Form er Clinton aide: criticism part of politics Ia n W i n g f i e l d s p e c ia l t o t h e ' S t a t e P r e s s Janies Carviile, form er senior political adviser to President Clinton, speaks to a crowd o f 150 state legislators and students from Arizona universifies at the state Capitol Tuesday. Carville's speech was a part o f the 12th Annual Leadership Conference dedicated to college students and sponsored by the A rizona Students’ Association. B y S t ep h a n ie P a ter ik S t a t e P ress Ja m e s C a r v iile , fo rm er sen ior p o litic a l adviser to President Clinton, told students from the three state univer­ sities and state legislators Tuesday not to be discouraged by . critics. , His speech at the state Capitol was part o f the 12th annu­ al Leadership Conference and legislative luncheon spon­ sored by the Arizona Students’ Association. Carviile, known as the “ Ragin’ Cajun” in political cir­ cles. addressed a crowd o f nearly 150 students, interns, and legislators about everything from running campaigns to his disapproval o f Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. “ There is a tremendous cultural assault on politicians and everything that is political,” he said. “ They deserve the blame when things go wrong, but would it be too much to give them the credit when things go right?” He added that because politicians are so mercilessly criti­ cized, he’s worried that students will be dissuaded from public service. “ I would urge you not to let these cultural critics con­ vince you to do something else,” he said. “ If we continue this constant search to find everything bad, we will only succeed in driving everyone out.” Carviile, who failed out o f Louisiana State University after four years before going back to get a law degree, said he didn’t win his first campaign until he was 42 years old. He told students to expect failure. “ I f you get involved in politics you may not grow up to be a governor, but you can still help out,” he said. “ Y o u ’re going to fail a lot, but you’re going to accomplish some­ thing too; don’t discount that.” Associated Students o f A S U President Paul Frost said he liked Carville’ s speech because it encouraged students to make a difference in their communities while they are young. Frost also identified with Carville’ s warning o f polit­ ical hardships. “ I’ ve learned over the past year that you really can make Tumto CartfRe page 02 New businesses booming; older Mill stores struggle B y K im P r e n d e r g a s t S t a t e P r es s The numbers are in — and they’ re the highest ever in downtown Tempers history. The taxable sales for restaurants, retail and other sec­ tors for the 1998 fiscal year were $131 m illion. That is a seven percent increase from 1997. “ It is a good measure o f how good the econom y is down here in Tfempe,” said Theresa Striegel, marketing director for the Downtown Tempe Com m unity. Restaurants have been booming in the area o f taxable sa les. T h e y ’ ve recorded a 12 percent in crease from 1997 to 1998, a $56.5 m illion value. Taxable sales are the city ’ s way o f gauging revenue generated by stores and restaurants. The city doesn’ t get any o f the m oney, but it uses the numbers to evaluate the area econom y. A cco rd in g to the D T C , P .F . C h a n g ’ s and G ordon Biersch are responsible for attracting a broader market to downtown Tempe. “ P .F . C h a n g ’ s and Gordon Biersch have both had a substantial impact on Tem pe’ s econom y,” Striegel said. “ Tem pe has ahvays been portrayed as a college town and they brought a new clientele.” Som e o f the m anagers and owners o f older dow n­ town establishments, however, have a different take on the increase. John Freeman, general manager for Paradise Bar & G rill, said the numbers may be up for newer businesses on the south end o f M ill Avenue, but not for those on the north. Because the city won’ t let him , or other’ s like him, put up b ig g e r sig n s sim ila r to the o n e ’ s sported by newer stores, business has been slow . “ W e look like a closed retail store at night because the c ity w ill not a llo w us to illu m in a te our s ig n ,” Freem an sa id . “ T h e south side lo o k s lik e little L a s V egas, however.” W ayne D o h se , president and general m anager for M ill Landing Restaurant, agreed in part with Freeman. H e said the businesses on the south are more prof­ itable than those on the north. “ The way I ’ ve been tracking the revenues for the last 18 months, the new businesses and the trendy, corporate places are doing better than we are,” Dohse said. T a x a b le sales fo r restaurant and retail Turn to Temp« page02 1997 Taxable sales for restaurant 1998 Cam pus radio makes its w ay to the W o rld W id e W eb B y E r le n d A a s S t a t e P r ess K A S R , A S U ’ s student radio station, has conquered the world —- not through the air­ waves, but oh the Internet. People across the globe can now listen to K A S R by logging on, said Ben Overbaugh, station manager. “ I ’ ve had p eo p le c a llin g in fro m Alaska,” he said. “ I had a friend who used to go to A S U , but moved to A laska. Now he can once again be an active member in my show.” ; A ll that’s needed to tune in is a comput­ er with Internet access, a sound card and speakers, Overbaugh said. People will only run in to problem s i f they have a slow he first heard about it, but was discouraged modem or a smaller computer. when he got more details. Some o f the K A S R disc jockeys had a “ T h e p ro p o sa l p ro b a b ly w o n ’ t go different hope for the station’ s future —I to through,” he said. “ There is too much resis­ enter the F M band with a license from the tance towards the idea. The powerful lobby Federal Communications Commission. The g ro u p , N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n of statio n is cu rre n tly A M , and is o n ly Broadcasters, is totally against it.” received within two to three miles o f cam­ Overbaugh said the N A B is likely get pus. their way. This notion was supported by In January, the F C C proposed creating Fred eric L e ig h , professor and associate thousands o f new low-power F M stations director in the W alter Cronkite School o f across the country, which has some peo­ Journalism and Telecommunication. ple at K A S R h opeful that their g o a l o f “ There’ s strong opposition to this prore a ch in g a la rg e r a u d ie n ce w ill co m e ' posai coming from the National Association true. o f Broadcasters and also from some mem­ Overbaugh said he liked the idea when bers o f Congress,” Leigh said. “ The N A B fears that the proposed stations will cause interference to existing stations.” ’ I f the proposal does pass, L e ig h ’ s not sure it w ill make a difference for K A S R anyway. “ There are just no frequencies available on the F M band in the Phoenix area,” Leigh said. A n F C C spokeswoman said K A S R is fre e to a p p ly o n ce the p ro p o sa l g o e s through. “ W e haven’ t finalized the rule-making process yet, so we’re still a long way .from accepting applications,” Rosemary Kim ball said. T h e K A S R In tern et address is www.asu.edu/kasr. C a r v ille Cam pus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to'the State Press in the basem ent o f the M atthew s Center. Requests will nqt be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. O n ly one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name o f ; the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f ■ the location.- A ll requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. I f > any o f the above information is incomplete or illeg ib le E N T R IE S W IL L B E D I S ­ CARDED. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the A S U community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are print­ ed as space permits. • The Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic offers individual, couple, and family counseling to all students, staff, and facu lty in the Cow den Fam ily Resources Building in room 140. Call 965-9373. • The Stu d e n t D evelpp m en t Learning Resource C e n te r is offering free computer workshops in the Student Services Building, room 394. C a ll the center for tim es and information. • The Counseling Training Center is o ffe r in g co u n se lin g se rv ic e s. Masters/Doctoral student counselors can assist with career, depression, an xiety, personal, and relationship issues. No fee for full-time A S U stu­ dents and staff. A $15 charge w ill apply to other students, and $40 to other non-ASU affiliated clients. Call 965-5067. • VITA will offer resident-only, free tax assista n ce today at 5:3 0 p .m . in Armstrong Hall, room 105. • The Lesbian/Bisexual W om en ’s Group will have a general meeting today 6 p .m . in the S o c ia l W ork Building, room 128. • The Muslim Student's Association will have a Muslim student and facutly mixer in the M U , room 218 at 4:30 p .m . Refreshm ents w ill be served. Com e take part in the large M uslim community. • The Hispanic, Business Students A ssociation w ill have a general meeting at 3:30 today in A G I 50. • M .E .C h .A . will have a general meeting in the Payne Education Building, in the multicultural lounge, at 4:30 p.m. • The Learning Resources Center is offering free test-taking services at 3 p.m. in the M U , room 208D.. • Career Services is having a behav­ ioral interview ing workshop in the M U , room 221 at 1 p.m. • The kundalini Yoga Club is offering free Y oga classes at 7 p.m. in the M U , room 221. • C ou nseling and C o n su lta tio n , Student Health, and the Student R ecreation C e n te r are h ostin g “ Journey o f the Soul,” an exhibit fea­ turing various mediums portraying the recovery process after eating disor­ ders. It runs all day, everyday through Friday in the M U , in an unannounced room. The three departments will also be having a body pride fair on Hayden Lawn, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. • The All Saints Catholic Newman Center is having Ernie G arcia, the CEO o f the U g ly D u c k lin g Corporation as a special guest speak­ er. “ L o s in g It A ll and G a in in g It Back,” is the speech he will deliver at 7:30 p.m. at 230 E . University Dr. fr o m p a g e 01 big, positive changes,” he said. “ I ’ ve been through rough times and criticized from all sides, but in the end I ’ve done the best that I can and have made a difference.” W hile taking questions from the audi­ ence, several students asked Carville about Clinton’s recent troubles. “W e can’t look, back and say it’s a victo­ ry,” Carville said. “ But given the circum­ stances, we got out pretty good.” He managed Clinton’ s first campaign in 1992 and said they have been close friends ever since. “ (Clinton) is a friend o f mine, and if you mess with a friend o f m ine, I ’ m going to mess with you,” Carville said. “ People are going to disappoint you, but for reasons that are intensely a part o f me, he’ s a friend o f mine and I’ve stuck by him.” Besides comments on national politics, C a rv ille said cam pus p o litica l hopefuls should tell voters they “ want the job, not the position.” H e added that students should take more from campus politics than a good T em p e resume. University students who attended the free luncheon also went to political workshops and discussed student issues with legislators. Je ff D ial, a business management junior at A S U , said he was surprised at how open the legislators were. He was also surprised by Carville. “ I went into it with a little negativity,” he said. “ I heard some bias in his speech, but overall it was very positive.” C arville said he won’ t be running any campaigns in 2000. Instead, he will work on a book and spend time with his two daugh­ ters. He also said he hopes the country will spend time focusing on child poverty, cam­ paign finance and a more positive view o f government. “ Y o u ’re looking at a guy who is proud of working on campaigns,” he said. “ A ll labor honorably and honestly rendered is sacred and no less important than the labor o f the critic.” - , :y fr o m p age 0 1 He added that his business has seen a 30 percent decrease in 1997 from 1996 and an additional eight percent decrease in 1998. H e attributes his loss o f business to the traffic blocks set up on M ill Avenue Friday and Saturday nights, however, not to an inadequate sign. H e added that he’ s trying to fin d a way to update his sign while staying within zoning lim its. A spokesperson for Tempe said new busi­ nesses are allowed to display larger signs than some o f the older businesses because they went through a design and review board. The spokesperson added that the newer restaurant’ s signs work into the land­ scape and fit in with the type o f business. Dohse said he is anticipating his rev­ enue to significantly increase in the next two years with the developm ent o f the Tem pe Tow n L ak e. H e said he is plan­ ning to wait for the lake’ s com pletion to see an increase in profits. Correction mmami In T u esd ay’s State P ress it w as incorrectly reported that tw o senator candidates in the A sso ciated Students o f A S U prim ary election w ill continue on to the general e le c tio n . F o u r ca n d id a te s, out o f the fiv e w ho are run n in g fo r the C o lle g e o f L ib era l A rts and Scien ce s senator positions, w ill m o ve on to the general election in late M a rch . If you have The Fast, Fun & Friend ly environment at Target is setting the A M BITIO N . pace for the retail industry. Best of a ll, it's creating exceptional management opportunities. Target w ill be holding an information session on campus & D R IV E, join the management team that's on MONDAY, MARCH 1st at Career Services in the Student Services Building. C all 965-2350 for more information. Target offers excellent starting w ages, retirement benefits, m edical/dental options and tremendous advancement opportunities. For mòre information on Target Tftarrti 1535 N. Scottsdale Road north of the 202 Fw y,at Weber) 6 0 2 / 6 9 9 -4 2 0 0 www.mark-taylor.com Five minutes from A S U , Mill Avenue and downtown Scottsdale Brand pew apartment community o f luxury, 1-3 bedroom residences Dramatic porte cochere entry with private, gated access Full-size washer & dryer, Cox high­ speed Internet, garages available Free-form lagoon pool, waterfall, lighted sand volleyball 24-hour fitness center with state-ofthe-art equipment and our fantastic management opportunities, visit us while w e're on campus, or call 602-931-4434. W e look forward to seeing you! Target is an equal opportunity em ployer committed to a sm oke-free/drug-free workplace. 0 TA RG ET State Local/State “Arzberger abandoned thé wonten in his district and around the state with this vote.” — Bruce Miller, lobbyist for Arizona Right to Choose, commenting on Representative Gus Arzberger’s deciding vote to pass the controversial “right to know” abortion bill in the Senate. 03 Press for Wednesday, February 24,1999 Senate passes ‘right to know’ abortion bill B y Pa u L Daven po rt A s s o c ia t e d P r ess P H O E N IX — With not a vote to spare, the 'Arizona Senate on Tuesday voted to requ ire that w om en get state-scrip ted counseling about risks and alternatives at least 24 hours before undergoing an abor­ tion. ■ ■V :----.'