:■% W e a t h e r - M o s tly s u n n y ; h ig h 10 2 , lo w 6 2 V o lu m e 84 N u m b e r 128 M o n d ay , A p ril 19, 1999 Chandler girl experi­ ences shootout up close and personal Quinney shoots 62 as Sun Devils win Thunderbird Invite A S U s tu d e n ts , fa c u lty clean up in G u a d a lu p e o f houses that needed the most help. “ The houses are owned by elderly peo­ Jo n elle M errill to o k her paintbrush, ple and we picked from the list what we dipped in light pink paint and gave a beat* thought we could do,” he said. “This is one of the most fulfilling things en down house a bright new look. The broadeasting ju n io r was one o f I can th in k o f to d o ,” said M ich elle about 600 ASU students and staff who met Ferrana, a history junior. “You can look in front of Guadalupe Town Hall Saturday back and actually see what changes you morning to. help in the Christmas in April have made.” S h e riff M ich ael D ezeeuw of project. Christmas in April is a nationwide pro­ Guadalupe, who volunteered his time to gram that renovates su p erv ise the p ro ­ je e t, sa id h e w as file houses o f lowim pressed w ith the incom e hom eow n­ amount of generosi­ ers, particularly the 4 4 f think what these ty ASU showed. e ld e rly and d is ­ kids are doing is “I th in k w hat abled. The program, great. Taking their these kids are doing w h ich b eg an 11 Saturday to come is g re a t,” h e said. years ago; rehabili­ "“T a k in g th e ir ta te d m o re th an down here to pick up S atu rd ay to com e 4 ,5 0 0 hom es in trash and paint these dow n here to 1997 with the help houses is very kind up tra sh and paint o f 145.000 v o lu n ­ these houses is veiy teers. Sheriff Michael Dezeeuw kind.” “ I th in k i t ’s a of Guadalupe S tu d e n ts and great opportunity to serve Others,” Merrill said. “I feel I never staff not painting took care o f the second part o f the clean-up effort. They walked get to join in on any community Service,” The first event of the day was the paint­ through the town picking up debris and ing project that 60 students from different removing trash. “T his is a com m unity w here a large organizations participated in. T he stu d en ts w ere assig n ed to four group o f volunteers can make a differ­ houses in town. Some re-painted while ence,” Peterson said. He said he hoped by the end of the day people would be able to others picked up trash. Val Peterson, a University representa­ notice the effort ASU made in die town. “It’s a lot o f fun because ASU students tive for the com m unity project, said the project’s board of directors received a list get to do this together,” Merrill said. B y C arrie S everson S ta te P ress Carlos Verdugo,7, peers out his second-story window while ASU students Cathryn Harvey (left), Sara Friedman (middle) and Darna Betts (right) paint his home in Guadalupe Saturday morning. ASU students and faculty participated in Christmas in April by painting four homes and picking up trash in Guadalupe; A B O R backs bill banning Social Security identification By K im Prendergast Sta te Press The Arizona Board of Regents is lending its support to a bill making its way through the state Legislature that bans the use of students’ Social Security numbers as ID’s at Arizona universities. The Senate bill passed out of the House with one amend­ ment, which means it floats back to the Senate. If they confer with the change, it goes on to Gov. Jane Hull’s office where she can sign the bill into reality or veto i t If passed, Arizona universities and colleges will be prohibit­ ed from using the Social Security numbers of students for iden­ tification purposes as of June 30,2001. However, the amendment gives students die option to use their Social Security numbers if they desire. Until recently, ABOR opposed the bill. On Thursday, they voted to support it at the suggestion of student Regent Jennifer Reichelt Under file bill, Social Security numbers would be replaced by pin numbers. Some regents questioned whether pin numbers offered any more security than Social Security numbers since they too can be stolen. “A pin number wouldn’t have a lifetime effect on the student like a theft of their Social Security number,” said Peter Likins, UofA president “We’ve found four instances (at UofA) where the last four numbers wereused illegally. At February’s ABOR meeting, Sam Leyvas, executive direc­ tor of the Arizona Students’ Association, shocked the regents and presidents of the universities by waving a handful of web pages with the Social Security numbers — and in some cases the names — of students he pulled up from his computer. He said anyone with access to a computer could do. the same. ASU President Lattie Coor said none of the numbers pulled off tile Internet were those of ASU students. He added that his staff spent a lot of time checking into it If the Senate doesn’t agree to the amendment it goes on to the conference committee where a new version is written. Then the bill will be re-voted on in both the House and Senate. Ms. Indian ASU pageant w inner honored to represent tribe, campus B y Ju n e D . W St a t e P ress Alyssa Macy, a justice study senior, performs a story explaining the presence o f salmon in the Columbia river during the Ms. Indian ASU pageant Thursday evening. Macy is from the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, O re., and the winner of this year’s pageant il h it e A professional dress competition. Talent presentations. An impromptu question. A ll the ingredients used to m ake the 20th annual Ms. Indian ASU pageant. Seven ASU students competed for the crown Thursday evening in the Memorial Union’s Ventana Room. But there was only one w in n er — A ly ssa M acy, a N avajo Indian and justice studies senior. “It’s an honor to be able to represent my tribe, ASU and the Indian nation,” said M acy, who was also awarded best essay and best talent in the pageant. “I want to encourage others to use their means of power to help my Indian people.” Macy shared the spotlight with fellow contestant, V alaria W hitem an, a ju stice studies and religious studies junior. W hitem an stood in shock after being aw ard ed M iss C o n g e n ia lity , an d the P eterso n Z ah S ch o la stic A ch iev em en t Award — a $500 stipend she will receive each year for the rest o f her life. “T h e a w a rd s to o k m e by su rp rise because it w as my peers w ho voted fo r me,” said Whiteman, who is a member of the Northern Arpano Tribe. ‘T h is is a big mark for me. And I am also glad that my people were well represented tonight.” Although the night was filled with new beginnings, it was the ending o f a good year for Amy Johns Ashley. ^ T u rn to P a g e a n t page 02 i 1 Pageant* Campus clubs and organizations m ay submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. ■ l, k Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. If any of the above information is incomplete or illegible ENTRIES WILL BE DISCARDED. The Today Section is a daily Calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • The Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic offers individual, couple, and family counseling to all students, staff, and faculty in the Cow den Fam ily Resources Building in room 140. Call 965-9373. J j I j g j T I I j J I 1 ! f I I • The Student Development Learning Resource J Center is offering free computer workshops in the I • • • • Student Services Building, room 394. Call the center j for times and information. The C ounseling Training C enter is offering I C ounseling Services. M asters/D octoral student I counselors can assist with career, depression, anxi- j ety, personal, and relationship issues. No fee for j full-time ASU smdents and staff. A $15 charge will I apply to other students, and $40 to other non-ASU I affiliated clients. Call 965-5067. Phi Alpha Delta, a pre-law fraternity, will have a I general meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the MU in an unan- J nounced room. For more information, call 777-1114. 1 Career Services is having “How to Succeed at j Collegiate Job Fair” at 2 p.m. in the MU, Room 211. The University Toastmasters are having a work­ shop on “Improving Your Communication Skills” at > 6:45 p.m. in the MU, Room 211. & CERTIFICATES n cr cam pus “I’m happy that it has to come to an end because I get to pass on the many great things that have happened to me in the p ast year to som eone else,” said A shley, 1998-1999 M s, Indian ASU. “She can meet other peo­ ple and enrich them with her culture.” B e h in d a ll th e g la m o u r sto o d LaVerhe Dennison, chair o f the 19992000 pageant committee. “W e did really well, despite it being such a big event,” said Dennison, o f the ASU American Indian Institute. “These students did a great job and made it worthwhile.” D ry , w in d y w e a th e r fo re ca st as Everglades blaze continues to grow By D a v e Br y a n A s s o c ia t e d P ress FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A fire fed by rapidly shifting w ind burned out o f control in the Everglades on Sunday , consuming 70,000 acres o f dry m arsh grass and creating clouds o f smoke that darkened the Miami area. T h e fire b egan on th e E v e rg la d e s’ w estern edge Saturday, possibly ignited by heat from a vehicle’s cat­ alytic converter. It quickly becam e the largest o f more than 2,450 blazes that have burned 130,000 acres in the state this year. Firefighters from Texas and A rizona were called in to help. W ith ra in f a ll 90 p e rc e n t b e lo w n o rm a l d u rin g Florida’s dry season, officials fear a repeat o f last sum­ m e r, w hen fires sco rch ed 5 0 0 ,000 acres and forced 100,000 people from their homes. M eager showers late Saturday were m ore o f a hin­ drance than help, m aking grass ju s t dam p enough to prevent setting backfires. Dry conditions, with tem pera­ tu res in the 8 0 s, g u sty w ind and low h u m id ity , are expected in Florida through Thursday, T h e E v e rg la d e s b la z e h a s b e e n d u b b e d th e “D eceiv in g F ire” b ecau se o f its freq u en tly sh iftin g w inds. A t one p o int Saturday, flam es jum ped o v er a fire crew, setting the vehicle near them ablaze. No one was injured, “ It was a frig h t fo r us and stark rem inder o f how d an g ero u s th is is ,” said G ene M ad d en , a sta te fire spokesman. E arly S unday, the fire cam e w ith in 100 y ards o f In te rsta te 75, c lo sin g the m ain c o a st-to -c o a st ro ute across south Florida known as A lligator Alley. Flames m oved close to pow er lines in the Everglades and lines carry in g e le c tric ity o u t o f th e T urkey P o in t n u clear pow er plant south o f Miami. For the second day in a row, spectacular clouds o f reddish-brow n sm oke drifted 45 m iles south to down­ town M iam i, where drivers used headlights in the day­ tim e as they m oved through city streets. A layer o f ash dusted cars in the suburbs. T h e re a lso w e re s m a lle r w ild fire s e lse w h e re in Florida. Fires in St. Lucie County, midway betw een M iami and Orlando, destroyed 43 homes and dam aged 33 oth­ ers, forcing residents to spend the w eekend searching ashes and nibble for anything worth saving. M ike and Kim G usrang lived 13 years in their first hom e, a one-story ranch style house, destroyed by the fire, Their losses included dozens o f pictures o f sons, A aron, 9, and Jason, 4. “This was lik e Our little dream ho u se,” said M ike Gusrang. In the northern part o f the state, 35 fam ilies w ere evacuated and one house was destroyed Saturday in a 2 0 0 -a c re fire n e a r P an am a C ity in th e P a n h a n d le . O fficials said Sunday that fire is under control. EVENINGS MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD took what’s going on this week! m o re ? » c a í__ I TUESDAY: Film C o m m itte e a t 1:00 o n th e 3 rd flo o r o f th e MU G allery C o m m itte e M eetin g a t 1:40 o n th e 3 rd flo o r o f t h e MU THURSDAY: B arren M in d Im p ro v a t 12:15 in th e MU P ro g ra m m in g L o u n g e, O p in io n s F o ru m C o in m itte e M eetin g a t 2:00 o n th e 3 rd flo o r o f th e MU. C ollege B ow l C o m m itte e M e e tin g a t 3:00 o n th e 3 rd flo o r o f MU. At ASU’s Extended C ampus, THERE ARE NO BOUNDARIES. WE HAVE A PLACE FORYOU AT MORE THAN FRIDAY: Farce Side Com edy H our a t 12:40 h i th e MU Program m ing Lounge 50 convenient Valley locations. And the ASU name carries the CLOUT YOU NEEDTO MOVE AHEAD. T he MU recreation cen ter has ch a n g ed its nam e! N o w th e sam e p lace y o u lo v e to p la y v id e o arcade gam es, p la y p o o l an d b o w l is called SPARKY'S DEN, Stop b y to see w h a t o th er great ch an ges h ave tak en place! Located o n th e lo w er le v e l o f th e M em orial U n ion . Y o u r Fu t u r e S tarts H ere. M il 985-6122 16 RMI BUT MORE MOW 611188 A rizo na State U n iv er sity Extended Campus w w w .a s u .e d u /x e d 480) 965^3986 Ext. 322 ♦ COFFEE HOUSE A N D POETRY ♦ ♦ COLLEGE BOW L ♦ COM EDY ♦ ♦ FILM ♦ GALLERY ♦ SOCIALS ♦ ♦ RECREATION ♦ Q u o te O ^ h e D a y Local/State “W e w ere so scared. First w e hid in my bedroom , then w e hid on th e kitchen floor.” — Susan Agar, a Chandler resident who had a d o se call dur­ ing a shoot-out in which Officer James Snedigar was killed. — mm wm m m m / ■ C o p k ille d in am bush; second in 3 w ee ks By Erlend A as State P ress Chandler police Officer James Snedigar was shot and killed in an ambush following a Tempe jewelry store robbery on Friday. Snedigar was shot as he entered the apart­ ment where Sergio Hernandez Martinez, the suspect in the heist, was outfitted with body armor and an assault rifle. Martinez, 26, was killed when SWAT team members returned fire, a police spokesman said. Two other suspects, Leroy Campbell and Arthur Larry Lucero, both 24, have been charged with two counts of first degree mur­ der, one count of armed robbery and one count of burglary. They could face the death penalty if con­ victed on the murder charges. Bail was set at $4.5 million for each of the suspects. Snedigar, 38, is the second Valley officer killed in three weeks, and the fifth officer shot in a month. He is survived by his wife, three ' children and a 1-year-old grandchild. What ended in Snedigar’s death started when two armed robbers entered the Crescent Jewelers at 1310 W. Elliot Road in Tempe. While a third man waited in a stolen black Ford Mustang, the robbers smashed and emp­ tied jewelry display cases before they fled, said Tempe police SgL Dave Lind. Employees called 911 and police arrived within seconds, starting the chase which ended at the Sierra Palms apartment complex, 1100 N. Priest Drive, two miles from the jewelry store, police said. , Police found the abandoned M ustang inside the complex and followed a trail of jew­ elry to apartment 1086 where most of the jew­ elry was later found. That apartment was empty. They also noticed a broken glass door in apartment 1055, Lind said. At 3 p.m. Snedigar’s four-man SWAT team threw stun grenades into apartment 1055 and entered. Inside, Martinez was waiting, police said. Snedigar took 3-4 shots in his pro­ tective vest and one to the head, police said. He died shortly thereafter. : Martinez died in a shower of bullets as the other SWAT team members returned fire, police said. The tw o oth er suspects, Lucerno and Campbell, were first arrested on unrelated war­ rants when they tried to leave the complex on foot, Lind said. They had changed their appear­ ances with clothes they found in an apartment, and had nojewelry atthe time of arrest. ■All three suspects were former convicts. C h a n d le r g irl has brush w ith s h o o to u t B y E rlend A as St a t e Press W hen SW A T team m em bers k ille d Sergio Hernandez Martinez in a swarm of bullets, Michelle Strieker, 19-years-old and 7 1/2 months pregnant, was only feet away. Martinez allegedly shot Chandler police O fficer Jam es Snedigar Friday afternoon after pulling a smash-and-grab robbery at a Tempe jewelry store. T he shootout took place in apartm ent 1055 in C h a n d le r’s S ie rra P alm s Apartm ents. Strieker said she was in unit 1056 when two bullets came through the wall. “I was so afraid,” she said. She was visit­ ing her boyfriend’s family when the shoot­ ing occurred. Strieker and Susan Agar, the residents o f the apartm ent, w ere the only people there. “W e were so scared,” Agar said. “First we hid in my bedroom, then we hid on the kitchen floor.” Fortunately, the two women didn’t take cover in the other bedroom, where two bul­ let holes were found. “I’m just glad they weren’t in here,” said John Fox, a 22-year-old High-Tech Institute student, while looking at the holes in his bedroom wall. Police spokesmen could not say if the two bullets were fired by officers or the sus­ pect, and said they w ere unsure if police knew the women were in the adjacent apart­ ment. Ongoing investigations might be able to answ er those questions, said O fficer Pat McDonnell, a Chandler police spokesman. The two women in unit 1056 got a call from an apartment manager at 12:30 p.m., telling them to lock the door and not leave the apartment, Agar said. Later, a SWAT Michelle Strieker waits for police to conclude their search erf the Sierra Palms Apartments. team with guns drawn escorted them out of Strieker, who is seven and a half months pregnant, was in her boyfriend’s apartm ent dur­ the