INSIDE Classifieds 20 Crosswords 08 Horoscopes 24 Opinion 04 PoliceBeat 08 W o rW N a tio n Weather- Sunny; high 72, low 49 Volume 84 Number 54 Friday, November 6, 1998 03 Rep. Hyde interrogates Clinton on Lewinsky details S p o rts I S Men's hoops squeaks out 92-86 win over Marathon A B O R p ro posai has students steam ed By jAtsON P eters Finlinson added he would support even State Press a 5 percent hike if, for exam ple, every M ore than 50 students crow ded tw o co m p u ter in the C om puting C om m ons sm a ll ro o m s in th e B u sin e ss were replaced with, a new one. Administration complex Thursday to voice ASU President Lattie Coor called the their concerns about a proposed increase in decision to increase tuition “one o f the m ost d iffic u lt the u n iv e rsitie s and the tuition by the Arizona Board o f Regents. “I’m trying to balance work, home and Board o f Regents make,” but he said the school,” said M att Furlong, a religious increase is “prudent and sensible” and was studies se n io r w ho attended the public recommended only after careful analysis. The A rizona Students’ A ssociation, a hearing. “This country is consumed with debt — it breaks up families and produces higher-education advocacy group repre­ a lot o f stress and health problem s. The senting public university students, coun­ Board o f Regents should take that into con­ tered the presidents’ figure by suggesting a 2.8 percent increase. sideration.” Sam Leyvas, executive director of ASA, T he A B O R C o u n c il o f P re sid e n ts announced its recommendation at the pub­ said this compromise was based on the 1.8 lic hearing fo r a proposed 4.79 percent percent rate o f inflation. He criticized ABOR for leaving it to increase in resident tuition and a 3.32 per­ cent increase in nonresident tuition for the students to get the word out about the hear­ ing. 1999-2000 school year. “Students are mobilizing other students This works out to an increase o f $100 for in-state students and $300 for out-of- on tuition,” Leyvas said. “ABOR has failed to give proper public notice that they’re state students. “This becomes a serious burden,” said holding the hearing. The regents have a Patrick Bellew, a freshman political sci­ responsibility to get that information out.” A protest rally was held on Orange Mall ence major. “Students should have a say as that afternoon in attempt to alert students to how this money is spent.” , about the hearing. D avid F in lin so n , a ju n io r stu d y in g ASASU P resid en t Paul Frost said he finance and accounting, also dem anded feared a tuition hike would lead to greater accountability. student debt. T he p re sid e n ts sh o u ld m ake th e ir j . , , • • - * r T s'4 .*•:r - ~*T-ir ■ !■ Students lives are made harder by a visions for the universities clearTnie said. T* . v, , , , , , ’ , , substantial increase m tuition, h-------e said. Because 1 don t understand them, 1 have The presidents do have a difficult task at no reason to support a rise in tuition.” BSWiit J e re m y W e is s o f t h e S ta te P re ss Senior communications m ajor Ferenia Lara, 26, protests with enthusiasm during a rally against raising tuition outside the Memorial Union Thursday. The presidents of the three state universities proposed a 4.79 percent resident tuition increase and 33 2 percent increase in nonresident fees. iy |p ® Ä - C t irr»nt Restftarlrs $2,158 N on -n ssid eh t^ ^ i, 110 , •ç s f ' VÏ X Proposed -4.7W (lö3+)_‘ 3.32% (302+) O l\i||$ Û R Is * ? - J r Exhibit showcases a rtw o rk from Tem pe’s Elvis By H ayley Ringle associates of the Fallout Common. State Press Most of the 1,000 pieces in the exhibit A strange conglomeration of cut-outs of were found in Elvis’ apartment or donated cats, pictures o f Elvis Presley and clippings from various friends in the Valley. o f local bands adorn the art o f F rankie M ary “Bone M am a” M cCann, KZON Martinez, a.k.a. Elvis. ra d io an n o u n cer, c o n trib u te d 13 E lvis His artwork and presence have been sta­ pieces. Since she first met him in the early ples o f downtown Tempe for more than 20 1980s, McCann became an avid collector years. Before his death last month, Elvis and currently owns about 30 pieces of his would sell or give away his artwork on die artwork. streets o f Tempe, with art in his bike basket “I loved his choice o f images, the disrogand a deep, wrinkled smile on his face. gard o f conventions, and how prolific tie Elvis was been called many things during was,” said McCann, who met Elvis in a bar those 20 years. He was known as “the Alley she worked at called The New Oxbow, now Cat” and “the Hillbilly Cat” because Presley called Murphy’s. “As his identity evolved, was already called “the Street Cat.” He was his work changed.” called Elvis “the Cat,” because neighbor­ “I don’t think anybody realized he was hood cats he allowed in his apartment were such a powerful artist,” said Brown, who not considered animals but friends. And he knew Elvis for 10 years. “He had the spirit also earned the nam e Elvis “del M onte” of making use o f what he had.” Ofelia Madrid of the State Pres, because he would get up on stage and sing He would go to as many local shows as Waxi Sargent, singer for the band Flail, and G; Freeman Brown sit in front of the art by Elvis the Alley one song with die Gin Blossoms, who used he could, usually at Long Wong’s, bringing C a t Sargent and Brown are a few of the people that brought Elvis’s artwork together for an exhibit at the Fallout Common in Tempe to play under the name “The Del Montes.” along artwork he had already put together The cut-and-paste collages he created for the occasion. throughout his life are the subject o f an His style influenced the album covers Flail used E lvis’ style for their album “He would research bands and use pic­ exhibit, running through November at the tures from m agazines,” Brown said. “He and fliers of many local artists. cover, S u b o rd in atio n , and said he w ill “I saw one of his posters and I thought it use Ws style for coVers Fallout Common. was much more conscious o f what he was „• . , . “1 think we haye the collection o f a great doing than what m ost people thought o f was funny,” said Steve Mitcholl, guitarist , , ,, , , ° His artwork doesn t use a computer or a for Flail, a local punk-blues band. mba. artist,” said G. Freeman Brown, one o f the him.” i ABO R Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a descrip­ tion of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • Am erican Indian Council — A frybread sale will take place on Hayden Lawn at 11 am . • Christian Students Fellowship — A meeting will be held at 23 E. 15 S t at 7 p.m. • Counselor Training C enter — Trained Master’s and Doctoral students offer free counseling for full-time students, faculty and staff from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday. Call 965-5067 to schedule an appointment. • Farce Side Com edy Hour — A performance will be held in the MU Programming Lounge at 12:40 p.m. • Japanese Student Organization — A meeting will be held in the MU Apache room at 3 p.m. • Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic — Individual, couple and family therapy is available for students, faculty and staff in the Cowden Family Resources Building Room 140. Call 965-937-3 for more information, • Philosophy Club A discussion on the nature of time will be held in tiie Physical Sciences Center room A546 at 3 p.m. • P ro g ra m fo r Southeast Asian Studies — A fall open house will be held in the Language & Literature building rooms C57 and C18 at 2 p.m. • Tem pe L D .S ilnstitute o f Religion —- Friday forum topic: Know your Religion. To be held at 947 S. McAllister Ave. at 11:40 a.m. • Young Dem ocrats — A meeting will be held in the MU room 224 at 3 p.m. | hand because they do not have all the pieces.” I Frost said he was concerned that the Council o f Presidents was recom m ending the high increase j because o f uncertain appropriations from the state Legislature. “I don’t feel that the students should have to shoulder the responsibility for that,” he said. A ssociated Students o f A SU W est President Alexis Wallace warned enrollment would decrease if tuition keeps increasing. “It’s not that the students here do not want to help their fellow students,” she said. But the students at ASU W est who have families to support w ould be hurt the m ost by the hike), Wallace said. She then asked the regents to consid­ er how they would feel about their own children going into debt under those circumstances. Tuition is scheduled to be set when the regentk next meet Nov. 19-20 at ASU. No further public comment will be taken then but can be mailed to ABOR President Judy G ignac, 2020 N- Central Ave., Suite 230, Phoenix, AZ 85004. 1 j lot of money and can be done by anybody who has cerned about what he would do with his art,” Brown a little creativity, Brown said. said. “He took all the elements, girls and cats, and put Brown has been talking to the Tempe Histórica) together words from letters he liked, to make his Museum about making a permanent exhibit o f his a rt,” said W axi Sargent, F la il’s singer/w riter. work because of all the local history in his pictures. I “Instead of spending a lot of money, he just spent a “H is work is very enduring, very human and little time from his imagination.” very ch ild lik e,” B row n said. “E lvis is looking I Elvis used anything he could get his hands on to around every comer at you no matter what situation ( put his artwork together, from placemats and old you are in.” The Frankie Martinez Memorial Fund has been 1 greeting cards, to magazine clippings. He also used images of his own head on different bodies, usually founded. It w ill be used by the Society o f St. j Elvis Presley, to create a kind o f pseudo-world he Vincent de Paul in Tempe for programs to serve I wanted to live in. others in time of need. Contributions can be sent to “He was an iconographist,” Sargent said. “He his fund in care o f SVdP, 2121 S. Rural Road, t lived in a time warp and his own little world.” Tempe 85282, or gifts of non-perishable food bar­ f The main thing that the Fallout Common would rels will be located at the ASU Newman Center, like to do with his artwork after the exhibit is to pre­ 230 E. UniversityDriven serve it. Brown is currently looking for people to T he F a llo u t C om m on is lo c a te d at 712 S. document and preserve Elvis’ work. College Avenue, at the tear entrance of the Campus Sunday’s Events: “The last few times we met him we were con- Comer. • Camp Sparky — A meeting will be held in the MU Cochise room at j 6 p.m. There is more to life than news and sports... • Entrepreneur Student Program — A meeting will be held at Old Check o u t the Chicago’s Pizza on Broadway Road, between Mill Avenue and Priest Drive, j at 7 p.m. . . j • S tu dents o f O bjectivism —- The video Your P rofessor’s W ar I Against the M ind will be held in the MU room 213 at 3 p.m. Page 14 I I I Comics WELLS FARGO Title S p on so r o f the A S U Hom econning Parade AT SPIRIT and CULTURE DAY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6 a t Hayden Lawn 10 am - 2 pm Pick up your Sparky tattoo and special edition ASU-Wells Fargo Arena T-Shirt* at the Wells Fargo Stagecoach at Sun Devil Stadium. 12:30-4 p.m. gameday W ELLS FARGO Join us on Saturday, November 7 th Homecoming Parade 10 a.m. ASU vs. Cal, 4 p.m. www .wellsfargo.com ♦Wells Fargo Arena shirts available when applying for services. Valid while supplies last. WELLS FARGO m World/Nation “The way out of the crisis, the only way, is for Iraq to rescind.” — Russian Ambassador Sergey Lavrov Hyde asks Clinton to adm it o r deny allegations By Larry Margasak A ssociated Press WASHINGTON “ VJudiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde asked President Clinton on Thursday to answer 81 ques­ tions for the House impeachment inquiry , including whether he made “false and misleading” statements under oath. In a letter to Clinton, Hyde, R-Ill., said die questions should be answered under oath and the answers would be used only for die impeachment inquiry, not in other legal matters. It was unclear how the president would respond. The detailed questions delve beyond the grand jury ques­ tioning of Clinton by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's prosecutors on Aug, 17, which was limited to four hours by agreement with Clinton’s lawyers. Hyde’s questions focused on allegations o f peijury or obstruction of justice by the president. None sought details of his sexual encounters with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky. At a news conference in Chicago, Hyde said the purpose of the questions was to “narrow the issues and bring this matter to a close more quickly.” “The president is free to dispute, of course, whatever he wants. But by agreeing to those facts that he does not dispute, he will allow us to narrow the issues and bring this matter to a close more quickly." said Hyde, who reiterated that he hoped to finish the inquiry by the end of the year. Among the questions: • ”Do you admit or deny that you gave false and mislead­ ing testimony under oath in your deposition in the case of Jones vs. Clinton when you responded "once or twice’ to the question, 'H as M onica Lew insky ever given you any gifts?”’ • "Do you admit or deny you had knowledge that any facts or assertions contained in the affidavit executed by Monica Lewinsky on Jan. 7. 