IN S ID E W e a t h e r S u n n y ; high 107, low 80 V o lu m e 84 N u m b e r 147 C la s s if ie d s 20 C ro ssw o rd s T u e sd a y , A u g u s t 3, 1999 outsid&thes Adult entertainers by night, college students by day, dancers defend th eir lifestyles. see s to p p a g e \ 2. 16 H o r o s c o p e s 23 O p in io n 04 Go go gadget m m■» ¡■ ■ i .* Students demonstrate the robotic wheelchair their group designed through the ASÚ Conexiones Project while other student look on. The Conexiones Project allows area junior high minority students to work with ASU faculty, researchers and staff to learn about tech­ nology in an academic setting. Forty-four students learned computer-programming skills and used Lego Programmable bricks this summer to design the robots ranging from carousels to moon buggies which were unveiled during a presentation Friday at the Computing Commons. Tonya Thüringer o f the State Press seeks m ore data said l%ia*y he wiU focas on whether Dow Corning to law­ suits as settlement over silicone Q te P i* ^ ^ by Dow Chemical ■Carp, and C oning Corp. Judge A f t e r Spector said th e 1 heart of the settlement is the question of immunity for t e f t e * |$ i ? " B f c pint is it’s unauthorized and it’s in bad faith under the (bankruptcy) code,” attorney Geoffrey M i t e an attorney for scv j j f f Nevada women, said daring the last day o f a hearing : | t e A* SrttlfeBWT*-' ;5 k V^; * ,* «Mj§|fcs»,' Specter also requested lawyers to submit raoK l t e IM rlhe question of punitive damages. ‘I f die debtor’s product didn’t cause these people’s diseases... then they shouldn’t have to pay anything,” he $*¡4- “If they did cause diseases or syndromes, dam until T O e jn te K te lA I 4 , Atlanta killings show how easily m urderers slip away B y A rlen e L evinson A P N a t io n a l W riter Last week, Sheriff Roy Wynn’s heart broke. He saw carnage in Atlanta by a man long suspected of carnage in his own Cherokee County in Alabama. There, six years ago, the man was linked to the hacking deaths of a woman and her mother. Months of police work in Alabama came to naught. Now, the same Mark O. Barton splattered blood in Georgia. “I just felt real saddened, all these people had lost their lives,” Wynn said from Centre, Ala. “I hoped someday we could bring this man to trial.” Barton’s case was only the latest in which it seemed police had their hands on a killer only to see him slip away to kill again. Early this year police questioned Gary Staynef in the killings of three Yosemite National Park sightseers. But they dismissed the 37-year-old motel handyman as a sus­ pect - until he confessed to the July 21 beheading of a park naturalist. He later confessed to killing all four. W hile the FBI and H ouston police hunted Angel M aturino Resendiz for a string of murders, unwitting immigration agents nabbed him for illegally entering the country, and sent him back to Mexico. Another spectacular murder case. Another Spectacular blunder. All in a matter of weeks. Or were they blunders at all? The public is getting a horrifying look at the daily frus­ tration of police work, experts say, “It’s more common than the general public knows,” says Vernon Geberth, former head of Bronx homicide in the New York Police Department. Now a consultant, Geberth claims prosecutors are more reluctant today to take on cases that aren’t a sure win. Quality Homës andTownhomeslnAffordable Wees Studios; 1 Bedroom; 2 Bedroom 1 Bath; 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath starting at *365 • Pool • Laundry • Microwave O vens & D ishw ashers Available • All the Conveniences 91 9 966-9000 E. L e m o n S t , Tem pe UNIVERSITY PROPERTIES Our auto insurance isn’t for everybody. Just people like you .. As an employee o f ASU, you will enjoy preferential ratés, • broad coverage, and outstanding service. Call toll free 1-888-744-9717 now for your free quotation. Made available to Benefit-Eligible Faculty and Staff only C aliforn ia Casualty* Everyone depend* on you. You can depend on u*. Visit our web site at www.calcas.com Source C ode 07 Sw» Prêts fcrlbawtay.Ä uget 1, IW » Honors College uproots, to settle in Irish Hall B y B ill W ard S t a t e P ress Toyna Thurihger of, the State Press T h e A S t' H o n o rs College will be m oving to Irish Hall Aug. 12-13. The ASU H onors C o lleg e w ill be m oving from McClintock Hall to the newly refurbished Irish Hall Aug. 12-13. where more than 25 offices and 600 bed spaces await. ■‘Student and office space has been unbearable for years," said Janet Burke, associate dean of the University Honors College, Irish Hall, built in 1930, is located in the Central Complex near the former home of the Honors College. M cC lintock H all. The room s are c u rren tly under restoration and will be ready for student life for the tall semester. McClintock Hall has served as a center of academic and co-curricular activities for students in the University Honors College since itsineeptibn. McClintock Hall: cur­ rently has 174 bed spaces and 21 office spaces. Irish Hail ultimately will have 600 to 800 bed spaces and 25 office spaces by next spring. Administration from two ASU departments moved out of Irish Hall Friday. Staff from Veterans Upward Bound moved to a leased office space off campus, and the A m erican English C ulture adm inistration moved to Mariposa Hall. “What we are trying to do bring the college together so we are a tight-knit community, sim ilar to the old English-style universities where students are located together based on their disciplines,” Burke said. “Right now everyone is spread out. It is exciting to think that everyone will be together this fall.” Honors College is among the first honors colleges in the nation and is the only one in the Southwest. Honors College graduates have had a 100 percent acceptance rate into law and medical schools since the program began. David Techan, director of Academic Facilities said the restoration process in Irish hall will include new Ethernet technology for Internet connections, and the rooms and offices will get a cleaning and painting overhaul. “These same offices have been here for 10 or 12 years. After that period of time, we really need to get in there and give it a fresh look again,” Techau said. Irish Hall is named alter Dr. Fred Irish, an ASU found­ ing father that contributed to ASU's science department from 1856 to 1940. - A SU student directs drag queen fairy tale B y D a v e Ma a ss S t a t e P ress G e o rg ia G e is ’ new o n e -a c t' p lay begs the q u e s tio n : How m any ASU B ookstore w orkers are actually drag queens? i'vv.Y: ..;Y. C in d y S p a r k le s : A M o d e rn D ay Fairy Tale opens Aug. 14 at Modified. 407 E. Roosevelt in Phoenix.The show starts at 8 p.m. and costs $4 per ticket. Gcis js keeping the details about the satirical comedy in the closet. Afterall, i t ’s only 50 m inutes long. H ow ever, she said. “I f s the story o f one woman stu g g lin g to be h e rse lf in co rp o rate America - Evil Corporate Am erica.” The play centers around Sparkles, a working girl suffering from low self­ esteem , who finds redem tion in a place “ w h e re m en d re s s as w o m en , and w om en do t h e ir ow n a u to r e p a ir .” N a m e ly , th e m y s tic a l C lu b 4 0 9 , a transvestite bar. G e is, w ho w o rk s at the ASU B ookstore, said she based S p a rk le s’ character loosely on herself, cmbcllish- ing w ith a few fa ls ie s and w igs. Sp a rkles is the lo n g est p erfo rm an ce piece Geis has written. It is also will be the first work she has acted as producer and director on. D a rlen e F oxm o re ( s h e ’s a m an, baby!) makes his/her theatrical debut as Sparkles' drag queen Fairy Godmother. F orm er ASU stu d en t M iche 1le C ru ff sta rs in the title ro le , and Jo n n y Oberdörfer, another ASU alumnus and coworker at the ASU Bookstore, plays Fantasy Man. S tate P ress C rosswords : G o :A h e ä ^ K Do Them in Ink! P ag e 16. miniR a n c h Ladies N ight Scottsdale’s hottest all female based s tem Clock People Rock Lobster THE G R EA T ES T U V E 80 s R ETR O IN TOWN! Todd Hart ► $2.00 to *» aweu« bourbons ■ $1.00 D O M E S T I C D R A F T S {U N TIL 11F M ) é T jfik King Norris featuring Fred Monis o í Howard Stern shows mmmmmmm* mm 7 2 9 5 E . S t e t s o n D r ., S c o t t s d a l e P IM A C O U N T Y F A IR G R O U N D S • T U C S O N WHLSUmiM SM «Z»V/\# B E G 1 I N J I S / X T 7 : 3 0 r > |v | P A R K I IM G L O T O P E N S A T 3 : 0 0 P IV I D O O R S O P E N A T 5 :3 0 P N I M A R TIN I T i c k e t s a v a il a b le a t a ll D i l l a r d ’s lo p a t io n s . To c h a r g e c a l l 5 0 3 . 5 5 5 5 o r 1 . 8 0 0 . 6 3 8 . 4 2 5 3 o u t s i d e t h e P h o e n ix a r e a . RANCH 9 7 0 -0 5 0 0 L 1 FOR MORE INFORMATION CA LL 580.762.3100 j w w w .even in g star.co m »produced by Evening S t a r • w w w .phlsh.cotn S o c i e t y l e a v e s n o t h in g I t o b e d e s i r e d ," , .lo v e d ...... Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ear. Society finds itself in a vicious circle, nipping at its tail like a mangy, dumb dog. Like the Epicurean and Roman civiliza­ tions of old. we find ourselves engourged at the trough o f amorality. In ancient days, undesirable people were wiped, beaten, tortured and fed to various beasts for entertainment. Attendees num­ bered in the thousands, packing arenas the size o f Sun Devil Stadium. Today, everything is fair sport. Turn on a TV set and observe how we have become cold and callous to the fami­ ly structure, to the opposite sex and to strangers. Family values is a joke, more a political j catchphrase than an actual way o f parent­ ing and learning. There's syndication’s Change o f Heart, a show that has a simple theme: “ If you don’t like your partner, w e’ll find you a new o n e.” T h ere’s M T V 's The B lam e Game, a mock court filled with a hooting monkey-like audience as jury. Both shows j send a simple message: eat, drink and be |carnal for tomorrow we shall break up. Then there’s Woodstock ‘99. This tradegy didn’t boil up overnight. It's a key point in a downward spiral of events since the original Woodstock. Attendees watched a ’ number o f acts dedicated to carnage such as Limp Bizkit and Korn. Then they decid­ ed to join in on mayhem, breaking others’ b on es, raping w om en , h avin g muddy orgies and finally rioting. In July alone, 23 people — including three gunm en — have d ied in m ass j killings in Atlanta. Think o f what’s hap- j p en in g in other c itie s throughout the j world. “It’s just mind-boggling,” said Georgia Hall, who lives across the street from the house where a July 12 murder-suicide left seven dead in Atlanta. “It’s almost unbe­ lievable that these tragedies are just hap­ pening all together. You get to the point j where you wonder what’s next?” Although we are on the same downward thrust that lead the Roman and Epicurean societies to destruction, we have surpassed the them in cruelty and in amorality. That j being the case, we will face a far worse j worse outcome. Arc eie Triomphe •T * ■ ■ • • 1 H eroes don’t w ait to do their best should stop its coverage of the less than uplifting things ■ ^ ^ ■ h e r e has been m ore than that happen in the world. We won’t get into the debate here enough sadness and negativity guestcolumnist about whether or not media coverage has become part of ■ in the news lately. But ju st when the bad news twins, Gloom and Doom, appear to the problem; that is a column in itself. But it doesn’t take a have a stranglehold on Good Guys everywhere, a new rocket scientist to understand that some increase in positive news items, coupled with some decrease in negative news, superhero rides to the rescue. (Pun intended.) Lance Armstrong completed the mother of all come­ would dilute the arguments of the anti-media crowd. Of backs July 26, by winning the mother of all bicycle dices, course, it shouldn’t be about strength of arguments, it the Tour de France. His victory lap around the Champs should be about numbers of results. Armstrong’s story, and the others I’ve alluded, to are all Elysée must have been difficult because he had millions of too common because of the circumstances behind them. those who suffer from life-threatening conditions riding on Why is it that, individually and collectively, we apparently his shoulders. Armstrong whad been diagnosed with a particularly must be faced with death or the threat of it before we can deadly form of testicular cancer which later spread to his even begin to achieve our full potential? Why does it have lungs and brain. He was told his chances of survival were to take the threat of tragedy to produce triumph. It took the very real threat of nuclear extinction to scare less than 40 percent and that his cycling career was over. Apparently, he doesn’t listen very well. After two surgeries world leaders into efforts to overcome the cancerous threat and 12 weeks of chemotherapy, Armstrong started training of global warfare, although it’s still not entirely clear that we are willing to eliminate small but potentially dangerous for a race that was then two years away. His training regimen was so successful that Armstrong tumors that still exist. Tumors with names like Khadafy, dominated this year’s race from the start. In fact, his only