apartment complex, she said. ing a fatal shootout next door that left Chandler Officer James Snedigar and robbery sus­ From about 1 p.m. on Friday to 3 a.m. on pect Sergio Hernandez M artinez dead. (Below) A flashligh t illuminates slain officer James Saturday, no one was allowed to leave or Snedigar’s vest early Saturday morning outside the apartm ent where he was killed. enter the complex. Snedigar, who was the first Chandler officer Sgt, Jon Schaper was shot on Mill Avenue, Agar was allowed back into her apart­ to be killed in the line of duty, died three weeks and on March 22 Phoenix Officer Lyn Butcher ment at 3 a.m., but entered with mixed emo­ to the day after Phoenix officer Marc Atkinson was shot. Both escaped serious injury. On A pril 9, another Phoenix officer was tions. was ambushed and slain by drug suspects. “I’m going to be scared to walk into my Three other Valley officers have also been ambushed after pulling over an erratic driver, own home now,” she said. shot in the last month. On March 19, Tempe but escaped without injuries. Parade displays Phoenix’s colorful UofA police face gay community despite opposition civil rights lawsuit B y Ja n -E rik Sa u e St a t e P ress M ore th a n 70 g ro u p s, 11 floats and several thou­ sand people participated in the third annual Gay Pride Parade on Central Avenue. T h e re w as T in k y W in k y , th e p u rp le T ele tu b b y , on o n e flo a t, and drag queens on anoth­ er. T here w ere the Sisters o f P e rp e tu a l In d u lg en ce, a p p ro p ria te ly d re s s e d in their nuns’ habits, and the Phoenix chapter o f Parents and F rie n d s o f L e sb ia n s and Gays. T h e n th e r e w e re th e p ro te ste rs w ho had lined up at one sp o t alo ng the ro u te . T h ey w ere led by R ev . F re d P h e lp s o f Topeka, Kan. and a dozen o f h is su p p o rters w aving signs saying “No Special Laws for Fags” and “Fags D oom N a tio n .” T he protesters gained little sup­ port among the spectators, who generally ju st frowned and turned their focus on the parade. M ost o f the sp ectators along 1.5-mile route happi­ ly w aved to th e floats as th e y p a s s e d by . A few ASU students took the trip to dow ntow n P h oenix to show their support. “No one should be con­ dem ned fo r th eir sexuali­ ty,” said Steve Adams, an e d u c a tio n ju n io r . “ In to d a y ’s so c ie ty w e h av e co m e to o fa r. P re ju d ic e and hatred does not belong anyw here. T he con serv a­ tive religious groups pro­ mote an anti-gay message. W e should instead send a m essage that being gay is not a sin.” T here w ere also som e ASU students participating in the parade. “ T h is is a c h a n c e to stand up and be proud o f who we are,” said Anthony Lee, an engineering senior. “N o o n e sh o u ld h av e to hide their true selves and be asham ed o f their sexu­ ality.” L ee h o p ed th e p arad e would be more than just a fancy show. “If our parade helps one y o u n g p e rs o n re a liz e there’s nothing wrong with him o r her, then th is has been a good th in g ,” Lee said- “ H o p e fu lly p e o p le can see that there’s nothing to be afraid of, no reason^ to hide who you are.” TUCSON (AP) — The University o f Arizona is being sued buy a Nigerian graduate student who chums campus police unjustly arrested him because of his skin color. Nuideen Lawal, 32, who is black, has filed a $1 million claim against the university, arguing his civil rights were violated during his arrest in January, The Arizona Daily Star reported Sunday. He was arrested by campus police officers who were looking fo r a black m an suspected o l thefts at the Architecture: Building. When Lawal came out of a nearby building and got into his car, which was parked next to die Architecture Building, police followed him to a campus-area fast-food restaurant MM- Opinion mm ■ ^ ■ ■ * Street blockades won’t solve traffic problem on Mill Ave. W e*re c o n v in c e d th a t so m e b o d y o u t th e re i s J p lo ttin g to m ak e o u r liv e s m iserab le. ' L a te ly , th e T e m p e P o lic e d e p a r tm e n t h a s tak en up its m issio n to re d u c e tra ffic c o n g e stio n 5 an d c ru isers o n M ill A venue on w e e k en d n ig h ts j w ith a v en g ean ce. Ju s t a sk a n y o n e w h o liv e s a n y w h e re in th e j v ic in ity w e s t o f M ill A v e n u e o n U n iv e r s ity • D rive. T h e y ’ll tell you th a t th ey h av e h ad to ta k e a J little d e to u r to fin d th e ir w ay h o m e F rid ay a n d j S a tu rd a y nig h ts. V ia C hina. I f y o u h a v e n ’t n o tic e d , T e m p e p o lic e h a v e j. sta rte d e re c tin g b a rric a d e s o n s tre e ts th a t m e e t M ill in an effo rt to c u rb tra ffic c o n g e stio n w eek - j e n d nig h ts. W h ich is all w ell and go o d, u n less o f j co u rse you live in th e area, w h ic h m any o f u s, as j stu d en ts a tte n d in g th is in stitu tio n , do. I t’s a n ice -e n o u g h id ea — it o ste n sib ly k eep s j d u ll a n d d u m b te e n a g e rs fro m th e fa s c in a tin g j a c tio n o f d riv in g u p a n d d o w n fa sc in a tin g M ill A v en u e a n d k e e p s th e sa m e d riv e rs o u t o f th e n o rm a lly q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d s th a t b o r d e r th e a re a , w h ich w e ad m it h as b een a p ro b lem . B ut w e d o n ’t th in k b a rric a d in g the streets w a s j th e so lu tio n w e w ere q u ite lo o k in g for. I t ’s a so lu tio n th a t seem s ty p ic a l o f A rizo n a, r T h e re ’s a p ro b le m w ith tra ffic ? W ell, b a tte n d o w n th e h atch es! W e’ll c lo se d o w n th e streets! : N o b o d y g ets in and n o b o d y g ets out! W e h a te to p o in t o u t th e o b v io u s , b u t, u h , a r e n ’t s tre e ts , lik e , m a d e fo r d r iv in g o n ? A n d d o e s n ’t th is all seem a tad b it e x tre m e? Is an y b o d y th in k in g h e re ? T h e y a re g o in g to j b u ild a d a m n la k e in th e a re a . W h a t a re th e y g o in g to d o w h e n th e t r a f f i c q u a d r u p l e s in | re s p o n s e to th a t little b ra in s to r m h a tc h lin g o f A m e ric a n s u b u rb ia ? A re w e g o in g to c lo se th e f r e e w a y s th e n , s ta r t s e n d in g o u t c a r a v a n s o f ; c a m e ls o u t a c ro ss th e V alley? H a s a n y o n e s e e n F ie ld o f D r e a m s l S e v e n w o rd s: i f you build it, they w ill come. S o w e ’v e b u ilt it. A little strip o f m a rk e tin g p a ra d ise o n e a rth rig h t h e re .in o u r little d o w n - j to w n T e m p e a n d th in g s a re so o r g a n iz e d a n d j w e ll-th o u g h t o u t aro u n d h e re th a t th e m e th o d w e j u se to re g u la te th e tra ffic th a t n o one c o u ld fo re ­ see it w o u ld c a u se is to b lo c k th e streets. S o u n d s lik e a few little sm a ll-to w n d e v e lo p ­ e rs g o t a few b ig -to w n d e v e lo p in g id e a s and ju s t j p lu m fo rg o t th a t w e still — if th e in fra stru c tu re j o f M ill A venue is an y in d ic a tio n — are a sm all j tow n. I t ’s n o t ju s t th a t w e h a v e to g o th ro u g h M ain e j to g et h o m e a n y m o re . I t ’s th a t th e tra ffic situ a ­ tio n s p r in g s f r o m a c h a l l e n g i n g p r o b le m o f j u rb an p la n n in g an d c iv ic o rd e r a n d th e w ay th a t th e p o w e rs th a t b e h a v e d e c id e d to d e a l w ith it is j o v e r ly s im p lis tic . T h e c h a lle n g e is n o t b e in g m et. W e d o n ’t th in k th a t b o d e s w ell fo r th e fu tu re . «Ma» » * * * _ C handler police officer becom es la te s t v ic tim in an open season Earlier this month, Phoenix police officer Marc Atkinson was allegedly killed by three men identified as illegal immi­ grants. This slaying prompted a cry for stricter border con­ trol and negative reactions toward illegal immigrants. F o u rth -y e a r o ffic e r Jam es But, perhaps the easiest excuse for police shootings is Snedigar was in pursuit of three men gang violence and the popular notion that whenever crimes suspected of robbing a jewelry store, concerning police officers occur, it must have been caused when he stepped through a broken by a gang member. I’m sure stories will soon appear that arcadia door and into an ambush. Snedigar’s killer was a member of some secret Chandler T he a lle g e d g u n m an , S ergio gang. Hernandez, was waiting for Snedigar Maybe the killer shouldn’t take all the blame for murder­ with an assault rifle and shot him in ing the C handler police officer. A fter all, the m urderer the head before Snedigar ever had a didn’t shoot Snedigar, he shot a uniform. chance to return fire. The tragedy of this murder lies in the meaningless way in The Arizona Republic reported that Hernandez, may have been covering for the other two suspects in the incident, which Snedigar lost his life. The killer didn’t know Snedigar who also were allegedly involved in the robbery. Hernandez and wasn’t on some revenge-related mission to kill. Sadly, Snedigar was killed for being brave. He was the is suspected of luring police officers into one apartment first SW AT m em ber to enter while his friends tried to escape into another. the a p artm en t. H ern an d ez S n c daigserious a r’s problem. m u rd er reveals allegedly shot Snedigar in an Sadly, Snedigar was killed for Thus far, five police offi­ u attem pt to avoid punishm ent cers have been sh o t in a being brave. He was the first and because of the color of his month and two have died. SW AT member to enter thè uniform. These incidents are causing He didn’t realize that residents to worry about the apartment. Hernandez allegedly Snedigar had a wife, three chil­ safety o f th e ir o ffic e rs. shot Snedigar in an attempt to d re n and a g ra n d c h ild . He They are dem anding pro­ didn’t know Snedigar had been avoid punishment and because tection and they are blam­ p ro te c tin g the stre e ts o f ing ev e ry th in g and an y ­ o f the color of his uniform. C h an d ler fo r fo u r years. He thing for not having it. only recognized that Snedigar’s Irate voters su g g est a uniform represented the law and the punishment he was in lack o f legislation is at fault. Residents want laws to be danger o f receiving. passed requiring all police officers to wear bulletproof vests. Unfortunately, we continually criticize the wrong things. Supporters feel these vests will help save lives in what seems to have become open season on Valley police offi­ W hy blam e gangs and insufficient legislation, when we should be focusing on the one simple truth: Police officers cers. However, what they are forgetting is that these vests are are shot by criminals who don’t want to be caught. In gang terms, they were just wearing the wrong colors. not only expensive, but also cumbersome. What if an officer becomes engaged in a wrestling match and can’t maneuver properly? Or, what if an officer is involved in a foot race Brant Galloway is a senior studying journalism and can be reached at Asupunk23@aol.Com. and can’t catch the suspect? t happened at the Sierra Palm s apartm ent complex in Chandler. I twflm ' rr Kara Shire, Editor Dave Woodfill, Managing Editor Reporters Alicia A. Caldwell -C ity Editor Lidia Kelly -Assistant: C ity Editor M ario A . Lopez ------- -O p in io n Editor Christi Foist —;— ----- News Editor Jeremy Hein -Photo Editor Doug Flanagan -Sports Editor Percy Ednalino Jr. -Magazine Editor Alyson H urt «>■'■ ■ Eriend Aas, Andrea Baisky, Jodie Lau, Stephanie Rtterik, Jayson Peters, Kim hendergast, Jan Saue, Carrie Severson, Gangs Subramanian, June D. WIhite. Sports Reporters — — ■■■■■■ . -........ ■— ——— Chris Carlodc, O n t Currie, Robert Deal, Percy Ednalino Jr, Sam Ganczaruk. Joe Marnone, Nick PSecoro. Copy Editors — — —— -— —------ Photographers........— — — ------------------------- ------------ • Leah Fasten, Soley Hartei, Hyun Lim, Samaruddin Stew art. — — -— ------*— — ------ . Scott Bracken, Stephanie C onner, Justin Doom , Brant Galloway, Scott 6 . Gillette, Stephanie D. Johnson, Shawna Kemppainen, G regor McGavin, Megan Nielsen, Brian Policoff, Timothy Scott, Joe Wadalawala, Brad Whisler. Cartoonists • -Asst. Magazine Editor Production N athan Balzer, T anya Baxley, T om C h e e , Alyson H u rt, H e a th er N ash, Shelley Oishi, Jennifer Swinfbrd, Joanna W ike. Sales Representatives Mike Gi^Hanza, David G oodw in, Jennifer H addan, Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Shane Siren, Kathy W elsh. Marketing Tearn — ----------— — — .. . ----------- — ----------- A m b er K nuth, Susan Schimmel. Columnists— «—— — — paper are n o t necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Brian Fairrington, C arlos Ramirez. G uray Alsac, Brian B akhum as, C a rrie L B ehrens. B ruce C rosby, Ami W right. Classifieds — — — «— ■ — —— — — -------- — - Kate Desio, Amanda G reen, Paul Holley. Megan LebeL T he State Press is published M onday th rough Friday during th e aca­ dem ic year, e x c ep t holidays a nd exam periods, a t M atthew s C e n te r, Room 2, A rizona S ta te University, T em pe, Arte.. 8 52871502. W e d o n o t a n sw er questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this news- Student Media Phone N um bers----965-2292 Slate Press Newsroom 965-1695 State Press Magazine 965-7572 Student Media Information 965-6555 Advertising 965-6735 Classifieds http://www.statepress.com O n the web E-mail stpress@ asu.edu Opinion wm m I | warn ■■ trmiirmmmm m m m m | 11 A S U ’s su n scre e n : an e x e rc ise in th e tric k y a rt o f fre e ad vice / ^ V f a ll th e ■ I pop songs re le a s e d so fa r th is y ear, th e one w ith the m o s t w o rd o f m outh has to be “ E v ery b o d y ’s F re e to W e a r S u n s c r e e n .” If you d o n ’t recog­ n iz e th e song by its unusual title , yo u ’d probably still recognize it by its unusual spoken-w ord lyrics. The song is currently num ber 10 on the B illboard Adult Top 40. W hile the single is the brainchild o f A u s tr a lia n film d ir e c to r an d soundtrack producer Baz Luhrmann, : the lyrics actually come from a July 1997 o p in io n c o lu m n w ritte n by C hicago Tribune jo u r n a lis t M ary Schm ich. The colum n becam e a hot item on the In tern et, when students started e -m a ilin g co p ie s to th e ir frie n d s, believing it was the work o f author K urt Vonnegut Jr. This was merely a rum or, but the rum or caught the attention o f Luhrmann, who eventu­ ally learned the true identity o f the w rite r. S c h m ic h g a v e L u h rm a n n perm ission to use her words over a re c o rd s a m p le fo r a c o m p ila tio n album. L uhrm ann then hired A ustralian actor Lee Perry, to extol the virtue o f s u n s c r e e n a n d o f f e r v a r io u s p e a r ls o f w is d o m in a s e r ie s o f m onotone non-sequiturs. In the original colum n, Schm ich sa id h e r in te n tio n w as to w rite a sem i-serious com m encem ent speech to c o lle g e g ra d u a te s. She e n c o u r­ aged anyone over 26 to try writing one as well. This gave me the idea to put to g eth er my own version o f “ T h e S u n sc re e n so n g ” fo r all th e students here at ASU. O f c o u r s e , g iv in g fre e a d v ic e should alw ays be considered im po­ lite. So, I prefer to think o f this as an exercise. Here goes ... Ladies and Gentlem en o f Arizona State University: • U se c o n d o m s. If th is n eeds any f u r t h e r e x p la n a tio n , th e n y o u shouldn’t be having sex at all. • N e v e r b o rro w m oney from y our friends. It’s the fastest way to lose their respect. • Take notes. • Hug at least one person everyday. • D on’t ask how som eone is doing unless you really want to know. • A d ic tio n a ry is th e o n ly B ib le you’ll ever need. • Quit smoking. • E xpect m ore from y o u rse lf than others expect from you. • Say excuse me. • When taking a test, look for infor­ m ation in one q u estion that m ight help you answer another. • Change your ASU ID number. • W alk your bike on campus. • Open a savings account. 4 1 When you're behind the wheel of a car, imagine you're a mother of three with a baby in the back seat, driving to pick up your two other chil­ dren from school. A sk for permission. • L earn to ap p reciate y o u rse lf for who you are. Trying to be someone y o u ’re not only leaves you feeling em pty and resentful. • D on’t w atch Jerry Springer. I t’s v o y e u ris tic e x p lo ita tio n th a t gets more distasteful everyday. • Practice what you preach. • Find som ething that you love to do and get paid for it. • D on’t com plain. •W hen y o u ’re in the com puter lah, d on’t leave the little sign on top of the monitor. • In 10 years, people w ill com pare Phoenix to Los Angeles, but not in a good way. • Try not to use slang if you don’t re a lly k now w h a t y o u ’re say in g . W ord to your mother. • Never eat lunch before a political science class. • Avoid Tucson. • It’s okay to adm it that you have no idea where Kosovo is. • See The Matrix. •Go to that boring class with a smile on yo u r face. It m ight m ake yo u r instructor more enthusiastic. • P r o c r a s tin a tio n is a d is e a s e . •Organization is the cure. • R ace, G ender. R e lig io n . Sexual preference. These are all clothes we p u t o n . U n d e rn e a th , w e ’re a ll naked. • Chew with your m outh closed. • D on’t let subtitles intim idate you. • L iv e in S e a ttle o n c e , b u t leav e before you get addicted to caffeine and anti-depressants. • Read. • Think before you speak. • W hen you’re behind the wheel o f a I c a r, im a g in e y o u ’re a m o th e r o f 1 three with a baby in the back seat, d riv in g to pick up your tw o other children from school. 