/1:''-' Key to the b ill’ s passage on a 16-12 vote — 16 yes votes are needed to pass a b ill in t h e S enate was S e n . G u s Arzberger’ s support for the bill for the first time. The W illCox Democrat voted last year against another version o f the so-called ’‘Woman’ s right to know” biil. He said in anl interview that this year’ s bill was accept­ able because doctors or other providers could pro\ ide the information by telephone, not;.necessarii> in person. The bi d iS B 1 3 4 3 ) now goes to ihc House where similar legislation died, last year. "It w ill be close in the House like it alw ays is." said Cat hi Herrod. an abor­ tion o p p o n e n t and lo b b y is t fo r the S c o tts d a le -b a s e d C e n te r fo r A r iz o n a Policy. \ "It's really too close to call in terms o f n u m b ers o v e r th e r e ,” a g re e d B ru c e M ille r , lo b b y ist fo r A riz o n a R ig h t to Choose. T he b ill w ould require that Women receive information on the risks and alter­ natives to abortion, the probable age o f the fetus and the risks associated with child­ birth. . ;V. , Supporters o f the b ill say it. is needed because many women are poorly informed before they get abortions and that some w ould not get them if there were fu lly informed. "This is a bill that everyone should be able to support." Herrod said. Opponents sav the bill would improperly intrude on the doctor-patient relationship and is intended to make it harder to get an abortion. A.-'...Opponents also have argued that the requirement fòr cou n selin g 24 hours jn advance would be a burden on rural women who have to travel to a metropolitan area for an abortion. H ow ever, the b ill was am ended dur­ ing Senate debate to no longer require the physicïans or their representatives to provide the required information in per­ son. , Arzberger said that change helped make the bill acceptable to him. “ F ttf still pro-choice and w ill contin­ ue to be so. but this b ill d o esn 't keep them from h avin g an abortion i f they w ishito,” Arzberger said. “ A ll it does is •probably give them a little time to think about it.” ■>" y,";. y :. M ille r said he was su rp rised by Ar/.herger's vote. "Arzberger abandoned the women in his district and around the state with this vote." the lobbyist said. ; The bill also was changed to no longer require p hysician s or their representa­ tives to. tell women that they and their children could he eligible for health ben­ efits and that the father is fiable for child support. Som e o f that sam e in form atio n still would be in state-required written materials that the bill requires be offered to women before they have abortions. M iller said he expected abortion-rights advocates in the H ouse to offer several amendments to broaden the bill. They could include similar disclosures for any type o f invasive medical procedure, “ whether it's an ab ortion or a v a se cto m y or p la stic surgery." and té apply the proposed law to pregnancy counseling centers “ to make sure that those groups that counsel against abor­ tion must provide factual information." he said. The bill is one o f two major abortionrelated measures being considered by the Legislature this year. The Other bill, awaiting a vote by the full House, would impose new regulations on ab ortion c lin ic s . It was prop osed in response to the death o f a woman last year whose uterus was perforated by a surgical instrument during an abortion. Bill forbids gifts from lobbyists; passes Senate P H O E N IX ' A Pi — The Arizona Senate voted Tuesday to baft lobbyists from taking lawmakers to sporting évents or concei ts or paying for meals worth more than $25. The bill {SB 1333) was approved 25-5. It now goes to the House where sim ilar legislation has failed in recent years. Voting against the bill were Senators Scott Bundgaard, R-Glendale: Herb Guenther, D-Tacna; Rusty Bowers,. RM esa: Joe Eddie Lopez. D-Phoenix, and Keith, Bee, RTucson. The b ill's exceptions include nominal items such as baseball caps and coffee mugs, expenses related to appear' antes as speaking engagements, and “ special events’’ at which the entire Législature or large groups o f .lawmakers are invited en masse. Bundgaard said he would support a bill that contained an outright ban with no exceptions. “ 1 would consider this more o f a lobbyist loophole than I would a gift ban,” he said. The bid’ s chief sponsor. Republican Sen. Marc Spitzer o f Phoenix, said the bill is “ not intended to be the be-all, end-all o f legislative ethics.” Rather, Spitzer said, the bill is intended to “ set stan­ dards o f what is proper and what is not proper in terms o f propriety.” Sn a k e eyes Scott K rieg, a fam ily studies senior, observes two rattlesnakes in the L ife Sicence building Tuesday. The bottom snake, an Albino Diamondback collected near Arlington is extremely rare because o f its lack o f pigment. Condem ned killer pleads fo r his life to clem ency board B y J e r r y N a c h t ig a l A s s o c ia t e d P r ess F L O R E N C E — Condemned killer Karl LaGrand pleaded for his life today, telling the Arizona Board o f Executive Clemency that he is truly sorry for what he did. “ I want (the victim’ s family) to know that what happened back then, I didn’t mean it. I never meant to harm anyone and I’ m deeply sorry for what 1 did,” LaGrand told the board. LaGrand and several German officials appeared before the five-m em ber board, hoping it would recommend that the gover­ nor spare his life. LaGrand is scheduled to die in the gas chamber Wednesday afternoon for the stab­ bing death o f a Maraña bank manager in 1982. His brother Walter, who was also convicted in the stabbing is scheduled to die next week. G erm an A m bassador Jurgen Chrobog said that he and other top German officials don’t dispute the severity o f the crime the LaG rand brothers committed but pointed out that the brothers, both bom in Germany, were 18 and 19 at the time o f the murder. In G erm any, they would have been tried as juveniles, he said. “ Without wanting to criticize Arizona’ s legal system, I wish to add that after so many years to execute a person who was so young at the time of the crime would be considered inhu­ mane in Germany and all of Europe,” Chrobog said. “I strongly believe it will only speak for the strength o f the Arizona legal system if a decision is taken in favor of clemency.” Arizona G ov. Jane Hull has already said that even if the board recommends clemen­ cy or a reprieve, she does not plan to grant either for the LaGrand brothers. Carla Ryan o f Tucson, Karl LaGrand's attorney, didn't comment publicly on the g o v e rn o r 's statem en t, but M a ttia s 4 1 1 want (the victim's family) to know that what happened back then, I didn't mean it. I never meant to harm anyone and I'm deeply sorry for what I did. 11 Karl LaGrand, condemned killer Lehmphul, a German national working with Ryan, told The Arizona D aily Star that “ we don’t say they are innocent; we only want mercy for the two brothers." The LaGrands —4 Karl is 35, Walter 37. — were bom in A ugsburg, Germ any and moved to the United States when they were children in 1967. The LaGrands chose the gas chamber over lethal injection in hopes o f winning an appeal on grounds that the method is cruel and unusual punishment and therefore vio­ lates the Constitution. There apparently was a chance that the L aG ran d s’ choice might delay execution long enough for additional appeals. “ Choosing a method o f execution so you can argue it is inhum ane is com pletely uncharted territory,” said Paul M cM urdie, c h ie f counsel for crim inal appeals in the Arizona Attorney General’ s O ffice. “ That is very risky, obviously, because if you lose you have to deal with the conse­ quences. But it looks like their best bet to buy som e tim e ." M c M u rd ie to ld The Tribune. inion Editorial A S A S U still weak on j campaign spending limits I I W e ’ re begin n in g to w onder about governm ent j altogether. W h at’s the poigt? | In T uesday’s State P ress we reported that R ep . i I L in d a G ra y , R -G le n d a le , fo u gh t fo r a cu t to the { state’s university budget based on facts that were j I j totally o ff the mark. N o t on ly that, but our state governm ent m ade recom m endations to cut budgets o f state agencies j nearly across the board, based on budget predictions that were hundreds o f m illions o f dollars o f f kilter. N o w , we see that our ow n student governm ent has abolished cam paign spending lim its. These poor kids running for A ssociated Students ; | o f A S U offices are spending hundreds o f their ow n [ t dollars — or in som e cases, those o f their fam ilies , j — to run for office in a play government. W hy? B ecause the A S A S U “ Supreme Court” threw out j Egg donation makes life a commodity j the previous law that capped spending at $400 for J ; executive offices in the general election and $200 in j the run-off. Senate candidates were forced to keep the tab j under $200 in the general and $100 in the primary. ) T he law was apparently scrapped because o f the j i nitpickiness o f the candidates. W A N T E D : Preschool or after-school teacher. W A N T E D : Telemarketers. W A N T E D : Film interviewers. W A N T E D : Food servers. W A N T E D : Donor eggs. W a it. . . What was that fast one? “Donor eggs needed. Healthy women (ages 21-30, all ethnic groups needed) to donate eggs anonymously to help infer­ tile couples achieve pregnancy?' Taken directly from an advertisement that frequently runs in the Classified section o f the State Press, this statement typifies a disturbing trend in reproduc­ tive medicine. It’s an industry that makes human life a com­ modity.. ’ ■ „ ■ ■ ;■ . With sperm banks and egg-donation clinics, the reproduc­ tion industry is convincing us that donating eggs and sperm is a purely financial decision. After all, ladies, your eggs are worth $2,000 to someone else. Maybe it’s cliche, but reproduction is natural and beauti­ ful. It is the creation o f a life that occurs between two people in love. But, for those loving couples who cannot have children, Creating Families Inc. offers a database registry o f more than 500 egg donors and surrogate mothers at www.eggdonor.net. With the click o f a mouse, the site visitor can specify the eye and hair color, the height and even the IQ o f a potential mother. After the user submits his or her request, the site immediately returns a list o f donors who fit these specifica­ tions. . . ■ M uch tiie same way you choose books at Anmzon.com. These babies are not conceived in bedrooms. T hey’re manufactured in laboratories and created online. Creating Families Inc. contends it is in the business o f “ providing comprehensive services in the area o f gestational surrogacy, egg and embryo donation for infertile families and surrogate mothers.” D o not be fooled by the professional, medical jargon. Creating Families Inc. and its competitors are in the business o f buying and selling eggs. They are in the business o f buying and selling potential embryos and poten­ tial children: While these services and agencies are monitoring the sup­ ply and demand o f the reproduction industry, children who T h e law , as Sen . Jo sh A ckerm an so eloquently i put it, “ provided a w ay for losers to whine their w ay into o ffic e ” T hat’s true. B u t the only reason this year’s candi- | dates are free to spend to their little heart’s desire is because no one bothered to write a new la w lim iting | cam paign spending. - ; A g a in , A ck erm an : “ N o one bothered to figure j (Hit a w ay around thé decision ” O K . N o big deal, right? W ell, with candidates such as presidential hopefills B rian C am p bell and Jen n y H olsm an spending close to $400 out o f their ow n pockets ju st on the primary election, w e think it is a b ig deal. E specially when others like M ik e So sso , w ho is a ls o ru n n in g fo r p re sid e n t, c a n sp e n d d o s e to $1,000 on the cam paign because fam ily is w illin g to I shell out the cash. Isn ’t this exactly what government isn’t supposed to d o ? A re n ’t elected positions supposed to be open to all people, the rich and the hard-up? j f ] •) 1 j j N ot i f you’ re talking about A S A S U . j W hat this means is that a bunch o f rich kids have m ore o f an opportunity to fig h t the fig h t — and j therefore w in the office. A n d therefore get the resume credentials, w hich I is, after all, the only tiling A S A S U is good for. G e t o f f your butts, A S A S U . Figu re out a cam paign finance law that meets the standards set by j your ow n Suprem e C ourt. N o t bothering to do so is not an excuse for run- | ning what we consider to b e a n unfair race. I L StatePressStaff need homes wait in orphanages and foster care. It is illogical and unfair that while eggs are being sold, children wait to be adopted and wait to be loved. I f a couple wants to care for and love a child, adoption is a viable alternative. Adoption provides a home for a child with­ out a family and gives that child a sense o f belonging they m ight never have; their love could satisfy the cou p le’ s desires. Just like any other consumer good, reproductive eggs are part o f a business process. A “ donor” sells her eggs to an agency for roughly $2,000. Through a careful screening and selection process, a donor and a client family are matched. Following the egg retrieval, the service sells them for a profit to the client family. Advertising and competition are also part o f the business plan. Creating Families Inc.’s W eb site, www.creatfam.com., brags, “ Our fees are much lower than many o f our competi­ tors.” Lower fees? Maybe there are free gifts with every pur­ chase, or a cash-back incentive too. What about interest rates? Seriously, this is not about shopping for the best deal on a Camry. This is a child’s life. There is something wrong when society can relegate human life to the status o f a car or a gallon o f milk. There is something wrong when life becomes just another consumer good on the market. So, you’re in college, and someone has offered you $2,000 for something you have an overabundance o f and don’ t really need anyway. You can pay for this semester’ s books and rent and still have cash left over. What a deal, right? It sounds good now. After all, you’re a “ starving college student,” and that’s precisely why these clinics target you by advertising in this newspaper. Y ou collect your cash,.but then what? What happens when your “ illegitimate” child wonders who you are? Egg “ donation” is a misnomer. It’s not entirely charitable. It’s a business. It’s a business that ignores current social ills and makes birth a technological and financial transaction. And it treats human life like any other commodity on the store shelf. Stephanie R. Conner is a sophomore studying jour­ nalism and can be reached at sconner@asu.edu. Kara Shire, Editor Dave Woodfill, Managing Editor Alyson Hurt -------------------------------------— -A s s t. Magazine Editor Reporters — — ——-— — —————— - W a d a la W a la , B ra d W h is le r . —Assistant City Editor Erfand A a s , A n d re a Balsky, Ja so n H allam , Jo d ie Lau, Stephanie. Paterik, Jayson F a ir r in g t o n , C a r l o s R a m ir e z . Peters, K im Prend efgast, Ja n Se u e , C a rrie Seve rson , G a n g ? Subramanian, Production —— — — ----------— — — —-----— — — — —Opinion Editor Jun e D . W ilh ite. N a t h a n B a lz e r , T a n y a B a x l e y , A ly s o n H u r t H e a t h e r N a s h , S h e lle y Sports Reporters ---—•—-— O i s h i , J e n n ife r S w in fo r d , J o a n n a W i k e . ---------—-News Editor C hris C a rfo c k , C fc it C u r rie , R o b e rt D eal, Percy Ednalino Jr ., Sa m Ganczaru k, Sales Representatives Jo e M an to ne, N ic k Piecoro. B ria n A r y , M ik e G ia lla n z a , D a v id G o o d w i n , J e n n ife r H a d d a n , Copy Editors -■ «■ •»— ——— M ic h a e l K n ie v e l, Jo n a th a n N e g r e t t i , S h a n e S ir e n , K a t h y W e ls h . Alicia A Caldwell — . ——«City Editor Lidia Kelly Mano A Lopez Christi Foist Jeremy Hein ..——¿.—photo Editor Doug Flanagan Sports Editor Jonathan Inge •Graphics Coordinator — —------ -— ——— -—- Marketing Team—————-—————— —— — —— -- Photographers——— - ——— — — —— ————— A n g e le e K in g L e a h F a s te n , S o le y H a r t e l, H y u n U r n , S a m a r u d d in S t e w a r t — .