Hussein, ethnic cleansing, etc. Is it in our genes? Will we be classified by paleontolo­ real headaches were accusations by the French press of gists in the distant future as the “come-back” species? One drug use. The allegations were unsubstantiated and, to his credit, Armstrong did not allow them to break his concen­ that had to be pushed, individually and collectively, to the edge o f extinction before it could make significant tration or weaken his determination. Armstrong has become hope’s poster boy not only for progress? And will we one day ran out of comebacks? This is not just about prolonging life, it’s also about people suffering from life-threatening diseases, but for those with any disability — and that’s as it should be. quality of life. The exuberance, joy and pride that radiates During the race, Armstrong was quoted as saying that one from people who overcome their adversities are the things of his motivations was to_ give hope to everyone who has we need to try to experience on a daily basis. Yes, I know that the intensity of emotion is a direct reflection of the gone through the same thing he has. Armstrong joins a long list of famous people who have amount of effort and danger involved. All I’m saying is overcome all kinds of adversity and now provide hope to that we need to strive for whatever degree of pleasure and pride we can every day of our lives, not wait until that life millions. My thoughts are that this story is both too common and is threatened. We need to do more than just read about the accom­ too uncommon. Thousands of people every day overcome or ignore life-threatening conditions to make a positive plishments of the Armstrongs of this world. We need to impact on the world around them. We hear their stories all start figuring out how we can evolve that trait of strong, too seldom. It is unusual for the media to cover the long list positive reaction to deadly menace into a strong, positive attitude that anticipates and counteracts the Gloom and of people in this category unless they happen to be famous. I’m not so naive to think that the media would, could or Doom brothers. StatePress R Jonathan Inge ----------- M etro Editor Dan Marek •Entertainment Editor Shawna Rae Kemppainen —— »O pinion Editor Leah Fasten — -— P hoto Editor e p o r t e r s — ——------ -— Student Media Phone N um bers---- Classifieds Photographers—— Vicki Carroll. State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Student Media Information 965-7572 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds * 965-6735 On the web http://www.statepress.com E-mail stpress@asu.edu —- — ------—- — —— Eric Bene, Dan Jackson, Jill Jensen, Andrew Long, Kelli Rasumssen, Kristin Sergeant Tonya Thuringer, lan Wingfield. Colum nists ....................-...... ----— ~ — - —-— Copy Editor — Joe Corrao,- Alyson Hurt, Jennifer McFarland, Katie Thomason. Bill Ward Production Senior R eporter — Mike Giallanza, David Goodwin, Jonathan Negretti, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh. Tarah McConnell Henderson, Diane Jacobs, Kondi Weinman, Steve Vrooman Dave Maass Salés Representatives —— Trisha Coffman, Lindsey CoMum, Eric Davit, Denise Estfan, Ryan Hem, Angela Jamison, Emily Johnson, Becky Michael. Michelle Ortiz, Erin Sweeney, Loren Watson. — — -------- — —-,-.¿1—— ————-— - —— The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 2, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz., 852871502. W e do not answer questions of a general nature. The Stoce Press is th e only new spaper exclusively published for and circulated on th e ASU campus. The new s and views published in this new spaper are not necessarily those of th e ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. O p in io n gagg S a t« Press f o r T u e s d a y , A u g u s t I . I W 9 M M M |B B 8 |P |p i OS M illennium m em o ries of th e next cen tu ry .M l M ilh the last year of the 20th W m f century more than h alf ▼ W fin ish ed, have you thought about what has already occurred in 1999? It has been a year rich in history, no doubt. But with the m illennium approaching, will 1999 receive more attention in the history b66ks than other years? Surely, in 2099, the New York Times will do a monthly feature looking back 100 years. Just what will be written? I have a few ideas... January 1999 — The people spoke and they were heard. That’s why a for-: m er s te ro id -u s in g . W orld W re stlin g Federation bad boy was inaugurated as M in n eso ta’s governor. Jesse V entura may be more familiar to all of you as the United States' 44,h President, but January of 1999 was when V entura’s political career was really launched. By becoming M innesota’s governor. V entura lit the . spark that ignited the nation's love for, the Reform Party. After Ventura’s inauguration, political p u n d its had o n ly one q u e stio n fo r Minnesota voters. “What were you think-' ing?” F e b r u a r y 1999 T he second im peachm ent trial o f a U.S. P resident W hat D o Y ou T h in k ? ended the same way the first one did, with an acquittal. The nation’s leader actually had to watch as Republicans brought his sex life into the hom es o f ev ery single American. It was proven that B ill C lin to n lik ed to play doctor with one of his interns, but in a fashionable partisan vote, the Senate decided to keep Slick Willie in office. As usual, the Teflon Prez watched his popularity among the American people increase during the scandal. March 1999 — In a move that would leave every U.S. Supreme Court Justice in a state of disbelief. New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani implemented a new pro­ gram that saw vehicles confiscated from people who drove drunk. A Worthwhile pro­ gram indeed, but the cars were taken away before convictions were attained. It seems the mayor forgot about the great American principle that you are innocent until proven guilty. The Supreme Court would later; declare the statute unconstitutional. A cou­ ple years: later, Giuliani would find himself sp ending m ore and m ore tim e in Washington. D.C. after winning a seat in the U.S. Senate. * M aik Letters to the Editor Arizona State University Matthews Center Room 2 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: \ 965-8484 W e b site : http://www.statepress.com Taiw an d eserves tru e A pril 1999 — NATO continues its air “Duh!” No one really believed China would w ar against K osovo. N ever heard o f be content to be number two, did they? July 1999 — The sentimental nature of Kosovo? Don’t worry, most Americans didn’t know where it was even when the A m erica is truly shown when John F. war was taking place. The United States Kennedy, Jr. crashes his plane off Martha’s ended up as the o fficial w inner, even Vineyard, killing himself, his wife and her though our success (or lack thereof) is still sister. Americans flock to Kennedy’s apart­ ment, leaving flowers, pictures, and other argued to this day. May 1999 — After waiting in lines tokens of affection. The media labels the for more than 6 weeks, some intense fans crash a great tragedy and asks if some curse finally watched as their dream become a surrounds the Kennedy family. Experts reality. Star Wars: The Phantom Menace realize, 100 years later, that a poor decision was o ffic ia lly re le ased . To th is day, and not some sort of curse was the true culp rit in the re se a rc h e rs death of John can not quite Jr. _ u n d e r s ta n d E xperts realize, 100 years later, What else the phe­ w ill 1999 that a poor decision and not nomenon that bring? Will su rro u n d e d som e sort o f curse was the true Y2K make the Star Wars cu lp rit in the death o f John Jr. people go film s. W hen crazy? Will ask ed about it, one psychology expert at Columbia President Clinton have a tough time keep­ University could m erely.offer, “People ing his zipper closed? Will anyone see were weird. People are weird. People will Mystery M en! These and other questions will be answered as the 20th century comes. always be weird. What can 1 say?” June 1999— The Cox report asserts that to a close. China might be an enemy to the United Kondi Kleinm an is a sen ior studying States. After looking back at the political cli­ B roadcast Journalism . H e encourages mate and China’s actions during the latter yoti to em ail him a t part of the 20lh century, we can only say, KingKJK@ email.msn.com 44 The State Press welcom es and encour­ ages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, dou­ ble-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full nam e, ID number, class standing, major (or affiliation with the University) and phone num­ ber. Requests for anonymity will be grant- ed only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opin­ ion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use Fax o ro u r website for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for w ritten purposes. Mayor: students welcome on Mill — as long as they ‘behave’ Editor's note: The following guest column is in response to the State guest ¿piumnist Whether you want to accept that Taiwan and China T Press editorial of June 15, which voiced are in fact two separate countries, all the citizens of j concerns about the city’s role in current downtown Tempe development projects and the effect those projects may the w orld should recognize that the era o f “One f have on ASU students. independence from C h in a China” has already and irrevocably ended. During an international media interview, Taiwan’s P resid en t Lee T eng-hui rem arked that re la tio n s between Taiw an and Chin-a should be based on a “state-to-state relationship.” I support L ee’s truthful statem ent and urge that you also accept the reality that Taiwan is a sovereign nation-state. Looking back on the whole history o f the region, Taiwan was never ruled by China for even a single day. The “One C hina" policy is not only based on a m irage, hi; has also created problem s between Taiwn » . Taiwanese people have a long history >-e :s> matic repression o f their national identi Chin, e identity was imposed on Taiwanese nationals by the policies of the Chinese Nationalist government, which also suppressed the .recognition of their Ta; anese identity. Moreover, under the “One China” adm inistration, Taiwan has been isolated from participation in the international arena because of its lack of clear nationhood status. The T aiw anese people, through a pro g ressiv e d em o cratic p ro c e s s ,’sh o u ld determ ine th eir own motherland’s statehood. n I met recently with the editorial board of the State Press to 1 discuss my reaction to a recent editorial headlined, “A let­ ter from some angry, insignificant students.” The editorial I I accused me and the Tempe City Council of trying to keep college-age students out of downtown Tempe. Nothing could be further from the truth. I As I told the editorial board, we openly welcome ASU I students and the energy and vitality that they bring with j them to downtown Tempe. But, we do not welcome ONLY J college students — and, perhaps, that is where the misun­ j derstanding lies. I often refer to Mill Avenue in downtown as Tempe’s j living room — over the years it has become the place in our • community where people come to gather, talk and just hangout. But, just as you would require of those visiting the living room o f your own home, we also expect all visitors to downtown, including college students, to properly behave and obey the laws of our community. Over the past twenty-some years, we have changed a broken down old downtown that was not'attracting anyone into a thriving, interesting and energetic place that attracts huge crowds every day. Downtown Tempe is now a model for downtown areas across the country, and I will continue to work to ensure that it remains so So, you see, the editorial’s argument doesn’t really make sense — running college students out of downtown would be completely contrary to the plans that we have for down­ Jolan H sleh town, now and in the future. Those plans do include, how­ G rad u ate Student ever, a responsibility to makt», downtown Tempe a safe and enjoyable place for everyone. Ju stice Stu d ies Yes, college students have long been a fixture on Mill Avenue. And recent surveys show that the ASU community, including students, represents about 50 percent of the down­ town Tempe patrons. But families, business people, the young and the old, visitors and tourists, individuals as diverse as this community and this entire nation, are all wel­ come. And they do come to downtown. That diversity is the real beauty of downtown Tempe —- many different people, with many different views on the world, who are interacting, sharing and debating those views. For many young people, going off to college is the first opportunity to be out there in the real world on your own. You probably are finding that your college years are a time for establishing your own independence, an opportunity to find out who you are and who you want to be. And, ultimate­ ly, who you are is all about the choices that you make. You can choose to feel “insignificant” and “angry” as portrayed in the editorial, and that is your absolute right. Might I sug­ gest, instead, a slight attitude adjustment. I sincerely hope (and, in