INSIDE Classifieds 19 Crosswords 08 Horoscopes 23 Opinion 04 PoliceBeat 10 S p o rts 1 7 1 L / ___________________ Weather Sunny; high 78, low 49 Volume 84 Number 106 Wednesday, March 10, 1999 | Students check out A SU panoramic style ASU m idfielder shines at national camp, earns repeat invite ASU helps NASA explore surface of Mars By A ndrea Balsky Sta te P ress 1 pr A ’| i . t ' r" y ff H y u p D o fig U m o f t h e S ta te P re ss Kelly Bender, ASU Mars mission planner, examines the Mars'modefat the Moer building’s space flight facility. The ASU geology team works in conjunction with NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor Spacecraft on primary mapping of the planet’s surface. -. B order life teaches; p ro fe s s o r to ‘see fro m b o th sides’ By Jo die Lau State Press “I t’s about discovery and seeing things from both sides,” said Alberto Rios, ASU Regents English professor, who grew up in Nogales in the late 1950s and ‘60s. “O f course you are growing up in a special environment living on the border of town,” he said. “You’re surrounded by food, languages, and fencing.” Rios will tell about his experience growing up on the U .S.-M exican border at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Anthropology building, room B203. Rios’ speech is part of the Border Studies Colloquium series sponsored by the ASU Center for Latin American Studies. Although his first language was Spanish, Rios said he had to learn to balance two languages and two cultures. His mother is from England, and his father is from Mexico. When he started first grade, he said he got swatted for speaking Spanish. “For me as a writer, maybe not as a human being, it helped me understand the power of language,” Rios said. “If you could say something that could provoke someone so much, there was a power to that.” He started paying attention to that power and what it had to offer. Rios said speaking two languages was like a pair of binoculars. “By using two lenses you can bring something that is far away much closer so you can see it better,” he said. “And by seeing better, you understand it more.” The professor speaks like a living poem, said Jim Hathaway, media relations manager of the College o f Liberal Arts and Sciences. “He presents one side of the Arizona experience that is foreign to a lot of people who have lived here, yet it’s much NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor Spacecraft began its primary mapping on Mars Monday. But ASU’s geology team, which works with NASA, started gathering information- about the alien surface m onths ago. The inform ation may eventually help launch a manned mission to Mars. Because so little is known about the red planet, any in fo rm atio n g a th e re d -w ill be h elp fu l, said Phil Christensen, ASU’s lead investigator for the project. : ; “We basically don’t.know anything about M ars,” Christensen said. “We’re trying to understand the early history. Did M ats have hot .springs? Did M ars have oceans? Did Mars ever have life? Anything we learn is interesting.” - -' The geology team will collect information sùch as temperatures on Mars, heat emitted by the surface, and general information about Mars’ atmosphere, said Kelly Bender, the mission planner at ASU. The information is gathered through an instrument called the Thermal Emission Spectrometer, which col­ lects data 24 hours a day. The TES gives information about the surface o f M ars, which in return provides information about the planet’s environment. C hristensen received more than $1 m illion from NASA and said the team will keep working until at least 2001, although he’d like to continue the work even after that. “Hopefully we’ll find something exciting,” he said. “One thing I’m excited about is that our data will play an important role in where the next NASA mission lands on Mars.” s \ - _» _ He also said ASU’s involvement will have a positive impact on- the University, > War« m w (8 Election complaints come rushing in By Stephanie Paterik State P ress Three newly appointed Associated Students of ASU elections commissioners handled a flood of complaints Tuesday, six of which were lodged against presidential candidate Jenny Holsman. The complaints :— filed by presidential candidate Mike Sosso’s campaign managers and Jayme Sloan, ASASU elections director 4-=- accuse Holsman of plac­ ing a sign against a tree, posting a sign with a metal stake instead of a wooden one, and campaigning too close to voting sites during the primary election. All of these offenses violate the ASASU elections code. Holsman appeared at the hearing with 15 witnesses, and commissioners listened to both sides of each com­ plaint. They have 24 hours after Tuesday’s 3:30 p.m. meeting to assess penalty points to her and other candi­ dates. Once a candidate receives seven points they are disqualified from the race, Sloan said if $ candidate is disqualified, they can appeal it to the student government supreme court. Holsman said many of the charges against her over­ lap, which is why she’s not too concerned about being disqualified. “I ran an honest campaign (for the primary),” she said. “The signs in question fell down on their accord, and I had campaign helpers checking on them continually.” Campaign Manager Mike Frias stated in his com­ plaint that “In order to ensure a fair election, each can­ didate should be required to abide by the same rules and regulations. Ms. Holsman refused to follow those rules that were established.” 1 However, Holsman said she’s not in the wrong. She said she told members of her campaign staff to move “Just Jenny” signs 50 feet from the polls, but because of miscommunication, the signs remained in place. " 1 Holsman also said she’s unsure of how her sign out­ side of the ASU bookstore, originally propped by a wooden stake, became attached to the metal stake next to it. “The sign either fell down and was put there by someone trying to help me out, or someone placed it Samaruddin Stewart of the State Press Jenny Holsman, Associated Students of ASU presidential hopeful, responds to complaints during a public hearing in the ASASU office Tuesday. The complaints, filed by rival Mike Sosso’s cam' paign and Jayme Sloan, elections director, accuse Holsman of vio­ lating the elections code which could result in her disqualification. M _________ Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the Stale Press in the basement o f the M atthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per orga­ nization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event* date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. If any of the above information is incomplete or illegible ENTRIES WILL BE DISCARDED. The Today Section is a daily calendar (rip events printed as a service to the ASU com­ munity. Requests are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • C areer S ervices is having a workshop entitled “Completing the Puzzle” at 3 p.m. in the Career Development Center of the Student Services Building. ' AH Saints Catholic Newm an C enter will have Dr. Barbara Keats o f the College of Business to deliver die sec­ ond segment of “What God Expects From Me in the World of Woik.” The speech is at 7:30 p.m. at 230 E. University Dr. • ASU Row W ow committee is having a general m eeting at 6 p.m. in the American Indian Institute conference room. • T h e N a tiv e A m erica n B u sin ess O rganization is having a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the American Indian Institute. • The ASU Philosophy Club will have a discussion group on Nietzsche at 3:30 p.m, in the Honors College Library, in reasons to enroll in our McClintock Hall. • Phi Alpha D elta is having a workshop at 5:30 p.m. on the second floor o f the MU, in the Alumni Lounge. The discus­ sion is on how to write your personal statement for law school applications. For more information call 777-1114. • V .I.T A . is offering free tax assistance for residents only at 5:30 p.m. in Armstrong Hall, room 105. V T he Kundalini Yoga Club is having a free Yoga class in the MU, room 221 at 7 p.m. • T he Lesbian and Bisexual W om en's Group is having a general meeting in the Social Work Building, room 128 at 6 p.m. • The Learning Resource C enter is hav­ ing a free Critical Reading Workshop in the MU, room 208D. • T he U niversity O rch estra having a Jass concert in Gammage Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. • T he C ollege Republicans will have a discussion on the upcoming presidential election at 2:30 p.m. in the La Paz room oftheMU. • M.E.Ch.A. will have a general meeting in the multicultural lounge in the Payne Education Building at 4:30 p.m. • The East Tim or A ction N etw ork will have a general meeting at 4:30 p.m. in theMU’s Coconino room. ;* T he M arriage and Fam ily Therapy C linic offers individual, couple, and family counseling to all students, staff, and faculty in the Cowden Family Resources Building in room 140. Call 965-9373. • T he Student D evelopm ent Learning R esou rce C en ter is offering free computer workshops in the Student Services Building, room 394. Call thé center for times and information. l — M a rs | ! “It really helps ASU’s im age to be able to participate in missions like this,” he said. “It helps to attract better students and better graduate students. It makes a huge impact on the classroom as well.” C h risten sen , who teach es a class about the solar system, said it is reward­ ing to show students pictures o f Mars gathered from the mission. Because the pictures come from a University-directed project, he said, students are more inter­ ested in learning about them. B ender said she is pleased with the direction o f the mission so far. “I think it’s going great,” she said. “It’s been very interesting.’’ C o m p la in t s there, took a picture and m ade a co m p lain t,” she said. F rias got d efen siv e about this notion, and said “th is im p lica tio n is not only completely false...but to m ake th is alleg atio n with no proof is extremely, extremely damaging.” H olsm an re p lie d th at she “did not accuse any­ one, but only said it was possible.” The hours of aggressive banter at the hearing will be taken into account by commissioners, who said it is th e ir duty to h ear all sides and make a fair judg­ ment. C om m issioner M artin M ontorfano, a broadcast student working on his sec­ ond bachelor’s degree, said these complaints are a sig­ nificant part of campaigns. “These might seem like petty , m inor th in g s,” he said. “B ut they com e up year after year.” One complaint was filed against former presidential candidate Brian Campbell fo r pro p p in g his sig n against a tree; how ever, Campbell was knocked out of the race during the pri­ mary. The o th er tw o com ­ p la in ts w ere ag ain st College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senate candidates Gregory Ensell and Darin Wisehart for posting a sign too close to a polling site. “I don’t want this elec­ tion to turn into w hat it was last year, with a lot of petty - c o m p la in ts,” Holsman said. “I didn’t file any complaints. All I can concentrate on is running a good, clean campaign.” ’ RÍOS «mí 1 I ! I more basic than most people are aware of,” Hathaway said. Rios said his published works are based on his experience and he is planning to read some at his talk. He hopes his lecture will give students an understanding of his cultur­ al experience. “My wOiks come from a life lived, not a life imagined,” he said. Rios has written seven books of poetry and two collections of short stories. He has received numerous awards -— including five Pushcart Prizes in poetry and fiction and the Walt Whitman Award. His third collection of short stories, “The Curtain of Trees,” will be published in April. His memoir, “Capirotada,” will be available this fall. course ea A HEAD START By signing up for Verbal Accelerator, you gain the upper hand in preparing for Verbal Reasoning. We provide you with essential verbal reasoning techniques, so that you can build upon this foundation and achieve your desired score. EARLY SCIEN C E REVIEW Verbal Accelerator kicks off with a full-length MCAT diagnostic. This will allow you and your teacher to evaluate your individual strengths and weaknesses before the course even begins. And you can get ahead on your sciences with the review materials and techniques you will receive as part of Verbal Accelerator. VERBAL IS DIFFERENT Your verbal reasoning subscore counts heavily on the MCAT and is an integral part of your application package. And you can't work on verbal the same way you do on the sciences: strong verbal improvements require work over a longer period of time and correlate strongly with subsequent improvement in the sciences subtests. Sign up before March 27th ana take our Verbal Accelerator Course fot FREE AND save $1001 # T H E P R IN C E T O N R E V IE W Buy your condoms cheaply and discreetly right here ”/ on campus ASU STU D E N T HEALTH P H A R M A C Y 3 FREE CONDOMS WITHTHISCOUPON EXPIRES3/12/99 ASU STUDENT HEALTH PHARMACY B OPENMWF8:30-5:00TTH0-5Closed Daily12:30-1:00 (6 0 2 ) 9 6 7 H 4 8 0 ^ LOCATED AT PALM WALK « UNIVERSITY BRIDGE 18 ü s ¡I I ■ H i 965-3338 i ¡L http://www.asu.edu/health/shrxhorne.html | Local/S tate Killer had sex with attorney while in jail PHOENIX (A P )— An attorney representing a man convicted in the so-called bounty hunter slayings was having sex with her client in the jail visiting room, a court was told. P ro secu to rs m et w ith Judge G regory M artin o f Maricopa County Superior Court on Monday to deter­ mine whether Carmen Fischer should be allowed to con­ tinue to represent Michael Sanders, who is awaiting a hearing on a possible death sentence. M onday’s hearing on Fischer’s assignment was to continue on Wednesday. Sanders was found guilty of first-degree murder and related charges for his role in a home invasion in which Spring Wright, 19, and Chris Foote, 25, were killed in 1997. The masked men in black who entered their home with assault rifles and bulletproof vests claimed they w ere on a b o u n ty -h u n tin g m ission in search o f a California bail jumper. Investigators said i t was a rob­ bery instead. Prosecutors told Martin that Fischer’s relationship with Sanders could be a conflict of interest and could result in ineffective presentation, which in turn could be found to be grounds for a new trial. M atth ew S ilv erm an o f th e A riz o n a S ta te B ar Association said there is no ethical rule prohibiting sex between an attorney and client but that an attorney could be disciplined in such a case if the attorney’s behavior were deemed to be inappropriate upon com­ plaint and investigation. s Detention officers reported Fischer and Sanders were seen kissing, touching, and engaging in sexual contact — but would break away and behave as if nothing had happened when confronted about it. They were told to stop on one occasion and did not, according to testimo­ ny and records. A jail shift commander recommended that Fischer be barred from visitation because of her behavior. N ational park proposed fo r Sonoran Desert TUCSON — Backers of creating a national park in the southern Arizona desert are poetic in their praise of the region. “This is one of the most beautiful places on Earth, and the burning symbol of the wild southwest,” says a promo­ tional brochure. “It is the living core of the Sonoran Des'eit “It is essential for the well-being of our souls. It is a desert ark for science and a huge resource for education. The proposal backed by scientists, writers, and former federal officials would combine two current national pre­ serves and a military testing range into Sonoran Desert National Park — “5,(XX) square miles of silence,” the orga­ nizers say. . Barry M. Goldwater Air Force Range, which cover much of Southwestern Arizona, would continue to serve its current weapons training and testing function, however. The park, were Congress to agree, also would include Organ Pipe National Monument, on the border with Mexico , south of Ajo, and Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, west and southwest of Ajo along the Mexican bor­ der. .A drive for its creation is to be announced later this week, The Arizona Daily Star said in describing the plan today. Die land within the proposed boundaries — it would be larger than Yellowstone and Grand Canyon national parks combined — contains no mines, no paved roads, no pri­ vately owned holdings, and no cattle grazing allotments. It is subject to depredation by off-road vehicles and unauthorized camping, however, and organizers want to see it in the hands of the National Park Service. That service already deals with Organ Pipe National Monument; the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service deals with the Cabez Prieta refuge. The Air Force and the Marine Corps use the gunnery and flight range. “In a world of off-road vehicles, growing millions and leisure time, we either protect ground that matters or see it m ashed under our feet,” the organizers say in their brochure. Hyun Dong Um of the State Press B r o a d e n in g H o r iz o n s + Troy Whisenant (left), an ASU biology senior, admires the view from the Life Sciences Tower with his wife, Brenda, and son, Joshua. Tuesday’s clear weather allowed the three to see a majority of the Valley area from the Tower’s seventh-floor balcony. Elizabeth Dole plans visit to Phoenix PHOENIX (AP) — Elizabeth Dole plans to visit the Phoenix area Thursday, a day after she launches an exploratory committee for president in Iowa. R eginald M. Ballantyne III, president o f Phoenix M em orial Health System , will jo in form er Attorney General Grant Woods in hosting Dole and about 100 smallbusiness people at Ballantyne’s Paradise Valley home. “I just think she’s an extraordinary individual,” said B allantyne, past president o f the American Hospital Association. He knew Dole in her role as American Red Cross president. Dole’s plans call for about two hours of coffee, cook ies and questions, moderated by Woods and his wife, a for­ mer Phoenix television anchor, Marlene Galan. Troubled ride owners hired fo r Chandler Ostrich Festival C H A N D L E R 7-9PM’ 7Pittimi well, i in i m i 7295 E. Stetson Dr., Scottsdale r " * ii 970-0500 Policeßeat Sonoran Sunrise Insurance Services ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: • A student reported his bicycle stolen from the Physical Sciences H-wing, where it was secured with a lock. • An em ployee reported his bicycle stolen from the Psychology building, where it was secured with a lock. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • Police served a search warrant at a home in the 2100 block of East University Drive on March 2. There they found a dismantled methamphetamines lab. A 29-year-old Tempe man was arrested on drug-related charges after trying to flee from police and evading capture for about an hour. He was booked into the Tem pe C ity Jail. Officers also arrested a 30-year-old Tempe man on drug charges and for possession of stolen bicycles, which were found at the scene. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail. • A 4-year-old Tempe boy nearly drowned Sunday in a bath tub at his home in the 1900 block of East Manhatton Drive. He reportedly either slipped or fell while taking a bath with his 5-year-old sister and was only under the SPORTS water for a brief period. He was treated at Desert Samaritan Hospital and released Monday. ■Police investigated a suspicious package at a Burger King at 5 E. Southern Ave. Sunday. Officers were dispatched after employees saw a blue Igloo cooler sitting on top of a pay phone with smoke coming out of it. A bomb technician with the Tempe Police Department was dispatched and determined that the cooler was stuffed with rags soaked in linseed oil, which apparently caused them to internally combust and smolder. Police do not know if it was left there by accident or on purpose, and an investigation is continuing. • A 41-year-old Tempe man was arrested Monday in the 1900 block of East University Drive on charges of posses­ sion of marijuana. Officers found a clear plastic bag con­ taining a substance believed to be marijuana and a white cigarette also containing suspected marijuana. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail and released pending anal­ ysis of the substance. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Jayson Peters. R a in o r sh in e, ch eer o r w h in e , w e ’ re there! See page 17. COLLEGE LIFE: n M p n M ip Ü P E R T H E N IG H T B E F O R E FULL-COLOR COPIES Receive8-1/ 2" x 11” full- or self-sen« copies on24-18. white bond forjust 694 each. Nolimit. Resizingcostsextra. Offer is limited to onecoupon per customer. Customer must relinquish coupon at time of purchase. Coupon may not be reproduced and is not valid with other coupons, offers or dis­ counts. 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Every year, we offer renewal to over 98% o f o u r policyholders. ♦ Low down-payment ♦ M onthly payment plan ♦ M oney-saving discounts ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Immediate coverage ♦ Free rate quote MU CHOKE P re fe rre d a t ASU Call today o r stop by o ur local office: (602) 931-0766 Over 300 courses in 44 departments Small, interactive day and evening classes One- to eight-week courses available Ayear's worth of credit in biology, chemistry, physics, or foreign languages in one sumfner Courses on our lakefront Evanston campus, on our Chicago.campus, in the field, and abroad F or y o u r FREE sum m er c a ta lo g D I R E C T Phone: I-800-FIN D S N U o r 847-491-5250 h ttp : //w w w.nw u.edu/sum m ernu/ E-mail: sum m er@ nw u.edu Case dropped against retarded boy who took $2 By Karen T esta A ssociated Press - won’t charge him as an adult,” said Mike Edmondson, a spokesman for Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A 15-year-old Krischer. retarded boy grabbed $2 in lunch money out of the pocket The decision to drop the charges of strong-arm robbery, of a classmate — and for that, he could have gotten life in extortion and petty theft Thursday had nothing to do with prison: ;/;■ “ 60 Minutes, Edmondson said, For weeks, prosecutors defended their decision to treat The 14-year-old victim changed his story and his new Anthony Laster as an adult, even though the boy communi­ version did not back up the severity o f the charges, cates on the level of a 5-year-old. He spent four weeks, Edmondson explained. including Christmas, in a jail for adults because his sister The child originally told police he felt threatened and was unable to raise the $500 needed to get him out. in fear of physical harm when Anthony demanded his Then; last week, two days after 60 Minutes arrived to do money during art class Dec. 1 at a Boynton Beach mid­ a story on the case, the charges were dropped. dle school. Later, he said he did not feel he was in dan­ The prosecutor offered no apologies for his zero-toler­ ger. ance stand in the case of Anthony, who never knew his State law gives prosecutors authority to decide which father and whose mother died in November. juveniles are treated as adults, Edmondson said in Palm “You do not cherry-pick the cases, you do not say you Beach County, thè policy is to treat as adults all offenders feel sony for this person because there’s a developmental who are at least 14 and have committed a felony. disability or this person has had a bad family life so we “If it is automatic, they’ve got a lot of holes in their zero-tolerance policy,” said John Walsh, an attorney with the Juvenile Advocacy Project who was appointed by a court to represent Anthony. Anthony did not deny taking the money. He said he was hungry and used the money to buy candy, according to police. Walsh said what was needed in this case was for some­ one to take a look at the child and his circumstances. “Maybe if they had done that they Would have seen that he Was having difficulty dealing with his mother’s death,” he said. “There just seemed to be very little attention to the individual child, No one seemed to care.” , . Anthony’s family didltot return calls for comment. “You scan the country, you rarely find cases this out­ rageous,” said Dan Macallair, associate director of the Justice Policy Institute in San Francisco. “This particular prosecutor is prosecuting kids in adult court that proba­ bly shouldn’t even have gotten past the school princi­ pal.” Earn up to $192 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit modem center our m ore about the opportunity to earn while helping others. 