————_— _— S c o t t B ra c k e n , S te p h a n ie C o n n e r , Ju s tin D o o m , B r a n t G a llo w a y , S c o t t D . G ille t t e , S te p h a n ie D . J o h n s o n , S h a w n a K e m p p a in e n , G r e g o r - — —Magazine Editor ——-— —— ———— —— — B ria n B a lc h u m a s , C a r r i e L B e h r e n s , B r u c e C r o s b y , B ria n A m b e r K n u t h , S u s a n S c h im m e l. Columnists---- ——— —— Percy Ednalino Jr. Cartoonists M c G a v in , M e g a n N ie ls e n , B rian P o lic o ff, T im o th y S c o t t J o e - Classifieds —*-■— —— —------— •— — —— — K a t e D e s io , A m a n d a G r e e n , P au l H o lle y , K a tie M c G e e , J e a n e tte P lo iu m . T h e State Press is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r id a y , d u r in g t h e a c a ­ d e m ic y e a r , e x c e p t h o lid a y s a n d e x a m p e r io d s , a t M a t th e w s C e n t e r , R o o m 2 , A r iz o n a S t a t e U n iv e r s ity , T e m p e , A r iz ^ 8 5 2 8 7 1 5 0 2. W e d o n o t a n s w e r q u e s t io n s o f a g e n e r a l n a t u r e . T h e State Press is th e o n ly n e w s p a p e r e x clu siv e ly p u blish ed fo r and cir­ cu la te d o n th e A S U ca m p u s. T h e n e w s a n d v ie w s p u b lish e d in th is new s­ p a p e r a r e n o t n ecessarily th o s e o f th e A S U ad m in istra tio n , fa cu lty , staff o r s tu d e n t b o d y. Student Media Phone Num bers — State Press Newsroom 96S-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Student Media Information 965-7572 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 O n the web http://www.statepress.com Id , I . .--i" ‘ • \ ' 4f Opinion Eq uality starts at hom e in new cam paign Last year, Senate M ajority Leader Trent Lott compared homosexuality to sex addiction and kleptomania. This month, The Arizona Republic reported that a member o f the state L e g isla tu re com pared bein g gay to “ bestiality, human Sacrifice and canni­ balism .” S u n d a y , m y son Jo e y spent h is eighth birthday in the m idst o f our Norman Rockwellesque fam ily. W hile I’ ll admit that the slightly ghastly dis­ play o f m iddle-class Am erican materialism was pretty frigh ten in g, a ll in a ll we did pretty w ell, keeping the human sacrifices and cannibalism to a minimum. It was a fairly tame weekend. W e left town Saturday after Jo e y ’ s soccer gam e and went up to my parents’ hom e in the V erde V a lle y , about 100 m iles north o f Phoenix. The bestiality thing didn't really work out •— though we did go horseback riding. W e went through the high chaparral, over dry stream beds and up into a canyon. C o m in g around one bend we saw a bull elk and two fem ales. Directly north o f us was M ontezum a’ s Castle National Monument, an ancient Native American ruin. It was the quintessential A rizona afternoon. I wish Seri. Lott and Reps. Karen Johnson and Barbara Blewstcr had been there. Perhaps the clean air and w ide vistas w ould have helped to open their minds. I don’ t mean to make light o f the opinions o f conserva­ tive Christian citizens who, through whatever rationale, feel homosexuals are not destined for “ heaven.” They are certainly entitled to interpret their religion in whatever manner they choose. M y problem is with being treated as a second-class cit­ izen here on earth. An opportunity to change that is com­ ing. ' In M arch, the first nationally organized, state-by-state political action campaign to demand equality for gay, les­ bian, bisexual, and transgendered people w ill take place. The Equality Begins A t Home campaign w ill focus atten­ tion on le g is la tiv e g o a ls , such as re p e a lin g a rch a ic sodomy laws and urging passage o f employment fairness initiatives. The E B A H cam paign was launched by the National G ay and Lesbian Task Force to focus on key state legisla­ tive issues across the country. The Arizona Human Rights Fund is coordinating our state’ s efforts. “ W e won’t sit still for punitive measures by representa­ tives like Karen Johnson and Lin d a Blew stcr, who are attempting to codify their morality into law ,” said A H R F board member Ron Passarelli. This campaign is important to supporters o f gay and lesbian rights. The issue is not sex, but prejudice. Your knowledge and attitude about homosexuals as people and as families helps to determine whether the legacy o f dis­ crimination continues. During the week o f March 21-27, E B A H Arizona par­ ticipants w ill engage in a letter-writing initiative, attend a session o f the House o f Representatives and pursue other activities designed to let elected officials know that efforts to deny a segment o f the population their basic rights as citizens will not be tolerated. I f you are interested in part ic ip a t in g , c h e c k o u t the sc h e d u le o f e v e n ts at: ahrf@ aol.com . I ’ ve watched iriy son grow up into an astute and sensi­ tive young boy. W hile driving him into school one morn­ ing last week, he asked m e, “ How come people don’ t want a gay person to be a teacher?” I told him it was because some people are afraid a gay teacher would turn the kids they are teaching into gays. He scrunched his face up and looked at me: “ That’ s just stupid! I ’ m not gay. I like girls and no one is going to make me like boys,” he said. I was thinking o f sending invitations to his ninth birth­ day party to Sen. Lott and Reps. Blewster and Johnson. I have faith that exposing people to reality will allow them to incorporate truth into their prejudices. Shawna Rae Kemppainen is a senior studying jo u rn a lism and can be r e a ch e d at shawnarae@aol.com. R e a d e rs’poii W h a t is yo u r o p in ion ? New York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan is retiring in January 200]. First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton is pondering a campaign for his seat during the 2000 clecIB S h o u ld she run ? A. Yes B. No C . Dont Care To vote, visit our website at http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/spre ss/spress.html Answers will be published in next Wednesday’s issue of the State Press. W h a t D o Yo u lllj Readers’poii - , ., ùSail ■ % Y es W w ß- IjE -m a ilî shades@imap4.asu.edu Splfebsite: http://www.statepress.com G r ip e L in e : L a s t w e e k 's m P T h in k ? 965-6881 r e s u lt s I f ax: A rizo n a’s public universities are haggling w ith the state legisla­ ture over th e ir proposed budget fo r the 2000 and 2001 fiscal years. A S U ’s Main, East and W est campuses requested $62.3 m illion m ore than the $303.3 m illion they received last year. G o vern o r Jane H ull's staff responded w ith a proposed increase of $7.4 m illion. The Joint Legislative Budget Com m ittee recom ­ mended A SU ’s funding be decreased by $1.9 m il­ (58%) lion. D o you th ink A S U ’s request is reasonable? Respondents Students Faculty 5 0 Staff Visitor 2 S No 4 Yes 7 Don't Know 965-8464 ¡P M fe ' Letters tothe Editor Arizona State University we Center Tempe, AZ 85287-160^ j Ii i i I I ' The Slate Press welcomes and encourages written response from opr readers on any topic. All letters must £ e typed, double-spaced and no longer than tw o pages to be eligible f or publica- H pn- n u m b e r , cla ss s ta n d in g , m a jo r (o r a ffilia­ tio n w ith th e U n iv e rsity ) and p h o n e n u m ­ b e r , Requests for anonymity wiH be granted only wjtb .an appropriate reason. g - l B b e y * are subject to editing by the opinion ft page editor fo r factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual r'iiiiiÌÌ»Ìsratteted. " Individuals wishing to use e-mail. Gripe Line, fax.P f ourwebsiteforw K^Jphteare able to do so by providing the same information ' required f o r . I ............- H A n I n t r o d u c t io n M t o o r m o n is m W h o are th e M o r m o n s ? • W h a t d o they believe? • W h y d o th ey sen d m issionaries to p eo p le w h o already believe in C h r ist? • W h a t c o m m o n g ro u n d d o th e y h o ld w ith o th er religion s an d h o w are th ey different? sol An Introduction to Mormonism,” a non-proselytizing ^ look at The Q ig rch o fJe sm C h w t o f Latter-day Saints. N o co st fo r th e series F o u r co n se cu tiv e W e d n e sd a y s, b e g in n in g F e b ru a ry 1 7, 7 :3 0 p m A t the L D S In stitu te — the n o rth w est co rn er o f M c A llis te r a n d Terrace (betw een the P sy ch o lo g y an d l a w b u ild in g s). A rt M e a c h a m , In stitu te D ire cto r, w ill present th e lectures. F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n , p lease ca ll th e In s titu te at 9 6 7 -4 4 9 8 D AYS” “5 U N D AR E is c o u n t D a, a y s YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE (m u st 5 m a rt R D o n a t io n s & P erc h a ses e tu d en t o o d w il l h a ve th e la r g es t S E L E C T IO N O F T O P Q U A L IT Y N A M E B R A N D S h a v e a v a l id s t u d e n t i. d . c a r d ) Wh e r e Yot W G S now 5 h o o p e r e C r ea te H o pe, J o bs $ a v e ! a n d F e u r e s JA CER & CUERVO SHOTS PREM IUM DRAFTS 1 DIFFERENT ONES EVERY NICHT . HOWTO LAND YO UR DREAM INTERNSHIP . P a id advertisement. ' (Even the o n e y O U didn't know e x is t e d ) I f you're starting to think about your career, even just an inkling .it may be time to focus on finding a sym m er internship, follow ing are some "insider" insights about bow to land your dream internship in some of today's fast-forward industries like m edia, entertainm ent, fashion and high-tech, that likely don't recruit on cam pus. WHAT TURNS YOU ON? CREATE YOUR OWN JOB A fter yotivq asked yourself whar you like, anrj Jb o iighr of som e of vour favorireffreducts and arriviiia s^ voirlTfavfind rhaTitianv of your choices lead to sm aller or less structured com panies that jilliely don't recruit on cam pus, or that don't have a form al internship program. Don't get discouraged!! Ip fact, think of it as a huge opportunity because you can potentially create your own jo b! There's nothing wrong w ith calling or writing a company out of the blue and letting them know who you are and'w hat you're interested in. Many of the sm aller com panies w ill be thrilled to have been approached and more than likely can use the extra hands for the summer. O ne of Hamadeh's favorite stories is about a college student who was interested in sports law: The guy figured that M ichael Jordan's law yer must be pretty good at it. so he read a bunch of newspaper articles until he found the guy'sname. then he wrote him a letter explaining w hy he wanred to work Not the typical first question you might think of when plotting your first careei experience, but you really should think about it. The b e s t, places to work are often the places that make or do things that already interest you. And who wrote the rule that work shouldn't be fun? "It helps to start by thinking about which classroom topics interest you the most and what hobbies get you excited." says Sam er Ham adeh. President of Vaukreports.com and the co au th o r of "America's Top Internships” and "The Internship Bible.” two of the most useful books on the subject. Take his advice and ask yourself some questions. Do you spend a lot of time listening to m usic and going to concerts? Maybe you should check out working for a local radio station, a record label or a music publishing company. Ate you a devoted athlete? fiy contacting a fun sporting goods compa riy. a fitness m agazine, or a sports talent agency. brings yo u Information designed to help y o u achieve y o u r personal and career goals. Watch fo r the rest o f this series In fu tu re Issues o f y o u r sch o o l ne wspaper. The S ecret Success Series CHECK IT OUT. Below ore key reso urces for you r internship hunt, including sp ecific listings for openings by com pany, industry and location. BOOKS; A m e rica ’s Too In te rn sh ip s - Mark Otdman and Samer Hamadeh The Internship Bible - Mark Oldman and Samer Hamadeh W EBSITES: www.htHum M ps.com • Comprehensive cky and regional guides to internship opportunities nationwide. ~ w w w .aaf.org - For aspiring advertising and marketing execs, this js the ske for The American Advertising Federation, it offers a comprehensive directory of internship opportunities in the advertising and media industries. w w w .revfe w.com /career/flnd/lntem .cfm - This is the "Princeton Review's" on-line database of internships. Vbu can search for openings on a City-by-cky basis, and by industry. Listings are highly descriptive, and candid. w w w .fntem s.org - Ideal for budding politicians, civil,advocates and lawyers. The Washington Intern Foundation posts internship available both on and • off Capitol Hill. w w w .fnroadsfnc.org - Teds about nauonal corporate-sponsored internship programs that give preferred placement to talented African-American. Hispanic and Native American students. - -* ’ ’ w w w .yauffreporfs.com - An invaluable way to team more about specific companies where you may want to explore possible opportunities. www.coUegehfre.com - An awesome site for anyone who wants to work in the high-tech industry. Submh your resume and a detailed form describing tour background and interests. Coliegehire will e-mail you with opportunities that match your qualifications and interests. SELL YO UR SELF, NOT YO UR NUMBERS Ju st because you may not graduate cum laude doesn't mean you won't qualify for some of the most selective internship programs. "You have (o make yourself sound interesting." says Price H icks, who hooks students Up With summer jobs at places like Warner Brothers as part of her w ork, w ith the Academ y of Televisión A rts: and Sciences. "Thè guy who wrote about growing up on a dairy farm is the one we remem­ ber best.' The people, who may have the best grades, but drone oñ and on about w hy they want to be television directors all tend to blend together.she says. ■ SCIENTISTS CAN BE JOURNALISTS Rem em ber that the purpose of an internship is to gain experience. The idea Is to-“test drive" career options that you think might inter­ est you for your future. And what interests you for a career may have nothing io do w ith what interests you in school (H ow many psych majors actually become psychologists'? How many history majors become historians? You get the point.). You never really know what someone might be looking for. so don't feel intimidated by internships that aren't directly in your field of study. Case in point, a biology m ajor beat out a slew of journalism majors for one of three highly coveted internships at the Center for Investigative Reporting. O ut of approxim ately 9 0 applicants, she was among those w ith the least direct experience. "It ju st so happened we were work­ ing on a project about chem icals in the environm ent, so her skills cam e in handy and she ended up playing a big role in the reporting.” said Maryann Sargent, who is the internship coordinator at the Center. REMEMBER THAT SMALL CAN BE BIG w w w .em m ys.org/eps/lndex.hhnl - if you're interested in the television world, check out this ske. which posts internships available through the Academy of Television A its and Sciences. Tor him . "Thq fatv yer had never received a letter like that from anyone befóte." Hamadeh says. "So he brought him in for an interview and w as'so impressed that he hired him for the sum m er" ; Som etim es, you really may be better off going to work for a company where the duties of an intern aren't w ell defined. In sm all but super fast-growing internet com panies, for instance, there's always a lot going on. so interns can often show up on day One and pick the things that interest them the m ost. "O ur interns w ill always be working on several different projects." says Je ff D aniel, who runs a cool new service called CollegeH iie.com that helps match up undeigrads w ith high-tech and internet-related internships and entry-level jo bs. "We look for people who can adapt w ell to the culture of fast-moving com panies and can excel in an environment . that's changing rapidly." Big change means new opportunities, and that's where g jg j a hungry intern can step into new. exciting areas and make i a big contribution. 