fact, I know, from the hundreds of college 'students that I meet each year) that, as students and as human beings, you strive for more than “roving the streets, vomiting in gutters...hooting at passing cars...and making gen­ eral nuisances of (y)ourselves.” I do understand that, to some degree, this is all part of the “college experience.” But please don’t ever forget that what you do and how you do it affects others— not only in downtpwn Tempe, but wherever you go. Despite the editorial’s claims to the contrary, downtown Tempe does not belong to ASU students. Nor does it belong to the Tempe City Council or any one particular group of individuals. Downtown Tempe belongs to all of us, and that means that all of us must abide by a set of standards for behavior that will allow all of us to enjoy it. I i m m g State Press - " " r i * * m m É Ê Ê t Ê 'W n m a, i m W o o d s t o c k ' 99: c e le b r a t io n o f m a y h e m , ra p e , p illa g e B y S c o t t B racken S t a t e P ress ■. Did you happen to catch all the peace, love and good vibes up at Woodstock '99 a few week­ ends ago? It’s way too easy to make l n6WS a n a ly sis the comparison to 'the “original” Woodstock, but that’s exactly what this year’s concert and its fans seemed to lack: “originality.” And a sense of dignity. Back in '69, the festival seemed to be more of a sense of togetherness for the common good, yet in '99 it appeared everybody was getting together for a common coup d’etat. Riots, looting, moshpits and now there are even reports of several rapes that occurred during the show. Is this a trend? And if so, how do we explain it? I believe there are a few reasons. For starters, kids today (more specifically young white boys) are way too bored. They have to vandalize, start fires and physically abuse women for fun. They mean to tell us that women, the most noble creatures on earth that carry and help raise our children of tomorrow, can’t even attend a live music event without having to fear a sexual IT 1 1 ...... . 1 attack by some punk with a pierced face and tattoos on his calves? If young white boys can’t have enough respect towards females to let them enjoy live music free of molestation then we either need to have undercover cops combing the mosh pits or just put an end to rock concerts—>period. The female of the species have been targeted for oppression, rape and murder since the beginning of time and sadly enough, it seems it will only get worse before it will get better. And it’s also easy to point the finger at MTV, the very con­ glomerate behind this cheap promotional campaign and the talentless music they filter through to the masses. Limp Bizkit? Do they have any original material? I guess the “z” in “bizkit” automatically places them in the hip-imp category. Kid Rock? Isn’t the chorus to his only hit strangely reminiscent to the Sugaihill Gang’s “Rapper’s Delight,” which makes him noth­ ing more than a jack-ass hopping around stage in a red jump­ suit? Korn? They sound like good musicians with their catchy guitar hooks, but I can’t take them seriously. Not only are they named after a vegetable, but they can’t even spell it right. Then there’s all the other MTV players who might’ve been Need Bucks for Books? ...d o n ate Plasm a. I LOOKING FOR MORE STUDENT ARTISTS Earn up to $192 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit v our friendly, modem center and find out more about the opportunity to earn cash while helping others. As part of a Company research program, an experimental test will be performed on your plasma Which could potentials' benefit plasma product recipients»in the years to come! Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate plasma. Have your work exhibited in Scottsdale alongside some of the top contemporary artists in Arizona. * Sellingstudent workforover5years * Representingstudents fromArizona universitiesandcommunitycolleges * Weaccept student projects 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Ceramics. Furniture, Neon, Paintings, Photography, Sculptureandmore! ARTONEGALLERY.INC.•4120N.MARSHALLWAY,SCOTTSDALE (480) 946 5076 1 ^ C to 965-4706, attention Kathy Welsh, Questions? Call Kathy at 965-6555. Feel free to visit the ad dept, and talk with the students presently selling advertising for the State Press. We won’t bite you. Promise. Statepress M a k e à d if f e r e n c e in y o u r c a r e e r T € O N jjj) G e o g ra p h y ” E n g l i s h 1 Q1 Ste.102 • Tempe JL The State Press is n o w hiring ASU students for the position o f Assistant Account Executives, with potential for growth. Training begins th e second w eek in July. Employment begins with train­ ing. Successful candidates will b e those w h o p ossess promising com m unication and problem solving skills. Requirement: a car, no m ore than 13 credit hours per sem ester and a positive attitude. If you are interested in discovering the business o f advertising, marketing and publishing, you should apply for this position. Write a short paragraph of two about why you'd like this job and why we should consider hiring you. Drop it off at the State Press advertising office in room 35 o f Matthews Center basement or fax it e N •“T A T S a r id Learn w hat It takes to work at an Ad Agency. H O W T O A P P L Y (it s easy): shot if they performed at Woodstock ‘99. They’ve got their three interchangeable singing groups, with identical sounds, dance moves and boyish faces: the Backstreet Boys, *N Sync and 98 degrees. In addition there’s a couple former New Kids On The Block trying to turn back the clock, the rumored soon-to-be Sun Devil, Brimey Spears and the “Jeanie in the Bottle” girl. Underneath all the make-up, tweaked vocal tracks and over-produced videos, you see that MTV itself has financial interest in these group. I don’t even want to call them bands, these ‘trend setters’. Granted, they’re better role models and have a more positive influence than some of the Woodstock ‘99 bands, but that soft, cheesy teeny-bop crap should air on Nickelodeon instead of MTV. Or at least limited Disney Channel afternoon specials. No wonder kids are so angry these days. The music sucks, or at least the music MTV airs that inevitably spills over into the Top 40 charts and eventually results in record sales. And I know there are some good bands put there with some solid music to boot, but just don’t go looking to MTV to find them. M ust be 18-49 years of age, possess a'valid ID and proof of local address & Social Security number. New home entertainm ent system excels, may widen scope of T V JEAROLD HERSEY State Press The summer usually brings attention to movies in theaters but this year the home market has been making noise, Digital Video (Versatile) Disc technology is a fast growing home entertainment medi­ um, out selling the debuts of VHS videocas­ sette recorders and CD players. According to statistics from Consumer Electronics Manufacturer’s Association (CEMA), retailers have purchased about 1,050,000 players for sale as of June 18 compared to about 1.1 million in all of 1998, At the current pace there will be about 2.5 million players in American homes by the end of the summer. In June, CEMA took a survey of fathers to find desired Father's Day gifts and DVD finished third (8 percent of consumers), behind computer (25 percent) and personal digital assistants (15 percent). The growing DVD format has brought several high profile releases to consumers and seen the demise of the maligned DIVX. “The biggest problem with DIVX was the confusion it generated due to the compa­ ny's twisted hype, marketing and commer­ cials.” said Darius DeMartini, editor of DVDReview.com, a Web site that focuses primarily on DVD news and information. DIVX R.I.P. Circuit City, in a partnership with Digital Video Express and the law firm Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer, introduced DIVX in the fall of 1998. After struggling to find financial back­ ing, Circuit City began exclusively selling DIVX enhanced DVD players to support a pay-per-view option for DVD. The DIVX system played $4.50 discs that could be viewed for 48 hours. To view the disc afterward, the customer would have to pay a fee for additional 48 hour viewing. The player, which had to be connected to a phone line, would call DIVX billing to report the viewing. Circuit City scratched the operation June 16 and estimated the venture will cost $114 million to shut down; including $100 rebate to DIVX buyers. The criticism of DIVX mosdy came from DVD owners who balked at a system that had discs that would not play in regular or “open" DVD players (DVD discs will play in DIVX). EXCEPTIONAL RESULTS Haircut &Dry $9.00 Fack* $25.00 end up $15.00 and up Body Waxing Manicure EyeicnhlM Brow Wax Colon Weave« Updo $10.00 $5.00 $6X10 $11.00 and up $20.00 and up $34X10andup $16X10 A V THEAITANDSCENCE OF 2 0 % D is c o u n t w i Ali work performed by students Opponents took the argument to the Web. DVD information Web sites, such as BanDIVX.com, were completely against the venture. “DIVX just had nothing to bring to the table. The highly touted convenience fac­ tor wasn’t exis­ tent and all other features were stripped down from DVD,” DeMartini said. Most DIVX discs didn’t offer the added fea­ tures (trailers, deleted scenes and commentaries) or the theatrical aspect ratio of DVD. DeMartini added that the advertising campaign seemed to try to challenge DVD, confusing the consumer. “They tried to make people believe that with DVD they get an inferior product, which wasn’t the case as we all know,” DeMartini said. With the growing DVD community, the Web sites function much like computer user groups, discussing issues and topics to bring the videophile units to the mainstream. DVDFile.com provides a large amount of information, including a introduction for new DVD users. “Our primary role is the dissemination of information,” said Jarod Musgrave, DVDFile.com webmaster and writer. “Our site can also act as an intermediary between the studios and the consumers by relaying information and questions between the two groups,” he added. Musgrave points out desired films like the Star Wars and Indiana Jones trilogies have “no release date in sight” and pricing is an issue as well. “Hardware prices have dropped nicely over the past two years, but some studios use a pricing scheme on software that is too high to attract buyers used to VHS prices,” Musgrave said. “An average DVD should not have a street price over $20.” D VD frontpages? Suggested or list prices for DVD discs range in the $2430 range, while special additions can cost as much as $50. While recent release hit DVD about the same time as VHS, older films release schedule can vary. “One thing that is most important is that DVD needs to break into the mainstream seriously and provide content for everyone,” DeMartini said. “DVD needs pan-and-scan and DVD needs more ‘classic’ content in order to attract the masses.” • W IDER IS BETTER? Among the desire to see certain films released, the aspect ratio of the film is of major concern as well. Panand-scan, with the exception of films up to the early ‘50s, manipulates the picture to fit a standard TV screen. Widescreen preserves the theatrical format. Pointing out that DVD appeals mostly to “film enthusi­ asts,” DeMartini said anamorphic widescreen is hotly debated in the on-line community,. The theatrical aspect ratio of a film is about 1.85 to one, or 16 wide by nine high. Standard televisions screens have a four to three ratio. In order to show a film in it’s original ratio, it has to be letterboxed with black bars at the top and bottom to preserve the ratio. With DVDs that are not anamorphic widescreen, resolu­ tion is lost in order to maintain the black bars on the TV set. Widescreen TV sets are capable of displaying the image without the black bars through discs that are anamorphic. While widescreen TV sets won't be in wide use until the arrival of High-Definition Television, Musgrave said the enhancement is important now for those who do have widescreen TVs and to avoid repurchasing enhanced discs in the future. . “Paramount has unfortunately chosen to release Titanic without the enhancement, probably because they would like to release it again in a couple years, only with the enhancement added, thus increasing sales." Musgrave said. Among the studios drawing criticism. 