du independent INSIDE Classifieds 20 Crosswords 14 Horoscopes 23 Opinion 04 PoliceBeat 06 mo rn i n g da i l y Local!State 03 o mm Lj ______.______ • Weather Partly cloudy; high 88 low 56 Sports 17 ■HH Volume 84 Number 101 Wednesday, March 3, 1999 Clemency refused ' fo r 2nd LeGrand brother M iller overcomes adversity to shine fo r softball squad bills m o v e th ro u g h state legislature B y K im P renderg ast S t a t e P ress Three bills that will directly affect ASU students moved through the state legislature Monday and Tuesday. Two of the bills prohibit Arizona universities and commu­ nity colleges from using students’ Social Security numbers as; ID numbers. The third establishes a maximum tuition increase using a formula based on growth of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product. The Social Security bill, which was initiated by the Associated Students of ASU, passed through the Senate in an amended form Tuesday, with a 51-4 vote. A similar bill passed in the House Monday. Because the bills are no longer identical, the Senate bill must now % 4 This bill places go back and be reap­ a limit on how proved. If passed, the bill much tuition would prohibit univer­ can be sities and community increased over colleges from using Social Security num­ any given year. bers for identification. The new law would go into effect June 30, Sam Leyvas, executive director of the Arizona 2001. Students’ Association ' “Judy Gignac, presi­ dent of the Arizona Board of Regents, said she was not opposed to the bill, but added that it needed some amendments. She said that ASU and UofA offer students a choice of using Social Security numbers, but university officials don’t advertise that choice. She said she didn’t know if NAU offered the pm e option. The tuition cap bill would limit the amount ABOR can increase tuition at the state’s three public universities. Sam Leyvas, executive director of the Arizona Students’ Association, said the bill is in response to “tuition indexing” previously suggested by Gignac and UofA President Peter - Likins. / ■ Indexing calls for a 10 to 12 percent tuition increase per year for the next decade, Leyvas said. “This bill places a limit on how much tuition can be increased over any given year,” he added. The bill also requires the publishing of ABOR meetings 10 days in advance of the meeting in Maricopa, Coconino and Pima county newspapers. Leyvas said publishing the meeting time and date would give the community to a chance to speak about tuition con­ cerns. As it is now, he said, a separate tuition meeting is held and the public isn’t allowed to give their opinion. rr Samaruddin Stewart of the State Press Kevin Monelli, a secondary education senior, participates in a field sobriety test after voluntarily consuming beer on Hayden Lawn Tuesday during the Pre-Spring Health Fair. The test was administered by John Anunson of the Arizona Department of Public Safety who was educating students about the risks associated with alcohol consumption. ASU student guzzles beer to teach others about dangers of alcohol B y K im P r en d er g a st St a t e P ress Kevin Monelli swayed slightly from side to side, slurred his words and shaded his glossy eyes from the sun with his right hand while his left lifted a Miller Lite can up to his lips. “1 feel pretty buzzed,” Monelli said. “I don’t want to drive. I shouldn’t drive. I wouldn’t drive.” Monelli, an ASU secondary education senior, skipped a class Tuesday to participate in the Pre-Spring Health Fair. He contributed to the event by drinking five beers under the supervision of the Phoenix Police Department. Of the four participants, Monelli was the only ASU student. “It gives students a chance to actually observe what someone who is im paired looks like,” said Reggie G eorgitso, assistan t coordinator for the A rizona Department of Public Safety. “It gives them a chance to ask questions from officers about any of the alcohol tests.” Georgitso said DPS visits campus twice a year to raise alcohol awareness. Monelli’s blood alcohol concentration was .068 at 1:30 p.m, — just two hours after the binge began. His BAC was considered under the “not presumed” category — a gray area where officers determine if the person is intoxicated. DPS Officer John Anunson said people with BACs ranging from .050 to .099 can go either way, depending on the individual. T rade Blankenship, one of the beer guzzlers and a Tempe resident, blew a .158 after seven beers, which is well above legal limit. Anunson said officers are arresting women for driving while intoxicated more than ever before. “It used to be that a lot more men were driving while impaired, but trends and times have changed,” Anunson said. “Women are becoming more like men and will go to bars to pick up men.” He added that women will have a higher BAC from less beer because they have more fatty tissue. After the demonstration officers drove Monelli and the other participants home. Extraordinary ASU women recognized by Student Life B y June D . W Sta te Press ilh it e Eighteen women were chosen by the O ffice o f S tudent L ife as “Women Making History Today” — a Women’s History Month project created to recog­ nize women doing extraordinary things. Mara Sawicki, an ASU chemical engi­ neering senior, was nominated by mathe­ matics Professor Michael Trapuzzano for what he called an outstanding effort in bringing awareness to domestic violence. Sawicki collected $2,000 for local shelters after biking from Phoenix to New Jersey in 32 days with her fiancee last summer. “I think it's really exciting to be nomi­ nated among such prestigious women,” Saw icki said. “But I think what I did for the domes­ tic violence cause needs it’s own attention.” Nonnie S hivers, program coordinator for Student Life, said the project was created to inform the public about local women who have committed themselves to being role models. “We really thought the achievements o f women who are tied to ASU was important,” Shivers said. “We always hear about the national, prestigious women, but we want people to know about women making a difference in our community.” Laura Krueger, a business manage­ m ent and intern atio n al business senior, said she was equally honored to be chosen because of her academ­ ic excellence. In July, Krueger will attend the N aval Academ y in Annapolis, Md. to pursue a career in aeronautical engineering and be a Naval aviator. I’m really proud because I was going up against some tough compe­ tition,” Krueger said. “I want ople to know that you have to stay ¿rue to your dreams.” Among the 18 women selected are students, such as Saw icki and Krueger, community activists, and ASU faculty and advisors -— past and present. Their biographies will be posted on the ASU and Office of Student Life web sites through March, excluding spring break. “We wanted to celebrate Women’s History Month and educate people about all the wonderful things being accom­ plished by women,” Shivers said. Shivers said the criteria for nomina­ tion was broad to allow for a variety of accomplishments made. “We want to shed some light on the positive contributions that are being made by women everyday because too often they go unreedfenized,” she said. other non-ASU affiliated clients. Call 965-5067. • The College Republicans will hold/ another “liberal bashing” in the MU, room 222 at 2:30 p.m. • T he Lambda League will hold a weekly meeting and dinner out on the town. M eet in the Pinal room of the MU at 7:30 p.m. 'Cam pus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. R equests w ill not be taken o v er the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. If any of the above information is incom­ plete Or illegible ENTRIES WILL BE DISCARDED. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-com e, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. I J I 1 1 • The All Saints Catholic Newman 1I Center will be host to Dr. Barbara j Keats of ASU’s College of Business and Will speak on what “God expects o f me in the world o f w ork” and “how to find our moral compass” at 7:30 p.m. at 230 E. University Dr. 1 1 j 1 • The Japanese Student Organization | will hold a general meeting at 3:30 J p.m. in the MU’s room 219. • T h e Lesbian/Bisexual W o m en ’s I Group will have a general meeting j ' The Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic offers individual, couple, and • fam ily counseling to all students, sta ff, and faculty in the Cowden Family Resources Building in room 140. Call 965-9373. • T h e S tu d e n t D e v e lo p m e n t Learning R eso u rce C e n te r is • • ‘Hiroshim a’ tops list of best American journalism works offering free computer workshops in the Student Services Building, room 394. Call the center for times and information. • The Counseling Training Center is • o fferin g C o u n selin g S ervices. Masters/Doctoral student counselors: can assist with career, depression, • anxiety, personal, and relationship issues. No fee for full-time ASU stu­ dents and staff. A $15 charge will apply to other students, and $40 to today at 6 p.m. in the Social Work Building, room 128. A.W.A.R.E. will have a regular weekly meeting at noon in the MU’s Reentry office and lounge. The Kundalini Yoga Club will offer free Yoga classes at 7 p.m. in the MU, room 221. Career Services is having a workshop e n title d “C om pleting the P u z z le ” at 3 p.m . in the C are er D evelopm ent C enter in an unannounced room. V.I.T.A. will offer free tax assistance for residents only in Armstrong Hall, room 105 at 5:30 p.m. A nthropology L ecture S eries is ho stin g R. M ichael F ink o f the Department of Health at 12:40 p.m. in the P hysical A nthropology Building, room C l 13. 1 I j I j I j 1 j « | { 1 j | B y R ic h a r d P yle A s s o c ia t e d P ress NEW YORK — John H ersey ’s “Hiroshima,” an account o f the nuclear explosion through the eyes o f six sur­ vivors, is the 20th century’s top work of American journalism, a panel of experts said. Last on the top 100 list was Hunter S. Thompson’s “Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail,” a series of articles first published by Rolling Stone in 1973 and later turned into a book. »The list of books, articles, columns, col­ lected works, famous photographs and television reports was selected by a panel of experts assembled by the New York U niversity school o f jo u rn alism and announced Monday. Some were familiar: Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s Watergate reports for The W ashington P ost (3), Edw ard R. M urrow ’s expose o f Sen. Joseph McCarthy (10), Associated Press photog­ rapher Joe Rosenthal’s Iwo Jima flag rais­ ing photo (68). Others are less vividly recalled, such as Lincoln Steffens’ 1902-4 “Shame of the Cities” at No. 6 and Susan Sontag’s 1964 “Notes on ‘Camp’” (74). Books made up nearly a third of the selections, among them Norman Mailer’s “A rm ies o f the N ight” (19) and “The Executioner’s Song” (72), Tom Wolfe’s “The Right Stuff’ (48), Truman Capote’s “In C old Blood” (22), Betty Friedan’s “The F em inine M y stiq u e” (37) and “Angela’s Ashes,” the recent best seller by Frank McCourt (95). Photos included L ife photographer R obert C ap a’s coverage o f D-D ay in Normandy (27) and the Spanish Civil War (73); Margaret Bourke-White’s postwar Germany photos (65); and two Associated Press photos from Vietnam — Nick Ut’s picture of a burned girl fleeing napalm (41) and Eddie Adams’ shot o f a South Vietnamese general executing a Viet Cong suspect (92). “Hiroshima” was first published in an entire issue of The New Yorker magazine in 1946. The narrative built around six sur­ vivors from the moment of the blast had no competition for top honors, NYU jour­ nalism professor Mike Norman said. “It hit like a thunderbolt” at the time and has since becom e “the m odel for American journalism, the first use of the technique of plot in journalism,” he said. While any list is open to argument, pro­ fessor Mitchell Stephens, head of the uni­ versity’s journalism school, said: “I sus­ pect that another similarly distinguished group of voters would have selected much of the same work.” The list, he said, touched in some way most of the major social issues of the past 100 years. “It shows that this was a centu­ ry that understood itself through its jour­ nalism and nonfiction,” he said. Correction M ike Sosso, an A ssociated Students o f ASU presidential candidate, was incorrectly identified as a sophom ore in T u esd ay ’s State Press. Sosso is a junior. The State Press regrets this error. S U N A N G E L FO U N D A T IO N UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH AWARDS IN THE HUMANITIES M a k e a d iffe r e n c e ! $ 1 0 0 0 Awards fo r In d e p e n d e n t S tu d en t R esearch in th e H u m an ities ELIGIBILITY: Advanced ASU undergraduates (at least 6 0 hours completed in the Primary Election! w ith 15 a t Arizona State in good academic standing, m ajoring in a humanities departm ent, m ay apply for support for an independent, original research project. Each student receivir V o te TO D A V an aw ard w ill enroll in a 4 9 9 course in the m ajor (eligibly m ajors include English, Foreign Languages, POLLING SITES FOR THE PRIMARY ELECTIONS: interdisciplinary Humanities, Philosophy, Religic w ork closely w ith an advisor to produce a scholarly L O C A T IO N equivalent) in the humanities. Students w illr HOURS results a t a special symposium. Memorial Union Palm Walk/Tyler Mall SRC PE East NOTE: ^ « m c u iT e n tw ilh The 4 9 9 independent study course4 it m ay be a the Honors thesis or w ith a proseminjj springboard to either one. 9 a m -9 p m 9 a m -2 p m 9 a m -9 p m 9 a m -2 p m APPLICATION: The deadline is April 2 ,1 9 9 9 summer, o r fall). Up to five aw ards ’ I year (spring, given annual ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF ARIZONA STATO UNIVERSITY Applications are available in all Wimanities For more inform ation, please cor »Intents. is www.asu.edu/asasu W illiam Foster, Chair Language and Literatures Depot 965-6281 ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY I Local/State R M H R H i mwwm “Wednesday, I’ll be ready at 3 o’clock. Governor Hull doesn’t have to worry about delaying, because I was killed when y’all killed my brother.” —Walter LaGrand during his hearing before the state clemency board, Tuesday. ■ B IB w m im m m m N o c le m e n c y f o r s e c o n d L a G r a n d b r o t h e r B y Jerry N a c h t ig a l A s s o c ia t e d P ress FLORENCE — Goy. Jane Hull refused Tuesday to halt Wednesday’s scheduled execution of a German man who chose lethal gas over injection for the 1982 slaying of a bank manager. Mrs. Hull rejected the recommendation of the state clemency board that Walter LaGrand receive a 60-day stay so that his governm ent could ap p eal his case to the International Court of Justice. “In the interest of justice and with the victims in mind, I have decided to allow this execution to go forward as scheduled,” she said. Walter LaGrand, 37, was the second of two German brothers condemned to die for fatally stabbing Marana bank manager Kenneth Hartsock with a letter opener dur­ ing a botched robbery in 1982. His brother Karl, 35, was executed last week by injec­ tion after appeal efforts failed. Both brothers requested they be executed in the gas chamber in an effort to get the method ruled cruel and unusual, and therefore, unconstitutional. The legal maneuver worked for a short time for Karl, when the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the exe­ cution. But hours later, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned M » ; I b w P '# l l l l t A f p A I Wffwwiwwwm ' . Ken Levine o f the Associated Press Walter LaGrand talks with his lawyer Bruce Burke prior to the start of LaGrand’s hearing before the Arizona Board of Executive Clemency Tuesday, at the state prison in Florence. LaGrand was granted a 60-day reprieve by the board, as the case was presented to the World Court, because LaGrand is a German citizen. the stay Without comment. Karl LaGrand then changed his mind and asked for lethal injection. The Arizona Board of Executive Clemency refused to reduce Walter LaGrand’s death sentence to life without parole but voted 2-1 for the reprieve. Germany on Tuesday asked the International Court in The Hague, Netherlands to stay the execution, arguing that Arizona violated international law by not immediately noti­ fying Germany of the LaGrands’ arrest. German ambassador Jurgen Chrobog told the clemency panel that his countiy did not learn of the brothers’ case until 1992 — eight years after they were condemned to die. The International Court late Tuesday appealed to the U.S. governm ent to press A rizona officials to stay LaGtand’s execution. The court has no enforcement pow­ ers and relies on voluntary compliance with its rulings. Arizona officials conceded that they violated the Vienna Convention by not immediately notifying the German govern­ ment about the brothers. But prosecutors insisted the LaGrands were afforded all rights any U.S. citizen would have received. Walter LaGrand would be the first person to die in Arizona’s, gas chamber Since voters approved use of lethal injection in 1992. About 75 inmates who were condemned to die before that year are given a choice between the two methods. Walter on Monday rejected the state’s offer to die by injection. “Wednesday, I’ll be ready at 3 o’clock. Governor Hull doesn’t have to worry about delaying, because I was killed when y’all killed my brother,” LaGrand told the board Tuesday. LaGrand lashed out at the death penalty during a 45minute address to the panel. “No one, me, Karl, anyone, has the right to take another life and that includes the state of Arizona and the United States of America,” he said. . The LaGrand brothers’ case has drawn widespread attention in Germany and Europe. Germany does not have the death penalty. The brothers were born in Augsburg, Germany, and moved to southern Arizona as small children. Karl was the first German citizen executed in the United States since World War II, when several prisoners of war were hanged. Walter LaGrand has contended that he was not in the immediate area when the bank manager was stabbed to death and a teller was injured.' At the clemency hearing, Walter’s attorneys played a taped confession Karl LaGrand gave to police. Karl said that his brother was at the front of the bank closing the drapes when the stabbings took place. “I’d already done it. He came back and said ‘Let’s go,”’ Karl said. The taped confessions were not played during the trial because a judge ruled Karl was lying to protect his brother. A federal appellate court agreed. Dawn Marie Lopez, a teller who was also stabbed, testi­ fied that both brothers were in the bank at the time and that it was Walter who stabbed her. Karl LaGrand said he panicked and stabbed Hartsock repeatedly with an envelope opener and slashed his throat when the bank manager, who did not have the combination to the vault, kicked him. A tto rn e y charged with prostitution, indecency B y Ja y s o n P eters St a t e P ress An attorney who has practiced law in Tempe for l7 years was arrested at his office Monday on charges of public sexual indecency and prostitution. According to police reports, William J. Walker, 50, of Phoenix fondled the breasts and genitalia of a female client in his office on Feb. 18. Police narratives say the woman, a resi­ dent of Chandler, sought the legal services o f W alker after having trouble with an insurance company following a car acci- dent. Officers said she told Walker she was having financial difficulties and that Walker then said they were going to become “spe­ cial friends.” He then reportedly said the am ount she received in her settlem ent would be up to her. He reportedly asked her to meet him at his south Tempe office two days later so that he could fondle and suck her breast and engage in sexual activity. After making that request, according to police, Walker fondled her. The woman reportedly contacted officers Feb. 20 and was- escorted to a police station where her