'StrongEnoughforaMan:ButMadeforaWoman! . State Press fo r W e d n e s d a y , F eb ru a ry 24, 19*9 V V W |||— I l| — M il— — f f l f M W ■ M *.«<• * • M H B 1 0 7 Q u a k e r e lie f fu n d n e e d s $ 4 ,0 0 0 London Monet show m o re to re a c h its goal by F rid a y to pull an all-nighter B y A n d r ea B a ls k y S t a t e P ress Anomieliz Vela, an aerospace engineering freshman, sat at à table near the Memorial Union Tuesday, calling out for contributions from students and teachers walking by. “ Donate to the earthquake relief fund,” she yelled over and over again. The plea worked. Change or dollar bills were dropped into the five plastic jars' in front o f her. V ela rewarded those who gave donations with a big smile and an exclamation of “ Y o u ’re awesome! Have a great day!” V ela is volunteering for the on-cam pus, fund-raising effort for Colombian earthquake victims, which was started by A S U students Dennise Castrillon and M onica Fajardo. The two got the idea after the Jan. 25 earthquake in western Colom bia, which killed more than 1,000 people and left many more homeless: Fund-raisers began collecting money on Feb. 15, and have raised more than $1.000. The money will be donated to the Red Cross and delivered to those in need. The volun­ teers will collect donations until Friday. Castrillon, a com­ puter systems engineering junior and native o f Colom bia, said her goal is to raise $5,000 by then. “ I don’t know if we’re going to make it, but anything helps,” she said. The collection o f the money has not been limited to donations from people walking by the M U . Fund-raisers bring jars with them to classes and have also put them in ’ Palo Verde West and East residence halls. Raising money is not Castrillon’ s only goal. She said she also wants to increase awareness o f the sit­ uation in Colom bia among A S U students. “ A lot o f people will come by and say, ‘W hat happened in Colom bia?” ’ ,shfe said. “ I want people to be aware o f what’ s going on in my country now. It’ s going to take a long time for the cities to get reconstructed.” She is pleased with what has been accomplished so far. “ I feel good because I did something,” she said. “ A lot o f people really helped us and were interested.” L O N D O N (A P ) — A n exhibit o f late paintings by Claude Monet has been so popular that the Royal Academy o f Arts will stay open all night before the show’s fin d day. A n advance booking system lets 800 at a time into the exhibit. The museum anticipates it will have sold out o f all 600,000 ticket by the time the show closed April 18, so it has decided to keep it doors open through the night o f A pril 17 to allow another 8,000 visitors to see thè works by the father o f impressionism. “ I think it is only the second finte in Europe that an art exhibition has been open all night There was one for Vienna 1000 at the Pompidou Center in Paris about 10 years ago,” Academy spokesman Norman Rosenthal said Tuesday. The show, first seen last year at the Museum o f Fine Arts in Boston, has had 210,000 visitors since it opened at the academy in Piccadilly. The 79 works in the “Monet in the 20th Century” exhibition depict the artist’s garden at Givemy near Paris and views o f London and Venice which he painted up to his death in 1926. Th e e n g in e 's in th e fronts bu t its h e a rt's in th e sam e p la c e . Some things change. And some things (like having to see your local Volkswagen dealer for details) stay exactly the same. The N ew Beetle. Drivers wanted.™ www.vw.com or call 1-800-444-8987 © 1 9 9 9 V olksw ag en Berge Volksw agen 1515 W. Broadw ay M esa 833-OpOl Biddulph Volksw agen 4611 W. Glendale Ave. Glendale 934-5211 Chapm an Volksw agen 6601 E. McDowell Road Scottsdale 949-7600 Cam elback Volksw agen 1499 E. Cam elback Road Phoenbc 265-6600 Security guard honored for saving a life B y G a n g a S ubram an ian S t a t e P r ess A Tempe city parks security guard is being recognized for going above and beyond the call o f duty. H e saved his colleague’ s life. Casey Steinert was finishing routine chores one evening, which included locking up park restrooms, when he heard co-worker Jim N oe’s plea for help over the radio. Noe, also a city parks security guard at Selleh Park, was in his vehicle when a severe aneurysm in his stomach rup­ tured, causing massive bleeding, Noe told Steinert he was disoriented and blacking out. H e also told Steinert his attempts to reach the police or emergency help were unsuccessful. Steinert kept talking with Noe over the radio and at the same time dialed 911 to alert the police and paramedics. “ O nce all that was done, I just stayed on the line to make sure he stayed conscious,” said Steinert. When the paramedics arrived, Noe was rushed to a local hospital. Noe said he was bleeding severely when he reached the hospital, where he had an emergency operation. H e said, “ Had he not been on radio that night, things could have been pretty serious.” “ I may not have made it,” Noe added. Steinert will be recognized by Tempe Mayor Neil Guiliano at the city council meeting Thursday. Steinert, 24, who has also worked as a city o f Tempe lifeguard and lifeguard instructor for seven years, said he has plenty o f experience saving lives. He works three jobs at the city. Apart from being a securi­ ty guard, he also is an assistant and an inner-city mail runner. His supervisor, Ginny Belousek, said Steinert’ s heroic actions don’t surprise her. “ H e’ s that kind o f guy,” she said. “ He always puts the extra effort,” she added. Steinert has lived in Tempe all his life and said he would like to be a Tem pe firefighter. H e also wants to get a degree in recreation management and tourism from A SU.. A S U police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: • A S U police impounded a bicycle until proof o f own­ ership can be established. • A man not affiliated with A S U was arrested, cited and released for being under the age o f 21, with spiritu­ ous liquor in his body, at Loop 202 and Rural Road. • A male student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession o f alcohol at Sonora Hall. • A student reported his b ic y c le stolen from the Memorial Union, where it was secured with ft lock. • Three male students reported their bicycles stolen from the Art Building, where they had been secured with locks. -■ • A 1998 Honda Accord was impounded by Fast Tow from 340 E . University Dr. • An employee reported she had a confrontation with one o f her students at the John W . Schwada Classroom O ffice Building. Police reports compiled by State Press City Editor Alicia A . Caldwell D onate P lasm a. Y o u a m a y h e lp s a v e lif e . 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G o to w ork, go to school, beat the sum m er heat! 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 • Tempe Must be 1&-49 years of age, possess a vaBd IDand proof'.oflocal address & ■ S o cial Security number. NSTITUTE w e ll EX C EP T IO N A L RESULTS Haircut ft Dry Facials BodyWaxing Manicure ilW $9.00 $25ÜOandup $15.00 and up $10.00 $5.00 $6.00 $11.00 and up $20.00 and up $344»andup $154» 3 3 4 5 S. RU RA L R O A D 4 9 1 -0 4 4 9 M O N - F R I 9 :3 0 - 6 :0 0 S A T 8 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 p M g M illM lIA C tX G iv e \ D u 10 w eek s. Ten weeks may not seem like much time to prove you're capable o f being a leader. But if you're tough, smart and determined, ten weeks and a to t o f hard work could make you an Officer o f Marines. And Officer Candidates School (OCS) is where you 'll get the chance to prove you've go t what it takes to lead aTrfe fu ll o f excitement, fu ll o f challenge, fu ll o f honor. Anyone can say the/ve go t w hat it takes to be a leader, w e'll give you ten weeks to prove it. Marines Ih / te lk / W n tlfa W t I f you think you've got what it takes to earn the title "M arine O fficer ' see QySgt Zigabarra next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, or call (602) 257-0310. There's Something About Mary An ASU C h a n n el Wjjtk Internships 2 P r em ier e ! See it this weekend Aitisbc Seattle Repertory Theatre Is now accepting applications for A rts Management Lighthm Design Production Management its 1999-00 Professional A rts Training Program. All internships Communications Properties are a fu ll season commitment (Sept. 1999 through May 2000). •Saturday at 1OPM Costume Shop Scenic Art Development Stage Management Technical Production Education The dead line fo r ap p licatio n is 4 /1 5 /9 9 . For d etails, visit : vj' ■ . ■- ; y ■'. your theatre departm ent or career center. •Friday at 7PM Available r •Sunday at Midnight Call (206) 443-2210 ext. 1200 Professional A rts Training Program J S J ji iilil K S S lilill ¡IËËMR W ith ip ;to lO :F^ a i ü ç n tolO Free Top||S*§ » a i : y id ita n Pizzasj W ï t l i t ip t t ì P Deep Dish, Spe Portions òr Extra C a l l s D o m i n o is t. D ouble 1T.00 e x tra . ' s jL ■ ' <■ : fe *C a lt Stores for Details' D o u b le D ea l L arge D eal E xtra -L a rg e D eal C arry o u t S p e cia l 2 Medium Mopping Pizzas for *9.99 2 targe 1-Topping Pizzas for *11.99 2 Extra-Large 1-Topping Pizzas for *14.99 *999 *09.9' 1 targe 1-Topping Pizza Median 8 läg e Deep Oidi J1.00 more Expira 3T4-99 Valid at participating stores only. Not valid with any other offer. Customer pays sales tax where applicable. Cash discount indudes rebate with applicable sales tax. Delivery areas limited t o ensure safe driving. 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V i s i t O u r N e w W e b S it e : w w w . d o m i n o s p i z z a t e a m a z . c o m large Deep Dish $1.00 more Expires: 3-14-99 > i m - m sm K W K Ê Ê È fflÊ ÊKÊ m M m m m æ m m m m m Ê m Ê M m m M Ê m Ê Ê m g m m m m m È m U .N . re c o m m e n d s re s e a rc h in to m ed ical m a riju a n a to end d eb ate B y A s s o c ia t e d N ic o l e W in f ie l d P r e s s U N IT E D N A T IO N S — In-depth and impartial scientific studies should be conducted into marijuana’ s possible med­ ical benefits, a U .N . report recommended Tuesday. Only scientific evidence from the public and private sector can end the emotion-charged political debate over using cannabis for patients, said Herbert S. Okun, a member o f the International Drug Control Board. He stressed, however, that the board wasn’t recommending easing controls on marijua­ na. The Vienna-based board is a 13-member, quasi-judicial organization overseeing implementation o f U .N . drug treaties. Among the other findings, the board’ s annual report said Europeans are the world’s top users o f stress-reducing drugs, while Americans hold the record for consuming the most performance-enhancing substances. W hile the reasons for such a disparity, weren’t known, Okun told a news confer­ ence Monday that it may lie in cultural, lifestyle and other forces. The aging European population has access to more extensive health care systems, which may be more willing to prescribe drugs to reduce aches and pains, he noted. The high use o f performance-enhancing drugs in the Americas may be at least partly explained by the prevalent sense o f competition there, the report indicated. R ssv e cE yo ur la â O W hat m akes a great organization: People. Join Excell as a Directory Assistance Operator and experience what a great job is all about. Absolutely no selling is involved, plus we offer our employees the following: • Advancement Opportunities • Competitive Pay Structure • Varied Full-tim e and Part-time Work Schedules • Paid Training • Weekly Pay Periods • 401(k) $100 Sign on bonus if you are hired before March 1. (Rehires ineligible) W ith fo u r Convenient loca tion s, w e have a n opportunity w aiting fo r y o u : Mesa 1906 E. Main (NW comer of Main & Gilbert Peoria 9802 W. Peoria (NE comer of Peoria & 99* Ave.) èess .............................."T ............................. A l" .........................................., P n h iiiiîifM ^ o : In particular, Okun said the board was concerned about over-prescription in die United States o f methylphenidate, sold as the drug Ritalin, to treat children with attention deficit disorder. American patients are consuming 330 mil­ lion daily doses o f the substance compared to 65 million for patients in the rest o f the world, the report found. The agency also warned that more and more North A m e rica n s are sm o kin g heroin and said Europe has emerged as a producer o f cannabis and synthetic drugs. Cannabis continues to be the most commonly abused ille­ gal drug in the United States, Canada and M exico. The report expressed concern about the prevalence o f do-it-yourself guides on the Internet, which teach users how to prepare certain illegal substances. A n d it repeated its concern that painkillers such as morphine are increasingly hard to come by in the develop­ ing world, though they arc widely available in the industrial­ ized world — about 100 times more available in the world’ s top 20 industrialized countries than in the bottom 20. The board, whose mission is to ensure the legal avail­ ability o f drugs for medical purposes, is launching a cam­ paign called “ Freedom From Pain” to make such drugs more available in the developing world. S n a t P ^ f i r n T ir n u r f o r W r u t n n n r l i M Phoenix 4250 E. 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S o m e t h i n g f o r a l l o f y o u V ir g in IVI e g a s t o r e MUSIC MOVIES BOOKS SOFTWARE # ¿ H S E Iili» I vr NIH1USM101 $ 1 2 .9 9 CD A n w a r accuses M alaysia’s ex-police chief of assault B y Jo c e l y n G e c k e r A s s o c ia t e d P ress K U A L A L U M P U R , Malaysia — W aving his fists; jailed politician Anwar Ibrahim tes­ tified Tuesday that M a la y sia ’ s powerful police chief was among the policemen who beat him in his cell the night o f his arrest, Anwar, Malaysia’s former deputy prime m inister now fa cin g sex and corruption charges, recounted how after his arrest last •year he was blindfolded in his c e ll, then attacked by a group o f o ffic e r s . Ju n io r policemen took pity on him afterward and informed him that the man who led the beat­ ing was police c h ie f A bdul Rahim Noor, Anwar testified to an investigating panel. Abdul Rahim Noor resigned as, inspectorgeneral o f police last month after an internal probe supported Anwar’ s claims that he was beaten by officers. But a report from the probe was never released, and public anger forced Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad to appoint an independent panel to investigate. Anwar was testifying Tuesday in front o f that panel during a recess in his trial. Anwar, 51, who was ousted from his post and then arrested on Sept. 20, is on trial on charges o f abuse o f office. He also faces other charges on corruption and illegal sex acts. He insists the charges were trumped up by offi- cials close to Mahathir, his former boss, in order to eliminate him as a political rival. The ja il beating left Anwar unconscious and bloodied about the face. Nine days later he appeared in court with a black eye and bruises, prompting widespread condemna­ tions from human rights groups. After police in ski masks bashed through Anw ar’ s front door to arrest him , he was driven to police headquarters and put in a cell, blindfolded and handcuffed, Anwar described the beating, saying he counted seven punches, the first o f which knocked him back onto a concrete slab. “ Allah! Allah! Allah! Do'not beat me,” he cried, reenacting the scene. Policemen dabbed his bloody face with his blindfold, but his appeals for medical treatm ent w ere ign ored fo r fo u r d a y s , Anwar said. Some police tried to help him, g iv in g him ointm ent and m assaging his n e ck , and even slip p in g him a pen and paper so he could take notes on the attack. Anwar’s testimony came one day after a policé officer told the panel he heard Anwar cry out in pain when the then-police chief and another senior officer were inside the prison. The commission does not have power to prosecute, but w ill make recommendations to Malaysia’ s king. Judy Tenuta The Power Of Judyism S po rts free season pass. 