20th Century Fox. which was one the last studios to support DVD. won't offer for the time being. A Warner Bros, spokesperson said decisions regarding enhancements and features come down to cost. Remixing sound from older films for DVD can cost up to $500,000. For the "master." the source film for the DVD, older films often have to be restored for quality. Warner Brothers released a collection of seven Stanley Kubrick films on June 29. The set, which includes Clockwork Orange, Dr. Stranglove and 2001: A Space Odyssey, has mono sound and no films in anamoiphic. % 4 Paramount has unfortunately chosen to release Titanic w ithout the enhancement, probably because they would like to release it again in a couple years, only w ith the enhancement added, thus increasing sales. M Fruit Smoothies, Fresh Squeezed Fruit Juice Nutritional Supplements i Energy Bars Baqel Sandwiches SURF CITY SQUEEZE Front lobbyoftheStrient Reortitionol Complex powœs Mon- Fri 7:30am• 8pm• Sot 10am• 6pm Semi-Annual Sate! • Semi-Annu Semi\i\A n n u a l Sale Semi-AnnuaiS y S’ emi-Annual y Jarod M usgrave, pV D File.com w ebm aster and w riter On the subject of anamorphic widescreen, the spokesman said all aspect ratio decisions are weighed with other options. "Our primary goal is the quality of sound and picture. Secondary goals are picture galleries and (director com­ mentaries ),” said Columbia Tri-Star- DVD “answerman” firn Adams. Columbia June 29 release of Ghostbusters was one of .he most anticipated DVDs of the summer. The disc is anamorphic, has a Mystery Science Theater 3000-like director's commentary, documentaries and interactive stolyboards to name a few of the features. Adams said Sony-owned Columbia (who along with Warner has shown the biggest commitment to DVD) is interested in testing the limits of the medium. “We’re trying to educate people as well as put product together,” Adams said. “We know that (anamorphic widescreen) is the future and we’re gearing most DVD toward the 16x9 format.” Adams added put both aspect ratios on the disc (which is common) is the best way to appeal to the broadest market. Buena Vista Home Entertainment, which represents Disney, Miramax and Dimension movie studios has not put its latest releases in anamoiphic. “We’re looking at it on a title-by-title basis,” said Kevin Kasha, Executive Vice President of Miramax Home Entertainment. “We want the film to be viewed in the best possible for­ mat,” Kasha added. Kasha said his studio is “very committed” to DVD and now without DIVX, the format can move forward. “We’re getting as many titles out as we can. I think (DIVX’s cancellation) will only help DVD in dial’s one format to talk about now.” Jhthree'stores Sale Semi-Annual Sale! • Semi-AnnualSiile Semi-Annual Sale! • Semi-^maf S e m u w J fiJ ^ a k S s ^ ^ ^ ^ n n u a l Sale S e m i- l^ m ^ ^ S ^ ^ ^ ' ^emi-Annual Sale Semi-Annual Sale! Sale . . . . Semi-ABthkl^aMMS^ihirMi^M Semi-Annual Sale Musician McCain brings his ‘message* to the Valley B y L in d sey C o llo m S t a t e P ress 1 Ti ni ! .' Iti jfa »;■ % i f jiff» mi I c U / V 'If ä wm ! 4$S § & • ■ ’ 1 yi W % ^ » IP ▼ ir f '7 w % JL m f 3 « ¡íé 0W:i$S. Ï0W- :K ■k l | | | y y . f V» 7 r 1 pP L at r .i B I B è »M l f l L i . L l i 1 Wi « « ju « M B MM i j «1 ft i ll1 1 [1 | ■jj [Fill*1 fIII tI ilI I f i] KJ L i l]5 Iti [fIW ! l M* 1 R i f l) O l i l i ym B ijii ' l i l Edwin McCain soars to new heights, and into the Valley, on the forged wings of Messenger, his much-anticipated third label release. Despite the success of his 1997 break­ through Misguided Roses, propelled by the success of the acclaimed single “I’ll Be,” McCain cast conventional methods aside to draw from new wells of creativi­ ty and m usicality in dealing w ith his recent effort. “Typically, I’m wrong much more than I’m right when it comes to my own o p in io n s and ju d g m e n t c a lls ab o u t music-’’ McCain said. “I had to suspend some of my own knee-jerk reactions and just make plans td try anything to make better music: That’s kinda how we came after this album. If it works, great. If it doesn’t, at least we tried. That’s the the­ ory.” ; . It appears to have worked. Enjoying a p rim e spot on th e B illb o a rd 200, M essenger seems to have taken flight and is gaining speed, due largely in p a rt to th e w id e ly p o p u la r D ian e W arren-penned single “I Could not ask for M ore.” This lover’s anthem, how­ ever, was initially a raw stone in need o f refinem ent. A fter some re-tooling, McCain and his cohorts fashioned the song into their ow n. “I felt somewhat weird about chang­ ing the song, but I think when I have trepidation towards som ething, to me, th a t’s a ch a lle n g e,” M cC ain said. “ 1 w ould have much ra th e r w ritten the first single m yself. But then, I think th is is a re ally good v eh icle to turn people on to what I do.” And w hat he does is tran slate the human experience into a m usical lan­ guage “that everyone can understand.” For his current release, M cCain con­ structed a com pilation o f the lessons and observations o f two-years worth of travels into a tiny package with a large sound. “I ju st write about what 1 know and what I’ve seen,” McCain said. “It’s very rare th at I invent som ething to w rite about. It’s mostly situations I’ve seèn on the road, o f characters I’ve met that I may have embellished, but most of the people are the real thing. “The truth o f the matter is, I goofed off until it Was time to go into the stu­ dio, and then I really got down to w rit­ ing about w hat I know and what has been my experience over the last two years. And basically, this album is a shot o f that headspace.” McCain’s idea of “goofing o f f ’ con­ s ists o f to u rin g . E ver the w an d erer, McCain has likened the North American continent to his backyard. After having kicked-off a nine week tour in St.Louis on July 27, McCain and company will be performing at the Celebrity Theater on Aug. 10. “1 do like touring, but I’m not as big a fan of it now as I used to be,” McCain said. “I ’ve been doing i.t for so many years that I really enjoy my time at home and being around my family. It’s kinda tough to leave.” 1 l i III H iT T ü r i I * FRIDAY C o ffe e S p e c ia lt ie s BtuMDriMhi LADIES In tro d u c in g t h e n e w “Breakfast Bagel Delight” A d e lic io u s b a g e l s a n d w i c h w ith e g g , h a m , C heddar c h e e s e a n d m ayo. Ice d D rin k s D IG O N G R O O V Y SQAS+tax V IB E S O F T H E 70s & 80s J o i n u s to d a y ! LIVE O N T H E PA T IO Z O W IE B O W IE a n d AM ANDA STAR S a n d w ic h e s j i i m s 4 GOURMET COFFEE UAFE i>„ “Where friends meet to eat” 8 /2 0 C a rd s v s. T ita n s A nd So -o -o -o M uch M orel smal coffee or iced tea With Bagel Delight Sandwich and this coupon ■ W C a rd s v s . R a id e rs Offer expires 8/31/99 ' J iim s GOURMET COFFEE 8. CAFE 1 430 N. SCOTTSDALE ROAD, TEMPE, AZ 85281 (602)894-6779 WWW.CLUBRIO.COM Forest & University 446-7011 at Forest & University (across from Architecture Bldg) IH P a in te r find s h u m an flesh b e tte r can vas B y T risha C offman S t a t e P ress Leah Fasten o f the State Press Melanie Corradi outlines Don “Muff’ Pluff of Phoenix’s latest tattoo while his daughter, Amber Lynn, looks on. StatePress N o O N E TALKS T O A S U LIKE WE IX )! — G all 965^ 555 t o Located in _ ® p ia c i a s a d — T he A rc h e s Plaza O ll-T h a Fit. j § Sat University Melanie Corradi prepared to tattoo her friend’s leg, filling ink caps with different colors of brightly colored ink, readying the needle she’ll be using and shaving a section of his leg. Corradi, who has been working eight months in a tattoo apprenticeship, turned on the needle and it buzzed in her hand. Her friend winced with pain as she retouched the outline on his “barrel of monkeys” tattoo. “It’s really interesting to me that people would trust you tb do permanent artwork on their bodies,” said Corrad, who “prac­ tices” on friends in her Tempe studio. “I’ve found it’s a totally different medi­ um (than painting) because what you’re working on changes. Whereas if I’m paint­ ing on canvas, canvas is always canvas. Everybody’s skin is different. It’s crazy to learn all of that and try to adapt to it. You don’t get a second chance.” Corradi received a bachelor’s degree in M 9-6 9-5 m u m G 1 O p M IN G H U M A N a.;';;' I «AI* STUDIO ! 9 6 6 - 5 4 6 2 lllhere ddriuer mith a past still has a future. MCAT • LSAT • GM AT « GRE I painting from ASU this year and studied art in Italy. As an apprentice, she works for free but gains the skills and knowledge needed to achieve professional status. Although the tools and mediums are differ­ ent, Corradi said tattooing techniques are very similar to those used in water color painting. “The ideas you’re using for blending the color are the same as you would use for painting,” she said. “The manipulation is a little different.” Needles are almost just like brushes, said Corradi, who still paints and shows her work at Art One in Scottsdale. “Every tattoo artist will learn the needles they like and what work best for them for their style of tattooing. Lots of tattoo artists will make their own needles.” Corradi said she wants to learn the art of tattooing so she can pay the bills, while still creating art. “By picking up another art form that was totally different, I can keep my painting as my painting and still do something creative.” more reason you should take T h e Princeton Review Even if you don’t have a perfect driving record, GEICO has a place for you. Every year, we offer renewal to over 98% of our policyholders. ♦ L o w d o w n -p a y m e n t m ♦ M o n th ly p a y m e n t p la n The B e st T each ers O ur teachers are experts. They have all scored in the 95th percentile or higher on the test they teach and have com pleted our rigorous training process. They know what it takes to get you your highest score. W ondering h o w y o u 'll d o ? C all tod d y an d ta k e a FREE practice test. ♦ M o n e y -s a v in g d is c o u n ts ♦ 2 4 -h o u r c la im s e rv ic e ♦ Im m e d ia te c o v e ra g e Call today or stop by our local office: ( 6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 P R IN C E T O N -^ R E V IE W www . r e vi f w , c o m ----tefiiasiB £sas»,ii wiiii&Mfifehmly Ihwrn v th_________ Preferred at ASU ♦ F re e ra te q u o te T H E 480.967 1480 CHOICE D I R E C T S u m m e r p e s t in a t io n s Stx« Preti forU m d^ r.Auiuw: 1t, t m An .. - ;>?,*./ ci e n t cave sti II B y D enise E stfan S t a t e P ress Often referred to as the jew el in the desert, Colossal Cave Mountain Park, is a crystal-filled hollow mountain with cave formations that curve through six and a half stories o f limestone, calcite and gypsum lock. Colossal Cave offers daily tours through the rock formations where the cave’s histo­ ry, legends and geology are explained thor­ oughly by a tour guide. Walking through the cave, formations such as stalactites, flowstone, boxwork and helictites surround and wow visitors with their beauty. First discovered in 1879, Colossal Cave has been used by the A pache and Hohokam peoples, and been a hideout for old train robbers of the Wild West. With its dormant atmosphere that creates a yearround 70 degree temperature, the cave is an attractive day trip. Off-route tours or “ladder” tours are given every first and third Saturday of the m y stifi es month, at night when all of the cave’s lights have been turned off. Tourists, provided with hard hats, can climb up ladders and crawl through restricted tunnels, with a rib dinner and a bonfire at the end o f the adventure. Candle light guided tours are done at night as well, but follow the regular tour route. The park is also a great place for a picnic. Wooded areas around the cave provide plen­ ty of picnic grounds With benches and a nat­ f-rS H H H M i to u r ists ural desert landscape to view while dining. Horseback riding is available at the La Posta Quemada Ranch where riders can fol­ low natural paths through the Sonoran Desert. Hiking and biking are also popular with the tourists. While visiting the scenic park, tourists can take a trip on an old-fash­ ioned stage Coach or have a real cowboy cookout at the ranch. How to get th ere: Take the I-10 east to Tucson. Exit at 279 (the Vail exit) and go north for about six miles. mm U O ... DRINKS $1 DRINKS $1 DRINKS $1 DRINKS $1 Check s ut I We have the BEST PRINK PRICES! I ALLYOUCANDRINK! C am pus C o rn er 712 S. College ’967-4049 $10 Cover All Night Long ( 8 pm to 1am) 18 and over - 1am to 4 am A r iz o n a 's I P O T o p D Js S p in n in g M W e e k ly P E I I I 919 E. Apache Blvd. 966-8004 LOCATIONS sparkystore.cof •Photo Developing ’Health & Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill 858-0567 >oer only at College St. store} ObvtsLoLes B y L ind sey C ollo m S t a t e P ress A bove: “ Jisty,” a P arad ise C om m unity College stu d e n t, catches u p w ith h e r m om d u rin g a slow dow n o f custom ers. “ Jisty ” w ho h as been dancing fo r five years feels th e jo b is fru s tra tin g a t tim es, b u t is w o rth th e fru s tra tio h becauge o f th e m oney. Role Playing “My goal when I started dancing was I Em erging from the smoky haze, the wanted to get an education,” recalled Lori, dancer steps into a seedy world saturated in 30, an ASU recreation tourism management flashing lights, pulsating music, and rhyth­ major, who asked to have her last name mic flesh. kept confidential. “I didn't care how I had Weaving through the random darkness, she dons the mask of a cunning saleswoman to do it, but I was going to get an education, and I was going to pay for it myself and not and begins marketing a pricey piece of self. The air thick with promises of money, she rely on anybody. I’d be going to a universi­ moves methodically amongst the seemingly ty and I’d be graduating. And I’m doing it.” Like Lori, many women have entered into faceless patrons —the adult en tertain ­ some robed in business ment industry, declar­ suits, others in casual ing their choice as a attire — all cloaked in means to an end. She the anonymity provid­ took on the role of a ed by die club’s exteri­ dancer five years ago or walls. and never intended to At the end o f the secure a long-term day, when the last Jisty career in dancing. dance has ended and worked at sev­ the last dollar is throws her head back and eralLoriValley clubs and earned, these particular laughs. now Pink Kitty dancers shed their skin Strippers, a local bach­ and clothe themselves elor party company. in yet another role —“There’s no way that of a student. A market o f titillation and sex appeal, any half-decent, intelligent person could stay the life of an exotic dancer can be taxing for in this business,” she said. “Your body is not those involved, but for many students pay­ going to be up to par with all the younger ing th eir own way though college, the girls, and you’re going to get burnt out” Despite the limited window of opportu­ financial incentives outweigh the negatives. Financial security has been the crux for nity, the quest for a greater, more fulfilling many students seeking to earn a large profit in a life has led a wide variety of women to the minimal amount of time. So it is no surprise that industry’s bosom. “I have experience working with a mix the adult entertainment industry lures many of girls,” Lori said. “Anything from a single with its siren-song of wealth and material gam. While they may share a common motivation, mother to a really young girl who doesn’t fach stray is personal, individual and distinct. even have her high school diploma, all the “Sometimes Til come home from work and ju st be so frustrated, and 1*11 wonder why I do what I do, and then / think.