telephone conversations with Ashby case nearing end B y E stes T h o m p s o n A s s o c ia t e d P ress CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. — Prosecution and defense experts cast doubt Tuesday on the other’s analysis of how fast a former ASU student’s Marine jet was flying before it hit an Italian ski lift, send­ ing 20 people to their deadis. After the brief session in the court-martial o f Capt. Richard Ashby, lawyers for both sides began preparing final argum ents, which were scheduled to begin W ednesday m orning. An eight-man military jury will then decide Ashby’s fate. P rosecution expert Robert Duarte said the gov­ ernment’s analysis produced “highly correlated data” that showed A shby’s EA-6B Prowler speeding along the route in the Alps last year. D efense expert Jeff Edwards disagreed, saying the government’s data was flawed. “The governm ent has tried to show speed is an issue,” Edwards said out­ side court. “All of the wit­ nesses so far have said speed is not an issue.” Edwards said the defense was not allowed to present evidence show ing there have been 29 accidents since 1980 in which Navy or Marine planes struck a cable that was hard to see. P rosecutors declined comment. Ashby, 31, an Arizona State graduate, is accused of being reckless, flying too low and too fast. He is charged with involuntary manslaugh­ ter and other counts and could get 206 years in prison if con­ victed of all charges. He contends that the jet’s radar altim eter m alfunc­ tioned, that the ski lift was not on his map, and that he suf­ fered from an optical illusion that made him think he was flying higher than he was. Walker were taped and impounded for evi­ dence. Walker was booked into the Tempe City Jail on the m isdem eanor charges and released Monday. The woman told police she also left a message regarding Walker with the Arizona Bar Association’s Ethics Committee. Walker’s attorney, Charles Franklin of Franklin and Associates in Tempe, said he does not know what the charges are based on and he has not been given a police or arrest report. ‘.T have no idea what the allegations are based on,” Franklin said. He added that officers would not even answer his ques­ tions about the case. Walker is a personal injury attorney in his own Tempe firm and has worked in the city for 17 years, Franklin said. He added that Walker has a good reputation and has never been accused or involved with any­ thing like this before.. State Press city editor Alicia A. Caldwell contributed to this report. Slumlord bill gets approval B y P a l l D a v en po r t ■ Associated P rkss PHOENIX - The Senate on Tuesday gave preliminary approval to an anti-slum­ lord bill after beating back an attempt by rural lawmakers to have it apply only to the state’s two major urban areas. Hie measure (SB1278) would make it easi­ er for neighbors or officials to sue a problem property to force it to clean up or shut down. Another provision allows landlords to evict tenante who violate drag, gun, or prostitution tews. The preliminaty approval of the bill came after the Senate voted to delete a requirement of certain problem residential ■ with the Secretary of State’s sread, under a recent Between nei ment officials, and now calls far all resi ride county assessors who already keep tax records cm pnmerty. Sen. Jack Jackson unsuccessfully tried to limit the bill's reach to only counties with Census populations greater than 600,000 meaning Maricopa and Pima Counties. The bill's registration requirement is intend­ ed to niake it easier to identify owners who often now are hard to trace through tax records or other public documents. Until amended Tuesday, the registration requirement would have applied to landlords who fell under specified triggers. Those includ­ ed documented reports of enme on the pmper ly. vHilautnis of public health and of anti blight laws, and declarations of property as a slum IéM&é ■mon m am mmmm mmmmm mm sü ÉËÊÊÊÈÈ aaam m - w * ■ /Tu?' A SITCOM ABOUT "MoTVWN&r LEADERSHIP ABOUT N ô T H iN é j^ _ t£ k 1 N o ise pollution makes I A S U campus nauseating Unwelcome intrusions are a constant annoyance here at ASU. W alk dow n C ady M all an d y o u ’re sure to : have someone stop you to solicit a signature. Sit down for a m inute and one o f those jokers j from the local salon will surely eye you, m istake 1 you for easy prey and ask if you’d like to have | your hair cut by some novice barber. No thanks, you say: A nd the joker leaves. But the intrusion has been made. The damage done. The same is true for unwelcome noise. Sky H arbor has been a continuous problem j i for Tempe. Giant hulks o f metal flying overhead seem to ahnoy som e people who think they should be able to enjoy a quiet walk through their Tempe neighborhood — or a good night’s sleep, j O ur com plaint isn’t with Sky Harbor, though 1 — w e’ve actually becom e accustom ed to that noise. W hat w e’re griping about is the scream ing, I th um ping, m ind -g rip p in g n o ise that p u lsates [ through campus on a regular basis. T h e m o st re c e n t o ffe n s e w as c o m m itte d ) Tuesday afternoon by a group o f four kick-boxing instructors from the Q Sports Club. They j teach a class, you see, on Wednesday nights and j they wanted to let us know about it. j G reat. But was the scream ing, aerobicizing ! wom an really necessary? Did we have to listen j to that inescapable, mind-numbing bass ju st so J they could advertise their exercise class? N oise the Latin word for “nausea” — is j not a mere, annoyance. It’s not simply an intruf sion. It ’s actually harmful to your health. Some experts say loud noise can cause stress, high blood pressure, sleep loss, distraction, and lost productivity. It’s actually said to dim inish I the quality o f your life. A couple o f years ago ASU considered set| ting a maxim um noise limit. The “nausea” pul| satin g from H ayden L aw n an d elsew h ere at I ASU was actually disturbing classes. Something ( had to be done But nothing was. jSo the noise continues to irritate. The woman f from the Q continues to annoy. Students try hard to study on their down time, i b u t are distracted . O thers try hard to sim ply relax for a few sacred minutes, but are left frus1 trated by the intrusion. W e re a liz e th is is a n it-p ic k y a rg u m e n t. ( M aybe y o u like the noise. M aybe it gets you j excited. Well, lucky you. For those o f you who don’t like it, stand up j for your rights. You do have them. T he airw av es'th at transm it unw anted noise belong to the public, Therefore, we all have a say in how those airwaves affect us.' We think A SU should once again Consider, and this tim e pass, a noise-level guideline. That way, the next time people choose to scream into a microphone, they can only scream so loud. | Alicia A Caldwell Ud» Kelly Reporters - j \ I J CtBATES ABour nothing ... M ED IA STÖRIES Ab o u t n o t h in g .. VsiHATs on your MIND AMERICA? } I j A r t goes take-out in new exhibit W hat is art and can you take it " ( home with you on a coffee mug? I "columnist > . spent some time pondering that ques­ tion last, weekend ás my friend and I cruised to Los Angeles. S atu rd ay n ig h t, we w andered around Venice Beach, a place for art and exhibitions of many kinds. There was a one-man-band with his guitar and drum set, playing in the middle of a circle of people on the Venice Beach walkway. And a young painter gently putting away his canvas and prints, the sunset urging him to offer me a few dollars off on the small print I was admiring. Sunday, we went to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to see the Vincent Van Gogh exhibit. But there were no discounts at that masterwork of merchandising, the muséum gift shop. Featuring approximately 100 items, LACMA outdid itself cloning the works of Vincent Van Gogh into sou­ venirs. The shop was packed with people fingering through racks o f postcards, coffee mugs, tote bags, paperweights, and stationary. Fifteen-dollar T-shirts depicting The Bedroom and W heatfield With Crows were stacked next to $6 mouse pads and a $98 blue and T lavender silk scarf of irises. The exhibit, “Van Gogh’s Van Goghs: Masterpieces j From the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam,” is an opporj tunity to see some of the most famous paintings in the I world by, arguably, the m ost-recognized artist who’s ever lived, I first strolled through the rooms of his work, haunt­ | ed by his implosive, transform ative portraits and the explosive colors he imparts to his natural surroundings. Van Gogh painted things within his realm: bowls of fruit, Paris cafés, the golden wheat fields, and flowerfilled ditches surrounding Arles in the South of France. He was a man with a suffering soul, who died young and poor in 1891, just a year after selling his first paint­ Kara Shire, Editor Dave Woodfill, Managing Editor — —-------------- ing. It was natural to think of his financial condition as I browsed among the posters, pins, and refrigerator mag­ nets in the gift shop. Does this kind of merchandising vulgarize an artist’s work? Does it degrade the authentic experience of going to see art in a museum? “1 almost cried walking in here,” said Mary Ginnane, a serious-looking woman who was waiting in the long line at the gift counter. “Knowing'how hard his life was, and then here’s all this ‘stuff.’ It’s just so sad.” Another woman in line, Tolene Jordan, said that She just felt the need to get something. “I ’m one o f those people that wants something to take home,” she said. Both women were holding post­ cards and small prints they said they were getting for friends. Collecting souvenirs is a natural instinct. I bought a T-shirt, pin, and a small print- I knew I couldn’t take home Van G ogh’s commanding brush strokes, or his perspective of light and colorful textures, except in my memory. A T -shirt or print can spark that memory during times when art must fit into one’s life in brief moments and not hdhrs or entire weekends. What is important is to keep one’s awareness of the artist -— his or her work and their struggle for expression — somewhere in the mind or soul. 1 I*don’t think d coffee mug is necessarily at odds with that goal. J " “Van G o g h ’s Van G oghs” is touring th e U nited States while the Amsterdam museum undergoes renova­ tions. Estimates are that 900,000 people will pay the $20 ticket price to see the show in Loa Angeles before it closes May 16. Saturdays and Sundays typically sell out;.it’s best to call ahead for tickets if you are interest­ ed in going. Shawna Rae Kemppainen is a senior studying journalism and can be reached at shawnarae@aol.com Fairrington, Carlos Ramirez. Erfand Aas, Andrea BaUqr, jodie Lau, Stephanie Paterik, Jayson Peters, Kim Production-— Sports Reporters Nathan Baker, Einar Bardarson, Tanya Baxley, Tom Chee, Alyson Hurt, Heather Nash, Shelley Oishi, Jennifer Swinford, Joanna Wike. ityditorPrenderyst. Jan Seue, Carrie Severson. Gary Subramanbn.June P.WfitoB. — — ————-— - — — —Assistant City Editor Mario A Lopez ------------------— ——»Opi ni on Editor Christi Foist . ................ . — — — — —— — News Editor Jeremy Hein —— —— — —— ........——— — Photo Editor Doug Flanagan ■i..——------ ......... — —...................... Sports Editor Percy Ednalino jr. — —.....—.................— - — — -Magazine Editor AlysonHurt —— — — —— — — Asst Magazine Editor ( Chris Cariock, QirK Curie, Robert Deal, Percy EdnafinoJr„ SamGanczaruk, Joe Mantone, Nick Pfaooro. Copy Editors —•— Sales Representatives t— —— Mike GiaHanza, David Goodwin, Jennifer Haddan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan Negretti, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. —— ------ — Amber Xnuth, Susan Schimmel. Photographers---------------------------------------------- MarketingTeam^"--r»--""--*-*"----- — Leah Fasten, Soley Harte!, Hyun Urn, Samaruddin Stewart. Ami Wrjght, Scott Bracken, Stephanie Conner, Justin Doom, Brant GaMoway, Scott D. Gillette, Stephanie D. Johnson, Shawna Kemppainen, Gregor McGavin. Megan Nielsen, Brian Policoff, Timothy Scott, Joe Wadaiawala, Brad Whisler. Kate Desk», Amanda Green, fa d Holey, Megan Label The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 2, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz., 852871502. W e do not answer questions of a general nature. Cartoonists— — — ----- ------ — — Classifieds ————— — — —— r—- *------— Brian Bakhumas, Carrie L. Behrens, Bruce Crosby, Brian The State Pres» is the only newspaper exclusively published for and dr- culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this news­ paper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body* Student Media Phone Numbers • State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Student Media Information 965-7572 Advertising 965-6555 Gassifieds 965-6735 On the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu Opinion iMWl wfwfKt:90fTVWWBKBHSÊmippy | 05 Q u a y le d e se rves new slate in p residen tial race It’s always quail­ hunting season. Or rather, Quaylehunting season for the media Dan Quayle is run­ ning for president and it’s time to forget his former bad press. Quayle suffered fre­ quent public humiliation during his four-year tenure as vice president. The mainstream media and late-night talk show hosts ridiculed Quayle for misspelling “potato,” for asserting that Murphy Brown, a CBS television charac­ ter, set a poor example and for opening his mouth; fair too often. Even now, almost eight years since any of his vice presidential shaftis, these, embarrass­ ments define Dan Quayle for many of us. This image creates a handicap for him as he builds his 2000 campaign for the presidency. However, Quaylc’s past embarrassments do not define the man or his campaign. Rather, his current ideas, words and actions are evidence of his character, strength, and leadership. Over the weekend, Quayle spoke to the California Republican Party Convention. In his speech, Quayle acknowledged his previ­ ous setbacks, but also noted that he should not be counted out. “In life it doesn’t matter that you get knocked down a lot; it matters whether you’re going to get back up and keep on fighting,” Quayle said, according to Reuters. This is character. According to MSNBC, Quayle also pro­ posed a 30-percent tax cut that would affect all Americans. This is considerably higher than the 10-percent tax cut currently backed by many congressional Republicans. “They better get a backbone, is what they better get,” Quayle reportedly said. This is strength. Does 30 percent seem a bit implausible? Perhaps. But, it’s important to note that Quayle has stepped beyond the confines of both parties with this tax plan. He proposes only three tax brackets and seeks to eliminate the marriage penalty and estate taxes. His proposal is new and unorthodox. This is leadership. One of Quayle's most significant issues involves strengthening the American family. When he told Americans that CBS’s Murphy Brown Wrongly glorified single motherhood, he was criticized for his conservative, provin­ cial attitude. Families come in all shapes and ReadgN m ! N ew Y ork Sen. D aniel Patrick Moynihan is re tirin g linJan. 2QDt. S tott la d y H illa ry C lin to n is pondering a campaign fo r his seat during die 2000 election. Should she run! Respondents Students Faculty C o m m e n t s 37 2 Staff Site visitor? 8 14 . . . She should run from Arkansas 11 she can’t win in her home state, what does that say about her politics? If she runs and not to represent the people of New and wins, the people of New York, or ■ As a non-resident of New York state, is the majority of those, are fools. she qualified to speak for the people of New York stale? A powerful woman senator with a specif­ ic agenda would do this countiy a world She. has not proven herself qualified to take the office, lu st look a t the fatted ■ A dm in istratio n Act. She ■ that is not legally granted. If aha wants to ¡rue ft# the Senate, die should do it for her stale of Arkansas. If I wane in New York, I wouldn’t vote for someone who doesn’t even live in the state. It sounds as though Hillary is doing it only to stay in politics ....now that her ■ pretty much over — y o u r o p in io n ? H rtm ent of Justice a federal commission «a H a r police agendec around should he able so take DNA anyone they arrest say such a measure would cHminals who have commitA . Yes t t . N o C . visit our website at will be published in Perhaps all of Quayle’s plans will not suc­ ceed. We can never be certain. But die former vice president has proposed actions that could, benefit every American. He has the courage to speak his mind. He has rebounded from the aftermath of negative media coverage.' He has had the strength to remain firm on the issues in which he believes the most strongly. He has not diluted his views into moderate stances to appease the party or voters. Many candidates are preparing for the 2000 presidential election. Most of these can­ didates are smart and worthy. If nothing else, they deserve the chance to make their case. Quayle deserves that chance, too. He brings new ideas and leadership to a potential­ ly dull race. It would be a travesty to the democratic process if we didn’t listen because we cannot forget prior press coverage. It would be unfortunate for Quayle and for the nation if we closed our minds to the whole story because we can’t seem to get past one thing: A potato. >— Stephanie R. Conner is a sophomore studying journalism and can be reached at scbnner@asu.edu. L e tte rs E d lto r Last week’s results Don’t know (4% ) sizes, critics said. And, they were right They still are. However, in the last few years, conven­ tional wisdom has pointed to a decline in fam­ ily values as the source of many of our social ills, including crime and teenage pregnancy. Even when he was lam basted for his stance, Quayle did not waver. He stood firm. This is leadership. Now, we agree with him, but we don’t give -Quayle enough credit for being a trailblazer. Nevertheless, he doesn’t ask for this credit. Instead, he continues to pursue his family-val­ ues agenda as part of his presidential cam­ paign. Quayle recommends reducing the size of the federal government, because big govern­ ment cannot solve our problems. Instead, he says, the solution lies with parents, teachers, and community leaders. But, the foundation for strong communities is strong families. To promote this agenda, Quayle proposes poli­ cies and legislation that will help the family. For example, his income tax-reduction proposal will allow people to keep more of what they cam and have more economic free­ dom. This freedom could allow parents to spend more time with their children and less time at work, he states. - A lthough I strongly support H illary Rodham C linton's political views and think that she would make a credible can­ didate at some future tim e. 1 do not believe that she should run now. There is no way that politically she could over­ come the recent hoopla and run based on issues. Perhaps in six years she would make a good candidate. Second Amendment support Recently, Brad Whisler wrote a col­ umn calling for the re-examination of the right to keep and bear arms (State Press Feb. 15). At the same time, he quoted his own version of the Second Amendment of our Constitution. Brad Whisler starts off his article on the Second Amendment with the words, “The Constitution says yes. More pre­ cisely, the Second Amendment reads that citizens shall have the right to bear arms for the purposes o f a w ell-organized militia.” He also states, “Often times, the sec­ ond half o f the Amendment is either ignored or forgotten, but it lies at the very heart of its intent.” What Constitution was he reading? It seem s th at he has no id ea w hat the Constitution and the Bill of Rights say or mean. It’s funny to me that anti-gun peo­ ple alw ays say the founding fathers didn’t mean what they said in the Second Amendment, but when it comes to the right to say what they want, the fathers meant exactly what they wrote. If this government ever repeals the Second Amendment, you can kiss your freedom of speech, press, and all other rights good-bye. W ithout the Second Amendment, the government would have total control over your life and death and nothing to fear from the rightful owners of this country, namely the people. The Second Amendment — the real one —- reads as follows: “A well regulat­ ed Militia, being necessary to the securi­ ty of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arm s, shall not be infringed.” Nowhere in there do I find the words “for the purpose of.” Please note the placement of the comas and the exact wording. - In his article, Brad claims that guns are “responsible” for more than 30,000 deaths in 1996. How can a gun be responsible when it has no life force of its own? I have yet, in my 53 years, seen a gun load itself and fire. . Guns never can be held responsible for the deaths of those 30,000 people, ju s t as autom obiles can not be held responsible for all the deaths on the roads of this country, nor can Burger King be held responsible for the deaths caused by heart attacks. It is the person behind the guns that are responsible. So put the blame where it belongs and not on some innate object You say the Second Amendment is antiquated and out of date. Prove it. Back in 1946, in a place called Athens, Tenn., the citizens were having elections. A number of the voters were veterans of the war and the election was not what one could call favorable. The sheriff of the county who headed the local Democratic Party machine was going to make^sure his people won. His methods were that standard type used by people like Hitler, Stalin, Saddam Hussein: beatings, jaifc ing, and ballots counted in secret.. The veterans and other citizens took matters into their own hands to take back the governm ent o f their town by the force of arms. They won and restored democracy to McMinn County. That is what the Second Amendment is for. The Brady Law people claim that some 300,000 felons have been prevent­ ed from buying guns because o f the instant background checks. For starters the instant background check is not and was not part o f the B rady B ill. The instant check was pushed by Virginia, which already had it and the NRA. Of those 300,000 felons, just to prove how tough this government is on the armed criminal, how many have been prosecut­ ed, 300,000, or 200,000, or 100,000?. No, just four. John W . Devins Senior Justice Studies 1^^ __ I • for Saturday, Mardi 1 P o lic e B e a t A SU police reported the follow ing inci­ dick.” He was booked into the Tempe City Jail and released. dents Monday: • A student reported his bicycle stolen from • A 21-year-old Phoenix man was arrested the w est side of the A dm inistration Sunday at Wal-Mart, 1380 W. Elliot Road, on charges of shoplifting. Police said he hid Building, where it was secured with a lock. • A male student reported four windows a stereo wire in his pants pocket and tried to leave the store. He was booked into the damaged at 601 Alpha Drive. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ Tempe City Jail. ed on an outstanding warrant from the • Police arrested a 19-year-old Guadalupe Maricopa County Sheriffs Office. He was woman Sunday at W al-M art, 1380 W. unable to post bond and was booked into Elliot Road, on charges of shoplifting and providing false information to police. She the Southeast Jail. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested reportedly removed a Bic lighter from its on an outstanding warrant from ASU police. package of three and hid it in her pants pocket and tried leaving the store. When He was able to post bond and was released. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ questioned by police, the woman gave a ed on an outstanding warrant from Tempe false name. She was booked into the Tempe City Court. He was unable to post bond and City Jail and held to see a judge. was booked. • A 28-year-old Guadalupe man was arrest­ • A Marlboro cigarette box that contained a ed Sunday in the 1200 block of West package of Zig Zags, marijuana seeds and a Southern Avenue on charges of criminal small baggy containing m arijuana was trespassing and criminal damage. Officers impounded for destruction by ASU police. said he broke a window at his brother’s Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ apartment and entered the apartment with­ dents Tuesday: out hi.s b ro th er’s perm ission. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail and held to • Police arrested a 36-ycar-old Tempe man see a judge. Sunday in the 1900 block of East Hayden Lane on charges of assault. Officers said he • A 24-year-old Tempe man was arrested punched his wife in the mouth, causing M onday at 2020 E. A pache Blvd. on charges of possession of narcotic equip­ swelling and bleeding. The man was ment. Officers found a pipe, commonly booked into the Tempe City Jail. • A 24-year-old Chandler man was arrested used to smoke marijuana, in his possession. Sunday at Smith's Food & Drug, 3232 S. He had no valid identification and was Mill Ave., on charges of shoplifting and booked into the Tempe City Jail. providing false information to police. He • Two Mesa women turned themselves in to was seen hiding two bottles of tequila, Tempe police Monday on drug-related worth about $29. in his pants. The man was charges. A 25-year-old was arrested on charges of possession of marijuana and a booked into the Tempe City Jail. • Police arrested a 34-year-old Michigan 27-year-old for possession of equipment man Sunday at 825 W. University Drive on and chem icals used to m anufacture charges of trespassing. He was accused of methanphetamines. Both women, who are trespassing at AM/PM, 980 W. University sisters, were booked into the Tempe City Drive. When officers read the man his Jail and released. Miranda rights and asked him if he under­ Reports. compiled by State Press reporter stood them, the man responded, “Suck my Jayson Peters. A S U College Bowl team advances to nationals B y Jo d ie L a u St a t e P ress ASU’s College Bowl team walked away from the R egional C ham pionship Tournament — an academic quiz competi­ tion — as winners for the second consecu­ tive year on Feb. 21. The team beat nine universities includ­ ing UofA, where the tournament was held. It will advance to the N ational. Championship Tournament on April 16-18 at the University of Florida to compete against 15 teams. Given its 11-1 record, w inning the regional tournament was not a surprise to the team. “We went in expecting to repeat as region champions,” said Joe Kushner, pres­ ident of the College Bowl team and a chemical engineering and biochemistry junior. “We had one bad game and it was the only one we lost.” The tournament, sponsored by College Bowl Inc., holds annual competitions with teams of four students from across the U nited States and C anada com peting against each other. “It’s along the lines of Jeopardy and Ben Stein’s Money," Kushner explained. “Instead of individuals, we have two teams from uni­ versities (competing against each other).” A S U ’s team , sponsored by the Memorial Union Activities Board,-consists of Kushner; Jason Zuffranieri, a chemical en gineering and m ath sen io r; Keith Aspinall, a political science and history senior; Brian Moore, a graduate student in astronom y; and altern ate B ernadette Goracke, an English sophomore. D enver was a “ flu k e ,” said P eter Freeman, the team’s coach, of ASU’s loss to the University of Colorado. Freeman, a physics and astronom y po st-d o cto ral researcher, said the team averaged 250300 points, but scored only 70 in that round. ' Captains Aspinall and Zuffranieri agreed they did well because they were prepared. “We are one of the few teams that have established practices and practices through­ out the year,” Aspinall said. “I think if anyone deserved to win, it would be us,” Zuffranieri added. Although ASU was winless at last year’s championship, they have high hopes for this year. Kushner said he believes this year they will win at least half the rounds. “There’s no where to go but up,” Moore said. ' Experience is an important factor, added M oore, who also played for Rice University, a national champion team. “College Bowl is not simply a knowl­ edge thing, it’s very experiential,” he said. Although this is Moore’s last year of eli­ gibility, he plans to participate in other sim­ ilar competitions, like National Academic Quiz T ournam ents and Academ ic Competition Federation, which do not have eligibility limitations. ■*- The College Bowl team also qualified for the NAQT competition. Unless the team receives additional funds, it will not be able to travel to Michigan and compete in that national tournament. our monthly expended Audio vox 502 iiv ith a $30 A irT o uch P repaid C e llu la r C ard purchase $5 0 (limit one) id |AirIbuch Prepaid Cellular pflard includes 50 minutes Idf local airtime • P ay As You G o • N o C ontract • N o M o n th ly Access Fees • N o D eposit Required Available at participating Circle K locations • N o A ctivation Fee Local C alls:........... ............... .60c per minute Long Distance Calls: . . . .. . .86« per minute Roaming Calls;. . . . . . . . . . . .$1.95 per minute - PITSTOP C A L L 1 - 8 0 0 - y U R T O t lC H i to delùderyourphone right to your door! w v m .a lrtQ U c h .p o m A i r T o u c h R e t a il S t o r e s Mon-Fii 9-7, Sat 10-5 . P h o a n ix \ ' 1645 E. CameJback Rd... . ....... 2 2 4 - 7 0 1 7 10011N. Metro Pkwy. East ..........6 0 7 - 7 1 1 9 Scottsdale . ■ 13802 N Scottsdale Rd.. 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Fax/Mgdem w/Voice • MS Wjfraows 95 o r 98 • kB104 Keyboard • ' S t u d e n t D i s c o u n t S p e c ia l ! ! ! itech PS/2 Mouse • M ic r o s o f t P ro O ffice 97 A c a d e m i c $ 1 7 9 .0 0 Prem ier PC. Network. Sates ànçt S ervice Solution! Sirice T987. ÇS&S h a s bu/it Arizona's fin est netw ork b usin ess system s. C orne s e e o u r g ia n t show room a n d te li us how we. c a n serve you. ,SgL to lm o program C anon o k id a t a ïh e È P A C K A R D M-F 8:30AM-5:30PM & Sat 10-3 Call for Custom PC Pricing:9 6 8 -8 5 8 5 Iraq: U.S. airstrikes jeopardize half o f the nation’s oil exports B y L e o n Ba r k h o A s s o c ia t e d P ress AIN ZALA, Iraq — About half of Iraq’s oil exports are in jeopardy after U.S. war­ planes hit two communications centers that controlled the flow of oil through a key pipeline, an Iraqi official said Tuesday . Thé1damage from the strikes Sunday and Monday is so extensive that it will take a “ long tim e” to resum e pum ping oil through the pipeline to Turkey, Hussein alF attal, head o f operations for Ira q ’s Northern Oil Company, said. Officials tried to pump oil on Monday but failed, al-Fattal said. “We tried ... but we lost communications and control,” he said. The U.S, military has said American planes may have hit several sites in north­ ern Iraq, but it was not sure if the targets had anything to do with the pipeline. British and U.S. planes have been strik­ ing Iraqi targets alm ost/daily since late December. The allies say they are respond­ ing to Iraqi threats to its planes in “no-fly” zones over northern and southern Iraq. Iraq does not recognize the “no-fly” zones, which were set up to ensure that Iraqi forces do not target Kurdish rebels in the north and Shiite opposition in the south. In W ashington on Tuesday, W hite House spokesman David Leavy said, “Ôur pilots are going to enforce the no-fly zone; they are going to take the necessary precau­ tions to do th a t... What they’re targeting is what they deem threatens their ability to carry out the mission.” Al-Fattal and other Iraqi officials have denied the two centers hit ever were used for military purposes. Al-Fattal said the centers functioned as an oil relay station, carrying Signals between Iraq and Turkey, and was used to maintain Contact between branches of the company in the area. The pipeline carried about half of Iraq’s oil exports. Al-Fattal estimated the damage has cost Iraq at least $2.5 million. Iraqi oil exports were banned under U N- sanctions imposed in 1990 after its invasion of Kuwait but, limited sales were resumed under a U.N. program that started in December 1996. Iraq is now allowed to sell oil every six months to finance its food and humanitarian purchases. In the current six-month phase, Iraq may sell $5.2 billion worth of oil, or about 2.1 million barrels a day. However, the dilapi­ dated state of its oil industry has made it difficult to reach that target. In New York,: the United Nations issued a statement saying it-was “deeply con­ cerned” about the strikes and said any extended stoppage will limit funding for the program. . . “Given the depressed price of oil and the state of Iraq’s oil industry, there’s cur­ rently a $900 million gap between the rev­ enue expected and what’s needed to fund the hum anitarian program,” said Benon Sevan, the executive director of the U.N. oil-for-food program. Recycle youi Strie Press (bids available wherever you picx ur YOUR fiver) Really Kool Ts • Sweats • Shorts • Hats featuring: Nike, Champion. Red Sand, Rusty, Life is Good Apparel, and Arizona Tourist SHORTS 01 ALL SORTS... Basketball, Volley. Soccer, and Casual ... Info on alcohol/drug use, sexual health, body image, sun safety, travel safety, nutrition, exercise. Demonstrations, raffles, prizes & give-aways. WELLNESS DAY 10:00 am - 2:00 pm Information/Wellness Fair 11:00 am - 2:00 pm Slight Edge Demonstration Team 12:00 pm -1:00 pm T’ai Chi Chuan Club Demonstration 11:00 am -1:00 pm Group Fitness Demonstrations Ig iisars «I HM Spriag Break fu n i are Wfealeaalan Advocating Moderation (MAM), Student Neallk Center. Student Bocreatien Contar, ASUBPS, and Intorcolloglate Athletics. Where you’ll find an excellent selection of study aids, books, school supplies, caps & sweatshirts, jackets, shorts packs and more, all priced to make your economics open 7 days 625 E. Apache 967-5445 State P resifor W ednesday, March 3, 1999 8 tourists tracking rare mountain gorillas killed in Uganda u came across the first set of B y H en r y W a s s w a A s s o c ia t e d P ress KAMPALA, Uganda — Eight tourists tracking rare mountain gorillas were killed and six others were rescued after being kidnapped by Rwandan rebels. An American survivor said today that the rebels brutally hacked' some victims to death with machetes. Y In Washington, State Department spokesman James Foley said two Americans were murdered as they were being marched away by their captors. The remaining six victims were killed the same way, he said. Foley said the victims cannot be identified until their rel­ atives are notified. The six released hostages were returned to Kampala and taken to a safe location, he said. Mark Ross, a tour operator and pilot who was bom in Arkansas but has spent years in Africa, told reporters the rebels rounded up tourists from several jungle camps in southwestern Uganda. Ross said he was among those taken captive, but was freed later with a political message from the rebels. The rebels — who came to Uganda after Rwanda’s 1994 genocide — marched their captives through the rain forest, where Ross said some were hacked to death Monday. Some captives were freed before Ross, who later came upon their remains. “We came across the first set of bodies. The women that we'd been told would be escorted back had been killed on the spot. It looks like one was raped prior to being killed,” he said. Ross said he saw five bodies, and “the ones that 1 saw had their heads crushed in and deep slashes.” His account clashed with that of Ugandan police spokesman Eric Naigambi, who told The Associated Press there was a shootout and that the rescue operation was car­ ried out this morning in a mountainous rain forest made famous in the film Gorillas in the Mist. ' The “tourists were killed in the crossfire during the res­ cue operation,” Naigambi said. We bodies. The women that we'd been told w ould be escorted back had been killed on the spot. It looks like one was raped prior 1 to being killed .,. the [bodies] ; th a t I saw had th eir heads crushed in and deep slashes, y y M ark Ross, a n A m e r ic a n - b o r n t o u r o p e r a to r a n d p il o t W H O W A S O N E O F T H E C A P T IV E S T O B E FR E E D . But another Ugandan. Hussein Kivumi, manager of a rain forest camp, said the rebels targeted Americans and Britons. “They killed four women and four men with knives, machetes and axes. There were no gunshots.” Three Americans, six Britons, three New Zealanders, an Australian and a Swiss woman were among those kid­ napped, Ugandan officials said. A Canadian citizen also was taken. British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook said four of the six Britons kidnapped in Uganda were among the dead. The Ugandan government did not give names or nation­ alities of the dead, but said that those rescued were an American, two British, one Canadian, one Swiss, and one New Zealander. Among those who escaped was Elizabeth Garland, 29, an anthropology student at the University of Chicago. She told her father, James Garland, by telephone that the rebels W ORTS |HARE IN THE G LO RY OF singled out American and British nationals as hostages. U.S. Embassy spokesman James Okanya said the U.S. government sent an aircraft to pick up the survivors ánd bring the bodies to Entebbe* Airport outside the capital. Uganda said four Ugandans — a game warden and three park rangers - 4 were killed when the rebels first raided two tourist camps Sunday. It said the rebels numbered about 130, and that its soldiers killed four in a jungle pursuit that continued today. 1 France’s deputy ambassador to Uganda, Anne Peltier, who was among the survivors, said the rebels gave her a message blaming the Americans and British for backing the Tutsis in Rwanda and not “the ethnic Hum majority.” The tourists were abducted at campgrounds on the edge of Bwindi National Park, known as the Im penetrable Forest, the starting point for visitors hoping to glimpse the 320 mountain gorillas that remain along the border moun­ tain’s slopes. The 1988 film Gorillas in the Mist about researcher Dian Fossey was based on her book of the same name and starred Sigourney Weaver as the woman who risked her life in Rwanda trying to save the gorillas from extinction. Fighting between Rwandan Hutu rebels and the Uganda People’s Defense Forces continued today along thf forested border in this east African country of 17 million people. The Hutu rebels fled Rwanda after they took part in a 1994 genocide of more than 500,000 minority Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus. The rebels are angry at Uganda for supporting the Tutsi-dominated Rwandan government. In August, the rebels kidnapped four tourists and seven Congolese guides on a trek to observe the gorillas. They later released a Canadian and the Congolese escorts. The others have not been heard from since. VIC TO RY h A gony OF DEFEAT. Sii PAGE 17. 