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SALE ENDS MARCH 7TH wm S a te P r e s for W e d n e s d a y , February 24, 199« Muslim leader withdraws threats against Rushdie B y N e e l e s h M isra A s s o c ia t e d P ress N E W D E L H I, India — A hard-line Muslim cleric on Tuesday withdrew his threats against British author Salman Rushdie, who plans to visit his native India later this year. Syed Ahmed Bukhari, a leader at India’s largest mosque, threatened last month that Muslims would follow and harass Rushdie throughout his v isit. In a speefch about Rushdie to thousands o f followers during Friday prayers last month, Bukhari had said: “The punishment for blasphemy is death.” India has a sizable Muslim minority and was the first to ban Rushdie’ s The Satanic Verses — the novel called blasphemous by M uslim leaders. The government granted the Bombay-bom Rushdie a visa in January for the first time since the 1980s. Rushdie, 51, has not yet said when he will visit India, but it is likely to be next month, when his newest novel is released in India. Bukhari withdrew his threats after a m eeting M on d ay w ith P residen t K . R . Narayanan. Bukhari said the president had promised to discuss with the prime minister the Muslim leaders’ request that Rushdie’ s visa be withdrawn. Bukhari told The Associated Press that he urged Muslims to send telegrams to the president and V ajpayee to express their opposition to Rushdie’ s visit. Rushdie spent nearly a decade in hiding a fte r Ir a n ’ s T ate A y a to lla h R u h o lla h Khomeini called for his death in 1989. The novel’ s Japanese translator was murdered and the Italian and Norwegian translators were attacked. The Iranian government has since dis­ tanced itse lf from the death decree, and R u sh d ie has appeared in p u b lic m ore freely. But Iran’ s Khordad Foundation, a se m i-o ffic ia l charity o rg a n iza tio n , has offered a $2.8 m illion reward to anyone who kills Rushdie. StatePress S p o r t s Arizona State University Your frpp xpaxnn naxx See page 17 Hardcover T h e sis & Dissertation binding $16.50each* 3 week service! Have your hardcover journals, books, and thesis bound by Arizona’s only Library Binding Institute approved binder. • Over 35 years experience • 1 & 2 week R U S H service available • On-Demand book production service • We also offer book & document restoration, conversion of paperbacks to hardcovers, and custom portfolios and boxmaking. • Call us and we’ll send you by fax or mail our easy-to-fill-out order form today! Our Minimum charge is $ 6 5 .0 0 . ’ Basic price - Some extra charges may also apply. Rosw ell B o o k b in d in g 2614 North 29th Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona 85009 /Telephone (6(0 ) 272-9338 / Fax (602) 272-9786 E-mail: Bookbindngeaol.com PulliamJournalism Fellowships Graduating college seniors are invited to apply for the 26th annual Pulliam Journalism Fellow ships. W e w ill grant 10-week summer internships to 20 jour­ nalism or liberal arts majors in the A ugust 1998-Ju n e 1999 graduating classes. Previous internship or part-time experience at a newspaper is desired, or other demonstration o f writing and reporting ability. W inners w ill receive a $5,250 stipend and w ill work at either The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis N ew s or The Arizona R epublic. Early-adm issions application postmark deadline is N ov. 15,1998. B y D e c . 15, 1998, up to fiv e early-admissions winners w ill be notified. A ll other entries must be postmarked b y M arch 1 ,1 9 9 9 , and w ill be considered with remaining early-admissions applicants. To request an application packet, write: Web site: vv\v\v.starnews.com/pjf E-mail: pulliam@stamews.com R ussell B . Pulliam Pulliam Fellow ships Director The Indianapolis N ew s P .O . B o x 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 MECHANICAL ENGINEER Entry Level A llie d Tube & C o n d u i t , an industry leader in Fire Protection, Electrical, Building and Mechanical Tube products, and part of T y c o In te r n a tio n a l L t d ., a 1 4 billion dollar N Y S E company with more than 8 5 ,0 0 0 employees in over 7 0 countries, is currently seeking an entry level M e c h a n ic a l H o w W o u ld You S c o re ? E n g in e e r . This position will report directly to the Engineering M a n a g e r and will be responsible for multiple Project Engineering assignments including upgrading, design, and installation of various production equipment. In addition, this position will interface with various levels of management and / LSA T M CAT \ work with college interns in the development and completion of specialized Engineering tasks. This is an excellent opportunity to gain valuable Engineering experience and work toward senior Engineering status. Take a Free Test Drive a n d fin d o u t ! W e offer a top notch benefit program including full tuition reim­ bursement, medical, dental, life, 4 0 1 -K , stock purchase plan and much, much more! Interested candidates should fax their Saturday, February 27th resumes and salary requirements to: 8:30am check-in ASU - Hayden Lawn A lla n G a r d n e r , D ire c to r o f H u m a n R esources A llie d T u b e & C o n d u it 25 25 N . 2 7th A ve n u e C a ll 1 - 8 0 0 - K A P - T E S T today to reserve your seat! B cc l? T * l \ \ ■ v T y JM IK B u sin e ss C o lle g e C o u n cil A S U B u sin e ss w w w .kap lait.com Hest names are registered trademarks of their respective owners. P h o e n ix , A r i z o n a 8 5 0 0 9 F a x : (6 0 2 )2 6 9 -1 3 2 4 Check our Website at www.Tyco.com Allied Tube & Conduit if an equal opportunity employer A HÁ ékéft ékeVi A ll photos by Soley Hartel of the State Press K ris M anzanares, a non-degree seeking student, works on her cur­ rent neón sculpture p ro ject, "Black Herring.” Manzares has to cut and sculpt the glass before she can melt electrodes to the ends. A fte r the inner im purities are removed, argon gas is pumped in providing its blue glow. Fourteen years ago A SU art professor Jim White brought nejv light to the art depart­ ment. White’s creation, the Neon Workshop, began in 1985 and he has been teaching the wonders of the luminous tube ever since. White’s efforts have aided neon’s evolution from its commercial beginnings into an art medium at ASU . “Neon has a lot of baggage,” said White. “It is associated with beer signs and hot pink signs flashing ‘girls, girls, girls,” but neon represents the future.” 'The Scream ’ thief recaptured O S L O , Norway (AP) — The man who stole The Scream may be a master thief, but he is not a master o f disguise. After escaping from prison on Feb. 10, Paal Enger was captured Monday after his bizarre attire — wearing sun­ glasses at night — attracted attention. Enger, 31, escaped while on an outing from the minimum-security prison where he was serving a six-year sen­ tence fo r the bold 1994 th eft o f N o rw egian E dvard M unch’ s painting The Scream. He was recaptured at the train station in Moss, 30 miles south of Oslo, The Scream, which shows a ghastly figure standing on a bridge, clasping its head against the background o f a lurid sky, is considered a Norwegian national treasure. Many were shocked when it was stolen from the National Gallery in Oslo. i The painting was recovered undamaged three months later in a sting operation that included assistance from Scotland Yard. Enger was one o f four people convicted in the theft. Enger’ s escape irritated policé and prison inmates alike, since he was serving his term in an open facility and could have walked out at any time. Fellow inmates said that by breaking an unwritten prison rule by escaping during an outing, he could Cost other prisoners that privilege. The convicted thief also tormented police by turning up in a cafe frequented by celebrities in O slo, and granting television and newspaper interviews while on die run. Enger is now likely to be moved to a full-security prison. Japanese Supreme Court upholds ban on Mapplethorpe book, citing obscenity T O K Y O (AP) — Customs inspec­ tors who w ould not allow a-T okyo businessman to import a book o f work by Robert Mapplethorpe on grounds o f obscenity acted properly, Japan’ s Supreme Court ruled Tuesday. Three members o f the five-judge panel said the book, a collection o f photographs by the late American artist known for his homoerotic images, was deemed obscene because it contains photos “ emphasizing male genitals,” said a court official, speaking on cus- tomary condition o f anonymity. The ruling upheld lower court decisions. Two judges supported the business­ man’s appeal, noting that views may differ over whether the book should be considered ob scen e. The book has been sold in Japan. M asaru T su c h iy a bought M applethorpe’ s book in the United S ta te s and sh ip p ed it to Ja p a n in A u g u s t 1992. B u t T o k y o custom s banned its im port, sayin g it cou ld “ corrupt public morals.” Tsuchiya sued the head o f customs and the government to overturn the ban. “ The works o f Mapplethorpe are re co g n ize d as h ig h ly a rtistic . The im port w as fo r my ow n p erso n al ap preciatio n, and should cause no harm to public morals,” Kyodo News agency quoted him as saying. The Sup rem e C o u rt d ecid ed in December 1984 that it is constitutional for customs inspectors to ban the import o f magazines on obscenity grounds. Police Reports Too bizarre to be a n y th in g b u t real! Page 08. A R IZO N A BA N K WE'RE COMING TO TEMPE! Immediate opening for part-time Data Input Specialist, 25 hrs/wk M-F, shift begins at 4pm. 10key experience pre-, ferred, Health/Dental, Tuition Assistance, Paid Vacation. Apply in per­ son at our job Fair at the Holiday Inn - Mesa, Tuesday 2/23 11a.m. to 8p.m. and Wednesday 2/24 7a.m. to 2p.m. at U.S. 60 and Country Club, London $151 Paris $170 Amsterdam $190 Lima $202 Sao Paolo $268 Rio de laniero $268 Bangkok $322 Hong Kong $322 Beijing $379 Fam eie cadi A iiction-Aouftle fa immAMp. I n m i senta f u i ne eidL iiilric tin c i «pply. arm i EU B JU LPñS S MRE m CSSSEX TOfffflEVBS1LPBSS, rom mopiis,exyoetr n ai-PX SS AND GETA ummptss 50% O F F !! C o u n c il EOEM/F/D/V 130 E.University, Ste.A Tempe,AZ. 85281 9 6 6 -3 5 4 4 ë-mdkCOVNCXL TEM K Ç cie*. « ÿ •M r. eameifírem/.a n h f i j i Ç riti bSAic Met p o p k Statepress Arizona Sat» University Crosswords They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. A Bar and Grill in Tempe with Balls. THIS TH U R SD A Y ¿ a n f/ is a N IG H T: BARRIO LATINO T e m p e ’s H o tte st L a tin o C lu b THIS W E D N E S D A Y N IG H T: FRED GREEN w/ Otis Roach & Jones Fracture FR ID A Y N IG H T : S A T U R D A Y N IG H T : iD e v o t io n G R U P O CALIENTE FRI. & SAT N IG H T D RINK SPECIALS: sl° ° K A M IK A ZIS s2 50 SH O TS O F C U E R V O G O LD H a p p y Hour Mon - Wed 3pm -10pm Thurs - Fri 3pm - 7pm . Oomes/icBotfledBoer 77 $2.00 DomesticBottledBeer—ìó oz. $275 DaftBeer —=— /Oat $1.# DraftBeer ————r&Moz. $1.75 ’ . 21 Pool Tables DraftBeetPikherDrafts WdDrihks-Margaritas— 2 Satellite D ishes • 11 Televisions 1 1 2 3 W . B R O A D W A Y • T E M P E • 9 6 8 -6 2 2 4 Go ahead. Judge us. There are places to j o and then there are places to go. 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University D r., Tem pe, A Z O n U n ive rsity between R u ra l & M cC lin to ck behind S u n n y's P izza ic e d c o f fe e s • tffas • m ochas • la tte s • c a p p u cin o s • sodas U niversity Rural Pilm Walk & Tyler Mall Eut tide of Bemeti Building 1 1 AZTECH COURT 1 i S' Slat« Press (o r W e d n e s d a ji, F eb ru a ry 24, 1999 I I Network Event Theater® presents: AFRIE PRIMIERE SCREENING Wednesday: March3rd B ro u gh t to y o u b y Coming O ctober '99 D K N Y JE A N S w w w FordveKicles.com/focus 7:00pm @ Memorial Onloa Cinema Passes ava U d e b ith e MIMO offices, 3rd floot MU and die State Press, Matthews Gemer. P a sse s required. Seating is lim ited and not guaranteed. Please arrive early. Seating is lim ited to a first com e firs t served b a sis. GM lB M UAB is not responsible fo r overbooking. NETWORK EVENT THEATER* M em orial U n io n A cüvtie » B oard Kitchen tests determine benefits for disabled Israeli housewives B y S ari B a sh i A s s o c ia t e d P r ess R A A N A N A , Israel — The bed is unmade, the bread is u n slice d , the potatoes are unpeeled, and Penina Muchtar is all oologies. “ I can ’t do any o f these tasks,” the dis­ traught 47-year-old homemaker said — but medical records alone won’t get her a dis­ ability pension in Israel. Suffering after spinal surgery that has left her unable to bend, sit, or stand for very, long, she must first fail a series o f govern­ ment-designed housewife tests to prove she can no longer manage her home. W om en who have run the gauntlet o f buckets, bed sheets, and bottle-w ashing complain the test is humiliating — but the National Insurance Institute says there’ s no other way to test their disability claim s. The issue has prompted a debate in the media. The 18 household chores include making a cup o f tea, slicing bread, washing, and ironing laundry (including hand-washable délicates), mopping the floor arid cleaning out c l o s e t s - all tested in a sim ulated kitchen, laundry room, and bedroom. Up to three officials watch closely, grading speed, confidence, arid expertise. The results are assessed-by a team o f doctors and occupa­ tional therapists. Medical records and phys­ ical examinations also are used. Leah Mann, who suffers from mental ill­ ness, took the test 20 years ago as a condition for receiving her approximately $400 per month disability stipend. “They threw sand on the floor and asked me to sweep it up,” she recalled. “ It was as though I had to show how badly o f f! was to get some kind o f security.” But insurance institute officials defend the test as “ progressive” because it compen­ sates 12,500 non-working disabled married women each year, even though they don’t contribute to the fund as wage-earners do. MartiniRanch NO COVER » BOCKS Spinning N i l HipHep Fusit, A lit u Old School O m n i! $2 Herradu Let “ W e don’ t have a test reliable enough to replace this one,” said disability department director Yehezkiel Bakal. The test is only for married women; men can’ t qualify for homemaker disability and singlé unemployed women must apply for disability through their most recent job s. A ll workers other than homemakers who request disability áre evaluated on the basis o f medical évaluations and do not take a practical test. \ G ila Stopler, a lawyer for the Jerusalembased Association for Civil Rights, says that makes the test discriminatory. “ I f a construc­ tion worker says he can’ t work, a doctor checks him out,” she said. “ No one rests him to see if he can put ope brick on top o f the other.” Tests on specific household Chores aré n ecessary b ecau se h ou sew ives are not expected to switch professions because o f their disability, according to Haim R ing, the d ire cto r o f the B e it L c v e n ste in Rehabilitation Center where the tests are conducted. A ream o f doctors, nurses and therapists at Beit Lévénsteín, alarmed by newspaper and radió criticism o f the test, were anxious to show that applicants are treated with respect and sensitivity. “ It’ s true, there are a lot o f women who com e to the kitchen and are against it,” said Ofra Maron, a therapist who guides the women through die exam at the center in the Tel Aviv suburb o f Raanana. Stopler said it is the assumption behind the p o lic y —• that every unemployed mar­ ried woman is a housewife — that is dis­ crim inatory. Under the law , any married woman who has Hot worked for four years and wishes to apply for a disability pension must do so as a housewife, regardless o f her prior profession. Ladies Night A L L N IG H T L IQ U ID LO V E! Scottsdale's hottest a ll fem ale band 24-1 AN Y BOTTLE S H IR LEY 'S TEM PLE $1.50JAGÇRS $9 Domestic Drafts 9-11pm 75 Cent KAMIKXZEES Silver B O D Y SH O T S on THE B A R & B O Ÿ D shew yee around the SH D R IN K S P EC IA LS $9 Miller Lite or M6D9-11(mi EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT 8- 10pm Specials: .75 cent kamikazees .7 5 c e n t D o m e s t i c & $ .1 .7 5 P r e m i u m P itc h e r s Friday Fes 26 FR ED G R EEN Dislocated Styles B ionic J ive J oe Mama Womb M i 1 Hilliinin TH E G R E A T E S T U V E , 80 s R E T R O IN TOWN! bourbon ALL NIGHT S unday Feb 28 V IN Y L National 8 Piece from Cali Groovin' Funk & S ka With Guests .75 Cent Corona's & Rolling Rooks until 9: 30pm RockLolita D E A D HOT W ORKSHOP Paaay Driaki N i CORNER M ill a SOUTHERN TEMPI. A2. 