** “Oh yeah — the money!** Adult entertainers find time to be college students, defend their profession way up to seasoned dancers who are older than me and still dancing. And they look fabulous. “And then you have the older girls that are just trying to hang on, and they don’t look as good, and they don’t have any edu­ cation. No car. No money. Nothing stashed away. You know they’re doing drugs and you think to yourself, ‘Where’s the money after all these years?”’ She said her job is flexible enough to allow her time to tend to her personal life. “T hat’s the great thing about it,” she said. “I t’s easy to ju g g le dancing and (school) because you can really pick the amount of hours you can do if you get into a nice club. If you have an exam, then just don’t go in that week. Then, after that, just go in three or four times to make up for it, and it’s okay. It’s not like being in a real job where you’re going to get fired if you don’t come in that week.” Dancers for large establishments, such as Tiffany’s Cabaret in Tempe, enjoy a flexi­ bility stemming from the benefits of a high employee volume. “We have about 250 girls working here, so there’s no set schedule,” said Missy, a supervisor and former dancer at Tiffany’s Cabaret. “They basically show up when it’s convenient for them. A lot of our girls are working moms or students, and they can fix their schedules accordingly.” However, flexibility is not an advantage present in every facet of the industry. For some women, the preservation o f various roles is bittersweet and often exhausting. “I study betw een dances, I study at work,” said Dina, a student at Pima Medical School. “There are times that I don’t get out of (the club) until two or three o’clock in the morning, and I don’t get to bed until four. I get pretty tired.” Like many single mothers, Dina is perse­ vering in the struggle to carve out a better life for herself and her daughter — a forged road leading to graduation, a “nine to five job, a house and a normal kind of life.” The effort, although strenuous, is not without some semblance of immediate gratification. “It’s hard work mentally and physical­ ly,” Dina said. “But it can be fun. It’s fun to be up there in the lights and dance and have a good time. I enjoy what I’m doing, but it’s different for everyone. “And there are times when you get burnt out. There are times when you feel guilty.” Be it a product of conflicting values or contradiction of upbringing, guilt, often accompanied by shame, is not an uncom­ mon side-effect Of the trade. “I was not raised like this,” Dina said. “My mom knows about what I do, and she doesn’t approve, but she deals with it. “To me, we do it to entertain. The dancers aren’t harming anybody and they’re not out there to be sleazy or do anything wrong. People have a right to do what they want to do.” Private Discretion Some women prefer to keep their job and personal lives as separate as possible, but to shelter a personal life from the radiating glow of the club spotlight can often become a cumbersome task. Lori related an experience in which she was confronted by a boisterous former cus­ tomer in public. JIBtlíií * All photos by Leah Fasten o f the State Press A bove: “ M id n ig h t,” a P a ra d ise C o m m u n ity C ollege stu d e n t, sits in a p riv a te d a n c in g ro o m a t S ecret Seductions. New to th e in d u stry ,“ M idnight” sees w o rk in g as a d a n c e r as a n o p p o rtu n ity to su p p o rt h e r child. H e r fam ily an d frien d s, u n aw are o f h e r dan cin g , believe she is a w aitress. “ If you’re really smart with sales, and you know how to sell yourself, and you have a good attitude,” Lori said, “you can make a large amount of cash, under the table, really really fast. You can pay for an entire tuition at ASU -— the whole thing — in one week. And nobody knows.” While the quantity of money and earning capacity varies in each segment of the indus­ try, the job provides, for most, an easier route. “It's a better living than most jobs,” said Mercedes, a student at Maricopa County Skills Center. “It provides better than any job that pays minimum wage. You’re providing for your fam­ ily and yourself without really struggling.’’ “It’s the money,” Dina agreed. “I'm paying for school, and I’m a single mom. I have to pay the rent, the bills. A b o v e : N ik k i, a p a r t tim e s tu d e n t a t M a ric o p a The money is there.” Com m unity College, takes a break during while w ork­ ing as a dancer. Attributing her L eft: M ercedes receives a cue from h e r in stru c to r comfortable lifestyle to w h ile p r e p a r i n g b o n e le s s c h u c k r o a s t a t th e the job, Mercedes M a ric o p a S kills c e n te r. By w o rk in g in th e a d u lt entertainm ent industry, M ercedes is able to p u t h e r­ views die industry as a self through school. H er goal is to becom e a butcher. virtual cash cornucopia “(The opportunity) “At first, I was really freaked out about telling anybody because I didn’t know what seemed like a good Lori they would think,” Lori said. “And then 1 way to get out of started telling a few close friends, and it where I was,” she said. didn’t seem to be such a big deal. And I’m “I’m going to school, having mixed feelings about it now. God, and I have a car now, a home o f my own. I maybe I shouldn’t have said anything.” couldn’t have done this by working at McDonalds.” A student at Paradise Valley Community Many women in College, Jisty has become well acquainted the business prefer with the crown jew el o f the industry. dancing rather than a However, the cash flow doesn’t always wash job producing minimal in as a flood. Sometimes it merely trickles. pay in exchange for an And occasionally, there are droughts. acquired skill. And the “Sometimes Fll come home from work and skills needed to attain a job producing a cash just be so frustrated, and I’ll wonder why I do crop remotely close to that gained by adult what I do, aid then I think,” Jisty throws her entertainer seems an insurmountable feat head back and laughs, “Oh yeah — the money!” “With my skills, I just didn’t have the means “ I haven't made anything in the past five to support and do everything,” Elina said. “The days, but it just works like that You have regular jobs just weren’t paying enough.” your good weeks and bad weeks. But don’t “I don’t feel I have the necessary skills to let her tell you she’s had a bad week,” Jisty get a normal job,” Lori admitted. “What’s the said with a grin, nodding to Nikki, a fellow point in me getting a (low paying) job when I dancer at Secret Seductions. Flashing a wide smile, Nikki admitted to can take my clothes off and make way more?” “It’s kinda like, gosh, can’t you find a the week’s indulgence, but also pegged it as real job where you can make money .instead irregular for the off-season. of taking your clothes off?” Lori said, mim­ “Things are slow this time of year. But as long as I get my bills paid, hey.” Nikki icking naysayers. “I mean, what’s wrong with you? Why can’t you be more indepen­ said, shrugging. dent and use your brain instead of dancing Appearing at home amongst the rigid around and using your body?” couches and red-drenched glow of the mir­ rored conference room, the dancers spoke of contention in the pursuit to make a dollar. Each is responsible for alluring customers to Joy Shearman, a clinical assistant profes­ their services, and when the clientele is sor of nursing at ASU West, reasons that sparse, there’s not much for a dancer to do. self-esteem has greater pull than most Cash flow is a factor primarily dependent would care to admit. on the type of outlet, A dancer employed by “There’s a lot of self-esteem issues con­ a cabaret or similar enterprise has greater m oney-m aking potential than a woman nected with that kind of entertaining,” said vying for customers at a relatively small Shearman, who specializes in psychosocial establishment simply because of customer behavior. “People who do that tend to be peo­ base and fluidity. However, some will chalk ple who derive self-esteem solely from their bodies. In other words, they don’t feel good it up to a matter of self-marketing. The Money “I was in the computer lab (at ASU) and some guy walks up to me and says, ‘Hey, I know you. Didn’t you do a party for so-and-so last week?’ And at first, I didn’t recognize him because I was knee-deep in my work,” she said. “But once 1 started talking to him, I began to recall the situation, and he said, ‘Yeah, you guys stunk. You just kinda bounce ip and down on tins guy, bounce up raid down on that guy, and you move on to the next one. You weren’t sen­ sual enough, aid you weren’t sexy enough.”’ “And all I could think of was, ‘Who is this guy? What’s he talking about?’ Because I didn’t notice anything like that. Clearly he wanted something our service doesn’t offer.” Lori said, as the tone of his voice began to escalate, she told the man to change die subject “He was making a scene, talking loudly. So 1 said, ‘Hey, let’s take this outside because people can hear everything we’re saying.’ I mean, 1 appreciate that he had a problem and wanted to address it, but the tone of voice he was using and die place was inappropriate.” Although Lori said she is not ashamed of her work, she said she feels it is a private matter to be shared at her discretion. Some women prefer not to tell friends or family members about what they do; others share finely. about their intellect, or maybe even their hair, or the way they look, maybe their face. “But if they have an attractive body, that’s kind of human nature to seek out and empha­ size the part of us that we feel good about, and we get that from the positive and negative (rein­ forcements) we receive throughout our lives.” And while the validation of ones self­ esteem may be perfectly logical reasoning, it is certainly not applicable for every dancer, Shearman added. “1 know gals who do it that feel perfectly good about themselves, and some, I think, truly do it for the money,” she said. “Others may think that they’re not worth anything else.. The only way they can get money or do anything is selling the body in one way or another. Because th a t’s the one thing that is positive, their body.” W hether or not dancing merely bene­ fits the purse, appeases a psychological need or is done out of sheer said. enjoyment, the motiva­ tion is determined by the individual. “Not all o f the dancers are the same,” Lori said. “We are all so different; it’s not fair to prejudge us. Some are in it ju s t for the money and some of us are just so focused in on getting that degree and trying to survive.” “Everybody looks down on us because we do what we do,” Mercedes said, defending her profession. “But they need to know that we’re just normal peo­ ple, like everybody else, trying to make it, try­ ing to make a life for ourselves.” The pangs of regret, the physical and mental endurance, the familial and personal obligations - aspects resting firmly upon the shoulders of each dancer. And exactly how heavy or light the weight becomes is vari­ ant. Undoubtedly, as any dancer will tell you, the promise of financial provision and likely excess lightens the load. And it is the pursuit of this “life” that leads women from various backgrounds to a stereotypically unsavory line of work. But this same line of work also ushers these women to the door of opportunity. Hie adult entertainment industry has been one of many launchpads for mainstream catea professionals. Hands outstretched, the industry sum­ mons die financially insecure, the unskilled, the dreamer, the student, anyone who will distributing to each a chance to temporarily undertake a role leading to the betterment of traditional roles, such a$ wife or mother, by