG! on All Bicycles, Parts, Clothing & Accessories! IA *** % % S A V E W IT H U S T H IS W E E K ! You'll find deep discounts In first quality brand-name clothing, accessories and bicycles. Come in and take advantage of our high-volume buying power. # Cm§4KP j 10% entlnenlal TO PEA K 3 ,£a/UJZA Come see and save on all: HARO • K2 • DYNO W H EELER • PR O FLEX RO SS • YETI* SUNLITE BALAN CE • TO R ELLI • MASI LECO LIN - to 9 0 % 4 DAYS ONLY! F rid a y , O c t o b e r 2 3 , 9am to 9 p m S a tu rd a y , O c to b e r 2 4 , 9am to (p m S u n d ay , O c to b e r 2 5 , 11am to 5 p m M o n d a y , O c to b e r 2 6 , 9am to 8 p m FOURDAYSTOSAVE! Storewide Savings onThousands of Items! www.tempebicycle.com Full list of sale Hems available at store during sale. No pre-sale, layaway, phone or mall orders. Sale prices apply only to stock on hand. TEMPE BICYCLE 330W. University (University & Farmer, 4 blocks West of Mill) 966-6896 - I H Financing Available • 90 Days Sam e a s C ash m Poll: teen voting concerns different from their parents B y Lidia E. Kelly S tate P ress When it comes to politics, teenagers think differently than their parents. According to a nationwide poll con­ ducted by Kids Voting USA, pupils con­ sidered “violence and crime” and “moral decay” as the top two reasons to vote in this year’s Nov, 3 election. In com parison, parents cited “moral decay” and “economy and jobs” as top issues, not even ranking “violence and crime” among their top reasons to vote, The poll, conducted Sept. 28-Oct. 2 on 1,386 pupils and 1,106 adults, primarily fo cu sed on o b tain in g o p in io n s o f teenagers and their parents or guardians; who p articipate in Kids V oting USA nationwide. C ynthia P. Dunne, com m unication director for Kids Voting USA, said the difference in priorities between teenagers and their parents is a result of the differ­ ent issues the groups face on daily basis. “Last year, we heard so much about shootings at schools,” she said. “That affected so many students. They believe they should do som ething to stand up against it.” Voting for people and propositions that help to prevent crime is one way of expressing th eir opposition to crim e, Dunne said. As parents face economic problems on a daily basis, the status of the economy is perceived as one of the top incentives to vote, she added. Tina Aiitilla, a volunteer director for Kids Voting Arizona, a branch of Kids Voting USA, said “moral decay” was brought up by the two groups mainly because o f the scan d als in v o lv in g President Clinton. “Both parents and their children are concerned about what has been happen­ ing at the White House,” A ntilla said. “They want to change it.” Kids Voting USA is a nonprofit orga­ nization that involves pupils from kinder­ garten through grade 12. It engages them with the Kids Voting USA Curriculum in the classroom, which focuses on transmit­ ting the message of the importance of voting and p rep arin g the pupils to become adult voters in the future. In addition, pupils are also exposed to a real voting experience by casting a bal­ lot at official polls Nov. 3, accompanied by an adult. Nearly one million students are expected to “vote” nationwide at offi­ cial voting sites this year, according to Kids Voting USA. More than 650,000 student ballots have been east through the Kids Voting Arizona program since its inception in the East Valley in 1988. According to research conducted by ASU journalism professor Bruce M errill, adult voter turnout was increased by 6 percent in 1996 directly because of the Kids Voting program. S3 T o d ay is super recruiting d ay! 10 a m -3 p m MU Arizona Ballroom The following is a list of em ployers who will be scheduling & conducting interviews in the MU. All m ajors are encouraged to com e by...and you don’t have to be registered with C areer Services to participate! AeroTek, Inc., Am erican M anagement System s, Am erican Woodmark Corp., Automatic Data Processing, C h arles Schw uab, Del Webb Sun City Grand, Derm a S c ie n c e s, In c., D uracell U SA , Electro-Test, E li Lilly & C o . Pharm aceuticals, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, First USA/Bank O ne, Fitness W est, Frito-Lay (sales), G E S Exposition Services, INROADS/Arizona Inc., Intel-Corporate Technical, John Hancock Financial Services, Jules& A sso c., Kiewet Construction Group, Inc. (accounting), Mervyn’s CA-Distribution Centers, Naval Surface W arefare Center, New Tim es-Classified, North Star Resource Group, O sca r M ayer Foods- Div. of Kraft Foods, Palm Harbor Hom es, Pinacor, Inc., Rincon, Shaw Inclustries-Contract S a le s, Sherwin W illiams, Target, The Presnell Group, Unum Life Insurance, W adell & Reed, W algreen’s , Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.-Distribution Centers R ayth eo n S y ste m s C o m p an y Inform ation S e s s io n W ed n esd ay, O cto b er 28 A S U M em orial Union, N avajo Room (Room 219) 6 :0 0p .m . - 8:00p .m . R efresh m en ts will be se rv e d TAKE TECHNOLOGYiTO Ü JU fff^ C E C S tü t. Whan something is too extrem e for words, it's to the Nth degree, And that's the level of technology you'll experience at Raytheon. Raytheon has form ed a new tech no log ical superpow er-:Raytheon System s Com pany, com posed of four m ajor technological giants: Raytheon Electronic System s, Raytheon E-S ystem s, Raytheon t l System s an d H ug hes A ircraft. The new Raytheon System s Com pany is driving technology to the lim it. And w e're looking for engineers who w ant to push the envelope. Break new ground. Make their mark. At Raytheon, you'll take technology-and your ca re e r-to the highest possible level. You'll take it to the N th. W e'll be visiting your cam pus Soon. Contact your career placem ent office now to schedule an interview, o r check out our website at www.rayiobs.com. If you a re unable to m eet with us, please send your resum e to: Raytheon Resume Processing Center, RO. Box 64024b, MS-201, D allas, IX 75266. We have many exciting opportunities available and we would like to talk to you. Internet: w w w .rayjobs.corn • E-m ail: resu m e @ rayjo b s.co m U.S. citizenship m ay be requ ired. We áre an eq u al opportunity em ployer. What MCAT course did people who got into medical school take? All O thers. I 79% C a ll to d a y to e n ro ll! at® n o * aval lt h e W . te s « ) Í ^ KAPLAN 1-800-MAP-TEST www.kaplan.com 1 1998 survey o f m etic a l school stu d en ts by Bruskin-GoWring research. For m ore details of th e Survey, ch eck o u t o ur w ebsite at ww w.kaptan.conV mcat. Sam ple: first-fourth y e a r stu d e n ts a t U S Schools w ho took a com m ercial test course. M ichael C u rra n o f t h e S ta te P re ss Mario Mendia holds a fresco he created from the scraps of paint that have fallen off the “A” on Hayden Bntte. Mendia, an art teacher at McKemy Junior High School, has created frescos as large as five feet high. Local artist makes frescos from ‘A ’ Mountain paint By Kim P rendergast State P ress Mario M endia creates artw ork from seem ingly useless scraps of paint left behind on “A” Mountain. The 50-year-old art teacher for McKemy Junior High School uses the abandoned shards of paint and makes frescos from them some as high as five feet. “If I found a smudge or smear of paint that was made accidentally, I would see what it reminded me of and create some­ thing,” Mendia said. “It’s taking an acci­ dental shape and converting it into some­ thing figurative.” To create his frescos, Mendia grinds, cuts and adds ceramic relief to the paint. “It’s just find the natural splotches on the rock and find the natural spirit of it and go with it,” Mendia said. “I just take what’s already up there and reinterpret it into my own perception of art.” The art teacher said the frescos take from a few hours to a few days to create. Most of the artwork is of imaginary characters that go along with a series of stories he has writ­ ten about a made-up lost civilization that lived where Sun Devil Stadium is now. Mendia said the pieces of paint thrown around on the mountain reminded him of frescos he saw in Italy . He said he was inspired by M ichelangelo, who painted im ages in Mannerist style, and Jackson Pollock, who is credited with creating “action-painting.” Pollock patterned his paintings after Hopi Indian sand painting, in which the process of painting is the subject of the work of art and is destroyed afterwards. Mendia said he, too, was influenced by the idea that the ritual of painting is art and people who go up to paint A Mountain are part of “ritualistic art making.” Mendia grew up in Calexico, Calif., near the M exican border, and saw a lot of Byzantine imagery. “Art was always part of life in Mexican culture,” Mendia said. “Art and life are intertwined and are not separate.” T h is J o b R o c k s ! At First USA, you’ll enjoy a friendly, casual environm ent where it’s actually fun to succeed. And from the m om ent you join us, you’ll have the advantages of outstanding earning incentives, flexible full­ time and part-tim e sc h e t^ e sC a n d a serious corporate com m itm ent to prom oting from within. Don’t wait another m tm d f to start enjoying your job. This job rocks! C u s to m R e r S u p p o r t e p r e s e n t a t iv e s Full & Part-Tim e To get a jump start on your career, call us TOLL FREE: I Like working with people? Find out how you can be a success contacting custom ers, answering questions and negotiating paym ent solutions. Keeping custom ers satisfied is as im portant as pro­ viding outstanding service. So an outgoing personal­ ity and excellent com m unication skills are im portant. You'll also need to be professional, a good listener and problem-solver, and able to take the initiative. 1-877-CARD111 C om puter literacy is a plus. I I FIR ST U S A . SONE. Company First USA is an equalopportunity employer anil we support diversity in the workforce m /f/d/v. Visit us at Career Services’ Super Day October 26th, 10 am - 3 pm, Memorial Onion, 2nd flnnr, Ariznna Ruom ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A student reported that she lost three keys belonging to ASU. • Three students reported a room broken into at Nelson Fine Arts Center and their wallets taken. • A employee reported a door at the Business Administration building damaged. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested on an outstanding warrant. He posted bond and was released. • A student was arrested for possession of marijuana at M anzanita Hall, cited and released. • A employee reported a set of golf clubs taken from Karsten Golf Course. • A woman not affiliated with ASU reported her vehicle damaged while it was parked in Structure 5. • • Several students were contacted at Palo Verde Main in reference to a dispute over a leather jacket. • Pqliee reported six bicycles stolen from vari­ ous campus locations. All were secured with locks. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Sunday: • Two men were arrested early Wednesday morning on charges of aggravated assault, dis­ orderly conduct, providing false information to a police officer and threatening and intimi­ dating. The men were arrested after an investi­ gation revealed they were involved in physical dispute about the payment for a pizza at Gus’ Pizza, 933 E. University Drive. While arguing with the employees, one the men reportedly went to a late model Acura and got a tire iron. When he went back into the store, he alleged­ ly threatened to kill the employees. The sec­ ond man went to a Ford Mustang and got a semi-automatic handgun and began pointing it at the employees from the front of the store. According to reports, the two men fled the scene in the Acura and were later located by police at 1655 E. University Drive. The car, tire iron and handgun were not found Both men were booked into the Tempe City Jail. » A 24-year-old Mesa mart was arrested Tuesday on charges of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Officers arrested the man in the parking lot of the Mobil gas station, 802 S. Mill Ave., after ah investigation revealed he had given a bottle of “Colt .45” malt liquor to an 18-yearold man. He reportedly admitted to officers that he bought the liquor, and was arrested. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Alicia A. Caldwell • ¥ < r~ V “ . J S o fa s law involving drugs and alcohol. In 1997 he was arrested during a drinking binge for roughing up his girlfriend, lacking a man in the stomach and trying to take an officer's gun during his arrest. He got a 90-day jail sentence and three years of probation. Now 29, Slater says he’s made peace with himself by discovering who he really is. “I think I lacked a certain identity of my own and I spent a lot of time living up to a projected image that people would place on me,” Slater said. “I lost myself.” N C o c k ta il & E n d T a b le s V y from $29.99 from $99.99 Beds R e c lin e r s from $99.99 from $99.99 19” C o lo r T e le v is io n s 5 -P ie c e D in e tte s from $99.99 V People NEW YORK (AP) — Christian Slater can admit he’s been a wildman offscreen, now that he knows who he is. '‘Nobody gets through life unscathed,” Slater says in Sunday’s Daily News. “I’ve been in the public eye for the past 20 years, so my life has been slightly more exposed, and dealing with some of that has been dif­ ficult, especially when you don’t have an identity or foundation of your own.” Slater, currently starring on Broadway in Side Man, has had several run-ins with the A from $99.99 . ^ ------ T71 G et som e realfu rn itu re ! Those cinder blocks, m ilk crates, w ire spool tables and hand-m e-dow n sofas a ren 't cu ttin g it. A t the Aaron R ents Clearance C enter you can g et previously leased fu rn itu re , appliances, electronics and bedding in great condition—a t unheard o f prices! You save because we rented It first. | 0 A aron | BIIHBWIt X u fllF Fur 10% Off A n y Clearance Center Purchase ' May not be used with any other coupon. A a r o n Ss& F u r n itu r ? I I 2077 East University Dr. Tempe, AZ 85281 (502)966-9499 Monday-Friday 9 to 6 Saturday 9 to 5 l o i M A N A G E M E N T / S A L E S T R A IN IN G w ith p o ssib ilitie s The S herw in -W illiam s C om p an y is actively see k in g b u s in e s s g ra d u a te s w ith so m e w ork ex p e rien ce an d lots of d esire for g ro w th to begin an ex citing c a re e r a s a M a n a g e m e n t T ra in e e with th e la rg e s t an d fa s te s t-g ro w in g division of o u r T h e n ex t cou rse. T h e m o st im p o rta n t cou rse. A n d A G reat T each er T o B oot! organization. s graduation approaches, you have some serious choices to make-choices which can determine which direction your life will take. Make the smart choice by choosing Enterprise to give you the foundation for a successful career in business. A Our business philosophy has always been centered on providing solid skills training in all areas of business management to eager and-motivated college graduates, allowing you to run your branch the way you want to. You see, our business grows if you do, and we realize that your inherent enthusiasm and sensibilities coupled with real life business training can spell true career satisfaction for you. And, a quick career trade can mean excellent financial reward. The potential exists to earn $35-55K within 3 years and more as you progress, As you can probably guess, this is no easy course...it takes hard work, dedication to task, and the foresight to see your goal. If you believe this is the path you'd like to take, bring your resume to bur booth at the ASU Super Day, Monday, Oct. 26th at the MU 2nd floor, from 10am to 3pm. If unable to attend, please call Erin at (602) 804-0700 ext. 557 or fax your resume to (602) 9546811. Visit our website at http://www.crac.com ■ pH m E n t e r p r is e rent-a-car A n eq u a l opportunity em ployer. S ta rt w ith a paid m a n a g e m e n t train in g p ro g ra m w h ere you wiii dev elo p a n d e n h a n c e y o u r b u s in e s s skills in m arketing, re ta il/co m m ercial/w h o lesale s a le s , sta ff d ev e lo p m e n t and o th e r challen g in g a r e a s . W ork w ithin an a tm o s p h e re of p ro v e n a n d p ractical b u s in e s s s u c c e s s w ith o th e rs w ho are fo cu sed on a future of achievem ent. For over 130 years, we have built o u r b u s in e s s on quality. We are seek in g th e le a d e rs of to m o rro w w h o will co n tin u e o u r p h ilo so p h y of s u c c e s s . If yo u a re a re s u lts -o rie n te d leader, w e offer th e tan g ib le re w a rd s; in c e n tiv e s, b en efits an d a d v a n c e m e n t o p p o rtu n itie s th a t w ill ch a lle n g e yo u . To find o u t m ore a b o u t S herw in-W illiam s visit u s at th e C areer S ervices S u p er Day Oct. 26th, or sen d /fax y o u r resu m e to: The Sherw in-W illiam s Com pany, Attn: Rick Ouellette, 5601 S. Broadway Blvd,, S uite 3 2 0 , L ittleton, Co 8 0 1 2 1 ; fa x (3 0 3 ) 7 9 4 -4 1 8 0 . Equal O pportunity Employer, M/F/D/V. IH M Tucson resident sues neighbor over fireplace use TUCSON (AP) — C hristine von Obenauer says neighbor Marjorie Elliott uses her fireplace nearly year-round, creat­ ing smoke so thick it keeps von Obenauer inside and even kills birds. Elliott says she only uses her fireplace when it gets chilly and the only dead birds sh e’s seen have been killed by von Obenauer’s cat. Now their dispute is in court, with von Obenauer suing Elliott and asking a judge to order her neighbor to stop building fires in her fireplace when the outside tempera­ ture is above 55 degrees. Judge Kenneth Lee heard testimony on the burning ban issue last month but has not ruled on von Obenauer’s request. “I’m sorry it had to come to this,” von Obenauer said. “I waited two years to avoid it coming to this. What if because o f youf neighbor’s fireplace you couldn’t open your window or go into your yard?” E lliott, a bookkeeper, said, “I think everyone thinks it’s a silly little thing, but it is not a silly little thing.” Even neighbors are split, with some say­ ing they only see a little smoke coming out of E lliott’s chim ney during the winter months and others claiming to have seen smoke pouring out even during the summer. Von Obenauer said problems with her neighbor began shortly after Juñe 17, 1996 — the day she bought her two-bedroom hoUse in an eastern Tucson neighborhood. Von Obenauer said Elliott used her fire­ place throughout that summer and often left the fire unattended while she was at work. Von Obenauer alleged she found about four dead birds a month in her back yard, and said the smoke kept her from using her new hammock or relaxing outside. Von Obenauer, who will only give her age as over 40, said she wrote Elliott a letter in October 1996 to get her to stop using her fireplace so much. “The burning escalated,” She said. “I became a prisoner in my own home.” E lliott, 63, said she had never even talked to her new neighbor until von Obenauer sent her the registered letter com­ plaining about the smoke. “She never really tried to make contact with me,” Elliott said. “She would put signs in her window that would say, ‘You’re smoking me out.’” Elliott admits that she uses the fireplace “almost all the time” during the winter and regularly in the late fall and early spring. But she doesn’t use it year-round, she said. Elliott said she finds dead birds in her D e l W eb b C o rp o ra tio n Del Webb the leader is active adult community development will be on campus Monday, October 26,1998 toiy&uary, 1999 to recruit for Construction and Civil Engineering graduates. We are seeking to fill' a variety of positions in our Construction Operations Department and our Land Develops»»! D&fjatmmtat our Sun City Grand location. Please mail, fax, or e-mail yoor resume or stop by the Del Webb table at the ASU Super Recruiting Day, if you are interested in any of ii§ |o w in g positions: C O N ST R U C T IO N M U D S U P E R IN T E N D E N T Responsible for co g n a tio n of new h o # construction according to Webb standards, including key out process, Also ensures quality assurance and customer satisfaction is met. BS degree in Qaadimction Engm eeitg with a minimum of one year related experience. Prepares subcontractor contracts, suppleifents and purchase orders for labor and material. Prepares ind administers construction documentation, i.e. general data/feature specifications, exhM T and quality |4d ard s. Administers bid documentation, subcontractor base, architectural and change order costs. BS degree Construction, minimum 1 year related experience, ¡fefifient in Lotus, ability to read blueprints. g ^ m m N B M m ß /P m l^ M ä N A G E R - l R e sp o S e fo r o v ^ p it and adraln«td|on of residential and infrastructure construction projects. Experienqe in ia iM i^ ^ p e Ä r o c e sse s including engineering management, plan review, scheduling, budget generatici, contract administration, bidding and negotiation. BS Construction Management/Civil Engineering or related experience. Extensive computer background including Lotus/Excel required for Project Manager Position. W ffim v c n o N h a n a g e m e n t /l a n d d e w j o p m e n t a s s o c m it E ^ a g e i ^ m o n M m d s - o n te d g j j j i ^ program focusing both field superintendent tasks and contract administrator tasks. Land developmendposition also focuses on project management job skills. Following completion, associie must be available for transfer, including relocation within the company. BS degree in Construction aJgem en t/C ivil Engineering. Proficient in computer skills, 1 p r related work experience in construction industry For more information on Del Webb Corporation, please refer to www.delwebb.com. We offer excellen tcom p an yb eaefits and com petitive salary. EOE M /F/D/V. Please send resum e as fallow s: H om an Resources Dept. 13950 Meeker Bldv. P.0. Box 5670, Sun City West, AZ 85375-5670. Fax 602-546-5058. E-Mail swenderj@ delwebb.com . own yard that appear to have been killed by von Obenauer’s cat. Von Obenauer said the dead birds she finds show no signs of hav­ ing been killed by a cat. Elliott admits that sometimes the logs in her fireplace are simmering when she goes to work, but said she never leaves a blaze unattended. Neighbors offer conflicting stories on die fireplace use. Joan Hiller, who lives behind Elliott, said she has a direct view of Elliott’s chim­ ney and never sees smoke coming put dur­ ing the summertime. But Allen Bauer, who lives across the street from Elliott, said it’s quite common for her to use her fireplace dining summer. “It doesn’t flow over across the street,” he said. “A couple of times I’ve smelled it because of the wind,” saves sem en from m olestation by Her grandfather PHOENIX (AP) — A girl who complained to her unbelieving father that her grandfather was molesting her got her grandfather arrested by saving a sample of his semen, police said. Authorities arrested Donald Precise, 59, on Saturday and charged him with three counts of sexual abuse and two Counts of sexual abuse of a minor. His 12-year-old granddaughter had told her father that her grandfather was molesting her, but the father apparent­ ly didn’t believe her, said Phoenix Police spokesman Sgt. Mike Torres. The father, Todd Precise, 35; left the girl alone with her grandfather on Saturday while she was visiting for the weekend, Torres said. The grandfather molested her Saturday, Torres said, and the girl decided to make sure he was caught. “She took her own evidence,” Torres said. “When the grandfather ejaculated, she took a sample into a bottle. She gave us the evidence we needed to put him in jail for that pending prosecution.” The girl told police she knew that semen could be used as evidence in sexual abuse cases from Watching the tele­ vision police drama NYPD Blue, Torres Said. Police also arrested Todd Procise Saturday, but released him while authorities investigate whether to charge him with failing to protect his daughter from her grandfather, Torres said. “She said it was going on since she was 8 years old, and her dad wouldn’t do anything about it,” Torres said. The girl was back in her mother’s custody Sunday, Torres said. State Press A tM » S m f UMwtrtty ‘You sh o u ld have stayed in bed. ” State Press Horoscopes In the classified section page23. Planning to STREAK the MO? Call the State Press photogra­ phers at 965-6526. Remember to plan ahead! rC A M P U S -| LC o r n er J 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S t r e e t Deli 6 0 9 S . Mill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c r o s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n Everyday Low Price *3.99 2 4 e x p o su re DOUBLE PRINTS se e sto re for details T l T' i "'T Color C-41 P ro ce ss [ B e st P rice in Town . ■ S U E S Imprisonment of immigrant felons prompts strong feelings PHOENIX (AP) — Guillermo Sanchez-Regalado wasn’t “We’re saying just coming into the country is as serious just sent back to Mexico when he was nabbed with other as manslaughter,” he said. illegal immigrants this summer. “It doesn’t make sense,” Navidad said. “We’re saying, Sanchez, 30, was sentenced Thursday to two years in ‘We don’t want you here, but we’re going to spend $60,000 federal prison for being a felon who had crossed the border to keep you here for two years.’” illegally. Sanchez served a prior prison term in the United Border Patrol spokesman Rob Daniels in Tucson said the States for selling $80 worth of cocaine. prospect of prison time “is part of the mix” of factors con­ Sanchez is part of a rapidly growing group of illegal tributing to a sharp rise in violent confrontations between immigrants being targeted for prosecution and prison time border.agents and illegal immigrants. on the U.S. side of the border: Those who come back here The 159 assaults in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 after being convicted of a serious crime and deported. more than doubled the previous year’s tally, Daniels saidAt the current rate, more than 1,000 mostly Mexican ille­ Another factor in the increase is that the beefed-up Border gal immigrants with criminal histories will be sentenced to Patrol is encountering more illegal immigrants smuggling prison by year’s end in Arizona. The cost to taxpayers: drags. $30,000 per inmate per year. Congress in 1996 stiffened the penalties for criminal Prosecutors say the crackdown is a way to lock up a dan­ deportees who return to the United States and broadened the gerous group of criminals. definition of crimes that make a deportee subject to the law. “These aren’t immigrants coming here to Work,” said Lawmakers also funded thousands of new Border Patrol Roger Dokken, an assistant U.S. attorney in Phoenix, positions to step up enforcement, and a new fingerprint­ “They’re coming here to commit crimes. checking system helps authorities quickly determine if a But defense lawyers call the policy a racist overreaction particular immigrant has been deported before. to a problem that isn’t as bad as Congress apparently thinks Prosecutor Elizabeth Overholt, who handles dozens of it is. And a Border Patrol spokesman chalks up some of the the cases each year, says the defendants get what they increase in border violence to illegal immigrants afraid of deserve. the stiffer prison penalties if they’re caught in the United “ They tend to have long and varied criminal histories,’; States. she said. Two of her recent cases included a Culiacan man “This is a racist policy,” public defender Alex Navidad with convictions for assault and battery, car theft and rob­ said, claiming prosecutors rush defendants into plea agree­ bery; and a 37-year-old with convictions on drug and sexual ments that deny them judicial procedures such as grand jury indecency charges. Another defendant had been apprehend­ review and the right to appeal. ed 53 times by police or immigration authorities, Overholt said. Because of the severity of the new program’s sentences, and its cost to taxpayers, prosecutor Dokken said a publiceducation campaign in Mexico may be in order. “For the cost of incarcerating one person, we