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(AP) — Two weeks after the maybr inflamed racial tensions by saying blacks are unfit to gov­ ern themselves, the all-white town council agreed to annex three black neighborhoods — the first annexations in ITrenton’s 215-year history. Black activists immediately announced they would drop a week-old boycott of the town’s white-owned businesses after the three councilmcn agreed Monday night to annex the areas and their roughly 100 residents. Trenton is a farming center of 200 people on Nqrth Carolina’s coastal plain. The town is about one-fourth black, The annexations will make the town about half black, and activists hope that will lead to the election of the town’s first black council member. “We just want to show people this board is not racially biased,’’ Councilman Charles Jones said. “Let’s put this ugly tiling behind us and all go back to living normal lives where we all speak to each other and are friends.” Blacks had filed a federal lawsuit Jan. 12 alleging the town discriminated by refusing to annex the three areas, called Haiti, Monktown, and Spicey-Quinn Lands. But tiie issue didn’t catch fire until two weeks ago, when Joffree Leggett, Trenton’s white mayor of 16 years, told The Kinston Free Press that blacks don’t belong in town govern­ ment “They are not leaders,” he said. “A black'man would rather work for a white person.” Leggett, 81, resigned last week under pressure from the council. Most residents of the three neighborhoods have signed a petition in favor of becoming part of the town. After die council’s decision, many said the town never would have acted without pressure from the NAACP. “They weren’t going to do nothing,” said Johnson Willis, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. “They never wanted to give us nothing. I had to sue them for everything.” Jones, the councilman, said the board could hot consider annexing the three areas until early this year, when die neigh­ borhoods were finally connected to the town sewer service. The annexation process is expected to take about a year. “This was meant to happen, and I’m glad it happened,” said Sharon Ingram, who lives in one of die neighborhoods. O v e r 1 ,0 0 0 P h o e n i x C h e c k D a ily A r e a U sed C a rs & ( F o r O n lin e S p e c ia ls ! T n ic k s A r e O n lin e ! © sca r P ick Contest m. M #jpi S ta ff P icks James Van D er Beek as Percy E d na lino , Jr. Saving Private Ryori Best Picture: Steven Spielberg, Saving Private Ryan Tom Hank$> Best Actor: Sewing Private Ryan Gwyneth Paltrow, Best Actress: Shakespeare in Love Supporting Acton Ed Harris, U Rj . 1 /' ; The Truman Show Lynn Redgrave, Supporting Actress: Cods and Monsters Marc Norman and Screenplay (O riginal): Tom Stoppard, Shakespeare in hove Screenplay (Adaptation): Scott B. Smith, A Simple Plan "1 D on't Want to Miss a O riginal Song: T hing," Armageddon Si iSi Saving Private Ryan Editing: Best Director: le n n lfe r Jason Leiah as A lyson H u rt Saving Private Ryori ’I D aria as H ayley R ingle C laire Danes as Jessica W o lf Shqkespeare in lpve 9 S h id to ^ d Ê d fri^ ^ B ra nd y as C abby Bass Saving Pmate ■ Steven Spielberg, Roberto Benigni, Life is Beautiful Saving Private Ryan Tom Hanks, . J i :Edward Norton, i American History X Saving Private Ryan 'i Gwyneth Paltrow,. Gwyneth Paltrow, Shakespeare in Love Shakespeare in Love Geoffrey Rush, . » p Ed Harris, Shakespearein Love The Truman Show Brenda Blethyn, Judi Dench, Shakespeare in Love Little Voice Ròberto 8èn{(|ni and SU Mart; Norman and Vincenzo Cerami, 1 Tom Stoppard, Ule is Beautiful Shakespeare inLOve Bill Condon, Scott B. Smith, Cods and Monsters A Simple Plan "I D on't W ant to Miss a "1 D on't W ant to Miss a T hing," Armageddon ~ T hing," Armageddon Life is Beautiful Saving Private Ryan Steven Spielberg, Steven Spielberg, Saving Private Ryan Saving Private Ryan Tom Hank$, jf §1 t f o U Redotifili Ryan Cate Blanchett, Cate Blanchett, Elizabeth Elizabeth Geoffrey Rush, BiH yBbfiThornton, ■, Shakespeare in love H H À Simple Plan Judi Dench, Judi Dench, . Shakespeare in Love Shakespeare in Love ertd v t "Ip * JMffiXiP&SlSÿcIi aridi’ Vincenzo Cerami, i IIÊ Ê Ê Ê m Ê ÎÎÎ^i *î * Ü SI! Bulworth tife ii^ M ittfu i * i Scott Frank, Scott B. Smith, Out of Sight A Simple Plan "W hen Thu Believe," : "I Don’t W ant to Miss a T hin g," Armageddon Saving Private Ryan Saving Private Ryan What Dréams May Came Visual Effects: What Dreams May Come What Dreams May Come Armageddon Armdgeddori Sound: Saving Private Ryan Saving Private Ryan Shakespeare in Love Shakespeare in Love g rjt* , Shakespeare in Love Ek. 1 xr “A fu l tkb Oscar State Press M agazine O scar Pick Entry Form C irc le y o u r p icks a n d d e liv e r y o u r e n tr y fo r m t o M a tth e w s C e n te r, R oom 0 3 5 o r e -m a il y o u r p icks to : o sc arp ic ks@ as u .e d u . E n trie s n e e d to b e re c e iv e d b y 4 p .m . F rid a y , M a rc h 1 9 . G e t y o u r e n try in b y 4 p .m . F rid a y , M a rc h 1 9 ! W in n e r w i ll b e a n n o u n c e d in SPM T h u rs d a y , M a rc h 2 5 Best Picture: Saving Private Ryan Shakespeare in Love Elizabeth Life is Beautiful The th in Red Line Best D irector: •, Roberto Benigni, Life is Beautiful John Madden, Shakespeare in Love Terrence Malik, The Thin Red Line Steven Spielberg, Saving Private Ryan Peter Weir, The Truman Show Best Actor: Roberto Benigni, Life is Beautiful Tom Hanks, Saving Private Ryan Ian McKellen, Cods and Monsters Nick N olte, Affliction Edward Norton, American History X Best Actress: Cate Blanchett, Elizabeth Fernanda Montenegro, Central Station Gwyneth Paltrow, Shakespeare in Love Meryl Streep, One True Thing Emily Watson, Hilary and Jackie 1 I N am e L* O riginal Song: S upporting Actor: "I D on't Want to Miss a Thing," Armageddon James Coburn, Affliction "The Prayer," Quest for Camelot Robert Duvall, A Civil Action "A Soft Place to Fall," The Horse Whisperer Ed Harris, The Truman Show < "That'll D o," Babe, Pig in the City Geoffrey Rush, Shakespeare in Love "When you Believe," The Price o f Egypt Billy Bob Thornton, A Simple Plan S upporting Actress: Editing: Life is Beautiful Kathy Bates, Primary Colors Out of Sight Brenda Blethyn, Little Voice Saving private Ryan Judi Dench, Shakespeare in Love Shakespeare in Love Rachel Griffiths, Hilary and Jackie The Thin Red Line Lynn Redgrave, Cods and Monsters Visual Effects: Screenplay (O rig ina l): Armageddon Warren Beatty and Jeremy Pikser, Bulworth M ighty Joe Young Roberto Benigni and Vincent Cerami, Life is Beautiful — TIE BREAKER — What Dreams May Come Andrew Nicol, The Truman Show Foreign Language Film: Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard, Shakespeare in Love A Sound: Central Station, Brazil Armageddon Robert Rodat, Saving Private Ryan Children o f Heaven, Iran The Mask o f Zorro Screenplay (A daptation): The Grandfather, Spain Saving Private Ryan Bill Condon, Cods and Monsters Life is Beautiful, Italy Shakespeare in Love Scott Frank, Out of Sight Tango, Argentina The Thin Red Line Terrence Malik, The Thin Red Line Elaine May, Primary Colors Scott B. Smith, A Simple Plan Phone # E -m ail address A H IE R A R C H IC A L M O D E L o F F IR S T H E W C A R N E E D S CD PLAYER AiR c o n d it io n s , r em o t e k e y l e s s e n t r y po w er windows & lo c k s, ALLOY WHEELS, CRUISE CONTROL Low MAINTENANCE, G o o D GAS MILEAGE S en tra GXE Lim ited Edition ...Y O U C A N A C T U A L L Y A F F O R D . Right now, through the exclusive Nissan Cam pus Connection Program , you can buy th e Sentra GXE Lim ited Edition with all the bells and w histles a t a package savings o f $ 9 5 0 / Plus you can get $ 1 ,0 0 0 Cash Back on top o f $ 7 5 0 College Cash* (If only your student loan w as this good of a d e a l.) %\/)00 CASH BACK PLUS $7S0 CoLLE6 E 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 7755 S. 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BROADW AY • T EM PE • 9 6 8 -6 2 2 4 O p en the O p p o rtu n ities. At Boston Beer Company, it's w h a t's in s id e the beer, the company, and the people that distinguishes us from the rest. • Sales Representative Bring your energy, enthusiasm and “ go get-em" attitude to this excellent nine month training program with The Boston Beer Company. As a Sales Representative, you w ill be responsible for promotions, merchandising, waitstaff train mg and taste testing. After the training program, you w ill have the opportunity to be hired as an Account Manager with Boston Beer in one of our open positions anywhere in the U S. or with one of our distributors. J t a j t e a j candidate w ill have « ^ » q u a lific a tio n s : . • R e T ffijyflftfaa rotretail sales experience • Ability P ^ ^ W M le c e n d e n tlv and juggle multiple tasks 8 p m - 1am S p e cia ls: •E x c e lle m H Specials • BA/BS p re fe rre d • Must be willing fSf| anywhere in the U.S Come visit us on the Arizona State University ! Thursday, April 1,1999 M a rg a rita s Long Islands Corona’s & Dos Equis a Contact Career Services to make aP appointment or send your resume, ^ by March 15th, to: The Boston Beer Company job Code: ASU-AR, 75 Arlington Street Boston, MA0211ft Fax: (617) 368-5564; No Cover for Ladies before 9pm We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. T h e B o s t o n B e e r Co m pa n y vuito* onourwebsite«tw w w .sa m a d a m s.c o m RJR N ab isco to q u it th e c ig are tte business C rossw ords They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. Page 08. NEW YORK — RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., the foodand-tobacco conglomerate whose brands include Camels and Winstons, Oreo cookies, and Ritz crackers, is getting out of the cigarette business. RJR said Tuesday it will sell its international tobacco business tó Japan’s biggest tobacco company for $7.8 bil­ lion and spin off its domestic tobacco operations as a sepa­ rate company; ■ ’' T he moves come amid rising legal challenges to cigarettes and falling numbers of U.S. smokers -—- some­ thing tobacco opponents were quick to note. “The tobacco industry is in deep trouble,” said Ahron Leichtman, executive director of Citizens for a TobaccoFree Society. RJR said its aim is merely to help the cigarette and food companies achieve greater success as separate entities. The $17 billion conglomerate has been under pressure for several years from major stockholders to separate its food and tobacco businesses because the tobacco is consid­ ered a drag on RJR’s stock. Some investors won’t put their money in any company that has tobacco holdings, out of either opposition to smoking or fear that lawsuits will hurt profits. The breakup doesn’t entirely solve the problem, because RJR can be hit with tobacco lawsuits even after it has shed its cigarette business. Carl Icahn, the corporate raider who holds 7.7 percent of RJR stock, had threatened to launch a fight for control of the board of directors to force a separation. He did not return calls for comment Tuesday . His 25 million shares grew in value slightly as RJR Nabisco stock rose 12 1/2 cents to $28.75 a share in trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Nabisco Holdings — which trades as a separate stock even though RJR owns 80.6 percent of it — closed up 31 1/4 cents at $44.93 3/4 a share. 