1998, in the case of Jones vs. Clinton were not true?" That question refers to Ms. Lewinsky’s affi­ davit for Paula Jones' sexual harassment against Clinton. In the affidavit. Ms. Lewinsky falsely denied having a sexual relationship with the president. Clinton also was asked about his public statements. One question asked about the truthfulness of his assertion in January that “1 never told anybody to lie, not a single time, never.” White House press secretary Joe Lockhart said Clinton’s lawyers were still digesting Hyde’s letter and had no immedi- U . N . d e m a n d s By Ed it h M. L ederer ! A ssociated Press U N IT E D N A T IO N S — T he U .N . Security Council unanimously demanded Thursday that Iraq resume cooperation with U .N . w eapons in sp ecto rs im m ediately. Baghdad has already announced it won’t comply. TTie Security Council m ade no explicit threats to use force if Iraq doesn’t obey, but the U nited S tates and B ritain say they already have authorization to take military action from previous council resolutions. The resolution didn’t include a timetable for lifting crippling econom ic sanctions, which Iraq has demanded as the price for reversing its decision to cut all dealings R e v iv e d 1 Ir a q C h a rle s B e n n e tt o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss House Judiciary Commitee Chairman Henry Hyde, R-Ili., takes questions during a news conference in Chicago Thursday. Hyde announced that prosecutor Kenneth Starr would be his only major witness in impeachment hearings, and that he asked President Clinton to “admit or deny” facts about his conduct with Monica Lewinsky. ate comment. The questions weave through the testimony of key figures in the impeachment investigation, including Ms. Lewinsky, presidential friend Vernon Jordan, oval office secretary Betty Currie and others. r e s u m e with the inspectors. The resolution puts into international law the council’s statement Saturday that condemned Iraq’s decision to halt coopera­ tion with inspectors as a “flagrant viola­ tion” of U.N. demands. But council m em bers reaffirm ed their readiness to hold “a comprehensive review” of Iraq’s compliance with U.N. resolutions, which could lead to the lifting o f the oil embargo if U.N. inspectors declare Iraq has disarmed. But this offer is contingent on Iraq resum ing cooperation with weapons inspectors. T h e c o u n c il a g re e d to c o n d u c t the review in September, in an attempt to get Baghdad to allow U.N. weapons inspectors T ro p ic a l S t o r m M itc h Susan S to c k e r o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss Hollywood, Fla., residents, from left, Sue Sprio, Chris Hagtron and Tom Saluta help their neighbor Brian Thomas, driving car, move his vechide through the sand which washed up onto streets in Hollywood Thursday., If Clinton denies the statem ents o f other witnesses, Judiciary Committee investigators “will have to prove them and that will take time,” said a Republican committee official, speaking only on condition of anonymity.“ We’ll have to put on a case.” c o o p e r a t i o n w i t h to resume spot inspections, which it banned on Aug. 5. But Iraq reacted angrily when the council sent a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan last Friday with the broad outlines of a review that didn’t explicitly mention the possibility of çasing or lifting sanctions. Blaming the Americans for cutting all references to ending sanctions, Baghdad on Saturday banned inspectors from monitor­ ing previously searched facilities — leaving them with little to do but change film and videocassettes on stationary cameras. Iraq said Thursday it would reject any Security Council resolution unless it calls for the end o f sanctions, imposed after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. th r a s h e s “Iraq’s response is that it will not deal positively with the members of the council unless there is a clear stand that the sanc­ tions on Iraq w ill be lifted ,” Iraq’s vice p re sid e n t, T aha Y assin R am adan, told A ssociated Press Television News at the Baghdad International Fair. Ramadan’s remarks echoed a front-page editorial in the ruling Baath party newspa­ per al-Thawra, which said Iraq would not abide by any measure without an explicit timetable for lifting economic sanctions. R ussian A m bassador Sergey Lavrov, w hose country has been sym pathetic to Iraq’s demand for an end to sanctions, said: “The way out of the crisis, the only way, is for Iraq to rescind.” s o u th e r n By Ian James A ssociated Press M IA M I— A revived Tropical Storm Mitch lashed southern Florida with heavy rain and wind Thursday, ju st weeks after the region endured the wrath o f Hurricane Georges. H a rd e st b it w ere th e F lo rid a K eys, w here tornadoes touched dow n, m obile homes flipped, trees fell and power lines snapped. One highway death was attributed to heavy storms. The scenic island chain also bore the brunt o f Georges, which destroyed or dam­ aged 4,000 homes when it struck Sept. 25. “The water’s getting ready to come over th e j e t t y ,” sa id K ey L arg o re s id e n t C h a rle n e R o w e ll, w hose fam ily ow ns Rowell’s Marina, where Mitch already had destroyed 11 boats and dam aged dozens more. The onetim e hurricane had weakened significantly after killing at least 9,000 p e o p le d u rin g a ra m p a g e th ro u g h C e n tra l A m e ric a la s t w e e k . B u t it revived itself to tropical storm strength while plow ing over the G u lf o f M exico in s p e c t o r s F lo rid a , K e y s toward Florida. By W ednesday, several tornadoes had touched down in Key Largo and one struck in Isla m o ra d a ,. said B ecky H errin , a sp okesw om an fo r the M onroe C ounty Sheriff’s Office. “ I t ’s ju s t M o th er N a tu re d o in g her thing,” said a nonchalant Lee Severino, general m anager o f the Hampton Inn in Islamorada, which had minor damage to its roof. “This year we’ve had two tornadoes and a hurricane come through. I hope we’re done.” Farther north, “a bunch of trailers turned over and people were trapped inside. We had to go trailer to trailer getting people out,” she said. Seven people were treated for stormrelated injuries, mostly cuts and scrapes, at M ariner’s Hospital on Plantation Key on Wednesday. Winds gusts reached about 70 mph near M iam i, where flooding slowed morning commuters. The storm was expected to move out to sea by W ednesday aftern o o n . R ainfall totals of 4 to 8 inches were forecast. Opinión B rn & m m rn THISLOCKOUTISNT JUSTABOUT MONEY: ITSABOUTOUI?RIGHT TDMAKEA DECENT LMN6-AFTERALL, I'VE GOTMOUTHS TOFEED.™ Bravo — To Gov. Jane H ull, Sen. John M cC ain f and th e re s t o f T u e sd a y ’s e le c tio n w inners. M ay | y o u r term s b e g o o d o n es. A n d fo r all the can d i­ d ates, c o n g ra tu la tio n s fo r a h ard -fo u g h t election. { A lthough A rizona voter turnout w asn ’t as good as ; it should have been, those w ho cast ballots should I be applauded fo r letting th eir opinions be know n. [ T he right to v ote is n ’t one that should be wasted. : Bravo (? ) — To M in n eso ta v oters, fo r electing | fo rm er w restler Je sse “T he B o d y ” V entura as that | s ta te ’s n ew g o v ern o r. W e’re n o t su re if th a t’s a j g o o d o r b a d th i n g y e t. B u t b e f o r e y o u s t a r t { b em o an in g V en tu ra’s q u a lific a tio n s, a t least give | th e m an a ch an ce to p ro v e h im self. A fo rm er B | m o v ie a c to r w as th e U .S . P re sid e n t fo r 8 y ears, j S o n n y B o n o W as a s t e r l i n g m a y o r f o r P a lm \ S p rin g s, C a lif., an d a p ro m isin g re p re se n ta tiv e , i A nd Jack K em p w as chosen as presidential candi; date B ob D o le ’s running m ate in 1996. Hey, if gov| e m m e n t m eetin g s g et o u t o f hand, V entura could se ttle th in g s w ith a p ile d riv e r. B u t w h a t’s n ex t? “H o lly w o o d ” H u lk H o g a n b a ttlin g w ith “ S to n e C o ld ” S teve A ustin in a steel cag e fo r C alifornia’s gubernatorial seat? Bravo —— To the A rizo n a State Fair, w hich ends Don’t always believe TV or lawyers on it S unday. G et o u t th e re w h ile y o u s till can , folks. T hink about it: W h e re else can y o u b u y a com dog (o r som e o th er food item ) m ade fro m yo u r favorite sta te fa ir an im al, g u zzle w a tered -d o w n s ta te fair b eer and then p uke y o u r guts b u t on yo u r favorite state fair ride? Bravo — To the A SU m en ’s an d w o m en’s hoops te a m s, fo r g iv in g u s so m e th in g th e N B A c a n ’t: B a s k e tb a ll! S u re , B o b b y L a z o r is n o M ic h a e l Jordan, but at least L a z o r and th e rest o f the Sun D e v ils are starting th eir season. Hey, w ho know s, L a z o r c o u ld be N B A -b o u n d o n e o f th e se d ay s. L e t’s h o p e th a t w h e n th e tim e c o m e s, th e N B A isn ’t still in a lockout. Speaking o f A S U hoopsters j [ j j ( | [ j Boo — To fo rm e r S u n D ev il S te v in “H ed ak e” Sm ith. A n article in this w eek ’s S p o rts Illu stra te d \ tells ab o u t S m ith ’s p o in t-sh a v in g seam and o th e r } alleged d ealin g s w ith b oosters. W e d o n ’t know if j all o f it is tru e , b u t w h e n w ill th is fia s c o e n d ? W hen w ill A S U h o o p fans g e t to en jo y new s o f an j N C A A T o u rn a m e n t b e rth in s te a d o f h av in g th is j p o in t-s h a v in g d e a l sh o v e d in o u t fa c e s at e v e ry j turn ? L e t’s h ope new coach R ob E vans can pull o ff | the sam e m agic h e did at O le M iss .. Boo — To the C al B ears and p oor planning and tim- j ing from AS ASU. Cal gets a “boo” ju st on principle, j l w hile the poor p la in in g and tim ing earns the same for j a r e la te d re a s o n . T h is w a s s u p p o s e d to b e j H om ecom ing w eek? You w ouldn’t have know n it by I j th e lo o k s o f th in g s a ro u n d c a m p u s . T h e tim in g couldn’t have been w orse for A SA SU ’s activities vice president to resign; that resignation has resulted in ) ¡ p ractically n o H o m e c o m in g ev en ts. S chool sp irit { already is at a low; this only m akes things worse. State Press Staff Caryl-Sue Micalizio Frank Kelley learned the hard way fo r his firm ’s “false, deceptive and m isleading” ads. not to believe everything he sees on W oods’ office took the DUI specialists to task for their television. bait-and-switch tactics, for kicking guys like Kelley when His teacher was a snake — an ASU th ey ’re down. F or using salespeople to separate them alum w hose business it is to turn a from their cash, rather than lawyers to defend them in profit on the hardship o f people like court. He did everything but come right out and say What Kelley . Regular people — not idiots everybody should already know, that Phillips is a snake. —- who in a time of trouble, swallow a But Frank Kelley could tell you that. story they know is too good to be true. What the Attorney General didn’t mention, though, is The ads promised “aggressive rep­ the biggest lie of all the one told by Phillips and his resentation” and “zero down” — entic­ fellow parasites, who make ambulance chasing look like a ing claims to someone like Kelley, a working stiff up to noble profession. The one that makes the lies about pay­ his neck in hot water. Kelley wanted to believe the guy in ment look almost little and white. the suit trying desperately to be credible actually could be The lie that’s never said outright, but is im plicit in credible. each o f the ads that hook suckers like Kelley every day, He wanted to believe Jeff Phillips could help him beat convincing them to go against their better judgm ent, to his drunken driving charge, ju st like he claimed he could take the bait. on TV. So strong was Kelley’s faith, he agreed to appear The one that whispers in your ear, “We might be able in the ads himself, pimping the services of Phillips’ firm to get you out of it.” They might not actually say it, but before he’d even benefited from them. the message is clear. They want you to believe that if they Then the truth hit. try really hard, the prosecution is otherwise occupied, the “The only thing I got were no attorneys at my court wind at your back and God decides to lend a hand, they case,’: Kelley told reporters.“ I was told that I could han­ m ight be able to deliver an acquittal. And it’s true •— dle it m yself and they told me what to say.” about three percent of the time. K elley soon le a rn e d th a t the sto ry at P h illip s & While con men like Phillips are promising to postpone Associates changed dramatically once the cameras were robbing you blind if you’ll ju st sign on the dotted line, switched off. That the claims o f “no money down”, and they never quite get around to mentioning facts like the “lo w m oney d o w n ” b elied the $ 3,600 in p o st-d ated 97 percent prosecution rate the Maricopa County attorney checks he was pressured into signing. That the fee reduc­ is batting so far this year. B ecause that m ight get you tion for telling their scripted lies turned out to be a mas­ thinking that a fee o f a couple grand might be a bit stiff sive $150 knocked off his first bill when you’re almost certainly going to be convicted any­ You mightn’t feel sorry for Kelley. Maybe the nature way. o f his crime drains you o f sympathy, makes you think he That $3,600 is a lot to pay for no help at all. Especially got what he asked for. But nobody should be tricked into to a snake. paying through the nose for their own punishm ent; no But Frank Kelley could tell you that. matter how deserved it might be. Attorney General Grant Woods squeezed $200,000 and G regor McGavin is a sen io r studying journalism 100 hours of free legal services from Phillips last week and can be reached at avdaddy@ im ap4.asu,edu. Percy Ednatino Jr., Editor Jodi Bafiindo, Managing Editor Doug Flanagan -Night Editor Chris Kahn -Assistant Sports Editor Becky Bevins — Cit)r Editor Jonathan Inge — ------- Magazine Editor David Woodfill -Assistant City Editor Michelle Craig — Asst Magazine Editor Reporters ~ ------ — Opinion Editor Afcda CakKveM, Lidia E Kelly, Stephanie Paterik, Jayson Peters, Kim Prendergast, HayJey Ringle, Ganga Subramanian, Jessica Wolf. Angela Yeager. — -— — News Editor Sports Reporters — —------Photo Editor Copy Editors Christi Foist — —— — — — — -— ------i Scott Bracken, d in t Currie, Sam Gariaaruk, David Myers, Nick Piecoro. Brad Lang -Assistant Photo Editor Ed Odeven — — Sports Editor Photographers— — —— — —— --------— — — Mike C u rran , Soley Hartel, Ofelia Madrid, Jerem y W eiss. Columnists-— 1502. W e d o n o t an sw e r questions o f a general nature. Cartoonists The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. ——— — Brian Balchumas, C a rrie L Behrens, Mike C urran, Brian Fairington, C arlos Ramirez, Melissa C arr. Production —— — — — .. . --------- — -------— R o b ert Deal, Keith G erchick, A lyson H urt, H e a th er Nash, W ayne Nelson, Jennifer Swinford, Joanna W ike. Sales Representatives — —— — ---------— -— — ~ Brian Ary, Mike Giallanza, David G oodw in, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Shane Siren, Kathy W elsh. Marketing T earn —r— .