1»^ __________________ Becycie your State t e s (BINS AVftltABtX MEKKA Y9U PICK UP YOUR.PRKs) Internships Available Seattle Repertory Theatre is now accepting applications for its 1999-00 Professional Arts Training Program. All internships are a full season commitment (Sept. 1999 through May 2000). The deadline for application is 4 /1 5 /9 9 . Tor details, visit Artistic Arts Management Communications Costume Shop Development Education ? lighting Design Pmftidion Management Properties Scenic Art Stage Management Technical Production As a sm art college student, we know you’re full o f bright ideas. Here's one more — join Desert Schools Federal Credit Union. W e’ve your theatre department o r career center. Professional Arts Training Program Call (206) 443-2210 ext. 1200 AnInterventionStudy inTensionHeadaches Two research conditions w ill be studied. The experim ent w ill be held on the ASU Main Campus. Students, Faculty and S taff are invited to participate. Study Criteria: •18 years of age and older • Able to read and write English • Individuals who suffer from tension headaches •A bie to commit to an 8 week intervention you are interested in being a study participant please call 632-0418 got “w atts” of ways to help you make the m ost of your money. Just take a look: 5 1 checking accounts some even earn you dividends. ^mm¡w scholarship l<^ an£ ,ree . searches itÊUüiMiiiiilÙiiikiiM Student VISA® card with a low annual percentage, rate. auto loans and leasing. WËË Joining mi? ^S ch o oVs^ pederá 1 prédit Tinion r Vj U ____________ 433-7000 Nigeria’s president-elect vows to rebuild nation BOOK N O W FOR SUM M ER! London Glasgow B y T im S u l l iv a n A s s o c ia t e d P ress $287 $331 $331 $355 $354 P a ris Fzanldnri Amsteram Madrid ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigeria’s new president­ elect, in his first speech since winning a weekend election, promised Tuesday to rebuild the crum­ bling West African nation, battered by 15 years of military rule. Retired Gen. Oluscgun Obasanjo, who once rah Nigeria as a military ruler until stepping aside in 1979, told crowds of supporters, diplomats, and journalists that he would lead “an open and fair and transparent government.” “I regard the results of these elections as a mandate, from the people of Nigeria and die com­ mand of God almighty, that I should rebuild this nation,” he said to loud applause. ’Together, we will strive to bequeath to die next generation, a truly democratic system of governance for our country.” But while Obasanjo made many promises in his speech, from better governance to more jobs and foreign investm ent, he did not explain w here funds w ould com e from to rebuild Nigeria, which faces plummeting oil revenues. $417 $433 $457 M ilan Athens FtW « 4 4 dM dw t a i l M i fHfKfct WfrriMSpw»; 1—Mr In IM câ u * Effty.cm Ht piatti. «T« . EVRMLPÄSS HEBE rssa a a a youthu m ana, rovn am pnss,ot rovn n m -n ssu o se rt ta rta n pass 50% OFF!! C o u n cil Travel, 130 E. University, St<.A T e m p e r i 85281 The country has a $395 million budget deficit, and although production remains steady at 1.9 million barrels a day, oil is selling for $10 a bar­ rel, down from $25 a decade ago. Oil accounts for 90 percent of Nigeria’s export earnings and 80 percent of government revenue. Obasanjo won Saturday’s presidential elec­ tions with 63 percent of the vote, defeating for­ mer Finance Minister Olu Falae — who immedi­ ately cried foul and rejected the results of the election. Nigerian and international monitors have also criticized the election, saying support­ ers of both candidates engaged in ballot-box stuffing and inflated vote returns. What is not clear, though, is whether a cleaner vote would have changed the outcome of the election. Obasanjo, unlike Falae, was backed by a pow­ erful and well-financed political machine, sup­ ported by many of Nigeria’s military elite. The campaign appeared to quickly overwhelm Falae’s. The retired general’s ties to the wealthy gen­ erals has sparked criticism among his opponents, but he promised to crack down on the corruption that has crippled the economy and infrastructure of this oil-rich nation, creating a handful of bil­ lionaires while leaving tens of millions of people in poverty. The president-elect avoided the question of whether he would withdraw Nigerian troops from Sierra Leone, where they bear the brunt of defending that country’s elected president from a brutal rebel movement. Nigeria’s involvement, which reportedly costs $1 million a day and has left more than 1,000 Nigerian soldiers dead, has become increasingly unpopular here. Obasanjo said that Nigeria would withdraw its forces “as soon as possible” but added he would not “do anything to worsen the situation in Sierra Leone.” M eanw hile in L agos, youths opposed to Obasanjo gutted two police stations with gaso­ line bombs, police and witnesses said Tuesday. Two people were reportedly killed and four wounded in the assaults. In both cases, police fired at the attackers before trying to flee. 966-3544 €-wxni;COUNCILTSMPë^aee arç • mm ' councütravK Î cam {¿Uh. B A R tJnu. Vice p&pli. • K iffe r K rm fo e N IG H T C L U B Scottsdale, Arizona ( 6 0 2 ) 9 4 5 -4 9 8 5 8005 E ast Roosevelt • Sco ttsd ale, AZ (SouthEast Corner of Hayden/Roosevelt) / $2 Pitchers / m Satellite Sports • New Sound fio C lover 8-C foçe flo Cover '$ 1 Domestic Longnecks Specials $1 You-Call-lt ! $1-50 Domestic Drafts for Guvs Starts at $2 Any Drink Pool Tournament (That's any Drink we make!!) 7 0's, 8 0 's & 9 0 's Dance Music M & 90's Dance Music M System Mondays: WWF/WCW Wrestliung Tuesdays: Pool Tournament • No Entry • Prizes Wednesdays:.Karoke Females ! fu tu re o f fib e r NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDY te c h n o lo g y in y o u r h a n d s can sure m ake life in terestin g. E very h o u r there's a ch a lle n g e . Every d a y b rin g s m ore a c c o m p lis h m e n t. S iecor is exceeding e xp e cta tio n s — even y o u r o w n . W e're g ro w in g a s the w o rld 's la rg e st fib e r o p tic s m a n u fa ctu re r, o p e n in g a b rig h t fu tu re fo r p e o p le w ith the v is io n to m ake a diffe re n ce , B rin g a ll yo u k n o w a n d fin d th e free dom a n d resources to reach y o u r g o a ls . If yo u are interested in th e areas o f Engineering (Developm ent, Manufacturing and Field) o r Supply Chain Managem ent v is it u s at: Super Recruiting Day Monday, March 8, 1999 Memorial Union Ballroom V is it o u r W eb s ite a t: www.slecor.com. W e a re a n e q u a l o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo ye r. . SIECOR [ ARE YOU R E A D Y TO LEAD ? ] In order to better understand the role of vaginal bacteria during menstruation, Hill Top Research needs healthy females, ages 13-40 from the general population to participate in a research study. One visit is required; study participants will be paid $70.00. c a ll H ill T op R esearch Inc . 3225 N. 75 th S treet S cottsdale, A z 85251 994-8502 mm IMI « W ttg W B p a M B B B in n iWMMR Cuba releases activists detained before trial, defends court case B y A n it a S n o w A s s o c ia t e d P ress HAVANA — S ecurity forces on Tuesday released some of the scores of activists detained during the sedition trial of four w ell-know n d issid en ts and Cuba accused the four of promoting aggressive U S. policies tow ard their com m unist homeland. A verdict is pending in Monday’s trial, which has focused international attention on Cuba’s Human rights policies. The tri­ bunal has until March 17 to issue a deci­ sion. The ruling could hold international repercussions for Cuba, which has been working hard to improve its ties with other nations, particularly in the Caribbean and Latin America. The prosecution recommended a sixyear sentence for lead defendant Vladimiro Roca and five-year terms for the three oth­ ers. Family members say the four rejected government offers to go into exile rather than face trial. Scores of the defendants* supporters were temporarily detained before Monday’s hearings, evidently to prevent any protests outside the courthouse. The number o f peo­ ple detained and released was not immedi­ ately known. “I was held incom m unicado for the entire trial,” said Ileana Somellan, a mem­ ber of a support group for the four defen­ dants. She Said state security agents picked her up Sunday and took her to a holding facility, before releasing her Tuesday after the hearing. “1 had thought about participating in the trial, if not inside, then outside,” she said. Somellan said she was riot charged with a crim e and was treated well during her detention. Communist officials insist there are no political prisoners on this island nation of 11 million people, only those jailed for common crimes. They reject the characteri­ zation o f the four as prisoners o f con­ science. Besides Roca, a former military pilot and son of the late Cuban Communist Party leader Bias Roca, the defendants are lawyer Rene Gomez M anzano; engineer Felix Bonne; and econom ist M arta B eatriz Roque. They were arrested in July 1997 for crit­ icizing a Communist Party document that they said did not present solutions to Cuba’s severe economic problems. They are also accused of encouraging Cubans not to vote in that year’s elections, holding two news conferences with foreign media, exhorting foreign businessmen not to invest in Cuba and asking Cuban exiles to encourage their kin on the island to undertake acts of civil disobedience. In its first detailed statement on the court process, the government on Tuesday said prosecutor E deim ira Pedriz Yum ar “demonstrated in her report the existing ties between the activities'undertaken by the „ •defendants and the forms of aggression toward Cuba adopted by United States’ policies.” , The report accused the four of receiving financial and material support from organi­ zations in the United States and using U.S.based media, especially those in Miami and the U.S. government’s Radio Marti, “to encourage civil disobedience and transgres­ sion of current law in Cuba.” ■Cuba plans to w elcom e King Juan Carlos II of Spain in the spring and play host to the Ibero-American Summit in the fall — events that, diplomats say, could be marred by com plaints of human rights abuses. n e mam ¡iiiiiii StateP ^ C “You should have stayed in bed. ” ___ -_______AUponttatlMNrt* -State Press Horoscopes , , V __ In the C lassified section page 23. 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The search for the students began Monday at Los Angeles International Airport after they stepped off a charter bus about 11:30 a.m. from the University of Redlands, where they studied English for four weeks. They were scheduled to depart for Shanghai. China, but vanished. Authorities searched the airport and delayed the flight until they got word the teen-agers had been whisked away in pri­ vate cars with several Asian men. Police thought the students may have attempted to defect, although none of the teens was known to have applied for political asylum. Police located two teen-age girls at a home in Covina, about 25 miles east of Los Angeles, hours later and eventually tracked where they believed 23 others were staying. “Detectives have contacted their fami­ lies in China and they have permission to be h e re ,” K alish .said. He said he believed m ost o f the group also had parental permission. The students had six-month visas and said they had planned to stay in Southern California for additional study. “This has been a bizarre incident, but it appears it will have a happy ending,” Los Angeles Police Cmdr. David Kalish said. It was unclear how exactly the miscom m unication occurred betw een the tour com panies and why the students were taken to the airport and booked for a flight home if their extended stay was preplanned. ■ for the g S u caught when fils allegedly touching h a fluorescent sub- KMT(AP) — In a a suspect in an extortion hi hands and clothes glowed money that had been dusted • wjSfc.'?? . 7 * 1 . Sunday near his home in Dryden, shining an ultraviolet light on him to get their man 1 R eynolds,' 56, w as charged w ith extortion and released on an electronic tether. • . ‘ /* T'.'.-*;.- ' 3 ' Reynolds had allegedly slipped two sisters a threat.. ening note and made phpitó calis démaadíng $1 million, than $250,000 . ■ ' * ' ■ ÿ â The sisters called the FBI. 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If ovulation has already occurred, experts theo­ rize that the morning-after pills may prevent fertilization or NEW YORK -— One night last summer, Anne Dill and alter the uterine lining so that a fertilized egg doesn’t her boyfriend had a terrifying experience: The condom implant and develop into an embryo. broke. Anti-abortion groups vigorously protest RU-486, though “I was freaked out, I didn’t know what to do,” recalled they have been far less vocal about the morning-after pills. Dill, a 21 -year-old senior at Colorado State University. The The National Right to Life Committee said in a state­ next day, a friend told her about a form of emergency con­ ment that it takes no position on any drug or device that acts traception — a high dose of birth control pills that may pre­ i to prevent fertilization, though it opposes anything that acts vent pregnancy if taken within 72 hours after sex. after that point. Dill called a family-planning clinic for a prescription. However, Judie Brown, president of the American Life Two Weeks later, her menstrual period started. “It was a League of Stafford, Va., said morning-after pills are “noth­ . great feeling,” she said. ing more than an early abortion.” Jusjt a few years ago, few women knew about the “momAlthough Preven debuted without much political fanfare, - ing-after” pills. Now, due largely to Preven, the first mar­ Gynetics has come under scrutiny for other reasons. keted emergency contraception kit, it is gradually becoming The Food and Dfug Administration, which approved more mainstream. Preven on Sept. 2, accused Gynetics in January of using At family-planning clinics, inner-city medical facilities false and misleading advertising because the materials and college health centers, doctors say the demand for “imply that Preven is an alternative to regular contraceptive emergency contraception has risen dramatically in the past use.” year. Most women may not know the brand Preven, but Gynetics officials say they are in discussions with the they increasingly know that there’s help available if they agency about the ads’ language. have unprotected sex. 1 The FDA also accused the company of minimizing the Some obstetricians and gynecologists are even writing drug’s side effects of nausea and vomiting. Gynetics is Preven prescriptions for patients to keep on hand — just in working on a second generation Preven that would reduce case. ; 1 the nausea. In the three months that the $20 Preven kits were avail­ A nother com pany, W om en’s C apital C orp., o f able in 1998, about 1.3' million were sold, according to IMS Washington, D.C., last month applied to the FDA to get Health, a market data firm based in Plymouth Meeting, Pa. approval for its as yet unnamed emergency contraception. Nationwide. Planned Parenthood clinics received 28,000 Women’s Capital officials say its pill would have fewer requests for emergency contraception last year, twice the side effects and be more effective than Preven. number of 1997. The FDA. which is known for restricting drugs into the “There no question that the availability of a dedicated product raises everyone's consciousness level for emergen­ U.S. market. Was a catalyst for Preven. In 1995, the agency cy contraception,” said Gloria Felt, president of Planned joined several women’s health groups in seeking a company to market emergency contraception. Parenthood of America. ' For years, public health officials felt hindered in getting At Penn State U niversity’s main cam pus in State the message out about morning-after contraception as doc­ College, Pa., requests for emergency contraception rose 57 tors worried about abortion politics, and patients did not percent last year to 148. Preven is made by Barr laboratories of Pomona , N.Y., know to ask for it. ■ • I -arge drugmakers, such as Johnson and Johnson, parent and marketed by Gynetics Inc., a Somerville, N.J.. company that is spending about $30 million this year to advertise of birth control pill m anufacturer O rtho-M cN eil Preven. Its marketing campaign ;includes full-page ads in Pharmaceutical, showed no interest. But Gynetics, which is most women’s maga/.ines with the slogan: “The condom headed by former Ortho President Roderick Mackenzie jumped at the opportunity. broke. But her life stayed intact.” Health officials were driven by one goal: Reducing the Preven pills are no different from other brand-name birth control pills that have been used as morning-after emergen­ more than 2.7 million unintended pregnancies each year in cy contraception. But doctors, say Preven is easier to use the United States. About, half are due to contraceptive fail­ because it comes prepackaged in a kit that includes simple ure. . ' v Dr. Carolyn Westhoff, medical director of a women’s directions and a pregnancy test. Studies show Preven is 75 percent effective at prevent­ clinic at New York Presbyterian Hospital, gives prescrip­ ing pregnancy if the pills are taken within three days of sex. tions for Preven to her patients even if they don’t ask. “This ’ By contrast, regular birth control pills taken properly are 99 way, patients are prepared in advance,” she said. Six months after using emergency contraception, Dill percent effective. The morning-after pills are different from RU-486, the has no regrets. “The only other option was not taking it and French abortion pill, which can end a pregnancy several having an unwanted pregnancy. It would have been worse weeks after it has begun. 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Open a Schaum’s ... 198-99issueofffayden'sfcnylew é Readers: 9:30p.m.,Friday,MudiSkat üuggjggMtootàm A l l y s o n S ta c k 414Soi 1 Avenue,Tempe O live r Francisco de la Paz L in d a B ie le r Peter R e n n ic k . Phoenix and show 'em what you know! At your campus bookstore now. Show ‘em what you know. Open a Schaum’s. www.schaums.com 704 S. C o lleg e Ave. One Block N. of ASU 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 ADivisionofTheMcGmwHiU(Companies Stata Press for Wednesday, Mwtfc 3 ,199P 13 W h o ’ll buy Monica’s book? N o t us, say re ad ers F A S T , F R E E , D E L IV E R Y 9 2 1 - F A S T f 3278) O P E N LATE 7 DAYS A WEEK! B y B e t h G a r d in e r A s s o c ia t e d P ress H o u rs : S u n -T h u r, 1 1 a m -2 a m • F ri & S a t, 11 a m -3 a m W W W .G UM BYSPI22A.CO M NEW YORK — After reading the Starr report, watching the House vote and snooz­ ing through the im peachm ent trial, is America going to pay to learn more about Monica? / Maybe so. , Two days before its release, Monica’s Story was No. 5 Tuesday on Amazon.com’^ best-seller list. St. Martin’s Press is ship­ ping 450,000 copies to book sellers and “we’re ready to reprint in a second,” said Sally Richardson, president of the publish­ er’s trade division. Still, many in the book industry expect the confessional to make a big initial splash, then fade away fast. And many readers claim to be absolutely, positively uninter­ ested in seeing a single Word more about Monica Lewinsky’s affair with President Clinton. “I think it’s not worth reading and I wouldn’t waste my time,” said Barbara Dolan, 48, as she browsed in a New York City bookstore. “I find it very sad that there is a market for this.” ‘So who are all those folks getting ready to plunk down $24.95 to read the former White House intern’s collaboration with Princess Diana biographer Andrew Morton? “Everybody says, ‘W e’re all sick of this,’ and yet every book and every video has done w ell,” said Am azon.com spokesman Bill Curry, “You just know in the industry that certain books are going to be big with a capital ‘B.’” And Monica’s Story, he said, is likely to be one of them. Richardson said the book will give the world a glimpse of a Monica it hasn’t Seen. EM AIL: GUM BYS@ AOL.COM midweek” MADNESS [ LARGE 1 ITEM PIZZA I I * 4 .9 9 * 1 w/ any purchase i ” midweek’ ; MADNESS Med. Pokeystix $3.99 I 4 Pepp Rolls $3.99 BO NUS B u y s 10 Buffalo Wings $3.99 Small Pokeystix 'M INIM UMDELIVERY$600 VALIDM ON-W EDONLY). $2.99 2 LARGE 2 ITEMS PIZZAS : *9.99 I VALIDMON-WEDONLY! THIS THURSDAY NIGHT: DEVOTION THIS FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS: fy X ìtÌ M BARRIO LATINO H T e m p e ’s H o tte s t L a tin o C lub FRIDAY LINE UP: T e q u i z a s a h N ig h t! THIS WEDNESDAY NIGHT: F R I. & S A T N IG H T D R IN K S P E C IA L S : 51 00 K A M IK A Z IS S2 S0 S H O T S O F C U E R V O G O L D FRED GREEN H appy Hour Mon - Wed 3pm -10pm Thurs • Fri 3pm - 7pm DomesticBoiffedBeer—12p i $2.00 Domeslk:Bollled,Beer 16cz 1175 DraftBeer Woz. $1,25 DraftBeet ¡6az.$175_ 1123 W . B R O A D W A Y DraftBeer.... .——r 25oz. $2.25. PikherDraftBeer— —~~$4.00 WéDrinks $2.00 Magantas-^.