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Reynolds tobacco company bought the food com­ pany Nabisco Brands. RJR’s international tobacco business is a distant third to Philip Morris Cos. and British-American Tobacco, and its earnings have fallen amid financial turmoil in its key Russian and Asian markets. It will be sold to the Japan Tobacco Co. “The deal will allow us to secure a base for future growth overseas and establish us as a global player,” Japan Tobacco said in a statement. After the sale, RJR will spin off its domestic tobacco operations to RJR shareholders. The tobacco business will revert to its old name — R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. — and retain its headquarters in Winston-Salem, N.C. The resulting RJR Nabisco will be basically a food com­ pany, with such products as Chips Ahoy! and Snackwell’s cookies, Life Savers candy, and Planters nuts. “We believe that the food and tobacco businesses will be best able to achieve their full potential under separate ownership structures,” said RJR chairman and chief execu­ tive Steven F. Goldstone. If RJR had tried to spin off its food assets instead, it would probably have been accused by anti-tobacco forces of trying to hide assets. Such accusations could have tied up such a breakup in court. John Maxwell, an analyst at Davenport & Co., said RJR got a fantastic price for the international business and will use the proceeds to help reduce its $9.1 billion debt. Even with lower debt, however, the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. faces challenges. Analysts expect the steady decline in smoking will accelerate because of big price increases that are being used to pay for a lawsuit settlement that is costing the industry $246 billion over 25 years. In addition, the government is considering a similar suit to recover the costs of treating sick smokers. A California jury recently ordered Philip Morris to pay a smoker a record-breaking $51 million. A class-action smokers’ suit is on trial in Florida, and several union health funds are suing the industry. nnies T h e F u 16 S er ling U . B y C a r l o s R a m ir e z B igger T h a n H u g e C O ecfc& tfg y~ State Press for W ednesday, March 10,199$ B y B r ia n B a l c h u m a s 8*w $ 0 * fo fc ig jS B f C S e t à b & ÿ # / / l IVI rC d f ÍV * 5 « d jf M F (V\i«¿IP S t ic k w o r l d A 1} _ jy 4 \ w v 'K CÛ®^ ^ (3 l9B4 MO. poi’iA+ did you so*y 4o ^oufsal-f ■ " Whoct »$ 4V»iV Cro-pÍ'. ï.W «.ocry, bw4 yo<* oiX cUv%¡co,Uy i»i»we , A4 |6o*s-4 AM'i wKft*r vMy doctor 4él A wit . X qa9S& you're *©+ 4o ht^r N/oices i'm yow.r ^eoicJ e><" *joi*ie4li’> P/eo-se 4wl ^f*e 4o Ewil (uycHé >f4V»e voices i»i i*y K*»di 4lr*l.icli2^öui«ftCo« “ I don’ t t h in k th o s e p e o p le rem em bered t o b u y ca n d y. T hey gave me a ham s a n d w ic h .” “ Y eah, th e y gave me a b e e r.” C h ic k e n - s t ic k B u g Fa c e B y G u r a y A lsac by J im w o d a r k A f io u n w CHESSG/WE Jim W o dark© 1899 Al Rights Rasanm d THE OTHER DMr 0ON*T FEEL B ad. r r $ J v s r AWT Yovfc GAME.- H a b it a t HARRV, ME’N THE GUYS HAVE BEEN TALK'W- - AND WE DONT WANT YOU HANfi'N AROUND HERE NO MORE/ \ ^ —- 5, oo Edna couldn't believe Harriet's luck. Her anorexia saved her from being eaten, plus It landed her some lucrative modeling contracts! H a y d e n ’s Fe rry R e v ie w W a n t s o m e th in g to p u t o n y o u r c o ffe e ta b le th a t s h o w s y o u ’v e g o t class? havoo^ v. 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B a s k e tb a ll, V o lle y , S o ccer, a n d C asu al P L E A S A N T H A R B O R M A R IN A 10 MI NI I I S VVTST OR 1-17 O N CA'lltfflRL 11 UVVY T u llo c k im p r e s s e s a t n a tio n a l c a m p ed the University of Florida 3-1 the nextday and F inland on Feb. 24. T ullock The Under-21 Women’s National Soccer dressed for the team’s 3-1 win over Finland Team now knows the pow er o f Stacey but did not play . Tullock. The power? Tull°ck said the play at the camp was ASU head coach Terri Patraw found out quicker, but that didn’t phase her. She felt about this power in Tullock’s freshman right at home, playing with all that talent. year. Tullock lead the team in every per­ “It was definitely a step up,” Tullock ceivable o ffensive category. She was said. “The speed o f play was very fast. awarded the Pac-10 Freshman Fortunately I was able tp play o f the Year, leading the with that. That is the type of conference in goals player I am — a quick and scoring. player. It wasn’t that “She is a heck hard for me to get ste o f a talen t, but * adjusted.” ' f u p /T h e sm m ^fptityjvas , she is also a Patraw was fpery fastiF ortunate^ heck of a per­ am azed by how son,” Patraw m uch T ullock wtys able to play with Wifesaid. accomplished at T lpt isth etyp e of player l her first national The camp, Am — a tfui^tptttybf. it *\ camp. held in O rlando, Fla. “She made such wasn't that hard for from# Feb. 19an impression that 24, was nothing by the end o f the week she was dress­ bu t soccer: eat, Stacey Tullock, sleep and study soc­ ing w ith the women’s A S U m id field er cer. natio n al team ,” Patraw said, “To make that type of “It was a week basically of nothing but soccer,” Tullock impression (in) three or four days is said. “(We) got up, ate, practiced, came just fantastic. The type of feedback she got back, practiced again. Then the next day back from the national team staff -— hey, was the game.” you can’t be anything but proud of her,” When Tullock went to her first national Tullock would have been invited back, camp, she was hoping ju st to make an but the team was full for a trip to upcoming impression and, in a long shot, be invited trip to Germany. She will get a call for the back. next camp. “They (head coach Loren Gregg and This exposure does nothing but help the staff of the camp) didn’t expect me to do as program and shows the Sun Devils are an well as I did,” Tullock said. “It went really up-and-coming power. _ well,” “It is huge (for the program), and she has T ullock played in two df the three been a great representative of our program games, scoring in one of them. Against and an inspiration as well,” Patraw said. “It Clemson on Feb. 21, Tullock registered a is great exposure. There is no question goal in the team’s 4-0 win. The team defeat­ about it.” B y Sa m G a n c za r u k St a t e P ress -■ S am aruddin S te w a rt o f t h e S ta te P re ss ASU midfielder Stacey Tullock was invited to the Under-21 National Women’s Soccer Team camp last month and impressed, scoring one goal in three games- She played well enough to garner a repeat invita­ tion to the camp. B o n d s , J u n io r g o y a r d a s M a r in e r s t h u m p G ia n t s Lance Johnson and Jose Hernandez com­ , Ken Griffey Jr. hit his second honte; run bined to go 7-for-8 With two doubles, two in three games and Dan Wilson drove in triples and three RBI for Chicago. The Cubs three runs Tuesday, leading the Seattle scored four runs in the first inning and six Mariners over the San Francisco Giants 6-2. more in the third. Sosa connected on his sec­ G riffey doubled and ond spring homer, reach­ scored in the first inning, then homered off starter C actus League roundup ing Josh Fogg during a three-run fifth inning that Mark Gardner in the third. Wilson drove in two runs with a double capped the scoring. Sosa, the 1998 National high off the center-field wall in the fourth League Most Valuable Player, hit .308 with 66 homers and 158 RBI last season. and an infield single in the fifth. Cubs starter Terry Mulholland earned The M ariners, who entered with a spring-best .386 team batting average, have the Win, allowing just a hit and a walk with scored 42 runs on 79 hits in five games. one strikeout oyer three scoreless innings as Mariners starter Jamie Moyer, allowed four pitchers combined on a seven-hitter. John Snyder gave up two earned runs one run and four hits in three innings and Struck out four. Mark Leiter pitched two and four hits with a walk and a strikeout in scoreless innings, and closer Jose Mesa two innings for the loss. Kip Wells, the pitched his third scoreless inning of the White Sox’s first-round pick last year, sur­ spring, The Mariners have given up five rendered six runs and six hits in one inning. At 1-6, the White Sox have die worst runs in their last two games . “Moyer looked very sharp, and he threw all exhibition record in the majors. his pitches today,” Mariners manager Lou Sox blank Rockies TUCSON — Paul Konerko drove in five Piniella said. “He’ll go four innings next time out, then probably five innings twice after that runs and five pitchers combined on a sixOur goal is to get our starting pitchers up to six hitter as a split squad of Chicago White Sox blanked a split squad of Colorado Rockies, or seven innings of work before we go north.” Barry Bonds hit his first spring training 6-0, for their first win in exhibition play. Konerko, acquired from Cincinnati for homer, a sixth-inning drive well over the 400-foot mark right-center. Jeff Kent went speedy o u tfield er M ik e C am eron on November 11, highlighted a four-run first 2-for-3 and stole a base. Sosa tufs 2nd spring dong inning with a bases-clearing double before The Chicago Cubs scored 10 runs in the belting a tw o-run hom er o ff C olorado first three innings before Sammy Sosa treat­ starter Bobby Jones in die third. ed fans to a two-nin blast in a 13-2 rout of a Jaime Navarro earned die win, allowing two split squad of Chicago White Sox. hits and striking out one over three innings. Henry Rodriguez drove in four runs and Jones suffered the loss, surrendering all T he A ssociated Press /Eric Risberg of the Associated Press San Francisco Giants leftflelder Barry Bonds hit his first spring training home run on Tuesday, a sixthinning shot over the right field wall at the Peoria Sports Complex. The Giants lost to the Mariners 6-2. six runs and eight hits while walking two and striking out two