— — ». . . — Angele e King M ario Lopez, Susan Schimmel. Jeremy Hem Scott D. Gillette, Stephanie D. Johnson, Amber Knuth, Nancy Kuo, C C McCandless, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Policoff, — —■— >— ----- ,------- — Brian Ary, Andrea Jennifer Bahfy, Scott Bennett, Ashlea Deahl, Ross Bde, Classifieds —.— . . . — ~ — —— Kate D es» , Amanda Green, Paui Holley, Katie M cG eeJeanette Ptoium. T h e State Press is published M onday th rough Friday during th e academ ic year, ex c ep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atthews C e n te r, R oom 2, Arizona State University, T em pe, A riz., 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 On the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu Opinion flNoJtaaittoMMitflVMMmtarlfc HW Van Buren labeled fo r reasons I would like to say a few things concerning Nancy Kuo’s letter in the State P ress on Nov. 3. The fact is, the area described around Van Buren Street is heavily ridden with crime arid prostitution. This is a fact period. No arguing about that one. Second, people need to realize that every human strives to fe d safe. The area described is not a safe area o f town. Therefore, it will be labeled as unsafe. It is not bad to label this area unsafe. People will avoid the area and hopefully avoid becoming the victim of a crime. Nancy has no right to get upset at people who label Van Buren a bad side o f town. This is not to say that I think every* one who lives or visits the area indulges in these crimes. It is not a matter of putting people down, it is a matter of safety. To be safe is a natural instinct of every human being. It is second in order in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, following the basic needs of food, water and shelter. People are always going to view areas with heavy crime as “the bad side of town.” I have friends at work that live in that area which I respect I do not look down on them, I know they are respectable people. However, that doesn’t mean that I will not try to avoid the area while driving through Phoenix at night. Despite whether Nancy visually encounters crime on her periodic visi­ tation or not, it is there. This conflict cannot be helped by telling people to stop recognizing the problem or to stop feel­ ing unsafe. What We can do is help reduce crime through com­ munity efforts. I know what it is like to be labeled and at times it can be discouraging, but ‘labels” are always going to exist It is how the human brain naturally stores information effec­ tively. The only thing that I can do is to prove misleading pre­ conceptions of me wrong. Devin Farmer Freshman Pre-business Find a m an! Was Christ! Foist’s Nov. 3 opinion article a presentation of her views on nightclub courtships or merely an avenue for her to reveal her own abandonment issues? The article was littered with situations which seemed like personal outcries rather than points of support for her thesis (which I thought was about how the bar scene is no way to meet lasting relationships). “I’m capable of loneliness even when loved,” Foist wrote, “ ... let a couple walk by and suddenly I’m stabbed with a long­ ing f o r ... a husband.” She continues, “there’s something about seeing your friends start to pair o ff— while you’re maturing in singleness — that’s makes the pain especially poignant” One can empathize with another’s personal alimentation, but was all that really necessary in the article? Some people call it ranting. Also, I felt that her language over-generalized the roles women and men play in the dating scene. Foist wrote, “failure to follow through on that implicit promise ... (for a man to call a Woman),,, is a failure to satisfy the female desire for closure.” Has Foist implied that all women seek closure or worse yet, ' ' ' •, -y ' 'I that men do not seek the same? There are many situations j where the river flows a different course. Some women will see | things one way and some men another, but holistically, I I believe courtship is played on the same court. The tone of her statement suggests an abnormal apathy j towards the opposite sex. Once again, there exists the impies- I sion that she is writing an article more about herself and her j less-than-stellar performance on the dating dance floor, rather I than on her original thesis. Ivan Insua { ; ;junior I Mechanical Engineering j I A n o th e r look a t A ffirm a tiv e A ctio n This is in response to Brian Ary’s column published Nov. 5 regarding affirmative action. Several of his assertions! are great examples of ultra-liberal hypocrisy and I would like to point a few out First, I find it incredibly ironic that Ary wants us to accept each other’s differences and ethnicities, but he makes a few “racist” judgments of his own. The reader is forced to accept the premise that affirmative action is “one of the only ways corporate white employers can realize the talents o f others not like themselves.’’ That is a very blatant generalization, not to mention untrue. Next, Ary claims we are “segregated socially” and that we tend to “be assimilated with those who have similar back­ grounds to us.” However, we need to find the root of this segre­ gation. As soon as young children are old enough to comprehend their diversity and ethnicity, they are forced to “appreciate other’s differences;’’ Which, in itself, is not a bad idea; howev­ er, this is a hidden form of segregation. If we are to progress as an “American culture” or a unified country even, why are we encouraging children to separate themselves into groups based on race? It is possible to respect each other’s cultures and to appreciate one’s one race, but it is not necessary to separate into coalitions and groups (i.e. Nation of Islam). Although Ary said there is “nothing wrong With that” socially, I believe the root of our race problems started socially. As for the corporate world, let’s be realistic in terms of affirmative action. If I was hired because I was a woman and only for that reason, ! would not accept the job. Women hâve suffered allèged oppression at the hand of “evil white males,” along with other groups. However, I am confident in my own abilities and successes that I do not need affirmative action to give me a boost Until people like Ary realize that affirmative action is in fact a form Of racism (there is no such thing as reverse racism — racism is racism across the board), we are destined not to just “get along.” I would like to play in the sandbox of life with all types of people, however, that will not happen until we stop dividing ourselves into races, ethnicities and groups. j j | j ! ! I j I J | | I 1 J j j 1 Susie Timm I junior I Political Science j Body becomes Mind thanks to Minn, voters If I were ever to go into politics and some reporter wanted to dig up dirt on me, they’d find some. I’m not proud o f some of the stuff I’ve done and I have to admit that I was one of those people. Heck, my fam ily was one o f those fam ilies. Living in M innesota, we spent one hour of a cold Saturday night watch­ ing pro wrestling. There, I’ve said it. Judge me as you will. I’ll also admit that I liked Jesse “The Body” Ventura in my junior high days. I used to cheer for him. His raspy voice and odd outfits made him unique. As Jesse and I have gotten older, I guess w e’ve both given up the wrestling scene. I’m in graduate School and Jesse’s in politics. While I’m preparing to graduate in M ay, h e’s m aking headlines— lots o f them . Even in Arizona, a state thousands of miles away from the land of 10,000 frozen lakes, Ventura’s win made tihe front page. Ventura’s win initially shocked me. He beat out Skip Humphrey, a well-known political figure in Minnesota. The win made me happy for two reasons. First, I’m glad a former wrestler has publicly re-invent­ ed himself. However, it seems a bit ironic that he went from wrestling — an arena that traditionally is known for fake moves and a lot o f show — to politics -— also an arena traditionally know n for fake m oves and a lot o f show. The public seems shocked about his win but when you think about it, the two professions have more in com­ mon than we’d probably like to admit. Ventura reminds us that America truly is the land o f opportunity and second chances. I know a lot o f students who don’t know what major they want to pick. They can’t envision themselves in one particular field for a long time. Ventura proves that we are in charge of our journey here on earth. Even if he hadn’t won, just by running, he made a statement. He pushed himself into a different arena. As warped as it may sound, he is inspirational in that he didn’t let his past interfere With his goals. Second, I ’m glad that M innesotans took a chance. I don’t know what kind of job he’ll do as governor. He may completely flop. That’s not the point. The point is that Minnesotans made it known they wanted a change. Many of the newspapers I’ve read and the TV reports I’ve seen have focused on the “former wrestler” angle of the story. Although it’s interesting, the fact that the public has made a strong statement seems to be far more intriguing. Ventura’s win seems to be another indication that politics is growing more and more disenchanting for the general pub­ lic. Some voting Minnesotans are making that known. I have to wonder, though, how many people who didn’t vote wished they could turn back time. Only the future will tell if Jesse “the Mind” Ventura — as he now wants to be called — will make a positive contribution to Minnesota politics. Meanwhile, I’m ju st enjoying seeing the shock and surprise — this is America! Rosie McSweeney is a graduate student studying journal­ ism and can be reached at mcswee@imap3.asu.edu. W hat D oyqu Think? E -m a il: shades@imap4.asu.edu W e b s ite : http://www.statepress.com G rip e L in e : 965-6881 Fax: 965-8484 M a il: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University 15 Matthews Center Tempe.AZ 85287-1502 Pick-up lines, rejection part of professor’s study By A ngela Y eager _...„....... . State Press ■— \ It’s a scene that could be found in ahyTem pe b a i\/ A man walks up to a woman who rnlttgifesTum. She isn ’t attracted to him, but doesn’t want to be rude. How does she let him know she has no interest in him without devastating his confidence? ASU communication professor Melanie Trost has been extensively researching rejection methods for years in order to find out the answer to that question. “I wanted to know, if someone hits on you, what regular strategies are used for rejection,” she said. Trost started the study when she came to ASU eight years ago. Personal experience led her to become interested in the subject. “I am not very good at either (flirting or rejection),” she said. “It is very difficult to take the fact that someone just isn’t interested in you.” Trost’s research on ASU students focused on the meth­ ods used to reject someone, The study looked at the fre­ quency of strategies used by females and males. Students filled out an anonymous questionnaire that rated the fre­ quency o f rejection methods on a scale of one to seven — seven being a method they always use. She came to some interesting conclusions’. “T he assu m p tio n w as th at w om en w ould be m ore polite,” Trost said. “In fact, we found that women tend to be much more direct in their rejection methods.” According to her study, in which 163 females and 189 m ales responded, the m ost com m on m ethod used by w$men was direct com m unication. This includes Such approaches as telling the person, “I am hot interested,” (4.1 frequency), saying “I just want to be friends,” (4.6 frequen­ cy) and “I have a boyfriend” (4.8 frequency). “One woman said to a guy, ‘W e’re really good Mends and that is so much better than having a boyfriend,’ which is a good, direct way to deal with this situation,” Trost Said. This kind of communication will leave no doubt in the minds of the flirter where thé other person stands, she said. In other cases, the message is hot as clear. “Some people Stated that they wouldn’t return phone calls or even worse, they would make excuses,” Trost said. “The problem with that is, once you start making excuses, you have to keep making them.” While men employed similar strategies, Trost said they were less likely to use direct communication. Males also tend to be less selective than women. “Many men, much more than women, said they would flirt with a person even if they weren’t interested in them,” she said. Men also tended to think Women were giving off signs of interest much more than women. “Because of die possibility of Violence, women are more on guard,” she said. Trost’s study looked at college-age, heterosexual cou­ ples, but she said she w ants to eventually expand her research to include gay and lesbian couples and to look at their flirting methods. She also wants to bring in research subjects to study flirting and rejection in a controlled envi­ ronment. Trost said one o f the main motivations for this study was to