— $2.00 « T E M P E • 9 6 8 -6 2 2 4 “She’s been called a tramp and a whore and a homebreaker. She’s had the vitriol of the world on her,” Richardson said. “The country’s been at the edge of a cliff for a year, and this woman is die cause of it all. We think the book’s going to be a major bestseller;’’ A m azon.com w on’t say how many copies the book has sold. Although Lewinsky was at the center of the impeachment storm for more than a year, an agreement with Kenneth Starr pre­ vented her from speaking publicly about the affair. Segments from her Videotaped testi­ mony in the Senate trial were released last month. A wave of Lewinsky media mania peaks this week, with ABC planning to air Barbara W alters’ heavily promoted twohour interview today on 20/20. The book will be released Thursday. “The tabloids will be writing about it, and there’ll be a lot of interest,” said Mary Ellen Keating, a spokeswoman fo r the Barnes & Noble bookstore chain, which has bought 45,000 copies of Monica’s Story “We anticipate that it is going to sell well in the first three weeks, and then it will drop off dramatically.” Lucianne Goldberg, the acerbic New York literary agent who set the impeach­ ment scandal in motion when she urged Linda Tripp to tape her telephone conversa­ tions with Lewinsky, agreed. “I think its sh elf life is som ewhere between yogurt and milk,” she said. “It’ll probably be about 10 days. There’s a great Curiosity about her, and T think it will be totally satisfied between the book and the Barbara Walters interview.” Martini Uaná Ladies Night S c o tts d a le ’s h o tte s t a ll fe m a le b a n d S H IR L E Y ’S TEM PLE $8 Domestic Drafts 9-11pm THE Night Long! MENU! 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C o l e m a n A s s o c ia t e d P ress CHICAGO — Treating back pain by shooting painless electrical impulses into muscles through fine needles brought patients modest relief and improved movement, 'researchers found in a study released Tuesday. But experts not involved in the work cautioned that the patients were an unusual group and results may not be applicable to most people with back problems. Even among the 60 subjects, improvements were very modest, the out­ side experts said. In the study, a therapy called PENS, for percutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, helped patients with chronic low-back pain feel better, move better, and use less painrelieving medicine within three 'weeks, researchers report­ ed; Findings of the study, led; by Dr. El-sayed A. Ghoname of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, are reported in today’s Journal of the American Medical Association. PENS worked better than three other therapies the researchers compared it to: using the acupuncture-like nee­ dles without electricity; stimulating nerves and muscles electrically without the needles; and having patients do simple exercises. Using electrical stimulation without needles — via elec­ trode pads placed on top of the skin — is called TENS, or transcutaneous electrical stimulation. Past Studies found TENS provided some relief to back-pain patients, the researchers noted. PENS uses the same kind o f fine needles used in acupuncture with tiny amounts of electrical energy pulsing through them. But PENS differs in that the needles are inserted only at 10 points on the low er back. Acupuncturists often insert needles at various points throughput the body . The study did not include acupuncture. Researchers said PENS was the only significantly effec­ tive treatment tried, and all patients received each therapy three-times weekly for three weeks, with a one-week rest period between each method. Dr. N ortin M. H adler, a back-pain expert at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, said the subjects were highly unusual in that all were relatively young (in their 40s), were not overweight and had injuries that were not complicated by psychological or job-related issues. “There’s nothing Wrong with studying such a group,” Hadler said. “You just have to realize at the outset that whatever their findings, it may not generalize to any other group.” ; .v ‘ ■ , . ,4 ' „ ;E , / Even among subjects, relief was “very modest,” he said. Another back-pain expert, Dr. Richard A. Deyo of the University of Washington in Seattle, agreed. Deyo also crit­ icized the type of exercise studied, a simple bending and straightening, as being inadequate by today’s standards. Hayden’s Ferry Review Want som ething to put on your coffee table that show s you ’ve got class? ASU’s Literary Magazine^ HAYDEN’S FERRY^. Ask for it at your local bookstore, or call 965-1243 for more information. W ANTED « « « a i s l ’ . ,}.»■ ggm sfc Freelance xjrapfiicartist to aHi irt development of interactive map for ASU W effDéyil^a student media website. .-Start ASAP. _ » . |g|k iiii mm MÈ j|g| - *' ■; -x " Applications available at front desk in basement of actually plays Music Videos lOlaÉhe^s lle m e ftt^ S W ^ É n . For information, * p ifa s ? c i f m m m m J m 7 2 7-^ 9 4 !; HAYDEN'S FERRY REVIEW A Sll's Award-Winning LiteraryMagazine F A L L / W IN T E R 199& 99 is s u e 23 Includes interviezvswitH Jean Valentine and Rick Moody H ew H |\; issue o n sale n o w Available at: • Student Media '•'dJsBL in the Matthews Center Basement Great Videos Paytime on ASU Channel 2 DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe across 1 Regal wrap 4 “Gymnopedies” composer 9 Money substitute 14 Alibi guy 15 Jagged 16 ‘ M aria—” 17 Put up, in aw ay 18 Engage in battle 20 Take turns 22 4-tim e Indy champ 23 Tux go-with 26 Hard cheese 28 Boom 29 W ilder classic 31 Himalayan hulk 32 Florida varsity 35 “— u ser: “Skip it!" 36 Karpov collection 39 Bumper sticker abbr. 42 Choral pieces 43 Speck , 47 Not asea 49 Give a tanning 50 Play to —: have no winner 51 Luau garb 56 Chou follower 58 M instrel, at times 59 Theme of this puzzle 61 Gelid 64 Cancel 65 “No man is a hero — v a le f 66 Not closed, poetically 67 Lachrymose 68 Sporting thorns 69 “Get cracking!" i Your Favorite Bookstore DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 Exaggerate Maui music maker Pullback Splinter g ro u p s, Rich tapestry 6 Mouthpiece 7 Japanese immigrant 8 MIT grads 9 Darned 10 Storage room 11 Ornamental screen 12 Taciturn 13 — dedeux 19 They keep you in stitches 21 “Hamlet” character 23 Kind of martini 24 Caviar 25 Perch 27 L-P dividers 30 Q trailers 32 Porgie of nursery rhyme 33 Autumn bloom 34 T h e Cocktail Party” auth. 37 Med. coverer 38 QB crushers 39 Kiwi’s kin 40 Summer aide 41 Silly 1 2 3 14 S o lu tio n to P u zzle in th e c la s s ifie d s e c tio n . 44 45 46 48 52 53 54 55 Student’s concern NHL great Joined Lend a hand Journalist Joseph Treat from Tokyo Toaster’s mug Spacek 5 6 7 8 17 20 21^ 23 24 28 31 ■25 te 57 59 60 62 63 9 1 16 19 ■ ■ss 56 64 67 10 11 12 13 32 33 34 35 38 43 44 45 46 40 52 E 5l7 51 i , 6■ 0 “ OS i 68 ■ i1 By Alfio Mkci 61999 Los Angeles Times Syndicate ■27 26 30 36 37 39 40 41 42 47 40 so Friend Marble French connections S h a fke /s rank Archer’s bow 54 55 g i • _jI 01 62 68 60 ■ 3/3/89 iftte Press fo r W ednesday, March 3. IM 9 ’ I ■ Candidates vow end to Lebanon occupation amid Israeli frustration By Dafna Linzer A ssociated P ress PETAH TIKVA, Israel — When Baruch Axelrod thinks about his 21-year-old son, an Israeli army officer serving in south Lebanon, fear takes over and tears well in his eyes. As the 901st Israeli soldier killed in Lebanon was laid to rest Tuesday, Axelrod made an emotional public plea to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to end 17 years of Israeli occupation there. “I don’t want my son to be a hero. I want him home for the Sabbath,” he said. Sensing the growing public frustration with the government’s Lebanon policy, both Netanyahu and his challenger made cam­ paign promises Tuesday to leave Lebanon within a year, placing the increasingly heated debate at the center of the election campaign. That’s exactly where Axelrod wants to see ft. In an ad Tuesday in the Israeli newspa­ per Haaretz, the 47-year-old president of an Israeli high-tech firm called on Netanyahu to “get out of Lebanon.” .“The politicians should know there are people who want to live long lives and be with their children,” he said in an interview. In 1982-, Israel invaded Lebanon to drive out PLO guerrillas attacking Jewish border communities. Three years later, the army pulled back to a strip it has patrolled ever since in an effort to prevent cross-border attacks. Since then, troops have been engaged in a costly battle with Iranian-backed Hezbollah guerrillas who aim to oust Israel from Lebanese soil. Hezbollah refuses to end its campaign against Israel, even if the Jew ish state were to w ithdraw from Lebanon, Polls show the majority of Israelis still oppose a withdrawal. Over 17 years, 901 Israelis have died Nati Hamik of the Associated Press Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, right, and Defense Minister Moshe Arans attend a funeral ceremony for Brig. General Erez Gerstein Tuesday, March 2 , 1999, in the north Israeli kibbutz, Reshafim. In the past week, the Shiite Muslim guerrilla group Hezbollah has killed seven Israelis, including Gerstein, in southern Lebanon. inside Lebanon, including Brig- Gen. Erez Gerstein, killed Sunday along with two other soldiers and a jo u rn a list when Hezbollah detonated a roadside bomb. Gerstein, the highest-ranking officer killed in Lebanon since the invasion, was buried Tuesday at his family’s kibbutz in central Israel. “W e’re truly afraid. Sometimes, I ’ll think about my son in the middle of the day and tears will just well up in my eyes. The times I know when he’s there are impossi­ ble,” Axelrod said. Parents of other soldiers began calling him Over 1,000 Phoenix Area Used Cars & Tm cks Are Online! 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With our staff of experienced s u c c e s s ... travelers, a global network of ...because whether offices, great prices, ticket you knew it er net flexibility and a ten ef travel yeur inner child is services, we know firsthand wearing a backpack. what it takes to put together a mind-blowing trip... A n d t o s a v in g y o u a f e w d o lla r s . Testing Support Services Test PreparationCourses Forthe GRE, GMATand LSAT ASU's official test prep.-Why paymoreelsewhere? Formore information: Checkout ourweb site: wwwasu.edu/vpsa/tss Visit us on campus: Student Services Building, Room332 Qg Call us: 965-6777 TidingSupfmtSmminicmptmttfCmiiselmgiCmsultiitm.mtlimtktlivismofStudal Affairs. w w w .statravel.com By J im W odark 1 ASU outfielder Melissa Miller has become the heart and soul o f the Sun Devils by overcoming obstacles on and o ff the diamond B y C h r is O a r lo c k S t a t e P ress There; are certain people in life that everyone loves to root for. ASU softball player Melissa Miller is one of those people. ; Coming into her final season as a Sun Devil, the senior outfielder has averaged 39 at-bats per season. Don’t expect to hear any complaints from Miller, though. She’s just happy to be able to play the game she loves. ' *T've always loved softball," she said. “I can’t remember not playing it.; On my fifth birthday my mom taught me how to slide. I used to wait, with all my stuff, for her to come home everyday to play catch with me.” In fact, there was only one time Miller, or “Mac”, as her teammates call her (because of her high school’s nick­ name). even entertained the thought of life without softball. After gaining all-state honors in her final season at McClintock High in Tempe (a.k.a. “Big Mac”), the 1995 graduate wondered if life would be better without softball. “1 didn’t want to miss out on things after high school,” Miller said. “But the more I thought about it the more I realized I didn’t want to be without softball.” With help and serious persuasion from her dad, Miller decided to stay close to home and try to walk on at ASU. Four years later, everyone that has come in contact with Miller is happy she made that decision. : “Clearly,” senior Kathy Ponce said, “nobody works as hard as Mac on and off the field.” Ponce and Miller are the elder statesmen of the team, both in their fourth and final seasons as Sun Devils. The two will see more time in the outfield With the loss of centerfjeider Devyn Braga, who tore her anterior cruciate liga­ ment in a recent practice. “She’s really had to work hard to be in a position to con­ tribute and she’s always been willing to do it,” head coach Linda Wells said. “She’s had her challenges along the way.” The biggest challenge for Miller was dealing with the unexpected death of her best friend as a freshman. Miller still remembers with specificity that on March 15th, 1996, while the Sun Devils were playing Missouri, her best friend Maren; who was 19, had a massive heart attack in the stu­ dent recreation center and died. “1 wasn’t ready to deal with that,” Miller said. “I lost my footing. It totally changed who I was. But it made me a positive person. I was so fortunate to know her.” As her teammates attest, positiveness is what personifies Miller. - “She is an inspiration,” senior Holly Smith said. “She has such a positive outlook on life.” Miller says the person she’s changed into is a lot more willing and accepting. She credits her grandma with some Jeremy Hein of the State Press ASU outfielder Melissa Miller, the Arizona high school all-time leader in steals until current ASU teammate Jennifer Langenhuizen passed her two years ago, brings a variety of offensive skills to the lineup when she is called upon. of her evolution. “She’s the symbol of the kind of person I want to be, morally,” Miller said. “My grams always said go after what’s in your heart.” Miller is doing just that, and learning a lot along the way. “I’ve been fortunate and unfortunate enough to experi­ ence a lot of things,” she said. “Some things have happened where I thought it was the end of the world, but a couple years down the road I think I am who I am because of (those things).” Miller got a chance last summer to experience another world as she traveled to Europe with two of her friends. Miller broadened her horizons by spending five weeks vis­ iting the likes of England, France, Switzerland, Italy and Germany. “It was the opportunity of a lifetime,” she said. “It was one of the best experiences I’ve had.” Miller wouldn’t mind going back some day as part of her job. The 21-year old is set to graduate with a degree in business marketing in May and would like to work intema- M M H i - tt■ M M 1■ ■ •■ ’n wrxi'WiaM M Recruits play through .injuries B y N ic k P ie c o r o St a t e P ress Samaruddin Stewart of the State Press Thanks to two losses last weekend (one aided by a controversial call at Cal), Alton Mason and the Sun Devils can only ding to hopes of making a repeat trip to the NIT. ASU head coach Rob Evans has always liked toughness in his players. He likes guys who will go to any length to win. Which is why he likes recruits Shawn Redhage and Tanner Shell so much. Redhage and Shell, integral parts of this year’s highly-touted recruiting class, have ignored pain and played for their high schools despite injuries. • “If you’ve got tough kids, guys who haye a will to win and athletic ability, and you’ve got experi­ ence behind that, then you’ve got a real dangerous basketball team,” Evans said. Redhage’s school, Lincoln (Neb.) East, is in the middle of a district tournament. He broke the pinky finger on his shooting hand last Wednesday, but played in his team’s game Monday night. Redhage had his pinky and ring fingers taped together, but it didn’t effect his play. He scored 26 points and had eight rebounds. Redhage went for a rebound in practice and his finger got caught in a teammate’s jersey and broke. “At first the pain was strong, but it’s gone down and the swelling has gone down,” he said. “I got treat­ ment from the trainer and it’s feeling a lot better.” When his season is through, which could be as late as March 13, Redhage will have surgery. On Saturday, Shell won the Arizona state cham­ pionship with Mountain View, playing through the pain of three tom ligaments in his left ankle. He originally hurt the ankle prior to the season but played the whole way until “tweaking it,” he said, in the regional championship. After missing the first game of state, he returned for the rest of the tournament. “It wasn’t all that bad,” he said. “A little pain doesn’t hurt anybody.” He’s scheduled to have surgery on March 23. Official screw up On Monday, the Pac-10 admitted its officials made a mistake in .interpreting a rule during the final minute of ASU’s 78-73 loss to Cal on Saturday. Evans isn’t the least bit surprised to hear they made the wrong call — he knew it was wrong at the time. The controversy began when Cal’s Carl Boyd rebounded a missed free throw and was fouled by Jason Patton with 22.7 seconds left in the game. After he was fouled, Boyd elbowed Batiste in the chest, who threw a punch back that missed. The players were given double flagrant technical fouls and were ejected. Ryan Forehan-Kelly made two free throws in Boyd’s place to make the score 72-68 and the officials incorrectly awarded Cal possession of the ball. The Sun Devils had the possession arrow in their favor, so the ball should have gone to them. After the game, Evans said that he had never heard of such a rule and said that when he tried to tell officials they were misinterpreting the rale, he was waved back to the bench. O fficials claim ed the rule was voted on by coaches, but both coaches didn’t recall approving it. ,i _ When asked if he voted on the rule, Cal coach Ben Braun said, “I don’t remember, to be honest with you.” “It’s nice that they were professional enough to admit that they were wrong,” Evans said of the Pac-10. As a result, the three officials who worked thegame will not be assigned any Pac-10 games in November 1999. . sm * .