over three innings. Pads edge A’s * V John Vander,W al was 2-for-4 with a two-run double as the San Diego Padres beat the Oakland Athletics 7-6 Tuesday. Winner Sterling Hitchcock allowed two runs, four hits and three walks in three innings. Loser Mark Mulder gave up three runs and six hits in two innings, Vander Wal’s RBI double came in the first off A’s Jimmy Haynes. A.J. Hinch hit a solo homer in the sec­ ond, and Ben Grieve’s run-scoring single tied the score in die third. San Diego went ahead 3-2 in the fourth on George Arias’ RBI double off Mulder. Gary Mathews Jr. followed with a run-scor­ ing single, and Greg Myers added an RBI double in the fifth for a 5-2 advantage. Oakland’s Brian Lesher hit a three-run homer off Will Cunnane in the ninth. Lady Voi seniors aspire to win 4th title, go out in style T he A s s o c ia t e d P ress A word, a nod or just a look is all it takes. Then Kellie Jolly tosses a pass downcourt and Chamique Holdsclaw finishes the break with a layup. Or Holdsclaw flips the ball out to Jolly for a three-pointer. Their mostly silent on-court communi­ cation has developed over four seasons of playing together for Tennessee and pro­ duced remarkable results. : 1 \ The No. 2 Lady Vols (28-2) have won an unprecedented three consecutive NCAA women’s basketball titles. Now, as Jolly and H oldsclaw prepare for their final NCAA tournament, they want to make it four in a row. “We.want to go out there and win our. fourth championship and go out in style,” said Holdsclaw, who on Tuesday became the first three-tim e selection to The Associated Press women’s All-America first team. Jo lly, an honorable m ention AllAmerica. puts it even more simply. “We want to go out as winners,” she said. Jolly and Holdsclaw seemingly had little in com m on when they arrived on the Tennessee campus as freshmen in 1995. Holdsclaw. who is 6-foot-2 and black, learned her game playing against boys in New York City schoolyards. Jolly, who is 5-10 and white, polished her game against her brothers and through hours of shooting alone in a school gym in rural Sparta. Tenn. “ Both are quiet, soft-spoken, not extremely outgoing,” Lady Vols coach Pat Summitt said. “At times, I think both of them come across as being very shy.” Not on a basketball court. There they are fierce competitors who stay calm while feeding off each other. They also are confident, as Jolly showed when she won her first national champi­ onship. “Kellie told me when she was a fresh­ man: ‘One down, three to go,” ’ Summitt said. While Jolly is like a pit bull, with bruis­ es and scrapes from diving for loose balls, Holdsclaw is quick and graceful, able to take over a game at any time. , She is Tennessee’s career scoring leader — male or female — and needs only seven points to pass former Lady Vol Bridgette Gordon as the NCAA tournament's leading scorer. Seven more rebounds, and she will pass USC’s Cheryl Miller as the tourna­ ment’s rebounding leader. Holdsclaw also has been voted the Final Four’s MVP the past two years. “I ’m playing with the best basketball player in the w orld,” Jolly said of Holdsclaw. “It's been fun. It’s an honor and a privilege to play with her out on the court. She’s very smooth and smart.” Jolly, a point guard who would like to coach someday, has a few records of her own, including most assists at a Final Four (20 in 1997) and most assists in a title game (11, also in 1997). She also shares the mark for the NCAA’s highest 3-goint shooting percentage in a title game, hitting four of the five she took mostly from NBA distance. She helped spark Tennessee to its 1997 title by returning from a badly sprained ankle to score a then-career-high 19 points in the Midwest Regional championship over Connecticut. “We’re not the typical vocal leaders--‘.Do this, do that,’ We try to lead by exam­ ple,” said Holdsclaw, the likely first pick in the upcoming WNBA draft. And that means not settling for anything less than a fourth championship. “If our defensive intensity is there, I don’t think there’s a team in America that can stop us,” Holdsclaw said. M ark H u m p h re y o f t h e A sso c ia te d P r e s s . Tennessee’s Kellie Jolly, left; shown grabbing a loose balTfrom Ashley Smith of Vanderbilt, and the rest of the Lady Vol seniors are gunning for their fourth straigft national title. FAST, FREE, DELIVERY 9 2 1 -FAST 1 3 2 7 8 J O P E N LA TE 7 DA Y S A WEEK! Hours: Sun-Thur, 11am-2am • Fri & Sat, 11am-3am W W W .G U M B Y S P I2Z A .C O M EMAIL: G U M B Y S @ A O L .C O M MIDWEEK MADNESS LARGE 1 ITEM PIZZA *4. 99* •MINIMUM DELIVERY $6.00 VALID MON-WED ONLY! Evèry T h u r sd a y ! j luys w / any purchase T “ " mI d w e e k " I MADNESS Med. Pokeystix • $3.99 I 4 Pepp Rolls 1 "b o n u s $3.99 10 Buffalo Wings $3.99 Small Pokeystix $2.99 2 LARGE 2 ITEM S PIZZAS : *9.99 ■I a •'.VALID MON-WED ONLY! THE HOTTEST M! Hom e o f the K ille r" Calzone “KILLER” CALZONES SPAGHETTI DINNER07 with salad & garlic bread, 14 . soda or draft, & homemade Italian ice 7 - 1 0 : 3 0 p m E v ery W ed . A M S I 75 Longnecks for the guys A L iv e B and a t 9 pm CornsExp$rim»Thelkm‘t 7ra(Mon 106 E. University Dr. FREE I block East o f MUÍ Ave. DAYTIME on University CAMPUS __ __________ DELIVERY ■ H B 894-M A M A D o m e s ti c s M a r tin is University Dr. $10 MMmum Dekveiy ■ Mama Knows Best , 7 8 5 0 8 . P r ie s t D r ., T e m p e 4 9 6 -0 7 9 8 Final Four 'itili 111 ¡| ‘ ."‘W x Maryland UConn Duke Cincinnati Washington Utah Maryland \ l UConn % Champion M e Cincinnati Maryland Stanford Duke UofA St John's Stanford Duke Utah Maryland UCònn Duke ’ Kentucky Stanford Düke Duke Auburn UConn Duke UofA . Uofk Maryland UConn Duke MtchpnStìfe Sbldhr/s UConn Duke Mchgpn State Maryland Arkansas Duke UofA ■ Atâjgpi State Duke Atikànsm e-m ail the sports editor at w ith your Final Four predictions Classifieds N otice to bur Feeders : Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified: section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. . , ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS GOING TO Mexico Over Spring Break? Budget M exican Ins. Right o ff o f I-10: 1 W Elliot, Ste 114, Tempe. 345-7378 3 OR 4 BDRM © Jefferson Commons, poolside. Take over lease and môve in ASAP. 6995508 APARTMENTS 172 BLOCK from A SU - lbd and 2bd/2ba. Furniture &. utili­ ties included. Quite no parties or pets. 966-8540 At latitude 6 0 ASM Walking Distance degrees south, you can sail all the way around the world. ANNOUNCEMENTS ATTENTION ASU! Make your reservation for fall now. Spa­ cious studios, 1 & 2 bd. Don't miss your chance to live at Tehipe's favorite. Meridian Comers ASU, 5 min. walk, nice studio 1440 E. Broadway 966-5818 new carpet & paint, ceiling fan, 'w_ Short-term leases avail. for summer. A /C $365.761-5025 NEWLY REMODELED lbd, $435/ mo. Walk to A SU, Call 784-1937 HOMES FOR RENT More Trivia... LaCresenta Apartments 1025 E. O range St. * Studio •1 & 2Bdr. * U tilities incL STUDIOS & 2bd p ool near Rural and O niversity from $395 Talco 230-2444 D esperately w anted by In fe rtile , hopeful p aren ts. A ll races needed. A pes 2 1 -3 0 . C om pensation $3,500. P lease c a ll O PTIO NS N atio n al F e rtility R eg istry. ' STU D E NTS W ELCOM E! B E A U TIFU L T E M P E H O M E S 1 - 5 + BR. S O M E W / P O O LS $ 5 9 5 -$ 1 695 J& T 446-RENT 1 2 0 9 W . B aseline HELP WANTEDGENERAL (800) 886*9373 * Pool C all 967-8203 for more info. HELP WANTEDGENERAL C ash iers HELP WANTEDGENERAL to start! • • • • $300 Sign-on bonus! Flexible Schedules! Immediate Start! No Experience Necessary! • Paid every Friday! U f iC U . S u p erviso rs Dobson /Guadalupe Call Laurie 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 Cali 894-0288. Summer/Fall rentals avail. A SU - 3/3 QUESTA Vida, 2story, all appi incl, w/d, avail now. $1,150. Joel 967-6205 CLOSE TO A SU - 2b d /lb a $550, Ib d /lb a $450. 3bd /lba $900 3bd/2ba w/attached stu­ dio, T blk tò ÀSU $1425/m o. HELP WANTEDGENERAL T elem arketer needed to Confirm Appointments. NO SELLING. $10/hr guaranteed. Nat'l Singles Org. looking for enthusiastic, articulate voice to confirm/ reset appts of prospective members. Flexibility needed. PT AM ONLY. Advancement Opportunity Call Summer 941-0500. AZ Ave. & Warner LOT ATTENDANTS 968-6383 3BD / 2BA Private patio, pool, all appliances, w/d hookup near Rural and Apache. $950/mOi Talco 230-2444 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 APARTMENTS Apache Terrace Apartments TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FO R RENT $10.25/HR. C a s h ie r 4 5 6 -1 4 0 0 Now taking reservations for Summer & Fall TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT WE RENT HOMES! * Laundry EGG DONORS NEEDED! APARTMENTS J L o o kin g for a Scottsdale Lexus and Land Rover Scottsdale has opening for Lot Attendants. M ust have valid A Z license, be 18, dean M V R , and drive a manual transmission. W e are a drug-free environm ent i Please call Kelly S - it t 675.0015 creative, In terestin g w o rk • Paid while training • $9.2Q/hr afte r certificatio n • Fringe benefits • F lexib le hours A p p ly In pe rson : C handler U nified School D istrict 1525 E. Frye Rd. C handler, AZ 812-7016 00 00 environm ent? ~ COW BOY C IA O w in e bar & g rill has im m ed ia te . openings fo r i host/,.J m HÓSTESSE&ÌS Lu n c h s e r v e r s ! and LINE COOKs| Call W IN E -111 for in te rv ie w tim es. im m e d ia t e A W ESO M E $200 SIG N -O N BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to p e o p le and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort Is the place to be! • Eve. Hra/Scottsdale Location • No Exp.Necessary •Big $$$$$$$$$ $8/HR GUAR + BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK Scottsdale 333-0109 Downtown Phoenix 253-2100 Ask for Irene (Leave message for same day interview) PAPAGO PARK 3bd/2ba con­ dos avail, immed. T ile floors/countertops. 432-3636 2B D /2B A , $650, Hardy/Umversity. Papago II 2bd/2ba, w/d $750 mo. 226-8875 This should be your adCSU 965-6735 HELP WANTÉDGENERAL RENTAL SHARING FEM PREFD 2 share 2bd/2ba apt @ Quadrangles (Rural & Univ). $360 + 1/2 uti. Move in dep req'd,330-6965. LOTS OF space in this house. Need 1 rmmte, great deal. For info call 897-6561 RMMT FOR 3br/2ba house, pool, Tem pe. $3í>0 + 1 / 2 util. 15 min ASU. 820-8633. ROOMMATE NEEDED- 4bd house w /pool, friendly mutts, near ASU $35Q/mo. 820-5925 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Security Officers arid $ lO /h r G u a ra n te e d Preboard Screeners Appointment setters. No selling or cold calling. Near campus. Weekly cash incentives. AM/PM shifts. v FLEX SCHEDULES - F T & PT Must be 18. Have high school diplòma, drug-free & pass background check. ' _We offer low cost Medical Dental, Vision, Uniforms . supplied & maintained. 894-9884 Apply at: Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. . 627 South 48th S t #105 Tempe 966-0141 Order Clerks JC ’s G l a s s h a s PT & FT CSR positio n s avail. E x c e lle n t cust sve & phone skills req. Must have basic co m p u ter & k eyboard sk ills. We offe r fl exible hours & s t a rting pay of $ 8 . 