find the methods of rejection that Would cause the least pain to the rejected. “Many people won’t approach someone because o f that fear of rejection,” she said. “It is painful to watch anyone go through that.” Tem pe named only disaster-resistant com m unity in A rizo n a By K im P rendergast State Press The Federal Em ergency M anagem ent Agency called Tempe the only disasterr e s is ta n t c o m m u n ity in A riz o n a Thursday. T h e d e s ig n a tio n c a m e as p a r t o f a n a tio n a l e ffo rt c a lle d P ro je c t im p a c t, w hich encourages the country to take a pro -activ e approach when dealing w ith natural disasters instead o f waiting for a disaster to strike. C o rp o ra te and g o v ern m en t p a rtn e rs including M otorola, APS, SRP and ASU agreed to participate in various programs to strengthen the ASU community in case o f a natural catastrophe, such as a wind­ storm or flash flood. “It only makes sense that ASU would be a partner w ith all the o ther partners since ASU is located w ithin thé city o f Tem pe,” said Bill Bess, the ASU docu­ ment signer and director o f public safety , Bess said ASU has not had to donate any m oney yet, b u t the U n iv ersity has offered its support and resources as need­ ed. “W e are co m m itte d in th e d is a s te r e ffo rt,” B ess said. “W e offered v o lu n ­ teers and facilities for temporary housing as needed.” A d d itio n a lly , th é p a r tn e r s a g re e d t h e ir e m p lo y e e s w o u ld r e c e iv e the. em ergency training and special services th a t w ould be n eeded if a catastro p h e struck. P roject Im pact is an initiative devel­ oped by FEMA D irector James Lee W itt to ch allen g e the co u n try to u n d ertak e actions that would reduce the effects of natural disasters. A ccording to FEM A, Tempe has had seven disasters declared since 1973. All seven have e ith e r been flash: floods or windstorms. Because Tempe is susceptible to wind­ sto rm a n d p o w e r-o u ta g e p ro b le m s , FEM A ad v ised the city to p re-p o sitio n pow er generators to assure the continu­ ance o f com m unity w ater supplies and electrical cu rre n t to centralized shelter locations. x “ I t ’s a p r o - a c tiv e a p p r o a c h ,” sa id M ayor Neil Giuliano. “It deals with dis­ asters before they strike.” Searchable A rchives • C ommunity G uide • H E a New Look and http://www.statepress.com at T r a d itio n a l H o m e s Ash C O U R T A new look at traditional housing in the heart of downtown Tempe. At the request of buyers like you, we have done away with the stucco and red tile roof home to offer you houses the way you remember them. Everything old is new again at Ash Court - basements, front porches, cozy hay windows and exterior siding. We built a home fitting of die historic character of the area, which lies one block from downtown Tempe, two blocks from Arizona State University, and minutes from the dynamic Rio Salado Project. We listened to you. No more long commutes to work and no more tract houses you mistake for your neighbors. So many people told us they wanted quality housing in an urban setting, not suburban, that we knew it was time for Ash Court lim es are changing, but some things should remain the same - like that great old house you grew up, just a short walk from downtown. SENECA Located 2 blocks west of Mill and 11/2 blocks south of University M ore mm Model Open D aily 1-6 p.m. • Sales O ffice 967-0002 940-944 Ash Avenue • Tempe, Arizona oo ^ — 1 New cell-phone hotline aimed at curbing graffiti Come out and By Stephanie Paterik State Press G raffiti-free streets and buildings are now just a cell phone call away. T he T em pe M a y o r’s C o m m ittee on Gangs, Drugs and Alcohol is empowering p e o p le w ho u se A irto u c h C e llu la r, C e llu la r O ne and S p rin t PC S c e llu la r phones to clean up graffiti in Tempe by dialing 2-9-2-9 (or “AWAY”) when they see it. “Since cell phones are the new, popu­ lar thing, we figure it’s pretty easy for people to dial four num bers w hen they spot it,” said C harlie B ladine, m anage­ ment assistant o f Tem pe’s Public Works D epartm ent, who helped im plem ent the p ro g ra m - “ W e ’ve o b s e rv e d th a t th e longer graffiti sits someWhere, the more people will add to it; sol this is a tool to com bat graffiti and get it off as soon as possible.” L t. Jay S p ra d lin g , w ith the T em pe p o lic e sp ecial in v e stig a tio n and gang unit, said g raffiti is m ore th an ju s t an eyesore. “Graffiti is considered by gangs as the new spaper o f the streets,” he said. “I t’s used to ad v ertise drug sales, designate boundaries and send threats. It transmits information from gang to gang, and it’s our priority that the m essages are rem oved before seen.” He said police regularly seek paint dona­ tions and volunteers to help rem ove the graffiti and anticipates the need for even more help because of cell-phone calls. “This gives us a whole new set of eyes and the sooner people let us know (about the lo c a tio n o f g ra ffiti), th e b e tte r,” Spradling said. S treet M aintenance M anager Randy V, a Florida company with the same office in Fort Lauderdale, and N utek Inform ation System s Inc. o f San Diego. T he co m p an ies had app ealed a trial ju d g e ’s ru ling th a t upheld the A rizona Corporation Com m ission’s order that the companies violated Arizona securities and fraud laws by not registering the ownership .share as securities and by making misrepre­ sentations about risk and other factors. The companies promised to appeal, They argued before the Corporation Commission and in court that potential investors were repeatedly warned about risk and that their ownership shares were not securities, pri­ m arily because investors were actively involved in management. A lawyer for state regulators said the rul­ ing means added protection for investors from promoters who do not disclose infor­ mation the investors should have. However, a business law expert said the ruling has national im plications and w ill produce uncertainty for business owners. “Simply because you’re using a new form of business organization doesn't mean you can evade .thé Securities Act if what is hap­ pening in the investment program is a pro­ moter offering a security,” said Assistant Attorney General W. Mark Sendrow. “W e’re certainly not saying, there’s any­ thing wrong with using the LLC as a vehicle for doing your business. The problem we found here is that they were using it to sella security,” he said. The case is Nutek Information Systems Inc. vs. Arizona Corporation Commission, 1 CA-CV 97-0590. t «; M o tt Smith UPCOMING EVENTS: 1 1 /1 5 - The O ffspring “The great Tiew ho of literate song-craft,” Mbs Angrden Tim es , “heartbreakingly gorgeous” | M .. ■■ W ¡is' 11/23 - The Black-eyed Peas TMC Presents . -JPUiWs County announces plans with 2 for new downtown jail Arizona utility companies By A m anda Riddle A ssociated Press PH O EN IX — The M aricopa C ounty B oard o f S upervisors spelled out plans Thursday to build a new jail downtown and expand another jail using proceeds from a voter-approved sales tax, A new jail near the downtown Madison S treet Jail will be ready for inm ates by 2003, the board announced at a press con­ ference. On Tuesday, county voters approved a fifth-cent sales tax designed to raise $900 million over nine years for jails and juve­ nile detention facilities. The tax, which will begin Jan. 1, 1999, will add 3,139 adults beds to the existing capacity of 5,700. It will also increase juvenile-detention beds from 277 to 665. Because of explosive population growth, county ja ils have been sw elled beyond capacity for four years and they are now 1,500 prisoners over capacity, said David Smith, chiéf county administrator. “ W e’re w ay beh in d sc h e d u le ,” said Supervisor Jan Brewers. “The people really solved this crisis. The only alternative we could have had was to let one prisoner out for every one in or to raise property taxes.” PH O E N IX (A PI — A riz o n a has moved another step closer to giving con­ sumers customer choice in electricity State regulators have reached agree­ ments with both Arizona Public Service Co. and Tucson Electric Power Co that will remove the final barriers APS, the state's largest electric utility, said today its deal guarantees a 4 percent rate cut for its customers during the next four years The deal, struck after tour months of negotiations, also resolves all pending litigation involving APS and die slate - - lawsuits that could have dragged on lor years. "This landmark agreement will finally make electric competition in Arizona a reality." said Jack Rose, executive secre­ tary of the state Corporation Commission and the sliAc’s lead negotiator. The deal still must be approved by the three-member Corporation Commission. Rose noted that no state in the nation has been able hi begin electric compel ition without first obtaining such a settlement. Without the cooperation of APS. electric competition would have bogged down in lawsuits and infighting, lie said The county will now look for land to build the new medium and maximum secu­ rity jail, which will hold 1,280 adult beds. Although it owns land west o f M adison Street Jail, it is also considering purchasing other land because they are unsure whether the spot is the right one for another jail. By March, the county will award a con­ tract for design of the facility and construc­ tion could begin as early as fall 1999, said Bob Williams, director of criminal justice facilities development. The southw est D urango Jail w ill be expanded to include an additional 1,850 adult bed s and 388 ju v e n ile -d e te n tio n rooms. The jail tax also required the county to streamline proceedings to reduce the time suspects are held and to find alternatives to detention. Smith said plans include dou­ bling the size o f pretrial screening pro­ gram s and hiring m ore S uperior C ourt judges. The county will also purchase a $25 mil­ lion computer system to fully-integrate the criminal justice information system. Voters last approved major spending on high-security jails in 1980, with the last expansion occurring in 1983. 3 StatePress KEGS * ? Arizona State Letters PotentiaL competitors o f APS agreed. “I think overall this is the most important agreement that the commission has ever re a c h e d ," said Tom B ro derick, a spokesman for PG&E Energy Services, which has applied to sell power in Arizona Commission plans call for large industrial customers to Start choosing their own electric provider on Jail. 1, along with a small num­ ber o f residential customers All customers jwill be eligible to compete by 200J C o m m issio n C h airm an Jim Irv in spoke favorably about the deal, without endorsing it. He said h e's happy to see that the deal lays to rest a critical issue for the commission: how to transform "verti­ cally integrated” utilities, which control generation, transmission and distribution, into separate companies that don’t have dominant market power. To accomplish that goal, the agreement calls for APS to trade its high-voltage transmission lines to UniSource, formerly Tucson Electric Power, for TEP’s interests in two power plants: Four Comers, near I armington, N.M , and Navajo, near Page APS will form a separate generating company by the end ol 2002. Ed ito r t o the E-MAIL SHADES@IMAf4.ASU.EDU We’re Open AFTER all ASU Games! SUN DEVIL Sportswear • Sweats T-Shirts • Pennants _ Decals • Mugs • Etc. CE — C am pus C ollege St. C om er Deli ( S f f ld e n r pn ¿ B o o le G e n tS r * | % Student Book r 7 0 4 S . C o lle g e A v e . T K E pc*® ] O n e .B lo ck N . o f A SU 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 5 .Ahn,. Michael d r a n d o n W . L e e , a F I L E S 5. P .P .S . ■1 4 9 1 - 5 O O 0 Í • Premiering Exclusively on ASU Channel 2 2072 E. Southern Ave • Ste. 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(Cleaning Extra) | Exam + /X-Ray 1 ^ $ 3 0 ' ............ 1- Special rates available for patients w ithout D ental insurance No charge consultation - I>f c i | h ► i h ; 1 '¡il- i f i 0 VI E .1: State press SPORTS Rain or shine, cheer or whine, w e’re there! 8 0 0 -7 2 0 -6 4 3 3 See page 15. w w w .AZcasino.com SPORTS ★ FAIL CONCERT* A Z casino is a link to in t e r n e t C a sin o & T e le p h o n e S p o rts w a g e rin g 6 c a s in o g a m e s NO d o w n lo a d No F e e s t o o p e n / P lay fo r FUN o r W in re a l S$ j Statepress pncHeozKs a c a p p e 1 1 a JL HEAR THEM PERFORM LIVE AND PICK UP A COPY OF THE NEW AND MUCH ANTICIPATED 18-SONG GDI F r id a y N o v . 