* - ' < ** * * Hi mi fn n Wu YKiulnmnilKi»] H in ti Tj t f f f p e n golfers take 5th place Cepeda elected to Hall o f Fame at Southw est Invitational B y C u n t Curarne S t a t e P r ess A fter a scorching first round of 2S6, the ASU men’s golf tem­ porarily held the lead o f th e Southw estern Invitational, but yield­ ed to a Texas team that tore up the fin al ,two rounds. The Sun Devils finished in fifth place with a team total of 877 strokes. Texas rallied to beat New Mexico by nine strokes and third-place Houston by 10 strokes. Texas shot a three-round total of 857. The in^iyiduai medalist was Joel Hendry of New Mexico, who shed rounds of 69, 69 raid 70, a 5-under par perfor­ mance. The North Ranch Country Club, in W estlake V illage, C a lif , is a p arr? I course. M ac Jin Park was ASU’s top performer, fib-, ishing tied for 11th place at 5-Over with rounds o f 70,72 and 75. Freshman Matt Jones, playing in Ms first collegiate tournament, was ASU’s second-best finisher, tying for 18th with rounds of 76,71 and 72, S-jovCT.Brad Cannoh. was tied tor 3 ls l with rounds of 74, 77 and 72. Greg Padilla w # tied for 38th with rounds of 70,75 and 80, and Paul Casey tied for 50th place with rounds o f? 2 ,79 and 7?. ASU also sent three indhidual per! former who fared well Jonas Runnquist was tied for 38th at 12-over, D.J. Lewin ; tied for 42nd place at 13-over awl Jason Hause tied for 61st place at 29-over “The course played harder today than it* did the first tw o rounds, Padilla said _ “We’re definitely disappointed, coosiillB lug we won here last year,** * * * TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Orlando Cepeda, the Baby Bull who earned his reputation with a big bat, and three others were elected to the Hall of Fame on Tuesday by the Veterans Committee. Former umpire Nestor Chylak, tum-of-the-century manager Selee and Negro Leagues pitcher Smokey Joe Williams also were selected. “It’s hard to explain the feeling when they told me I was selected to the Hall of Fame,” Cepeda said at 3Com Park in San Francisco. “I’ve been ready for this for 17 years.” Cepeda was the NL’s rookie of the year in 1958 with San Francisco and the league’s first unanimous MVP in 1967 with St. Louis. The first baseman hit .297 with 379 home runs and 1,365 RBls. “I’ve been through good things, bad things, but I was very blessed to be bom with the talent to play baseball,” he said. Cepeda, a community relations representative for the Giants, also got a reward from his team — it will retire his No. 30 uniform. The 12-member Veterans panel, which included former Cepeda teammate Juan Marichal, Ted Williams and Stan Musial, passed over Bill Mazeroski, Dom DiMaggio, former manager Dick Williams and umpire Doug Harvey. Candidates needed 75 percent — nine votes — for election. Voting totals were not released. “As a rookie on the Veterans Committee, I’m glad he got in on my first year,” Marichal said of Cepeda. “He was the type of player who had no fear, the type of player you wanted playing behind you.” from page 17 tionally at some point. For now, when she’s not playing softball, you can find her at Firebird International Raceway doing an’ internship in the marketing department. D on’t w orry about M illet not having enough time for school, though. She was named an Academic All-American last year after maintaining a 3.5 GPA the entire year. “There's a pride factor for me,” Miller said. “Softball is always going to be in my heart, but academics will always be in my head.” Miller says her older sisters Jennifer and Sandy are a big reason for her academic success. "T grew up thinking I was going to be smarter than my sister, who everyone said was so smart,” she said. The youngest child in her immediate family is now adjusting to the role of big sister in her softball family. “I like the role because I’ve never had it,” she said. “1 put myself in the position to learn the hard way a lot of times. If I can help them not to do it that way, I’ll do it.” The newcomers seem to be taking her words to heart. “She made me feel at ease,” junior trans­ fer Jam ie H lebechuk said. “W hen she speaks to you, you know she means it.” . Standing only five feet tall, and wearing a “good everyday smile”, as her coach says, Miller can make anyone feel at ease. Some of her skills even make her teammates feel superpowers. Smith often refers to Miller as “Super Mac” because of her air-catching, head-first slides. “You’d think she would stay low to the ground because she’s so small,” Smith said. “But she jumps in the air and it looks like she’s flying. When she lands it looks like it hurts!” > Miller is happy to fill whatever role is needed of her, even if it’s “Super Mac”. “It was hard to learn how to be a role player,” Miller admitted. “You want to be as good as you can be. But I can say I’m as good as I’ve ever been.” The playing time, or lack thereof, has never soured Miller's attitude. “On any team you have people who are selfish,” she said. “I’ye always said I’m not going to be one of those people. This year is it for me and there's not going to be a day I won’t be happy to be out there.” Hey, A.S.U., we offer on a weeMy habit The alternative newspaper industry has gone from a $170 million industry to a $340 m illion industry in the last four years.* This robust growth stems from a fiesty and irrelevant editorial approach which has lured Baby Boomers and Generation X readers away from daily newspapers. M O RE Stheel Prodótto, LO W ER Prîtes! • M ord than 7 0 0 0 general products - everything from art supplies and envelopes to paper, desk pads and backpacks! • 1100 software titles - accounting, finance, calendars and more! • 1000s of furniture pieces - assorted style and shapes New Times, Inc. is the nation’s largest publisher of weekly newspapers with papers in eight cities. Our Phoenix paper is searching for sm art, com petitive risk takers to fill advertising sales positions in our retail and classified departments. We offer a com prehensive training program, full benefits package base salary and commission program. Rapid personal and financial growth are available for those who enjoy hard work. to help you study in comfort and style! • 1000s of technology products - laptops, printers, monitors and more! 6 Locations Serving Greater Phoenix Call 1-800-685-8800 fer the One Nearest You! Interested? Schedule an interview with Career Services fo r Wednesday, March 10. You can also contact us at 238-4802 for retail sales, or 238-4818 for classified sales. O FF YO U R NEXT ’ A s s o c ia tio n o f A lte rn a tiv e N ew s W e e klie s 1997 PURCHASE NewTimes P.O. Box 2510, Phoenix, AZ 85002 www.phoenixnewtimes.com Please present o rig in al coupon a t tim e o f $ 2 5 purchase. If o rdering b y phone d r fa x , m ention offer w hen p lacing order an d present coupon to d elivery service representative upon d elivery. If ordering online, present coupon to delivery service representative upon deliv­ e ry fo r account cred it. Lim it one coupon p er custom er/com pany. N orvnegotiable. Coupons cannot b e com bined C annot be used o v a cred it card paym ent. Inetock items only. O ffer good through 12/31/9 9 /fo Phoenix only. Coupon Code 3735 mm State fre si fo r Wednesday, March 3, 1999 Sun Devils add new coach, recruits as practice begins B y S a m G an c -z a r u k S t a t e P ress On Tuesday afternoon, the ASU soccer team was in the middle of a scrimmage at spring practice, and changes could be seen on and off the field. After one particular play, newly hired assistant coach Neil McGuire loudly com­ plemented goalkeeper Kristin Slater for playing like she practiced. As he did this, head coach Terri Patraw smiled proudly at the new addition to her team. Patraw named McGuire as the team ’s new assistant coach on Feb. 8th. He got the job by contacting her in the offseason. “He got in touch with me and he made a tremendous impression right away,” Patraw said. “He is going to be a fantastic addi­ tion.” . M cGuire has been working with the goalies and the midfield during Spring prac­ tice. “In the fall (assistant coach) Jen (Haigh) worked with the defense and Terri worked with the o ffen se,” S latef said after Tuesday's workout. “Now we have some­ body strictly working with the midfielders, and our whole midfield has been working as a unit. That has improved bur transitional ■.game” McGuire was previously an assistant coach at Iowa State University, but saw a team on the verge of greatness in ASU. "1 believe it is a program that can win a national title and 1 would like to be a part of that,” McGuire said. “I think that ASU is a better team and probably has a better shot at becoming national and conference champi­ ons. There is a definite drive here in want­ ing to be the best.” According to McGuire, the team must start with the basics and build on that. He wants to win the conference and then go from there. “Our first focus has to be successful in the conference and to make the NCAA Tournament,” McGuire said. “A national title, maybe, several years down the road. I believe that the players have the ability, athleticism, and the right mentality to go there. And certainly, under the tutelage of Terri Patraw, (they) have every chance of doing that.” The players like the attitude that McGuire brings to practice and enjoy his examplebased style of coaching. Midfielder Erin McGinnis likes that different attitude. “He has a different coaching style (that) mixes in well with the other two coaches,” McGinnis said. “He is very calm and posi­ tive.” With this new addition the coaching staff is complete. “He com pletes the circle,” McGinnis said. ’’There are pieces missing that Jen and Samaruddin Stewart of the State Press Senior midfielder Kerrie Kulack tracks down a ball during Tuesday’s practice session. Terry don’t have, and he completes the puz­ zle. It makes a solid coaching staff.” N e w re c ru its In addition to a new coach, Patraw also recruited five new players that have the potential to make an impact right away. This year’s class include three freshmen and two junior college transfers. Patraw started at home, Arizona, with a junior college transfer and a high school first-team all state choice. H eather Irw in played two years at Phoenix College, where she earned firstteam NSCAA All-American honors and was in the national top-10 in scoring with 17 goals. “I think the potential is there to win a national title,” Irwin said about her decision to come to ASU. “The girls have a hard work ethic and people will challenge for starting positions.” She chose ASU over San Diego state because of her experience with ASU play­ ers. “Stacey (Tullock) was on my team (club Santos), so I definitely played with high caliber players,” she said. “I played with her for a couple of years; so I am excited to play with her. Jennifer Peterson went to the same high school (Horizon High School) as me. I have played with a lot of the girls on the team already.” M idfielder E lisa Lorenz, from Sunnyslope High School, was a first-team all state choice and garnered 1999 Skyline Region Player of the Year. For Lorenz, the chance to play at ASU and under Patraw was too big to pass up. “I think it (ASU) has really good possi­ bilities this year to go pretty far and I think it is going to be a really good team,” Lorenz said. “She (Patraw) is a really nice lady and I think she is going to be a really good coach to have.” Lorenz has also played with Tullock on a club team. “I think it is going to be great opportuni­ ty,” Lorenz said. ”1 practiced with her at Santos and (we) played on the same team.” Patraw also went to Texas and recruited Holly Cohen. She was also a first-team all­ stater and El Paso Player of the Year. She has tallied 148 goals during her high school career, which is currently still ongoing. Patraw was happy to sign the forward. “We think we have added a big time for­ ward,” Patraw said. “She just loved it here and her family has visited here plenty of times. It has been a school she has always wanted to go to, and she knows she will fit in real well with our program and help take us to another level.” L indsey M ack, a d efender from Michigan, was also brought in. She chose ASU over William & Mary, Indiana and Boston University. Mack is the captain of the O lym pic D evelopm ent P rogram ’s regional team and participated in Adidas Esp camp, where the top 150 players in the country are invited. “(Mack) is a excellent player,” McGuire said. “She has experience from her playing career so far that is going to stand her in good steed.” Mack said she always wanted to play at ÀSU. “I always kind of wanted to go there and when I went on my recruiting trip I abso­ lutely fell in love with it,” she said. “I like the team, coaches, the dorms, the campus in general, the field, the players — all the good stuff. The new program has done so well. I know that this year they had a lot of injuries, but I think the program is in the process of building. The program is going to build and go a lot farther.” The final recru it is a tran sfer from Cypress Junior College, Nicole Terry. She posted 25 goals and 33 assists en route to winning a California state championship. “ASU had a better team and better facili­ ty,” Terry said. “I just thought it was a bet­ ter school altogether. The players on the team are cool, That is another reason why I chose ASU over UNLV. M uch more friendly.” Patraw said she is extremely happy with this year’s class. “We are real excited about our class,” Patraw said. “We think we have answered our problem at defensive midfield, which was a huge issue (last year), and added a lot of speed. They are going to provide us with not only some additional starters, but some serious depth.” W h a t the Kruk?: a jovial look at the events in the sports w orld John Kruk played first base and the outfield for ten seasons with the Padres, Phillies, and W hite Sox. f o l k -..*1 5 He was a leader o f the 1993 National League champion Philadelphia Phillies, one o f the most colorful teams in baseball his­ tory. Kruk batted ,348 in. six World Series games th a t year as the Phillies lost a thriller to the Toronto Blue Jays. Despite his considerable talent, Kruk is remembered for his gruffy appearance, his ro tu n d ch a ra cte r, and his th o u g h tfu l quotes (to an onlooker, shocked to see him smoking: “ I ain’t an athlete, lady. I’m a baseball player) He hated exercise, loved hot dogs, and —- except for the one testicle part — remains the hero o f many lazy sportswriters. To honor one o f the most entertaining men ever to put on a uniform, we present you with “ W hat the Kruk?" D o you smell what the Kruk is cookin’? Gettin’ Tricky for Ricky All the talk in the City of Brotherly Hate is of the illE agles p ick in ’ up Heism an Trophy W inner Ricky Williams. Sorry to disappoint ya, Philly fans (and you’ve been disappointed quite a bit), but it looks like this’ll be the first time you don’t get that highly touted draft pick since, well, since J.D. Drew. Not that Ricky won’t sign, but the Eagles’ll be better off not takin’ him. They have a running back (the Duce galloped for over 3,000 feet as a part-time starter) and they NEED a quarterback (Doug Pederson ain’t gonna get it done). So the Eagles best option would be to take a QB (Akili Smith, Duante Culpepper, and Donovan McNabb will all be available) or to trade the pick. So what about Ricky? The best player in the draft could drop down further than a White House Intern (we know that joke is played, but, hey! so is the president), all the way to number five or six. The top four teams (Cleveland, Philly, Cincinnati and Indianapolis) are either set at running back or have needs greater than a back to fill. The fifth slot belongs to Washington, who may take him, and also look out for the Cardinals, who have two picks and would love to trade up to grab the star. Or at least to keep him out of the NFC East. NHL Hockey! It’s Fantas... Aw, Belle! It’s boring What the Kruk is up with the NHL? No, seriously. Would somebody tell me? I haven’t been watching. Queen Midas of the W eek Since everything she touches turns to wood, our Queen Midas of the Week is the sizzling Ali Landry, the hot little number that stars in those Doritos commercials. Expand This, Paul After a week’s hiatus, we return with the Kruk You! This week the award goes to the erstwhile (you look it up) Paul Tagliabue, commissioner of the NFL, who allowed the Cleveland Browns the number one draft pick plus a full salary cap. It’s as one GM put it: “If the Browns want some­ body, there’s nothing you can do to stop them.” So Kruk you, Paul. You only need one ball for this sport Wanna see a good tennis match? Move to Fresno and watch the Raiders bounce up and down the California coast. W hat’s in a name, Part III You just broke up with your girlfriend and it’s clear she’s never coming back to you. It looks like it’s time to... ...Mo Vaughn. John Kruk did not write this article. Because helshe has a repu­ tation and some semblance o f a conscience (but no life) the real author has withheld his/her name. For comments or ques­ tions, please write whdtthekruk@asu.edu. Classifieds N otice to o ur readers: Before responding to any advertisement requeuing money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. Th6 State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information andassistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721 ; . M o ra T r i v i a . . . The most requested name by boat owners is "Obsession." ANNOUNCEMENTS ATTENTION ASU! Make your reservation for fall now- Spa­ cious studios, 1 & 2 bd. Don't miss your chance to live a t Tempe's favorite. M eridian Corners 1440, E. B roadw ay 966-5818 Short-term leases avail, for summer. GALLEON APTS, 1920 E. Hay­ den L n., 2bd, 2ba. $100 o ff first mo rent w/ this ad. 96879315, STU D IO S & 2bd pool near R ural an d U n iv ersity from $395 Talco 230-2444 GOING TO. Mexico over Spring B reak? Budget Mexican Ins. Right, off of I 10: ’l ;W- Elliot. Ste 114, Tempe:-345-7378 LOST YOUR #! W ould thé. student who wanted extra income please call Bob @ 992-9124 or Jen @ 963^5532. APARTMENTS /2 BLOCK fro m À SU - lbd and 2bd/2ba. Furniture & utili­ ties included. Quite- no parties or pefs. 966-8540 4BD/2BA. 1 MILE from ASU. A vail; im m ed: C all 7.31-3969 o r pgr. 360-1626 4BD/2BA. POOL service, w/d, d sh w . new tile , p ain t, very ; c le an . ' B roadw ay & Beck'. $1400^10.3/1,922-2715 W E REN T HO M ES! STUDENTS W ELCOM E! . BEAUTIFUL TEM PE HOMES 1 -5 + BR, SOME W / POOLS $595-$1695 J& T 446-RENT 1 2 0 9 W . B a s e lin e APARTMENTS A SU Walking Distance LaCresenta Apartments 10251 Orange St. 4BR PURPLE house near Gamm age. Cool house, $1095mo., 730-9040. 16th/ Roosevelt. BEAUTIFUL HOM E w / poolNorth Biltmore Estates. View of Squaw Pk Mtn. Guest rm avail, fum. $645mo obo 721-3666 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1BD CONDO, all appl's. incl'd. TEMPE: 1BR apt, walk to cam­ w /d, free H 20/trash, $495/mo. pus, only $425/mo. Avail, mid- • Call Jeff 893-1651 March. 804-0537 C la s s ifto d s TEM PE: 2BR, near ASU & dow ntow n,, be aut ifU11y; rem o­ deled, a/c; cov'd, parking avail HELP WANTEDnow. $55.0/mo., assistiv e a ni­ GENERAL m a ls 1only; m ove in special. 804-0537 HOMES FOR RENT ANNOUNCEMENTS HOMES FOR RENT Now taking reservations for Summer & Fall PT Custom er Sendee Reps U nited Blood S ervices, th e V a lle y ’s n o n p ro fit b lo o d p ro v id e r S in ce 1943. is se e kin g in d i­ v id u a ls w h o w a n t to m a ke a d iffe re n c e in people's lives. M orning, e v e n in g & w e e k e n d s h ifts a v a ila b le . $ 6 $8/hr plus sh ift differen­ tia l fo r e ve n in g h o u rs. G ood custom er service s k ills a n d p le a s a n t phone vo ice p re fe rre d . C a ll 4 31-9500, Tem pe Id e a tio n . E m p lo y e e drug testing required. EO E/M /F/D /V TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BR/1BA TOWNHOUSE, all applnces included, w/d, like new. $650/mo. Call Jeff, 893-1651. C all 894-0288. Sum m er/Fall rentáis avail. 3BD / 2BA Private patio, pool, all a p p lia n ce s, w /d hookup . n e ar R ural and A pache. $950/mo. Talco 230-2444 A SU - 3/3 Q U EST A V ida, 2story. all appl. incl, w /d, avail now. $1,150. Joel 967-6205 FEMALE RMMATE p re fd for 2 bd/2ba condo, com m , pool, $35Q/mo + ? /2 util. 345-0846 RENTAL SHARING NEED .ASAP! M/F, 3bd/2ba th, clean, resp, friendly. Alt appi's* $350/mo. util's, incl'd. 885-4804 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL 2 ROOMS available; pool, spa, new h ills id e house, 15 m in from ASU. NS p re fd $350 mo +1/5 utilities 756-7807 Call 965-6735 I ft TRAVEL SPRING BREAK Starting at $ 9 9 * 9 /1 » < G u a r a n te e d DONOR EG G S N E E D E D Customer Service for credit card protection $ New CTR/ Immediate Openings $ Flexible Hours $ *1 2 *1 5 After Training $ Daily/ Weekly/ Monthly Bonus $ Predictive Dialer $ Tuition £ Reimbursement H ealthy wom en (ages 21-30, a ll ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonym ously to help in fe rtile couples achieve pregnancy. 7-10 clin ic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2,000. For m ore inform ation ca ll (602) 860-4792 GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS Have Fun • Make a Difference • Summer in New England I Ì R E I N G A K ROCKY POINT Granada Del Mar, Plaza las Glorias, Condos. M EXICO TOURS 8 0 0 -3 4 7 -4 7 3 1 --- ---- Call TODAY 6 8 4 -0 7 6 4 or Fax 6 3 2 -1 0 3 5 48th St. & Southern B BI@l@IBIBiar@IBIglÊ!IBIBIBIBIBl@IBIÊÎI@IBIBIBIBIBI@IBIBIBIEÜtiltilBlï •W binera find a new path” ’ S P R bad and g o t N ow w c are jlp a w Residential Summer Camps seek staff in all indi­ v id u a l a n d te a m sp o rts; B aseball, B asketball, Tennis, Soccer, Inline Hockey, Golf, Swimming, Sailing, W ater-skiing, Mt. Biking, Backpacking, C lim b in g w a ll/c h a lle n g e C o u rse , F o o tb a ll, L acrosse, C o a c h in g , G e n e ra l sta ff p o sitio n s, office, dance, an d gym nastics. Located in th e m ountains o f Massachusetts just 2.5 hours from NYC & B o sto n . C o m p e t i t i v e S a la r ie s + 1 | non*«** - *9** t' g o to M a za tla n fo r i Spring Break. Must sell o u r trip s. We paid $439 fo r air, 7 nights, transfers. W ill . sacrifice fo r $299. Call 271-4896 ■ k í:Íc t':1 2 é o r1 3 3 room/board. ... OUTBOUND C ustom e r S u p p o rt *9 - $10 P h o n e ; 4 1 1 -C A LL FAX: 4 2 1 -2 2 6 0 E :m a il: te le s v c s 8 d o itn o w .c o m Call C am p Greylock for Boys (800) 842-5214 or Camp Romaca for Girls (800) 779-2070. SPRING BREAK 9 9 H ealthy sum m er • Stay in shape • W ork outdoors To M azatIan fiiOM S I 69 7 N iqkis -1 4 FREE 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 m ea Is, (? The G ood L ité EFFERSON Now leasing for Fall 1999 1655 E. University Dr. - Tempe 602-699-5333 w vM .jeffersoncom m ons.com HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL “ Call 8 3 4 -5 0 3 7 r 8 0 1 0 E. M c D o w e ll # 1 1 3 (Comer-Hayden) Call 967-8203 for more info. LO O K IN G FO R o utgoing, frien d ly fem ale to share 3bd house, m aster bdrm, $325/mo. RO O M S FOR RENT San Cartes, M exico O ffe rin g W o rk T o H ap p y P e o p le w ith S m iting Y o k e s Fran + 1/3 utils., w/d, 15 m in .,w alk to ASU, 967-7199 2B D /2B A , $650, H ardy/U niversity. Papago II 2bd/2ba, w/d $750 mo. 226-8875 3 ROOM S, U niv/D bsn lg hse, ns pref, no lease req'd. $300mo + utls. Tony 610-1746 - T h è C a ll C e n t e r P e o p l e - Apache Terrace Apartments C LO SE TO ASU* 4bd, wd, p o o l, n s . no pets. $325 + 1'u til's. M ature, reliable person prefd. 