5 0 / hr. lax resum e to 243-13 9 5 attn: Lisa or Marina, or c a ll 243 - 064 9 x 104 to apply in p e rso n . C onvenient location @ 1-10 & Unive rsity. u 40 needed Immedi­ ately in service and m arketing division. No experience necessary - we train. S i2 /h r + bonuses. W eekly pay, flexible p /t day evening or weekend hours. Downtown Tempe location. For details call Brad 894-1151. SPOKTSNUT.COM G et “Paid to Play” New network looking for players in AZ to represent top names in Sports, Outdoors and Fitness equipment. Toll free 888-205-0432 e-mail * murdockden@aol.com RO O M S FOR RENT HOMES FOR MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 1 BDR Furn. or not- C. Scotts (5 m iles to cam pus). $275 + utl., avail now 994-0622 3B D /2BA , 1578 SQ.FT Block home on, large lot w / veg; gar­ dens. Fully remodeled, w/ o f­ fice, many extras. 968-6554. ULTIMATE EMERGENCY prepareness tool. This portable cook stove is a must for any storage program. $89.95 call 1800-774-3889 1 BDRM- Share electric and phone. Free H20 and trash col­ lection. Cov'd pkg. Pool/ spa. $350 mo. Jeff 893-1651 2 ROOMS (TWNHMS)- $250 + $50 util, w /d, carport, Chris 839-8229. 3BD/2BA, SCOTTS & Mckellips, 2cg. pool, lge fncd yd, nice nbrhd, $425 + l/3 u tils. 945~1586 -"-V- :;:y ' OWN ROOM & share bath in nice home; phone line, w/d,:ga­ rage. 2 mi. from ASU. $425/mo. inclds everything & cable. Male pref. 317-0822 LG ROOM avail in a beautiful house, quiet, clean, all amen., -pool/patio, 10 min. to ASU on •Greenbelt, $450/mo . incls util, cable, phone. Avail. March & June. Jay 941-1806 CHARMING, SPACIOUS 3bd home on 1/3A near ASU & Kyrene sch ools. T ile roof, RV gate, many closets, covered pa­ tio, soaring fireplace, formal LR & DR, tile & berber floors. Quiet street & ho assn, fees! Original owners (A SU profes­ sor) have iheintaned this home in immaculate cohd. Call Judy at Century 21 R.A.N. 844-0600 MISCELLANEOUS COMPUTERS COMPUTERS: DSKTP/ Ntebk, Bundled/ Build-to-order, Train­ ing; Internet/ Cd/ Handson. Ac­ c esso rie s/ Printer/ Supplies. w w w .handtech.com /tcweb/kevinbriggs TICKETS TICKETS AUTOMOBILES TRAVEL TRAVEL lars each or $150 for a pair. Call Paul e 884-9817 for fur­ ther details. 93 DEL SOL- white, removable top, auto, anti-ignition sec. sys­ tem, full power, cruise, ac. exc cond. $8500 obo. 947-3684 LAKE HAVASU Spring Break ’99. London Bridge resort, 2 bdr for rent. Nights o f 3/16-18. Sleeps 6. Was $425/night now $150/night. C all 345-0466 or 393-1510, leave message. LOW COST M exican surance. Right off of I-10, 1 Elliot, Suite 114,345-7378. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL SHERYL CROW tickets for sale Concert is Tues. Mar. 30th at Union Hall. Center stage , Row 20, $100/ticket. Call Den­ ise at 460-3670 93 HONDA CIVIC EX, 100k fw y mi, àuto, pow er all, cd changer. $6,900.462-5515. AUTOMOBILES 99 VW B eetle for $239 per month. Call for details. Fleet dept 265-6600 1995 HONDA, EX 2 dr Coupe red-5 spd. Below wholesale Ex­ cellant condition $8,250. 9561004 or 646-0276 80'S-90'S CARS from $500- Po­ lice impounds. For listings call: 1-800-319-3323 ext. 4740. 84 TOYOTA ÇAM RY, runs good, clean, 4-cyl, new tires, automatic, $1300.412-0103 S 1 0 0 S ig n -O n B o n u s !!! H ilto n TRAVEL Scottsdale Resort A Villas COMMUTERS: PARKING space on Lemon st. just east of Rural Rd. $50 mo. 525^838 ALANNIS MORRISETTE w / Garbage tickets for sale. Con­ cert is on Sunday, March 21st at Desert Sky Pavillion. I have seats in the first and second sec­ tions from the stage; $84 dol- 86 HONDA ACCORD LXI, $1200, obo. LB: 951-0523 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departrs. I also buy. coupons/awards. M ost places worldw ide. 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL F O R s^ L | :_ _ _ _ We are im m ediately hiring for th e following positions. Please apply at 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd. in th e Human Resources Dept., M-F, 9am-4pm. • GSA 3pm -llpm , $7.00 • Bellperson HELP WANTEDGENERAL 7am-3pm, $4.75 S ta ffin g Sunterra C o n s u lta n t Resorts O w n Established staffing | firm seeks a bright, aggressive individual w ith sales exp. to join our organization. Salary (with incentives) and benefits. Company w ill train. . F/T bob r n Please FJUresame ta 783-4071 arman ta 8700 S. Kvraaa M_ Tem pe» 85284. W o r l d " Customer Service-Outbound 5pm-10pm, $6.25/hr Join the SpringStreet Team • Pool Attendant 10am-6pm, $5.15 j A p p t. S e tte r s Up to $ 2 5 /H r . Open Interview: 'Tues. Mar. 9. 9-1 Sat. Mar 13,9-1 j Contact Marie Chicoire at 470-8012x111. Stelling 3410 E. University Suite 300 Phoenix, AZ 85034 3200 N. Hayden #285 (Hayden/ Ij N. of Thomas) 4 2 4 -7 3 9 9 Become a member of an organization that’s redefining apartm ent adve rtisin g on the Internet. SpringStreet is experiencing tremen­ dous growth and is currently in need of dynamic and motivated individuals to be team members as Outbound Customer Service Represen­ tatives. This is an ideal position for students and individuals looking fo r flexible daytime hours. P/T & F/T positions available, starting at $10/hour. Fax resume to 602-941-2520, or Email: Phxjobs@springstreet.com W ho says you can't have it ail? • • • • • • • • Psych & Social W ork M ajors Gain Valuable Experience 2 -3 evenings/ Pi' w eek, 4 -8 p m 8. evety other DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Call Kelly at j We do fundraising over the telephone for worthy causes. The work we do makes a difference and changes lives. Call now to Join our team. Residential Summer Camps seek staff in all indi­ vidual arid team sports: Baseball, Basketball, Tennis, Soccer, Inline Hockey, Golf, Swimming, Sailing, Water-skiing, Mt. Biking,'Backpacking, C lim b in g w a ll/c h a lle n g e C ourse, F o o tb all, Lacrosse, C oaching, G eneral staff positions, office, dance, and gymnastics. Located in the mountains of Massachusetts just 2.5 hours from NYC & B o s to n .C o m p e t itiv e S a la rie s + room /board. w eekend. Pay DOE. GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS Have Fun • Make a Difference • Summer in New England Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package $8-$9/hr guaranteed $10-$13/hr achievable bonus W eekly pay Set your own hours Salary reviews every 6 months FT/PT/Perm anent or Tem porary No experience necessary Paid training Interested candidates can . apply Monday through Friday between 9am-6pm at our Tempe Call Center S u p e r s titio n E w y . 6 7 5 -0 0 1 5 . Call Camp Greylock for Boys (800) 842-5214 or|j Camp Romaca for Girls (800) 779-2070. SubmitApplications To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 A I jjP PT receptionist A large financial service Center on the Tem pe/P hx border has several open­ ings for customer service agents. Will be assisting their Important clientele with financial info. Type 30w pm , knowledge of Windows, paid training, pay increase upon completion of training. Positions start im m ediate­ ly!! Call Pridestaff at 7 7 70 7 0 7 for m ore details. www.needwork.com Take Spring Break off l Scottsdale Acura needs a CUSTOMER SERVICE $8-$8.50 20 Positions ¡Start Now 1 MDSI B a s e lin e Healthy summer • Stay in shape • Work outdoors [ j R u ra l !■ Ta Y o u r — • Restaurant Greeter M ill /C ------- Find it F AST in ther Classifieds 7 5 2 -8 1 4 0 5005 S. Ash Ave., #15-18 (North of Baseline, West of Mill) Bus Routes 66 & 77 If high pressure sales are crashing in on you, ride the wave of success with First USA.As the nationis leading issuers ofVlsaand MasterCard credit cards, we can offer you the growth potential you're looking for in a career. Customer Service Advisors Use your sales skills to provide excellent service in our customer-focused environment, initiative, professionalism. computer literacy and communication skills can get you where you w ant to go with First USA. Bask in the w arm th of our benefits: • Unbeatable Pay—No one will start you higher • Up to $3000 in quarterly in performance incentives • Access to state of the art Athletic Club • Matched 40l(k) • Outstanding Growth Potential • Corporate Casual Environment Ride the next wave of success by calling: T id e S id o 1-877-CARD111 m rn _ _______ First USA is an equal opportunity employer and we support diversity In the workforce m /f/d/v. HELP WANTED- TRAVEL SPEND SUMMER backpacking through Europe, or skiing through C hile. T our packages start at just $999 including air­ fare. Optional C ollege credit is avail, for in fo, call 88 8 -5 2 4 4408 or www.istpurs.cooi HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ 10-$ 12 EASY $$ P/T telemarketing , M-Th 5:308:30 pm. Setting appts for in­ surance agency. N o sellin g, must have great phone person­ ality. Call David @ 704-0283. App't Setters for AC Co. P/t am/pm, $ 10/hr + bonuses, pd wkly, fun environ. Linda 9211903 48th StTUniversity $6.50 +/HR. Preschool or afterschool teach­ er. F lexib le hours. Training avail. Child care & insurance. Children’s V illa g e Learning Center, 949-5552. APT MAINTENANCE for 28 unit complex, working for own­ er. PT, liv e on site, nice apt. East Phx. $100 o ff rent + sal­ ary. 756-1656 Classifieds WORK! BANQUET SET-UPS flex hrs. fit around classes. Close to cam­ pus, $6.50/hr. + good benefits. Holiday Inn-Tempe, 915 E. Ap­ ache ask for Jeff. i , BILINGUAL SPA NISH - itttM trading co. needs full or pt as­ sistant w / computer sk ills, bookkeeping know ledge a +, flex hrs, NE Scotts. Fax resume 342-8095. CAREGIVERS NEEDED- flex hrs. Training provided; Let’s talk. $7/hr. 730-8713. CASUAL WORKING en vi­ ronment, c lo se to ASU , good pay, need basic computer EMBASSY S U IT E S RESORT scon solili Educational Catalog Company Now open the following Saturdays ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS I M, Tu, a n d F 8:30 - 10:30am o r 1:30-3:30pm 9am - 3pm : We have m any great ASU students on staff, and we* want yo u to join oUf growing team! PT and FT positions are open in th ese departments: Dishwasher Banquet Set-up • B ell Stai1 • U na Cook • • Customer Service • Answer incoming custom er phone calls, enter orders in com puter system . Good typing skills req’d. Morning, afternoon, evening, and weekend shifts available. $8/hr to start. FT & PT work available P lease apply iwith Hum an Resources, 5001 N . Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. • W ebsite D esign • Create and maintain com pany website.- HTML knowledge is preferred. NOW HIRING Join a growing company that accom odates student' hours! Call Ronda CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATES 438-4400 Provide Excellent Customer Service and support Dillard Store card customers. ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ sk ills, be detail oriented, de­ pendable, w ill train. C all A1 967-2678. CHASE IS hiring! F/T & P/T positions available with cu s­ tomer servic6, account reps, fraud reps, mail openers, data entry; and collection s. Apply in person 8:30am -4pm , M-F. Chase cardmembers services: 100 W est U niversity D rive (U hiv: & M ill) Tempe (prkg. avail, on Ash). Job-line 902-6000. CIRCLE ME!! Local company seeking IS individuals; ideal for students. Up to $11.25, call 10-4,246-8427. COCKTAIL WAITRESS for Ahwatukee bar/ rest. A pprox. 4 nights p/wk. Fun place, good music; pay, + tips. C all John 893-6630. 6 m inutes from ASU Mar. 13 Mar. 27 • ✓ HELP WANTEDG g J g A L ^ ^ ^ PT Custom er Service Reps United Blood Services, th e V a lle y ’s n o n p ro fit b lo o d p r o v id e r s in c e 1 9 4 3 , is se e k in g in di­ v id u a ls w h o w a n t to m a k e a d iffe r e n c e in people’s lives. Morning, 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 shift differen­ tial fo r e v en in g hours. G ood customer service s k ills a n d p le a s a n t phone vo ice preferred. C all 4 3 1 -9 5 0 0 . T e m p e lo c a tio n . E m p lo y e e drug testing required. E O E /M /F /D /V V Numerous Part-Time and Full-Time openings available operating hours between Sam - 10pm, 4-5 hour shifts. 