303-0223 til' lOpai & B lues CarvinJones 1 • »2.00 TOP S H ELF BOURBONS I (UNTft. U PCO March 5th : The Peacem akers March 17th: St. Paddy’s Day Bash April 2nd : The Peacem akers HAPPYHOUR 1/2PRICEMDRINK>74PM> 7PMDOORS 1 ___________________ m ifw ,p R B w w in L jm m 7295 E. Stetson Dr., Scottsdale 970-0500 TheFu nnies T r ia l s & T r ib u l a t io n s B l o o VCNOuJ THftT THE S e o h ,B u t . . . i t 's s o lOORKERS WHO MAKE THOSE Room* . EARN LESS THON S c * IN T H E l^ NRTWE COUNT RN? L O O K C f t f t L O S 1. I G O T T H IS D ID c u t e .. FU izV SERK-SaCr - SIN O To decorate my State Press fo r W e d n e s d a y , Feb ru ary 24, IM 9 y J o n a t h a I n n g S e t i c k w o r l d SO U 'H fcD O 'l TUET IS N 'T C O M P L E T E U N T IL . Y C U 'V C P E E D O N M S •P P R ftP m a tT N O T T S O f c .l L E T Y O U O P T O N C H R IS T M A S . StlckWorld Rule #117: Be loud. Get noticed. 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Join on-line today: www.hiayh.org Sttte Press fo r W e d n e s d a y , Feb ru ary 24, 1999 ASU continues offensive surge, crushes ‘Lopes B y N ick P ieco ro S tate P ress S a m a r u d d in S t e w a r t o f t h e S t a t e P r e s s C atch e r Casey M yers and the rest o f the A S U baseball team once again had an offensive explosion on Tuesday, night against G ra n d C anyon, The Sun Devils pounded out 18 runs and 25 hits, two days after drubbing B Y U 28-3 at Packard Stadium . There was nothing strange about Tuesday night’ s game between A S U and Grand Canyon as far as the outcome was concerned. A s expected, the N o. 9 Sun Devils trounced G C U 18-6, spraying 25 hits all over Brazell Stadium. ^ But when John Gusich came in to pitch in the sixth inning, something had to be up. It was actually Chuck Crumpton wearing G usich’ S N o. 16. Crumpton and pitcher Brad Pennington both had a late afternoon class, so when they went into the locker room at Packard Stadium, equipment managers had already cleaned out his locker. No matter. Crumpton went out and pitched three scoreless innings, fol­ lowing sophomore Drew Friedberg, who went the first five innings to get the win and improve to 2-0. Grand Canyon (9-4) got on the board first with a two-run home run in the first inning by Ronnie Holtorf, who turned on a hanging Friedberg slider and ripped it over the left field wall. But that was as close as it would be. A S U jum ped all over Brian Gerlach (0-1), the A ntelopes’ starting pitcher. Throw ing m ostly fastballs and sliders, Gerlach allow ed seven runs (four o f them earned) on nine hits in three innings. P lu s, five Antelope errors in the first three innings didn’ t help G erlach ’ s cause. A S U was held scoreless in the next two innings, but exploded for 11 runs in the next three. Outfielder Dustin D elucchi and third baseman Andrew Beinbrink both ripped three-run homers in the eigth, finishing A S U ’ s scoring. Beinbrink had four hits on the evening. Scott Goodman had the best line for A S U , going 5 for 6 with a solo home run and a double. “ I ’m really pleased with Scott,” A S U coach Pat Murphy said. “ H e hasn’t swung the bat he’s wanted to the first month o f the season, but to see him come out this way is great. The ball he hit out o f the park was the longest ball I ’ve seen him hit in a long time.” The jersey switch also caused one other problem. Gusich actually got into the game in the ninth as a pinch hitter for W illie Bloomquist, but had to wear Kevin Tillm an’s N o. 29. “ C o a ch cam e up to me and said get a good at b at,” G u sich said. ‘Tillm an was there, so he just gave it to me.” Junior Mark Emster’s second-inning R B I triplë extended his consecu­ tive hits streak to eight straight at bats, one short o f the A S U record. “ Pm seeing the ball well, but I ’m getting lucky too,” Emster said. “ M y teammates are getting on base and opening up holes for me and I ’m just seeing the ball well and hitting it hard.” Friedberg went fiv e innings and allow ed four runs, one o f them unearned, all o f w hich came via a Grand Can yon home run. Grand Canyon’ s other two runs came o ff o f Charlie W illiam son in the ninth inning. Another oddity involving Crumpton occured. Because o f a passed ball allow ing H o lto rf to take first base even though he struck out, Crum pton had to fa ce V in ce n t B rie d is, who he struck out fo r his fourth o f the inning and fifth o f the game. The Sun Devils will now travel to Tucson for a three-game weekend series against U o fA . Martin, Hall to battle for conference honor By D o u g Flanagan S ta te P ress W ith apologies to Oregon freshman point guard Shaquala W illiam s, W ashington small forward Jam ie Redd and U S C 's Adrian W illiam s, there are only two players who have a realistic shot at winning the Pac-l()’ s Player o f the Year honor, according to the majority o f the conference’ is coaches; A t Tuesday’ s weekly coaches teleconference, U C L A center M aylana Martin and Washington forward Am ber Hall were most frequently mentioned when the subject o f the award came up. “ That’ s tough (to nick) because I think there’ s a lot o f very good players,” U o fA head coach Joan B onivinci. “ jAWnk it’ s going to be a close vote (between) a lo t'o f d if­ ferent players.” __ i C o ach esjsJxY p ick ed Martin cited her lofty statistics (first in the Pac-10 in scoring at T9.-3*‘points per gam e, second in rebounding at eight per gam e, fourth in steals at 2.58 and second in field goal percentage at 58) and her ability to make her teammates better. “ Sh e’ s one o f those kids who is not only up there for Pac-10 Player o f the Year, but 1 think nationally,” W ashington coach June Daughtery said. “ I think she done some incredible things for her teammates and the program at U C L A . Sh e’ s so versatile — she can hurt you inside and outside. Sh e’ s just a great athlete.” “ I might be a little biased,” Bruin coach Kathy O livier said, “ but M aylana Martin is one o f the most competitive people I ’ ve ever worked with. Sh e’ s improved her game so much since she’ s gotten here. She came in as a great post player, but she has more range now. She can shoot the 15-footer consistently, and she’ s done much better job on the boards. She brings an attitude to the team that it’ s very hard to play without her and very hard to practice without her around.” How ever, O liv ier knows that H all, who has led the conference in rebounding the C o u rtesy U niversity o f W ashington W ashington’s Am ber Hall is attempting to lead the Pac-10 in rebounding for the third straight year. She currently is pulling down 10.8 boards per game, pacing the conference. past two years and is currently pacing the Pac-10 with 10.8 per gam e, w ill give Martin stiff competition. 1 “ I think Am ber H all is a great player too,” she said. “ Sh e’ s one who has a nose foi the basketball, someone you have to worry about. Y o u probably have to have two oi three people to keep her o ff the boards. Sh e’ s a workhorse. She^s always giving 110 percent. Sh e’ s going to score and get rebounds and put the putbacks in and she can score at the block. Sh e’ s another one like M ay. Sh e’ s someone that wants to find t way to w in.” “ I really like A m ber’ s gam e,” Stanford head coach Tara Vanderveer said. T think she’ s a real physical presence, and she really dictates a lot for her team because you 24,1999 Alou most likely done for year after freak treadmill accident H O U ST O N (AP) — It's been a bummer o f an Off­ “Getting Camy was great,” second baseman Craig season for the Houston Astros. Biggio said. “ He gives you a big bat in the No. 4 spot. First, Randy Johnson left Then they failed to get “But when you lose M o, that’s a big loss. What he did Roger Clemens. Now, they’re likely to be missing as a player is just hard to replace.” Moises Alou for the entire season. Alou finished third in the N L M V P voting last sea­ “ We’re not as good a team today as were yester­ son behind Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwire. Alou hit day,” manager Larry Dierker said Tuesday as full.312 with 38 homers and 124 R B Is in helping the squad workouts began in Kissimmee, Fla. “I ’m sure Astros win their second straight N L Central tide. it’s going to be more subdued out there among the vet­ “ We still have a good offense,” first baseman Je ff eran players. Bagwell said. “ We had one with M o, but without M o Houston found out Monday that Alou tore the ante­ we’ 11just have to find a way to survive.” rior cruciate ligament in his left knee when he fell dur­ Caminiti, traded from the Astros to the Padres in ing a treadmill workout. 1994, was the N L M V P in 1996. He hit 29 homers for “ Nobody’ s going to replace A lou, but we have the Padres last season but missed 21 games because o f some guys who can come close.,” Dierker said. a strained left quadriceps and was ineffective in the Richard Hidalgo, who split time in center last year postseason. with Carl Everett, likely w ill take over from Alou in “ It’s great to be back,” Caminiti said. “The bad part left. Third baseman Ken Caminiti, who came back to is coming in and finding out that Alou is going down. Houston as a free agent, is expected to replace some of He’s a great player. The good thing is we’ve got some Alou’s power. great guys to fill in. I’m sure we’ ll be all right.” H o u s to n A s tr o s o u t­ fielder Moises A lo u rip p e d his knee when he fe ll o f a treadm ill and w ill m iss m o s t, i f not a l l , o f th e 1999 re g u la r season. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Miche] Jaffe ACROSS 1 5 9 14 15 16 Govt, agent Wing movement Finish a job Steak order Teeny bit , “— that will live in infamy” 17 Singer Redding 18 Tiff 19 Off the ground 20 Precisely the right thing 23 Pretentious 24 Madrigal's kin 25 T h e Crying Gam e” star 28 Teachers' org. 29 Taylor of “Mystic Pizza” 33 Moves like a thief 35 Giving up 37 BB and spitball 38 Not quite sure 43 Anent 44 Skiing sites 45 Forehead wrinklers 48 Recieve or decieve 49 H S . “wheels” 52 — de vie: brandy 53 They deliver 55 Birth word 57 Everything 62 Scarlett was one 64 AN Baba, for one 65 T h a t’s — I” 66 Exchange vows 67 Mastery 68 Item lor 62 Down 69 Anopheles kin 70 Send forth 71 O n pins and needles DOWN 1 Paris or Priam, for two 2 Adult 3 Bristlelike appendage 4 Tree houses 5 Sucker or fluke 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 Stride Rat — Barbecue spot Trade center “Garfield” pup Deli moat Sporty vehicle HoOsegow President before Polk 22 ROM s and more 26 “Sesam e Street” character 27 “Unto us — is given” 30 Brom suffix 31 Schindler had one 32 Going nowhere 34 Victuals 35 Work on 34 Down 36 Neutral hue 38 Knowing 39 Peruvian of yore 4 0 , Woebegone 41 C E O , e.g. , 42 Parallel to 1 2 3 46 47 49 50 German sidearms Bad Ems or Baden Went flat “— Bull”: De Niro film 51 Nasty weather word 54 Rolls are made on it (with 59 Down) ■ 4 6 14 17 1 20 Solution to Puzzle in the classified section. 21 7 I 30 31 46 ■ J j 47 53 57 66 i■ 34 26 27 50 51 25 37 36 41 52 69 13 42 44 45 62 12 16 19 33 32 39 43 11 22 35 38 10 24 29 Playing marble .Wings S e e 54 Down “Road to —”: HopeCrosby film 61 Work on a “job” 62 Jam boree org. 63 Yew’s homophone 8 15 18 23 28 56 58 59 60 63 48 49 55 54 58 59 64 67 70 1 By Virginia Yates © 1999 Los Angeles Times Syndicate 60 56 61 i J1 65 68 71 State Press fo r W ednesday, February 24, 19»9 Conference have to work hard not to let her get the ball, and then you have to double her when she does get it because one-onone she beats-people: “ The thing you like best: about her § ÉM K game is she’ s consistent. (The fact that she) averages a double-double shows so much about her effort every night. S h e ’ s so m e o n e th a t w ill h a v e the opportunity to play at the next level professionally i f that's an ambition o f hers. I ’ m glad that we’ re probably not going to play against her again,” A S U head coach Charli Turner Thorne summed up the overwhelming feeling o f thé P a c -10 when shé sàid, “ W e, for one. will be happy that she is graduating. A s a matter o f fact. I think I’ ll even send her a .graduation g ift.” A dark horse candidate has emerged in W illiam s, who has been the sparkplug the Ducks have needed to surge past U C L A into first place in the conference. However, Over 1,000 Phoenix Area Used Cars & Trucks A re O nline! despite her statistics (9.6 points per gam e, 3.1 rebounds, 2.8 assists) and surp rising le ad ersh ip , O re g o n head coach Jody Runge believes the award w ill go to Martin. “ I thin that Shaq is playing great, considering that she is a freshm an,” she said. “ S h e ’ s certainly had a huge impact on the success that we’ re having, similar to what M aylana is having at U C L A . I would say that because o f their difference in age that M ay w ill probably w ill end up with that award.” Huskies hope to honor Hec Ed with victories Daughtery figured her team might gain a split out of, last weekend's trip to the Bay Area. But she didn’ t know it would come in the form that it did. A fter upsetting Stanford 74-62 on Friday at M aples P avilion , the H uskies came back two nights later and appeared to be sluggish in a 58-56 loss to C a l. "It was a real g ood so lid w in a g a in st S ta n fo r d ,” Daughtery said. “ It was exciting for our program, espe­ cially I think for our seniors. Probably just as important, it was important for our youngsters to understand they can go on the road and play in a place which I think is one o f the top five hardest places in women’ s basketball to play in the country. H opefully, that w ill help us in the future.” S h e a ls o sa id th at th is w e e k e n d ’ s h om e g a m e s again st U C L A and U S C , the fin al at H e c Edm onson Pavilion for a year while the 72 year-old building gets a face lift, have taken on extra importance with her team ’ s seniors. ’ “ I think that for us, it’ s an exciting weekend, with not only two very good teams com ing in, but also the fact that it’ s senior night and it’ s the closing o f Hec E d ,” she said. “ It’ s real important for us, not only for our seniors to leave H e c E d in style, but for our fans and all the great tradition and fan support that w e’ ve had. W e ’ re going to close it down for a little over a year to get in renovated, and we want to leave it in style. That’ s some­ thing that’ s very important for the program .” Check Daily I F o r Online Specials! ÏÏIÎJÏÏ1 S P E C IA L S T U D E N T FA R E S R o u n d trip from P h oen ix LONDON . MUNICH . . . . . . . LIMA,PERU ...... COSTA RICA . 