could prob­ ably ran ads down there so thatthese folks don’t come back here and get surprised and do time in jail,” he said. Meanwhile, Phoenix public defender Jeanette Alvarado said her clients are stunned to learn about the prison time that awaits them after being caught at the border. “ They’re shocked,” said Alvarado, the attorney for Sanchez. “They don’t believe us. They say, T didn’t hurt anyone. I didn’t do anything. I just crossed the border.’” Not all the prosecutions begin with capture by the Border Patrol. Federal Officials also check Maricopa County jail inmates to determine whether they are here illegally; illegal immigrants are screened for criminal histories and many are referred to prosecutors. John Sands, the top federal public defender in Phoenix, said the law has pitfalls for prosecutors. He told of a case involving a pregnant woman whom prosecutors wanted to send to prison for two years. “That meant the baby would have become a U.S. citizen autom atically,” Sands said. And because authorities couldn’t make contact with her relatives in Mexico, Sands said, tile baby would have been put up for adoption. When the case came to court, Sands said, U.S. District Judge Stephen McNamee decided to sentence the woman to the time she’d already served. Thousands gather for groundbreaking of Oklahoma City memorial By P atrick C asey A ssociated P ress OKLAHOMA CITY - T housands Cagle to the site of the Oklahoma City bombing Sunday to break ground for a memorial to the 168 people who died, with Vice President Al Gore digging the first scoop of dirt. “The people who died here were victims of one of the crudest visitations of evil this nation has ever seen,” Gore said. “But we offer them today not pity but honor, for as much as any soldier who ever fought in any war, they paid the price of our free­ dom.” A fter speeches by G orè, A ttorney General Janet Reno and other officials, Gore took a shiny shovel and dug it into the ground where the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building once stood. He handed the shovel to young Clint Seidl, who was in the second grade when his mother died in the 1995 bombing. She worked for the Secret Service, and Clint said he wants to do the same. Gore said several agents wanted to talk with Clint after the ceremony. Gore told those who ever wanted to demean the work of federal workers to “come here and be silent and remember.” One after another, people grasped the shovel Gore passed to them and, dressed in their Sunday best, took a turn tossing a chunk of soil into a pile. “Being down here always takes us back,” said Diane Léonard, whose husband died in the April 19, 1995 bombing that also left 500 injured. The $24.1 m illion m em orial will include a reflecting pool, an interactive muséum and 168 stone chairs built atop glass basés, one for each of the people killed. A portion of the chain-link fence that surrounds the bomb site will be kept as part o f the m em orial, The fence has This winter, m ove one ste p closer to graduation. P re fe rre d a t ASU become a shrine, with visitors leaving mementos. The fence holds; “the real story of our democracy. This is how we feel,” Gore said. While many survivors and relatives had gone into the ceremony with mixed feel­ ings, some said it was time to move ahead. “A lot of us want to get along with our lives and forget the tragedy but not the people inside. That is what we want to remember,” said Greg Smith. Timothy McVeigh was sentenced to death for the bombing. Terry Nichols was sentenced to life in prison as a bombing conspirator. Tell us what you think about stulf at ASU and you could win a bag chocked full of most excellent goodies worth 100s of dollars. Grab a frien d & d o it n ow . Dec. 29 through Jan. 15 E a r n th r e e c r e d its in th r e e w e e k s! Class schedules available at Registrar Sites, Ritter B-132 or visit the Winter Sessio n web site at www.asu.edu/x0d/wntr/ssn.html R eg ister n ow through D ec. 24 at R itter B-132 o r call 965-9797 with Visa o r M asterCard. Registration not available through InTouch. m i A r izo n a State U n iv er sity E x ten d ed C am pu s Here’s how it works: Via computer, just type in the answers and send it to ads@asu.edu. If you're doing it on paper, just number it from 1 to 31 & begin brain­ storming. If you can’t think of an answer, skip to the next one. Submit entry in the box outside room 35 of Matthews Center basement or fax to 965-4706. Your answers will be printed in the November 12 ASU Choice issue of the State Press. Entry deadline is Wed., Nov. 4 at noon. All entries will be placed in a random drawing where four people will win bags full of great, valuable stuff. Good luck! 1. Best place to sleep on campus“ 2. Best place to watch tv on campus_______ - ■ ' 3. Favorite ASU football player: ■ ■ ■ ■ 4. Best time to go to the SR C: - ___ _____ ______■ -■■ ' ■' 5. Best place on campus for romance: •- ' ' ■ ■ ~ 6. Favorite place to study on campus: 7 Favorite elected official of A B A S H • 8. Professor most likely to have tattoo9. Easiest class at ASU: -■■ ■ ' .. • - '. 10.Hardest class at ASU: . ■ ■, 11. Best body part to pierce: . \ 12. Best line to get cash from the parents:— 13. Best way to drive your roommate crazy: 14. Favorite ASU event:__ _____ 15. Favorite ASU employee: ' 16. Favorite ASU building: ■ • 17. Favorite pièce of art on campus: 18. Best pick' up line you’ve heard: _ 19. Best pick up line you’ve used: _ 20. Best excuse to get an override: _ 21. Best place to work on campus: _ 22. Boxers or hriafe? 23- What band would you like to; have play at ASU? • 24. Your dream car is: .. ________ _____ 25. Best residence hall on cam pus:. 26. Class most likely to be closed: . 27. Best bathroom on cam pus:, 28. Friendliest retail store on campus:. 29. Favorite professor/instructor?._____ 30. Best time to paint the “A": 31. Best cafeteria on campus: , Sate Pi r o to r Monday, O ctober 26, 1998 — 888« «— MM I Sex, lies and m urder visit a M idwestern town By Larry Mc S hane and Molly W ood says. summer. A ssociated P ress Brandi Glynn, 19, a teen mother who dated Catenacci One of the alleged attackers, his hands covered in BELLEVUE, Neb. ;- f- On the last night of his life, Scott when her marriage began to disintegrate, was sexually Catenacci’s blood, hugged and kissed his accused co-con­ Catenacci left his job at the Krispy Kreme doughnut shop, abused by her father, state records Say. Nicci Wetherell faced spirator, Mrs. Glynn, after the murder, she said. climbed into his car and drove through the darkness toward a pending assault charge. Daniel Jones, 16, had a criminal “He said, T love you,’ and I said, T love you,’” Mrs. the Iowa border. record dating back to age 10. Glynn later said in a jail-house TV interview, He was heading to meet some friends in a park, intent on Those three, along with high school dropouts Patrick Burden commandeered his slain friend’s ¡blue 1987 selling his laptop computer. Those friends, authorities say, Burden, 16, and 19-year-old James Hargett, were ordered Chevrolet Celebrity and drove into Omaha, authorities say. were waiting to murder him. held without bail for the murder. Brandi’s estranged hus­ Police stopped the car; once Catenacci’s body turned up, One week earlier, Catenacci and three of those friends had band, C hristopher Glynn, -■ ; ■■ : ; v Thomas says, attention experimented with partner-swapping Sex -r- “basically a allegedly knew of the plot but focused instantly on his group orgy,” one later recalled. There was a problem: One of did not alert authorities; his bail friends, the two girls involved, 18-year-old Nicci Wetherell, had was set at $ 1 million, and the £ £ He said, 7 love yo u / and I said, M rs. Glynn, in her spumed Catenacci. state took custody o f the phone call to the local TV 'I love you,' » • The 19-year-old became angry and allegedly roughed her Glynns’ son. station, said the killers car­ B ran d i G ly n n , a 19-year-old * * up. Wetherell and four friends spent the next week planning B urden’s attorney, wellried four knives. Thomas, a payback. On the night of Sept. 29, police believe, they exact­ known local défense law yer teen m o th er, describ ing her 25-year law enforcement ed it. p o st-m u rd e r e m b ra ce w ith James Martin Davis, condemns veteran, said the brutality of Catenacci, a burly 6-foot-1-inch, 250 pounder, was sur­ the police version of the slaying one of the alleged attackers, in the killing left him stunned. prised by knife-wielding attackers beneath the two-lane as “presented in Jerry Springer a jail-house T V interview . “We have never had this Bellevue Bridge. In the dim glow of the span’s sparse red, terms ‘rough sex,’ ‘a group > type of homicide,” he says. white and green warning lights, he fought desperately for his encounter.’” “You like to think of kids as normal, law-abiding citizens.’’ life. Against the unassuming backdrop of Bellevue, those The teen murder suspects already appear to be angling for Catenacci’s body, dumped in a tree-lined ditch on the out­ terms seem all thè more unlikely. a deal to testify against one another. Some have acknowl­ skirts of town, was discovered early the next morning by a Named for its scenic view of the Missouri River, Bellevue edged being at the murder scene, but none has admitted par­ man collecting recyclable cans. was a fur post established in 1822 to trade with the local ticipating. Within 16 hours, Wetherell and four friends — two of tribes. The First Presbyterian Church, erected in 1854, still Mrs. Glynn said she was Sitting in a car when the stabbing them juveniles charged as adults were arrested for killing stands in its Olde Towne section. occurred, and Wetherell said she has no memory of the inci­ their sometime friend and lover. The town’s population, 1,200 before World War II, dent. Burden claimed to have only met the Catenacci crew a None of the suspects, ages 16 to 19; has expressed soared to its current 40,000 when the Offutt Air Force Base month before the slaying. remorse, the Sarpy County sheriff says; all five could face opened. “He was present,” Davis says of his client, Burden. “But the death penalty if convicted in this tale that begins like a It has maintained a small-town feel, though. Mayor Inez he played no part in any premeditation or planning.” letter to Penthouse and fin: : Boyd arrived in 1968 and still The sobering mutation of its children into killers dominat­ ; ishes like a Stephen King H considers herself an outsider. It’s ed talk in town, although some, like the head of the 144-yearnovel. a town where Friday night foot­ old Presbyterian church, would rather not discuss it with out­ • B ellevue, with its It's like, 'Damn! This doesn't ball is a major social event, com­ siders. adjoining Air Force base, plete with a performance by the But a message board at the nearby Bellevue Christian happen here.' This is a quiet has suffered its share of Bellevue East Chieftains band. Center offered a clear message that combined old-time reli­ recent atrocities — a 1996 It’s where Catenacci, gion with Nebraska’s other passion — big-time college foot­ type of to w n .... They sound like drive-by killing, the 1994 Hargett, Jones and Wetherell ball. a bad bunch. B i murder of a 7-Eleven clerk, went to high school. But they “All Time Top Ten,” the sign read. “No. 7 - - You Shall the 1983 abduction and shunned thè school’s organized Not Murder.” Bob W illiam s, a retired A ir murder of two children by a One week after Scott Catenacci’s body was found, the activities; in their yearbook, Fo rce officer who settled in serviceman. seniors Catenacci and Wetherell moming sun reflected off the Missouri River into Haworth Bellevue in 1985 But this homicide felt each merit just a Single mention. Park. It was eerily quiet, with the wind rustling a few tree different. In her senior photo, Wetherell is smiling like a starlet in a limbs and the river rolling' slowly past. This was not the work of outsiders. This was homegrown Hollywood publicity shot. It contrasts starkly with the wan, Thp ravine where Scott Catenacci died is a nondescript kids turning on one of their own — Catenacci literally grew sad-eyed mug shot issued by the Sarpy County sheriff after stretch of Nebraska parkland. Just a few feet away stands a up on Main Street, less than a mile from the park where he her arrest. humble warning that a town’s young are not necessarily its died. The Tuesday night of Catenacci’s death was a typical future. “It’s like, ‘Damn! This doesn’t happen here,”’ said Bob weeknight in town: A Chorus Line was playing at the A small wooden stake was driven into the ground; Williams, a retired Air Force officer who settled here in Bellevue Little Theater, and local librarians prepared to cele­ scrawled on it with a black felt-tip pen was “SCOTT” and a 1985. “This is a quiet type of town.... They sound like a bad brate ‘Teen Read Week.” crudely drawn heart. Alongside it stood a simple plastic bunch.” Typical turned terrible once Catenacci pulled his car flower pinwheel, its petals a bright green. Catenacci and his crowd were certainly not among beneath the bridge linking Nebraska and Iowa, lured by a The wind blew. The petals spun madly. And Scott Bellevue’s best and brightest. One mother grounded her promise of $400 for his laptop computer. His killers set upon Catenacci’s alleged killers, the children of Bellevue, waited daughter just for allowing thè clique into their home this past the overmatched teen like buzzards on carrion, the sheriff in their jail cells. a DIRT BAC Cornerstone Securities Corporation P i r t b a g s a r e o u r s p e c ia lty . B rin g i t o n ! • Same day service! In by 9o u t by 5 • F lu ff & fold $1.80/lb within 2 days • 40% discount w ith ASU ID » B usiness sh irts $1.00 Give us a try coupon 40% OFF ENTIRE PRY CLEANING BILL Show your ASU ID for discount. 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Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate ■*“ Tuesday, October 27 • 7:30-9:30 pm On the Starlight Terrace...go to the 2nd floor of the MU (north end) & go through the Maricopa Room to the terrace B R IN G Y O U R F R IE N D S ! 