5 dags a week Saturday or Subdag required. Weekend onlg positions available, work Saturday and/or Sundag for a 4 to 6 hour shift Starting pag $S.2S and up. Paid every Friday. Three potential Salarg increases in First Year based on performance. Medical/Pental Benefits Generous Dillard's Discounts up to 2S96. Avoid Freewau congestinnlll Great location for East VaBeg residents. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL COLLEGE GIRLS wanted for modeling in amateur video. No exp. h e c .^ u s t be 18 years o f age. Call 389-5.187 C ustom er Service sk ills. Gr8 company/ benefits. Deanne 7071880 or fax resume 707-1885 DELICIOUS DELIVERIES Courteous order takers & de­ livery drivers, flex. hrs. Call 220-0000 for info. DISABLED STUDENT needs PT caregiver for inhome help. Patrick 829-0766, GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic, dedicated, and great w / kids 3-12 years. $ 8 -10/hr. doe. 200-8255 KENNEL WORKER needed PT. flex hrs. Must be neat & de­ pendable. 7311 E. Thomas' Rd., Scottsdale, 945-7692. LEGAL COURIER F/T & P/T (M -F, 1-5). P rofessional ap­ pearance & car required. Call 452-1826. FINANCE CO. in Tempe seeks $$ m otivated indiv’s w / exc SWIM COACH & Lifeguard wanted- pt/ft, for summer and year round positions. AZ Country Club 947-7666 MADISON'S IN Scottsdale, due to high volume is hiring host­ ess, barback & cocktail server. Apply betw een 2-5pm daily: 7108 E Stetson Drive. MAJOR WALL St. firm now hiring interns. Greati resume builder. Call Jodi @ 461-5032, MARKETING FIRM needs F/T & P/T. Operations support for S. Scottsdale location. All majors encouraged to apply. $6-$8/hr. DOE. Advancement opps. Fax resume to 941-5246. NEED EXTRA money? 3 to 5 hour a.m. shifts avail.. Valid driver's license & work boots. Apply Ontario Aircraft Service, 2633 E. Buckeye ODD JOB- Take 4 cats to hu­ mane society for disabled per­ son. Please call 839-0426. F IT N E S S T R A IN E R S $8-$10/hr. F /T o r P/T. Scottsdale Tem p e Ahwatukee Gilbert 94 5-1 9 5 5 94 5-1 9 5 5 70 4-9 8 4 5 89 2-8 5 8 2 Specialists $7-$8.36/hr, Wk 1:1 w / A d u lts o r Child w / d is ­ abilities. Eves & W knds. You make S chedule! Must b e 18+, HS/ GED, fin g e rp rin ts. A p p ly in person. G o o d S hepherd, 8 6 W. University #2 16 o r 1628 W. Camelback. Call 53 2-97 15 xt 01. IF Applg today in person bg mail or fax your Resume to 503-5507 Mail infonoation to: DILLARD NATIONAL BANK located betw een Arizona Ave. A McQueen off Elliot Road 3 9 6 N. William Dillard Drive * Gilbert Arizona 5 5 2 3 3 1 $9/hr Guaranteed Customer Service for credit card protection $ New CTR/ • Immediate Openings $ Flexible Hours $ A fter Training $ Daily/W eekly/ Monthly Bonus $ Predictive Dialer $ Tuition Reimbursement “W binen find a new path” Call TODAY 6 8 4 -0 7 6 4 or Fax 6 3 2 -1 0 3 5 : 4 8 th S t. & Southern NOW H IR IN G I i Red R oof Inns EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER will soon be opening its newest hotel just 3 miles from the ASU campus! D IL l.A R D N A T IO N A L BAN K Front Desk Van D river A s k About Our Last Chance* For $500 Signing Bonus EEO/ Pre-employment drug screen * B r in g a d t o r e c e iv e c r e d it Reed a job for Spring Break or after y o u ig etA alM ® Higginbotham Associates, Inc. L SERVICE ¡ + ik J f î lJ ÿ TRAINER « (we^vork around your classes) HK F /f - Ideal for tests.b rea k s^ IP o in te H ilto n l ✓ Must b e ab le to w ork 2 5 hrs/wk ✓ com m unicate w ell ✓ b e en e rg e tic ✓ have 9 P 9 |i ideas « m h fiw to train o ftfe r.. ✓ training WKtf mm 1 I I ✓ ✓ -À GET TO THE POINTE! And find many fulfilling job opportunities. H H ons Foe m ore information, call us at 8 9 4 -9 8 1 6 it South Mountain Resort ™ We offer: f lnteroffice advancem ent opportunities § Business casual dress environment $ Relaxed, professional, fun environment S Full paid training $ Extra hours for extra cash 557-5382 is looking for a student to becom e a fe fo r b o th m positions available. No experience necessary, with Flexible Hours to meet your schedule! For immediate consideration, Apply in person at our Chandler location: 1-10 and Chandler Blvd. or call John Slaughter at T h e P o in te H ilto n S o u th M o u n ta in R e s o rt is lo o k ­ in g fo r E n e r g e tic , P ro fe s s io n a l, and D e d ic a te d in d ivid u a ls to fill a v a rie ty o f p o s itio n s . C u r re n tly w e a r e lo o k in g fo r: A ' accom m odating schedule e x c e lle n t c a re e r e xp erien c e ■Salon R eceptionists Afternoon shifts ■Golf P ro -S hoppe C lerk . . Day Shifts ■Bartenders Flexible shifts - Fax r e ^ ^ ^ P ^ ^ - 9 1 9 8 m jx a p p ly ™ p e r s o n ^ 1oasli 8roadvrayHI»«pe, AZ a >R ustler ’s R ooste G eneral S tore C lerk Evening shifts ■C oncierge / G uest S ervice Varied shifts P le a s e ap p ly in p e rs o n a t H u m a n R e s o u rc e s , 7 7 7 S o u th P o in te P a rk w a y P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 4 Job Hotline 4 3 1 -6 1 6 1 D ru g f r e e w o rk p la c e /E O E HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDG |N g * A L _ _ HELP WANTED: GENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE P/T CUST. serv./cashier eves A wknds. Apply in person at Water'n Ice at 3141 S. McClintock. PLUMBING DISPATCHER for Sat/ Sun. Price A Broadway. Call 804-0600far details. P/T RUNNER wanted for pag­ ing co. in Scottsdale. Must have reliable trans., valid AZ li­ cense, Ins. & reg. Approx. 2030 hrs./wk. $6.50/hr. + 25 cents/mile. Call 970-7676. Ask fen* David. POOL MAINT. Tech, great pay, flex, p/t hrs, fun job. Call 4380258 Must have reliable truck. TENNIS COACHES needed at children's sports camps in NE US. Tf you enjoy tennis A love kids then check us out! We offer salary, com plete travel, room, board. Call 800^4946238 or e-m ail jobs@ greatc a m p j ,o b s . c o m . Http://www.greatcampjobs.com A+ ATTITUDE, sales mgr trai­ nee, $48k+ 1st yr, salary + comm, paid vacation + health benefits. Must have strong peo­ ple s k ills . Training A adver­ tising galor. Fax resume to 4351300 or call Bert 937-1775. PROMINENT AZ female artist needs assistant. .Must have painting experience & transpor­ tation. P/t, $9/hr. 948-6112 A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail. W ill train, p/t. Concern w / appearance, reli­ ability & -personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th S t (952-0585) HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T WORK - F/T pay. Come to play not to work. Day & eve. shifts avail., $9/hr. University & Priest. Mr. Belles 517-1977 A s s i s t a n t for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/t, $8.40/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 perso nal PERSONAL CARE assistants needed am & late evenings w /quadriplegic. $8/hr. No taxés withheld 966-2059 SCOTTS/PV YMCA now hir­ ing dependable A cert, lif e ­ guards A swim instr. M-F 6amlpm. For info, call 922-5474 PERSONAL CARE attendant wanted for P/T york: getting in & out o f bed, laundry, no exp. nec. Hrs flex., pays $8.87. Call Jake @ 884-0444 SWIM INSTRUCTORS for spring/ summer prog. Must be enthusiastic A great w / kids 6 mo - 12 yrs. CPR & first aid cert. $8-$l(Vhr DOE. 200-8255. C la s s lfi& d s 965*673S COLD CALLER, p/t for major financial firm in Mesa. Salary + bonuses. Call Jim at 827-4365. UP TO $12/HR Start NOW at $9/hr guaranteed + bonuses. 15-20+ hrs/wk. Survey marketing in a profes­ sional environment. Camelback A Scottsdale Rd. location. No boiler room. 1-5:30pm M-F with flexibility. Contact Dean 423-0136 Call MS-4735 fa place ywr ad HELP WÁNTEDGENERAL CORK’NCLEAVER OFFICE HELP- must be posi­ tive, personable, A have com­ puter knowledge. P/T $7-9 ' +/hr. DOE Call 200-8255 RECEPTIONIST FOR Pruden­ tial Securities. Pt M-F 12pm4:30pm Great business exp. Call Nancy 952-5150. ' l Social Service agency seeks applicants to w o rk in program s designed to prom ote com m unity p articip atio n fo r in d ivid u als w ith HELP WANTEDGENERAL developm ental disab ilities. W e o ffer a variety o f positions w o rkin g w ith WEB PROGRAMMER, exp. w/ASP websites, NT, TCP/IP, Microsoft ASP, Lasso, 6r Cold­ Fusion. Fax res to 990-1666, email chood@ goallegro.com or • call 990-8881 far interview. individuals in th e ir ow n hom es o r resi­ d en tial settings. W e offer o ver 4 0 hours o f paid train in g and have an e xcellen t benefits plan. W e have fle x ib le sched­ ules w ith FT, FT and o n -c all positions Im agine ; M M HELP WANTEDFO Q D SERVICE a va ila b le im m ediately. O u r pay ranges from $ 7 .0 0 - $ 8 .0 0 D O E/EO E . Please c all 4 3 1 -9 5 1 1 o r 8 6 1 -2 3 8 5 (west Wm \ = Phoenix) fo r m ore in form ation. J SeeWhyPeoplePreferOur Part-Time Shifts!! A4C1WORLDCOM is n ow hiring part-time O utbound T elesales Representatives. If you are a high-energy, career-oriented Individual w h o w ants to earn great m oney, MCI WORLDCOM Is looking for you! W e n e e d Sales Representatives to handle incom ing and o u tg o in g calls a t our Phoenix location. Sales experience is preferred but not required; Is currently hiring for the following positions: ✓ * Excellent Benefits • Tuition Reimbursement • ■ 40 iK and Stock Options • Unlimited Career • Opportunities • Outstanding Bonus Plans • ✓ C o m e into our o ffice ready t o a p p ly an d interview : 1801 E. C am elback Road. S u ite 2 0 t (C olon nade Plaza) MCI WORLDCOM is a n eq u al o p p ortu n ity e m p lo y er. a Baseball ■ Softball • Basketball ■ Aquatics * Special Needs ■ Youth/Adult Classes * Concessions -A n d More... g Parks and Recreation Office 3 5 0 0 South Rural Rd., Tem p e, AZ (6 0 2 )3 5 0 -5 2 0 0 TDD (602) 350.5050 www.tem pe.aov - Interviews begin in late M arch - O n-Site Interviews Every Wednesday from 8 a.m. te 4 p.m. Custom er Service A ssociates Full- and part-time, various day and evening shifts available. Requires superior communication and problemsolving abilities, excellent telephone manner, and accurate PC/typing skills (30 wpm preferred). Data Processing Sundoy-Thuisdoy, 3rd shift, flexible full-time hours. Reouires accurate typing skills (30 wpm m in.), strong analytical and problemsolving abilities, and familiarity with PC/W indows navigation. Deluxe is proud to be an employee-friendly organization. We believe in respect and recognition for the individual, and celebration of team achievements. In addition to paid tuition, we offer weekly pay; immediate medico), dental and vision coverage; and 401 (k), stock purchase ana profit sharing plans (port-time benefits vary). Call our Job Line at 602-431-254/; or apply in person at Deh»e Corporation, 3050 S. 35th St., Ste. C, Phoenix, AZ 85034-7244. We're conveniently located off 1-10 and University. A pre-employment drug test/backgrouna check is required. EOF. Tempe Airport and we’re looking for associates to join our team! Great benefits like FREE food, FREE bus pass & parking, FREE uniforms. Excellent wages in a fast-paced & exciting environment. COCKTAIL SERVERS STARBUCKS ASSOCIATES CUT SHOP CASHIERS FOOD &. BEVERAGE CASHIER WAREHOUSE DRIVER Call today to schedule an immediate Interview: 1-888-HOST-JOB (1-888-467-8567) or call the recruiter at 275-1721x3302 for more info. EOE Drug free workplace M /F/V/D AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/REASONABLE ACCOMODATION EMPLOYER V H o st M a r r io t t S e r v ic e s • Chili/Salsa Çook-Off • Valentine’s Day Activity/Balloons & Candy • FACS Bipod Dri ve « VIP Banqu et » Ten ni s Eve h t • Bas eb ail • ut "O Who Says You Can’t Have Fun At Work? 0 o w í ■*" > At the FACS Group, Inc., we have found a way to combine work and Fun. Full and part-time openings exist for: Part-time days, with alternating Saturdays W e offer: tuition reimbursement, semi annual merit reviews, Macy’s discount and much, much more! (O 3- _ Z 0 A typing test is required for all positions. Apply in person Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm at 1345 S. 52nd St. in Tem pe or c a ll: 929-300 0 co (Northeast com er of 52nd St. and W est 14th St. b etw een B roadw ay and U niversity D rives) Equal Opportunity Fo r All DELUXE eoe J j We’re Host Marriott Services at Slty Harbor ^ $ 5 .5 0 to $ 1 2 .0 0 per hour! Spring into action... P M B U SS E R PM SERVER E X E C U T IV E H O U S E K E E P E R BaBiaaaaia Applications and position descriptions m ay be obtained from : T ✓ ✓ Fax:649-1886 APPLY NOW! W e are no w hiring individuals w ith education, experience, and interest in leading an y of th e sum m er recreation programs th e City o f T e m p e offers! C O C K TA IL S EFIVER Applications are accepted Monday through Friday. 