1 • Ask for permission. •D on’t think about w hat you’ll say next, when you should be listening. •Ask yourself if that thing you really want is som ething you really need. Then buy it anyway. • Send a Thank You letter. • Prepare y o u rse lf fo r d isa p p o in t­ ment. • Trust your parents. • T e ll y o u r frie n d s to c h e c k o u t Barren Mind Improv. • E n te r y o u r th re e -d ig it y e a r and term code. • Paint your toenails. •A lw ays te ll the truth. L ying isn ’t necessary. • L adies, tell the m en in your life what you want. Be specific. Men are b e tte r at m aking you happy w hen th ey can b re a k the p ro c e ss dow n into logical parts. • Gentlemen, cheating on your girl­ f r ie n d is a lw a y s w ro n g . U n le ss Jennifer Lopez tells you that sh e’s madly in love with you. • L e a rn fro m y o u r m is ta k e s . E s p e c ia lly th e o n e s y o u h a v e n ’t made yet. W h e th e r y o u ta k e an y o f my advice or not is entirely up to you. O b v io u sly , I have no ev id en ce to support any o f these statem ents. O f course, if you live in A rizona, no one should have to tell you to wear sunscreen. But trust me on the condoms. Timothy Scott is a sophomore studying journalism and can be reached at tscott@imap4.asu.edu W hat D oyou W ebsite: http://w w w .statepress.com E-mail; m aralop @ im ap2.asu.edu Mail: G ripe Line: Letters to the Editor Arizona State University 15 M atthew s C enter Tem pe, A Z 85 287-1502 965-6881 T he State Press w elcom es and en courages w ritte n response from o u r readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than tw o pages to be eligible fo r publication. Please, include your full name, ID number, class standing, major (or affili­ ation with th e U niversity) and phone num ber. R eq u ests fo r anonym ity will be g ran ted only w ith an Fax: 965-8484 appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page edi­ to r fo r factual e rro rs and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual e rro rs will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use e-mail, Gripe Line, Fax o r our w ebsite for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for w ritten purposes. OS L e tte rs E d ito r A m id sthistory... Sixty-four Albanian refugees were killed by a mistaken NATO aiisnike. Tens of thousands of other refugees are waiting in misery along the borders of their native Kosovo - - no shelter, little fond, separated from their families The headlines of borre» and pictures of sobbing children have become all too familiar in the past weeks. Meanwhile, ASU hosted a Brnwatch audition on Hayden Lawn. As I listened to conversations revolving around tans and Pamela Andersen, I cringed. While I know that the activities on Hayden I awn are not meant to demonstrate the core values of ASU. they are a very real picture of where our focus is as a university. And right now, that locus needs a readjustment. Other than a few discussions in classrooms or the recent demonstration by Serbian students, the ASU community seems sadly oblivious to the crisis exploding in the Balkans. Perhaps many have purposely chosen to keep themselves aesthetically distanced. ( Jr maybe others do not consider this situation particularly relev ant to their own plight in life But as a student of history. I say that both of those rea­ sons are merely facades for the simple lack of education and understanding. As we look back at moments in history, such as World War D and the Holocaust, we condemn those who chose to keep themselves “aesthetically distanced” from the atrocities happening in Nazi territory We ask the question. “Why didn’t we do something sooner?” Or we look at headlines from yellowed newspapers proclaiming news o f the bomb­ ing of Pearl Harbor or D-Day and yvonder what it was like for the readers of those headlines .. knowing they were in the middle of history. We are there... we are in the middle of history And we, as college students, with inquisitive minds and all the resources offered at a major university, have an opportunity to educate ourselves about the situation in the Balkans and through this education, become equipped for action Perhaps, instead o f hosting radio stations or Baywatch auditions, we should encourage discussion panels or estab­ lish frutdraising projects for relief efforts. There is a huge, hurting world out there .. beyond our Arizona sunshine and plans for summer vacation. Take a moment and allow yourself to learn a little about the Balkans, to ache for all the victims in this struggle, to be moved to action and to claim a piece of this moment in htstory as your own. Without knowledge, compassion and action, the head­ lines of today’s newspaper will be only a distant reminder, 30 years from now, of one of the greatest horrors to close the doors ot the twentieth century. (Cameron K erg er Junior ¡j SH State Press for Monday, Aprili?, (999' Russia ...l and some questions am writing to express my growing concern over the involvement arid possible further buildup of troops into the Balkan area Although ray h e a t goes out to the thousands of ethnic Albanians who have suffered at the hands of ethnic Serbs in the Kosovo area, there are still some questions that come to mind when wondering about our role as peacekeep­ ers in this vdatfle area. Why. is our country, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), deciding to use brutal force on a country that is not even one of the nineteen member countries? How ate massive bombing runs and the destruction o f the cities from which many of these ethnic Albanians live going to help these people after the conflict? Who will help rebuild | after the conflict has ended and who will foot the bill tor it? How will committing U S. ground-fighting forces stop | the overall bloodshed within die region ? Will it not only con­ tribute to further loss of life in the area? § How could it be that our political elite even tolerate a pos | sible vote in Congress to send these troops when out national | security and interests ate not threatened? 1 Would it not he more to everybody's advantage, for I example, to divert about a F-l 11’s worth of funding to some I real hutnaiittaiian aid? | The answers to these questions are not very clear to me at this time, however, peace can only be achieved in this if the people that live in this region really want it. The U S./NATO forces have the means to acquire this peace, but at what cost? Surely, the American public is not in favor of long-term Commitment of troops within an area that could prove to be more of a burden to take care of than wc are actually willing to accept Although my sense of duty for my country is present, my sense of duty for the security o f another country— especial­ ly when engagement could lead to military involvement with a re large country to die Bad —-is not. If the course of action for combating genocide is to engage militarily with that country — even if it is not a member of NATO (and perhaps, not subject to their rules), why did NATO and die United States stand idly by to watch the genocide unravel in the African nation of Rwanda? Ryan S . A rp G n á n ta stu d tn t Unclassified MM B » ...........•••• h i a •• . • ì s m 1 1 ib i is ■ i m a im Day-camp program helps unite A SU , local schools B y J o d ie L a o St a t e P ress Take 50 elementary students, throw in 23 ASU Camp Sparky members and what do you get? A lo t o f fu n an d in s p ir a tio n , s a id V ic to r D ia z , c o - d ir e c to r o f C am p Sparky’s third day-camp. “W e’re trying to educate them and at the same time have fun with them,’’ said Diaz, a broadcast journalism freshman. “W e’re trying to give them the same opportunity drat other school children have.” Camp Sparky counselors spent Friday at Lowell Elementary School in Mesa teach­ ing students about how the m edia affect their community. This was just one o f the four day-camps planned for this semester. The organization began during the fall 1997 sem ester and has since grown to 40 members. “The purpose is to enrich the lives and in s p ire su c c e ss w ith in kids, in th e metropolitan area, and that’s through our community outreach,” said Brent Maddin, Camp Sparky’s co-founder and a biology and society senior. T he A SU students helped the fourth through sixth graders create mock broad­ casts and newspapers. The elementary students took roles as broadcast announcers, writers and reporters on the news shows. Each show addressed problems that happened at the elementary school, such as vandalism, bike thefts, lit­ tering and recycling problems. “T h is g iv es them a ch an ce to th in k about th eir com m unity, w hich d o e sn ’t h appen a lo t,” said p sy ch o lo g y ju n io r Diana Zakrzewski. The newspapers gave the kids an oppor­ tunity to personally reflect on communityrelated issues and things that happened to them , said B rie S m ith, an arch itectu re freshman and co-director o f Friday’s camp. During lunch, the students participated in a team-building activity where each stu­ dent had a disability — such as being mute, blind or having a missing arm. S m ith said th e a c tiv ity em p h asized teamwork; each student had to help another so they could get their food and eat. Twelve-year-old Ageda Gonzalez said from “being tied up,” she learned “to be friendly to friends and others.” Teachers at Lowell Elementary said they were impressed with the program. “These are real-life college students who are giving to the com m unity and having fun at the same tim e,” fifth-grade teacher Christel Arbogast said. S ixth-grader D ianne D ow ns said the Camp Sparky counselors were role models. M ost o f the young students d o n ’t have older brothers, sisters or family members that are “college people.” D iaz said this com m unity service is for the kids, but there is another purpose behind Cam p Sparky. “W e’re bridging the huge gap between the community and A SU ,” he said. “W e’re form ing a bond th at probably w o u ld n ’t be form ed any other way.” Smith said this benefits the receivers as well as the givers. “It gives us counselors an opportunity to go into the Valley and work with these kids, to build relationships with them. And it’s good for them because they wouldn’t normally have this opportu­ nity for these programs,” Smith said. p S / IO C I * j u s t m in u t e s a w H a C o a H H ||H H k g e has classes available in Enj H istory, C «tH É M lM É )i< and other d iscip lin es. Day; M CE;aá'^óútltern & D obson M ^ M B S H B ib u n ta in D ow ntown C anter/C ountry C lub & Brown in tern et classes Get com plejHHpsnsfer and lH ||tr a tio n inform ation right on the A SU c a J H L P ick u p a MCC sch ed u le at th e follow in g registrar sites and us & £ “ C om m unity d f H lH H H p e ” to e n r o jfH p h on e. :gÌ8trar’s Site C a ll t o I liO-461 First Summer Session b e p á J u n e 1 ,1 9 9 9 aunity College A Maricopa 1f f l ^ a r i c o p a Community CoU^n| Autrici is an EEO/AA institution. opportunity E A R N that lets $ 5 0 0 IN 2 W E E K E N D S you be an individual MAKE A DIFFERENCE BY ASSISTING MEDICAL RESEARCH You can be part of a medical research study at MDS Harris and earn $ 5 0 0 IN 2 W EEKENDS. By participating, you can help improve the quality of life for people around the world. 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W e need professionals to jo in ou r 12 0 0 + em ployees in a fast-paced and fun en viro n m en t MDS Harris Insight SoSSnshSot 6 8 2 0 S o u th M a ri A v e n u e (N e a r l-IO a n d E llio t R d .)T e m p e ,A Z 8 5 2 8 3 F a x : 6 0 2 -9 0 2 -1 1 5 7 e -m a il: re c ru it@ in s ig h t.c o m Together, W e're Making Lives Better 4639 South 36th Street, Phoenix www.mdsharris.com/rcrt/recruit.htm S ta te P re u fo rM o n d a y , A p r i l l 9 , 1999 forSunday Tem pe Police reported th e fo llo w in g incidents Sunday: • A Tempe man was arrested Thursday at 2nd Month FREE Free LOCK Y ou can b an k o n u s! C 6N T E O N B io - S e r v ic e s , f n c. rep o rters J a n -E r ik Sa u e a n d C arrie Severson 6 m e n o rd e re d to pay $ I m illio n to sex slaves Earn up to $ 1 9 2 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit our friendly, modern center and find out mofe abouFthe opportunity to earn cash while helping others. As part of a Company research program, an experi­ mental test will be performed on your plasma which could potentialy benefit plasma product recipients in the years to j I come! Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate plasma 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 • Tempe 202 Baseline Road on charges of disor­ d e rly c o n d u c t. H e a n d h is ro o m m ate engaged in a night-tim e wrestling match, when the man started banging at apart­ m ent doors and yelling. He was tra n s­ ported to the Tempe City Jail. • P o lic e a r r e s te d a T em p e m an W ednesday on charges o f possession of narcotic drugs. He also had two active m is d e m e a n o r w a rra n ts w ith th e Scottsdale Police D epartm ent. The man was booked into the Tempe City Jail. • P o lic e a rre s te d tw o T em p e w om en W ednesday at 401 W. Baseline Road on charges o f urban camping. An investiga­ tion showed they were sleeping on a rug. Both had been warned by officers before. « A Tempe man was arrested Thursday at 626 T aylor for possession o f marijuana. Police reportedly observed him smoking a m arijuana cigarette. He then proceeded to throw the cigarette away and flee the prem ises. A fter a short pursuit, he was cau g h t in the street o u tsid e the a p a rt­ m ent. He w as boo k ed in to the T em pe City Jail. • P o lic e a r r e s te d a T e m p e m an W ednesday on charges o f driving under the influence o f alcohol. Officers pulled him over and noticed signs that he had been drinking. • A Tem pe man was arrested Thursday on charges o f giving false inform ation to police. The man was involved in a fight with his roommate when police arrived. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. Police reports compiled by S ta te P ress 968-6139 M u s t b e 1 8 -4 9 y e a rs o f a g e , p o s s e s s a v a lid ID a n d p ro o f o f lo c a l a d d re s s & S o c ia l S e c u rity n u m b e r. 1999 NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE WEEK % WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Six men who admitted forcing 17 women and girls into a prostitution-slavery ring were ordered to pay a total o f SI million to the victims. The six men, who pleaded guilty to helping run brothels in Florida and South C arolina, were also sentenced Friday to between 2 1/2 and 6 1/2 years in prison. The ringleader, Rogerio Cadena, 52, pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate the w om en’s civ il rights and was sen ­ tenced three w eeks ago to 15 years in prison and also ordered to pay $1 m il­ lion. ■ Prosecutors said C adena’s organiza­ tio n s m u g g le d th e w o m e n , so m e as young as 14, to the United States from M exico with prom ises o f steady work, then forced them into prostitution from 1996 to 1998. The victims had sex with as many as 130 men a week, prosecutors said. The women were allowed to keep only S3 of the $20 to $25 charged by C adena’s men, and the $3 went back to- the organization for room and board. The ring was discovered when two 15year-old girls escaped and found th eir way to the Mexican consulate. Monday Hosted by: N a tiv e American Business O rganization 1 1 '3 0 a m - Yellowbird Dancers (Apache) 12:30p.m . - Yoloincuahtli (Aztec Dancers) > 1:15p.m . - Ms. Indian Arizona Fifth Annual Recognition Banquet \\ - 7p.m . in Alumni Lounge, M U - Keynote Speaker - Jerri Bruneo-Samson NATIVE AMERICAN VOICES U N ITED ” Tuesday Hosted by: American Indian Council 1 1:00a.m . - Clan-Destine (Band) • 12:00p.m .>-Derrick Davis; H o p i/C h o e ta w W orld Champion Hoop Dancer, 12:45p.m . - Desert Rumble Drum Group A m e r ic a n I n d ia n C o u n c il :. • -..•; A RIZON A ST A T E Wednesday ÜN1VERS1TY Hosted by: American Indian Social W ork Student Assoc. 10:30a.m . - Spirit Mountain Dancers . from Ft. M cDow ell 1 1 :30a.m . - Robert Torres' Chaak Button Blanket Thlingit Dancers from Alaska 12:30p.m . - Featured Speaker - Dr. Frank Dukepoo, N AU 1:30p.m . - Eric Manuelito, Flute Soloist APRIL 19-23 HAYDEN LAWN Funding Provided BY: Thursday Hosted by: Am erican Indian Science & Engineering Society W assaja Gift ASASU MCAPB Office o f Senior Vice Provost Cultural Diversity Committee American Indian Council 1 1a.m. - Bluff Elementaiy Youth Dance Group 12a.m. - Featured Speaker - Cheryl Tofpi (Sac and Fox), Honeywell Satellite Systems Sponsored by: American Indian American Indian Native American American Indian American Indian Friday Institute Graduate Student Council Business Organization Social Work Student Assoc. Science & Engineering Society Hosted by: - Am erican Indian G raduate Student Council K II A n H 1 1a.m. " Akina (Contemporary Band) a n y q u e s t io n s Featuring Keith Secóla c a ll 9 6 5 - 8 0 4 4 1 2 P .m. - Featured Speaker - AAA Jaimes-Guerreo Alleged white supremacists’ trial enters defense phase By P eggy H arris A sso c ia ted P ress LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Two men accused of committing a murderous crime spree as part of a plot to set up a whitesonly nation face a tough road as their defense opens this week. Both their mothers testified for the prosecution. One placed her son near the scene of three 1996 murders. The other told the mostly black jury her son took part in the killings. “God won’t let me live with it anymore,” Gloria Kehoe told her son, Chevie Kehoe, in front of jurors. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Kehoe, 26, of Colville, Wash., and Danny Lee, 26, of Yukon, Okla., who are accused of racketeering, conspiracy and murder. T he trial resu m es T uesday, skipping today, a key anniversary in white supremacist circles: April 19 marks the start o f the A m erican R evolution at the B attle o f Lexington in 1775, the fiery federal raid on the Branch Davidians at Waco, Texas, in 1993, and the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building in 1995. Court officials say the day off is only to give defense lawyers time to study the vast amount of prosecution evi­ dence: more than 150 witnesses and hundreds of exhibits. The government alleges the two young white men were out to overthrow the federal government and set up a new nation, based in the Pacific Northwest, that would bar peo­ ple of African, Asian, Hispanic or Jewish descent. Kehoe and Lee are accused o f the January 1996 robbery and killings o f gun dealer W illiam M ueller, his wife, Nancy, and her 8-year-old daughter, Sarah Powell, in the northwest Arkansas town o f Tilly. The victim s’ decom posed bodies w ere found in an Arkansas bayou. Plastic bags had been taped over their heads. The prosecution says Kehoe and Lee believed Mueller might have been a governm ent inform ant and his wife might have been part American Indian. Jurors also have been told that: • Kehoe and Lee detonated a bomb outside City Hall in Spokane, Wash , and were disappointed that it didn’t cause much damage or reaction. • Lee talked about killing people “down South*’ with whom he had trouble. • Kehoe said in a television interview that white people are morally superior. • Kehoe feared he m ight have to kill his ow n wife because she might be part Indian. He also allegedly talked o f killing his parents to get their gun collection and of killing his brother, Cheyne, who has testified against him. The two Kehoe brothers were convicted in Ohio of crimes related to a shootout with police. The shootout was video­ taped by a police car camera and broadcast nationwide. In this trial, Cheyne, 22, of Colville, Wash., and thenm other provided graphic descriptions of what they said Chevie told them about killing the Mueller family. Mrs. Kehoe, of Yaak, Mont., cried and looked at her son as she testified. “It’s got to be told, Chevie,” she said. Lee’s mother, Debra Graham, testified that around the time of the Muellers’ killings, her son was home visiting her in Oklahoma. And she said he left the day before the date on which authorities believe the Muellers were killed. Despite their testimony and the many exhibits, Lee’s attorney, Cathleen Compton, argues that the government had little physical evidence. “I think, without any disrespect to the court or anyone else, if these boys were in charge o f conspiring to over­ throw the government, w e’re all safe,” Compton said. Planning to. STREAK the MU? Call the State Press photographers at 96S -6S 26. Remember to plan ahead! . Richard R Krecker A ttorney at Law Assisting Students with matters such as: , Alcohol Possession, Drug Offenses, Landlord/tenant problems, DU1 and other legal matters. Evening & Weekend Appointments Available G et H elp Today! 491-1011 I re a so n s you s h o u ld t a k e o u r Transfer more credits Transferlesscash. SUMMERSCHOOLCLASSESATGATEWAYFROM$38* ACREDITHOUR! Transfers GateWay Description to ASU as Course GateWay , Coarse Description M C A T c ourse SUPERIOR MATERIALS W ith over 40 0 0 pages c texts and practice passages can rest assured that y< receiving the most com MCAT materials on the Best o f all, you won't h an inconvenient tape lil let you take it all horn THE BEST RECOMMENDATIONS Over 90% of our MCAT students are recommended to us by their friends and family. 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Take it for less at GateWay and transfer it toASU for full credit. Choose from day or evening classes. Daycare is also available. Check out our complete class schedule on the Internet and register today. $38 a credit hour $38 a credit hour $38 a credit hour $40 a credit hour Pre-Summer Classes—Begin May 17 Summer I session- -June 1-July 1 8-week session-June 1-July 22 Summer II session—July 6-Augusf 5 * for Maricopa County residents 602-392-5000 Sum m er courses form ing now ! THE PRINCETON-7 REVIEW Critical and Evaluating Reading 1 Freshman English Freshman English Introto Literature Literature and Film Principles of Human Nutrition College Algebra Brief Calculus ElementarySpanish 1 Introto Psychology Developmental Psychology IntroToSociology CREI01 EN610T EN6102 ENH110 ENH254 F0N241 MAT151 MAT212 SPAI01 PSY101 PSY240 SOCIO! Transfers to ASU as www.gwc.maricopa.edu AnEEO/AAInstitution 40thStreet ft Washington Just FourMilesfromASU! G A T E W A Y TO Y O U R F U T U R E . STUDENT TRAVEL London........$567 Paris.......... $692 Amsterdam....$620 Frankfurt......$715 Brussels...... .$679 All fares are roufXMrip. Taxhot inciifded. Some, restrictions apply. 921-1988 609 South MH Avenue TEMPE STA TRAVEL WE’VEBEEN THERE. Johnson & Johnson first sponsor to drop Olympics By H a n n a h W o lfs o n A s so c ia te d P ress SALT LAKE CITY — Johnson & Johnson has become the first company to abandon the O lym pics in the w ake o f a bribery scandal, backing away from an estim ated $30 m illion sponsorship deal for the 2002 W inter Games. Com pany spokesm an John M cK eegan on Sunday blam ed the decision on internal d is­ agreem ents about how to link the com pany’s many brands under a sponsorship umbrella in tim e for the Salt Lake games. But he acknowledged that Olympic corrup­ tion was also a factor. “We can’t say that it didn’t have anything to do with it,” McKeegan said. “It was certain­ ly in the background.” The Salt Lake bribery scandal sparked sev­ eral investigations after it was revealed th at members of the city ’s bid com m ittee offered $ 1.2 million dollars in cash, scholarships and o th e r g ifts to I n te r n a tio n a l O ly m p ic Committee members and their relatives during th e s u c c e s s fu l c a m p aig n to w in th e 2002 W inter Games. A total of 10 IOC members have been ban­ ished or have resigned after being linked to the cash payments and other vote-buying induce- 4 4 We can't say that [thè Olympic bribery scandali didn't have anything to do with it. It was certainly in the background. 9 Johnson & Johnson spokesman John McKeegan, commenting on the company’s decision to drop a $30 million sponsorship deal for the 2002 Olympics. m e n ts. T en o th e rs h av e b e e n c e n s u re d o r w arned about th eir actions in what has been described as the worst scandal in the history of the m odem Olympics. Johnson & Johnson had ju st signed a letter o f intent to increase financial support when the bribery scandal surfaced late last year. “The sponsors that we talk to are assessing the environm ent in w hich w e find ourselves every single d ay ,” said John K rim sky, U .S. w w w .s t a t r a v e i .c o m T h e r e is m o r e t o lif e t h a n n e w s a n d s p o r t s C h e c k o u t th e T he Olympic Committee Deputy Secretary General and the g am es’ c h ie f fu n d -ra isin g o fficer. “And when they have to invest millions of dol­ lars and the^ reputation o f their products and services they have to be very, very careful.” Though Johnson & Johnson has never been a full sponsor for the games, it has provided its pro d u cts to ath letes through th e USOC fo r about 20 years. M cKeegan said that relation­ ship would continue. Krimsky said the com pany pulled back in January or February, before Olympic organiza­ tions finished investigating and implementing reform s- And he added that the door is still open for an agreem ent for 2002 , because com­ pany officials have since m et with Salt Lake Organizing Committee head M itt Romney. S a lt L ake a lre a d y h as co m m itm en ts fo r more support than A tlanta had by the time it S taged i t s m o re e x p e n s iv e 1996 S u m m er Games. But since the revelation that Salt Lake bid executives w ooed IOC members w ith bribes, no new sponsors have signed on. K rim sk y ’s m a rk e tin g p ro je c t, O ly m p ic Properties o f the United States, still needs to raise about $300 m illion in cash, goods and services to meet SLOC’s $1.45 billion budget. TheFunnies Page 12 w e i g h t o v e r... 1Products... You Can Really Feel! S ta te P ress Crosswords They aren 't harsh words. They're just across-words. Page 10. 356 Herbal Formula to enhance your DIET and provide ENERGY! M.L. International Products, Inc. ACNE? YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE BY ASSISTING MEDICAL RESEARCH H appy H our lla m -6 p m c h o o se fro m over 5 0 m -f f d iffe re n t b e e rs $ 5 A ll D a y p o o l s p e c i a l 11am 6 p m m -f k o lb v 's If you have acne, you can be part of a medical research study at MDS Harris and earn $ 5 6 0 IN 2 D A Y S . By participating, you can help improve the quality of life for people around the world. If you meet the criteria below, call us at 2 5 4 -P A Y S (7297) to learn more. ■ ■ ■ ■ men and women 18 to 40 years old smokers and nonsmokers availability: two days Harris testing pays. Call 2 5 4 -P A Y S today! £iftD S H arris Together, W e 're M aking Lives B e tte r c a n i l n e i h ai m i t i i 1301E. University, Tempe, behind Sunny's Pizza * £29-7344 | M etabolife™ Independent D istributors O rd e rs a n d F R E E info call TODAY! 1(800) 283^3352 4639 South 36th Street, Phoenix w w w .m dsham s.com /rcrt/recruit.htm Prison comedy ‘Life* breaks loose to top sci-fi ‘M atrix’ at box office B y A n t h o n y B r e z n ic a n A s so c ia te d P ress LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Eddie M urphy-M artin Lawrence prison comedy Life pulled in $20.7 million in its opening weekend at the box office, bumping the sci-fi adventure The Matrix down to second place. Life, which features Murphy and Lawrence as innocent men who use humor to cope with life sentences at a noto­ rious M ississippi prison farm, had the year’s third-highest opening, according to estim ates by Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. It was an impressive showing for Murphy, who seems to suffer a flop after each success. His Holy Man bombed last fall with a paltry total gross of $12 million, while Dr. politile garnered $144.1 million during the summer. “The success comes from a combination o f both stars.’’ said Nikki Rocco, head o f distribution for U niversal, which released the film. "They play well off each other. It’s just a good time, without the special effects and action of other films.’’ The Matrix took in $18.1 million during the weekend. The futuristic Keanu Reeves thriller, about a computer hacker who discovers humans are the unwitting slaves of machines, has earned $99.1 million. D espite the end o f spring break, young audiences also flocked to the Drew Barrym ore high school com e­ dy Never Been Kissed, which had S8.7 million for third place. th e a lte rn a tiv e < epy sh o p 915 South Mill Ave. • Tempo * 829*7992 Southeast Comer tfM iU & University DISSERTATION Although the box office has been languishing in a postTitanic funk for most of the year, the popularity of those top three films pushed the weekend’^ ticket sales 13 per­ cent higher than the same weekend last year. But the end o f spring break may have harmed other youth-oriented films such as 10 Things I Hate About You, the loose adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Taming o f the Shrew. It lost 27 percent of its audience in its third week and was fifth with $3.7 million. The critically praised rave-scene film Go lost 36 per­ cent o f its business to finish seventh with $3 million. Ron H o w a rd ’ s co m ed y ED tv, one o f the y e a r ’s biggest disappointm ents, plunged 51 percent to collect only SI m illion with a paltry per-location average of $655. Estimated grosses for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations, with final figures to be released Monday: 1. Life, $20.7 million. 2. The Matrix. $18.1 million. 3. Never Been Kissed, $8.7 million. 4. Analyze This, $4 million. 5. 10 Things I Hate About You, S3.7 million. 6 . The Out-Of-Towners, $3.2 million. 7. Go, $3 million. 8 . Forces o f Nature, S2.6 million. 9. Shakespeare in Love, SI.9 million. 10. Cookie’s Fortune, $1.8 million. & THESIS COPIES 8*1*" X 11 " on acid fre e 25% cotton, 50% recycledpaper expires 5 /1 Ì/9 9 co p yin g * b in d in g • la m in a tin g • co m p u ter re n ta ls fu ll co lo r p rin t & copy • scanning • design Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week N O W IN O U R 3 6 "' Y E A R T h a n k y o u f o r y o u r p a tr o n a g e ! A S U S tu d e n ts , F a c u lty , a n d S ta ff A ll y o u r fa v o r ite s + S p ecia l M e n u Ite m s Fabulous F ajitas - B eef • Shrim p • Chicken Jefferson Airplane member dies at 52 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Skip Spence, an original m em ber o f the rock band Jefferson Airplane, has died of lung cancer at 52. Spence died Friday at Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz, where he had been fighting a number o f ailments. His death came weeks before the release of More Oar, a CD tribute to S p en ce in c lu d in g so n g s by B eck, Robert Plant, Tom W aits and m em ­ bers o f R .E .M . T he reco rd in g was inspired by Oar, S pence’s unique, fo lk -p sy ch ed elic solo album from 1969, which will soon be reissued. S p en ce had long b a ttle d schizophrenia and alcoholism. He had been on a ventilator since entering the hospital April 5. In 1965, A lex an d er Lee “ S k ip ” Spence, bom in Ontario, Canada, was set to audition as a guitar player for Quicksilver Messenger Service when another local musician, Marty Balin, invited him to play drums in his new band, Jefferson Airplane. Spence had never played drum s before but learned quickly; on Oar. he plays every instrument. Spence left the Jefferson Airplane in 1966 and became a founding mem­ ber o f M oby G rape. Later, he gave another San Francisco Bay area band, P ud, a new nam e — th e D o o b ie Brothers. Survivors include four children. A ssociated S tudents of A rizona S tate University Present: Tuesday, April 20 6 8PM Memorial Union Ventana Room 226A ASSOCIATED STUDENTSOF ARIZONASTATEUNIVERSITY www. asu .edu/asasu r* fo rs • M eet legislators and network • Listen to w hat legislator's educational goals are • Ask the legislators questions • Refreshments w ill be served * c / , e ,v • • • • • 6 :0 0 6 :2 0 6 :3 0 6 :3 5 7 :1 5 • 7 :4 5 • 8 :0 0 A rriv a l a n d R e fre s h m e n ts I n t r o d u c tio n o f G u e s ts Paul F ro st, P re s id e n t o f ASASU G u e s t S p e a k e rs Q u e s tio n a n d A n s w e r S e ssio n w ith a ll R e p re s e n ta tiv e s a n d S e n a to rs R e fre s h m e n ts a n d m in g le C o n c lu s io n Sim ply th e B E ST M EX IC AN FO O D in the VaUey! ...T ry u s and see w hy. K ids M enu A vailab le FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS I 1/2 PRICE DINNER W ith the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. 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Butterfly’s sash 63 Two of a kind 64 Captain of the “Half Moon” 68 Infuriate 69 Kind of angle 70 “Superman” portrayer 71 D raft inits. 72 W ord after raw or big 73 Staircase part DOWN 1 “The Merry Widow“ composer 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 23 25 27 28 31 32 '34 35 37 40 41 W ear away Senator Specter Salt, on the Seine Breyers rival Gushes One, to Fritz “When Harry — Sally...” Bit of gossip Fergie, for real Yin and yang Eighty Most uptight Makes haste Rapid transit Bloodhound’s clue They make things cozy Foot part Fails away Eastern discipline Snow removers Defies gravity — Raton “Evil Woman" grp. Fans’ sound S o lu tio n to P u z z l e in the classified section . 42 43 47 49 50 52 55 56 It spins in the wind Unbeatable foe U .S, Open call Remained Klondike command Get-well center Medicates On high 57 He’s down in the pits 59 Art — 61 Sound of a happy cat 65 Religious sister 66 9 or 66, e.g. 67 Agnus — I I I J W ant som ething to put on your coffee table that show s y ou’v e g o t class? Hayden’s Ferry Review __ __ ASU’s Literary M agazine Ask for it atyour local bookstore, or call 965-1243 for more information^ AndClearer Skin Birth Control Wouldn'tItBeGreatIfThereWereABirth Control Pill That AlsoReducedYourAcne? Phoenix Center for Clinical Research is conducting a research study to determine if an approved birth control pill also helps to reduce facial acne. If you are not currently using a hormone-based form of birth control and have regular menstrual cycles, you may qualify to participate. Participants will receive free study-related: PHOENIX CENTER • Lab Work • Study Medication • Physical exams by a dermatologist and gynecologist & ° P le M so * you? You're a crafty individual who believes in free thinking and possesses an overflowing amount of creativity and gusto for the cutting edge. We know that wlieg you put the right software and hardware talent and technology together, success is inevitable. Matrox is the undisputed world leader in high-end graphics, video, and multimedia products. We've created the world's fastest graphics accelerators and call some of the most brilliant minds in the business, colleagues. We believe that the free expression of ideas leads to rapid progress, and allows real creativity on the job. If you wont to discover more about Matrox, look for us a t Aricoaa State University's upcoming Caraar Fair on April S4th. All qualified rasumas and applicatiaas racaivad will ba antarad lata a drawing for a Matrox Millenium II graphics card. 