968-6139 C E N T E O N B i o - S e r v i c e s , Inc. M u ait» 1 8 ^ years erf ag e, poeintwo a 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 «Tempe and proof erf locN addro o sA Social Security ntentoer. S IN G Y O U R H E A R T O U T ! • it’s free • great way to take a break from studying • live DJ! « free food and plenty of Pepsi L Q u e stio n s? C a ll MUAB 965-6822 Vending machine leader introduces restaurant brand food Charles Nicholas, a spokesman for Burger King Corp. in B y S kip W ollenberg A ssociated P ress Miami, echoed those concerns: “From a quality standpoint, NEW Y O R K — Had a sandw ich from a vending our product wouldn’t be best served through a vending machine lately? Didn’t think so. But with food and bever­ machine.” age vending sales estimated at more than $22 billion last But Canteen’s Gagliardi said his company has been year, someone must be stopping by for a bite. working on introducing restaurant brands to its food kiosks Canteen Vending Services, the vending industry leader, for about two years, and is sure it can deliver quality food. is trying to create a tastier experience and improve the Its brand partners say they’re confident of Canteen’s industry’s image by stocking nationally known restaurant ability. brands in its fresh food machines. “They are the masters of this segment of the business,” It has struck deals to stock Nathan’s hot dogs, Blimpie’s said Jerry Sbarro, a vice president and member of the sandwiches, Hardee’s biscuits and burgers and Red Baron founding family of the Italian restaurant chain Sbarro Inc. It pizza along with its own private-label brands of sandwich­ is still deciding whether it will supply its pasta, salads, pizza or something else for the Canteen machines. es. Some items are designed to be eaten as is from the Canteen, a North C arolina-based unit of B ritain’s refrigerated machines, while others will have to be heated in a nearby microwave oven. Anthony Gagliardi, president of Canteen, called it the most ambitious effort to date by any vending machine oper­ < 1 The consum er perception o f ator to offer restaurant brands in food kiosks. vending machine products is “ There is a clear consumer desire for brands in vending, poor at best. I'd be looking twice but there has never been a focus on brands by the vending operators,” he said in a recent interview. at this if I were a brand mar­ Gagliardi figures the restaurant brands will boost busi­ keter. t i ness for Canteen and improve consumer perceptions of food sold through vending machines in the process. Jon K ram er, president of the In tests over the past year in North C arolina and m a rk e tin g co n su lta n c y J. California, he said, vending machine sales rose 20 percent Brown/LM C Group when restaurant brands were offered. Officials for the brands say vending machines give them Compass Group, certainly has some strengths. a new way to distribute products, reach new customers and It has been in the business for 70 years and has 150,(XX) boost brand awareness. Some plan to include coupons with food and beverage vending machines in the United States. their vending food to get people into their stores. It operates eight kitchens nationwide where it makes its But marketing experts say there are huge risks in entrust­ own food for vending, and stands ready to make food to ing a revered fresh food brand to a vending machine opera­ specifications of its new partners. It employs more than 3,100 people to service the machines and has state-of-thetor. : " :V; “The consumer perception of vending machine products art refrigeration systems to keep the food fresh. is poor at best,” said Jon Kramer, president of the market­ Most of Canteen’s food kiosks are in work places, cam­ ing consultancy J. Brown/LMG Group. “I ’d be looking puses or medical facilities where people may not have the twice at this if I were a brand marketer.” time or the inclination to go elsewhere for a quick meal. Indeed, spokespeople for the three big fast-food chains Among its clients are IBM, Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson, — McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s — said they C hrysler, the U niversity o f M ichigan and K aiser have no plans to sell via vending machines. Permanente hospitals. Denny Lynch, a spokesman for the Dublin, Ohio-based This isn’t the first time that a nationally recognized Wendy’s chain, said selling its hamburgers, chicken sand­ restaurant brand food has been sold via vending machines. wiches or pitas via a vending machine “doesn’t seem to be White Castle System Inc., the Columbus, Ohio-based a compatible idea since we like to serve freshly made prod­ restaurant chain, has been selling microwavable versions of ucts.” its distinctive square-shaped burgers via vending machines for five years and sales have been growing. “It’s another way of getting our product to people across the country who can’t get to our restaurants,” said Vickie Steinbrook, sales and marlrating manager for frozen foods at the White Castle Distributing division. She declined to say what percentage of the privately held White Castle sales are made via vending machines through its non-exclusive vending deals. But she said White Castle is pleased with the product quality and vending operators’ diligence at “staying within the recommended guidelines” on making sure the products in the machines are fresh. Under Canteen’s exclusive multi-year deals with restau­ rant brands, the brand owners can supply the products themselves or have Canteen’s kitchens make them to speci­ fications. Canteen delivers the food to its refrigerated vend­ ing machines and replaces unsold items as often as every day. The food is often developed specifically for sale via vending machine and is not exactly like that sold in restau­ rants. Canteen and Nathan’s, for example, developed a hot dog that would be heated in a microwave oven rather than grilled at a Nathan’s restaurant. The hot dog bun was refor­ mulated so it would be neither too hard nor too soft after being microwaved. “Obviously the best place to get our hot dog is in our stores,” said Joseph Adams, director of business develop­ ment for Nathan’s Famous, which has 200 stores and sells through 800 other outlets in 28 states. But he said the vending machine frank tastes “very, very close” to the restaurant version. “People will definitely know it is a Nathan’s hot dog,” he said. Blimpie International Inc., which sells submarine sand­ wiches through 2,000 outlets across the country, developed smaller versions using a different kind of bread for the vending machines. The dressing and produce like tomatoes are packaged separately for the consumer to combine. “If you receive something from a vending machine that far exceeds your expectations, you will have a happy cus­ tomer,” said David L. Siegel, chief operating officer for Blimpie. But marketing consultant Kramer said that’s a risky bet that could end up damaging a brand reputation. “These brands spend multimillions of dollars communi­ cating a quality equity image to consumers — fresh, good and fast,” he said. “How this product is going to travel in a vending machine is a huge challenge.” W ell stilI burns in Louisiana, delaying retrieval of bodies BRYCELAND, La. (AP) — A natural gas well that exploded and killed six workers burned through the day Sunday, preventing authorities from retrieving the todies of most of the victims. Emergency crews were preparing to enter the fiery, twisted wreckage after cooling it with water and clearing a path to the bodies of five of the victims, state police spokesman Chris Johnson said. The body of the sixth worker was removed hours after die blast The explosion occurred Saturday after­ noon in Bienville Parish, about 45 miles east of Shreveport, as 13 workers were preparing the new well to begin pumping natural gas. On Sunday, flames still shot 100 feet or more into the air as steam billowed over the site. Authorities said there was no threat of the fire spreading to nearby woods. State authorities won’t investigate the cause until the bodies are retrieved and the blaze is put out, Johnson said. Extinguishing the fire could take days, said Bruce Connery, spokesman for Sonat Exploration Co., which owns the well. “Our first priority is to retrieve the bodies, then we’ll kill the well,” he said. “But that has to be done safely.” What’ll show you have class better than a pai A S U ’s a web site you’d like 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 and a brief explanation of how you developed your site to Paul Matthews at Pm atth@im ap3.asu.edu. We’ll provide a link to your web page our web site and let view ers decide the winners. F o r m ore inform ation ca ll Paul M atthew s at 727-6941 Ask for it at your or call 965-1243 for Pleasantville pleases public in first week B y ic h a e l F leem an A s s o c ia t e d M P ress LOS ANGELES — Audiences sought hope at the box office as two life-affirming films, Pleasantville and Life is Beautiful, drew big crowds while the bleaker Beloved tumbled in its second week, according to industry estimates Sunday. Two other films. Soldier and Apt Pupil, opened to luke­ warm business behind the resilient holdovers Practical Magic, Antz and Bride o f Chucky. Pleasantville, the story of two 1990s teen-agers who give a black-and-white TV town a colorful and hopeful splash of reality, collected $9 million on 1,636 screens for a $5,501 -pertheater average, the highest among the wide-release films. The movie exceeded the expectations of its own studio. “It was difficult to market. It wasn’t explainable in a couple of seconds like our other films,” said Mitch Goldman, president of marketing and distribution from New Line. Pleasantville managed to take the top spot from the witch flick Practical Magic, which brought in an estimated $8.8 million. Antz also remained strong after a month in release, bringing in $8.2 million for third place. Bride o f Chucky lost more than 40 percent of its audience in the second week but still collected $6.7 million — a respectable gross for a horror film — to finish fourth. Soldier, starring Kurt Russell and Jason Scott Lee. opened with $6.3 million for fifth place, one of two new movies that did lukewarm business. The other, Apt Pupil, with Ian McKellen as an old man whose genocidal Nazi past is discovered by a teen-ager, had $3.6 million in ticket sales for ninth place. The fall surprise Rush Hour chugged along with $5.7 million for sixth place, beating Beloved, which suffered among the weekend’s biggest box office disappointments. Life is Beautiful, a hit on the festival circuit and the dar­ ling of critics, collected $120,000 in just six theaters for a huge $20,000-per-location average. Starring and directed by Ita ly ’s Roberto B enigni, L ife is B eautiful is a comedy/drama set against the Holocaust. - : Father e; ^ tim • C h a rlie R iedel o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss v n .- Joe Trembley checks the time on one of four clock faces on top of the Thomas County Courthouse in Colby, Kan., Friday. Trembley, who has been maintaining the clocks since 1975, turps the clocks back one hour for the change to fall standard time. For most of the country the change occurred officially at 2 a.m., local time on Sunday. 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All of our teachers offer a dynamic presentation and have scored in the 95th percentile or higher on the MCAT. sta rts C all Frank G ucciardo Simply the BEST MEXICAN FOOD in the Valley! ...Try us and see why. Kids Menu Available with over 4000 pages of review texts eftd practice passages, you can rest assured that you are receiving the most comprehensive MCAT materials on the market. Best of all, you won't have to use an inconvenient tape library; we let you take it all home with you. G & weigh 170-250lbs Compensated $ 4 2 5 fo ra 10 d ay in-patient stay. A G G R E S S IV E E X P E R IE N C E D A T T O R N E Y S S P E C IA L IS T S A V A IL A B L E - M /C & V IS A P H IL L IP S & A S S O C I A T E S L A W O F F I C E S . P h o e n ix /M e s a "Why I love ASU " ESSAYCONTEST Love ASU? Then write an essay and tell us why. If our judges like your essay, you’ll win a $200 gift certificate to use at the ASU Bookstore! Grab your keyboard and enter! Entries are due by noon on Nov. 4. E-mail your entry to ads@ asu.edu or submit on disk or typed to room 35 of Matthews Center and include name & phone. Winning entry will be published in the 2nd annual State Press ASU Choice issue on November 12. Good luck! m . TheFu nnies . . ■ M l / O ut of C ontrol Ï 2«, i m S an s Press fa r B y M ike C urran M T T H Ç ÈM B Ò U H E V rÌH ò Sme: H T ÏÏ7 } S nacks y half DecayiT, sri-F ii n o t t h è " s i x x ^ s P ecrw e y^W€N I met THi*s WC^K Bigger than Huge B y C a r r ie L B eh ren s Werewolves can only be killed by a silver bullet. B y B rian B alch u m as Winy» e r o-f 1 r+foe r-a.ce by -«.r-e.-çV- j] ■+he T o r+ o ri> e l/ Serling U. B y C a rlo s Ra m irez 1C B y J im W o d ark THftT'S THE OHE IM OrOlNtr TO THE WOSPlTftu m.ftHEH; C.HECXVP TOPftf. \ 'H 3UST WftVlMfr H t y ORftcei-PA LOHftT'S eoKONCr? C h ick en -stick B ug F a ce O J É E L E THEM UOOK \MS IDE nJA I í O j iu .: S O M E k V W lttt. Q ü t ln m lT I g . 