9 a -1 1a and 2p-4p. W e are located a t Superstition H wy and Southern across from Fiesta Mall. W e offer competitive wages an d benefits including free Bally’s m embership, group health insurance and 401 (k). Background checks will b e conducted. P lease m ail/ fak resumes to: Hilton M esa Pavilion 1011 W . Holms M esa, A Z 8 5 2 1 0 » Attn: H R For more information, call our JOBUNE at (602) 530-6459 .. .with great employment opportunities at Deluxe Corporation, the notion's premier provider of forms and checks to the financial industry! We offer excellent tuition reimbursement for full- and part-time employees. Make the most of your vacation, and when school starts, you can work convenient porttime hours, so your career with Deluxe doesn't hove to end! ■ Mesa Pavilion and CREDIT SERVICES • Partners in Time Meeting • Mother’s Day Flowers • Company Picnic • Hawaiian Day Activity • Golf Day • Father’s Day Celebration HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTED- HELP WANTED- D eli person pt, days/wknds, flex. hrs. Exp. pref. but not nec. Apply in per­ son: Capistrano's Italian D eli, 655 W. Warner, Su ite # 1 1 0 , Tempe, Kyrene & Warner. 4969044 HOULIHAN’S RESTAURANT now hiring food servers & line cooks, f/p time. Apply in per­ son 6 2520 E. Camelback 9578490 MACARONI GRILL, one o f die V alley's most popular restau­ rants, Scottsdale/Goid Dust, (1 ligh t S. o f Shea) now hiring servers. Apply M-F 2-4, or call 596-6676 for appt. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Thtm m h o u kl bo y o u r ad _________ COM 9 8 5 -6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL PEPPINO’S NEW location on Apache A Terrace is now ac­ cepting app’s for servers, cashr iers, bartenders, delivery driv­ ers, pizza makers. A pply at 1112 E. Apache M-F, 9-5. HELP WANTEDGENERAL EGGS NEEDED Healthy women (ages 21-30, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2,000. For more information call (602) 860-4792 The hhmoritdUrdon Recreation Center invites YOU to experience Cosmic Bowling/ Every Monday and Saturday Night 8pm-11pm HELP WANTED- INTERNSHIPS F o o D s g R v ic ^ Handle A litouch C ellular 555-1212 calls Directory Information Operator, 25 wpm, Phoenix area knowledge. all shifts. $8/hr to start. FT, MUST love children, edu­ cation major prcfd. N . Scotts. 2 kids, n/s. Brigitte 563-4216 MOTHERS HELPER/ child care, late afternoons, evenings, 3 -4 days/w k. M ust provide own bans. Call 496-8376 Find it ________________ PERSONALS SERVICES ___________ _ PERSONALS 1 1 aw a » jf R | *” "■1 $2,000 and ■ MX receive up to \# C aU 602.eT8.i906 for information ( SERVICES $20-$40/hr. in spare tim e! $100 signing bonus! 800-6000343 ext 1927 ACTORS! Open auditions for student film . A ll types,, styles, looks. Sat 3/13, 4 3 5-2505 dr 2089433 SECRETARY WANTED w good typing, leadership, com­ munication sk ills, for a busy gallery on Nantucket Island, M ass. May thru Dec: (w ould consider May thru Sep.) Room & salary, (602) 991-4271. egg d o n atio n ^ ^ ^ ^ as an advocate f o r the donor, we work to ensure a J respectful process f on Nantucket Island, M ass. May thru Sep. 6. Room and salary 602-991-4271. r JOB OPPORTUNITIES "GIRL FRIDAY", errand run­ ner, light office, work, mother's helper for active home/ offfice th e C lassified s 225-9699 Metro One 1 120 N. 44th St., #150 FAST in BUSINESS/ SALES/ Account­ ing majors- internship w/ft po­ tential after graduation w/Discount Homes. Attitude + effort very important. Fax resume to 435-1300 or call Bert at 9371775. JOB O PPO R TU N m K BUSINESS O PPO RTUNm K^ CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com WORK AT home, be your own boss! Learn to earn 2k-3k/wk. N ot MLM! 1-800-345-9688 e x t 4668 C a ll SERVICES 965-6735 ITS A CLOW N THE DARK EXPERIENCE! to p la c e y o u r c la ssifie d ad ASTCOCOOCAL FORECAST SERVICES by Sidney Om arr ch o ic e proves intelligent!. C ircu m stances turn in your favor, rewrite and review until you are pleased . Taurus and another Scorpio involved, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Spotlight on ability to put ideas across. Moon in your sign relates to ability to be at right place at crucial moment. Y ou direction you instinctively dis- wiU know for certain your love is like. Heed own counsel, Pisces is misinformed. GEMINI (May 21-June 2Q): No exit! Spotlight on legal commitrhent,: cla sh . Of ideas w ith Sagittarius, marital status. Verbal : acrobatics featured. Many twists, / turns C ancer n a tiv e p la y s role, . CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Health report good,, dori t stand still where laurels are concerned. r Push ahead, there are more worlds to. conquer. Communicate with individual in another land. Love reunion. LEO (July 237Aug. 22): Your kind of. day bright, showman^ship. Sexuality. Jealous indi vidual, possibly Aquarian, attempts io bring down "house o f cards. You w ill .1ové a.nd be loved.. Lucky number is 1. VIRGO (A ug 23-S ep t. 22 ): Make repairs; correct measure-, menis, count -your change and check hank account figures. No onq deliberately cheats, but cari .be careless with your m oney. Capricorn dominates scenario. , LIBRÁ (Sept. 23-Oct; 22): Aura o f confusipn exists, investigate claims; be aware o f where you stand in connection with in sur-;, aficer telephone bills. Gemini i iridividuál puts forth plan that is: daring, revolutionary. :. SCORFlQ :(Oct> 23VNÓV. 21): ; Money is on the lin e your , not unrequited, CAPRICORN (D ec. 2 2 -Jan. 19): Scenario features m usic, style, fashion, reunion with loved one. Serious discussions involve. marital status. People sense you w ish them w ell, they respond accordingly. AQUARIUS (Jauu 20-Feh. 18): , Extricate yoursélf from ugly situation. You are better person than many o f your associates. Cease hard feelings toward Leo. Pisces, V irgo, ind ividu als rep resen t. opposition;: PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Professional superiors praise arid promote you. Avoid self-decepT tion, dig deep for truth éóncemirig current relationship..Older individual admires- you, w ill prove it. IF M ARCH 10 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: You áre sensitive/ psychic; creative, ...independent,., w illing to ;fight for underdog, Leo, Aquarius persons play fas- . cinating roles in your life, co u ld ; have th ese letters, initials in names: A , S, j; Current cycle relates to travel, love relationship and marriage.. You 11 be tested* challenged; could participate in quiz program. Be analytical, don t be afraid to ask questions Gf authorities, March and December most memorable for you in l999. ’ 1999,TheLA Times Syndicate • NEED $1000? Got 30 seconds/ Log on C ollegeBytes.com and you’re automatically entered to win! O fficial contest rules on site. CollegeBytes is a compre­ hensive toolbox for c o lle g e students! What are yon waiting for? ADO PTIO N LOVING COUPLE adopted son long for hew born. Stay home mom, professional dad ready for open relationship w ift birth family. Allowable care expens­ es. Shitiey/Drew 800-607-3632 SERVICES 50% OFF dry cleaning bill w / ASU I.D.- biz. shifts $1. Cheap flu ff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner o f Rural A Univ. 966-7454. CHILDREN’S VÍLXAGE Learn­ ing Center & Child Care. 1 free w eek. Licensed facility, com ­ plete educational programs. Scottsdale, 949-5552. THESIS ATO We provide Tech assistance A edit theses & dissertations. $15/hr. 1st hr. free. Call: D is­ sertation Drs. 345-6538 HEALTH & FITNESS FEEL BETTER w /H erbalife Guaraña tea/tablets, $14.75. N u tr it io n /w e ig h t- m a n a g e m e n t 7 s k i n , www.kbriggs.coni/herbalife TUTORS W e d n e s d a y , M a rc h 10, 19 9 9 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Domestic adjustment featured, long-distance com m unication reveals you were right „all alongFlirtation fun but know when to announce, "Enough is enough. TAURUS (April 20-M ay 2Q): Y ou have not been e x a c tly straight with yourself. You have talked yourself into a path or PERSONALS GROOMING HUMANS $3 off W ash, Cut Style (Reg. $20 men, $25 women) Expires 3/31/99 G R O O AZ SKY D tV m g ß & m iD G a T-(3§B)-741 -JUMP wvyw.arizpn^^diying.com Bi I N G H U M WMß0 HAI I -n k? e. i ® Ii I LA__ I University A N S ST U D Io Mon-Thurs Friday Saturday $8 9-6 9-5 InThe Arches __ ___ I S tate P ress Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 ASU Box 6 71502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 TUTOR IN academic English writing needed for MBA stud­ ent. C a ll Julia 753-6828 or 579-6868 WANTED WANTED: ROOM to rent« fern undergrad w /cat up to $500/mo. Need ASAP. Jennifer 461 -0200 em ail: siindevil48@hohnail.com INTERNET URLS KNOW YOURSELF Take a free Internet personality test. www.toknowyoursdf.com C la s s if ie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS L iit t e fte c k u A h Chinese F ood Classified Ad Order Form FREE D e liv e r/ . ($15 minimum). N O M S G , LE S S O I L 5 2 4 W . University 966-7660 W OODSHED I * O ldest neighborhood MHS • C h eap B eer 831B a s e lin e & M ill Please be sure to check yoür ad. Make sure it reads exactly às you V/ish it to appear in the S tate Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S tate Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit WHI be held on account for future advertising. P Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day ■—,10+ days, $1.49 per fine, per day A 3 Commercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+days, $1.60 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a 13rcharacter bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. WEDNESDAY $1 DRAFTS $3 73 PITCHERS Bud • Bud Light • Corns Light‘ Amber 2 TICKETS. 20 BUCKS. HOWS THAT FOR A SPRIHG BREAK? {COYOTES COLLEGE NIGHTS IN MARCH] The Phoenix Coyotes are giving ASU students, faculty and staff a break this spring: Two full- view, upper-level seats at tw o designated March games for only $20. Tickets are available only a t the Gammage Auditorium Box Office w ith your ASU I.D. Hours are Monday through Friday from 10 to 6 and Saturdays from 10 to 4. So grab your buddies, grab your tickets and make this spring break one to remember. Available 6ames Mon, March 15 Coyotes vs Carolina 7 p.m. Thu, March 25 Coyotes vs Washington 7 p.m.