6 8 :0 0 PM A r c h it e c t u r e F o re st & B ld g R o o m U n iv e r s it y o n t h e A S U 60 C a m p u s D o n a tio n $5 / S tu d e n ts $4 Arizona academic standards earn more praise, slight rap PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona’s academic standards for public schools are getting further praise, but it comes with a rap on the knuckles as well. The American Federation of Teachers, an AFL-CIO affiliated union, was to release a report today saying those standards are clear and tough. At the same time, the organization was calling on Arizona to provide help for students who have trouble meeting the new standards. The report points out that 20 other states pay for remedial programs. “Arizona has done a good job with stan­ dards,” said the federations’s Heidi Glidden, author of Making Standards Matter. “But the state needs to give every student a fair shot at meeting the standards by ensuring that stu­ dents having trouble are given the extra help they need.” Lisa Graham Keegan, who won re-election on Tuesday as Arizona’s superintendent of public instruction and oversaw drawing up the standards, said she hopes to provide such sup­ port. Keegan said she will ask the Legislature for $4 million to that end. “I’ve had many conversations with district superintendents around the state, and they have indicated to me that remediation is a concern,” she said. “They want to know that there will be an investment in intervention programs.” Earlier this year, the Washington D.C.based Fordham Foundation called Arizona’s academic standards No. 1 in the country in setting concrete goals for student achievement. The standards, adopted in 1996 by the Arizona Board of Education, are the founda­ tion for state’s new high school graduation test Arizona is one of 24 states that now requires students to pass exit exams before graduating. Starting this spring, high school sophomores in district and charter schools will have five tries to pass two language and five math portions of the Arizona Instrument to Measure Standards. G reenlee leads all A rizo n a counties in v o te r tu rnou t PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona’s least-popu­ lated county had the highest voter turnout per­ centage of the state’s 15 counties in Tuesday’s general election, according to unofficial results from the Secretary of State’s Office. A total o f 2,919 o f Greenlee County’s 5,436 registered voters — 5.4 p e rc e n ti— cast ballots on Tuesday. By comparison, only 40 percent, or 534,794, of the 1.3 mil­ lion registered voters in Maricopa County, the state’s biggest, voted. Statewide, 42.3 percent of registered vot­ ers cast ballots in the general election, State Election Director Jessica Funkhouser said Thursday. Election officials had predicted about 45 percent of Arizona’s nearly 2.3 mil­ lion registered voters would go to the polls. Results had been tabulated Thursday from all but four of the state’s 2,027 precincts, and about 50,000 early-voting ballots remained to be counted, Funkhouser said. Yavapai County was second to Greenlee County with 53 percent o f registered voters casting ballots, followed by Cochise at 52 percent; Graham at 48 percent; Pima and Coconino at 46 percent; Gila at 45 percent; Apache, Navajo and Pinal at 44 percent; La Paz at 43 percent; Y um a at 41 percent; Maricopa and Santa Cruz at 40 percent, and Mohave at 38 percent. YOU ARE INVITED T O A A t lt a O P E N lo c a l M H O U S E o s q u e The Greater Phoenix Muslim community would like to invite you to meet them and learn more about the religion of Islam. This open house is to create channels of communication and understanding between the Muslim community and their Non-Muslim friends in the general Phoenix area. Bring some friends or fam ily members and come enjoy ethnic food and snacks from various Muslim cultures. W here: W hen: Tim e: Islam ic C ultural Center, 131 E. 6th Street, Tempe, by ASU for informa­ tion please call 894-6070 Isla m ic C om m unity Center o f Phoenix, 7516 N. Black Canyon, Phoenix, for information please call 249-0496 Saturday, November 7,1998. Begins at 4:30 PM with snacks, video, lecture on Islam, and Q &As. NO ADMISSION C L A S S R IN G S EVERYBODY WILL f££L MIS PAIN NOVEMBER 6 n T h e F u rim e s 14 B ig g er H than >TWoyt Croiz.'Y Wild £7*4 0 *0*1 "T5e*fs, ■^4 * ..." 0*rc hcf"4 0*0000*1 A a.,,.- « By Brian Balchumas uge 4 T ric y c le s a r e n o t a llo w e d to b e rid d e n o v e r 1 0 m . p . h . in V a n c o u v e r , C a n a d a . W ) E B y C a r r ie L. B e hre ns ¡ l & Q ß ß © ^ ’l ^ S ( ^ 0 t o ( 3 ö ^ 1 % g >% ß a e a ^ c o ^ a t s t f . ¡8 Snacks î hW 4kW S pade P hillips , P.L CoHeiV GwyKoy' “Sityl«. —^ By M att Kowalski BBttA&Y BY WINS. i J S pade P hillip s , P.L By M att Kowalski C hicken- stick Bug Face B y Ji m W odark SilRCHABLE ARCHIVES • COMMUNITY GUIDE • AND MORE D I G I T A L IP K 5 h ttp : //w w w . statepress.com connecting [CYCLEYOURSTATEPRESS N othing talks 921-FAST (3278) izza 2107 S. RURAL RD. • TEMPE PERSONAL CHECKS °m v LARGE 14” with 1 TOPPING FOR OPEN LATE 7 DAYS A WEEK! FAST, FREE DELIVERY! LIKE WE d o ! HOKEY POKEY X-LARGE 16”WITH 2TOPPINGSFOR *5.9 9 " ‘7.99 k+ TAX AD D ITIO N A L TO PPING S 1.00 EA. PER PIZZA TO ASU ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS 1.00 EA. C a l l 965-6555 T O PL A C E A N A D ! GAMMAGE communities ASU Public Events Presents David Rousseve/Reality in 'Lo ve S o n g s " Renowned African-American dancer/ choreographer David Rousseve and his troupe Reality present the story of two African slaves, John and Sarah, who fall in love and conceive a child, in spite of their master’s cruel and sadistic attempts to keep them apart, in “Love Songs.* Saturday, November 7 * 8 pm Tickets: $9, $19, $25, $29 H alf price fo r students w ith I.D. Information/Charge: 602.965.3434 Group sales: 602.965.6678 TTY: 602.965.1871 Free! Open Rehearsal Friday, November 6 * Nook .Gam m age Stage This show contains graphic nudity and adult them es th a t m ay not be appropriats fo r young audiences. ASU Public Events Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium ASU Main Campus • Mill Ave. and Apache Blvd. • Tempe H o u se show s no ill effects fro m in ju r y Sun Devils defeat Marathon 92-86 By Nick Piecoro State Press So how much did Eddie House’s broken jaw effect his play Thursday night when ASU took on Marathon in the Sun Devils’ first exhibition game of the season? Well, considering that House set a career high with 37 points, had four steals and three assists in ASU’s 92-86 victory at Wells. Fargo Arena, the wired shut jaw couldn’t have caused him too much grief. “The jaw didn't bother me. My wind both­ ered me the m ost” said House, who made 16 of 22 shots. “I got tired in quick spans. I had to go o u t come back in, go out, come back in. But overall, I felt good.” House, along with senior Bobby Lazor, came up with numerous key baskets as the Sun Devils pulled away from Marathon late in the second half of the back and forth game. The two hit back-to-back shots in the paint as the Sun Devils took a five-point lead, 86-81, with about two minutes left in the game. “I’m really proud of the guys for coming out with the effort'they had,” head coach Rob Evans said after the game, his first at ASU. “I c a n ’t begin to say enough about Eddie House.” Lazor finished with 31 points (10 of 17 from the field) and 17 rebounds. “I’m really pleased with the play of Bobby Lazor. He really got on the glass for us,” Evans said. “That’s against a pretty good basketball team. (Marathon will) beat some people.”* Marathon, a traveling team made up of for­ mer college players, played the Sun Devils tough, ju s t like it did at M arquette on JVednesday night. Marathon came away from both games with a loss, as Marquette hit a buzzer beater to do them in. Led by forward Jerald Reiner and center Brian Myers, Marathon had a 43-41 lead at halftime. R einer and H ouse took over from the perimeter in the first half, providing the major­ ity of the offense for their teams. Reiner had 13 points, hitting three 3-pointers, and House had 18 points, making eight of 11 shots prior to the break. Neither team was able to jump out to much o f a lead mainly because of turnovers and sloppy play. The good news for ASU is that it forced 17 turnovers; the bad news is, it committed 24. “We made some mistakes, but again that’s going to happen early on in the season,” Evans said. “I think we need to take care o f the basket ball a little better,” House said. ‘I t’s going to be tough to win ballgames.in the Pac-10 turn­ ing the ball over 24 times.” The Sun Devils were, of course, without senior forw ard M ike B atiste, but ju n io r Okeme Oziwo, playing in his first game in nearly two seasons, did plenty to impress Evans. “Okeme did a good job. He played with a little bit more stamina than he had been play­ ing with in the past,” Evans said. Oziwo had five points and 10 rebounds. “I’m delighted to be back. I have, some stuff to work on, but we’ve got a long year,” he said. “Okeme played great. He got out there and got 10 boards and did everything that we asked him (to do),” Lazor said. Has Oziwo fully recovered from injuries sustained in a car accident occurring in August of 1997? “Not quite, but that’s right around the cor­ ner. I just got to keep working hard in prac­ tice,” die 6-foot-8 forward said. Sophomore point guard Alton Mason and junior Derrick Davis both had uneventful games in their Sun Devil debuts. Davis twist­ ed his right ankle and played only 11 minutes while Mason sat on the bench near the end of the game as ASU finally pulled away, “ It’s normal for a kid coming out of a JUCO. He has to learn the quickness up on this level,” Evans said of Mason, who had five turnovers and five assists. “He’s a smart kid, he’ll get better and better.” Evans isn’t disappointed with the perfor­ Jeremy Hein of the State Press mance and believes the team will improve Sun Devil point guard Alton Mason attempts to drive past Marathon guard Ron McMahon during the first half of ASU’s 92-86 victory. “because of the effort that they give.” Soccer squad attempts to keep hopes alive Grapplers get chance to showcase ta le n t By Sc o tt Bracken State P ress With a slim chance for the Pac-10 title and a shot at postseason action, the Sun Devil soccer squad will host USC Friday and UCLA Sunday, The Sun Devils ( get underway against USC at 6 p.m. Friday and noon on Sunday against UCLA. Both matches will be at Sun Devil Soccer Field (located on the com er of Rural Road and Sixth St, adjacent to the C ornerstone Theatres). Big crow ds are expected for both gam es, and FOX S ports N et w ill tele vise the U CLA m atch on a tapedelayed basis on Nov. 12 at 2 p.m. The Sun Devils (8-9, 4-3 in the conference) split with the Oregon schools last weekend. Stacey Tullock knocked in a free kick to give ASU a 1-0 victory over Oregon State Friday. The Ducks won by the same margin on a free kick in the 80th minute Sunday. In the match, ASU consistently threatened to score, but came up empty-handed, including multiple shots o ff the goalposts. Jeremy Hein of the State Press T h ro u g h it a ll, A SU fresh m an m id fie ld e r S tacey F reshm an fo rw ard K ristin a Dawson and th e struggling ASU women’s soccer team ends their regular season with home games Tullock continues to shine, leading the Pac-10 in scoring against USC Friday and UCLA Sunday. and establishing herself as die .school’s all-time leading point scorer. nine assists. USC is 10-0-1 when scoring first. “The recognition I ’ve received d o esn ’t include my The No. 20 Bruins have five players scoring in double teammates’ effort,” Tullock said. “A Pac-10 Player o f the digits, with 15 players contributing at least one point. Week award for me is an award fo r m y teammates, too.” They lead the Pac-10 in total points (125). Despite a mediocre record, Jennifer Peterson, Karine In the net for the Bruins is Lindsay Chip. She needs to Inoue and Kristina Dawson continue to pour in game-win­ stonewall one more shutout to break UCLA’s single-sea­ ning assists and goals and control the Sun Devil attack. son record o f 10. The 25th-ranked Trojans have won three out o f their Note last five games, including a 5-4 win over cross-town rival ASU has faced five ranked teams in 1998. The Sun UCLA. Sophomore Isabelle Harvey leads the Pac-10 w iflr^ ^ e v irsa re T -3 againstranked teams. B y Sam G anczaruk State Press 1 he ASU wrestling team will hold an open practice to the local public and coaches on Saturday at 1 30 p.m 1 he clinic will be held at the Physical Education W est building. The open workout is part ol head coach Lee Roy Smith's fall clinic for coaches and wrestlers. The work­ out will consist of wrestling matches between still-tobe-derennined team members, giving the public the opportunity to get a glimpse of the team. The wrestlers will battle individuals from their own weight class. Sm ith said be is hoping fo r a good turn out this weekend. “This is a real good opportunity foi people to come by and preview the talent we have before we get on the road for competition,” he said The team will be on the road for the next month-anda -h a lf. T h e Sun D ev ils h av e fiv e to u rn am en ts in Nvember and December. Th te a m ’s first w ill be the C a lifo rn ia O pen in F u lle rto n . C a l i f . on N ov. 14th, fo llo w ed by the Keystone classic in Philadelphia, P a , on Nov. 22 and the Las Vegas Invitational in Stateline, Nev. on Dec. 4The final two m eets in D ecem ber are the Reno D uals in R eno, N ev., on Dec. 19 and the M idlands Invitational in Evanston, 111., on Dec. 29-30. ASU return home on Jan. 8 for a meet against the Michigan State Spartans. ASU spikers attem p t to avenge previous defeats B y D a v id M y e r s S t a t e P ress V A ite n d P r o t e i The ASU volleyball team, riding a threematch winning streak, continues its quest for a postseason berth as it travels to Los Angèles to take on the UCLA Bruins and the USC Trojans this weekend. The Sun Devils take on the Bruins Friday night at 8 and the Trojans Sunday afternoon at 2. The Sun Devils (10-10, 7-6) need to win three o f their last five matches to have a legitimate shot at the postseason. A split this weekend would give them a great shot at doing just that. “We can not worry about the matches down the road,” ju n io r Jam ie Peck said. “We have to take it a game at a time, and I am sure that everything will work out for us.” The last time the Sun Devils faced these two schools, the m atches didn’t go their way as they Were swept in both. “That UCLA game was probably our low point of the season,” ASU head coach Patti Snyder-Park said. “Nothing went right for us and we self destructed in every aspect of our game.” After two weeks of using a different line­ up, the Sun Devils are, once again, changing the starters, moving Peck back into the line­ up and bringing Robyn M attingly o ff the bench. “Mattingly is going to be our ace in the hole,” Snyder-Park said. “For us to be suc­ cessful, we are going to need Peck to get in there and block some balls. With the combi­ nation o f that, Amanda Burbridge passing