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By S am G anczaruk State P ress The 14th annual Sunkist Kids/ASU International Open at Wells Fargo Arena was full of impressive wrestling and incredible intensity. ASU’s most impressive wrestler was Eric. “ The Great” Larkin, who finished third in the 58-kilogram (127.75 pounds) division. Larkin first: defeated Richard Gant and then had to face ex-ASU wrestler Danny Felix, who is fourth on the Olympic ladder. Currently, Felix is fourth in line to compete at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. “1 didn’t know what to expect until 1 got out there,” Larkin said. Larkin wrestled Felix very cautiously ; until he felt he had a opening. He wanted to make sure that Felix didn’t get a hold of his legs.. ' '• " “I kept him off my legs,” Larkin said after the match. “I didn’t want him to get under me.; Larkin defeated Felix before facing 1991 World Champion Jesus Wilson. Wilson frus­ trated Larkin, but Larkin still wrestled a decent match. Larkin was defeated 9-5. “I felt I could have done better,” he said. “I should have been smarter with my shots. I didn’t even know who I was wrestling. They (Casey Strand and coach Lee Roy Smith) didn’t tell me until after the match who he was.” Park places 6th H ouse breaks jaw , out 4-6 w eeks at LPGA event B y C u n t C urrie S ta te P ress ASU sophom ore Grace Park tied for sixth place last weekend in th e S am sung W orld Championship of Women’s Golf in Lady Lake. Fla. Park was the only amateur in the LPGA event and- finished at 2-under par. It was Park’s final] round o f 66, tied for a tourna­ m ent low. that evened her up with Liselotte Neumann in a tie for sixth. The to urnam ent featured a com petitive final round between Juli Inkster and Annika Sorenstam. Inkster pulled away in the final three holes to win by three strokes at 13-under. Park was invited because she is the defending U.S. Am ateur Open champion. She was also the first women’s golfer since 1938 to sweep all three major amateur events oyer the summer to give her that crown. Su n D e v ils Intercollegiate fin ish 13th at S ta n fo rd The ASU wom en’s golf team finished in 13th place last weekend at the Stanford Intercollegiate in Palo Alto, C alif., shooting 930, or 54 strokes over par. Tui Selvaratnam was ASU’s top finisher at 7over par, tying her in 19th place. Selvaratnam was in 15th p la c e on S a tu rd a y , b u t sh o t a 76 on Sunday, Other ASU finishers were Lisa M eredith, tied for 55th place at 16-over, Keri Cornelius, tied for 66th place at 19-over, and Molly Cooper, tied for 81st place at 25-over. UofA won the tournament at 9-over. Rounding out the top 10 were Stanford, Washington, Indiana, Pepperdine, San Jose State, USC, Oregon, UCLA and Oregon State. Sun Devil Jody Niemann, who was in 34th place after Friday’s tw o rounds, exited the tournament Saturday after being bothered by shoulder soreness. By N ick PiECóRo State P ress After suffering a broken jaw on Thursday night, ASU junior guard Eddie House spent the weekend at home rest­ ing instead of practicing with the team, During a drill, teammate D’Angelo Jones’ elbow caught House in the chin while taking a charge. House, a two-year starter who averaged 11.3 points per game last season, will have his jaw wired shut for four to six weeks. The am ount of tim e that he will miss is unknown, but he’s expected to resume light practice in about a week. “Hopefully Eddie will be back before long because (he) was playing awfully well,” head coach Rob Evans said. “He was playing as good as anybody on our basketball team when he went down, I know he’s a tough kid, and with that being said, we expect him to be back as soon as he’s capable of being back.” ASU will also: be without forward Mike Batiste for the first eight games of the season due to academic ineligibili­ ty, so senior Bobby Lazor is now the only returning starter expected to play in the Nov. 13th season opener at home against San Jose State. “We are really going to miss him,” junior guard Jason Patton said of House. “We need him.” Patton, who averaged 6.1 points per game last season, and junior college transfer Derrick Davis have been filling in for House in practice. The 6-foot-1 House, a native of Union City, Calif., is now on a liquid diet and, according to Evans, is trying to intake as many fluids as possible to avoid losing muscle mass. “I don’t really worry about him getting out of shape because Eddie is in pretty good condition,” Evans said. “But the thing that I worry about is him losing weight” Evans is even more disappointed with House’s departure because o f how well he had been playing in practice. Transfers Alton Mason, a sophomore out of Lincoln., Neb., Awvee Storey, from the University of Illinois, and Lohnnie Tapé have also had a strong first week o f practice. “Lohnnie Tapé has been a real pleasant surprise,” Evans said. “He’s getting a lot more physical and a little bit tougher.” Evans also likes die play of freshman Chad Prewitt “I’ve really been impressed with Chad Prewitt. Chad Prewitt is a guy that has really worked hard, and is getting better,” Evans said. “He can bang with any of them. He’s a real tough kid and he’s a pretty skilled guy for a guy his size.” Notes •Freshman Kenny Crandall got his SAT results Friday and unfortunately didn’t attain the score he needed. He Jerem y H e in o f the State P re ss ASU junior shooting guard Eddie House, shown in a game against Delaware State last year, will be out of action for four to six weeks. His jaw was broken during Thursday’s practice. took the ACT Saturday and will get die results in early November. Because of Crandall’s high school grade point average, he must get a certain seme on either his SAT or ACT in order to be academically eligible to play. Crandall has continued attending practices, just standing off to die side watching and shooting alone. “We can’t ask him to come,” Evans said. “I’ve never asked him to come, which (makes it) really nice that... he comes over here on his own.” •The ASU basketball team will hold walk-on tryouts at 6:30 p.m. Oct, 28 at Wells Fargo Arena. Walk-ons must be full-time ASU students. Those interested should go to the basketball office, located on the fifth floor of the ICA building, to pick up an eligibility form. For more informa­ tion, call 965-3261. *> Wrestling Larkin won his next match and advanced to the bronze medal match against Duane Martin. Martin was a tough competitor, but Larkin was equal to thé task. Laikin pinned Martin at 1:21 to win the bronze medal. “I thought it was going to be a little clos­ er,” Laikin said, “but when I stepped on the mat, I knew I was going to dominate the match.” Tony Quinones, Larkin’s teammate, was happy to see that Larkin’s extra practice is paying off. He also said he was impressed by Larkin’s wrestling at the collegiate level. “Some of the younger guys, the 16 fresh­ man that came in, we all had them do little extras," Quinones said, “and the older guys are going to have to take notice that it makes a difference.” Smith was also impressed by Larkin’s per­ formance. He is very excited that Larkin will be able to help the team. “(Larkin) did a outstanding job," Smith said. “It is going to be exciting to coach (him) and watch (him) compete.” Sun Devil Matt Azevedo was almost as solid. He finished fourth in the 54-kilogram (117 pounds) division, losing to Sheldon Thomas in the bronze medal match. “Matt’s performance is equally impressive as Larkin’s,” Quiones said. “His last match was against a former NCAA champ. He had (a) controversial call (made on him), but it still was impressive.” Azevedo was happy with his performance, N but still wants to improve. He would have liked to have won the bronze, but he was sat­ isfied. “My goal for die tournament was to come in and wrestle well,” Azevedo said, “and if I wrestled well, I would place. And I did.” For Steve “Spider” Blackford and Glenn Pero, the tournament was a learning experi­ ence. Blackford posted a 1-2 record. “The tournament went real bad. It didn’t go the way I wanted it to go,” Blackford said. “I broke down mentally. I need to work on that. I need to get back and reevaluate what I need to do right in practice on Monday.” Blackford said. Ex-ASU wrestlers and brothers Steve and Dan St. John wresded extremely well at the tournament. Steve St. John finished second, winning 63-kilogram (138.75 pounds) silver medal, losing to Bill Zadick 5-0. Dan St. John won the gold at 85-kilogram s (187.25 pounds). The tournament was beneficial to all the wresders, according to Smith. “They did a great job,” he said. “At this level of competition, you must be very selfmotivated to pursue and that is what you have to do to be a Olympic athlete.” Note •Three-tim e NCAA champion Joe Williams, of the Hawkeye Wresding Club, was named as the outstanding wresder for freestyle competition. United scorched by Firë, 2-0 ¿r PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — The expan­ sion Chicago Fire ended D.C. United’s twoyear reign as Major League Soccer’s only champion with a 2-0 victory Sunday in the MLS Cup. In the process, coach Bob Bradley finally won a game against his longtime friend and former boss, Bruce Arena. Jerzy Podbrozny and Diego Gutierrez scored goals 16 minutes apart in the first half and goalkeeper Zach Thornton and the Fire defense did the rest before a crowd of 51,350 at the Rose Bowl on a warm, sunny day. "• ' Bradley’s long association with Arena includes 1996 and 1997, when he was Arena’s assistant as D.C. United won the new league’s first two championship games. Arena, who already owned an NCAA tour­ nam ent win over his pal, guided D.C. United to two regular-season victories over Bradley’s Fire this year, by scores of 3-1 and 4-1. Arena is widely regarded as the top can­ didate for the vacant U.S. national team job. Thornton had eight saves as the Fire shackled United’s high-powered offense, including league MVP Marco Etcheverry and strikers Jaim e M oreno and Roy Lassiter. D.C. outshot the Fire 22-10 and held an 8-4 edge in shots on goal, including 6-0 in the second half. o t h in g t a lk s l ik e C a l l w e d o to pl a c e 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 A SU to ! a n a d DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jalfe ACROSS 1 — spumante 5 Strikebreaker 9 Dutch earthenware 14 “Moonstruck” star 15. Dorothy’s doggie • 16 Lyons bye-bye 17 Home run king 19 Dork 20 NY time 21 Plays 23 Pot builder 24 Singer Billy 25 Farm ing; Abbr. 27 Clods 29 Grasshoppers' kin 34 Anne of “Return to Paradise” 35 Beavers' project 36 Juanita's mom 37 O ffice memo abbr. 38 “Chances —” 39 MGM's symbol 40 Vapor 42 C ar finish 43 Investor’s purchase 44 Peevish 46 Motif 47 Accom plished, 48 Priceless 49 Computer user’s choices 52 Kind of agent 55 Jam aican m usic 58 Suspect's defense 60 “Slum s of Beverly Hills” dad 62 Plácido or Luciano 63 Lemon’s coat 64 Merit 65 Play segment 66 Hoosegow 67 Alaskan island 8 — fide 9 Pop 10 "Tiny Alice” playwright 11 Mortgage 12 Tootsies 13 Boob — 18 Love to pieces 22 Took a chair 24 Bird artist 26 Sweatshop? 27 M s. Midler 28 Eight m usicians 29 Jew eler’s unit 30 V isa rival 31 Vernacular 32 Beehive member 33 Mail 34 Lid fastener 35 Daybreak 41 Nero’s 1051 43 Greek letter 45 Com m ercials 46 In vogue 48 Old Blue Eyes 49 Wrestling pads 50 51 53 54 55 56 57 5 * à■21 1■m24 27 37 1 2 3 4 6 7 18 20 40 25 29 51 58 62 65 12 13 31 32 33 55 56 57 36 38 39 43 45 50 11 26 30 35 46 47 49 10 42 41 44 9 1 “■ 23 28 34 POW N Stomach — Roe producer Tepee Bother Rubbernecks 6 Reef component 7 Particle 8 14 17 59 Anger 61 Stephen of T h e Crying Gam e” Pt. of the utility bill Cubs or Tigers W yatt of the W est Muse of history Old card game Spock’s captain T h e King and I" lady 48 ■ ■ JI 52 59 53 «4 60 63 66 61 1 64 67 By N orm a S teinberg © 1998 Los Angeles Times Syndicate Home o f the 'Killer" Calzone LUNCHSPECIAL 11AM-2PM BUY 1 SLICE & A DRINK, GET ANOTHER SLICE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE DINNERSPECIAL 5PM-7PM “KILLER CALZONE” 14 oz. soda or draft, & homemade italian ice FREE! *5.35 894-MAMA! ! October 2 7 8 2 8 Sahdaro Residence Hall Spin - 9pm (Seek ZuhhcI Sxpcrienceis 45 minutes) 10/26/98 Huskies storm past ASU soccer squad,.2-1 B y S c o t t B racken S tate P ress On Sunday, cloudy weather rolled into Tempe that left the Sun Devil soccer team in a twilight zone, allowing themselves a 2-1 loss to the Washington Huskies. “Our forwards didn’t show up to play today. That was the difference in the whole game,” ASU head coach Terri Patraw said. “I don’t think Washington played a great game, but they cared more than we did.” At the conclusion of yet another broken up National Anthem, the rain slowly began to còme down. Moments later, it began to pour. In the middle of the 14th minute, Tullock put a one-onone move on the Washington goalie for an unassisted goal off the left post. Tullock’s goal makes her ASU’s all-time goal scorer (12). The rain then stopped, and so did ASU’s goals. In the 32nd minute, Husky Casey Dickerson assisted Tami Bennett on a head-in goal. With 9:20 left on the clock, Husky midfielder Erin Bailey got an unassisted goal past ASU goalie Erin Reinke to win the game 2-1. Both coaches felt a few factors were missing. “The biggest difference was that on any given day, Jennifer Peterson and Stacey Tullock can kill you and today they didn’t,” Gallimore said. “They’re phenomenal players that have taken this program to another level and coach Patraw has done a great job.” Patraw added, “We relied too much on Stacey Tullock to pull something off. It needs to be a constant commit­ ment from everybody everyday or we’re going to lose.” On Friday, ASU clawed the Washington State Cougars 2- 1. The weekend split with the Washington schools puts ASU’s hopes of a tournament birth on thin ice, but still within reach. “I know there are a lo t o f gam es left to p lay ,” Washington head coach Leslie Gallimore said, “but I think Arizona State’s still going to be in thè thick of it with their Jerem y. H ein o f t h e S ta te P re ss ASU junior forward Sarah Blaska fights for position in Sunday’s 2-1 loss to visiting Washington. remaining schedule.” On Friday, the Sun Devils looked sharp, outshooting Washington State by an overwhelming 28-5. Despite this, ASU found itself behind in the fifth minute, when Cougar Megan Donovan kicked in a goal off a Beth Childs pass. . However, the early goal didn’t set ASU back. “We’ve been scored on first before,” ASU freshman forward Kristina Dawson said. “But we always come back.” Teammate Jennifer Peterson said, “It didn’t set us back at all. It motivated us. After that, we went out and domi­ nated the game.” Freshman midfielder Stacey Tullock added, “I don’t think wc started out hard. That first goal they got was kind of a wake-up call. We came out tough after that.” ASU came back strong with two goals from Tullock. In the 36th minute, Tullock took a pass from Jill Rivard in the middle of a rugby scrum in front of the Cougar goal and found the back of the net, blasting the ball past three defenders. In the second half, after several attempts from Dawson, Rivard, Kim Wagner, Peterson, Tullock and Karine Inoue, the Sun Devils once again made it happen. In the 60th minute, Peterson fired a shot that deflected to Jaclyn Clark, leaving her an open net. Cougar m idfielder Lindsay Millspaugh illegally stopped the shot with her hands. As a result, Millspaugh was ejected for the obvious hand-ball and Tullock easily knocked in the free kick to take a 2-1 lead. With the goal, Tullock moved ahead of Cougar Deka DeWitt into the top spot on the Pac-10 goal­ scoring list. “It’s very exciting,” Tullock said upon hearing the news. “I never expected to be in this position. It’s awe­ some.” Clark summed up the 2-1 win over Washington State by simply stating a win’s a win, “I just think it’s great we won,” she said, “Whether it was by five or by one, it doesn’t matter.” Inoue said the victory is a huge boost to the team’s tour­ nament chances. “This helps us a lot,” she said. ”We gotta win these games. We can’t lose anymore. No more losses allowed.” Volleyball squad splits weekend matches with Cal, Stanford By D avid M yers ■St a t e P ress The ASU w om en’s Volleyball team once again had an up-and-down weekend, splitting its away matches with Stanford and Cal. The Sun Devils (8-It), 5-6) ended the weekend on a high note as they came back from a tw o-gam e d e fic it to b ea t the Golden Bears 7-15, 11-15, 16-14, 15-5, 15-11 Sunday afternoon. Freshm an o u tsid e h itte r Robyn Mattingly led ASU with 17 kills, 17 digs and four service aces. Freshman Jamie Coughlin also chipped in 12 kills. The G olden Bears received a solid effort from Candace McNamee, who had 19 kills. The young Bears (6-14, 2-9) have been going through similar growing pains as the Sun Devils. The team was so close to the victory but just came up short. “Our skill level has been like a roller— coaster ride,” Cal interim head coach Lee Mes said. “We are very good in some games, but winning two games doesn’t win a match.” On F riday night, the Sun D evils dropped their fourth straight match, losing to the Cardinal 7-15, 15-3, 15-2, 15-4 at Maples Pavilion. Stanford has beaten the Sun Devils 10 straight times dating back to 1993. It marked the 41st straight home win for the sixth-ranked Cardinal (16-2, 10-0), dating back to the beginning of the 1994 season. The Sun Devils were led by Amanda B urbridge, w ith 18 k ills and Jolynn F aatulu, who dished out 45 assists. Mattingly, getting her first start of the sea­ son, also had 11 kills. S tanford was led by A ll-A m erican Kerri Walsh, who had 18 kills and three service aces, and Sara Sandrick, who had 11 kills. M istakes, once again, w ere the big problem for the Sun Devils. The team had nine service errors and numerous hitting errors, which led to the ASU defeat. ASU comes home this weekend to take on Oregon State Friday night at 7 p.m. and Invitation to apply for your State Press S tate P r ess E d it o r s h ip The ASU Student Media Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State P ress editor­ ship for the Spring Semester 1999. Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State P ress; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; -must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. ‘ Applicants must also: submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form-the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State P ress or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State P ress or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State P ress office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Monday, November 9,1997. Director, Student Media . Matthews Center, Room 131 Oregon Sunday morning at 11. Hockey team loses 2 to Iowa State The ASU hockey team ended up on the short end of the stick last weekend. The team lost both games against sec­ ond-ranked Iowa State, 5-1 on Friday and 9-6 on Saturday. “The scores didn’t reflect how close both games were,” assistant coach Brad Bayer said of ASU’s first two games this season. In the first game, the score was tied 1-1 going into the third period and in the sec­ ond game ASU was up 6-4 at the same juncture. Goalie Greg Powers said Iowa State’s physical shape won both games for cxxrccccccocccccoo M IGUEL'S M USIC CENTER > METRONOMES • A CC ESSO R IES • ETC. > ELEC TR IC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS >AM PS • ELEC TR IC EFFEC T S • SH EET MUSIC > LESSO N S (Rock •Contemporary •Folk • Classic Guitar) > REPAIRS On A ll Instrum ental ...and much MORE! In The Arches Shopping Center 130 E . University Dr. 968-2310 3X C C C C C C C B.R. (beforeBother’*) FacingJail or Prison?». Experience Counts! Certified Criminal Law Specialist** Firm defends all Felony & Misdemeanor Cases A.R. (after Rother’s) BE HAPPY. SHOPROTHERS. Open 7 d ays 625 E. Apache 967-5445 ROTH ERS BOOKSTORE Now Serving Glendale Community College! • 5925 W. Olive (SW Comer o f Olive ft 39th) »931-3456 24 Hours for inilial Appearance • Court (Bail) 1212 East Osborn, Phoenix, Arizona "Anders Rosenquest. 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Back in A p rils I - »“(Boston) will be in the hunt for the peered »deep into my playoff spot, but (its) weaknesses will even­ crystal ball and present-f tually catch up to them.” ed, in two editions of the Well, the Red Sox’ weaknesses actually State Press, my predic­ did catch up to them late in the season, but tions for the 1998 Major by then, it was too late for other teams to League baseball season. catch them because their wild card lead was Now, since the World so big. We all knew they had a great offense. Series is done and one of But the pitching, led by Pedro Martinez and the greatest seasons ever a rejuvenated Bret Saberhagen, really sur­ is in the books, I thought prised me. it would be a good time The Ugly to revisit my predictions •“The St. Louis Cardinals will rebound and see how 1 did. Unfortunately, when I looked back on it, from a terrible ‘97 season to recapture this I found that I had many more wrong predic­ division” and advance to the NLCS. The Cards responded to their terrible ‘97 tions than correct onCs, But there’s still a , season «with... another terrible season. few gems in there. To wit: Injuries decimated this team, which led to a The Good •On the NL Central: “It will take more sorry first half which led to player dumping than the 84 wins last year’s division winner, at the trading deadline. Overall, nothing went right for them this year, with the Houston’, put up to win it again this year.” Right On the money with this one. The notable exception of that power hitting first Astros repeated, but upped their victory total baseman, what’s his name... •On the Cubs: “ They won’t be anywhere to 102. The ‘Stros featured the league’s most lethal offense, and of course, the late-season near (the postseason) this year.” Oops, addition of Randy Johnson didn't exactly You know, it was hard for me to root for hurt their cause. •’The Giants will probably finish a lot the Cubs against the Giants, for the wild card closer to the penthouse than the doghouse in spot. But any true baseball fan has to be happy to see the lovable losers from the ‘98.” Most so-called baseball “experts” predict­ North Side in the playoffs again. With Slammin’ Sammy tnaking history, ed a fourth-place finish for the defending NL West champs. Not me. Maybe it’s because Henry Rodriguez arid Mark Grace providing I’m a huge Giants fan, or because I just saw solid protection in the lineup, and a great season from “The Shooter,” Rod Beck, the something in them. But by posting a solid first half and stag­ Cubbies made their first playoff appearance ing a torrid four-game comeback in the last since 1989 (when, incidentally, they lost to week of the season to force a one-game the Giants). •I don’t know What the hell 1 was think- J playoff for the NL wild card spot, they made believers out of everyone who saw ‘97 as a ing when I made this pick... On the Marlins: ‘They will be a lot better fluke. •And of course, my best prediction of all... than most people think; a ,500 record and a third-place finish isn’t entirely out of the “Mark McGwire will hit 62 home rims.” question.” , Enough said. I don’t know how I can explain this one. The Bad •In the Fall Classic, “Cleveland over In my defense, I didn’t know they would get rid of Gary Sheffield, Charles Johnson, mid Atlanta, 4-2.” Bobby Bonilla during the season. But still, Hey, almost, •On the Mariners: “My patience has been when I look back on it, a God-awful pick. All in all, I picked three of eight postsea­ rewarded the past three years with two divi­ sion titles, and this year should be no differ­ son entrants correctly. On the surface, that looks pretty had. But when examined closely ent.” I foresaw the terrible bullpen and the dis­ and put into baseball terms, that’s a .375 bat­ tractions that die Johnson situation would ting average. And that ain’t bad. create, but I had no idea the defense would be that bad. And for all of the acclaim the offense gets, this was a terrible hitting team Doug Flanagan can be reached via ein the clutch. Kudos go to Junior and A-Rod mail at Bonds4MVP@asu.edu. 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Baseline Id ., Ste. 166, Tempe them. “They were in great shape and we were not,” Powers said. “We outplayed them in the first two periods in both games,” Bayer said, “They are the kind of team that keeps coming at you, they have an endless battery pack out there, like the Energizer Bunnies.” Iowa State improved to 10-0. In the first game, things were a bit jum­ bled, left winger Brian Dorwart said. It was ASU’s first game of the season, and it took the players some time to work out their practice habits and get into game mode. It was what Bayer called a “rough and tum ble gam e.” Among the several players who received minor injuries was defenseman Gordon Hester, who bruised his lower back and did not play in the sec­ ond game. It was after the first game when the team and coaching staff had a talk about character and “going to the wall,” Bayer said. Receiving some personal attention during that session was Dorwart. After playing his first collegiate hockey game, Bayer noticed Dorwart was tentative and lacked a little confidence. The next game Dorwart showed up with new resolve. “He started throwing his body around, and created some real defensive opportuni­ ties for us,” Bayer said. ‘‘All around, he’s going to be a power for us in the future.” Dorwart agreed that he was nervous and hesitant the first game, but came alive in the second. “The second game I was more confi­ dent and began hitting guys and getting into it. Now I’m really looking forward to playing again th is w eekend,” Dorw art said. According to Bayer, the entire team played their heart out in the second game. “The second game is when things start­ ed clicking. We had a breakout game. If we keep improving like this, I think we should definitely beat them the next time around,” left winger Erik Williams said. A subplot in both games was die offici­ ating. ASU was penalized about 20 times in the first game and approximately 25 times the second game. “It was the most absurd ‘homer job’ I’ve ever seen in college hockey,” Powers said. “They kept us in die (penalty) box the whole time. Interférence calls, hooking calls, their guys were taking dives,” Bayer said. Bayer said that you have to expect that when you go away. He also said that he was proud of the players that they didn’t have any retaliation penalties. “We took it to them and we kept it hon­ est,” Bayer said. D esp ite the lo ses, th e Sun D evils returned to Tempe on Sunday full of opti­ mism. “They (Iowa State) don’t want to see us for a while,” Bayer said. “It this is a test of what the country has, then we’re right with it.” —Clint Currie Classifieds Notice to oiir readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the.offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Mare Trivia... A bowl of Wheaties contains twice as much sodium as a bowl of fotato chips. t> am — ■ rnkm am APARTMENTS A ^ R T M |N T S _ 1014 S'. FARMER. 3 blocks to campus,- 2bd apt. Pool, a/c, $575/n>o. 690-3677 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. EL DIABLO Apts. NE comer of Apache/McÇlintock, quiet lux­ ury living, 1bd $500/mo, 2bd $590-$70Q/mo. 921-0699. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT 3BR/2BA CONDO. Very nice, close to campus, all appliances included, including w/d. $950/mo. Call Jeff, 893-1651 HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c. Near ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/ mo; 510 W. 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If you have 1 o r 2 extra ticket, please call Paul at 965-6735. 2 AMERICA West passes, an­ ywhere they fly, good until 1/99 $300obo call 832-5335. 4 BDRM HOME @ McClintock & Guadalupe. Call Maggie @ 268-1543 or 345-7314. HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL FURNITURE 486DX4-100 COMPUTER $350 obo. !6mb, 1 gig HD, Win '95, etc. Brenna 884-8720. 1 BD IN nice 4/bd house with all enmities. /'Close to ASU $325/mo. + 1/4 utils S20-779-2873 T E M P E B E A U T IF U L 3 . 4 ,5 B R H O M ES SO M E W /PO O LS $1095-$ 1595 HOM ES FOR ROOM S FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING PAPAGÓ PARK Village 3bd/ 2ba W/D, patio, pools, avail 11/1, $1200/mo. 945-7986, RENTAL SHARING WANTED: TICKETS for Phish Halloween show in Vegas. Will pay over face value. Call Katie at 967-3317 Classifieds WORK! AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES J& T P R O P 44 6-R EN T 1983 VW Rabbitt like new. Conv. top and interior 2yrs old. $5795 call 855-3330. 