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D O LlTTLE P IC T U R E PERFECT DR . DO LlTTLE M U S IC V ID E O S DEVILS ON THE DEUCE M U S IC V ID E O S R U SH p ict u re M ONEY PIC TU R E HOUR PERFECT TALK S PERFECT B O O C IE M ONEY B IC U T S TALK S DR . D O LlTTLE DARK C IT Y 1 ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Mo n ey talks □ “He hasn’t won, but he’s awfully consistent Now he’s gping to be looking to win — not hoping to, but expecting to. That’s a huge difference” — ASU men’s golfcoach Randy Lein, onJeff Quinney Quinney fires course-record 62 as A S U wins tourney By C u n t C urrie Sta te Press Leah F asten o f t h e S ta te P re ss J eff Q uinney celebrates after sinking his putt on the 18th hole o f the fin al round o f the Thunderbird/Savane Invitational on Sunday. Qiiinney’s 62 set a Karsten record and led ASU to its first team title o f the year. Jeff Quinney shot a course-record 62 in the final round to give him the individual title in the Thunderbird/Savane Invitational, a tournament ASU won by 15 strokes, “This is what we wanted,” head coach Randy Lein said. “I couldn’t have scripted it any better.” There were claps and cheers from the gallery as Q uinney approached the 18th green. The word had spread throughout the crowd that one of ASU’s own was about to break a record. Quinney gave back a modest smile, dropped his shoulders, eyed the hole and sunk die last putt on his miraculous 18hole performance. The crowd cheered again and his teammates and family came out to congratulate him. “It felt great,” he said. “I got chills through my body after the putt” Quinney broke the competitive Karsten record that was only one hour old. At about 1:30 p.m., Oregon’s Ryan Lavoie walked off the course after shooting a then-record 64. “It started out on (hole) num ber tw o,” Quinney said. “It (his eagle) kickstarted the whole day.” Quinney’s run included the eagle on the second hole and birdies on holes 3 ,5 ,7 , 8 ,11 (sinking a 35-foot putt), 13,14 and 15. “I kept telling myself, ‘Earn it shot by shot,” ’ Quinney said “Today it all came together.” “He hasn’t won, but he’s awfully consis­ tent,” Lein said. “Now he’s going to be look­ ing to win —7 not hoping to, but expecting to. That’s a huge difference.” Quinney finished with a weekend total of 201 with rounds of 70, 69 and 62. Quinney overshadowed teammate Paul Casey-, who finished in third place with rounds of 70, 67 and 70 for a 9-under par 207. “I’m happy that I’m playing good again,” Casey said. “I’ve had two top five finishes in a row, and I’m peaking at the right time of die season.” Casey has played his best golf of the year this month, firing 4-under par April 4 in Lecanto, Fla., and 9-under in Tempe last weekend. Casey’s timing is perfect as ASU prepares for the Pac-10 tournament this week­ end in Seattle. “H ie team win is great,” Casey said. “A couple of guys didn’t play great that usually do.” C a se y ’s p o int w as th at the team has tremendous momentum right now because the golfers that struggled, like Greg Padilla, Jin Park and Matt Jones, have been consistent all year and one not-so-good tournament does not turn that around. Jones tied for 18th place while shooting par with rounds of 74,70 and 72, Padilla was the first round leader after fir­ ing a 67, but die day was long and Padilla’s second round o f 73 brought him back to the pack. His third round of 79 put him at 3-over par and landed Padilla in a tie for 36th place. Jin Park shot a 71 in his last round, but previous, rounds of 73 and 77 kept Park five shots over par and in 43rd place. In all, ASU was 30-under par for the weekend and beat second place UCLA by 15 shots. UCLA’s Jeff McGraw (206) and B.J. Schlagenhauf (209) finished in second and fourth place. Behind UCLA in the top ten were Cal, O regon, U ofA , C olorado S tate, T exas, Washington and Kansas. Oklahoma State was “a shocker,” according to Lein, With its tenth place finish. The Cowboys brought two of the co u n try ’s best golfers in No. 4 C harles Howell and No. 7 Edward Loar. Texas’ David Gossett is the only player in collegiate golf this year to have a better tour­ nament than Quinney’s 201. Gossett shot a 199 at the Taylor Made at Red River. Gossett, the country’s No. 2 golfer, according to the MasterCard Collegiate Golf Rankings, fin­ ished tied for 46th at 6-over par. A SU ’s second team was led by Ryan Whitaker’s 7-over 223 and Brad Cannon’s 8over 224. D J. Lewin finished at 10-over par, Jonas Runnquist finished at 11-over par and Jason Hause finished at 14-over par. Sun Devils revert to old ways, take 3 of 4 from Bay Area schools Gill eclipses RBI mark By C hris C arlock State Press Winning cures all ails. The ASU softball team found that out after sweeping No. 10 Stanford Friday night and splitting with No. 13 Cal Saturday at Sun Devil Club Stadium. The successful weekend moved the Sun Devils to 5-9 in the Pac-10 and 34-14 overall, with half of the conference schedule completed. “We came out emotional and fired up,” freshman Erica Beach said. “We’re ready to go into the next half of die Pac10.” If anybody has reason to be fired up, it’s Beach. The south­ paw threw consecutive 1-0 shutouts to improve her record to 14-7. She wasn’t too shabby at the plate either, collecting five hits in 13 at-bats, including her fifth homer of the season. “I felt pretty much on top o f it,” Beach said of her game. Beach completed the weekend with a six-hit, two strikeout performance against Cal. She now has a scoreless inning streak of 20. Beach managed to strand four runners in scoring position in the 1-0 victory. The defense was stellar behind her as Hoily Smith turned in a few gems at shortstop. “Our defense .was great in all four of these games,” head coach Linda Wells said. ASU scored its run in the fourth inning when Beach led things off with a single. After Jamie Hlebechuk came in to pinch run, Chris Gill singled to right field. Kirsten Voak then laid down a sacrifice bunt that led to Kathy Ponce’s sac fly,which plated Hlebechuk for the only ran of the game. “It’s huge,” Beach said of winning three games. “This is just die next step to get us to where we need to be playing.” The first game against Cal didn’t go as well. Voak surren­ dered her 18th, 19th and 20th home runs of die season ami the Bears’ leadoff batter scored in each of die second through sixth innings to propel Cal to a 7-6 win. After tying the game at four in die third inning, two leadoff homers and a two-out, ran scor­ ing single gave Cal a 7-4 lead heading to the bottom of the sev­ enth. After the first two batters were retired to start the final frame, Beach lined a double to the fence in right field. Chris Gill then entered her name into the record books by smashing a two-run homer to left field to bring ASU within one. The two RBI put Gill ahead of Alyssa Johnson as ASU’s all-time lead­ ing ran producer with 109. Winning pitcher Jocelyn Forest then retired Voak to end the game. : Friday night ended on an emotional high for the Sun Devils as Missy Hixon delivered a clutch game-winning single to cen­ ter field with one out in die bottom of the eighth to give ASU a 1-0 win over Stanford. Beach and Stanford’s Becky Blevins each allowed only three hits throughout the game but the Cardinal defense opened the door for the Sun Devils in the eighth. Stanford substituted Kelly Yablonski in right field to start the inning for defensive purposes. The Sun Devils were glad to see her out there, for with one out, Yablonski misplayed a line drive by Holly Smith for a three base error. Hixon made the Cardinal pay with a single to score Smith from third, giving ASU the sweep. “I didn’t get a hit the whole game, so I was due for one,” Hixon said. ‘1 was real relaxed and I wasn’t worried. Wé defi­ nitely needed the wins.” Beach stranded four Cardinal runners in bouncing back nicely from her eight-run first inning against UCLA the week­ end before. Gill and Voak were the other Sun Devils who had hits in the game. ASU started off die weekend in impressive fashion, pound­ ing out 10 hits in a 6-0 rout of the Cardinal. Hixon, Beach and Jennifer Langenhuizen each collected two hits while Beach and Langenhuizen scored twice to boost the Sun Devils’ confi­ dence. Voak dominated from the get-go, improving her record to 19-6 by throwing a five-hit shutout. Leah F a ste n o f t h e S ta te P r e s s Freshman E rica Beach was im pressive with the bat in this w eekend’s doubleheaders w ith Stanford and Cal (5 o f 13,. fifth hom e run o f the season). But Beach dominated injthe circle, throw ing consecutive 1-0. shutouts to im prove her record to 14-7. At 5-9 in die Pac-10, the Sun Devils have climbed out of the basement and are now hoping to climb toward die penthouse. ‘I t was a good boost for die team,” Beach said. ASU will travel to Oregon next weekend to take on No. 12 Oregon State and No. 14 Oregon. The Sun Devils split with the Beavers and were swept by the Ducks in the conference-open­ ing weekend in Tempe a few weeks ago. B a tis te ’s N B A chances rise at Nike Desert Classic A ccording to H arris, both ASU fo r­ wards played Well, but Batiste probably im proved his d raft statu s m oreso than Lazor. B y N ic k P iec or o S t a t e P ress All Mike B atiste w anted to do in the N ike Desert Classic was play his game, H oopin’ w ith th e H o o ters girls his style of basketball. No more, no less. You don’t think there’s any creativity By doing ju st that over the weekend, Batiste, who played forward for thè ASU in slam dunk contests anymore? Cincinnati’s Melvin Levett, Saturday’s m en’s basketball team the last three years, may have put him self in a position to be Desert Classic Slam Dunk champion, will bee to differ. taken in June’s NBA draft. S alw ay s som e B a tiste and fo ty som ew here,” te a m m a te Bobby id. w ere th e ci_ A nd L ev ett favorites at the to towed a lot of it. n a m e n t h eld ; These g u y s o u t F irst, L ev e tt Wells Fargo Arena ju m p ed over here are real physi­ B atiste may have four ball racks le ft as a sco u t cal. You don't play u sed in the favorite. against g u y s tike three-point “ He was d e fi­ shooting contest n ite ly a su rp rise this in the Pac-10. positioned about for us, as an orga­ 0 feet aw ay n iz a tio n ," sai om the hoop and L arry H a rris , tl M ike B atiste, fo rm er A S U forw ard ily e x e c u te d a D irecto r o f Scout mded dunk. fo r the M ilw i : brought in two Bucks, rom the restau­ : According to H rant Hooters, where he had lunch earli­ may be a possible second round pick thanks to his play in the three-day tourna­ e r in the day. He directed them to a spot about 10 feet from the hoop, where play­ ment. “He definitely helped himself,” Harris ers line up to rebound free throws. The pair hunched over each other, Levett got a said. B a tiste avraged 12.3 p o in ts and 3.7 running start and. much to the crow d’s delight, he cleared the pair and threw it rebounds in three games. • “I didn't want to come in here and try down one-handed. B o th d u nks re c e iv e d p erfect scores to do things 1 couldn't do,” Batiste said. “1 wanted to come here and play to the best from the judges. Levett, who’s vertical was measured at o f my ability.” If Batiste were to go to the NBA, he 34.5 inches last week, said that the idpa of said he would probably have to play some­ using the waitresses came to him whtie he thing between a three and a four. Size may eating lunch at th eir restaurant. He got be a concern because o f how much of a approval from the restau ran t m anager, physical jum p it is from college to the who liked the idea not only for its creativi­ ty but for its promotional value as well. NBA. The w aitresses were a little scared at “These guys out here are real physical,” Batiste said. “You don’t play against guys first, his successful first dunk built their confidence in him. like this in the Pac-10.” : . “They saw how high 1 got and said they Lazor also played well in the tourna­ m ent. He av erag ed 8.7 p o in ts a n d 3.7 weren’t scared anymore,” Levett said. L e v e tt w s a lso n a m e d to th e A ll rebounds in three games, with a high o f 15 Tournament team. points in Thursday’s game. 44 tf S am aruddin S te w a rt o f th e S ta te P re ss C incinnati's M elvin Levett won the slam dunk com petition o f the Nike Desert Classic on Saturday by dunking over two Hooters waitresses. Ex-Devils Ruegamer Paulk selected in 3rd round o f NFL D raft B y Joe M a n t o n e a n d Sa m G a n c z a r u k Ruegamer jafid H H H H I Grey Ruegamer finally got a good night o f sleep. The M iami D olphins selected the form er ASU center with the eleventh p ick in the th ird ro u n d o f the NFL Draft at New York Saturday. “(S aturday) was the best night o f sleep I’ve had in a couple o f weeks,” R uegam er said. “It’s great to finally see what happened.” Before Ruegamer was tucked away in his bed, he spoke to his new head coach. “Jimmy Johnson came on the phone, and he Said, ‘Are you ready to be a Dolphin?’ I said, ‘I’ve been waiting for you guys to call,’” said Ruegamer, who spoke to Johnson from his home in San Diego. R uegam er gets a chance to show Johnson ju s t how re a d y h e is th is w eek . H e w ill tra v e l to M iam i on T h u rs d a y to p a rtic ip a te in a th re e d ay m in icam p . Ruegamer said this will be a good a chance for him “to learn the system” and “find out what’s going on.” He should find that the Dolphins are a little thin at the center spot. Tim Ruddy started all 16 games for Miami in 1998, and Ruddy has been M iami’s starting center for the last four seasons. John Bock, who is listed as a guard on Miami’s depth chart, is the Dolphin’s backup center. “I knew Miami needed a center, so I had the Dolphins in the back o f my m ind,” R uegam er said. “But getting picked by them was still a surprise.” The two time All-American center M H i was a little surprised because he said that M iami was talking to the Bears a b o u t a c q u irin g c e n te r C asey W iegman. But apparently that didn’t work out and Miami made Ruegamer the third center selected in the draft. New England used the 17th pick in the first round to take center Damien W oody fro m B oston C o lleg e. A nd Denver closed the second round o f the d raft w hen the B roncos selected fo rm er BYU cen ter Lennie Friedman. D oin ’ th e D irty Bird Fullback Jeff Paulk was pleasantly surprised when he received a phone call by Super Bowl .runner up Atlanta Falcons head coach Dan Reeves Saturday afternoon. He had avoided watching the draft all day until the phone call. “He asked if I could play special teams,” Paulk told the Tribune Saturday. “I said, ‘Yea. I ’ll play whatever you want.’” Many had predicted Paulk going in the fourth round, but the Falcons chose him with 92nd overall pick — the last pick in the third round — making him the 10th run­ ning back taken in the ‘99 draft. The present fullback for the Falcons is Bob Christian, but he is having problems recovering from a serious knee injury. Paulk said he is grateful to have such a great opportunity. “I can’t do much better in terms of a coach and team,” Paulk said. “I’m very fortunate.” Kenny’s still alive Kenny M itchell’s phone didn’t ring during the NFL Draft, but his agent’s phone rang after-* wards. M itc h e ll, a fo rm e r A SU w ide receiver, was not picked at Saturday’s and Sunday’s NFL Draft in New York. H ow ever, he w ill try to sign w ith a club as a free agent. “T eam s are n e g o tia tin g w ith my agent on the phone,” said an upbeat Mitchell. He added that several teams -— including the Cardinals, Giants and Titans — have contacted Mitchell or his agent on Sunday. “I would like to stay in Arizona,” said Mitchell, who caught 27 passes for 576 yards during his 1998 season as a Sun Devil. “But we have to find the best spot.” Mitchell said he wants “to see what the teams have to offer,” but he would like to be signed before minicamps open. “I want to do this as soon as possible,” he said. “That could be today, tomorrow, next week.” R uegam er said he w as surprised that no N FL team drafted Mitchell. “I thought he w ould go before the seventh round,” Ruegamer said. But not being drafted didn’t seem to bother Mitchell. And the amount o f money he will receive from his first NFL contract will probably not bother Mitchell either. “I lived off loot checks,” Mitchell said. He’ll probably get more cash then he did on ASH road trips, but that’s not his top concern. “W e’re not looking at money situations,” Mitchell said. “W e’re just listening to the teams who call, and we will find the best situation for me to play.” s««« P r œ ttr n m m r , pu h m h Sun Devils one step closer to home court advantage defeated UofA senior Pascal Salasca in straight-sets, 6-4, 6-3. It was courts four and five that went the longest o f the afternoon. A fter a dis­ a p p o in tin g f ir s t set* A SU ju n io r E d C a rte r c a m e b a c k to o b lite r a te th e W ildcats’ M ichel Stopa, 2-6, 6-1, 6-1. O n N o. 5 , Sun D e v il fre sh m a n M att K linger took a close first-set tiebreaker before w inning the three-set battle 7-6, 3-6, 6-3. “All o f the singles played extrem ely w ell,” Belken said. “It’s always tough to play in T ucson. T h ere’s a lo t o f em o­ tion.” The doubles once again proved to be a high point for the Sun D evils’ offense, despite a shocking upset on court No. 1. T h e U o fA te a m o f L a C o s te an d Salasca m anaged to upset the n atio n ’s N o . 