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' D iscb u rrts À iso A yätiä ö te to F^cü-ity. & S ta ff R e s tric tio n ^ A pply,-Süb^ec^ to A y a ila b ility , Cali (602) 867-2208 - Great Piiçéè sc___ 2 CLARITY th e new album fe atu rin g “LUCKY DENVER MINT” 0I $379 shared room $13.99 CD on SALE S e e ‘em live 2/27 & 2/28 at the A Z Green Room n ew & u s e d m u s ic Located in the lower level of the Memorial Union 7 2 7 -U S E D 8 7 3 3 $669 private room (includes $80/mo. utility a llo w an ce per unit) THE O N L Y P L A C E T O LIVE! 11 1 1 E . A P A C H E B L V D . T E M P E A G A T E D C O M M U N IT Y 303-7000 1- 8 0 0 - 2 4 7 - 6 1 4 7 http://www.commonsonapache.com 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 die validity of thè offers advertised in our classified section. For mòre information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. » APARTMENTS TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT TEMPE: 1BR apt, walk to camr pus, only $425/mo. Avail. midMarch. 804-0537 N . T E M P E , 2/1 dplx, a/c, yd, spacious. Near A S U . $615. 1201 E. Wejber 966-0987 T E M P E : 2 B R , near A S U & downtown, beautifully remo­ deled, a/é, cov'd, parking avail now. $550/mo., assistive ani­ mals o n ly, move in special. 804-0537 P A P A G O P A R K I - large,. Ibd/lba condo. Part furnished, w/d, h20 incl'd. A vail. 3/15.or sooner $7?5/mo.TJ 966-1555 HOMES FOR RENT P A P A G O P A R K II- lbd condo, Roman tub, w/d, like new $650 mo Treg 967-4100 4BD/2BA, 1 M IL E from A S U . A v a il, immed. 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B E A U T IF U L T E M P E H O M E S 1-5+ B R , S O M E W/ P O O L S $595-$1695 J& T 446-RENT 1 2 0 9 W . B a s e lin e HELP WANTEDGENERAL DILLARD’S DISTRIBUTION CENTER Boring?? n o is y , lo u d '3 9 6 N. Wm. Dillard D r., Bldg. D, Gilbert, AZ (M cQueen & Elliott) accepting apps for Merchandise Processing. » re a d y , h e ate d p o o l, an d s p a c io u s la u n d ry f a c ili­ tie s . F rie n d ly c o u rte o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p b y to d a y !!! P T shifts, M -F, 7am11am or 4pm-8pm. Som e S a ts TarnNoon or Noon-5pm. Com petitive wage + bonus, Apply in per­ son, M -F. 7am-6pm. EO E Terrace Road Apartments 9 5 0 S . Terrace Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 1.5 M T O A SU - m/f, furnished,. $450 mo + u tl., w/d, pool on site. Rachal 350-9532. 2 RO O M S (TWNHMS)- $250 +_ $50 u til, w/d, carport, Chris 839-8229. HELP WANTEDGENERAL TEM PE: 4BD/2BA.home, pool, carport, only $ 1200/mo. «Avail: mid-March 804-0537 of ROOM S FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT WE RENT HOMES! n e ig h b o r s ? W e o ffe r q u ie t liv in g , 1/2 b lo c k from ca m p u s. B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d . H u g e 1 b e d ­ ro o m , 1 bath a p a rtm e n ts. A ll b ills p a id . C a b le T .V . M/F T O share 3bd/2ba really sweet house. 44th St. Arcadia area, Very clean. A v ail 3/25. Call 750-3464 SM 3BDRM/ 2ba near BdWy & M ill. Alam eda Park $740/mo. After 6pm call 814-102 h SO U T H S C O T T S D A L E :: Nice 4bd/2ba house, $1250, Evan 481-2026 Avail. 3/1 T ire d M/F F O R 2bd/2ba, pool/jac, ns, Rural/Southerii. $360/mo. + 1/2 utils, Russell 672-7877 L A R G E 3 -L E V E L home, 1.5m from A S U , nice, pool, w/d, no lease; fun going roommates, $325/mo. M/F, avail. 3/1, 9211825 M IL E 1/2 from A S U , 4bd/2ba, pool, new tile* new paint, Ige yard. $ 1195/ifio. 829*-6302 APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING C A M P C O U N SE LO R S wanted for private boys, girls summer camps in Michigan, Teach: swim­ ming, sailing, skiing, golf, tennis, dramatics, comput­ ers, riflery, archery, gym­ nastics, crafts, camping OR riding. Salary: $1300 on up plui room & board, 602-502-6014 lwcgwc@aol.com ?\ Chandler U nified S School D istrict • Paid while training • $9.20/hr after certification • F rin g e b e n e fits • F le x ib le h o u rs A p ply in person: Chandler Unified School District 1525 E. Frye Rd. Chandler, AZ 812-7016 00 00 M ERIDIAN CO RN ERS-SH ARE 2bd/2ba 1/2 mi from A SU $355/mo +1/2 utils. 965-0177 Bala A L A N N IS M O R R IS É T T E w/ Garbage tickets for sale. Con ­ cert is on Sunday, March 21st at Desert Sky Pavillion. I have seats in the first and second sec­ tions from the stage; $84 dol­ lars each or $150 for a pair. C all Paul @ 884-9817 for fur­ ther details, RO O M S A V A IL , in a beautiful house, quiet, clean, all amen., poOl/patid, 10 min. to A S U on Greenbelt, $3‘0p/mo.' + util's. Avail. March & June - Jay, $901941 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE H A Y D E N S Q U A R E , I Bdrm 1 Bath, great location , asking $85,000. Re/Max Excalibur Realty* ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333; Appointment setters. No selling or cold calling. Near cam pus. Weekly cash incentives. AM/PM shifts. 894-9884 F IT N E S S T R A IN E R S $8-510/hr. F/T or P/T. Scottsdale Tem pe Ahwatukee Gilbert 945-1955 945-1955 704-9845 892-8582 P sych & Social Work Majors ^fj D B C needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmen­ tal^, Emotionally, and Behavioraily challenged. Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working With Adolescents North Scottsdale ■Company is in need for data entry operators. Call today, work tomorrow. $8-$9/hr to start A " . O lsten S O 1 Staffing Services 6045 N . S co ttsd ale R d., #208 922-3113 • $300 Sign-on bonus! • Flexible Schedules! • Immediate Start! • No Experience Necessary! • Paid every Friday! Dobson /Guadalupe 777-8757 • Food Server-F/r o r p / t C o ck ta il Server- f / t o r P / T F or a d d itio n a l p o s t io n s a n d b e n e fit in fo r m a tio n c a li o u r C O O K I E LIN E 949-3938 K N. S c o tts d a le R d . ~u R E A K ROCKY POINT GranadaD el Mar, Plaza las Glorias, Condos. M E X IC O TOURS L a st c a ll fo r M a za tla n D on ’t m iss out on this century’s final spring break blow out party! Great prices that include FREE meals and v FREE drinks! Call FREE for brochures and info. 1-800-944-4463 (www.collegetours.com) HELP WANTEDGENERAL F O R T H E M O S T R E W A R D IN G S U M M E R Ò F Y O U R L IF E , L O O K N O FU RTH ÈR1 CAM P S E Q U O I A , e s t a b l i s h e d in 1 9 3 2 , C a ts k ill M o u n t a in s , N e w Y o r k S t a t e , s e e k s d e d i c a t e d a n d ta le n t­ e d p e o p le tp jo in o u r h ig h ly m o ti­ v a t e d s t a f f . C o n t r ib u t e , in a w o n ­ d e r fu lly s u p p o r t i v e e n v i r o n m e n t , to in c r e d ib le s u m m e r e x p e r i e n c e s fo r c h ild r e n in t h e fo llo w in g p o s i ­ tio n s :' C a b in C o u n s e lo r s a n d In s t r u c t o r s fo r B a s k e t b a l l , R o lle r H ockey, Soccer, S o ftb a ll, V o lle y b a ll, G o lf* SPRING BREAK *99 T o M a z a t Ia n Fr o m $ 5 6 9 ? Niqhis -14 FREE meaIs, 2 0 (hours o f FREE dRinks, $1 50 ìn MiqABucks 602-271-4896 o r w CALL FREE * 1-800-244-4465 w rb sire WMAV.CollEqEIOURS.COM T è n n is , G y m n a s t i c s , S w im m in g , W a te r s k i, T h e a tr e & T e c h , D a n c e , A e r o b ic s , Ropes C ou rse, Je w e lr y , C e r a m ic s , W o o d , P h o to , M o d e l M O R E ! E x c e lle n t s a la r y , ro o m , b o a r d & tr a v e l a llo w a n c e . O n 735-0000 c a m p u s in te r v ie w s in e a r ly M a r c h . F o r in fo r m a tio n e - m a il u s a t S e q u o ia 2 u @ a o l.c o m , o r c a ll o u r HELP WANTEDGENERAL Mesa Pavilion Is currently hiring for the following positions; tf Lead U ne Cook «/Cocktail' Server Have Fun • Make a Difference • Summer in New England E A R N W H ILE you learn pt. & ft positions avail, for drivers/ housemen. Apply in person @ 1473 W . R ip Sàlado fckwy. Tempe EOE. Take Spring Break off C la ssifie d s on the World Wide Web! D IR E C T O R Y IN FO R M A TIO N operator, 25 wpm, Phx. area knowledge, all shifts. $8/hr. to start, 225-9699. M etro O ne, 120 N. 44th St. #150. Start Now State Press COCKTAIL SUVEKS STARBUCKS ASSOCIATES GIFT SHOT CASHERS SNACK BAR CASHERS We're Host Marriott Services at Sky Harbor Airport and w e’re looking for associates to join our team! Great benefits like FREE food, FREE bus pass & parking, FREE uniforms. Excellent wages in a fast-paced & excit­ ing environment. Call today to schedule an Im­ mediate interview; 1-888-HOST-JOB (1-888-467-8567), or call the recruiter at 275-1721 x3302 for more info. EOE Drug free workplace M/F/V/D B IL T M O R E A R E A law firm , needs messenger for errands & general office duties. M -F , 125:30pm, need own car & in­ surance. Mike 468-8900 You can find httpJ/www.statepress .com/classifieds/ classifieds.html Excellent Benefits: - 60 Hours Paid Time O ff Every 6 M onths - Paid Holidays - Paid Training - M edical - Dental - Life Insurance Scottsdale Resort & Villas We aré immediately hiring for the following positions. Please apply at 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd. in the Human Resources Dept., M-F, 9am-4pm. • Restaurant Server 5am-2pm, $3.75 plus tips • Lead Restaurant Greeter 5pm-10pm, $8/hr • Restaurant Greeter 6am-2pm, $6.25/hr . • Busser Weekends, 6am-2pm, $5.15/hr • Steward Flexible shifts, $6/hr • Guest Service Agent . 1lpm-7am, $9/hr HELP WANTEDGENERAL P»nH Very Generous Com pensation and Benefits Package tO t M/F/D/V Pre- Employment Drug testing Required, 253-2100 w Croup Hom e Supervisor C u rren t p o sitio n s a va ila ble In clu d e : W m Hilton HELP WANTEDGENERAL • Benefits for part-timers (20hrsMO • Tuition reimbursement • Stock option eligibility ...plus much more! We'ie looking for high-energy, unique people for all kinds of full and part-time positions - from Customer Service, Account Reps, and Fraud Reps (bilingual English/Spanish is a pits), to M ail Openers, Data Entry and Collections. So let yourself be drawn to Chase and see why we are the employer of choice in Tempe! Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 8:30am-4:00pm or send your resume to: Chase Cardmember Services, 100 W. University Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281. Jobline: (602) 902-6000. We are an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer M/F/D/V. A p p ly o n -lin e a t: w w w .c h a s e .c o m Additional advantages include: • 20% discount on most Macy's purchases • Casual dress every day • Competitive medical benefits for full-time FACS FINANCIAL and CREDIT SERVICES Serving Macy’s & Bloomingdale’s Department Stores • 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 Tempe Equal Opportunity For All State Press fo r W e d n e s d a y , Feb ru ary 24, 1999 HELP WANTEDGENERAL F O O D SERVICE/FRONÍT gate manager for Big Surf H2Ö park. Great summer job Mar./Sept. FS exp . nee $8 tÌ(). C a ll 834, 8319 e x t 170 Or stop by. FUN PEOPLE W anted! Appointment setters for Universal Portraits. $7$ 12/hr! 777 Í HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL altitude, leadership skills, team player.: Excellent business op­ portunity for students. For more info, eàll 340-4796 sired. Starting pay $8-12/hr. w/ advancement 15 mins, to A S U ./ Flex. hrs. Call 956-8200, days. P E R S O N A L A S S IS T A N T for male wheelchair user -in Tempe, p/t, $ 8 .10/hr. no exp „nee.. Heavy lifting req’d. 804-0300 J A V A . H T M L . ÇG 1. P E R L , M Y S Q L ,I and M S access pro­ grammer needed for personal ad website project. $ 10 + dp.e, call 888-589-0121 or :send e: mail; imgjobs^hotrhail.com f! "M G O IN G Crazy! M Help warit..¿d processing MP’-I. Refund. ■$202) 678 -190 6 N O W H IR IN G 1 Put it in the for m ore inform ation -• pass cnm inai $$$$ work harder! II ¿luitfur' to recipient coupib; 5'8". meefium Buifrft dark (tfowii hair, jjood (uraftfi fiislory. disabilities. FT & PT shifts and support DiHard Store ! Evening & weekends, aftercard cùstòrn^rs. H noon & graveyard positions. Easy , ✓ N i^ e r o u s Part-Time and Full-Time bpenincfs available operating Vaiiçy & PV/. Scottsdale areas. hovtrs between ^ am t 10pm, 4-;S hour shifts, 5 days a w eek : $7-7.50/hr dependent on site. - Satin ^ ay pr Sunday required'.'.'-.' • ,, •. Paid training. ... ■ V W eekend only positions available; w ork Saturday and/or Sunday for Excellent *' ' -■ Benefits ✓ Starting pay ,$& 2S and up. Paid ev0hj Friday, ' Contact Lex ✓ Three potential Sa^ry increeses in First Yem, basedAon performance. . m m 338-8111 - ✓ idedical/Dental Benefits .' . ■ ■ k ext- " e All positions require: ( 602 ) Feb 27 Mar. 13: . . Mar. 27 } • : : j • Servers M ake a différé- c. <- i the lives c Make your advertising • Dishwasher Houseperson Habilitation Techs. 1967 L A D IE S A C T IV E wear, flex, hrs, -EO E, com p etitive, sal's. Fash. Sq, & P V M ails! 8952835 lv; ifisg. Fax: 895-3458 R e sp e c tfu l and anonym ous p r o c e s s . .M. Tu.'and F 8:30 *.ld;épàm or i:3Ö-3;3ÖRrn i" ' J £ HELP WANTEDSALES . KESORT____ SCOTfsÔAt F. F T & P T work available of individuals with disabilities since J W O R K Y O U R own hours. $8 òr $12 hr guaranteed +/com ­ mission. 894-5J 52 * G en e ro u s C o m p en satio n 4 0 n e e d e d im m e d i­ a t e ly in se r v ic e a n d m a r k e t in g d iv is ió n . N o e x p e r ie n c e n e c e s s a r y - w e tr a in . S 12 / h r .+ b o n u s e s . W e e k ly p a y , fle x i b le p / t d a y e v e n in g o r w e ek e n d ho urs. D o w n to w n T em p e lo c a t io n . For d e ta ils c a ll B ra d 8 9 4 -1 1 5 1 . ' m e/rt ■6 0 7 - 1 0 6 9 . G r e a t 1 Enhancing : die lives' W E A R E looking for an ener­ getic. self-starting, responsible, fun person to learn! the, ins and outs o f a small g o lf co . near campus. I f you have basic phone, computer, and sales skills we W0 uld.be interested. Hours are flex.(20 hrs/wk,, 4-5 days/wk.). Year-round em­ ployment. Begin immed. $7/hr. If interested, calfTom at 285 1282, Egg Donor N eeded O r d e r C le r k s J. ly b o n u s $ $ . N o s e llin g • S $ a n d fu n ! N E E D 5 positive indiv’s to help w/ new Phx office. PT7FT, no exp.iiecVVee 881-7088. Some tech school | $ 9 'h r , p o t e n t ia l m o n t h - j e n v ir o n m e n t . 3 A S U UP TO $12/ HR HELP WANTEDGENERAL MECHANICAL IE C H . ft/pi. some mechanical exp. desired. L ;in G a in e y R a n c h . E a r n i r e q u ir e d . P /T f le x ib le RECEPTION IST FOR Universal Portraits; Fun, outgoing, Tem ­ pe. Kristen,; 777- lp54 : S C O T T S D A L E IM A X theatre . looking to fill 5 staff positions for day or eye shifts. Lots o f study time between shows to earn while, you learn. C a ll 9493108 to set up interview; HELP WANTEDGENERAL PERSONALS IN TER N A TIO N A L FORTUNE 000 Co; searching r prop). « tih rhe follow ing .'qüâlitre-s; \mbitious self startiir!-’positive. l N A T IO N W ID E S E E K IN G p/f time •m edical billers. Up to . 31 k/yr; No exp. hec. Will train. Home PC req’d. 800-921-9939 V HELP WANTEDGENERAL $9/hr guaranteed + com m is­ R E D E Y E is now hiring Assist. sion . 15-25; hrs/wk. Survey Mgrs.i fo.r Arizona Mills, Fiesta, marketing in a professional eh-* and Supefstition Springs. No vironment. Camel back Scot­ . mgmt.. exp. necessary. F lex , JO H N H ANCOCK W ESTSTAR TÄ L K R A D IÖ Net­ P/T. CUST> serv./cashier;’eyes & hrs. excel, training and-a fun at-. : tsdale Rd. Ideation. No .boiler work: P/T Entry. Level Broad­ Arizona Kerstihg. general agen-. winds.. Apply in persoii at. Wa- ", mosphere. Call Renee fqr an im­ room. 9am-lpm or J-6pm M--F ; casting, PR , M K T A sst, cy needs agents. $2000mo: ter'nlce ai 3141 S. McClintbck. ", with flexibility!. Contact Dean. mediate interview 833-9207 Strong organization skills, -self/ training subsidy. Cali, Jim 522j ^ 42.3-0136 • motivation & ability to handle' $6-$3.3/HR. P/T W O R K O n ­ 2100 ex1507 ËO E M F V D 304Ï R O SE G IR L S wanted1for rose line !..!.!. Vjsit us. today,■work to-. Tales in East! V alley ni g h i mult, .tasks a must ! Fax resume:, 061198-019 ■UP TO $25/ HR morrow. www.4reseUrch.cqm; . 38U 8 2 2 1 - or ' e-mai l ^.Càrclubs.