way of provision. A role leading to the betterment of self by way of education. For many, a means to an end. “At first, I was really freaked out about telling anybody because I didn ’t know what they would think, ” “And then / started telling a few close friends, and it didn *tseem to be such a big deal. And I’m having m ixed feelings about it now. God, maybe / shouldn’t have said anything.” The Naked Truth ‘G ian t’ director: a B ird of a v ery likable feath er B y G a y l e B a ss S t a t e P ress The Iron Giant is a “split of my Disney training and the more interesting, multi-layered material that was on TV shows,” said the m ovie’s director and Writer Brad Bird.. ■ The first-tim e director wrote Steven Spielberg’s *batteries not included and works as executive consul­ tant on television’s The Simpsons and King o f the Hill. D espite his talents, Bird said h e ’s shocked and amazed that he was able to make The: Iron Giant under the Warner Bros, banner. The movie centers a boy who befriends a giant robot, which happens to be an elaborate gun. As their friendship blossoms, the movie begs the question,“ What if a gun has a soul?” and becomes a com m entary o f life in the 1950’s and living in the nuclear age. At first Warner Bros, wanted to make it into a musi­ cal, but Bird had different plans after he read the books by Ted Hughes. “I got captured by the image of this little boy and the metal man,” he said. “I had my own notions of where the story should go.” He said his goal for the film was to have the emo­ tional part of a Disney movie and the edge of TV ani­ mated fare, minus its sarcasm. He took his story in a bit of a different direction of the later half of the book because it got away from the relationship of the boy with the giant. “To me it felt like the core of what would be a good movie version of it,” Bird said. Although the book doesn’t specify a year or time period, Bird said he set his version in the 1950’s for the country’s time of great social change, “America had a clean cut everything is fine exterior, underneath it we were petrified about how we were going to live with the bomb. , “There was great unease under this calm, you know Clenched teeth exterior,” he said. Bird said he also was attracted to the absurdness of the era, the advent of rock *n’ roll, beatniks and the beginnings o f the social rebellion that m arked the 1960’s. ------------------------------------------ ------------------------ \ n n gL D omestic S l l T l / D rafts & É B w w Lhnenkugels Young Hogarth befriends a metallic giant in Warner P hoto courtesy W an er Bros. A S lice o f H eaven SO J L 9 0 V I P 9 (Lu n ch & La te N lte) PLUS, A u th en tic Italian Dishes m ade from scratch everyday. Including lasagna, baked z iti, calzone* and m ore! S h o p B y T o d a y s SUNDAY A ll- U - C a n - E a t PA STA Bros.’ latest animated feature, the Iron Giant. Romantic pairings paint different pictures in ‘Crown,’ ‘Bride The Thomas Crown Affair is a delicious game of wit between Crown (played by title role. Faye Dunaway, who played the part o f Banning in the original, makes a cameo as Crown’s psychiatrist Brosnan, who also co-produced the film, is easily both sly and likeable, and Russo’s slinky get-ups are forgivable only because she wears them while tossing out savvy insights and quick thinking. Affair does well in steering clear of the predictable, managing to remain interesting with each ne w and playful curve of the plot. Just as summer films should be. — Trisha Coffman P i e r c e gI l l ' l l I III Brosnan) and W * The Thom as Catherine Crow* A ffair Banning (Rene s ta r s (o f 5) | Russo) who is jk A hired to find a % f IT If'jF lu iiri" IT T * stolen M onet painting. , The film follows the romance between Russo and Brosnan, which is fueled by their adversarial relationship. The two realize they may be soulmates, even as they try to outsmart each other. Directed by John McTieman, the film is loosely based on the 1968 flick of the same title, which starred Steve McQueen in the Despite the dynamic on-screen chemistry between Julia Roberts and Richard Gere, the actors’ highly publicized reunion in © Tw o SS T uesdays T he T h ir s t y B ea v er *2 U-CALL-IT! Beer & D rinks All N ight *2 3 5 0 -9 8 8 8 ______ -_______ i/sui Burgers & Fries 7 5 « W ell, W ine and D omestic D rafts for Ladies *2 TUESDAY lO O l Bud & Bud Light Bottles a st 8 H a p p y H our 3 - 7 pm 1/2 P rice D rinks, D rafts *225 W eil, W ine and Domestics , PflnM 7p-nosr THURSDAY © FRID A Y © End of the W ebcend Saturday Nk h t ! Orn a t S m $1 so 0UD & bud yfz Price on any sandwich From 5-8pm ■ • Light Bottles Beers and Aprs. * 3 60°' Pitchers of M iller Light W ED NESDAY DAM E 50c hardware store. Annoyed with Ike’s pres­ ence and only a few days until her next wedding, she decides to fight back. Even though Gere seemed uncomfort­ able with his delivery at times, he was able to pull o ff a comedic perform ance that rivaled Roberts and Cusack. Roberts is charming and amusing. Yet her polished performance and ease at times overwhelms Maggie’s insecurity and neu­ rotic lifestyle and trivializes the concept of her dumping so many men. Runaway Bride stays light and funny throughout. The romantic comedy’s story­ line is a little cluttered, but it’s unique nature a n d great leading actors carry through. — Erin Sweeney © o T hursday N ic h t ! G mls Nk h t O ut! 3-1 Opm A CD o Runaway Bride does not cap­ ture the same magic that made P retty Woman a suc­ cess. Gere plays Ike Graham, a New York newspaper columnist who hears about a Maryland woman who ran away from the altar more than once. Intrigued, Ike com­ poses a column about the “runaway bride,7’ which eventually leads him to her small Mayberry-like hometown. With the exception o f her infamous near escapes from matrimony, Maggie Carpenter (Julia Roberts) seems to be a normal small­ town girl who drives a truck and runs a *111.1 1pm *2 i 150 W ell, W ine, D omestic Bottles Long Islands and C oronas SA T U R D A Y & D rafts FREE SU N D A Y P o o l ! MONI GOOD PLACE TO COME th S t r e e t • T em pe • N CAMPUS” l ) t n t “O 801 E Apache •894*2662 T a v e rn 8 E a te ry Happy Hour 7 days a week, 3pm-7pm $/dozen $ 1 domestic drafts • $2 premium well $2 Cuervo margaritas • $2 domestic bottles Also featuring daily food specials Daily Specials 1301E. University, Tempe, behind Sunny's Pizza • 829-7344 G et your v o ic e H e a rd ! B E A T S ME T h e S ta te P re s s is now accepting applications fo r O pin ion Colum nists fo r the Fall semester. Bring a writing sample and apply at the State Press office in the basement o f Matthews Center. Submit writing sample with application. Deadline: August 27 th. en tv to c renue dow ntow n iem p e w ith T h e D e v il’s P la y g ro u n d , the W eb D e v il s n e w M ill A venue e n te rtain m e n t guide. Its chock-lull of listings o f eateries, shops and fun places to visit on DubPistols “Point Blank” Iem p es busiest street W a n n a c o m e o u r a n d p la y ? C D on s a le ! V is it the W eb D e v il And the fun has only p:// www. st W EEK LY CR O SSW O R D PU ZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe I ACROSS 1 “H am let" h a s five 5 B ed tim e sto ry 9 Type o f cam p aig n 14 B o a rd 's p a rtn e r 15 M an o f w a r? 16 — ffrm a : 17 U nreal visio n 1 9 M a rriag e 20 Derby, e .g . 21 M idm onth, in R om e 22 M issing 23 Cavities 25 N ap o leo n ’s exile islan d 26 Fire b o m b s u b s ta n c e 28 J o s ip B r o z 29 “Rose — rose" 32 Part of QED 33 Castro’s prop 34 Sped 35 Unreal vision 39 Weak ending 40 “It’s — time!" 41 Totes up 42 Director Spike 43 Attar exchanges 44 Uncoinesque 46 Horse hue 47 Mammoth and Crystal 40 Valjean pursuer 51 Sitarist Shankar 52 Fixed term investments: Abbr. 55 “I wasn’t there,” e.g. 56 Unreal vision 56 French artist 59 Genesis setting 60 Part of A-D^ 61 Point of view 62 Capone pursuer 63 For the guys DOWN 1 St. Louis landmark 2 Burger go-with 3 Brush stuff 4 Rice rival: Abbr. 5 Bicycle built for two 6 The Ram 7 Magnifying glass 8 Map dir. 9 Mulish 10 Exclusive group 11 Empire State canal 12 Elvis follower 13 Carry on 18 — pickle 22 Mongolian mountains 24 “Egads!”, e.g. 25 Ball to avoid 26 Stair post 27 Get out of bed S o lu t io n to P u z z le in th e c la s s if ie d s e c t io n . 28 “— Andronicus" 29 Lustrous 30 Smooths, in a way 31 Woody Alien feeling 33 Emmett Kelly persona 36 “My — Martian” 37 WWI menace 38 Charles Foster — 44 Folk-rocker Richie 45 “Metam orphoses” author 46 Confederate 47 Toreros’ wardrobe 48 M.D.’s reading 56 49 Astronaut Bean 50 “Pulp Fiction” actor Rhames 51 Travel by horse 53 Delaney or Carvey 54 Air pollution 56 Slammer 57 Ethiopian noble 9 10 11 12: 13 l 15 : 17 18 J1 20 21 _ ■B 23 24 _ ■ 26 n27 30 31 ■28 29 32 1 a 3 4 14 35 39 42 àz 36 37 40 50 55 58 51 7 l “ i 45 41 j ■ 44 7 I ■ i ■ 4 52 54 ■ ■ i 57 J 50 1 1 1. , " -tty Matt Gaffaey © 1999 Los Angeles Times Syndicate $10>99 CD on sale! m en*« .3 1 34 38 ” 1 Freestylers “We Rock Hard” 80 new Located in the lower level of the Memorial Union 7 2 7 • U S ED 8 1 “ 7 Sale ends next Mem 8/3/99 u s e d m u sic 3 3 - w w w .h o o d lu m s m u s ic .c o m State Press for Tuesday, August 3, Iff» ■ n n n v B ‘V isita n t* sh o u ld sc o re big w ith re a d e rs W ith Stone G h o st's aid. B row ser and his w arriors search the canyons and comb the wilderness in search of The Visitant is both a work o f historical fiction and the evil-spirited killer. As B ro w se r’s m ission p ro ­ an e n tic in g su sp e n se n o v e l, ty in g an an cien t A nasazi m anhunt for a serial gresses, a second plotline surround­ The Visitant killer with a present-day archaeological ing two archaeologists excavating a by Kathleen O’Neal and W. Michael Gear mystery. burial site begins. Dusty Stewart ★ ★ ★ ★ stars (o f 5) and Dr. M aureen C ole, w hose Written by wife and husband team Release date: Aug. 10 Published by T om D oherty Associates, Inc K ath leen O ’N eal G ear and W. clashing personalities bicker and M ich ael G ear, the novel ju m p s b anter- th ro u g h o u t, sta rt to betw een New M exico 1250 A.D., un co v er co rresp o n d in g e v i­ when the land was tended by the dence in the murders. The two A n asazi In d ia n s, and a m odern are pleasantly familiar Mulderarchaeological dig. The two different stories are inter­ and-Scully character types, drawing battle lines around twined, which both release clues to the reader, little by science versus instinct. Stewart and Gole also have a little, to fill in the holes each story leaves. certain opposites-attract charisma, reminiscent of Han Most of the novel revolves around Browser, the War Solo and Princess Leia, which can only mean one thing Chief of the Katsina people, as he searches for a masked in the next installment. murderer who is slaughtering women and children in Then again, the authors are not afraid to surprise the several villages. When Browser's wife is found dead, he reader. ‘ recruits the help of his great uncle, Stone Ghost, an As the story bounces back and forth, details are ancient version of Col umbo, to help solve the murders. revealed by Stewart and Cole that help the reader gain R e v ie w B y D e n is e E s t f a n S t a t e P r ess insight into the killer’s identity. While the suspense is not as dangerous or as exciting in the present-day sec­ tions, when discoveries are made in the present day, it heightens the tension in the Anasazi chapters. Various characters are introduced throughout the story, and well-researched legends and customs of the Anasazi, their homeland of Chaco Canyon and their way of life are interwoven tending authenticity to the novel. The Gears are professional archaeologists, and it’s this first-hand experience that ultimately works to not only paint a vivid picture of ancient Anasazi culture, but also to show the realistic in teractio n betw een two archaeologists passionate for their chosen field, yet at odds with each other on both a philosophical and a gen­ der level. This novel is the first book of the authors’ Anasazi mystery series, so the ending is satisfying, yet leaves the reader knowing the story is not complete and more is to come. T h e au th ors o f T h e V isita n t w ill sign b ook s A ug. 9 a t C hanging H ands B o o k sto re, 6428 S. M cC lintock Dr. MU Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week N O W I N O U R 36"' Y E A R T hank y o u f o r y our p a tro n a g e! A S II S tu d e n ts, F a cu lty, a n d S ta ff A ll you r fa v o r ite s + Special Menu Item s Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp • Chicken JA M S S im p ly t h e B E S T M E X I C A N F O O D in t h e V a lle y ! . . . 