13 d o u b le s te a m o f C a r te r an d W illiam s 8-5. T he Sun D evil duo has lost two straight m atches since their 8-0 start halfway through the season. “It’s unfortunate,” Belken said. “They (Carter and W illiam s) m issed a couple o f big shots, and pro set matches just go by so fast.” T he m atch d id n ’t do m uch fo f the W ild cats’ scoreboard, how ever, as the other ASU teams took the best o f three competition. On court No. 2, M arcaccio and Osterrieth defeated Brown and Stopa 8-5 w h ile A S U ’s th ird c o u rt team o f H am m ond and senior C asey W as took out Jackson and Novo 8-2. The Sun Devils now look to Tuesday, w h en th e y p la y th e ir m ak eu p m a tc h against Cal. The m atch is im portant in th at it could be the deciding facto r in w hether or not the Sun Devils gain home court advantage through the first rounds o f the NCAA tournament. :£fl W ith one m ore match to go In the reg­ ular season, the Sun Devil m en’s tennis te a m is o n e s te p c lo s e r to g a in in g re g io n a l h o m e c o u rt a d v a n ta g e a fte r routing UofA 6-1 Saturday. Dropping only ohe singles matgh on th e a fte rn o o n , th e N o. 14 Sun D evils advanced their record to 12-5 and 4-2 in th e P a c -1 0 . T h e lo s s to o k th e 4 7 th ra n k e d W ild c a ts to 7-12. W ith a w in against Cal on Tuesday, ASU could fin­ ish 5-2 in conference, the best P ac-10 record in the team ’s history. “W e’ve never sw ept both UofA and Cal in the same year,” ASU head coach Lou Belken said. “It feels good to know w e have the chance now .” It was an em otional m atch for many of the players who would be facing the in-state rivals for the last time. The m atch started w ell fo r the Sun Devils with two quick wins on the sec­ ond and sixth courts. On the No. 2 court, ASU senior G ustavo M arcaccio dom i­ nated the second set w ith a tw o-break win over U ofA ’s Jean-Noel LaCoste 6-4,' 6-1 O n c o u rt N o . 6 , s e n io r T im H am m ond also m anaged a straight-set v ic to ry , defeatin g th e W ild c a ts’ A lex Brown 6-3, 6-3. “W e had an im portant m atch to win on No. 2,” Belken said. “I think Gustavo handled it very w ell despite unfam iliar conditions.” The Sun D ev ils’ only loss cam e on the top court, where 89th-ranked senior Jeff W illiams m oved up to face U ofA ’s 100th- ranked senior Adnan Novo. Novo got an early break on W illiams, helping him pull out the victory 6-3, 6-4. T h e p o in t w as s h o rt liv e d f o r W ild cats, how ever, as the Sun D ev ils took the next three singles matches. On the th ird court, ju n io r A lex O sterrieth -M B y R o b er t D e a l St a t e P ress .I H yun D o n g Lim o f th e S ta te Press The No. 2 doubles toam o f Gustavo Marcaccio and Alex Osterrieth contributed to the Sun Devils’ blowout win over UofA Saturday in Tucson. The duo defeated Alex Brown and Michael Stopa 8-5. W om en’s tennis team prepares fo r postseason by destroying UofA Seniors Propstra, Nash end regular season careers with victories B y R o b e r t D ea l St a t e P ress In an only appropriate regular season finale, the Sun D evil w om en’s tennis team annihilated in-state rival UofA in a 7-2 fight Saturday at the W hitem an Tennis Center. The w in gives the No. 11 Sun Devils a final record of ; 7 and b rin g s them to .5 0 0 in co n fe re n ce at 4-4, which should be enough to keep the team in the coun­ try ’s top 16, giving them hom e court advantage through the first rounds o f the NCAA cham pionships. The loss w as a to u g h o n e , h o w e v e r , f o r th e 5 6 th -ra n k e d W ildcats, who finished the season 7-13 and 3-5 in the Pac-10. “The rivalry is definitely a big one,” ASU head coach S heila M cln ern ey said. “Y ou n ev er dow nplay a win against UofA, but w e’ve got to focus on w hat’s really court, where sophomore Faye DeVera was m oved up to important now, and that’s the postseason.” The Sun D evils dropped only one singles m atch in play against M ichelle Gough. Despite taking the second the victory. On the top court, ASU freshm an A llison set to a tie b re a k e r, D eV era w as u n a b le to h o ld o ff B radshaw , the n a tio n ’s 3 0 th -ran k ed sin g les p la y e r, Gough, who won the match 6-2, 7-6. em erged victorious over U ofA ’s Lindsay B lau in the The doubles courts also proved prom ising for the Sun only match to go three sets. A fter dropping the first set Devils, where they gained two out o f three wins. On the to Blau, Bradshaw broke three tim es in the second to top court, the nation’s 20th-ranked team o f Propstra and gain the momentum to take the match, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4. Bradshaw reaffirm ed their high ranking by shutting out It was also a good day for both o f A SU ’s seniors, U ofA ’s team o f Blau and Allegre 8-0. w ho m anaged to end th e ir re g u la r season co lleg iate Nash also added to her perfect last m atch by team ing careers with a win. On the second court, senior Katy up with McCoury to defeat Gough and Abel 8-4. P ro p s tra q u ic k ly d e fe a te d th e W ild c a ts ? M o n iq u e The lone UofA doubles win came on the third douAliegre in straight sets 6-2, 7-6. - bles court. In the absence o f A S U ’s Palm e, D eV era It was an even quicker match for senior Alison Nash, teamed up with Pereyra to take on the W ildcat team of who com pletely obliterated Joanna Buczkowska on the S tringer and L aresa M arino, w ho eventually w on the No. 4 court, 6-3, 6-0. On the low er courts, long first sets m atch 8- 6 . gave way to quick seconds as the Sun Devils took wins The team now prepares for the postseason as they get on both. At the No. 5 spot, sophomore Celena M cCoury ready for the P ac-10 individual tournam ent later this defeated Vanessa Abel in straight sets, 7-6, 6-1. In the absence o f Kerry G iardino and Karin Palme, week. “ T h e s e a s o n ’s o v e r an d i t ’s tim e fo r a b r e a k ,” freshman Ana Lucia Pereyra made her singles debut on the sixth court. She proved her place on the Sun Devil M clnerney said. “W e can give the team some tim e off to prepare for final exams before the big team tourna­ squad by defeating Carly Stringer 7-5, 6-1. The only singles loss for ASU cam e on the second ment in M ay.” State Press for Monday, April IK, HKt ! Baseball squad drops 2 to Bruins ijliiï-freei Duerbeck wins F rom staff reports The UCLA Bruins won the first two games of a three-game Pac-10 series against the ASU baseball team this weekend. UCLA downed the Sun Devils 9-3 on Saturday and opened the series at Jackie Robinson Stadium with an 11-10 win. Results from Sunday’s matchup weren’t available as o f press time. Saturday ’ s gam e saw th e B ruins win behind the pitching Of freshman right handed pitcher Josh Carp. Through the top o f the ninth. Carp (5-3, 5.20) held ASU scoreless and scattered just four hits against the nation’s top scoring lineup. Carp finished with 10 strikeouts, while Sun Devil starter Chuck Crumpton was handed his second loss of the season. On Friday, a bases-loaded walk to Jason Green allowed the Bruins’ Chase Utley to score the winning run in the ninth in the series opener. A triple by Chip Gosewisch tied the game at 10-10 in the ninth. But in the bottom of the ninth, a 3-2 pitch by Chad Pennington landed high and inside and locked the game for theBruins. ASU previously erased a five-rim deficit in the sixth when Mitch Jones stroked a threerun home run. Pennington took over for Eric Doble, who in turn replaced starter Will Waldrip in the fifth. Doble was greeted in that inning by a two-out line (hive single by Nick Lyon. A SUp lays‘u naccep tab le’g am einStLo uis B y Sam G anczaruk State P ress The weekend was going all too well in the cold and wet conditions for ,the ASU soccer team until its final game against the University of Kansas in the College Challenge Cup in S t Louis. Head Coach Terri Patraw felt the weekend would have been “awesome” if the Sun Devils could have finished of the Jayhawks. Instead, the Sun Devils lost 2-1. Scoring the lone ASU goal was junior defender Shanel Scott. - - “The weekend went Well until we played Kansas,” Patraw said. “The last game was absolutely unacceptable. We thought we had matured enough to the point to take care of team s we were supposed to, and we had proven it up until that game. I guess we are not there quite yet.” The Sun Devils had taken care of business earlier in the tournament by tying Missouri 1-1 and defeating Creighton 2-0. Senior forward Sarah Blaska scored in the first game and senior midfielder Kerrie Kulak and junior midfielder Antoinette Maijanovic each scored in the victory over the Blue Jays. They then defeated Butler 2-0 with goals being scored by Blaska and senior forward Jennifer Peterson. ‘W e were by far the best team there, with Missouri being a very close second,” Patraw said. “Physically, we’re there, (but) mentally we are not That comes with maturity.” 1,500-meters at Arizona Elite for 30 seconds," Duerbeck scud. "Now I just want to take advantage of every opportunity 1 have to run.” That is why Duerbeck ran the 1,500 at the Elite. It was the first time she competed in a race that short. She usually runs the 5,000 or the 3,000. but the 1,500 was the longest race at the Elite. H Distance coach Walt Drenth said she will probably run either the 5,000 or the 3,000 at this weekend’s [brake Relays in Des Moines. Iowa And she will more than likely compete in one o f those races at Pac-10 B y Jó e M a n t o n e S t a t e P ress With bones rubbing against each other in her foot, ASU d istance runner M ary Duerbeck just wanted to run pain free. Duerbeck, who underwent foot surgery in September o f 1998 to remove an extra bone, experienced a pain free race when she won the 1,500-meters Saturday at the Arizona Elite Classic in Tucson. “I don’t feel like I’m in racing shape,” Duerbeck said “1 still have farther to go but at least I'm not running with pain.” D uerbeck first injured her ankle in 0 i$ o tip $ n i^ p $ m .h m e , January 1998 before the start of the Btdoèff ■ Duerbeck and sophomore sprinter Christie season. H it SH m a H H Bbad aside Winkle, who placed first in the 100 ( 11 90). sprains,” p i said. But Duerbeck continued to were the only two runners on the 21 st-ranked Sun Devil women’s team to win In field XSttL-"; ¿ ft* i **lhad never been injured seriously before, events, ASU’s senior Fiona Daly won the high jump with a leap of 5 fleet 8 75 inches. For die 12th-ranked men’s squad, sopho­ said. “I don’t think m y body likes m e too more Brandon Strong and freshman Isaiah The injury fumed Duegbocit to lake m M I Festa were the only runners from ASU to time off from tunning in the summer. This win. Strong ran the 800 in 1:51.44. and Festa fall she still M t parò and when the foot was ran the 1,500 in 3:52.51 But since Festa, who examinb B d octors told her Hup a bone was is redshirtiug this season, ran unattached. Strong was the only official individual win­ p f t d a g a in h t a n o ih e r b o n e n ih e l^ p ? ’ ner for the ASU’s men’s team. However, cross country her foot in a most o f ASU’s runners didn’t compete. "We have a number of athletes who have cast for about stx weeks. She w jw B iiilf ti finally ab le to sta rt "slogging'* in late competed hard the last four weeks.” head NqmmImc. -V s - ■ coach Greg Kraft said. "So we gave them the weekend off.” Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our Classified section, For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721, M ore T r i v i a . . . If you put a raisin in a glass of champagne, i t w ill repeatedly fleet to the top and sink to the bottom. HO M ES FOR RENT ANNOUNCEMENTS SCOTTSDALE'S LIVING @ it’s finest. San Marquis. See our ad in Wednesday’s paper. 4BD/2BA, 1 MILE from ASU. Avail, immed. Call 731-3969 or pgr. 360-1626 APARTMENTS 4B D / 2BA, POOL, $1400, Brdway/ Beck, avail now. Huge 4bd/ 3ba, $ 1300,: 13th/ Priest, avail now. 4bd/ 2ba, $ 1150; 13th/ Hardy, 6/1. All clean, new tile, paint, w/d, dshw, 922-2715. > 1 BD $525/ mo. incl: utils. Super huge discount w /| yr lease 1010 E. Orange, 5261806. 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 o ff move-in w/ad. 966-8597. CLOSE TO ASU 3bd/2ba, $900; lb d /lb a $480; 2bd/lba 2 BD / 1 BA TH style, AC, $600; 3bd/2ba $925; 4bd/2ba utils incl., $650/mo. Super $1150, summer and full rentals. huge discount w/ 1 yr lease. Call 894-0288 1010 E. Orange 526-1806 CLOSE TO ASU summer and full rentals* apts. and homes 2BD/1BA 2 blocks from cam­ avaiL CaU 894-0288 pus, pool,' spa, laundry, cov­ ered parking. Available now. No pets 1700 S. College Ave. 967-7212 : LARGE 5 Bd house near ASU, pool, jacuzzi, w/d, etc..$1400/ mo. 3 bd also avail $995/mo. • 966-2627 4BDR/ 2BÀ @ Jefferson Com­ mons, $377mo p/ rm. Avail all summer, fum. 699-5344. ANNOUNCEMENTS LADIES FITNESS: Fitness Works in Tempe is offering 2 weeks free at our new exclusive fitness club for women.. Call 413-1111 MIGUEL S MUSIC- everything 1/2 off! Acoustic, electric, and classical guitars a all must go! The Arches, University & For­ rest, 968-2310. APARTMENTS Now taking reservations for Summer & Fall LRG GARAGE w/ running wa­ ter, used as art studio. S Roo­ sevelt, $300 mo, 894-0288. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W N H O M E S / C O N D O S FOR RENT 3 BD/ 2 BA $975/mo. Covered prking, w/d, fp, & vaulted ceil­ ing. University Ranch. Call 226-8875 TEMPE/ASU 3BD/2BA Papago Park & 3bd/.3ba Questa Vida. Avail. May & June. 2 story, all appi, w/d, $1100-1250 Jòel 967-6205 HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd/2ba condo, walk to ASU, w/d, à/ç, fan, pool $685/mo 966-0987 N. TEMPE, 2bd/1ha duplx, spacey, a/c, ydm immed. occup. w/d hkups, $615/mo. 9660987 PAPAGO II 2bd/2ba, w/d $750 mq.covered park. 1 unit avail iirnned. 226-8875 PAPAGO PARK V illage and Questa Vida 1, 2, & 3 bedroom condos $700-$1350, June 1 move in. Call Bob Bullock at Realty Executives 998-2992 LUXURY 2BD/ 2BA, apt. aval). June 30 - Sept. 30th.; Pool, exercise rm, w/d* full kitchen, patio. Close to ASU & AZ Mills. $1400 431-5911 SIZZLING SUMMER saying 4bd/2ba home for rent, 5 /158/15. Lg yard, 1 mile from ASU, w/d, $275/rm + util. Will rent fast. (520) 779-2873 QUESTA VIDA 3bd/3ba. Start at $ 1 100/mo. Luxury town^ house, great for 4 people, vltd ceilings, fans, sky lights, w/d, d/w, micro, 2 pools* spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, 2 story. Har­ ris Equity; 888-870-5762. Start @5-99 to 8-99. VERY NICE* large, clean 2bd/ Iba, walk to ASU. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS O R A N O MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE JEFFERSON COMMONS, piivate room avail for sub-lease, 5/12. Share 3bd apt. w/2 males: 20. Call 699-2126, ask for James. •FULL-SIZED FUTON w/ Wood frame, $200. Also for sale- a fish aquarium, $40. Toby 8846848 JEFFERSON COMMONS: Prvt bd/shared ba, fully furn'd. Avail 5/17-8/12. Jana 699^1784 M OR F (F Pref.)- 2 bd / 2 ba, apt.- own bd / ba. 929-9403 JEFFERSON COMMONS: Room avail 5/15-8/12, fern, p r e f d. Private bd, shared ba, w/d, new appl's, fully furn'd. Call Shannon 699-0902 RESPONSIBLE N/S fem ale pref d to share 2bd/2ba. Close to ASU, fireplace, pool view. $300 +1/2 utilities. 890-7263. •RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN, ns to share newer 2bd condo in Mesa. Pool & spa, fern pref, $350 + 1/3 util. 964-2840 R O O M S FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ATTN: INTERNATIONAL studtints. Stay w/ American family near ASU. P rivate room + 2 meal/day. $550mo. Ovecs Ltd. 633-8191 BUY SONY, Kenwood, Apline & many other car & home audio products, w ell below retail. Wholsale Outfitters, 456-8777 or 316-2535 Leave message FEMALE RMMATE prefd, asap. 3bd/ 3ba condo near ASU, own bd & b a,’wd $370 + util. 593-9809. CAR STEREO for sale: 6 disc Pioneer CD changer w/ wireless remote and 4-channel, 150 watt amplifier. $300 obo, call Paul at 884-9817. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL EM BASSY S U IT E S RESORT Opening Special SC O TTSD A LE • C ih li Ready • Appfteaftaa Fee W A IV W%F- ; R o o m , F w i ^ p E l Q ^ |^ p ^ r i g e r a l o r , ' I S to v e , D is h w a s h e r , M ic r o w a v e ¡¡ ■ f im f C o n tin en ta l B reak fast P|p| Monday-FrWay Apache Terrace Apartments RENTAL S H A R IN G R O O M S FOR RENT E ig h th S tre e t N e P e ts • E le c tr ic N ot In clu d ed 3 W h eelch a ir A ccessib le U n its A v a ila b le H um an R esources A sst. Bilingual R eq ’d E ntry level W ill train A ssist w ith ap p lican t & new h ire p ro c e d u re s , b e n e fits, ee info X c e lle n t c o m m u n icatio n skills H EM P (Silk-plants) unmistakable, awer some gift. A smile maker! www.silkweeds.com 549-4737 SMALL DORM-SIZE refridgerator and microwave. $30 each, Patrick 937-8595 FURNITURE ^ ENTERTAINMENT CENTERLarge, whitewashed, $50. Please leave message 968-1738 COMPUTERS 1 YR OLD Pentium II 200mmx* 56k mdm, 24x CD, 15” moni­ tor, spkrs, mierphn. Great for school. Must sell!! Paid $1100, will take $660 obo. Call 699-1633. TICKETS LIVE '99 at Desert Sky Pavillio n !!! 