1209 W . B A S E L IN E $ 1 9 9 Move-In Spedala O ne Bdr $590/mo • Two Bchm $685/mo Alt Utilities included Furnished/Unfurnished W alk To Cam pus HELP WANTEDGENERAL f lJOURNALIST NEEDED University Village Apartments 936 S. Terrace Rd. for 2 trade papers. Develop, research, write and edit news stories. Ability to w rite a v g o f3 stories per week. O ther duties as assigned. Must have com pleted JRN 201, 301, and/or 501. M ust have Arm understanding of AP style. Must pass AP and writing test to be considered. 2025 hrs/wk (M-F). $6.50/hr. Call (602) 263-5508 or fax resum e and 2-3 clips to (602) 263- (East of Rural/South of University) 967-6665 ssssst“ — s t u d io , ooca o a n n o o M t t w o o a in o o M ■ W UK INC DISTANCE TO ASU AMD DOWNTOWN TtMRE - save o n u n l i n t s - m o t w a ter in c l u d e d ■ ALARM SVSTEAA AVSMtASLE - PRIVATE BALCONY/PATIO ■ i POOLS <1 HEATED) - BARBEQUE AREAS - CHUNG FANS • CUSTOM VERTKAL/MINt BUNDS EUROPEAN CABINETRY - LARGE STORAGE AREAS .urn as# HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HELP WÀNTEDGENERAL ^ 8 7 2 ^ ittn ^ is a ^ ^ I Security Officers and Airport Security Officers Teiem arketers Wanted In GaliMy Ranch. Eara $9/hr, potentlal monthly bonus $$. No scllln g rsquirsd. P/T flexib le hours. C al for appointmont - 607-1069. Grant onvlronmont» 3 ASU grads employer! now. FLEX SCHEDULES • F T & F T Must be 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass background check. We offer. • Medical/Dental benefits • Tuition Assistance • Uniforms supplied & maintained • Monthly, Quarterly Bonuses Apply atWorldWide Security Amoc. Inc. 627 South 48th S t *105 Tempe 9664)141 B U Y Used Cars/ Trucks/! Jewelry/ Antiques/■ LP's/ Mise. 1987 FORD Escort- 4 spd man­ ual transmission, $1,000 obo, caU 968-0251. 874-3268 Ü 1999 TOYOTA Carnry $12,788 call 604-6510. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL J C ’s G 3 PTCSR Grant opportunity for $$ and font RESID EN T ASSISTAN T Clare Bridge of Tempe, specializing in assisted living for dementia care, is seeking caring pari time and full time Resident Assistants, Dietary Aides and a PM Resident Manager to work in a non-dinical setting. W e offer: 4 and 12 hour shifts,- full benefits after 3 months; PTO; starting salaries include a shift differential,- weekend and weekday shifts- meals included,- and opportuni­ ties for advancement. If you are interested in a great job, stop by 1610 E. Quadaiupe Rd., on the N W side of Quadaiupe and McClintock in Tempe, For directions call 777-9334. la ss has X P O SITIO N S AVAIL. E X C E L L E N T O U S T S V C 8c PH O N E S K IL L S R E Q . Mu & s t h a v e b a s ic c o m p u t e r K EY B O A R D S K IL L S . W E O F F E R F L E X IB L E H O U R S & E X C E L L E N T STARTIN G PAY. FA X R ES U M E T O 2 4 3 -1 3 9 5 attn : L is a , o r c a ll 2 4 3 - 0 6 4 9 X 4 0 1 T O A PP LY IN perso n t io n .C o n v e n ie n t l o c a @ 1-10 & U n ­ iv e r s it y . / §§§ C reate Your Own Sched ule / FU LLTIM E ADVERTISING S A LES POSITION b a n q u et \ SERV ERS You CantAsk for a Better Student Job! D U T IE S AN D R E S P O N S IB IL IT IE S : S e ll ad ve rtis­ ** 4 ^ ** ing for the cam pus d aily new spaper, State Press. 1 1 ** TuWo N Assistance W ill a s s e s s lo cal and n atio n al b u sin e ss fo r th eir M ake extra m oney, U ** PhoNE Bill CREditS m arketability and m ake ad vertisin g recom m enda­ jo in our busy bqt se aso n . |j{ ** UNbrlifVAÍ>lb BeneÍíts tions based upon a sse ssm e n t. Prim ary resp onsibil­ F le x hours, E xp . req’d. f jj* * Fun WoRk Environment ,; ity is generatin g new b u sin e ss' w hile developing Sco ttsd ale Em b assy i l l ** Earn hill liME wAqES woRkiNq pARt tíme houRs! e xistin g o n es in an effo rt to m eet in d ivid ual and § § Su ites team sa le s g o als. A ssist student ad reps with copy I I To Apply ANd ÍNTERVÍEWCOME TO OUR PhOENÍX IocATÍON AT Hum an R eso u rces w riting, ad design, layout and sa le s techniques on 1801 E . CAMEtbAck RoAd, S u iiE 2 1 0 5001 N . Sco ttsd ale R d. a lim ited b a sis. M ust understand th at ad vertisin g (In ih t ColloNAdE PIaza) I P le a se apply w orks on a continuum . A su cce ssfu l ad sa le s rep | | Mon -F r í 9 am'6 pm ill ft / M, T u , or F between w ill p o sse ss a keen understanding of how his/her S at 9 am '2 pm m 8:30am -10:30am c lie n t's b u sin e ss o p erates and m ost im portantly, or 1:30pm -3:30pm how he/she can m ake strateg ic advertising recom ­ Sco ttsd ale Em b assy m . m endations based upon that knowledge. S u ite s supports a drug­ ' s ^ free w ork fo rce, R E Q U IR E D Q U A L IF IC A T IO N S : A A d e g re e in : B u sin e ss A d m inistration, o r related field and two M y e a rs of e xp erien ce ad m inistering cre a tive sa le s program s; O R tout ye a rs of exp erience adm inisterI ing cre a tive s a le s p ro g ram s; O R an y eq u ivalen t com bination of exp erien ce and/or education from w hich com parable know ledge, sk ills and a b ilitie s have been achieved . M ust have prior m edia sa le s exp erience and a proven track record in new b u si­ Full-tim e m oney, D BC needs people to work with ohildren, adoles­ n e ss generation. cents, and young adults who are Developmen­ Part-time hours. tal^ , Em otionally, and Behaviorally challenged. M CI 1 Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale’s leading dating service located in Old Town Scottsdale. Have fun calling singles to invite them for a free tour of our center IT ’S PUN ! IT ’S C A S T ! IT D A TS I • NO SELLING • Permanent Part time Evening & weekend shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d » Women Excel ■Casual Dress » Automated Dialing System • Fun Atmosphere BascPw y $M ir Plus Bonus (Stt-SlS/hr mg.) n I ill SIB 6 0 2 -5 5 0 -6 4 5 9 Y Psych & Social Work Majors ^ Gain Valuable Experience D E S IR E D Q U A LIFIC A T IO N S: Newspaper adver­ tising background. Demonstrated skill in generat­ ing new business. Experience or education in a design related field is helpful. C O M PEN SA TIO N : B a se sa la ry $1 2,13 3 p lus gen­ erous com m ission. O utstanding benefits. T O A P P L Y ; Subm it co ver letter, resum e and the n am es, a d d re sse s, phone num bers of 3 p ro fe s­ sio n al referen ces. Sp ecify job title and S R # 05935. A S U E m p lo ym e n t S e rv ic e s , P O B o x 8 7 1 4 0 3 , Ternp e, A Z 85287-1403. E O E mm You're smart. Do the math! $$$ $$$ Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working With Adolescents S8/hr. base + comm. Flex AM & PM hours C o n ven ient locations Incentives: Tuitipn Reimbursem ent, Paid Tim e Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Fu ll Benefits Package Dobson & Guadalupe 777-8757 Subm itApplications To: DBC Residential Servjcea 2405 E . Southern Avei #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 J AZ Ave. & Warner 735-0000 AUTOM OBILES 1999 TOYOTA Corólla as low as $199/mo. For more info, call Rick or Frank @ 604-6510. 1999 TOYOTA Tacoma as low as $199/mo. for more info call Rick or Frank @ 604-6510. 90 VW Cabriolet Conv. 69K, A/Ç, pwr wndws, 5spd. Grt Deal $5600; Tobi 969-2258. 93 MAZDA MX3 2dr coupe, low mileage, good cond, .am/fm cd/cass $6750 731-9515 HELP WANTEDG EN ERA L 2-3K/MO PT Inti co hiring for new sales/ mgmt positions. Hours flexible. Start now! 690-5911. RESPONSIBLE FEMALE aide needed for disabled girl! M, T & Th, 3-9pm* Sat: am. $7-, 10/hr, own car. 423-5903. BAD CREDIT-, no credit, no problem. We can help you buy a new Toyota. For more info call Rick ór Frank @604^65 TO. ATHLETIC CLUB hiring front desk attendants, fitness instruc­ tors, and basketball court su­ pervisors. P/T and Winter break positions avail. Outgoing, serv. ice oriented people apply in person: Village, 4444 E. Camelback Rd , Phx. 840-6412, C ÀRS $ 100-$50Q - police imr pounds. Hondas« Chevys, Jeeps Sport Utilities. MUST SELL! 1-800-522-2730 x4740 BREAK DANCERS needed! One time event Nov. 20. For more info call Rachel 394-0616 or Anne Elisa 699-5344. TOYOTA COROLLA 92, a/t, tin ted wnds, am/fm,.. A/C, ;runs well. $3,995 obo May 6493649 CAREGIVER NEEDED: ECE & exp. req'd. 1 blk. N. of ASU. Hrs. flex: Call 967-22U EOE TRAVEL CASHIER POSITION entry level $6.25jand up. Flex hrs, Scottsdale area. Call for an ap­ point. 945-2629 Debra SEMESTER AROUND the World; Travel to Greece, Spain, Costa Rica, or Australia and earn col lege credits . Cal 1 tolf free 1-877^333-SATW(7289). HELP WANTEDGEN ERA L $6.50 +/HR. Preschool, or afterschool teach­ er. Flexible hours. Training avail; Children’s«Village Learn- '. ing Center; 949-5552. / D illard Ticketing System s, Inc. Customer Support Services CIGAR STORE Clerk, P/T, no exp. nec., must work thru Xmass vacation, clean cut« outgoing, like smoke, 840-9080 DAYHOST NEEDED M-F 10am2pm. Exp; nec. Apply at Casey Moore's Oyster House 850 S. Ash Ave. DELICIOUS DELIVERIES Courteous order takers for val­ ley-wide delivery ¡service. Com­ puter experience preferred. Call Andy 220-0000. HELP WANTEDG | N | E A ^ _ ^ _ !__ gineering student. Responsi­ bilities inc. developing struc­ tural repairs for Rotor & Fixed wing aircraft components & pro­ viding technical support for production activities. Salary is negotiable. Opportunity avail, for FT employment following graduation. Fax resume & cover letter to Tony Mitteer @ (602) 947-6Q99 or Mail to ABLE En­ gineering 350 N. Hayden Rd., Suite #1 Scottsdale, AZ 85257. FUN PEOPLE EDUCATIONAL MAIL Order Wanted! Appointment setters Cp! has FT & PT positions, in : for Universal Portraits. $7-. Custom er Service. Answer $12/hr. 777-1054 phones, no telemarketing. HOLIDAY POSITIONS at US $8/hr. to start. Raises every 90 Postal call center. $8.39/hr (afdays.- Just off of University . ter training). Avail, for 4-8 hr near ASU. 438^4400 shifts. No weekends or nights. FAST GROWING Tempe Aero­ Phoenix/Tempe border. Must space Co. seeks a 2nd or 3rd ‘ type 20 wpm & be Windows yr. Mechanical or Aerbspâcè Enliterate. 2 wks paid train. US birth cert., passport, o r Alien HELP WANTEDG EN ER A L HELP WANTEDG EN ER A L HELP WANTEDG EN ERA L reg. card r’qrd for Security Clearance. Call 407-1441 for an appoint. P/T BOOKKEEPER must have knowldg of quick books pro. Need refs., flex daytime hrs. Jerre Lynn946-7507. PHOTOGRAPHERS, NO exp. nee. FT some PT $6-$7/hr end of season bonus. Apply in per­ son 3375 E Shea Blvd. Ste D3. lhr photo lab. 494-3556 LEGAL COURIER F/T & P/T avail. Professional appearance & car required. Call 452-1826. LOOKING FOR career in retaiil resale? C hic and Cheap, AZ Best's is seeking managers & sales associates 279-6380 P/T WORK - F/T pay. to m e to play not to work. Day & eye. shifts avail., $9/hr. University & Priest,'Ms Tobin 517-1977 MARRIOT IS hiring. We need food servers, cooks,, retail, cler-. icai, & housekeeping. Jobs close to ASU. Call 667-3388. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m/f needed immed. for nat'l commercials/print! 941-6922. P/T ASST/RECPT for Tempe in­ vestment co. 12:30-5:30 M-F, $8hr to start 517-0001 ■Protect America, Inc. rastnnm N E W R E ST A U R A N T ♦♦OPENING SOON** S eek in g A p p o in tm e n t S e tte rs (no.sale^hT^yf^) loin the Fiesta Fun! Earn $7 ^$ 15 /H r! - W e o ffer: • AM (9-2) a n d PM (4-9) s h ifts Night Housekeeping FT/PT • B a s e S a la r y S h i f t D i f f e r e n t ia l 4pm-M idnight • GENEROUS B onus P la n • P a id T ra in in g • A dvancem ent O p p o rtu n itie s (P ro m o te fro m w ith in ) Eyes/Wknd$ Property Upkeeping FT Mon-Fri, 5 a-lp Reservations FT/PT C o n ta ct o u r R ec ru itin g D e p a rtm e n t a t (602) 273-1998 Mori-Fri, 7a-3p 3p-9p & Sat. 9a-5p Front Desk PT Jobline: Work with people with disabilities. TCH is hiring - FT/PT. $7-57.50 • Excellent :. Benefits. * 838-8111 ext. 110 lookingfor top-notch kitchen help, food servers, lunch & din­ ner shifts. 1extraor­ dinary eve bartender. Apply in Person M-F. l -5pmor by appt 3223 S. Mill Ave (NE corner Southern & Mill) 966-4488 C la s s if ie d s N ational Alarm Compajpiy APPOINTMENT SETTERS MAKE IB> TO $15/HR 16 yr old Phx based service company offers great environm ent (no boiler room). Looking for long term , FT appointm ent setters. Business to business sales. We offer great compensation incfucSftg base, commission, bonus, benefits &.401K. Please call oar apply in person.Trish Ottva, OJP.E.N. Cleaning System s, 2777 E. Camdback ltd., S*e. 350, Phx, AZ 85016 • (602) 224-0640. Internet; http://ww w.opencs.com MAKE A DfljfERENCE ROCKWELL'S SPO RTS GRILL Focus Market Research 804-5285 H elp W anted Start Building Y our Resum e & Business Skills Now! 2100 S. Priest Tempe Becom e a M arket Research Interviewer o r a Client Qualitative A ssistant 2 m ile s fr o m A $U N O W H IR IN G SERVERS • HOSTESS* KITCHEN STAFF We’re an Oklahoma based upscale casual dining' concept with aggressive growth plans. Our menu features steaks, prime rib, chicken, pasta, fresh fish, speciality sandwiches and salads. Apply today and secure your spot on our opening team. Day’s / Evenings - Flexible Hours Mon. - Fri. 10-6 pm, Sat 10-2 pm NE Comer o f 1-10 & Ray Rd. CHANDLER, AZ We offer: PT position to assist customers and clients in Support Services. Must have strong communication skills and computer experience. Must work well under pressure. Nights/ . weekends. Accepting applica­ tions M-F, 9a-5p, 1616 S. Priest Or., Tempe • $7.50/hr (eve. shift) + Bonus Plans • Flexible schedule • Convenient Location - about 4 miles from ASU « Absolutely NO Sales! No experience Necessary ALL WANTED POSITIONS Call Ray at 874-2714 - Focus Market Research DON T KNOW WHICH WAY TO TURN? la rrn u — 5 & D in e r Coming to AZ M ills Fun 50s concept is now hiring servers, cooks, hosts, bus and dishwashers. Flexible schedules, great $$$ and a fun atm osphere. SSSFASTSSS Interview at AmeriSuites @AZ Mills (on southside). Mon-Sat 9am-4pm or call Layla at 670-7866 o r 843-8936 The Student Affairs Research Office is looking for ASU students to conduct telephone surveys from November 3rd through November 18th. Surveys will be conducted on Sundays from 3pm - 9pm and Monday through Thursdays from 5pm 9pm. There is a mandatory paid training session on Tuesday, N ovem ber 3rd, a t 4pm in the Memorial Union Room 208B-Hohokam„ ' An equal opportunity employer WE'RE LOOKIN' FO R A FEW 6 0 0 D HELP WANTEDG EN ERA L M A T E S » Aw esom e A u ssie them ed re sta u ra n t seeks en erg ized in d ivid u a ls fo r b ig fun and K ill-tim e em ploym ent. The O utback Steakh o u se w ill open soon in C h a n d le r, A riz o n a N O W H IR IN G ALL POSITIONS A p p ly in p e rso n M o n -F ri 1 p m -6 p m 1 0 6 0 N . 