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If you are interested in being an egg donor please call (6 0 2 ) 3 4 3 - A R M S (2 7 6 7 ) o r v is it o u r w e b s ite »vfvfv.aritonarms.com Burning Sky is known fo r their 20th century spins on N ative American melodies and rhythms, mixing world cultures an d world music into their Big Sky sound. In concerty today A S U M em orial Union a t 12 noon FREE! — -— ASU MU Basem ent (F re e A d m is s io n Public Events in th e P r o g r a m m in g L o u n g e ) lx A lliu n s ■ M U M H I H l lìie sd a y , A ugust 3 Thè Rhythm Room will present the roots country sounds of the Bobby H orton Band. The cover is $3. Call 265-4842 for more information. M ike Ness and Deké Dickerson will be Boston's at 9 p.m. Tickets will be $20. W ednesday, A ugust 4 The Fat Possum Showcase of Down Home Mississippi Blues will present T-Model Ford with Paul ‘W ine’ Jopes at the ■¡■¡¡¡¡¡I MMMI Rhythm Room. There is a $8. Call 2654842 for more information. Ziggy Marley & The Melody Makers with Ghetto Youth Crew featuring Julian and Dam ian M arley will be at the Cajun House at 8 p.m. Tickets will be $25. Kirkland and the Energy Band will be at the Rhythm Room. There will be a $5 cover. Call 265-4842 for more information. Bash on Ash will hold their weekly swing lessons followed by Magnum Brutes. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. and there will be a $7 cover. T hursday, A ugust 5 Santana, Mana and Ozomätli will be at the America West Arena at 7 p.m. Tickets range between $30 and &54. John Lee Hooker’s legendary guitarist Eddie Friday, A ugust 6 Donna Sommer will he at the Celebrity Theater at 8 p.m. Tickets range from $35 to $45. Lady “J” and Blues Ratio with M axine Johnson will be at the Orbit Restaurant and Old Bard festival livens up Sedona B y B rian P o u c o f f S t a t e P ress Shakespeare Sedona. now in its second season, has engaged talent from throughout the nation for its produc­ tions of Much Ado About Nothing, The Hamlet Project and A Midsummer Night's Dream. In order to give the produc­ tions a decidedly different flavor each is being performed in a different venue; M uch A d o A bout N othing features B eatrice and Benedick and their age-old merry war of wits. This brilliant comedy is ideally performed outdoors at the Tlaquepaque Arts & Crafts Village. A Midsummer Night's Dream, the Bard’s enchanting, mischievous fantasy plays, at the Verde Valley School. an institute well known for its theatrical excellence. Both performances feature seasoned stage and screen actor D avid Barlow, Barlow was featured in Jazz Club. Call 265-2354 for more information. Uncle Charlie, Spiral Jupiter and ÜFO will be at the Bash on Ash at 8 p.m. The cover will be $5. Saturday, A ugust 7 „ Bad Company and Billy Squier will be at the Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavilion at 8 p.m. Tickets will range between $20 and $45. The Wise Monkey Orchestra will be at the Green Room. Cover is $5. T h e W e e k e n d B o x O f f ic e nev LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Witch stole some of the new­ lyweds' blush, but the Julia Roberts-Richard Gere reunion Runaway Bride sail managed to detail atop the weekend box office, according to estimates Sunday. The Blair Witch Project, the summer’s low-budget surprise, came in second with $28.5 million in its first weekend of wide release. The horror tale, told through videotape purportedly shot by filmmakers who vanished white hunting for a witch, had played to sold-out theaters in its first two weeks on just a few dozen screens. 1; Runaway Bride, $34.5 million. 2. The Blair Witch Project, $28.5 million. 3; Deep Blue Sea, $1 8 .6 m illio n . 4. T he Haunting, $15,1 million. 5. Inspector Gadget, $14 million. 6 *66. yV ow e IS IM fP iiifttY — S fc e ? 0O X SAY CoMPtGL . a SU *1 T L SRC P~l P V M «:.n ic t o r C arun g #3 îWc, còffe*..Vj OM S C S . r tA C \ O >1 CTIV .m e .n » C l o n i rt ex ./» ertV \ «aT . t-xAi^pW : StatePress No ONE TALKS TO ASU LIKE WE d o ! -Arizona State University — Call 965-6555 to place an ad— Classifieds N o tic e ip oiir readers: B efo r e responding to any. advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The Store Press cannot assume responsibility for die validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS 1 M IL E FR O M A S U : stu d io apt., $ 5 5 0 m o. u tilities included 360rl626. 1214 E. O R A N G E . M arianna A p ts. 1bd & stu d io s. $ 5 0 o f f move-in w/ad. 480-966-8597. 1 M ILE from A SU: Ige Ibd w / p riv a te b a lc o n y , lau n d ry . Q uiet, clean & very nice! $510 m o. T ak e o v e r le a se 'starting Sep, (flex). Chiistin 929-0067. 2B D R , 1BA. 2 blks from A SU , p o o l, spa, co v d p k n g , laundry fa c ility , $ 5 7 5 /m o + $ 2 0 0 dep. Quiet complex. 967-7212. y TEMPE: 2B R ’S, com p letely re­ m o d eled , oak ca b in ets, o n -site la u n d ry . W alk to to w n la k e, A SU & dow ntow n. O nly $ 6 0 0 / m o. A sk ab out m o v e -in s p e ­ cials. 804-0537, C la s s if ie d s rm rrm n M m Trivia... HOM ES FOR RENT Canada is an Indian word meaning "big village." -----------------J APARTMENTS WE RENT HOMES! STUDENTS WELCOME! BEAUTIFUL TEMPE HOMES 1-5+ BR, SOME W/ POOLS $595-$1695 J&T 446-RENT APARTMENTS A S U , 5 M IN w a lk , n ic e o n e bdr; laundry, q u iet. $ 4 1 0 m o ., 921-7120 or 761-5025 GALL FOR super m ove-in spe­ cials! 1 & 2 bdrs, sm quiet com­ m u n ity , p o o l, sp a , 1 m i from c a m p u s, w a lk to T o w n L ak e. $ 5 2 5 - $ 6 2 5 , R iv er R un A p ts. 968-2042. APARTMENTS V A N B U REN & 52nd St., 1 & 2 bdr fro m $ 4 7 0 - $ 6 0 0 , p o o l, sp a , o n b u s* lin e, c le a n . 225-. 0944 --.V ; ■■ V ERY N IC E, large, clean 2bd/ Ib a , w a lk to A S U . C a p e C od Apts. 968-5238 C lassified s W O RK! APARTMENTS APARTMENTS HOMES FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT I M l FR O M A S U , .3 bdrm , 2 b a y w /d , la w n m ain t in c l, $ 1 2 5 0 /m o . 7 3 1 - 3 9 6 9 o r 3 6 0 1626 pgr. 3 B D R / 2 B A : Ig b ck y rd , 1 5 m iles from campus. Pets ok. A ll a m m en ities, 1 7 0 0 sq ft, $ 1 0 5 0 mo. 902-0562 or 275-2909. 3 & 4 BEDROOM HOMES for rent, $ 1 0 5 0 -$ 1 2 7 5 /itio . J e f f at 893-1651. A S U A R E A - 1 bedroom c o t ­ tage, ex c e lle n t con d ition $ 395. 966-2627. ‘ APARTMENTS APARTMENTS W ELCOM E BACK N e w ly re n o v a ted I bd apts w /cera m ic tile . W alk to A S U . B eautiful 1.5 acre grass court­ yard w /p o o l. C all for ap poin t­ ment. 784-1937. Find it FASTm the Classifieds Boring?? T ire d of n o is y , loud n e ig h b o rs ? We offer quiet liv in g , 1/2 block from campus. Beautifully furnished. Huge 1 bed­ room , 1 bath &, 2 bed­ room, 2 bath apartments. All bills paid. Cable T.V. ready, heated pool, and spacious laundry facili­ ties. Friendly courteous m anagem ent. Stop by today!!! T errace Road A partm ents 9 5 0 S. T errace Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 . I HOMES FOR RENT C L O S E T O A S U - A b é ti 2ba $ 1 0 5 0 ; 3bdr/ lb a $ 8 7 5 ; 1 bdr/ lb a ml w/d $500. 894-0288 H O U SE FOR Rent $ l,0 0 q /m o . 3 b d /2 b a , 2 car ca rp o rt, 1 2 0 0 sc|. ft., very clea n , q u iet area. 3 /4 m i. from A S U . H ardy & 14th S t. 9 2 2 - 3 5 5 2 ask for Mark. S T U D IO G U E S T -H O U S E for ren t. N ew c o n s tr u c tio n , CP h x ., p rivate, a /c , p o o l, lau n ­ dry. S in gle resident, N S , $ 5 0 0 m o., ut^'s included, 712-'1514. Thta a h o u kt bo yo u r a d Call 965-6735 APARTMENTS TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FO R RENT TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT 3 B D /2 B A C O N D O w / appl. U niversity/Price. $990/m o. Call Greg 755-0299 LRG 3 bdr, 2 ba. tw n se, w /d . U ni v ./R o o s e v e lt . $ 9 9 5 /m o . Shah 820-3333. W U SA ow/agt. 3BD /2BA , UNIVERSITY/ Price, w /d , new carpet, cov'd prkng, p o o l, ja c u z z i. T o b e p ain ted and refu rb ish ed $ 9 4 5 /m o . Avail. 8/1. Call 861-2052 Q U E ST A V ID A 3bd/3ba Start at $ 1 1 0 0 /m o . L uxury to w n h ouse, great for 4 p eo p le, vltd c e ilin g s , fan s, sk y lig h ts, w /d, d /w , m ic ro , 2 p o o ls , sp a , rqt ball. 1 mi. to A SU , 2 story. Har­ ris Equity, 888-870-5762. T E M P E C O N D O : p a rtia lly furn’d 2bdr/ 2ba (u p sta irs) w / g a ra g e, b a lc o n y , & fir e p la c e . $400 mo. 699.5415 C O M M O N S O N L em on- w alk to A SU . Bdrms & baths up, liv­ ing rm down; d /w , w /d , micro,'1 c o v ’d prkg, pool etc. Avail 7/1, $725 mo. 1-800-977-0803 SPA C IO U S 3 B R /3B A . pvt pa­ tio , c . p o o l, appi & w /d in c l. Near A SU , $1125 mo 451-4609 FOR LEA SE by ow ner, luxury c o n d o , W alking d is ta n c e to ASU. 866-9124 or 432-5078. APARTMENTS C / a s s if ie d s APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING RMMTE NEEDED- share 2 bdr hse w /fem ale & 1 dog. 1 mi to ASU. $400 incl util. 967-5818 ROOMMATE W ANTED, Scot­ tsdale & Shea, $ 4 0 0 + 1 /2 util. 991-6679. T E M P E D U P L E X : 2 b d / lb a $ 5 9 5 ; 2 b d / 2ba $ 6 3 5 m o. C ond o near A S U , $ ¿ 9 5 , p o o l, w /d 966-0987. S H A R E T H , v er y n ic e , great p o o l, evd pkng. NS grad stud­ en t p ref. A v a il 8 /1 5 . $ 4 3 5 + elec & phone, 602-866-0896. T E M P E - B R O A D W A Y / M cC lin to ck . N ew luxury co n d o s/ tq w n h om es, gated com m u n ity, attached garages, 2br/2ba. Hur­ ry! 968-6461. ROOM S FOR RENT T E M P E / A S U 3 b dr/ 2b a L as BriSas. A v a il. A ug. 1: 2 story, 2 -ca r g a ra g e , a ll aipjpl., w /d , $1250. Joel 967-6240-1100. AZ FUNDER: professional door so cc e r team looking' m rktg sales in te rn for. fall m ester: paid position. Fax sum eto 480-948-7.348 in ­ fo r se­ re- ! M U S T .SE L L 9.2 Ford Esicori,: $ i()(X) obo. Cal I Lcsite ..30/\ 9 250. Ä 874-3268 Ä AUTO CLUB I Sales & Service BUY, SELL, TRADE •96 N issa n 2 0 0 S X S E R ed, L o a d ed . 39k, 1 Owner $8,950 •96 N issa n A ltim a GXE W h ite, L o a d ed , l ow ner $9,450 Many Others to C h o o se From "Cj^eot people; y*eot pay; ani ho teUmy made Ixcetttke oloioui choice fob me experience what a great |ob Is aH about Absolutely no selling is involved, 7 plus we offer our employees ft» following : • Advancem ent O pportunities HELP WANTEDGENERAL Mesai* 1906 E. Main (NW com er of Main S Gilbert) FLEXXHeDVLESFTin Must be 18 .Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass background check, We offer low cost Medical Dental Vision, Uniforms. supplied: & maintained. Apply at: Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. 627 South 48th St. #105 T em p er -0 1 4 1 CEN TRO BE an EDS Co. Seeking P/T, Inbound Customer Service Reps Monday - Friday Available shift 5am -10am . Paid training begins 8/16. Must have 20wpnt, PC proficient, customer service experience. Rate of pay $ 7 .S 0 -$ 9 (d.o.e.) Cali for Interview 5 9 8 -4 5 2 0 AA/EOE C en tro b e p ro m o te s a drugtre e w orkplace/ B ackground investigation GYM NASTICS INSTRUCTOR. G o o d w / ch ildren . E xp erien ce & e n th u sia sm a m u st. 8 -2 0 hrs/wk. State's Top Gym nastics.. Program. 9 4 0-404 1. H A N D Y M A N FO R apt. com ­ plex. 30 hrs/wk, work hrs flex, to o ls pro v id ed , a b ility to do* odd jo b s d e sired . 'W ill train. 967-7212. L A W N SERV ICE p/t help . N o ex p . n ec. $ 7 50/h r. 9 6 6 -3 2 6 9 . Flexible hours. LEARN “WHAT It takes to work at an ad agency. The State Press is hiring A ssistant A ccount Ex­ e c u tiv e s . T o P articip ate in all le v e ls o f a d v ertisin g , 'm arket­ ing, & publishing, Potential for grow th , salary + b o n u ses. R e­ quirements: a car, ho more than 13 cr ed it h r s ./s e m e s te r , & a p o s itiv e a ttitu d e. C a ll Kathy W elsh at 965-6555, 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 C U STO M ER S E R V IC E You Couldn't Ask For A Better PT Job! W e a re a b u s y c o m m e rc ial real estate fin n in need of an, in d i v i d u a l to d p m a r k e t re sea rc h , w o rd p ro c e ssin g , a n d receptionist w ork. This is a g r e a t o p p o j t u n i t y to learn m ore about- a business office a n d th e Phoenix re a l estate m arket. • paid weekly! • paid sick/vacation days! • AM & I’M / .FT & IT hrs • no experience necessary! S ta r t in g p a y is: $6/50 / fir; y o u r ho u rs m y b e scheduled to suit y o u r class schedule.: If a relaxed, b u t h igh energy, work, environm ent is im por­ ta n t to y o u , y o u w ill enjoy this p o rtio n . D ohson/G uadalupe 777-8757 Answer incoming customer phone calls, enter orders in computer. Join other ASU students at national corpora­ tion near campus. AM & PM shifts. $8/hr to start with opportunity for advancement. Call 438-4400. Please call C o rin a L a n g e a t R and C om m erciail B rok ers a t 945-2822 im m ediately, AZ Ave. & W arner 735-0000 ¥" G a in v a l u a b l e ifi E x p e r ie n c e P eo rii 9720 W. Peoria (ME co m erei Peoria & 99th A m ) • Varied Full-time and Phoenix 4250 E. Camelback Bldg K, Suite 300 (CameISquare Atrium) Part-time Work Schedules Tempe • Weekly Pay Periods . 1919 W. Fairmont (off 48th St. between Broadway & Southern, near 1-10) DBC n e e d s people to work with children, ad o les­ cents, an d young adults who are D evelopm en­ ta l^ , Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $7 - $8 per Hour Working With A dolescents Incentives: Tuition Reim bursem ent, Paid Time Off, A dvancem ent Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package SubmitApplications To: Call our Employment Hotline at 808-0008 to schedule an interview. DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 Agent Services w w w .e xce lta g e n t.com Security Officers and Preboard Sereeners G Y M N A S T IC S , D A N C E & C heer coaches to teach T + Th . aftns th is fa ll. M ust be en th u ­ s ia s t ic , fu n , d e p en d a b le, w / x ln t c o a c h in g and s p o ttin g sk ills. Xlnt pay for xlnt people 955-7805. opportunity taiddng tor you: • Com petitiva P m / :-“TI' Stru cture • 4 0 1 (k) HELP WANTEDGENERAL Classifieds ST 000.00 Sign-on Bonus! W H hiouf gofiybniart! 