4 bands will play on April 27: Lenny Kravitz, The HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ACCEPTING WALK-IN INTERVIEWS M , T u, and F 8:30 - lo:30am o r l-4p m Servers $4/hr + tips 1207 E. F T & F T w o r k a v a il a b le Pleas« apply w ith Human Resources, $001N, Scottsdale Rd, 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 ' Scottsdale Embassy Baltes supports a Drag-Free Workplace. m Sate Press for Monday, April 19, 1999 TICKETS AUTOMOBILES MOTORCYCLES Black Crowes, Everlast, and Créé Summer; Excellent seats as close as 3rd row from stage. Ticket prices range from $25$75. Paul ’884-9817. ; 99 VW Beetle for $239 per month. Call for details. Fleet dept: 265-6600 96 SUZUKI Katana 750, excel, cond., nice looking, many extras incl. $4,000 Call 503-3822 NO CREDIT, no problem. We can help you buy a new Volkswagort'! Ask about our college program. 265.-6600 96 YAMAHA YZF 750, low mi., I yr warranty, $6,250 obo. Call 740-7566 SMAS HING P UM P K INS : 2 tickets. $65 each. Leave mes­ sage at 203-499 i MOTORCYCLES- AUTOMOBILES 80'S 90\S CARS from $500- Po­ lice impountis. For listings call: 4 - 800-319-3323 ext. 4740. 95 GEO M ETRp, 4dr, blue ext/gréy ini. 5spd, a/c* am/fm. 56k mi, $5900 obo, 449^3425 '96 HONDA Scooter, needs work $500 o.b o. Call 884-6848 91 YAMAHA SZR-600, wht/red, cròme frame; tuned pi pe, he w è ve rytliih g. $ 3500 Call 6544)995. Must sell. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departrs. I also : buy coupons/awards. Most places worldwide: 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL 2« NEEDED NOW I B U Y Used Cars/ Trucks/ Jewelry/ Antiques/ LP’s/ Misc. HELP WANTEDGENERAL In our established accounts dept. $ 12 p/hr + bonuses and commision. Day and evening TRAVEL 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 ^ EUROPE $239 oa. HELP W ANTEÖGENERAL A N Y T IM E IN 1 9 9 9 Hawaii Carib/Mexicb $119 888-AIRHITCH www.airhitch.org (taxes additional) wanted (p t/ ft) for 12 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL year old boy in north Scottsdale area. Must HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL hrs avail, at our convenient downtown Tempe location. Call now for Scott or Christina 894 1151. ADMIN ANALYST PT for Real Estate finance firm. Accounting background prefd. $8-$10/hr. Fax. resumes to 838-5565' or call Debbie at 838-5600. CHIC & CHEAP is hiring for a payroll clerk/ administrative as­ sistant. Salary DOE, please call 279-6380. FULL SERVICE Sign & Graph­ ics shop. Close to ASU, Ft/Pt avail, 967-6029 Ask for Judith. A FUN way to build your re­ sume! Campus Reps needed to perform yr-round mktng & cam­ pus research functions. Mlist enjoy interacting w/ other, stud­ ents/ faculty, posses above avg comm skills, & be a self-starter: Flex hrs: 1U-I5/ wk. avg'. Must be available over summer mb’s. Great pay & fringe benefits, in­ cluding discounts on your text­ books; Call 1-806-921 -1099 or email jQb.s@theu20ne.cbm, w/ a resume attachment. E0E. ACCOUNTS PAYABLE, data entry & filing for non-profit or-' ganization. Fax res only to 8605534 i5-20hrs/wk;$8-|0/hr, . ACTI VITY ASSISTANT, set up crew, PT flex- hrs., afternoons^ nights and: some weekend hr«;, 236-5782 ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs . highly motivated ind for vet recept. and vet ass­ ist. pos. Please apply AZ Ave Animal Clinic, 7 W Knox Rd, Chandler 85224 Or call 9632513 ARCO AM/PM,needs Cust, ser. assoie, all shifts, starting $6hr + raised 357-7296; ATT EN DAN T/C A REGIVER AN active quadriplegic man seeks personal assist, for FT & PT shifts. ÂZ drivers .1icense. Good pay, N. E. Valley 602596-7998; BEN & JERRY’S Icecream Scoopers and vendors. Bank One Ballpark, and Amer­ ica West Arena. Transportation Provided from Tempe. Call 9689278, or 690-6939 $189 «4 Discount Fares Worldwide Male or Female Manny HELP WANTEDGENERAL Mac W ork P h oto shop & QuarkXPress PT/FT - Near ASU Call 4 3 8 -4 400 C H A S E IS h irin g ! F / T .& P /T p o s itio n s a v a ila b le w ith c u s ­ f r a u d r e p s , m a il o p e n e r s , d a ta e n t r y , an d ; c o l l e c t i o n s . A p p ly in p e r s o n 8 : 3 0 a m - 4 p m , h i - F . C h a s e c a rd m e m b e rs se rv ic e * : ¡0 0 • W e st U n i v e r s i ty i.e. likes golf, swim­ ming baseball, etc. a v ijil. o n A s h ) . J o b - l i n e 9 0 2 -; Needs reliable trans­ portation with A/C. Call Carrie or Betsy at 998S I 54 or 585-4651. PART TIME DRIVERS Make a Right Turn to Avis! B ecause y o u 'll fin d g re a t PART T IM E o p p o rtu n itie s w ith us in P hoenix! W e o ffe r c o m p e titiv e p a y an d s te a d y p a rt tim e ho urs. These p o sitio n s a re id e a l fo r th o s e lo o k in g fo r a d d itio n a l in co m e! C o lle g e S tu d e n ts 8 . R etirees are e n c o u ra g e d to a p p ly . T em pe-based co . is seek in g a courier to deliver transmitters and k eys to sites throughout th e Valley. Must b e familiar with th e Phoenix metro area and have reliable vehicle. FT position (+ benefits) or PT. $ 8.50/h r + m ileage. Apply in person. Position starts im­ m ediately. Anozira Door System s, 9 1 0 0 S. McKemy St., Tempe, 8 5 2 8 4 . Drag screen required. EOT 6000, internship: internet marketing <& design. Learn the•>*kilts in de­ mand: 66Ì-5427 ext.; 3, Lou E-COM M ERCE Marketing Experiences. Get your foot in the door! Bigwords.com, an on-line text book co., seeks motivated in­ terns for real world mrktng exps. and ’cool .incentives. Check . out w.ww.Bigwords.com/intems for more info. reat th e lo cal a re a . W e re q u ire a v a lid d riv e r’s license an d g o o d d riv in g h isto ry a lo n g w ith th e fle x ib ility to w o rk v a rio u s sh ifts in c lu d in g d ays, ev en in g s , w e e k e n d s a n d h o lid a ys. P lease a p p ly in person M o n d a y -F rid a y b e tw e e n 9 a m -5 p m to : A v is . 14 4 0 S . 2 3 rd S t., P h o en jx, A Z (1 -10. E xit 2 4 th St L e ft to B uckeye R d ., L e ft to S outh 2 3 rd S t.) 6 0 2 -2 7 3 -4 6 1 4 Equal O p p o rtu n ity e m p loyer m /f/d /v . Avis h U Y -A ^ T A r C I V I C P l A Z A • NETWORKS BAR & GRILL • COMPASS RESTAURANT • TERRACE CAFE • EINSTEIN’S BAGEL SHOP •BEVERAGE • BANQUESTS • CONVENTION SET UP • STEWARDING • FRONT OFFICE • GUEST SERVICE • CULINARY • HOUSEKEEPING I GREAT TE AC HI NG jobs i n Dallas & suburbs. $30k+, call 3pm-9pm. 817-834-4173. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic, d^dicatSd, and great W/ kids 3-12 years: $8-i0/hr. doje. 200-8255 .' JO H N HANCOCK KINDER - 3RD Grade summer (Frie nd ship Club) need ft .you. iPt/Ft $7/hr+ d o e . Fully planned, active program: Swiramingv field trips, science, art, movies, etc. Scottsdale 9495552: V 'r .. FOUR PEAKS Brewery is now accepting apps.. for waitstaff and doorstaff. 1340 EL8th St. LAWN & YARD Maintenance person wanted, tools provided. 6 brxv I day ofwk (day flex), $10/hr. 967-7212 ; ■ •; : LEGAL COURIER p/t, M-F 1-5 Prof, appearance & car req?d. Call 452-1826. C Chandler U nified School D is tric t $400 S IG N ON BONUS / • • • • $8/Hr to start! Flexible Schedules! Immediate Start1. No Experience Necessary! • Paid every Friday! A N tl p l iO N e s k i lls A MUST. N o expeRÎFNce iveeessARy. C aII 927-9754 o r Fa x 508-0586. • Dobson/Guadalupe j 777-8757 Summer & School Year Programs !_ U j Paid while training • Flexible hours Apply in person: Chandler unified School District 1525 E. Frye Rd. Chandler, AZ 312-7 016 00 00 735-0000 AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to people and work w here you are appreciated? The Orange Tree Gólf Resort is the place to be! • Eve. Hrs/Scottsdale Location • No Exp. Necessary • Big $$$$$$$$$ Scottsdale ■ I f City of Tempe KID ZONE \ AZ Ave. & Warner $8/H R GUAR * BONUSES U P T O $ i0 0 e /W K ■■ 1 • $9.20/hr after c e rtific a tio n • F ringe b e n e fits tqscw Social Service agency seeks applicants to work in programs designed to promote community participation for individuals with developmental disabilities. We offer a : variety of positions working with individuals in their own homes or resi- h j dential settings. We offer over 40 hours ¡1 | of paid training and have an excellent |) ; benefits plan. We have flexible sched- {I > ules with FT, PT and on-call positions !| [ available immediately. Our pay ranges {» j from $7.00 - $8.00 DOE/EOE. Please call 431-9511 or 861-2385 (west j| Phoenix) for more information. JJ $7 - FOUR PEAKS Brewery «» now accepting upps. for waitstaff & door: 1340 £. 8th St. Apply in person. couples and indiv. needed for corporate gigs. Please call Pickering En­ tertainment 782-8055 FOX PRO Programmer (for DOS), for local manufacturer w/ 3•+ yrs. exp..to assist In data­ base admin: EXc. pay, close; to ASU, 25-40 hrs/wk. Call Jane at 967-2678 ext. 114 p e o p le J Experience th e rew ards of a career w ith a world class hotel! We h a v e o p e n in g s in th e following d e p a rtm e n ts: ,fq r U n i v ers*».l P o r t r a i t s. e n e r g e t ic d a n c e M in im u m a g e o f 18 re q u ire d . Y ou w ill d riv e o u r cars b e tw e e n A v is lo catio n s in FUN PEOPLE W a n te d ! A p p o i n t m e n t s e t t é f s Arizona Kersting general: agen­ cy needs agents. $2000mó training subsidy. Call Jim 5222 100 ext507 EOE MFVD 304061198-049 pART'TÎMe WOr Ic, G FUN CONCERT* jpbs avail. Red River Music HailMill/Wash Box Office-SecurityUsher & Conce.ss. areas. Pay doe, apply in person M-F 10-5. $ 12/hr. 7 7 7 rl0 5 4 . : E-COM M ERCE D riv e (U n i v . & M i 11) T e m p e ( p r k g . MINI STORAGE MANAGERS lookilViq T o r A FUN A N tl ENTHUSIASTIC Relief MANAqeR Fo r DISTRIBUTION CO near ASU needs PT help for sales dept. ExC typing & comm skills req. Flex hrs, M-F, $7/hr. Call Diane Drake 921-0707. , to m e r s e ry ic e , a c c o u n t r e p s , be athletically inclined: C O U R IE R COOK NEEDED for childcare center, M-F. 7am-12:30 prti Tempe/Mesa border 839-5953 333-0109 Ask for Irene ; (Leave message for same day interview) A DREAM JOB $7.50-$9 15 Positions P/T Shifts An automobile co. in Tempe has seve ral openings for individuals w ith exce lle nt customer service skills. Will be helping members with ro adside assista nce, answering questions, help­ ing w ith maps and d ire c­ tions. Shifts available 7 days! a w eek, 8am -noon or 5:30pm -9:30pm , 4 weeks' paid training! Type 20wpm' and have kn o w le dge of! W indows. These positions s ta rt im m e diate ly so ca ll; P rld e S ta ff today a t 777-; 0707 for more info. www.needwork.com THE SCOTTSDALE PLAZA RESORT Our success depends on y o u r e x p e rie n c e and desire to be a part of our te a m . M any Food & Beverage & Rooms area positions are now avail­ able: • G uest S ervice . A ssociates • A ssistant F ront D esk M anager • M inibar A ttendant N o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r Sum m er Programs. Positions available w orking w ith Elementary (K-5) Children. Site Program Mgrs - $9.76-$10.51/hr Enrichment Instructors Special Recreation Leaders Activity Leaders - $7.44-$9.05/h r We offer excellent benefits, flexible schedules & vast opportunities. interviews available Mon. 3pm -6pm & Tues. 9am - Noon. At the Human Resource OfficeList St. & Monroe entrance) 24 Hr. JOBLINE: (602) 440-3154 10 to 30 hrs/wk during the school year. 30-40 hrs/wk during the Summer. Requires experi­ ence leading children in recreational and/or educational activities: Applications available at: City o f Tem pe So cial Services O ffice 3500 S. Rural Rd., 2nd Floor Hrs: M-Th 8am-5pm Tempe, AZ (6 0 2 )3 5 0 -5 4 2 3 EOE/AA M /F/D/V EOE t BI I r - ' — 1 ......" S i g n |P Psych & Social Work M^ors ^ G ain V alu ab le E xperien ce • AM R oom S ervice O perator -A M /P M S ervers <* P T/FT C ashier -B arista • PT Mo s t • C offee B ar A ttendant DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Devetapmentally. Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $6.SO- $7.50 per flo u r W orking W ith Adolescents •F lexible Security O fficer •¡FT 2 nd S hift j S ecurity O fficer • S h ip p in g C le r k s • F T S huttle D river Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time O ff, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Fax your resume or apply in person to: The Scottsdale Plaza R esod 7200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85253 SubmitApplications Zb: it DBC Residential Services 2405 E, Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 Æ Fax:948-0513 NOTE; All food service workers1 must have a food handler's card. HELP W ANTEDG g N g lA L ^ ^ ^ LUXURY AUTO Sales Auto sales are booming. Opportunity to make up to 6 figures. Ex­ perience not nec. large new and used car inventory. Full Bene­ fits Gall Stacy M-F 265-6600 MAINTANENCE PERSON, 20 units, live-on, near ASU, P/T, flex, hrs, know plumb & turn over. Call/ lv msg 841-7240. MAJOR WALL St. firm now ‘ hiring interns. Great resume builder. Call Jodi @ 461-5Ô32: P/T WORK - F /t pay : Come to play not to work. Day & eve. shifts avail., $9/hr. University & Priest. Mr. Jones 517-1977 PHOENIX HOME Builder seek­ ing a f/t entry level sta ff ac­ countant . Competitive salary & benefits/ Fax res to 777-2407 MYGRANT GLASS, pt Sat po­ sition, Tempe, area, warehouse driver. Call for interview. 9668055. SCOTTSDALE BOYS & Girls Club looking for Education instr. to conduct fun, educational activities for children âgé 6-?12. Clean DL, M-F, 2.-6 pm, salary doe: CaU 948-8020 Deeded @ Sixshooters. Ëxp. prefd, must be 19+. Apply in person M & W 214pm: 705 S. Rural (in Cor­ nerstone) 557-6820 serv ers HELP W ANTEDG |N |R A L _ _ _ _ _ _ HELP W ANTEDG gN ER A ^___ HELP W ANTEDC L g H C A L __ SHIPPING/ RECEIVING, ft/pt w/ exp, comp, knowledge a +, apply in person or call. 1090 W, 5th St. Tempe 967-6488 enthusiastic & great w/ kids 6 mo - 12 yrs. WSI, CPR & first aid cert. $8-$HVhr DOE. 200-8255. ACCOUNTING/ DATA Entry Clerk, must be dep & have strong data entry skills, 20hrs/wk. until June. Then 3040hrs/wk. for summer. Please fax res to 858-9456 TICKET AGENT: part-time af­ ternoons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 SNACKBAR ATTENDANT, Pt summer job, w/ flexible hrs. & time to get your homework done. Starts immediately! 236^5782 TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, days, nights or weekends, fun job, 947-6562. 2013 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd. SUMMER COUNSELORS wanted! Friendly Pines Camp, located in the cool pine moun­ tains of N. ÁZy is looking for cabin leaders for 99 season. If interested: please calí ús @ (520) 445-2128 or info@friendlypines.com U P TO $12/H R . . Start now, guaranteed base + bonus, l,5-20hrs/wk. Survey mrktng. Camelback & Scot­ tsdale. No boiler fooirt. 9:301:30 & 1:30-5:30 M-F w/ flex­ SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Op^ ibility. Please call 423 0129 port un ity!! Kyrene school d isr. After 9:30am trict is seeking people inter­ ested in Club Leader positions V ALET MGRS, exp’d attend­ working directly with children. ants needed, jiiust be athletic, . PT & FT positions avail. Apply able to work wknds. $8-10/ Hr. in person at Kyrene School Dis­ Please call Aaron @ 321-1 O il trict, 8700 ‘S- Kyrene Éd, Tem­ or 990-PARK pe, AZ (corner of KyreheA APARTMENT MGR, couple Warner) by submitting a resume p refd . .. On-site ajFtV avail. & 1 letter of recommendation. Knowledge of tools & handy­ Please call 783-4039 with any. man exp: des'd. Complex'’is lo­ questions. cated 2 blcks to ÁSU.. 967- ■■• : SUMMER HELP wanted at the . -7212 yv y Col lege S to re ..All positions WSI SWIM Instructor, morning avail. Please come in to fill out qnd evening lessons June-Au­ app. 1015 S. Rural. Now hiring! gust, 236-5782 SWIM INSTRUCTORS for spring/ summer prog. Must be $ 1 5 0 S ig n - *9/hr G uaranteed SHELF HELP Reeded Ft/Pt; mornings, drug-free workplace, . benefits, base + comm-» Space : Age Paint, 707 Si Country Club Dr. Mesa O n Bonus Appointment Setters O u tbou nd T e le m a rk e tin g ' fo r c re d it c ard s a le s ' «WeeklyBase + Bonus + ' Commission • $14-$28 per hour averase • Paid training • No experience necessary • fun çoM ortÿjle -, environment . $ N ew C T R / Im m e d ia te O p en ing s $ F le x ib le H o urs $ A fte r T ra in in g $ D a ily / W e e k ly / M o n th ly B onus $ P re d ic tiv e D ia le r Camp Staff positions avail, at Girl Scout summer cam ps in Phoenix & northern Arizona. Camp C ounselors H orsem anship in strs L ifeg ua rd s Calf Marc Now! 956-2139 $ T u itio n R eim b u rs e m e n t 1-800-352-6133, opt. 4 or 1-602-25341359. opt. 4 CaU T O D A Y 4 7 0 -4 5 5 7 ■' o r F a x 4 7 0 9 1 4 4 a U L iO J NOW HIRING for thè meat department Please fax resume to 456-1490 or call Mike 456-1400 Y O U C O ULD G ET A [ 4 8 th SL A Southern < Great part-time work at $8.96/hr. 20hr/wk min. Drive before and after classes. 