well and all of our middles being offensive, our weekend could be very successful.” A gainst UCLA, the Sun Devils know they are playing a team that they can beat. Thè Bruins (9-10,8-4) have won the last five meetings against the Bruins, but have been struggling a bit, which the Sun Devils hope to capitalize on. ' UCLA is led by freshman Kristee Porter and setter Ericka Selsor. Porter is third in thè conference with a 5.01 kills per game average, while Selsor is also third in the conference with an average of 13.32 assists; per game. “The key thing for us against the Bruins is to block much better,” Snyder-Park said. “We have been working on that all week and feel real confident that will be able to be successful.” The closing matchup against the Trojans should be much tougher for the Sun Devils. The No. 11 Trojans (15-4, 10-2) have won five in a row against ASU, and they have been playing at the top o f their game the past few weeks— winning eight of their last nine matches. “We played well against USC last time, but we just didn’t block that well,” SnyderPark said. “If we block, we should be able to force the Trojans to do more with the ball, which could result in some mistakes, If that can happen I feel that the match will work out in our favor.” , H ockey team b attles G olden B uffaloes The Golden Buffaloes of Colorado await ASU’s arrival tonight, when at 7 in Boulder, the referee will drop the puck, commencing a two-game, two-day series. The Sun Devils pulled up to No. 12 in the A m erican C o lle g ia te H ockey Association rankings. They were not ranked in the preseason poll, and this weekend’s challenger, Colorado, is ranked 14th. ASU’s record is 2-2-1, but both loses were to No. 1 Iowa State. ASU should have no trouble herding Colorado to the loss coral, but the Golden Buffalo coach vows it will not be so easy. “W e’re going to be offensively minded. The plan is to throw a lot of shots on the net and hope they go in,” Colorado coach Jeff Marten said. “(Colorado players) are skating well right now.” According to defenseman Luek Kriel, the Sun Devils will once again rely on defense. “I have to keep doing what I’m doing,” he said. “Step up to the blue line and let our goalie see the puck.” Center Jeff Kennedy said ASU is a team that plays solid “D.” Kennedy simply said, “ I d o n ’t like to be sco red on, so I put defense first.” Je re m y H ein o f th e S ta te P re ss Junior Jami Peck and the Sun Devils hope to continue their winning ways this weekend in Los Angeles. ASU has won three straight games during its late-season bid to reach the postseason. 13 ir A \ I ✓ / \ I -Turn to P review s page' 19 HOOTERS H jk M to fSvkl íi êv&È w è mrmwfwt et Hoofers before end after fhemmel fg p H M r, f4 o v « .T 4 ,1 9 9 8 $ pm to Midnight at new west location w ith c o u p o n a t b o th a d u lt th e a te r lo c a tio n s (G o o d th ro u g h 1 1 -3 0 -9 8 ) ■ • Theatres * • Over 10,000 videos (3 day rentals) I «Arcade | • Preview Booths | • DVD & CD Roms I • Lubes & Lotions ■ • Couples Welcome Free Full Year M em bership • Free Prizes • Free T heater • Free Food • Free Music ¡¡O H Male Revue Dancers MHIh.33li f. HOLLY ISSI LMICD01ELL OFFTHE -M M iíttjS ROAD til S. i l " ST. JUSTS. OF JEFFERSON N 24" ST. S aturday , 7 ,1 9 9 8 ,4 p.M. ' S u n D evil S t a d iu m ■ .......... »— ■ . C a m e i i i f i i Kickoff ■ 4 p.m. §t Sun Devil Stadium Fc« Sports AZ KMVP 1360AH ASU by 9 ASU leads series 11-8 ASU won 28-21 (1 1-8-97) Radio Latest Line Series Record Last Meeting — M M iniiiiiiii.Miiiiini Coaches — — Bruce Snyder No. 14 ASU (4-4,3-2) 45-31 ASU (7 deadline for a decision on his $2.5 million option until mid­ BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The Billings RimRockers of night EST on Nov. 11. Strawberry conditionally filed for free ’ the International Basketball Association have signed two agency Thursday, meaning that if the Yankees decline the guards, including former Northern Arizona standout Charles option and pay a $100,000, he becomes a free agent. Thomas. “G eorge never said he would not close a deal with Thom as, a 6-foot guard from C olum bus, O hio, was Strawberry,” Rubenstein said. “He’s hoping Strawberry can named the Big Sky Conference player o f the year for the make the team.” 1996-97 season. He averaged 12.3 points and 5.5 assists per Rubenstein said Strawberry owes the Internal Revenue game. He still leads NAU for single-season steals and Service $2.5 million in back taxes and penalties and the total assists. is about $4.5 million. Thomas averaged 16 points, 5.3 rebounds, 4,1 assists and “It’s clear he’s really in the hole,” Rubenstein said, “to the 3.8 steals at Cuesta Junior College in San Luis Obispo, Calif. IRS, and his alimony payments and other debts.” The RimRockers also have signed guard Chivo Anderson Strawberry’s agent, Eric Grossman, did not return a tele­ of Riverside, Calif. Anderson was the most valuable player phone call seeking comment. The 36-year-old outfielder hit .247 this year with 24 for; the University of Portland during the 1997-98 season, when he averaged 13.3 points and 4.5 rebounds per game. LSAT • GMAT MCAT• GRE Press Sports Week Ten Football Picks Photo Dynamic instructors c l r instructors have not only achieved h |jh scores, but also have excelled in our rigorous training process. They all know what it takes to bring out the best in their students. You’ll really like us t -90% of our students state that The eton Review was recommended to them by a friend. N ot Available , L a st W eek* Record 3-4 4-3 . 5-2' ’ 4-3 5-2 Season R ecord 28-23 28-23 22-29 11-10 8-6 C al ASU, 30-20 ASU, 13-10 ASU, 21-17 ASU. 35-14 Oregon, 38-28 Oregon, 45-24 Oregon, 48-24 Michigan, 20-17 Penn State, 3-0 Army, 21-11 vs. A S U W a s h in g to n vs. O re g o n N ot sure ho w you'll do on the real thing? Call today to schedule a free practice test and find out. Penn S ta te vs. M ich ig an A ir Force vs. A rm y Redskins vs. C ardinals THE P R IN C E T O N R E V IE W m 6 0 2 .9 6 7 1480 w w w . review. com Monday Night: 6-1 . 25-26 12-9 ■ASU, 28-13 ASU, 38-31 ASU, 24-21 Oregon, 35-14 Oregon, 31-28 Oregon, 54-0 Oregon, 45-24 Penn State, 28-7 Penn State, 27-21 Michigan, 27-24 Renn State, 24-7 Penn State, 31-21 A ir Force, 31-20 A ir Force, 28-14 Air Force, 42-30 Air Force, 44-32 Air Force, 31-10 Army 17-14 Cardinals, • Cardinals, Cardinals, Cardinals, Cardinals, Cardáis, Cardinals, 4 2 -3 2 1 -1 0 2 -0 174) Steelers, 27-24 Packers, 31-10 3 3 -1 5 1 7 -1 3 ... Steelers, 23-21 '2 4 - 1 0 p Steelers, 24-21 Packers vs.Steelers Packers, 24-13 U p set Pick o f RutgersX), Virginia 27, ’ Sanford 29, N avy 19 Florida S t 2D USC 28 th e W e e k __ I. n m m m m 5-2 Packers, 38-7 Packers, 38-31 Boston College 27, . Houston 3 1 ,, N otre Dame 24 So. Miss. 21 Colorado 17, W yoming 24,. Missouri 14 Colorado St 14 • • , -r * - > • -«y * »■” * * ■ ■ ■ ■■ mmm h * "h ' f ir* *■ I ’I r h m r > • • *• *' • , *. • f ¡/, I r * r i Cardinals, Redskins swap shoes this year TEM PE (A P) — The shoe is on the o th e r fo o t fo r the A riz o n a C a rd in a ls, whose accustomed role in a playoff race is that o f spoiler. This tim e, the C ard in als have som e­ th in g to play for, and the W ash in g to n Redskins are the struggling bunch that had to shelve their postseason plans early. W ith a w in o v e r W a sh in g to n on S unday, the C a rd in a ls (4 -4 ) w ould be poised to play Dallas next week for the NFC East lead. They already have Won as many games as they did last season. The Redskins (1-7) have lost as many as last year, when their 8-7-1 record got them close enough to a playoff berth to feel the sting of missing out. It also earned them a tougher schedule than Arizona’s, “W hen you start on the road in New York and th en 'y o u play San Francisco, Seattle, Denver and Dallas in a four-week stretch, you’ve got to be playing your best to come away with a decent record, and obviously we w ere far from our b e st,” Redshkins head coach Norv Turner said. The R edskins lite ra lly fu m b led and stumbled their way to a seven-game los­ in g s tre a k , p o s tin g th e N F L ’s w o rs t turnover .ratio while Turner tried to decide between Trent Green (seven interceptions) or Gus Frerotte (three) at quarterback. Turner finally turned conservative and told Green to throw safe passes and take sacks rather than trying to make plays. Green completed 21 of 31 throws for 225 yards and a touchdow n in a 21-14 win o v er the New Y ork G ian ts la st w eek, W ashington’s first turnover-free game. T he R ed sk in s are s till w o rst in the league in turnover ratio at m inus-13, but the figure reflects on the defense, which has only four takeaways. The Cardinals are the flip side o f the R e d s k in s th is se a so n — a b r is tlin g defense with an NFL-high 25 takeaways and an offense that ranks next-to-last. “Arizona is the beast/’ Washington left guard Tre Johnson said. “Regardless what their record is they’re always tough — at least from a defensive standpoint.” M iddle linebacker Ronald M cK innon is tied for the league lead with five inter­ c e p tio n s and has tw o o f A riz o n a ’s 14 fumble recoveries. He expects the ball to come loose frequently if Green, who was sacked fo u r tim es by the G iants, stays Jeremy Hein of the State Press Arizona Cardinals middle linebacker Ronald McKinnon (57) and his teammatesTbok to extend their wiiifling streak to two games and get above .500 when they face the hapless Washington Redskins at 2 p.m. Sunday at Sun Devil Stadium. conservative under pressure from defen­ s iv e e n d s S im e o n R ic e an d A n d re Wadsworth. “W henever you have those two guys coming from the outside and putting pres­ sure on the quarterback, th at’s a night­ mare,” McKinnon said. “Then you’ve got M ark Smith coming up the middle, so if it’s not open for him (Green), our defen­ sive line will have a whole lot o f sacks.” W adsworth hopes Green stays with the percentages. “I ’ve been sackless for three gam es. Tell him to fall my way so I can touch him ,” he joked. W hatever problems Washington has on offense seem to have been com pounded by running back Terry Allen’s injury and wide receiver M ichael W estbrook’s self­ ishness. Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS 1111 THE Commons on Ap­ ache Apts, utils; incl., fur­ nished, w/d, Private patio lbdr $540 move in Jail. 303-7278. TEMPE: 2BD, 5th & Hardy, totally remodeled* cov'd park­ ing, A/C, avail. Dec. 1, movein special, 804-0537 1214. E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 Off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. THE VILLAS Rural & Vista Del C eito, huge 2bd/2ba; free ac, water, heat* only pay for outlets & power. $671/mo. Lindsay or Tracy 968-9388, or 701-4351 TEMPE: 1BD, 5th & Hardy, totally remodeled, cov'd park­ ing, A/C, avail. mid-December, 804-0537 This should be your ad Call 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Gazelle co. CLOSE TO ASU, 3bd/2ba, $ 840/m o. 4bd/2ba $ 1025/mo. 2bd/ Iba $600/m o. 2bd./lba $525/mo. Call 894-0288 TEMPE: 3BD house, walk to ASU, carport, huge fenced yard, avail. mid-December, $80Q/mo. 804-0537 TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE 2br/2ba; oear ASU. W/d met $895/mo. PRS Mgmt 838-3500 x-103 PAPAGO PARK, 2&3bd con­ dos avail now & in Dec. New paint, clean carpets. Very nice. Call 432-3636. LUXURY 3BD/2BA Condo. Questa Vida, w/d, pool. Avail Dec 28 $950mo 949^73-3122. R I ^ _ ^ NEAR ASU 3bd/3ba, 1400 sq. ft., patio, newer carpet. Avail 12/1. $950/mó. Call 953-186? LOOKING FOR F munt to share 2 bd. apt. in La Mirage. J.Cv 967-1369 $400/mo. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL 2 ROOMS available in W. Phx home, $275 & $375/mo., 20 min. from ASU, N/S, N/D, 8499562, please leave msg. NS FEMALE preferred- to share 2bdr Apt in Hayden Square $450+utilitjes 967-3512 FOXFIRE APTS looking for fe­ male vto share 2bd/2ba, $350/ma + 1/2 utils. 360-8351 C /a s s /f /e c /s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ROOMS AVAIL.4BD hs Tem­ pe. M/F $350/mo. Near ASU. 968-8659 G ARAGE SALES SAM PLE SA LE T-Shirts, Sweat-Shirts, etc. $320, Th-Su, 8am-6pm. 2210 S. Roosevelt, Tempe 921-0532. HELP WANTEDGENERAL C u rre n tly H iring W E RENT HO M ES! Seeking detailed TEMPE BEAUTIFUL 3, Professional Telesales Reps 4,5 BR HOMES SOME (NO Cold Calling) for advancement. W/POOLS $1095-$1595 J&T PROP 446-RENT 1209 W. BASELINE K Dillard’s MMMHPMHMk • • • • • HELP WANTEDGENERAL Box Office Im m ediate FT/PT positions available as c h a rg e lin e phone operator at G ilb e rt lo c a tio n . B asic typ in g and custom er service skills required. PC experience a plus. Applications accepted Monday - Friday, 9a-4p, at D i I fa r d * s $ o u t h w • a t D ivisional O ffices: 396 W illiam Dillard D rive, B u ild in g B (C o u n try C lu b & E lliot), G ilbert, AZ. A ROOM S FOR RENT 3BD/3BA TOWNHOUSE Avail, immed, $350/mo. 48th StVBaseline. 470-1175 RENTAL |H RO O M S FOR RENT expanding rapidly. phone people. Opp. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HOMES FOR RENT TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT % A dvancem ent O pportunities include: C ustom er S ervice C lien t M onitoring D epartm ent D evelopm ent S p ecialist Hum an R esource D epartm ent and m ore! ity - A - v r RESORT AT' GAI N EV RANCH Immediate Positions Available for energetic GUYS AND GALS at our Tempe Outbound Call Center. ’ DISCOVER THE PEOPLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! • Recreation Attendant • Spa Attendant • Bussers • Golf Concierge • Host/Hostess » Pool Server • Room Service Cashier F or More Information C all: tS. 991-9670 i / $ Experience the benefits at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale: • M edical/Dental Insurance • Ufa Insurance • 401 (k) Plan • Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates Applications are accepted Mon. 9am-Noon and Tues. 3pm-6pm; At the Human Resources Office 7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. Please enter at the west end of the building next to the loading dock. Certain positions may require testing. P*y n / ü PLUSfê&hweti ì / ^L v & JU jL S c f U s U l t t t c , M Ì4/Jk y e w cI a w l i IR s tM fr t, R to M h t, R fiU + h c ! ) f / Qlc4t U ASUQfirtyjw Sfoj*. by 4M ItVhjpLf/idtity- tc- ItMfc 1310e. Hyatt supports a drug free workplace. AA/EOE/M/F/D/V > .N jet m • orcmvm-mi fobyc^J. lassa i Press for Friday, im MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FURNITURE TICKETS AUTOMOBILES BEIGE SECTIONAL 15 ft long $175. Wood Credenza $80. Can Winkie 266-4005. DEPECHE MODE tickets want­ ed. Prefer floor section, closest to stage. If you have 1 or 2 extra ticket(s), please call Paul at 965-6735. AUTOMOBILES WEDDING DRESSES #1 by Vera Wang, never worn or al­ tered. #2 by Anísale slightly al­ tered. Both White, sleeveless, Satin Sheaths, size 8, $ 1200 éa 753-9464 MATTRESSES - QUEEN set $125, full set $110, twins $89/set. In plastic, free deliv­ ery. 649-2625. Find th e S tate Press on th e in te rn e t: iv M o v jstate pre ss .çom HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL '76 VW Westvalia camper cur­ rent tags, runs well, green $1900, 998-0704. 93 MAZDA MX3 2dr coupe, low mileage, good cond, am/fm cd/cass $6750 731-9515 CARS $100-$500 - police im­ pounds. Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps & Sport Utilities. MUST SELL! 1-806-522-2730 X4740 ^P rotect Am erica/ Inc. National Alarm Company C la s s i f i a d s 9 6 5 - 6 - 7 3 5 S e e k in g A p p o in t m e n t O t t e r s (no sales Involved) E a rn t ? -$ 1 5 /H r ! • A d v a n c e m e n t O p p o r tu n it ie s . Contact o ur R ecrniting D epartm ent a t (602) 273-1998 Reward Yourself... with a relaxed and friendly work environ­ ment. At the Pointe Hilton Resorts we under­ stand that our people are out greatest asset. Just ask any Pointe Person, it’s what Pointe Pride is all about. Here you’ll find a compre­ hensive benefits package, competitive wages and plenty of career path opportunities. So why not reward yourself with a career at the Pointe Hilton Resorts? F u ll-tim e m o n ey , P art-tim e h o u rs. $$$ 1 S8/’lir. base + comm. 1 Flex AM & PM hours 1 C onvenient locations Dobson & Guadalupe 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 AZ Ave. & W arner 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 Opportunities available: Front Desk • Concierge • Housekeeping • Restaurant • Banquets * Security • Administrative • Bell Desk • Retail • Fitness Centre/Salon « Landscaping Fo c u s ACTORS FOR educational vid­ eos. Must pass for high school student. On call PT. Great exp. in front of camera. 438-4400. COMP. SCI. major needed for visual basic and/or dBase pro­ gramming and application de­ velopment. 481-8081. NO CREDIT? Credit Problems? Need a vehicle? You're ap­ proved by phone, fax, or e-mail at Earnhardt's Auto Centers. Call 813-5555 or visit on line at www.eamhardt.com/credit AXIS & RADIUS Scottsdale's hottest nightclub. W aitstaff needed, experience & flex shed. Apply 11/04, 11/05, & 11/06/98, Noon-6pm @ 7340 E Indian Plaza. 970-1112. For Sky Harbor answering air­ port questions. Training pro­ vided. 8am-3pm or 3-8pm, p/t, $7-8.75/hr. Milt 267-7994 BICYCLES EARN A free bike! Sell con­ sumer direct Asian roadster bikes perfect for campus. Knowledge of bikes & rudi­ mentary mechanical skills need­ ed. Commissions + free bike after 10 sold. 1-800-393-0339 www.bikeprqject.com Market Research Help Wanted Start Building your Resume & Business Skills Nowl A M BA SSA D O R AREA MILLIONAIRE Earn while you learn. Need five peo­ ple to make some money. Work from apt., or dorm ok. Phoenix toll free 1-888-354-3179. ARIZONA ATHLETIC Club is recruiting team players! Cafe, front desk, towel desk posi­ tions open. Free club member­ ship + hrly pay. No exp. nec. Apply in person: 1425 W. . 14th St. Tempe ASU CHANNEL 2 seeking crea­ tive, dependable student to surve as station director. Must live oh campus. Apps. avail, in Mathews Center basement Rm. 002. V % DELI HIRING sandwich mak­ ers, counter help. PT/lOam2pm M-F. 92L7827 DELICIOUS DELIVERIES Courteous order takers for val­ ley-wide delivery service. Com­ puter experience preferred. Call Andy 220-0000. EARN UP to $12/hr. KFC is hiring delivery drivers, must be @ least 18+, w/ vehicle, in,--surance, & valid driv's Lie. Apply 7055 East Shea Bivd, Scottsdale. Of call Bryan or Krista 596^0937. FARM TO Market/ Wild Oats is now hiring for all departments. Excellent benefits and competable pay. Apply at 4730 E. Warner. GOT MONEY? Get paid to have FUN! Lead children in ac­ tivities which are guaranteed to cause JOY & LAUGHTER! Temp, p/t. FLEX hrs. $7-97hr. Exp/ref req. CaU 800-942-9947 Classifieds WORK! nrstnmn loin the Fiesta Fun! Reservations FT/PT Mon-Fri, 7a-3p 3p-9p/ Sat. 9a-Sp Front Desk PT Hotirs/days vary ‘ --------------- ¿ Jobline: We offer: • $7.50/hr (eve. sh ift) + Bonus Plans • fle xib le schedule • Convenient Location - about 4 miles from ASU • A bspitfreV NO Sales! No experience Necessary Pojnte Hilton Resorts Tapatio Cliffs • 1 I t 11 N. 7th S treet Squaw Peak • 7677 N. 16th St. South M ountain • 7777 S. Pointe Parkway Display advertising -965-6555 CHASE IS hiring! F/T & P/T positions available with cus­ tomer service, account reps, fraud reps, mail openers, data entry, and collections. Apply in person 8:30am-4pm, M-F. Chase cardmembers services: 100 West University Drive. (Univ. & M ill) Tempe (prkg. avail, on Ash). Job-line 902-6000. — “S O M A N Y D A Y S L E F T 2100 S. Priest Tempe U N T IL C H R IS T M A S . ” 2 miles from ASU STUDY A BR O A D Communication Specialists Needed CEA is looking for dynamic individuals to work in an exciting foreign study office near ASU (Rural & Broadway) offering programs in France, Spain, Mexico a n d . Costa Rica. • 3 p/t positions • $648 Hour + bonus • 15-25 hours/week • Must have studied abroad • Internet proficiency required • Knowledge of Spanish o r French a plus Mail/Fax resum e to: CEAINT’L 1801 S. Jen Tilly Ln. Ste. A-20 Tempe, AZ 85281 . Fax: 557-7926 e-mail: $S and $9Im ^ AMFulltime Shifts Di $9/hr % DONOR EGGS NEEDED W Healthy women (ages 21-30, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2,000. For more information call (602) 860-4792 'ISO ¡^REFERRAL BONUS!!! ■FULLBENEFIT PACKAGE • FULL MEDICAI. BENEFITS ! • 4 0 lK U fS e tfn n Excellent starting salary ! HMedical/Dental Insurance j 1 «í*v ne sm / TUITION REIM BURSEM ENT SEM I-AN NUAL M ERIT REVIEW S MOBi 1Rural 1 •H e r 9 0 d a p , 1 Superstition Pwy. : interested candidates cari ap ily Monday through Friday between. j 9am -6pm atoufTetripoC ail Center Baseline 752-8140 MDS 500SS AChAi*. «15-1S CORPORATION (North of Baseline, West of Mill) . Bus Routes 66 & 77 Get a good, dose look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FACS provides financial, credit, and administrative services to Federated Department Stores, Inc., including M ac/s and Bloomingdale's. Full and part-time opportunities are currently available in the following areas: COLLECTIONS 20% discount on most M ac/s purchases Casual dress every day • Competitive medical benefits for full-time FINANCIAL an d CREDIT SERVICES Serving M acy’s A Bloom ingdale's Departm ent Stores job@trat>elabroad.com EM BASSY SUITES RESORT SCOTTSDALË CUSTOMER SERVICE • CREDIT GRANTING Additional advantages include: FAGS 804-5285 JOB OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE / FULL TIME, PART TIME, 2ND JOB Clifts Pointe Hilton Resorts CHANNEL PARTNERS - look­ ing for cell phone reps. Comm. $ 10-13/hr. approx. Cell phone w/airtim e provided. Contact Scott, at 507-6545 ext. 24 Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote com munity par­ ticipation for individuals w ith develop­ mental disabilities. We offer a variety o f positions working w ith individuals in their own homes or residential set­ tings. We offer over 40 hours o f paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. We have flexible schedules w ith FT, PT and on-call positions available Ihnmediately. O ur pay ranges from $7.00 - $8.00 DOE/EOE. Please call \ 431-9511 for more inform ation. Call Ray at 874-2714 - Focus Market Research <® > CATERING SERVERS needed immed. for Holiday season. P/t, $10/hr. Call Kelly 968-7727 : DAY BARTENDER, M-Th, 27, drug-free wrkplc. Looking for fun, energetic person w/ exp. Phx location 220-0859. Become a Market Research Interviewer or a Client Qualitative Assistant A p p ly in Human Resources M onday - Friday 8am-4:30pm Tri-Property fob Hotline 906-3886 / C A M PU S C O RNER Exp'd cashier needed. Must be , avail btwn 8am-2pm, MWF or TTR. Nights/wknds also avail. Apply at 712 S. College. IT Mill • HELP WANTEDGENERAL Busy Scottsdale Travel Agency is In immediate need of “Business Savvy Professionals” for its contract admin­ istration department. Applicants must be articulate, pleasant, personable and professional. This job will have lots of customer.contact, and you must be flexible to work varied schedules. Salary + comm, could earn you $500+/wk.This is not a sales job, and we will provide training to the right individual. Open interviewing T, W, Th only at 3:30pm. Please call 874-5888 for directions. You're smart. Do the math! $$$ (Prom ote from w ith in ) HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL W e o ffer: ( • AM (9-2) and PM (4-9) shifts ■*Base Salary Sh ift D ifferential • GENEROUS B onus Plan • Paid T raining LOOKING FOR a new or used vehicle? Shop at the World's largest auto retailer. Earnhardt Auto Centers, Tempe, Chandler & Gilbert HELP WANTEDGENERAL • Paid benefit days • Paid weekly • Hrly rates are $8.25 or more (DOE) A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon.-Fri, 8am-5pm or call toll free: 1-888-284-3227. (Northeast comer of 52nd St. and west 14th St between Broadway and University Drives.) 1345 S. 52nd St. in Tem pe Equal Opportunity For All ACCEPTING WALK4N INTERVIEWS Now open the following Saturdays 9am - 3pm ; M, Tu, and F * 8:30-10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm Oct. 24 Nov. 7 Nov. 21 • S ervers ■ ¡¡M M FT & PT work available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free W orkplace, HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED* GENERAL GRAPHICS DESIGNER - Prod Assist. Inti Trade Assoc, for die Beauty Industry has Pt pos. avail. (Ft mid-'99). Must have Quark, Photoshop, Illistrator & prod. exp. Call BBSI- Brian Condit @ 404-1800 ext 113. NEEDED ATTENDANT for quad, in G ilbert area. Wknd mornings, great pay. Willing to train. Call 813-7934 lv. msg. SCOTTSDALE BOYS & Girls Club needs latchkey assist. MF $8/hr, 1-7. Learning instr MF $7/hr, 2-6. Blaine 948-8020. P/T, FLEX hrs., no sales, close to ASU, salary $6/hr. Must be computer literate. Professional office atmosphere. Call Cathy 9664228 SHOW M E T H E $! HELP SANTA Nov30 - Dec24 $7+ p/hr. On/offload aircraft. Driver's license necessary, p/t am/pm shifts, M-Th 225-2066. ATTENDANT CARE for young man w/ CP needed. 2 after­ noon wkday &: 1 afternoon wkend. $9.25/hr. Please call after 6pm 994-4590 ask for Rita KENNEL WORKER needed PT. flex hrs. Must be neat & de­ pendable. 7311 E. Thomas Rd., Scottsdale, 945-7692. KINDERCARE LEARNING Center in Ahwatukee is look­ ing for Ft/Pt teachers. Am and pm shifts avail. Please call Tracy or Barb at 759-4063. MARKET RESEARCH assis­ tant. Education co. near ASU. Administer surveys, & moderate focus groups. Call 438-4400. M I AM IGOS Food Servers wanted. Great Pay/ flexible hours. 1285 W. Elliot Rd., Tempe. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m/f needed immed. for nat'l com­ mercial s/print! 941-6922. You can V IE W and SEAR C H the S tate Press C lassifieds on the In te rn e t! ' statepress.com/ classifieds/ classifieds html HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T WORK - F/T pay. Come to play not to work. Day & eve. shifts avail., $9/hr.‘ University & Priest, Ms Tobin 517-1977 PROPERTY MGMNT Office seeks p/t assistent for a variety of tasks. Must be flexible w/ a dependable vehicle. Call fof fur­ ther info 730-1673. RECEPTIONIST/FRONT OFFICE w/computer skills, prof, appear. MWF 8-5pm. Salary doe. Call Olabisi 966-2892 or IV. m&g. RESEARCH ASSISTANT need­ ed!! Will pay top dollar in cash. Qualitative data analysis, . Grad preferred. Start asap. Send resume to skip@asu.edu Are you earning $500/wk.? Local marketing company is hir­ ing 6 people to rill direct sales positions. Work evening hrs. promoting local restau­ rants.$10/hr + comm = $20/hr. Call Tom at 460-0859. PERSONAL CARE attendant wanted for P/T work: getting in & out of bed, laundry, no exp. nec. Hrs flex., pays $8. Call Jake @ 884-0444 HELP WANTEDGENERAL U P TO $1 2 / H R $9/hr guaranteed -f 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 Dean 949-1088. HELP WANTEDSALES HOLIDAY HELP- 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 AUTOMOTIVE SALESPEOPLE earn lots o f money and have opportunities for career ad­ vancement, W e'll train you! Earnhardt Auto Centers, Tempe, Gilbert & Chandler. Call Dutch, at 756-3523 TEMPORARY LIVE in nanny mothers help now thru end of tern. Mostly eves, approx. 30 hrs. $250/wk. 240-7240. HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRIANGLES BIRINI Shop, p/t, RESERVATION AGENT P/T eves. 16th St./Indian S c h o o l. days, nights or weekends, fun job, 947r6562. 2013 N. Scot­ $8/hr 954-7099. tsdale Rd. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CASH FOR Christmas! P/t sales, flexible hours. Call 407-8782 RUBY TUESDAY, 4843 E. Ray Rd. Hiring servers, hosts & bartenders. 940-3504 BABYSITTER NEEDED for one 5yr old, downtown Tempe area, M & W, 7-9pm. Call 9673957. $7hr references requited. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE $100/ SHIFT, ZIPPS, a casual cosmopolitan bar, looking for cocktail servers.. lOmin ASU, Hayden & Villa de Ventura: Apply in person, 922-1500. VALET PARKING Attendants needed PT, must be 19 yrs, clean MVR, neat ap­ pearance, w/ depend trans. AZ Park. Serv. 266-3396; HELP WANTEDSALES C O RK 'N CLEA V ER Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail. Will train, ji/t. Concern w/ appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2^5pm o r by apjpt. 5101 N. 44th S t (952-0585) LUNCH SERVER, 10-2:30, $5/hr + tips. Dinner host(ess), 5-11, $6 to start. 598-0506, 5061 E Elliot, Phoenix. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ♦♦OPENING SOON** NOWHIRING $ 1 0 /H R G U A R A N T E E D !!! 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, flesh 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 of 1-10 & Ray Rd. CHANDLER, AZ HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL DONOR EGGS FACT: O n e w om an in six has trouble Conceiving. Southwest F e rtility C enter needs egg donors of ethnic diversity. For m ore information Please call 956-7481 Have fun calling Valley singles to invite them in for a free tour of Scottsdale’s most prestigious singles service, G re a t E x p e c ta tio n s ! NANNY FOR 3 kids, ages 4-9, hrs. 3-7pm M tF, some wknds. Must have a valid drivers lir cense, some housework req'd 755-8316. • In g o o d health. • W ith no hereditary d isease factors t . A ll m ed ical e x p e n se s p aid 2 . Fee p aid to don or CREATE ( RESTAURANT ) ARE YOU looking for a fun job w/ flex, hrs.? Arizona Ath­ letic club is currently hiring front desk and child care posi­ tions. Daytime evening and wkend shifts avail. Free club membership in addition to hourly pay. No exp. née. Apply in person at 1425 W. 14th St injempe. * W e n e e d w o m en • 18 -2 8 yrs of a g e Y O U R O W N S C H E D U LE ! NEW RESTAURANT BABYSITTER NEEDED in Tempe: M-T-F. 3 to 6:30pm; car necessary, but only needed to pick kids up (5-6yr old boys) from school 640-9305. 6cottsdale Accura Hiring: /Wi-ttiwelot /ittendont Hours flexible and pay negotiable. We are the largest group o f luxury ear dealerships- in Arizona, and offer . excellent opportunities for growth. . . Please call Kelly D. Davis at 6750015 plus bonuses ($12 - $ 15/hr avg.) no experience req’d or apply hi person: at 6825 E. McDowell Pd„ Scottsdale - 941 -0500 <4 s4 s4 <4 s4 4 4 4 *4 «4 «4 s4 ^4 «4 «4 e4 «4 s4 s4 «4 Our employee benefits include.. . PLAYTIME! If you have the heart o f a child and love to have fun at work, Club Disney has a job for you. Club Disney, a community playsite designed to entertain and enrich young families with imaginative play, is coming to Phoenix. C lub D isn ey Job F a ir November lith-15th 9:00am to 3:00pm Sheraton San Marcos Resort and Conference Center We have part-time opportunities in the following areas: Club Operations * Club Greeters • Activity Coordinators • Cyber Guides * Facilities Hosts/Hostesses Birthday Parties/Events • Celebration Specialists * Celebration Coordinators • Club Sales Representatives Club Cafe • Cafe Counter Hosts/Hostesses • Cafe Floor Hosts/Hostesses •C lu b Cook Entertainment • Theater Performance Coaches •fpf P r o g r a m m in g • Creativity Coaches * Edventure Guides Clubhouse Shop • Retail Sales Associates £0 To qualify for these positions, you must be at least 18 years of age. EOE. Disney 1998 < 4 ^ *4 *4 *4 ^ <4 *4 *4 «4 <4 *4 <4 «4 <4 <4 <4 <4 <4 *4 <4 «4 *4 HELP W ANTEDC H ILD CARE P/T SITTER for 12 y/o. Must have flex hrs., car & refs. P/T, M,TH. Tempe area. Good pay. Driving required. 756-0549 PT NANNY, 2 kids: 3yr & 4mo. Flex days & some eves. Scottsdale. Leah 314-4175. CHILD CARE in our home for 3 kids (6, 4 & 2). Must be en­ ergetic, interactive & organized, w/own car, ins & clean MVD. Flex hrs, avg 25-30 hrs/wk. Ahw. area, 263-1782. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL OPPORTUNITY with GREAT PAY! JJon’t let it pass you by... Red Valley offers: * $15-$40 per hour Base + Bonus + Commission * Paid Training * PTevening hours w / FT pay * Casual Business Atmosphere * Fun Telemarketing Take a step in th e rig h t d ire ctio n and jo in a w in n in g team . N o experience necessary . Call Now! 955-4115 JO B OPPORTUNITIES IN T |R N S H ire = = PUBLIC RELATIONS/ Market­ ing assistent for international CRUISE SHIP employmentfirm. Communication, writing, workers earn up to $2000/mo computer skills. Work with 1 (w/tips & benefits). World Trav­ media and press; flex hrs 20-30 el! Land-tour jobs up to $5000p/wk. Fax letter and resume to $7000/summer. Ask us how! 244-8977 attn Dmm/Kmi. 517-336-4235 ext C59182 PAID MARKETING InternshipCampus street reps wanted: to market and promote animalhouse.com» the ultimate on-line college community. E-mail: cam­ pus @animalhouse.com or call 800-254-8433. MODELS WANTED. If you have a few hours on 11/11 & could use some extra $$$? Please interview on 11/9, bet­ ween l-3pm , @MU #203SPlease bring recent photo. BUSINESS O P P O R T U N IT H ^ BUSINESS O P P g R T U N m ||_ RESTAURANTS/ CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader, com LAMSON JUNIOR College has day and evening classes for Legal Assistants, Legal Secre­ taries, Paraprofessional Ac­ countants, Business & Office Managers, and Computer Tech­ nicians.. "Learn a Living at Lamson" Call today! 898-7000. MILL AVE Beer Co. Now hir­ ing bar, door & kitchen help. Full & part time. Apply in per­ son 605 S. Mill Ave. CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com FREE WINNERS, scores, lines. No money, no operators, no hassles www.line-busters.com Your ad should be here! HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Call 965-6735 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Part-Tim e C ustom er S ervice R eps 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 V weekend shifts available. $6.87/hr plus shift differ­ ential for evening hours. -I Good customer service i skills &. pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 4319500. Tempe Location. Employee drug testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V O r d e r C le r k s 4 0 n e e d e d im m e d i­ a te ly in se rvice a n d m a r k e tin g d iv is io n . N o e x p e rie n c e n e cessary - w e tr a in . S 1 2 /h r + bo nu ses. W e e k ly p a y, f le x ib le p / t d a y e v e n in g o r w e e k e n d h o u rs . D o w n to w n T e m p e lo c a tio n . For d e ta ils c a ll Jane 8 9 4 1 1 5 1 . WEB PUBLISHING on an as needed basis. $9 p/hr, req'd skills: HTML, Java Script, and graphic editing capabilities.' Prior experience a must. Col­ leen 940-6027. > Find it FA ST in the Classifieds HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL PERSONALS XQ LADIES- the gentlemen of Kappa Alpha- order look fo r­ ward to a wonderful wine and cheese social this Friday. HEATHER-I HOPE you’ve been having fun this week. Now get excited for retreat! Soon you'll know all about Sigma Kappa. See you on the bus. XAÛ, Mom ipm hi P §R SO N A ^___ LAS VEGAS, Halloween Wee­ kend. You stayed at Excalibur., and played 21 next my friend and L. You wore black, I wore blue. You said you partied at Utopia. You are extremely beau­ tiful and you wear glasses. Call for Adam 1-509-332-5505. S J R V jC g g ^ ^ ^ 40% OFF dry cleaning bill w/ ASU I.D.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap flu ff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner of Rural & Univ. 966-7454. NEED YOUR term paper typed? Accurate last revisions not a problem. Call Peggy 493-7808 H * frh«» ¥•«> TUTORS RESTAURANTS/ BARS TYPE PAPERS, tutor math, physics (others)! Rates are neg Randall 968-8249. asututor@ix. netcom.com LEXINGTON HOTEL RESIDENTIAL INSTRUCTOR Le a r n to T h in k on Your E te r Work with DD Adults * F T /P T -P M L obby « ReHef N ig h t C le rk • F T /P T - N ig h t C le rk • F T -F ro n t D eck C le rk Perfect for school schedule PT/ Afternoon hours/ M-Th A p p ly in pe rso n M-F, Z4 lirs /d a y XOO W . C laren d o n P h o en ix , A Z 8 5 0 1 3 F ax * * 3 0 -8 1 1 7 EOE M/F/V/D Scottsdale Location 994-5704 Fax 994-0491 'ACME' k B A R ft G R IL L RESTAURANTS/ BARS J y o u r Neighborhood" Ban • Food • S p irits • P ool • ■ Bow ling • Cigars • 424$ N. C raftsm an Ct. O ld Town S cottsdale 990-7111 !• Oldest neighborhood bar in i Tampa - Eat 1979 j i• Neav 77mes award winner !• Cheap Beer &$1.25 Shots !• MLB-ESPN Game Plan-NFL \ !>Steaks Welcome. Spool I tables I !* 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE I Sun & Mon. * 8 3 1 -W O O D E B a se lin e & M ill N O W HIRING CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATES . To assist with inquiries regarding Dillards D ept Store Cardmembers ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ Numerous Part-Time and Full-Time openings available with start times between 11:30am 8r 4pm. working 4 5 hour shifts, 5 dags a week. Saturday or Sunday required. ✓ Weekend only positions available, work Saturday and/or Sunday for a 4 to 6 hour shift. Starting pay $7.25 and up. Paid every Friday. Three potential Salary increases in First Year based on performance. Medical/Dental Benefits flenerous Dillard's Discounts up to 2S96. Avoid Freewau conjestionllf flreat location for East Valleu residents. Apply today in person by mail or fax y óur Resume to 503-5507 Mail information to: DILLARD NATIONAL BANK located between Arieona Ave. 8r McQueen off Elliot Road 396 N. William Dillard Drive * Gilbert, Arizona £5233 i— ■- ii IP* Psych & Social Work Majors ^|f BOY OHE BESOLAS ) CONEOB COP Gain Valuable Experience DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmehtaily, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working W ith Adolescents GETONE BESOLAS GONEOB COP FBEEI Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Tim e Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Expires 0/30/98 B E H Æ rJ E R M fiE S ubm itA pplications To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 4 n Mm Avenue’0**' Tempo/ 736-1900_ J JÉ ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST DILLARD NATIONAL HANK \ I / / by Sidney Omarr Friday, N o v e m b e r 6, 1998 o $ $ $ $ $ R e a l P P O r tü * i t y NO EXPERIENCE? Get it HERE! C o lle ctio n s starting @ $9.75 Background in Custom er Service, Telem arketing and/or Collections helpful, but not required. BANKFIRST is Close to the A SU cam pus. Part-Tim e Shifts A vailable >M ust be able to attend MondayFriday, 3 w eek training class 1Day shift training begins Novem ber 16th; 7am -11am ’ Evening shift training begins Decem ber 1st; 5pm -9:00pm BANKFIRST ft OnCOOPONFBiCOnOMED \ EQUALOPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER mi • Flexible W eekend Schedules • Bonus Incentive Pay • Extra Pay for Evening Shift • Extra Pay for Bilingual (Spanish/English) • Extra Pay for W eekends Visit our facility in person Monday - Friday, 8am - 5pm or m ail your resum e to: BANKFIRST, Attn: HR D e p t, 3600 E. University D r., Ste. D160Q, Phoenix, AZ 85034 Fax: (602) 308*5083 BANKFi E E 5 S .J E MEMBER FDIC We are an Equal Opportunity Employer ARIES (March 21-April 19): A Friday you will long remember. Conference is held with close relatives, emotional debris put aside. You’re presented with unique honor. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Relinquish preconceived notions - you’ll be offered new proposi­ tion involving different modes of transportation. You1’11 exude aura of confidence, sex appeal. Leo involved, GEMINI (May 21-June 20); Funding will be obtained fol­ lowing initial delay.. Durable goods, household products fea­ tured. Cycle high, you will be at right place almost effortlessly. Marital Status. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Secret meeting includes Gemini who discloses plans involving you. Focus on hospitals, institu­ tions, devices whose purpose is to aid the handicapped, Sagittarian involved. LECMJuly 23-Aug. 22): Those who neglected you will pay dear price. Eleventh House Moon coincides with ability to transact fantastic deal. Distance, lan­ guage barriers overcome -r- you are hero. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A ccept leadership rôle — includes editorial work. Keep plans flexible, be ready for change, travel, variety of experi­ ences. Flirtation lends spice, keep it under control. Gemini represented. LIBRA (Sept: 23-O ct. 22): You’ll be doing what comes nat­ urally. Family financial problem solved due to your persistence. Domestic adjustment featured, music involved. Taurus, another Libran play roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You em erge from skirm ish, unscathed. Problem involved accounting procedures, credits and debits. Almost duplicate examples found in arcane litera­ ture. Experience revolves around mystery. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Ability to handle pressure com es into p ractical use —^ C apricorn individual plays instrum ental role. Check for mechanical failures, tear down in order to rebuild on solid struc­ ture. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): People call upon you for special services. Be sympathetic without being maudlin. Stress practicality, eschew the sensa­ tional. Overseas journey is dis­ tinct possibility. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Popularity zooms. Participate in pioneering project — deal gin­ gerly with talented, tem pera­ mental Leo. Question of marital status will loom large. Attend social affair: PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Focus on home, real estate, sale or purchase of property. You could en cou n ter fu tu re soul m ate. W hat you yearn for is closer than might be imagined. Capricorn involved. EF NOVEMBER 6 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: C urrent cycle relates to career, major business transaction, added recognition, marital status. You are senti­ mental in romance, have unusual voice, deeply appreciate talent­ ed, creative people. 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