8 Jom Excel! as a Directory A iM tfnr« Opmirtor a n d ‘ locations, w e h a v e a n • Paid Training 1607 E. Apache Bivd. Tempe, AZ 85281 480-804-1166 DISTRIBUTION CO. near ASU n eed s FT h elp for s a le s dept. Exc typing & com m sk ills req. F lex hrs. M -F . $ 7 /h r. C a ll Diane Drake 921 0707 *3404. GENERAL OFFICE help need­ e d . D u ties in c lu d e : ty p in g , b o okk eepin g, running errands. M u st h a v e o w n car, co n ta ct Paul Whiting @ 820-0309; $10 2S/Hr. to start 02 TERCEL: loOks gre¡aU new tires, no air, 90K miles. .$2,800 obo: 73.()-8538-‘-Ieaverhsg C A S H T O D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. C U S T . SER V / S a le s P o sitio h avail. @ Citrus N ursery. Enjoy o u tsid e/ in sid e w ork. FT -com piiter ex p . e s s e n tia l. $ 8 / hr + DÓE. G r e e n fie ld C itru s N u r se r y ,’ I n c ., E. M ésa 83Ò800Ò! HELP WANTEDGENERAL CO E. Drug-bee workplace. =^3B ] N O W Market Research H I H I N Gi Telephone Interviewing RedRoof Inns $7-$9/hr. DOE has just opened its newest hotel 3 miles from the ASU Campus! Front Desk positions available. No experience necessary, with Flexible Hours to meet your schedule! For immediate consideration, Apply in person at: RPS, Inc., the fastest growing small package delivery company, is An FDX Company expanding their Phoenix Call Center. The following positions are available: CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Full and Part Time Q u alificatio n s an d re sp o n s ib ilitie s • E x cellen t Communications skills • Problem solving skills ' Previous customer service experience a plus • Strong typing + 10-Key a plus • French and Korean speaking also needed • Handle various customer inquiries from tracing packages to general service information. Benefits • Complete benefit package/ salary $21,000+/yr for Full-Time em ployees • $9.00/hr. for Part-Time • No week­ en d s or holiday hours (center open 7:30 am -8 :0 0 pm) • Business casual dress everyday • Promotional opportunities 2135 W. 15th St, Tempe or call Ray DiSalvo at 449-3205 m R PS,Inc. Human Resources Dept. 4632 E. Hammond Ln. Phoenix, AZ 85034 Æ Submit Resumes online: www.shiprps.com Fax: 602-303-8285 or call 602-303-8230 EOEAA X Flexible Hours X W eekly Bonuses X Quarterly R aises X Paid Training X A u to D ialer X Prom ote Within X Bilingual a Plus X P aidB reaks (English - Spanish) 2 LOCATIONS (Scottsdale &. Tempe) Come join a reputable Marketing research company that offers a pleasant working environment, casual business dress, and the opportunity to make good friends & good money. Call Geo o r Rob 77 4 -0 7 7 1 HELPWANTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL - LEGAL COURIER p/t, M -F 1-5 P rof, ap pearan ce & car req'd. Call 452-1826. " NEED STUDENT for M D office, S cò tte. 1 2 -2 0 h rs/w k . M o stly m orn's + som e aftrns. G eneral office work, local errands. Must h a v e ow n tran sp. C a ll 9 4 7 - ' 7651 or fax resume 947-0274- PR P E R S O N A L IT Y - in t'l co se e k s p o s itiv e , s e lf m otivated indv'ls to train in to upper le v ­ els; T ravel o p tio n a l. N ew Phx location. 602-863-3009. S A M U R A I S A M S is lo o k in g for som eone to take over cater­ in g b u s in e ss . W e're o ffe r in g 50% o f th e p ro fits + $ 6 hr. Hours are M onday-Friday, 102pm. Dan 770-8686 N EED M O RN ING work to ac­ com odate to your school sched­ ule? Space A ge Paints is a great place to work!! W e are flexible, fun, and a drug free work place! S to p in at 7 0 2 S . ;C oun try C lub Dr., M esa, any day o f the week to pick-up an application. N O W H IR IN G : w a itr e s s e s , d oo rsta ff, & d eliv ery d riv ers. A pp ly @ B o jo s, 8 2 9 S . Rural ■:Rd. ' PT , M -T H 6 -9 p m $7/h r. N ear A SU . Survey telem arketing, no pressure presentation. N o exp. n ec. C a ll fo r in te r v ie w w ith NormGifford at 736-0675. t PT PERSONAL caretakers for M stud en t w / d isa b ility . For fur­ ther in fo <& app p lease contact  SÙ Disability Resources, Mat­ thews Center, 1st floor. YIP Passes tP Vegas’ hottest Night Chibs! ! 1702-471-0111 i w w w .totalvegas.com ¡ RECEPTIONIST FOR Uni versal Portraits. Fun, ou tg o in g . T em ­ pe Kristen, 777-1054. T O T h C .y E G A S .C O M fismoiDçmFozecfitr by Sidney Omarr Tuesday, August 3, 1999 ARIES (M arch 2 |-A p ril 19): Job activities expand* could in clu d e sp ecial S aturday memorial. Emphasis on popu­ la rity , social a c tiv ity , hew Wardrobe Previously indiffer­ en t asso ciate WÏ1 1 becom e enthusiastic ally. T A U R U S (A pril 20-M ay 2Ô): Lunar position high ligh ts phys­ ical attraction, vitality, partici­ p ation in C reative e n d e a v o r s. Forge ahead! G EM INI (M ay 2 1 -June 20): W ord s, m ea n e v e r y t h in g ! Y o u ’il w rite and w in , y o u ’ll Create you r o w n aura through w o r d s ,, v e r b a l a n d w r itte n . p ro ce ss . under w ay. Sophisticated A ries relates tales concerning foreign intrigué. SCO RPIO (Ó c t 23-N ov .2 1 ): M o v e forw a rd , return o f o ld flam e m ust not d eter progress. Y d o ’J1 h a v e , y o u r c h o ic e o f alm ost anything but not i f you in sist o h attem pting to rev iv e g h o sts S A G IT T A R IU S (N o y . 2 2 -D e c . 21): C h o ic e o f words important - avoid double m e a n in g s , s p e a k c l e a r ly , b e d efin ite con cern in g intentions. S p o tlig h t o n p u b lic a p p e a r ­ ances, popularity, marital status C A PR IC O R N (D e c 22-Jan SALES ASSOCIATES wanted for AZ Mills candy store, flex. his. Fun job, good pay. Sweets from Heaven, call or stop in! 777-7307, A D V E R T IS IN G A S S IS T A N T N EED ED Learn all a sp ects of print advertising. Flexible schedule. Work on cam pus. Start Immediately. SURF CITY S q u ez e SR C lo c a tio n lo o k in g fo r frien d ly , en erg etic, fitn ess oriented p eo p le for sum m er & fall. Stop by for an application. D o w n to w n T em p e lo c a tio n look in g for friendly, en ergetic, fitness oriented people for sum ­ mer & fa ll. Stop by fo r an ap­ plication. Nate (mgr.) 968-5354. SHOW ME THE $! A re y o u e a r n in g . $ 4 0 0 /w k.? Local marketing company is hir­ ing 6 p eop le to f il l direct sales p o s itio n s . W ork e v e n in g hrs. $ 8 /h r + co m m = $ 2 0 /h r. C a ll Tom at 460-0859. V HELP WANTEDCH1LD CA RE CLERICAL HELPER: entry leve l , F T , 2 p o sitio n s , lig h t ty p ­ ing, benefits, $7.6 5 hr. (Tem pe) 602-351-8661. FEM HOM E aide for 15 yr-old d is a b le d g ir l, Tue-Fri*. o c c S a t/S u n , 3 :3 0 p m - 9 :3 0 p m , $10/hr. N eed CPR, first aid, ac car a must. 423-5903. P/T CLERICAL A sst. $6-$7/hr. T em p e lo c . C a ll 8 9 4 - 2 2 2 7 or amynew@ix.netcpm.com SURF CITY SERVERS N EEDED A SA P . Ft/pt days avail. R e x hrs. Great $. D w tw n Phx, near B allpark. Call 252-4682 for interview. HELP WANTED- C U y i[C > y L _ _ g en e r a l HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BARBACK P/T, nights, exp. prefd. Eli's Bar and Grill, 4519 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd. 949-1100 TELEMARKETERS WANTED: 12 hrs wk (ev es), pay + bonus. N o s e llin g . B u ild re su m e w / Pain Webber. Ken 443-5405 BUSSER. 3-5 days/wk incl wknds. Please call 831-0070, ask for Carmine. TELEMARKETING POSITIONS Earn up to $ 1 5 /h r o f m ore w orking at hom e. M on.-Thurs., 5 -8 p m . N o s e llin g in v o lv e d , o n ly settin g ap pts. M ust h ave g reat p h o n e p erso n a lity & b e h ig h ly m o tiv a ted . C a ll 7 0 4 1954 for details. S T U D E N T W O R K E R n eed ed to w ork in S tate Press C la s si­ fie d s o f f ic e . P h on e, p e o p le & g o o d co m m u n ica tio n s k ills a must. Familiarity with Macs a +. Please apply in the basement of. Matthews Center. E N JO Y Y O U R jo b ! M u n is C afe, Ahw atukee, w ould like to ta lk w ith y o u ab out jo in in g our team. W e offer a fun & fastpaced environm ent. Please stop by and in tro d u ce y o u r s e lf. 4901 E. Ray Rd,, Phx. M A N U E L S R E ST A U R A N T is look in g for daytim e fo o d serv­ ers: Baja T illy 's is lo o k in g for cocktail servers. A pply at 1123 W. Broadway. 968-4437 TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, d a y s, n ig h ts o r w eek en d s, fun jo b , 9 4 7 - 6 5 6 2 . 2 0 1 3 N , S c o t ­ tsdale Rd. You can VIEW and SEARCH the Sta te P ress Classifieds on the Internet! HELP WANTEDSALES P/T COOK n eeded. G reat pay, e x c e lle n t hours. C om e in after 3pm fo r a p poin tm ent. T h irsty Beaver, 1001 E. 8th St. N E E D W K N D work to accofiiadate to your sch ool schedule? S p a c e A g e P a in ts is a great place to work!! W e are flexible, fun, and a drug free work place! S to p in at 7 0 7 'S. C o u n try Club Dr., M esa, any day o f the week to pick-up an application. statepress.com/ classifieds/ classifieds 965-6736 S E R V E R N E E D E D : L o o k in g for p o sitiv e person w h o en joys lif e to w ork in a b u sy fa m ily restau ran t. M u st h a v e a g o o d appearance & sen se o f humor. G reatp ay! A p p ly in p erson : 4 4 1 6 N . M ille r R d, in A B C O center or call Pasta Brioni 994* 0028, ask for Brian or Mike: INSTRUCTION 19) W hat Was lost recently w ill b e re tu rn ed , w ith a p o lo g ie s . A c c e n t v e r s a t i lit y , la u g h a t yoUr ow n foib les. V irgo m oon , H ig h lig h ts j o u r n e y , s p e c ia l fa ’m i 1i àr .groü n d , a tte n tio n studies, e x c itin g romantic inter­ lude. r e v o lv e s around fa m ily r e la ­ t io n s h i p s , h o m e b u ild in g , A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 2 0 -F e b p lu m b in g repairs,: C lo s e rela­ 1^): Step in to world o f fantasy ! , t iv e sta tes, “I. Want ,yo u t o be . T h o se w h o cla im y o u aire n ot hom e m ore often !” r e a lis t ic p r o f it a b le r e a lit y , i L E G (J u ly 2 3 -A iig .. 2 2 ): Playwright in you w ill surface! , O riginal plan discarded. M ore ; PISC E S (F eb . 19-M ar 20): -r e a lis tic a p p r o a ch in v o lv e d , O b ta in h in t fr o m A q u a r iu s. • necessary-w hat w as broken Will m e ssa g e . W rite you r dream s* be fixed. Element o f tim e could aspirations, reflect oh relation­ i n e l u d é w a tc h , e lo c k . F o r v ship with mother, father. .Legal a n sw er s, ..look b eh in d .s c e n e s .:. situation requires clarification . P isces in v o lv e d .. V irgo w ill play significant role. V IR G O 1, r V ñu m line: WTT* ed., a» m rn ’m At a ■ ■ h 9 6 a * « ia i T k I i ly W h í m i b k HPM/ r 1-L State Press Classifieds On the Web daily - in html! ^Deadline: Mon., August S *6555 od pricins 1 http://www.statepress.com/ classifieds/classifieds.html k - 8 / 1 6 - 8 / 2 0 RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS s u o G m m fE 1 Émim&M mmmmv a w -e * * • 1m t ^including: sum Adams, Trimstasl None] tw y w ity : Ends ————J fAlUE youf\ $Ë H Ê «am STU D IO - — — — — — — — — tm — fOft y*'--/ - Í/Í U M A N S HAIR i f f vili HONT MISS ö l 1 C DS D H 1E A M A N N O S T AG RESTAURANTS/ BARS 7 H 9 6 6 -5 4 6 2 GETMON m GUIDE Los Angeles Times Syndicate G ROO MI N G Mon.-Thurs. 9-8 Friday 9-6 Saturday 9-5Iii The Arches •With the purchase of a haircut at regular price and a $6 product charge - short to chin length hair | » * * ä i m am m fu lly an alyzing com plicated sit­ uations^ TA A R U D N 1 1 D E O L E 8 A L M T C H F U L A B O VOW R O A N E RT 0 OM w/ Carrie! tion, p ossess knack for su ccess­ ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE A R C H FREE HILITE* row 4 RESTAURANTS/ BARS um 1 Lv at % JM»' •* W ttsorS mIm i If the class you is closed...MCC is Ju st M IN U T E S AWAY. • • À ^ HOME OF THE ^ "K ILLE R C A L Z O N E " ^ • MCC at Southern and Dohson |0£f Hours: Open Daily lla .m . - XO p.m. í'm B» Mesa Community College has classes available in English, Math, History, Communications and other disciplines. Day and evening classes are offered at: • s e ll DAILY LUNCH SPECIAL 1 1A.M . - 2P.M. • MCC at Red Mountain • ASU Research Park • •¡j B* • Downtown Center/Country Chib & Brown Buy 1 slice & drink, get another slice s of equal or lesser valué . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FREE! s ' •jj wrth^sSad^. garlic bread (reg. $ 4 .2 5 ) . . . . • . . . . . . . ............ $3.55 s s i Internet classes are also available. Pick up an MCC schedule at one of the following registrar sites: •¡Ü • Social Science Registrar's Site "KILLER" CALZONES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4.55 « « sB 110" PIZZA with 2 FREE toppings /HOMEMADE" LASAGNA with salad & garlic bread. Mecrt or Spinach $ 5 .2 5; Cheese $4.75 ♦jy H A P P Y HOUR • i r ÁÁ C O M M U N IT Y s REGISTER NOW! 8 9 4 -M A M A s FAX 8 9 4 -8 7 9 5 s ® (480 ) 461-7700 Monday - Friday 2-5p.m. & 7-9:30p.m In a Hurry? Phone Ahead! • Undergraduate Services Registrar’s Site s s s sfl Pan $ 4 .7 5 ; N ew York $ 3 .9 5 11 fin A SU 1U n i Fall Sem ester Begins August 21st. M One of the Maricopa Community Colleges, The Maricopa Community College District is an EEO/AA institution. S c o r e B ig P o in t s a t R a n c h o M urietta and Th e E n cla v e cdzttu 1 7 1 7 S . Dorsey Lane Tempe 480 - 966-5184 HUGE Apartment Homes 1 , 2 , & 3 Bedro om s w w w .eqr.com 3 2 5 5 S. Dorsey Lane Tempe 480 - 345-1292