2-4 weeks paid training during the summer. Drive August through May. Apply now at Tempe Elementary School District #3, 3205 S. Rural Rd. or call Linda at 774-2142 Ext. 7622. i National BA in Child Development or équivalant degree / ' • Bilingual is a plus • Excellent health and ' retirement plans Position opened until filled • ■ ■ Please contact Karen at Hacienda, a, Inc. (6 0 2 ) 2 4 3 -4 2 3 1 e x t 1 1 6 F a x (6 0 2 ) 2 4 3 -1 2 1 7 OOÊBBÈBSBâÈBSÊSSm GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS Have Fun • Make a Difference • Summer in New England Residential Summer Camps seek staff in all indi­ vidual and team sports: Baseball, Basketball, Tennis, Soccer, Inline Hockey, Golf, Swimming, Sailing, Water-skiing, Mt. Biking, Backpacking, Clim bing w all/challenge Course, Football, Lacrosse, Coaching, General staff ¡positions, office, dance, and gymnastics. Located in the I mountains of Massachusetts just 2.5 hours from| NYC & Boston. C o m p e titiv e S alaries room/board. Call Camp Greylock for Boys (BOO) 842-5214 o r| Camp Romaca for Girls (800) 779-2070. Healthy summer * Stay in shape • Work outdoors I PT BANQUET Server, imme­ diate openings, flexible sched­ ule, exp, helpful, 236-5782 STOCKYARDS RESTAU­ RANT now hiring lunch serv­ ers & dinner hostess. Apply in FT Custom er Service Reps U nited Blood S ervices, th e V a lle y ’s n o n p ro fit b lo o d p ro v id e r s in c e 1 9 4 3 , is s e e k in g in d i­ v id u a ls w h o w a n t to m a k e a d iffe re n c e in people's lives. M orning, e v e n in g & w e e k e n d s h ifts a v a ila b le . $ 6 $8 /h r plus shift differen­ tia l fo r e v en in g hours. G ood custom er service s k ills a n d p le a s a n t ph on e vo ice p referred . C a ll 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. HELP W ANTEDC H ILD CARE person, lpm -5pm , Mon.-FrL 5001 E. Washington. NANNY-LIKE position avail ASAP (min. 1 yr). Split bet­ ween two families (PV & Scot­ tsdale w/ 2 children per family). 30+ hrs/wk, own transportation req'd. Previous exp. w/ possi­ ble Nursing or Education back­ ground p refd . NS, pay doe, call 948-1525 or 404-3713. THE ALL new Bojo's now hir­ ing expd doorstaff, cocktail w aitstaff and cooks. Apply in person @ 829 S. Rural Rd., Tempe. Classifieds WORKI HELP W ANTEDGENERAL B o r in g MINDED Int’l sales & marketing co. seeks 2-3 ambi­ tious individuals to help capitalize on Virgin Phx. market. Positive attitude a must. 946-2430 : Call Now IT S YOUR FUTURE 759-7047 Lifesuards Swim Instructors 7am-3pm • R e s ta u ra n t G r e e te r 6am-2pm & 5pm-10pm 3pm-llpm • S e c u r ity O f f ic e r Various Shifts 8am-5pm currently hiring exp’d ce rtifie d Lifeguards and Swim Instructors foi all shifts For more information please contact the T e m p M ^ J L .Y M C A at 7 3 o l S l F e x : 504 r= SwmMer D i s c o V E r Y = Counselors wanted for the world-renowned Vermont). Must be at toast 21 by June 20 and have ? a valid d o er’s license. W o a t 888-878+^37, stoff@ sum m erfunxam or Y w w .su m m erfu n .co rtt^ • R o o m A tte n d a n ts Various Shifts Sunterra ----- M R e s o r t s -------- $30 0 $600 a week, only 30 hrs/wk, FT/PT shifts, Full benefits, Cash spiffs, Bonuses. Contact Kim at 424-7399 or Apply in person at: 3 2 0 0 N. H ayden # 2 8 5 (H ayden/ N. of Thom as) 424-7399 STARBUCKS ASSOCIATES FOOD & BEVERAGE CASHIER f t H o st M arriott COCKTAIL SERVERS S ervices GIFT SHOP CASHIERS WAREHOUSE DRIVER We're Host M arriott Services at Sky Harbor 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 Ft exciting environment. Call today to schedule an immediate interview: 1-S88-HOST-JOB Etarc&g t >' o 0 -888-467-8562) or call the recruiter at 2754721 x3302 for more info. TUITION REIMBURSEMENT SEMI-ANNUAL MERIT REVIEWS Get a good, close look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FACS provides finandal, credit, and administrative services to Federated Department Stores, Inc., induding Macy's and Bloomingdale's. Full and part-time opportunities are currently available in the following areas: To qualify you must be willing to work both evenings and weekends, possess com puter skills and a desire to aggres­ sively prom ote our option­ al services. Apply at or send resumes to National C ar Rental, 1402 S . 22nd S t., Phoenix A Z 85034. Fax: 267-7395 (Equal Opportunity Em ployer) 3pm-llpm & llpm-7am • B eU S ta ff • P a y r o ll C o o r d i n a t o r R ental S ales Agent National C ar Rental, one of the fastest growing car rental com panies in Phoenix, is now hiring Rental S ales Agents for the evening shift at its air­ port location. Previous customer experi­ ence or sales experience Is preferred. In return, we offer a com petitive hourly w age, the opportunity to earn $1000 to $2000 a month in sales incentives, and an excellent benefits package which includes M edical/dental, 401 (k), paid training and m ore... • G ra v e y a rd GSA 2pm-10pm exciting residential campus programs (UCLA, LIFE! We are immediately hiring for the following positions. Please apply at 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd. in the Human Resources Dept., M-F, 9am4pm. • H o s p ita lity A t t e n d a n t UC San Diego, U o f Michigan, Georgetown, U o f • Income for today! • Income for summer (transfer to hometown) • Ongoing income for Hilton Scottsdale Resort $ Villas • R o o m S e r v ic e the summer working w ith teenagers a t one o f our Join the Fastest Growing Company on the American Stock Exchange HELP W ANTEDGENERAL en trepren eu rial E O E /M /F /D /V Drive A S ch o o l Bus! EARLY INTERVENTIONIST y WHÒLE FOODS U DELIVERY DRIVERS- good pay, shifts daily, 10am - 3pm, The Picnic Company 1415 E, University, E of Rural, Tempe. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL H C O R K 'N C LEAV ER Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (952-0585) HELP W ANTEDGENERAL SUMMER DISCOVERY, pre-college program. Spend fo r p art-tim e re ta il prom otion positions. M u st be educated, o r have a serious in te re s t in health & n u tritio n . R etail product dem onstration or related sales exp erien ce a plus. N eed transportation and available to w ork on w eeken d s. F o r im m ediate consideration please contact D eA nna a t 7 8 4 - 1 7 3 8 . y STATE FARM Insurance cleri­ cal asst. Tempe. P/t, 12 mo/yr, flex hrs, testing is-r’qrd, fax re­ sume to 897-6890 Y O U C O ULD G E T A INDEPENDANT CONTRACTORS NEEDED ç” 1 . RECEPT FOR Phx hair salon. Flexible hours, no exp. nec. Call, leave message 585r472l “Win tiers find a new path” June 1 - July 31 f k // OFFICE ASST P/t, flex hrs. Know basic coihputer/bookkeeping, honest, dep, near ASU, good pay 827-2035 or 692-0844 HELP W ANTEDF O O D J |R V IC |_ _ CUSTOMER SERVICE • BRIDAL DIRECTORY Additional advantages include: • 20% discount on most Macy's purchases • Casual dress every day • Competitive medical benefits for full-time • Paid benefit days • Paid weekly • Hrly rates are $8.25 or more (DOE) FAGS FINANCIAL A typing test is required for ail positions. Apply in person Mon.-Fri, 8am-5pm or Call 929-3000 (Northeast comer of 52nd St. and west 14th St between Broadway and University Drives.) and CREDIT SERVICES 1345 S. 52nd St. S erving M acy's 6 B loom ingdale’s D ep artm ent Stores in Tempe Equal Opportunity For AIL 19 State Press for Monday, April 19, 1999 HELP W ANTEDC H ILD CARE HELP W ANTEDC H IL D C A R |_ _ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS o p p o R ry N m ¡s NANNIE / MOTHER’S Helper wanted Mature nurturing, flexi­ ble person wanted to care for 3 year old twin girls. Education or family studies degree pref. Salary. Starts Sept. 99, Hiring now. Caroline. 998-4845, 3:6:30pm. Housing is an op­ tion Call 812-8359 or 855-0034 CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader, com skills & would enjoy talking to bus. owners about the hottest mrkt. concept of the 90s. Call Lori @ 443-0322 ext. 226 NANNY WANTED for 9 & 6 year old. Must have own trans. SUMMERTIME NANNY need­ ed for adorable 7 mo. old boy. Live in a beautiful setting in Prescott. Weekends free. Com­ petitive salary, rm & board. Call Andrea at 951-0323. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL FU LL & PART-TIME INSTRUCTORS WoRk w ith disAbltd cWWren ancJ Adults ScottsdAle Locaiíons, FIex H rs, ENTREPRENEURS: WK at home on your schedule. No in­ ventory, no quotas, take action now! 1-888-474-7405 FAST GROWING retail barter co. has openings for p/t & f/t telemarketers. Your home or our office. If you have exc. telemkt. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Will Train. 9 9 4 -5 7 0 4 EOE W iz a r d o f V is io n s $10 Readings Psychic Eye &. Tarot Readings Reunites loved ones * Forsees lovers’ futures * Names. Dates & Times 6 0 2 -8 4 1 -5 2 0 8 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Sidney Omarr Monday, A p ril 19, 1999 M echanical T e c h FT /P T , som e m ech. exp., tech school or college pref. S tart at $8-$12/h r with advancem ent. 15 min to A S U . Flex hours. C all 95 6-82 00, days. FAST GROWING retail barter ;co. has opening for p/t & f/t trade broker. We seek highly motivated indiv. who enjoy a fast pace & have been success­ ful in cust. service. Attitude & talent more important than exp. For immed. interview call Lori at 443-0322 ext. 226 for us.” Scorpio in picture; SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov, 21): Dig deep for information previ­ ously censored. People observe you are undergoing serious test. If Successful, you will be cele­ brated: People look to you for leadership. You can provide it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2 i ).: Domestic adjustment fea­ tured; m usic involved. Get in harmony with youixelf, remem­ ber aphorism. " Physician, heal thyself.” Taurus. Libra, Scorpio persons; play leading rotes; Letters in names: F. O. X; CAPRICORN (p e c 22-jan 19): Make an effort to help oth­ ers understand m etaphysical subjects. Maintain aura of mys­ ticism. be discreet, don’t reveal everything. In surveying mys­ tery of num bers, stick w ith number 7. AQUARIUS (JanV 20-Feb. IS): What was lost will be recovered -Cancer. Capricorn persons play major roles: Accept chal­ lenge of added responsibility. Opportunity exists to knock on doors, of fame, fortune. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): What was started with Aries associate will begin to bear fruit. Some people never lost faith, deserve your thanks;,, including Leo and' Aquarius"; Land development will be fea­ tured. IF APRIL, 1^ IS YOUR B i RT HD A Y: C urrent cycle relates to getting in step with your own tune. You exude aura o f daring, sex appeal, intelli­ gence, courage. Relationship that grows warm could eventu­ ally be hot and conclude in mar­ riage. During May you become involved with metaphysical sub­ jects ,-r- new world opens. Travel, increased social activity in June. August —- heavy lovemaking. ■ N E M E S 1 s S win! Official contest rules on site. CollegeBytes is a compre­ hensive toolbox for col lege students! What are you waiting for? THINK TWICE!!! Choosing an adoptive family involves know­ ing the fight questions to ask. We want to help. Call Candy @ 266-TALK, & a list of ques­ tions will be mailed to you. (This is a FREE service provid­ ed by Christian Family Care Agency) NEED STORAGE space?? Call American Systems Mini-Storage @ 833>2972 to check out our Student Specials. A D O PTIO N LOVING COUPLE & adopted son long for newborn. Stay at home mom, professional dad ready for open relationship with birth family.. Allowable care expenses. Shirley/Drew 800-607-3632. NEED $ 1000? Got 30 seconds/ Log on CollegeBytes.com and you're automatically entered to SERVICES Call 965-6735 to | i | i c your od i SERVICES 50% OFF dry cleaning bill w/ ASU Lb.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap fluff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner of Rural & Univ. 966-7454. C la ss!flsd s K ra c k e d THINNING HAIR? Hair loss? The solution . . . www.hairIoss2000.com WANTED HARD ALTERNATIVE band is seeking sihgér. Influences: Foo Fighters/Deftones. If interested; call Mike at 970-2427 This sho uld bo y o u r ad C all 965-6735 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 PERSONALS PERSONALS W in d s h ie ld T We will make it look new again Student/ Faculty Discount Up to $250 on collision repair FREE ESTIMATES • FREE TOWING S o u th w est A uto B o dy & Cottsion Repair »Ante 6 tM Earn your true potential by joining one of. America's largest telecommunications c o s. Be your own b o s s with flexible h o u rs. E n th u siasm , not d e g r e e , required. Call now! 24 hr. info line (602) 337-7125 . Gu 4 fo ta a ila i» e * IIS a d EGG DONOR NEEDED Sim ilar to woman seeking assistance: 5 5 ", 12s lbs., dark brown hair, good health history andüPA. Up to 10 doctors 'visits. Injections & out-patient procedure Involved. You receive $2,000 9 6 8 -5 9 1 5 ^ ( 6 0 2 J 6 7 8 - 1 9 0 6 fo r Inform ation 6 2 2 & .H a c te m ta P r.,^ MMPfNOfMTHFPNCSCNTATIVC PERSONALS TUTORS TUTORS RESTAURANTS/ BARS [ w oodshedT • Oldest neighborhood bar in Tempe - Est. 1979 • New Times award winner • Cheap Beer & $1.25 Shots • NBA, ESPN. Fun Court MLB • Greeks Welcome - 3 pool tables • 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE Sun. & Mon. ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S ta te P re s s C lassifieds M atthew s Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 C lassified Ad Order Form s E T? E A s E A R R E o o L L Y HUN T E B A D ■ S I R E N o ■ E T N A £ 1 ■ O E S S E R T■ S C A B 0 B s H E R B H. JL X H O O c S t O Ï1 O V V 1 L A 5 . S_ M| A E T E ñ\ f*T S T U |A^_S p L A T E E T ■ H E N R Y H u R E A r B E D I ÌSL s s o P P O E 8 T 1 F T o ,É u N R s S E C s 1 T O T R V A S E N E D A M O B t D S O N E E y «" 1 S E R 4/19/99 Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish if to appear in the S tate P ress, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability o f the S tate'P ress shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to cancel you r ad a credit will be held o n account for future advertising. Q Check# □ nsa □ Please Include Driver's license* □ p A j Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day 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 E S 3 line minimum. Add a 13-characterbold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Oates you wish your ad to run: Price per Day á ofDays Total \ S Benk Card Number C la s s if ic a tio n N a m a /N u m b e r : Name on Card Expiration Date ^ HEALTH & FITNESS ___________ m m h u r W t j k n O m r T BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Get On The Fast Track SERVICES ^ / I C P 1999. The LA Times Syndicate ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE L E H A R PERSONALS PERSONALS PERSONALS ARIES (March 21-April 19): Period of confusion will end sooner than anticipated, If you don't know what to do. do noth­ ing. Answers are found as result Of attending .social affair. Pisces., Virgo persons become ’allies: TAURUS (April 20^May 20): Pressure off. you handle added . resp onsibility with grace, . aplomb. You will be-compii mented fór maintaining emo­ tional equilibrium . Yduencounier individual destined to. play major role in yOUr life,. :. GEMINI (May 2 4 -June 20); Look beyond the immediate; jump info thè. game: don’t fie fallow, on bench: Opportunity' , exists to make mark, to influ­ ence what happens in the world. Aggressive Aries exhibits jeal'•ousy. v • . ...: "C A N CER .(June 21-July 22): . Holding on to preconceived, hot io ii s wo u 1d be n ¿jiat i ve. Hig h light invÉ:.hiivenes s, pionee:ring spirit. willingness to (tike• change .on rothirncë; You’ll b e tmiertainéd ;it dinner. smáck lips vyiihpleasure. LEÜ (July 23-Aug: 22): Fófius ón, direckon. molivatlon. major dec ision relytiing to marriage. Wh; ii you ihou g»ht lost; is. actuál.ly.iin yoiir own home, piDsstbíy wht:.re water- runs. Ga nce r. Capricorn persons1will reveal secrets.r VIRGO (Aug. 2.L Sept. 22):: Aura of: confusion, impatience dominates.: Get your mind off the trtv k it —- participa ( e i n entertainmem, po 1itical■ -charit% b 1e p ro jects. C areer m atters d phi ip a te . Gemini iridi v id u a I opens previously closed doors. LIBRA (Sept., 23-O ct. 2-2),: Refuse to; be stym ied by. mechanical difficulties, includ­ ing computer. Don ’t lower stan­ dards. raise them .instead. Written notification received. We would like you to travel P |R g > N A L |= s : Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads through the mail. PUMPf^BOTTUS/CAGES S CARRACKS• L 20thANNUAL CYCLE SALE SALE ENDS TODAY! Monday, April 19th, 9am to 8pm We have what you want ON SALE! Shop early - SAVE BIG! on All Bicycles, Parts, Clothing & Accessories! Save with us this week! You'll find deep discounts in first quality brand-name clothing, accessories and bicycles. Come in and take advantage of our high-volume buying power. # CAMawK JyZw»"* W 10% to 90% SALE ENDS Come see and save on all: H A RO * DYNO REDLINE • IRONHORSE • K2 POWERLITE • SUNLITE PROFLEX* LE COLIN LODEMASTER • FREE AGENT MTN. GOAT • MASI • VISION TODAY! Monday, April 19th, 9am to 8pm £>» LAST DAY TO SAVE! Storewide Savings on Thousands of Items! Full list of sale items available at store during sale. No pre-sale, layaway, phone or mail orders. Sale prices apply only to stock on hand. TEM PE BICYCLE 330 W. University (University & Farmer, 4 Stocks W est of M ill) 966-6896 m Financing Available • 90 Days Same as Cash www.t e mp ebi c y c l e . com H g jij