- Must be 19 & have oWn Fyn Environment, ft/pt hrsv full, L E G A L C O U R 1ER F/T &' P/T ; .Qls#weststar.coin EOE. . . . transportation. Fun jo b . ¿ood benefits. Kim 424^7399. avail. Professional -appéaranee / P A R A D IS E B A R / & Grif1 is ; Call 897-2728;' ’ ' . v;y } now’accepting applications for & car required. Call 452-1826.. V ALET PT/inS Premier Phx! lo^ broakfast. seryers. Apply. at 401 SO M E B U R R O S M E X IC A N cation seeks yalets. musf.have . S: Mill Aye; Tempe MADISONS IN Seottsdale is .. .. Food: great pay . friendly place valid AiZ.driyers lic .; Gall Roy nów hirijig I .biglia volume} Sat 6.02440-310j M-F, 9a: 2p P/T W ORK - F/T pay. Come to :. 839-8-226.: cpcktail sérvier. Apply’ in.perplay not t:q ;work .Day & eve. F in d t h e S t a t e P r e s s o n t h e In t e r n e t : son at 7.Ì0-8 È. St.etsbn Dr. shi fts avail;, S9/hr. University w w v s / .s t a t e p r e s s .c o m 5th Aye btwrï 2& òprrv.. „■ JA P A N ESE ' ■ & Priest..Mr.. Belles 517-1977 V .G Y M N A ST IC S IN STR UCTO R . Good m l children. Experience &■ ehïhusiasm ja must. ttrs/Wk! State's Top Gymnastics. Program. 940-4041. : T e le m a r k e t e r s W a n te d HELP WANTEDGENERAL RESTAU RAN TS/ BARS HUNGRY? Little $zeek(t&n J ■ C h in e se F o o d FREE D e liv e r y RESTAURAN TS/ BA RS W O O D SH ED II j • New Times Best . N eigh b orh o od B ar . i . • Burger Madness-Tuesdays! j • Cheap Beer & Cheap Shots J •All A p petizers, on H a p p y H r. j • D SS System - 2 2 screens N O M SG , I ESS OIL 524 w University 9 6 6 -7 6 6 0 j • NBA, ESPN, Full Court, MLB 8 4 4 -S H E D University & Dobson _ EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Pre-employment drug screen S A K E B O M B E R S $399 DILI. A R ® 1 4 1 1 0 1 » ® B A N K 2 for 1 Sushi C h in a G a t e ’s Looking for a career opportunity that affords you FLEXIBILITY? R esearch, Data ijfeessin# , Project) H|JGINBOTHj l^SSOCIATEi INC. I B M r «fr m ........ — f's finest market research firm is f^BhraU BroadwayJl We need mdfotgi... phone surveys; no selling. . Dependable * Friendly;* M ott« $7.00/hr. fu ll time or Sp aaiikl $6.50/hr. part time (12 or more . Flex schedule: 2:30-10:30pm, 7am-7pm Sat Friendly, relaxed atmosphere Excellent advancement Two week training Weekly pay Hiring immediately. ; fjfyr.m ore information call Manuel at 774-07711 1005 E. Broadway Tempe. A Z j J Jew elers National Bank, cre d it c e n te r for th e ZA L E C O R P O R A T IO N , th e w o rld ’s la rg e st jew elry retailer, is seek in g in d iv id u a ls for th e fo llow in g FT a n d P T p osition : 7 8 2 0 E . M cD o w e ll S c o t t s d a le • 9 4 6-0720 HELPWANTEDGENERAL COLLECTORS H e lp u s to re -e d u ca te o u r n on -p ayin g c u sto m e rs an d y o u ca n • Attend c la s s e s full-tim e an d w ork • Earn a m o n th ly in ce n tiv e up to $500 • Receive a 6-m onth p erfo rm a n ce -b a sed in cre a se • Select a sc h e d u le to m eet y o u r n eed s d a y o r eve n in g , FT o r PT N o e x p e rie n ce is n e c e ssa ry . . |(A p p ly in p erso n 9am -5pm . M -F for an im m e d ia te interview o r ca ll to sc h e d u le o n e a t y o u r co n v e n ie n c e 2035 W . 4th S t., T e m p e , A Z 85281 Le ss th an 2 m iles from A S U C a m p u s 8 2 9 -5 8 0 4 Drug-Free Environm ent/Equal O p p ortunity N EW S u sh i B ar -K n m w r i -■ » x iiifr r - E m ployer X National Bank HELP WANTEDGENERAL Social Service agency seeks N applicants to work in programs designed to promote community participation for individuals with developmental disabilities. We offer a va'riety of positions working with individuals in their own homes or resi­ dential settings. We offer over 40 hours of paid training and have an excellent benefits plan. We have flexible sched­ ules with FT, PT and on-call positions available immediately, p u r pay ranges from $7.00 - $8.00 POE/EOE. Please call 431-9511 or 861-2385 (west \ Phoenix) for more information. WÊim iÊÊHIÊËÊHÊmKÊHHKHÊÊÊMÊÊHÊmÊKÊHÊÊHÊÊHKÊÊÊÊÊÊÊmHÊKÊËKHÊÊHÊÊÊÊÊÊHm PERSONALS PERSONALS egg donation as an advocate for the donor, we work to ensure a respectful process for you. HELP WANTED* FO O D SER V ICE HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE A C C E P T IN G A P P LIC A T IO N S for day/eye. host, servers, bar­ tenders, kitchen/ hobart staff. W ill train pt/ft apply in person, M -F 2-4:30pm, 3159 E L in ­ coln Dr. Phx Bar and G f ill hiring night cooks. Exp. pref. 829 S . Rural Rd 966-5543 PERSONALS receive up to $ 2,000 Call 602. for information Mem orial Union recreation Center Cheek out the Party!!! ADOPT: A young, loving professional couple w ho enjoy sports, the out­ doors, and each other have so much to give and w ant to provide the best possible home for your newborn. Expenses paid. Please call Lisa and Keith at: 1-800-237-9517. SERVICES BOJO'S HELP WANTED* C H ILD C A R E BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FREE LOST/FOUND older, ñs, w/knowledge in the ed. or nursing fields. Pay to be determined w/exp. & refs. Call 948-1525 G R E A T $$$ making oppor­ tunity; http://members.aol.com/ Ateam1607/CircleOne.html L O S T C A T long hair, dark gray, white mane and paws. Between Univ. and Broadway, near campus 306-0049 lve mSg. W O R K A T home, be your own boss! Learn to earn 2k-3k/wk. Not M L M ! 1-800-345-9688 ext. 4668 W O R K A T home father, needs help w/4 mo. old. 1020hrs./wk. McClintock/B roadway area. 966-8593 D E L I C O U N T E R person, f/p time, good pay. Manhattan Bagels/Estelle 838-3097 PETE'S 19TH Tee restaurant at R ollin g H ills ; 1405 N . M ill; 1/2 mi N . o f M ill Ave. bridge, accepting appls for pt waitstaff & bvg cart. Apply in person. JO B OPPORTUNITIES 7 RESTAURANTS/ BARS $20-$40/hr. in spare time! $100 signing bonus! 800-6000343 ext 1927 P O S IT IO N S A V A IL A B L E for food servers, am/pm, flexible hours, happy & dependable. 1V illa g e Inn Scottsdale 9941568 ; ; SERVER NEEDED, Have fun & make money! Positive people only. Pasta Brioni 994-0028 SECR ETA R Y W ANTED w good; typing, leadership, com ­ munication sk ills, for a busy gallery on Nantucket Island, M ass. M ay thru D ec, (would consider May thru Sep.) Room & salary, (602) 991-4271. HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES L O O K IN G FO R p/t, long-term, nanny*like caregiver, 20*25 hrs/wk. Trans, feq'd. to N . Scotts. for 2 kids under age 3,beginning 5/1. Pref. 21 yrs.^or C O R N E R ST O N E SE CU RITIE S Corporation: To learn moré about day trading for a living, cáll 423-1700. www.protfáder. com SERVICES SERVICES M A JE R L E ’S S P O R T S grill is hiring for all positions, apply in person at 24 N , 2nd St, Phx. No phone calls please. C H A N G IN G JO B S , graduating, need a job? U need a Killer Re­ sume; Log on and it's done. wWw.resumesquick.cqm - We accentuate your positives! Classifieds WORK! FREE 1st VISIT R elative w ill lend benefit o f experience, if not cash. By dig-ging deep forinform ation you cou ld uncover treasure map, Don't laugh now! . S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov, 22-Dec. ■21): Highlight universal appeal, exploré, do research, consult with Scorpio. You could be on way to hitting financial jackpot, Let go o f preconceived notions, Aries plays role, C A P R IC O R N (D e c . 22-Jan. 19): Your attitude changes concem in g marital status. D o n ’ t attempt to thwart progress — you need more flattery, or iricidents to buoy confidence. Leo represented, A Q U A R IU S (Jan 20-Feb. 18): intercepted pass does not mean opposition eán run away with the ball. Excellent fo fs a v in g s ,. locating lost articles, m aking decision concerning lové and marriage, P IS C E S (Feb, 19-March 20): G iv e fu ll rein to intellectual curiosity, Study, research, Write* Display talent for making peopie laugh i f even through their tears. Gem ini talks fast, plays amazing role, IF F E B R U A R Y 24 IS Y Ó Ü R B IR T H D A Y : You are musical. enjoy food, have deep appréciâ­ tion fo r the arts, e s p e cia lly m u sié . in tu itiv e in te lle ct is honed to razor-sharpness < Taurus, Libra* Scorpio persons play astounding roles in your life , could have these .letters, initials in names: F , O , X . You en jo y hom e l i f e as w ell as B right lig h ts o f n igh t lif e . Friends learn early there is more than one side to your life and character. August most memorabie for you this year. © 1999, The L A Times Syndicate WANTED Auto A cciden t Victim s • 20 yrs experience • Close to ASU • No out of pocket cost The right doctor for you Dr. Brace Lubltx W A N T E D : D R U M M E R for exp’d, serious band. Alternative original music. Studio time for album guar'd. 731-4610 David 968-7767 2504 S. Rural Rd. FAMDE TUTORS JU M P S 1 2 5 v ~ D A V E M A T T H E W S tickets wanted (3 or less). The closer to the front the better! Please call 884-9817 after 5pm or 9656735 during the day ; ask for Paul. Call today fo r yo u r Hist free v isit ($200 value) W e d n e sd a y , F e b r u a r y 24, 1999 D U I O R C H IL D S U P P O R T Problem s? A S U LaW school graduate handling - crim inal, civil, domestic relations matters. Discount for A S U ID . C a ll the Law office o f Dwane M , Cates 905-3117 for a free phone con­ sultation U N IV E R S IT Y ST U D E N T dis­ count, long distance rate 7c/min. 24 hrs a day ! C all 8198615 ' SERVICES Basem ent o f the MU Building À R IË S (M arch 21 -A pril 19): . You r interests in various subjects are showing. People consuit you on everything from die ■ A ’ ’ in alchemy to thë " Z ” in zodiac. DeyotiOn to L eo w ill pay dividends. . T A U R U S (April 20-May 20): Yo u ’ re in rhythm. Moon position equates to locating lost artid e s, making profitable investments. Attention w ill'revolve around marital status. Seafood dinner. GEM 1N1 (M ay 21-June 20): C y c le h ig h , exp erim en t and explore, be up-to-date in fashion< R e la tiv e in distant city seeks your counsel on relationsh ip , p h y sical appearance. Sagittarian involved. ’ 'C A N C E R (June 21 ¿July 22): Let it be known, There are two ways to dp things, the right wày and mÿ w ay !’ ’ M aintain ereative freedom. Flirtation begins mildiy, could g d top hot. L E O (July 23-Aug. 22): To get a smile^ giye a smile. Read and Write On such subjects as psyc h o lo g y , parap sy ch o lo gy . Member o f opposite- sex asks, " I s this to be a short-term relationship?” V I R G O (A ug 2 3 -S ep f 22): Stress d ip lom acy, study L e o mes sage fo r added W isdom. Pecóle loók to:you for leaders h ip ;—- accom m odate them without getting lost in maze o f red tape. Libra plays rolé. L I B R A (S e p t. 23-O c t . 22); D efine terms, outline boundaries, wake up with answers. Y o u w ill hear this confession, " I cannot keep it to myself any longer, I’ m in love with you!” Offer tea and sympathy. S C O R P IÓ (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ' Your kind o f day, .your w ay. . SERVICES 50% O F F dry cleaning b ill w/ A S U I.D .- biz. shirts $1. Cheap f lu f f & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner o f Rural & U n iv. 966*7454. S IG N E D N A T IO N A L band seeks trumpet player. Contact Tim at 520^320-3742 by Sidney O m an FEB. 17, 1996: I fell in front of -the Lang. & Lit. bldg. Looking for witnesses. 464-0574 or pg. 203-8789. G R IL L C O O K $7-10/hr.* Fun neighborhood Sports Bar/restaurant New Times award win­ ner. 20-30 hrs/wk. A p p ly the W oodshed II. Dobson/Univ. See Louis after 5:30. M USIC ASTR0 G0 ÔICAC FO RECA ST PERSONALS TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE ... W e offer tutorial for-the fo llo w in g classes: A lg e b ra/Fin ite C alculus/Precalculus Statistics Physics Business Accounting Q D AZ SKY DIVING C O e tlD y j 1-(88s | p 1-]UMP": MAT 114, M AT 117, M AT119 MAT 210, MAT 270, M AT 271, MAT 170 QBA 221, PSY 230 PHY 111, PHY 112 FIN 300, 0PM 301 ACC 230, ACC240 Successfully Helping Students Since 1980. Call us for information www. a rizonaskydivi n g .co n i MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON" • Cornerstone Mall • 968 4668 S ta te P r e s s Classifieds A S U Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 C la s s ifie d A d O rd e r F o rm Nam e Hom e Phone B u sin e ss Phone A d d ress C ity, State Zip P le a se print one letter per box, lea ve a blank box betw een w ords. i*:. ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE: Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly a s you Wish it to appear in the State P ress, including punctuation. P lease check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State P re ss shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make^ goods- No refunds will be given, but if you need to can cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. i—* i - i . .. u i In t m e U t d u d e ■ □ 2S0 □ BB Ó B a n k C a rd N um ber U M p A y PriYflte’P aity •1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day E S 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. D a tes y o u w is h yo u r a d to ru n : P r lis a p e r ö ä y • $ Commercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2*4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5*9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.60 per line, per day — Jr............................... *r ri....... , t......................... .... ’ X fM B É » , .- J M C T?##/ " » - - y » ’ -' C la ss ific a tio n M ame/Number: N am e o n C a rd E xp ira tio n Date S o rry , w e c a n n o t a cc e p t peraortal a d a thro u g h tira m ali. - - « ......!......... ..................................................................................-............. ......... -......... ...... A HIERARCHICAL MODEL o f F IR ^T NEW CAR NEEDS CD PLAYER AiR C o n d it io n in g , REMOTE KEYLEGG ENTRY p o w e r w in d o w s & l o c k s , ALLOY WHEELS, CR U ISE CO N TR O L Low MAINTENANCE, G o o d GAS MILEAGE Jr Sentra GXE Limited Edition ...YOU CAM ACTUALLY AFFORD. Right now, through the exclusive Nissan Cam pus Connection Program, you can buy the Sentra GXE Limited Edition with all the bells and whistles at a package savings of $950? Pius you can get $ 1 ,0 0 0 Cash Back on top of $7 5 0 College Cash* (If only your student loan was this good of a deal.) $ IflOO CA'SH BACK PLUS $7S0 COLLEGE CASH on SENTRA GXE LIMITED EDITION:' P H O E N IX A B C N issan 1300 E . Cam elback R d. 264-2332 P H O E N IX M idway Nissan 2201 W est B ell R d . 866-6600 TEM PE Brow n & Brow n Nissan Tempe 7755 S . Autoplex Loop 598-6000 “ SC O T T SD A LE Pinnacle Nissan 7601 E . Frank Lloyd W right B lv d . 998-9800 G LE N D A L E W est Valley Nissan 41)50 W est G lendale Ave. 9341-3444 SC O T T SD A LE Scottsdale Nissan 1000 N . Scottsdale R d. 994-0301 M ESA Brown & B tow nN issan Mesa 1701 W est Broadway 461-4300 . 1WISSâMÉ ■ ..... Enjoy the ride. 6 1 9 9 9 N issan N orth Am erica, In c. “N issan," the N issan Logo, “Enjoy die ride.“ and Sentra axe registered trademarks owned or licensed to N issan. A ll rights reserved. * A ctu al m ileagem ay vw y w ith driving conditions. U se for com parison only. 1999 EPA fuel econom y estim ate on m anual transm ission 29 city/39 hwy, autom atic transm ission 27 dty/36 hwy. fSavings claim based on M SRJP o f a 1999 Sentra G X E w ith options purchased separately vs. a 1999 Sehtra G X E Lim ited E dition. tCash Back from N issan N orth Am erica when you purchase from a participating retail­ er and take delivery from existing retailer stock. M oat leases not eligib le . R e ta ile r sets a ctu a l p ric e . See re ta iler fo r d e ta ils. O ffe r en d s M a rd i 3 1 ,1 9 9 9 . '"B etw een February 2 ,1 9 9 9 and M ardi 3 1 ,1 9 9 9 , sby college student who purchases or leases a new Sentra Lim ited Edition through N M A C w ill receive ah additional #750 C a d i Bade. M ust show proof o f enrollm ent o f at least 6 credits from an accredited U S college. M ust show proof o f insurance. Som e restrictions apply. retailer for d e ta ils.'