970-1358 N TEM PE, 2/1 dplx, a/c, yd. spacious. N e ar A SU. $615. 1201 E. Weber 966-0987 ... INBOUND C u sto m e r S e rvice (FT A FT) •Studio • 1 & 2 Bdr. • Utilities incL • Laundry •P ool RgNTALSHARjNG FEMALE LOOKING for summer re sid en c e neaiu A SU . A round $300-$350/m o, n /s p re f. C all Sangeeta 703-319-8710 C LO SE TO A SU - 2 b d /lb a $550, 1b d /lb a $450. 3 b d /lb a $900 _3bd/2ba w /attached stu­ d io , I blk to ASU $1425/m o. 1 T E L E S E R V IC E S ^ 1 RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTEDGENERAL % S ocial Service agency seeks applican ts to w o rk in program s designed to prom ote co m m u n ity p a rtic ip a tio n fo r in d iv id u a ls w ith developm ental d is a b ilitie s . W e o ffe r a v a rie ty o f positions w o rk in g w ith in d iv id u a ls in th e ir o w n hom es o r resi­ d e n tia l settings. W e o ffe r o ver 40 hours o f paid tra in in g and have an e x c e lle n t benefits plan. W e have fle x ib le sched­ ules w ith FT, PT and o n -c a ll positions a va ila b le im m ediately. O u r pay ranges from $7 .0 0 - $8 .0 0 DOE/EOE. Please c a ll 431-9511 o r 861-2385 (west Phoenix) fo r m ore in fo rm a tio n , j ]P 5am-2pm, $3.75 p lu s tip s • Lead Restaurant Greeter 5pm-10pm, $8/hr • H o u s e p e rs o n , 1 -8 0 0 -2 4 4 -4 4 6 5 Visir OUR WEb SITE WWW.CollEqEIOURS.COM ' HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL W eekends, 6am-2pm, *5.15/hr • Steward Flexible shifts, $6/hr • Guest Service Agent Enhancing th e lives of individuals w ith disabilities since 1967 llp m -7 am , $9/hr Psych & S ocial W ork M ajors Habilitation Techs. Make a difference in the lives o f individuals w ith d isabilities. FT & PT shifts. Evening & w eekends, after­ noon & graveyard positions. Easy V alley & PV/ S cottsdale areas. $7-7.50/hr dependent on site. paid training. Excellent Benefits. Contact Lex 838-8111 ext. 110 Submit Applications To: FT & PT work available Please apply w ith Hum an R esources, 5001 N. S cottsdale Rd. S cottsdale Em bassy S uites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace, or 6am-2pm, $6.25/hr Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package V 6 0 2 -2 7 1 -4 8 9 6 CALLFREE • Burner Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working W ith Adolescents •R o o m _ M EqABucks • Restaurant Greeter DBC needs people to work w ith children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Now open the following Saturdays 9 a m -3 p m : Feb. 27 Mar. 13 Mar. 27 to place your classified ad ìn • Restaurant Server Gain Valuable Experience RESORT èÌXTTTSDiSLE I We a re im m ediately hiring for th e following positions. P lease ap p ly a t 6333 N: S co ttsd ale Rd. in th e H um an R esources Dept., M-F, 9am-4pm. \ , EM BA SS Y S U IT E S ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M, Tu, and F 8:30 * 10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm H ilto n Scottsdale Resort A Villas Call 965-6735 2 0 b o u R so f FREEdaiNks, $ 1 5 0 k DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 A EEO/ Pre-employment drug screen RO O M S FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS F O R ^ L g _ _ RURAL & B A SEL IN E, 3b d /2 .5 b a, w /d, po o l, yd, last mo. dep. req'd. 2 story condo, $300/mo. + util's. U ly 413-0577 DELL DIMENSION- great cond, ly r old, used 9m os, 17" m oni­ tor, 4.3 gigabitz, flatbed scan­ ner, various software, no print­ e r. W indow s '95, O ffice '97, paid $2500, will sell for $950. Call Steve @ 704-1714. SPM TREADM ILL $100, Bookshelf $15,"D resser $15, T runk $[15, Coffee Table $10. 303-9388 TICKETS A LA N N IS M O R R ISE TT E w / G arbage tickets for sale- C on­ cert is on Sunday, M arch 21st at Desert Sky Pavillion. I have seats in the first and second sec­ tions from the stage; $84 d o l­ la rs each o r $150 fo r a pair. Call Paul @ 884r9817 fb r fur­ ther details. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Security Officers and Preboard Screeners HELP WANTEDGENERAL FLEXSCHEDULES - FTA PT Must be 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass background check. We offer low cost Medical Dental, Vision, Uniforms supplied & maintained. FITNESS TRAINERS $8-$10/hr. F/T o r P/T. Apply at: Worldwide Security AsSoc. Inc. 627 South 48th S t #105 Ifempe %6-0141 S cottsdale Tem pe Ahw atukee G ilbert 945-1955 945-1955 704-9845 892-8582 AUTOMOBILES D A V E M A TTH EW S tic k e ts$250 each. C o n ce rt is Sat, March 6. Lve msg at 647-8747. GEORGE STRAIT tickets! Sec­ tion B 1 floor level, $75.00 ea , 956-1004 AUTOMOBILES 1995 HONDA, EX 2 dr Coupe red-5 spd. Below wholesale Ex­ cellent condition $8,250. 9561004 or 646-0276 1995 HONDA, EX 2 dr C oupe red-5 spd. Below wholesale Ex­ cellant condition $8,250. 9561004 or 646-0276 89 C H R Y SL ER LEB A R O N , 2dr coupe, at, ac, tight steering, airbag, spoiler, 132k m, great gas mileage, runs good, $2300 obo. Call 884-0474 96 HON D A SH A D O W VLX 600cc. B lack, 7500 mi, $3750 obo. Call No»y 557-6397. 99 VW B eetle fo r $239 per month. C all for details. Fleet dept. 265-6600 BM W Z 3: georgous show rm convertable; white on tan; cus­ tom wood/ w indscreen/ chrome wheels pckage. 721-3666 80'S-90'S CARS from $500- Po­ lice impounds. For listings call: 1-800-319-3323 ext. 4740. 84 TO Y O TA C A M R Y , runs good, c le an , 4 -c y l, new tire s , automatic, $1,500.412-0103 : C O O L B LA CK A udi 5000's 1987 all leather (tan & black in­ side), all power, great running, good cond itio n , safe in c o lli­ sio n , d ep en d ab le, g re a t AC, tin te d w indow s; 79,000, $4;200; 650-0174 86 H O N D A A C CO R D LXI, $1200, obó. LB: 951-0523 86 TO Y O TA C A M R Y , runs w ell, $1800 obò, 961-5068 (eve) 5sp m anuals 965-3862 (day) JE E P W RA N G LER S port: shw rm m int co n d .; 1 o w ner; black ' on tan; l g e ,c u s t o m chrom e w heels. M any extras, moving, must sell 721-3666 C la s s if ie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENËRAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL MOTORCYCLES 1972 HONDA 350 G ood Con­ dition $950 o.b.o. TRAVEL BAHA BEACHFRONT 1-7 bdr hom e(s), border 30 m in, $39395/nite 01152:-615-50174 D ISC O U N T TR A V EL: C heap in your name. Quick departrs. I also buy c o u pons/aw ards. M ost places w orldw ide. 968-7283 LO W C O ST M exican In ­ surance. Right o ff o f 1-10, 1 W. Elliot, Suite 114,345-7378. SPEND SUMMER backpacking th ro u g h E urope, o r sk iing through C hile. T our, packages start at ju st $999 including air­ fare. Optional College credit is av ail, for in fo . Call 888^5244408 or Www.istours.com HELP WANTEDGENERAL $2000 $5 0 0 0 /M 6 FLEX. hrs. L im ited o p enings, w ill train. Call 819-8615 * M ake y o u r a d ve rtisin g $$ $$ w o rk harder! Put ft in the Classifieds/ IMAX® THEATRE ARIZONA MILLS ( RESTAURANT ) A. « 1 Z O N A M I jfci L B NOW HIRING is now hiring ALL HOSTING POSITIONS IxxJking for a fun part time job,with flexible hours &great pay? Come work for the only IMAX® 3D Theatre in ArizonaT Mornings, evenings, weekends.... Call 9 4 9 -3 1 0 0 ext 201 HELP WANTEDG gN gR A L ^^^ $6.50+/HR. Preschool or afterschool teach­ er. F le x ib le hou rs. T raining avail. C hild care & insurance. C h ild re n 's V illa g e L earning Center, 949-5552. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CALL TODAY for the follow ­ ing positions: C ustom er S erv­ ice Reps, Data Entry Clerks, Re­ ceptionists, Admin. A ssistants, Assemblers. Volt Services: 7301808 CHASE IS hiring! F/T & P/T $9-$13/HR p o sitio n s a v aila b le w ith c u s­ P rom otional m ark etin g co. tom er se rv ic e , acco u n t reps, seeks e n erg etic, ag g ressiv e, %fraud reps, m ail openers, data hardw orking students fo r pro­ e n try , and c o lle ctio n s. A pply m otional dem o n stratio n p o si­ in person 8:30am -4pm , M -F. tion in the high tech industry. C hase cardm em bers services: E v e n in g / w kends, apply 100 W est U n iv e rsity D rive immed. to 1-888-238-8017 ext. 58 (U niv. & M ill) T em pe (prkg. avail, on Ash). Job-line 902-6000. 2 FEM Aides, day/night for el­ derly d isab led Couple. 20-25 CIRCLE M E !! Local company h rs/w k ea. $7/hr. W ill tra in . seek in g 15 in d iv id u a ls; ideal Central Scottsdale 423-5903 for students. Up to $11.25, call 10-4,246-8427. AMBASSADOR A t Sky H arbor answ ering a ir­ port questions. Fluent German, Italian, French, o r Spanish etc. 6am-3pm or 8am-3pm, p/t, $78.75/hr. M ilt 267-7994 EOE. EASY $$ A pp't S etters fo r AC Co. P /t am /pm , $ 1 0 /h r + bonuses, pd wkly* fun environ. Linda 9211903 48th StVUniversity A TTEN D A N TS NEED ED fo r the wknds o f Spring Break for fem ale in Q uadrangle A pts. M ust be 21 o r o v e r w / good driving record. No lifting req'd. Ellen, 968-6284 C LIC K S IS look in g fo r e n e r­ g e tic , h ard -w o rk in g in d iv id 's fo r b a r and w a itstaff. D rug scree n in g , b e n efits, apply in person: 3935 E Thomas Rd CLU B A TT EN D A N T w anted for prestigious health club,; pt, all shifts. Outgoing, reliable, or­ gan ized , c u st. serv . orie n te d people apply: Village, 4444 E. C am elback R d. Ptax. G ene o r Doborah 840-6412 COLLEGE GIRLS wanted for modeling in amateur video. No exp. nec. Must be 18 years of age. Call 389-5187 COOK NEEDED for childcare center. M-F 7am-12:30 pm Tempe/Mesa border 839-5953 ***** N M C A FE SERVERS * HOSTESS * KITCHEN STAFF [ W e ' r e an OkUboMA bAsed upscaIe casuaI | diNiNq concept wiik AqqRESsiyE quowrh plANs. O ur menu I eatures steaIcs, prime Rib, chickEN, pasta, FresIt fisb, spsciAliy SANdwicbEs ANd saM s . Apply TodAy ANd SECURE yOUR spor ON OUR OpENiNq TEAM. DAys/ (EvENiNqs > FlExibk H ours Mon . >■ Fm. 10'6piw, S at. 10'2pM NE C orner of I '10 & RAy Rd. TWICE THE MONEY half the time See Why People Prefer Our Part-Time Shifts!! MO VVORLDCOA1 is now hiring part-time Outbound Telesales Representatives. If you are a high-energy, career-oriented individual who wants to earn great money, MCI WORLDCOM is looking for you! We need Sales Representatives to handle incoming and outgoing calls at our Phoenix location. Sales experience is preferred but not required: CHANDLER, AZ » « E x c e lle n t B e n e fits « T u itio n R e im bu rsem e nt • U n lim ite d C a ree r > O p p o rtu n itie s O u ts ta n d in g B onus P la ns • 40 IK an d S tock O ptio ns - « ■ Come into our office ready to apply and interview: 1801 E. Camel back Road , Suite 201 (Colonnade Plaza) a r 4 Ji.St, BAKERY & CAFÉ For more information, call our (OBLINE at (602) 5 3 0 -6 4 5 9 D illa r d T ic k e t in g Busy lunch restau ­ ra n t now accepting applications for full­ tim e an d part-tim e w aitstaff, lin e cook and dishw asher. A pplicants m ust be available d ay hours an d hav e a stro n g com m itm ent to c u sto m er service. E xperience is ... helpful b u t jio t required. Customer Support Services FT/PT positions to assist custom ers & clie n ts in Support S ervices in our Tem pe office, fle x ib le s c h e d u le .. M ust have strong com m unication skills, com puter experience & w ork w ell under pres­ sure. T icketing experience pref. Pay com m ensu­ rate w ith experi­ ence. Fax resum e to 736-2383. No phone calls. • - A pply in p erso n MF, 10-6pm in Human ' R esources, Neiman M arcus, 6900 E. C am elback Rd., Scottsdale. .. MCI WORLDCOM is an equal opportunity employer. SKY HARBOR AIRPORT TERMINAL 4 Da you have M/W/F Or T/TH and weeken «.is free? Close to campus, free meals, free parking, benefits available. Graveyard/ early am/ late pm shifts. All positions need to be available for weekends, FT or PT. • Baker 9pmr7am, 3-4 days/weék $ 7-$ f 0/hr based on experience •: C ounter Servers 5 of 6am to 1 or 2pm; 6pm to 12 Or 2am; 8pm to 6am . $6-$8/hr based on experience and shifts MAKE MONEY - BE PROUD -HAVE FUN WITH OUR QUALITY PEOPLE-DRIVEN COMPANY Y ou deserve Paradise! C a ll 4 8 3 - 1 8 6 2 W e’re H ost 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 w ages in a fast-paced 8. exciting environment. COCKTAIL SERVERS STARBUCKS ASSOCIATES CUT SHOP CASHIERS FOOD &. BEVERAGE CASHIER WAREHOUSE DRIVER Call today to schedule an im m ediate Interview: I-888-HOST-JOB (1-888-467-8567) or call th e recruiter at 275-1721 x3302 for m ore info. EOE Drug free workplace M/F/V/D m ’i H o st M a r r io t t S e r v ic e s M adison School D is tric t’s C o m m u n ity Education Department is hiring staff to work with children K-8 in their Summer Club. All positions work June 1 - August 6, however, staff must be available for evening planning and training prior to June 1. tThlll I t l l l i r r Entry level position, looking for energetic, creative people w ith a background in elem entary education, early childhood develop­ m e n t,.o r recreation. Must have a t least 1-year experience w orking w ith school age children. Approximately 30+ hours a week w ith Morning and Afternoon shifts available. (AM 6:45-12:30 & PM 12 M) - 6:00) starting wage $6.35 - $7.54/hr. Many positions available. O ffice W his N eeded ASAPH! T h e S ta te P re s s a d v e rtis in g d e p a rtm e n t n e e d s s o m e o n e to a s s is t w ith th e d a y to d a y o ffic e fu n c tio n s a n d th e im p le m e n ta tio n o f s p e c ia l p ro m o tio n s . The successfu l candidate: ✓ ✓ Applications being accepted at M ad iso n S ch o o l D istric t Office, 5601 N. 16th St., Mon.- Fri., 8am - 4:30pm. Deadline March 12 Major crossroads are Missouri & 16th St. Call 664-7956 for more Info. m u st lo v e in te ra c tin g w ith p e o p le h a s m a s te re d E x c e l ✓ h is s a k e e n s e n s e o f d e ta il ✓ ta k e s g re a t p rid e in h is /h e r w o rk ResponsJbHKIea Include: • p la n n in g 4 im p le m e n tin g p ro m o tio n s fo r th e S ta te P re s s • re s e a rc h • d e liv e ry o f co u p o n b o o ks o n ca m p u s « p ro o fre a d in g • a n s w e rin g th e p h o n e s • ru n n in g e rra n d s • e tc . H o u rs a re fle x ib le - w e'H w o rk w ith y o u r s c h e d u le . 1 5 -2 0 h rs /w k , $ 5 .5 0 /h r. S to p b y M a tth e w s C e n te r b a s e m e n t, R m 3 5 to d a y a n d s e e J a c k ie E kJrid g e, o r c a ll 9 6 5 *6 7 4 1 . K — i ■ » BM W ■ — HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL DANCE A U D ITIO NS at Axis and R ad iu s n ig h tc lu b . T hurs. 3/4 6-8pm , p aid p o sitio n s, m ust be 21 +. L ooking for tra in e d & free sty le d an cers. C om e d re sse d to im p ress. Apply in person. NEED EXTRA money? 3 to 5 h o u r a.m . sh ifts av ail. V alid driver's license & work boots. Apply Ontario Aircraft Service, 2633 E. Buckeye > PERSO N A L A SSISTA N T for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p /t, $ 8 .10/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req’d. 804-0300 RED. EYE is now hiring Assist. Mgrs. for Arizona Mills, Fiesta, and S u p e rstitio n S prings. No m gm t. exp. necessary. Flex, hrs, excel, training and a fun at­ mosphere. Call Renee for an im­ mediate interview 833-9207 TH E BOYS & G irls C lubs o f S cottsdale is seeking a highly motivated & creative Computer Instructor for their Teen Center. 231 I N. M iller Rd. (E ldorado Pk> Instructors must be efficient in M icrosoft O ffice, In te rn e t U sage, W eb Page D esign, TC P/IP netw orking, U nix, and W indows 95. P/T, M -F 3-8pm, 20/25 h rs/w k , D O E, Please apply in person at the Boys & Girls Clubs o f Scottsdale - The U nderground T een C en ter 2311 N. Miller Rd. WOULDN'T YOU love to have a great boss and work at a fun store in Tempe? Sports Author­ ity at Elliot and 1-10 is now hir­ ing. E x c e lle n t h o u rly w ages and g re a t w orking e n v iro n ­ ment. All shifts needed, esp e­ cially m ornings. F ull and part time opportunities. Call now or stop by. W hen can y ou start? W e need you today! C all a manager 496-8622 for more in­ formation. OWN A part of AZ hottest pro­ motional team- invest your mar­ keting & Sales skills com m isf u n PEOPLE 1 si on- Partner % A rizona Bikini W anted! A p p o in tm en t setters team 517-9557 fo r U n iv ersal P o rtra its; $7$12/hr. 777-1054 P/T CUST. serv./cashier eves & GOOD SALÀRY + comm, for outgoing, friendly, sales- mind­ ed p e o p le a t S c o tts. Fashion Square. Call John 563-5883 GREETERS P/T, M ake $7/hr. greeting p eople at concerts & sporting events. A pply in per­ son @ 3707 E. Broadw ay, #3, Phx, r " __________ LEGAL COURIER F/T & P/T (M-F,. àftns). Professional ap­ pearance & c ar required. C all 452-1826; wknds. Apply in person at Water'n Ice at 3141S. McClintock. POOL MAINT. Tech, great pay, flex, p/t hrs, fun job. Call 4380258 Must have reliable truck. $ 6 -$ 3 3 /H R . P /T W ORK O n­ line?!! V isit u s today, work to­ morrow. www.4researeh.ctMn RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem­ pe. Kristen, 777-1054. PA R A D ISE BAR & G rill is now accepting applications for breakfast servers. Apply at 401 S. Mill Ave. Tempe P/T, WORK - F/T pay: Gome to p la y h o t to work: Day & eye. shifts, avail., 59/hr. U niversity & Priest. Mr; Belles 517-1977 This should be your ad Call 965-6735 Chandler Unified' School District f. ; Don’t le t it pass you by... Red V a lle y o ffe rs: • $ 15:540 per hour Base + Bonus + Commission Paid Training • PT,evening txxjrs w / FT pay ./- • Casual Business Atmosphere '? Fun Telemarketing Take a step in th e right direction and join a winning team . SOM EBURROS M EX IC A N Food: great pay, friendly place 839-8226. TENNIS COACHES needed at children's sports cam ps in NE US. If you enjoy tennis & love kids then check us out! W e o ffe r salary^ c o m plete tra v e l, room ; b o ard , C all 800-4946238 or e-m ail jo b s@ g rea t:c a m p j o b s . c o m . Http://w ww.greatcampjobs.com Find it FAST in the C la ssifie d s • Paid while training • $9.20/hr after certification • Fringe benefits • Flexible hours Apply in person: Chandler Unified School District 1525 E. Frye Rd. Chandler, AZ to start! • $300 Sign-on bonus! • Flexible Schedules! • Immediate Start! • No Experience Necessary! Red Root Inns LCfiC w . w ill soon be opening its newest hotel ju st 3 miles from the ASU campus! Dobson / Guadalupe 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 AZ Ave. ¿ Warner 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 Front Desk Van Driver 00 positions available. No experience necessary, with Flexible Hours to m eet your schedule! For immediate consideration, Apply in person at our Chandler location: 1-10 and Chandler Blvd. or call John Slaughter at 956-0600 = £ > IM M E D IA T E AWESOME $200 SIGNrON BONUS F o r a fre e tria l co p y o f M adness (the best basketball pool m anagem ent softw are on the planet) ch e c k o u t o u r W eb s ite at: www.wcsoftware.com Æ 3 X McCormick Ranch Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to ta lk to .p e o p le and work w here you a re appreci­ ated? The O range T ree Golf Resort is t h e place to be! Eye. H rs/Scottsdale Location • No Exp. Necessary • Big $$$$$$$$$ 333-0109 253-2100 Ask for Irene 5PORTSNUT.COM G e t‘Paid to Play" IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S • Customer Service • Data Entry • Flex Hrs PT/FT • $8-$12/Hr •1 0 min from ASU • Professional Environm ent e-mail murdockden@aol.com Call M aria at Cornerstone 570-6129 Customer Service Associates W ork w ith one o f th e b e st n am es in the a p p lia n ce in d u stry! As an affiliate of General Electric, Advanced Services, Inc. (AS1) is a national service center providing telephone assistance to customers regarding GE appliances. As a member of our inbound Customer Service Department team, you must have a dynamic telephone personality, type at 20 wpm and be ready to work with a great team. Previous customer service experience and Windows com­ puter skills are preferred.. • • • • '• • $8/hour after training Paid training Fun, motivated, professional work environment Afternoon/early evening shifts available Advancement opportunities Excellent benefits for FT and PT employees (health, dental, vision, tuition reimbnrsement. profit Sharing and more),' Apply now - classes are beginning soon! _ Applications are accepted Monday-Friday, 7am-4pm at: 3137 E. Elwood Street, Suite 100, Phoenix, AZ 85034 (University, east of 1-10). For more information/ directions, please call: 414-2592. Equal Opportunity Employer -w ^ ^ K IS tart Now We do fundraising over the telephone for worthy causeé. The work we do makes a difference and changes lives. C a ll n o w to jo in o u r tea m . H M 8 I Interested candidates can apply Monday through Friday between 9am-6pm at our Tempe Call Center j j Join Excell as a Directory Assistance Operator and experience what a great job is a ll about. Absolutely no selling is involved, plus we offer our em ployees the follow ing: • Advancement Opportunities • Competitive Pay Structure • Varied FuU-time and - Part-tim e Work Schedules • Paid Training • Weekly Pay Periods 7 5 2 ^8 1 4 0 Mill | i MD@ I 5005 S. Ash Ave., #15-18 (North of Baseline, West of MHi) BUS Routes 66 & 77 IN C . i l Marketing Research, Data Collection, Data Processing, Project Management W ith four convenient locations, we have an opportunity waiting fo r you: - if you are hired before Mar 1. Rehires ineligible. ..... « Ì » The valley's finest market research firm is expanding into Tempe (RuralI Broadw avX We need individuals to conduct telephone surveys: no selling. Mesa 1906 E. Main (NW comer of Main & Gilbert) If Peoria We will often 9802W. Peoria (NE corner of Peoria & 99th Ave.) $7JW/bn f«II time OfSpaniah bi- ,0 x *4 Jt r ■ Phoenix 4250 E. Camelback Bldg K, Suite 300 (CamelSquare Atrium) J r , Friendly, relaxed V n jIlH H B iP n ff . |P * . Tempe • 401 (k) S100 S ig n in g B o n u s S uperstition Fwy; H I QQ IN B O T H A M ASSOCIATES ‘Cjncat people; ¿¡neat pay; and no telling made inceli the ohoiouf choice ( oh me Take Spring Break off Baseline I / HELP WANTEDGENERAL Advanced Services. Inc. • $8-$9/hr guaranteed • $10-$13/hr achievable bonus • W eekly pay • Set your own hours - • Salary reviews every 6 m onths • FT/PT/Permanent or Tem porary • No experience necessary • Paid training V Call 965-6795 n place your ad (Leave message for same 'day interview)' Restaurant General Mgr. Human Resources Asst. Pool Hostless) Reservationist Sales Telemarketer Concierge Front Desk Agent Host/ Hostess Cocktail Server AM Food Server Banquet Food Server Bus Person Cook Apply Anytime ■ Downtown Phoenix W h o sa y s y o u c a n ’t h a v e it all? 7401 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85253 Ph. (602) 367-2443 Hotline (602) 367-2496 Fax (602) 607-0268 EOCM/F/D/V Pre-Employment Drug Testing 557-5382 ik _ Scottsdale . Current positions available Include: Very Generous Compensation and Benefits Package . $8/HR GUAR + BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK C la s s ifie d s W O R K I 888-205-0432 Call Marc Nowl mm PUT YOUR money where your m outh is. Set appts. for travel agenices. N o selling. Flex. hrs. N ear ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. + comm. $ 12/hr. avg. 829-6222 Toll free No experience necessary ÌA LOOKING FOR energetic, selfstarting people to call existing custom er base. Fun, m otivated atm osphere. S tarting @ $ 10 + bo n u ses, p /t o n ly . C lose to ASU. Call 894-9200 New network looking for players In A Z to represent top names in Sports, Outdoors and Fitness equipment. 812-7016 00: UP TO $12/HR Start NOW at-$9/hr guaranteed + bonuses. 15-25 hrs/wk. Sur­ vey marketing in a professional e nvironm ent. CamelbacjL^& S co ttsd ale R d. locatio n . N o b o ile r room . l-6 p m M -F w ith flexibility. C ontact Dean 4230136 $10.25/H R . • Paid every Friday! J O P P O R T U N IT Y with PLUMBING DISPATCHER for S at/ Sun. P rice & B roadw ay. Call 804-0600 for details. P/T DRIVING cars - Must have a current valid driver's license. Drug te st req'd. Apply in per­ son @ 3707 E. Broadw ay, #3, ffo . , ' M EC H A N IC A t TEC H ; fi/pt* some m echanical. exp. desired. Sòme tech school o r college de^ sired. Starting pay ¡$8-12/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mi ns ; to ASU. Flex hrs. Call 956-8200, days. GREATPAY! PHARMACY/ WHOLESALER, close to A SU , seeks d e p en d ­ able person to assist w / deliv­ eries, packing pharmaceuticals, o rd e r checking & data entry, Flexible PT (20-25hrs/wk). No evenings or wknds. C all Jerry @ 321-3447 for more details HELP WANTED- ^ L E ^ _ _ == .. 1919.W. Fairmont (off 48th St. between Broadway & Southern, near 1-10) g. Two week tearing ** u Ê Ê n q ^ j h l n t immediately. For Call our Employment Hotline at 808-0008 to schedule an Interview. at Tempe, AZ E t t o l Agent Services EOE. Drug-free woricpiace. % j J HELP WANTEDC L |R IC A L _ _ HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O P SERVICE HELP WANTEDC H IU > C A R ^ _ _ JOB DYN A M IC REA L E s ta te co. has im m ed iate o p en in g s fo r Cust. Serv/Recept, Ft/Pt, days, eves. & weekend shifts varied hours. Com p, sk ills a +, p ro­ fessional ap pearance. Fax re ­ sum e to 285-0300 o r phone 285-1000 ext. 208 R EC EPT - B ILIN G U A L a +, data entry, busy phones, work Sat.-W ed 7:30-4:00. Apply in p erson @ 3707 E. B roadw ay, #3, Phx. RECEPT P/T, evenings, Thurs & Fri 5-9pm. Apply at 6850 E. M cDowell C all 994-9922. Ask fû t Darline ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for day/eye. host, servers, bar­ tenders; k itc h e n / hobart staff. Will train pt/ft apply in person, M -F 2 -4 :30pm , 3159 E. L in ­ coln Dr. Phx BABYSITTER NEEDED, flex, am hrs., own trans., Camelback & 24th St. 955-2881 PT MARKETING Reps for collegestudent.com . U nique opp. fo r creative, independent, indiv. Set own hrs, m arketing/ adver­ tising exp p re fd but w ill con­ sid er any high achei ver. C on­ tact Ms. Bayer 888-915-6200 Thfm should ho your md Call 965-0735___________ HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL " RECEPTIONIST ÈOR Pruden­ tia l S ecu rities. P t M -F 12pm4:3 0 p m G re a t b u sin ess exp. Call Nancy 952-5150. RESTAURANTS/ BARS .Order Clerks WHÔLE FOODS 11 1 1 1 1 1 M 4 0 weeded immedi­ ately In service and m arketing division. No experience necessary - we train . $ 1 2 /h r + bonuses. W eekly pay, flexible p /t day evening o r weekend hours. Downtown Tempo location. For details call Brad 894.1151. Looking fo r acoustic perform ers fo r 1 year anniversary celebration. $50 p er hour Call Sury 456-1400 ß f im C K Y — 1 WEDNESDAY *1 DRAFTS *373PITCHERS Bud • Bud Ught • Coots Lig h t‘ Amber B otii ÑtHre • Serra Nevada Honey Bnm IMLL1AQDÔ TOURNAMENT Mar. 6 at the MU Dec Center MACARONI GRILL, one of the V alley's m ost p o p u la r re stau ­ rants; Scottsdale/G old Dust, (1 lig h t Sv o f Shea) now h irin g servers. Apply M -F 2-4, or call 596-6676 for appt. SERVER NEEDED, Have fun & m ake m oney! P o sitiv e people only. Pasta Brioni 994-0028 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE C H ILD C A R E A TTEN D A N T w anted fo r p re stig io u s club. Previous exp. w/infants & tod. diets prefd. Kind, patient & re4444 E. C am elback Rd. Phx. Kathy 840-6412 LOOKING FOR p/t, long-term, n a n n y -lik e c areg iv er, 20-25 hrs/w k. T ran s, req'd. to N. Scotts. for 2 kids under age 3, beginning 5/1. Pref. 2 1 y rs . or older, ns, w /know ledge in the ed. or nursing fields. Pay to be determined w/exp. & re fs. Call 948-1525 PT STUDENT Sales Exec, need­ ed fo r w w w .collegestudent.com . Strong com m ission + incentives based pay while ¡set­ ting your own hrs. C ontact Ms. Bayer 888-915-6200. LOOKING FOR long-term help w /lO yr. o ld, 3 d ays/w k, a fte r school. M u st have ow n trans, SE CR E TA R Y W A NTED w good typing, leadership, com ­ m u n ication sk ills , fo r a busy g a lle ry on N an tu ck et Isla n d , M ass. M ay th ru D ec. (w ould consider M ay thru Sep.) Room & salary, (602) 99L4271, PRESCHOOL Teacher 4 yr. old c la ss FT, b e n efits, E C D , o r GDA pref. M esa/Tempe border 839-5953. ULTIMATE EMERGENCY prep a re n ess tool. T his p o rtable co o k stove is a m ust fo r any storage program. $89.95 call 1800-774-3889 JOB OPPORTUNITIES FT, M UST love children, edu­ cation major prefd. N. Scotts. 2 kids, n/s. Brigitte 563-4216 "G IR L FRID A Y ” , errand run­ ner, light office work, mother's helper for active hom e/ offfice on N a n tu ck e t Island; M ass. May thru Sep. 6. Room and salaiy 602-991-4271. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CORNERSTONE SECURITIES C o rp o ra tio n : T o learn m ore about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com W ORK AT home, be your 6wn boss! Learn to earn 2k-3k/wk. N ot M LM ! 1-800-345-9688 e x t 4668 Join the Fun !!! WOODSHED II ASTWCO&CAt, FORECAST HELP WANTEDGENERAL by Sidney Om an C alm down.* Fam ily m em bers assure you that necessary papers have been filed. Double-check. D o m e stic a d ju s tm e n t c o u ld include financial deal, marriage. Taurus represented. SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22-Dec. 21): Come out o f hiding: Claim o w n e rsh ip ; d o n ’t b a ck dow n u n d e r th re a t o f e x p o su re . Display courage o f convictions, i you are due for rousing yictoiy. Pisces plays top role. C A PR IC O R N (D ec. 2 2 -Jan . 19): Loved one assures, " T h i s 'is y o u r cup o f te a .’ ’ It w ould certainty appear to be so follow­ in g y o u r feat o f m eetin g and beating deadline. Cancer native ifigures prominently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): L ook b eyond the im m ed iate, bring forth special talen t th at includes extrasensory p ercep ­ tion. M ake in tellig en t conces­ sion but no more. Aries, Libra persons dominate scenario. PISCES (Feb. 19-M arch 20): Stress o rig in ality , pio n eerin g sp irit Make new start, be open to romance despite recent disil- -lusionm ent. G iv e atten tio n to c o lo r c o o rd in a tio n , s ty le , design. Leo arrives. IF M A R C H 3 IS Y O U R BIRTH D A Y : You are artistic; creative, sensitive, very m uch c o n s c io u s o f b o d y . im a g e . G e m in i, S a g itta riu s p e rso n s play exciting roles in your life, could have these letters, initials in names: C, L, U. Current cycle relates to m editation, mystery, intrigue, locating hiding places. Y ou are p resen ted w ith c h a l ­ lenge d u rin g A pril, relates to d ire c tio n , d ecisio n asso ciated w ith p a rtn e rs h ip , m a rria g e . October most memorable. © 1999, The LA Times Syndicate $10 /hr Guaranteed S CR 1P E E L E N A S s WOR 0 S u NS E «i RT E D A M O u R T OW N o R S S N O E TOM EE w 3/3/90 <*1St n in im u m ) • NO A A SC 5, LESS O IL RESTAURANTS/ BARS G R IL L C O O K $7-1 0 /h r. Fun neighborhood Sports B ar/restaurant New Tim es award win­ ner. 2 0-30 h rs/w k. A pply the W oodshed II. D obson/U niv. See Louis after 5:30. MASERLE'S SPORTS g rill is hiring fo r all p ositions, apply in person at 24 N. 2nd St, Phx. No phone calls please. FREE K > g W > U N j^ _ ENGAG EM EN T RING lost at H ayden lib rary bathroom . Please return to circulation desk at library. O w ner sad and anxi­ ous! SERVICES 50% O FF dry cleaning bill w / ASU Ì.D.- biz. shirts $ 1. Cheap flu ff & fold. P ueblo C leaners $E C o rn e r o f R ural & U niv. 966-7454. UNIVERSITY STUDENT d is­ co u n t, long d ista n ce rate 7c/min. 24 hrs a day! Call 8198615 WANTED D A V E M A TTH EW S tic k e t wanted. The closer to the front the better! Could exchange for prim e Alannis M orrisette/ Gar­ bage tic k e t. P le a se c a ll 8849817 a fte r 5pm or 965-6735 during the day; ask for Paul LO O K IN G FO R 89-90 Y e ar­ book. Call Steve @ work: 6195 9 5 -T 067 hom e: 619-5161304 fax: 619-283-1121 P ut it in the C la s s ifie d s ! FREE1Delivery 5 2 4 W . U n iv e rs ity 9 6 ^ ■7660 TUTORS P R IN K U P ! 894-9884 ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE ... We offer tutorial for the following classes: SAKE BOMBERS s399 ■ r i Have your own ■ personal Sushi Chef! TUTORS M A T 114, M A T 117, M A T H 9 A lg e b ra /F in ite —. C h in a G a te ’s NEW S u sh i B ar Calculus/Precalculus M A T 2 10 , M A T 2 70 , M A T 2 7 1 , M A T 170 Statistics QBA 2 21 , PSY 2 3 0 Physics PHY 111; PHY 112 Business FIN 300, 0 P M 301 A ccounting ACC 2 30 , ACC240 Successfully Helping Students Since 1980. 7820 E. M cD o w e ll S c o tts d a le • 946-0720 Call us for information MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • State Press Classifieds SIMON" • Cornerstone Mall ■ 968 4668 ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. T elem ark et er» W anted in G ainey Ranch. Earn $B/hr, po tentia l m onth­ ly bonus | $ . No sellin g required. P/T fle x ib le hour». C all fo r appoint­ m ent - 6 07-1069. G reat ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE: ■ MLB Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! Chinese Food WÊ ¡•N B A ESPN, Pull Court, Appointment setters. No selling or cold calling. Near campus, W eekly cash incentives. AM/PM shifts. In d iv id u a ls to co n d u ct o p inion surveys in person or on the phone. NO SELLING, no ex p e ri e n c e required, FLEXI­ BLE SCHEDULE. B ilingual a plus. S6 - $ 1 0 /h r . Call Dixie 892-5644. f HUNGRY? Ite k i¡MyluiSk ¡»Cheep Beer A Cheap Í M l Appetente on Happy H r. ! ¡•OSS System » m m W e d n e s d a y , M a rc h 3 , 19 9 9 ARIES (M arch 2 1-A pril 19): , T w o p re y io u s o p p o rtu n itie s slipped by -*rr you determ ine it w o n 't Happen again! Focus on re b u ild in g p ro g ran i, ex citin g lo v e re la tio n sh ip . C ap rico rn , Cancer nati ves involved. TA U RU S (April 20-M ay 20); T hose w h o in sist you sh o u ld rem ain ho m e áre sin ce ré but sincerely m isinform ed . Travel wdl enable yOti to fulfill obliga.. tions. Aries, Libra persons play roles. ; G È M IN I (M ay 2 1 -June 20): T h o se Who claim ed you lack .o rig in ality w ill be •dining o n . crow . Em phasis on pioneering ■ spirits the need fo r fo llo w in g Others finished. Leo, A quarius play outstanding roles. CA NC ER (June 21-July 22): . Y o u r k in d o f d a y ; F o c u s on directioh, motivation,- sharpen­ ing c u lin a ry s k ills w ith new recipes. R elative say$;~"I am v e ry m u ch in fa v o r o f m a r­ riage.’’ Capricorn involved. L E O (J u ly 2 3 -A u g . 2 2 ): . Emphasis on fun, frolic, diversi­ ty, versatility. Love relationship m ore s e rio u s th a n o rig in a lly anticipated. You’ll be asked to make up your mind. Sagittarius in picture . V IR G O (A u g . 23-S ejjL 22): You are not out o f game. People who back you will not be disap­ pointed despite outward appear­ ances. You may not be model o f sartorial splendor, but you look very good. L IB R A (S e p t 2 3 -O c t. 2 2 ): Secret meeting set o ff emotimial firew orks. Spotlight on words, w ritten and verbal. Prove that musical score is your ow n cre­ atio n . E m p h asis on flirtatio n , reading, writing, discovery. SC O R PIO (Oct. 23-N ov. 21): ■* Burger Madness»?« I O P g ^ N IJ g ^ environm ent. 3 ASU grads em ployed now . G reat opportunity fo r P lease b e sure to check your a d . M ake sure it reads e xactly as you w ish it to a p p ear in th e State Press, including punctuation. P lease check your a d th e firs t day it ap p ears-th e liab ility o f th e State Press sh all not exceed th e cost o f th e a d and cred it m ay be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor spelling erro rs do not qualify fo r m ake­ goods. N o refunds w ill be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cred it w ill b e held on account fo r future advertising. R A T Private Party 1-4 days, $ 1.7 0 per line, per day 5 -9 days, $ 1.6 5 per line, per day 1 0 + days, $ 1.4 9 per line, per day :E S Com m ercial A day, $ 2.6 0 per line 2 -4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5-9 days, $ 1 .7 6 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.6 0 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. $$ and fun! RECRUITING Community Support Specialists $7-$8.36/hr, Wl< 1:1 w/ Adults or Child w/ dis­ abilities. Eves & Wknds. You make Schedule! Must be 18+, HS/ GED, fingerprints. Apply in person. Good Shepherd, 86 W. University #216 or 1628 W. Camelback. Call 532-9715 xt 01. me 065 010 020 061 064 061 077 054 066 Adoption Atapianae Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Frag Loet/Found 068 052 048 101 074 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales HeaNh & Fitness Help WantodrChMd Cara 072 Help Wanted-Clerical 073 HaipWantod-Food Service 070 Help Wanlad-General 071 Help Wanted-Saies 030 Homes for Rent 040 Home for Sale , 102 Houaectoaning 107 Instruction 103 Insurance 135 Internet-Related Services 130 Internet URL* 075 Internships 056 076 015 t2 0 050 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous tor Sale 045 MobHeHbmes 063 048 062 090 Motorcycles Moving ft Storage Music Personals 064 110 087 047 035 080 037 100 061 056 Pets Photography Pregnancy CounseNng Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms tor Rent Services Sports ft Recreation Tickets • m i Townhomes/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomea/Condos for Sato 060 Transportation 067 Travel 108 Tutors 105 Typtog/Word Processing 115 V A HIERARCHICAL MODEL oF FIR ^T NEW CAR NEEDS,.. CD PLAYER a ir c o n d it io n in g , rem o te kEYLEss ENTRY PoWER WINDOWS & LOCK'S, ALLoy WHEEL'S, CRUISE CONTROL Low MAINTENANCE, Go o d GA”S MILEAGE S entra GXE L im ited E dition ...YOU CAM ACTUALLY AFFoRD. Right now, through th e exclusive N issan Cam pus C onnection Program , you can buy th e Sentra GXE Lim ited E dition w ith a ll th e b e lls and w h istle s a t a package savings o f $950? Plus you can get $ 1 ,0 0 0 Cash Back on to p o f $ 7 5 0 C ollege Cash? (If only your stu d e n t lo a n w as th is good o f a deal.) $I O i fC ASH BACk PLUS CASH ON SENTRA GXE LIMITED EDITION: PHOENIX ABC Nissan 1300 E. Camelback Rd. 264-2332 PHOENIX Midway Nissan 2201 West Bell Rd. 866-6600 TEMPE Brown & Brown Nissan Tempe 7733 S. Autoplex Loop 398-6000 SCOTTSDALE Pinnacle Nissan 7601 E. Frank Lloyd W right Blvd. 998-9800 GLENDALE West Valley Nissan 4830 West Glendale Ave, 934-3444 O S pCOLLEGE SCOTTSDALE Scottsdale Nissan 1000 N. Scottsdale Rd. 994-0301 MESA Brown S t Brown Nissan Mesa 1701 West Broadway 461-4300 Ety'oy the ride. 01999 Nissan North America, Inc. “Nissan,” the Nissan Logo, “Enjoy the ride.“ and Sentra ace registered trademarks owned or licensed to Nissan. Ail rights reserved. *Actual mileage may vary with driving conditions. Use for comparison only. 1999 BPA foel economy estimate on manual transmission 29 city/39 hwy, automatic transmission 27 city/36 hwy. fSavings claim baaed onMSRP ofa 1999 Sentra GXE widi options purchased separately vs. a 1999 Sentra GXE Linuted Edition. ¿Cash Back from Nissan North America when you purchase from a participating retail­ er and take delivery from existing retailer stock. Most leases not eligible. Retailer sets actual price. See retailer for details. Offer ends March 31,1999« "Between February 2,1999 and Much 31,1999, any college student who purchases or leases a new Sentra Limited Edition throngh NMAC will receive an additional $750 O sh Back. Must show proof of enrollment ofat least o credits from an accredited US college. Must show proofof insurance. Some restrictions apply. See retailer for details.