5 4 th S tre e t N E C o rn e r a t I-ÎO .& R a y R d . in C h a n d le r EO E STEAKHOUSE«! AÍO fV d J F S » AD REP NEEDED for 2 trade papers. Call & meet with potential advertisers. , Coordinate ad promotions with ad manager. Other duties as assigned. Guaranteed base income. Must have reliable trans. 20-25 hrs/wk (M-F)* Previous ad sale exp. desired. ( all (602) 263-5508 or fax .■ resume with prev. ad exp. and 3 prof, refs to (692) 26^8726 Attn: Lisa $5.75/Hour To apply, stop by Student Affaire Research locat­ ed in the Memorial Union Room 110 (by the Art Gallery) or call 965-4070 for more information. • «*« CO IOI I ) T 0 . ■lw". : > * o • Room Service Attsnd. •S e rv e rs • Buseers • Dishw asher • Set-up • Sw itchboard O pt FT & PT work available P le a se apply with Hum an R e so u rce s, 5001 N. Sco ttsd ale R d. Sco ttsd ale E m b assy S u ite s supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. H a r r io t t EM PLOYMENT CENTER jobs available close to campus! Call today. • Chili/Salsa Cook-Off • Valentine’s Day Activity/Balloons & Candy • FACS Blood Drive » VIP Banquet • Tennis Event • Baseball Q EM B A SSY S U IT E S One place to apply for jobs at over 50 Marriott locations Valleywide Food Servers * Cooks Retail • Clerical • Security M aintenance • A nd M ore! ' € /) Who Says You Can’t Have Fun At Work? At the F A C S Group, Inc., we have found a way to combine work and Fun. Full and part-time openings exist for: Part-time days, with alternating Saturdays W e offer: tuition reimbursement, sem i annual merit reviews, M acy’s discount and much, much more! 1 “ r- a CD CD CO Q. CD 3 CO CO 1 - ° A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm at 1345 S . 52nd St. in Tem pe or call toll free: ' ' 1-888-284-3227. t : h ID O s CD *o (Northeast córner of 52nd St. and W est 14th St. between Broadway and University Drives) Equal Opportunity Fo r A ll FINANCIAL and CREDIT SERVICES wc t CD o m> urne» 3 CQ ^ Û) CL • Partners in Time Meeting • Mother’s Day Flowers • Company Picnic • Hawaiian Day Activity • Golf Day • Father’s Day Celebration HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Part-Time Custom er Service Reps United Blood Services, the Valley’s non-profit blood provider since 1943, is seeking individuals who want to make a difference In people’s lives. Morning, evening k weekend shifts available. $6.87/hr plus shift differ­ ential for evening hours. Good customer service skills &. pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 431 9500. Tempe Location. Employee drug testing required. EOE/M/T/D/V NOW MIRING Cam pu s S ic u k it v A ssistant» Peoanau Hiring new CSAs for cam pus foot patrol Mil. 4hour shifts, daily from 4-Spm and I midnigh t. M ust work 12 hours minimum. For dotaits call » 6 5 -5 6 4 3 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDCLERICA L HELP WANTEDC H W & C A R |_ _ PT POSITION 20 hrs./wk Looking fof motivated indi­ vidual to fill position in edu­ cation dept, w/ prof, assoc. Re­ sponsible for course prep., shipping, some comp work, & other various clerical duties. Must be capable of lifting 50+ lbs. Flexible to you schedule between 7 am - 5pm M-F. Fax resume to 252-1511. STUDENT WORK, due to in­ creased volume, int’l co. has 37 immed. openings. Scholarships avail.; conds. exist. Up to $9.85/hr PT/flex schedules, all majors may apply. Call 10am5pm 246-8427 OFFICE ASSISTANT PT: fil­ ing, data entry, answer phones. Evenings and weekends r ’qrd. Must have reliable trans. Office located in N. Scottsdale. 4838894. CHILDCARE SUBSTITUTES Full time, or Part time $6.50+ /hour. 306-SUBS. P/T RECEPT., must be available holiday breaks. Icon Hair Architexture, Scottsdale Fash­ ion Square. 941-8656 RESERVATION AGENT P/T eves. V16th St./Indian School $8/hr 954-7099. SECURITY CO. needs f/t scheduler for speciál events. 9am-6pm M-F Call 253-9335. tug Research, Date W t m s s i n g , P r o je c tM % HIGGINBOTHAM? i HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPAGHETTI COMPANY’S new Chandler location seeks Assist. Mgr. No exp. nee. Will train. Looking for indiv. w/ integrity and strong work ethic. Bene­ fits, Bonus plan! Call Mike Pulps 732-0610 to apply. t:— ❖ -M »finest market research firm is fgËÉKalj Broadway ). We need hose surveys; no selling. Dependable * Friendly H ttcg fl' $7.00/hr. full time or SpawfaM | ; $6.50/hr. part time (12 o r S S tW ^ » Hex schedule: 2:30-lft30pÉ^j| j | | 7am-7pm Sat gM ■ fe Friendly, relaxed a t m o ^ ^ p ^ S B IB Excellent advancement possibifttkil p. . Two week training H H s i v Weekly pay W OODSHED I »OMsstnetahborhoodbarin ; Tem pe - E s I 1979 i I VALET PARKING atndnts, PT eves $6-$9/hr (incl. tips), must be cleancut, 548-0599 lve insg HELP WANTEDSALES RESTAURANTS/ BARS • M LB-ESPN Game P lan -N FL! ! .- Gun. A Men.____________ j 8 3 1 -W O O D Baseline & Mill O FOOT B ig S creen M o n d ay N ig h t F o o tba ll BLADDER BUSTER F O O D ^ ^ IC ^ by Sidney Om arr Monday, O cto b e r 26, 1998 ARIES (March 2t-April l9); Take in itiativ e — you are climbing the road to success. Focus on intense love relation­ ship, new experiences, sensa­ tion Young persón intrigues. Leo in spotli^it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Fam ily m em ber suggests, "L et’s wait ho longer, overseas jaunt is overdue.” Spotlight on philosophy, publishing, learning more about the world. Cancer native involved. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your kind of day. Read, write, publish, let others know bow you feel —- do so in dramatic, entertaining manner. Open lines of communication. S$gittarian appears, as if out of nowhere. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don *t becom e in vol ved in financial problems o f others; Be gracious but firm in declaring, "Neither a borrower or lender ana I.” Relationship warms up, could get too hot not to cool down. LEO (July 2 3 -Aug. 22): Competition remains one step ahead, at least for now. You could he on top p f the world. Words mean everything, verbal and Written —- make sure of diem. Aquarian involved. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent harmony, beauty, flow­ ers, music. Open gift package, contains silverware. This could be subtle hint for dinner invita­ tion, classical Libran gesture. Smile, doit. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 22): Obtain h int from Virgo m e s -, sage Be quiet within, realize you are loved. E rase fears, doubts, suspicions. Emphasis on real estate, fam ily, decision regarding long journey. - More questions than answers involved — work with elements o f tim ing, surprise. D on’t neglect engine problem . Capricorn has best interests at heart, could lack funding. SAGITTARIUS! (N ov. 22Dec. 21): Round out project make contacts, open lines of communication. Love enables you to walk on air. Give atten­ tion to language, geography, history of your field of endeav­ or. • CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19): Shake off emotional lethar­ gy. Imprint style, highlight orig­ inality, don’t be afraid of con­ troversy. Gift of clothing fea­ tures color red. Leo, Aquarius persons dominate scenario. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 18): You have numerous choices — . select quality, accent durable goods. Dining out enables you to meet vibrant individuals des­ tined to play roles in your life. Cancer native involved. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar«h 20): Burden lifted, you’ll be free to travel, experience rom antic interlude. Moon position high­ lights ability to win friends and influence people — good tuck in money and love. IF OCTOBER 26 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: When it comes to pressure, responsibility, ability to settle business disputes, you are the person. M other was excellent hom em aker, father could have been m usician. Capricorn-, Cancer-born p e r­ sons play major roles in your life, likely to have these letters, initials in names ~ H, Q, Z. Current cycle relates to travel, participation in humanitarian projects, ability to let go of past, take cold plunge into future. SC O RPIO (O ct 23-Nov 2 Í): ©1998, Los Angeles Times Syndicate • ENLARGEMENTS October sale - 10% off witfi this ad! The Picture Place - ASU MU A D g P T IO N _ _ JO B “ “ OPPORTUNITIES Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail, Will train, p/t. Concern w/ appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (952-0585) LOVE DEVOTION, & wonder­ ful life await your newborn. Successful stay-at-home female children's TV writer longs to give your baby a beautiful, lov­ ing home & bright joyous fu­ ture. Liz 1-800-637-7999. P/T SALES- Communications Indust., flex hrs. $2000 1st wk potential, òall 407-8782. Q: DO you want lots of money, parties-, and fun? A: Join us, MPI, live high, call 898-18Ì4. STAY AT home mom & Physi­ cian can give your baby lots of love, Call 520-218-1688 pgr. LITTLE CAESAR’S Pizza- hir­ ing management, shift leaders & delivery drivers. Thomas/ Hay­ den 945-8920; Southern /McClintock 8 9 7 -8 1 1 4 ;. Rural/ Guadalupe 831 -6199; Warner/ McClintqek 820-9480; Base­ line/48th St, 43 SEXUAL PROBLEMS? Main­ tain control, max. stamina, & last longer. Seeking prgmrs. www.newremedies.com LUNCH SERVER, 10-2:30, $5/hr + tips. Dinner host(ess), 5-11, $6 to start. 598-0506, 5061 E Elliot, Phoenix. CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about daÿ trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com WOODSHED II SportsbarWanted P/T cook, $?-$! 2/hr. 844-7433 FREE WINNERS, scores, lines. No money, no operators, nò hassles www.line-busters.com HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE LAMSON JUNIOR College has day and evening classés for Legal Assistants, Legal Secre­ taries, ParapTOfessioiial Ac­ countants, Business & Office Managers, and Computer Tech-. SERVICES 40% OFF dry cleaning bill w/ ASU I D.* biz. shirts $1. Cheap fluff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner o f Rural & Univ. 966-7454. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES TUTORS YOUR PLACE is a mess! Come home to a clean apartment. Rea­ sonable! 303-0797 TUTORS TUTORS W e offer tutorial fo r the follow ing classes: MAT 114, MAT 117 MAT 119 MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271 QBA 221, PSY 230 PHY 111, PHY 112 FIN 300, OPM 301 CHM 113, CHM 115/6 . Algebra Finite Math Calculus/Precalculus Statistics Physics Business Chem istry Penny Drafts SE Comer of Rural & University INTERNET U R lS ~ FREE INTERNET access for life. U nlim ited. access, no monthly fees, no set-up fees, $99.95 1 tibie only. Call 1-800330-1270 Give ref. 6909524 TYPIN^EDIIING THESES TERM PAPERS RESUM ES APPLICATIONS . 1HO^yj&srvfce § Kathy @ 2 6 2 -5 4 5 4 C a ll us to d ay fo r m ore in fo rm atio n . Su ccessfu lly h elp in g stud ents sin ce 1 9 8 0 . "SIMON” MATRIX ÉDUCATION CENTER Cornerstone Mall TYPE PAPERS, tutor m ath, physics (others). Rates are neg Randall 968-8249. asututor TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE, 966-5543 ASTROCO&ICAL FORECAST PERSONALS INTERNSHIP AVAIL. w/Merrill Lynch, eve’s, M-Th Call Brent Bowden 898-6651 BOJO’S- HIRING exp’d cooks & delivery drivers. Apply at 829 S. Rural or cal! 966-5543. E v e ry M o n d a y N ig h t 1005 E. Broadway“ **jÊË Tempe, AZ NO EXP. necessary, $535/wk, assembling products. PT/FT, Call 1-800-530-7524. INTERNSHIPS BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ dise Valley Mall, $8/hr, own transp. needed. 788-6333. tables i • 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE ! Hiring immediately. . f fo r more information call Manuel a t 774^eM&m ■BP»? UP TO $12/HR $9/hr guaranteed + commis­ sion. 20-25 hours per week. Survey marketing in a profes­ sional environment. Camelback & Scottsdale location. No boiler room. 2pm-7pm M-F with flexibility. Contact Chad 949-1088. • Mow Times award winner ! ■Cheap Beer &$1 as Shots ! • Greeks Welcome 3 pool HELP WANTED- www.wofdworkx.com 968 4668 ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between Words. P le a se be sure to ch eck your ad. M ake su re it reads exactly a s you w ish it to appear in the. Sta te P re ss, including punctuation. P lease ch eck your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S ta te P re ss shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do hot qualify for m ake­ goods. No refunds will be given, but if you heed to cancel your ad a credit wilt be held on account for future advertising. P A § 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. ____ _ a a aai P rice per D ay a « .... - S o l D eys Total i 1 B u b C ard Humber Name an Cord ?í * ' 'C'* : Commercial 1 day, $2.60 perline 2-4 days, $1.99 perfine, per i 5-9 days, $1.76 per line, per t 10+ days, $1.60 per line, per i Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1,49 per line, per day -1 &y 1 x -'1. ' ?' "< ™ ' y/'&' > * * * : ~ " t \ y'**t * ’ i ^ |S _ nicians. "Learn a Living at Lamson" Call today! 898-7000. EXP’D RELIABLE babysitter needed. Variable hrs. Kristie 517-0357. Be fun & flexible. CORK’NCLEAVER A GREAT place to work! Fan­ nie May Candies @ AZ Mills has immediate openings for re­ tail sales people. Flex hrs, $6 50-$7/hr. Bob 697-4957. RESTAURANTS/ BARS a s s o c ia t e s ! INC. THE AZ House of Represen­ tatives is seeking page applic­ ants for the 99 legislative ses­ sion. Positions are f/t, $7.50/hr. Call Scott at 5423657 for info or app. BUSINESS O P ro g U N m . ■ ^ B w y ,t a W iS M iS W M j* W » M t W b U iroughthe tradì. — \ - 'S ì /