W o r l d / N a t io n Florida police strategy may HAVE BACKFIRED DURING ST. Petersburg riots Page 3 1 F * i . 4 P* !i u W 1 J ft____________ Sports The ASU volleyball team will TRY TO BREAK OUT OF ITS SLUMP WHEN IT HOSTS U W AND W SU Page 15 ©Copyright.StatePress.1996 Tempe.Arizona Vol. 81 No. 56 An Independent Morning Daily Rental code serves students well, says tenants’ rights rep B y R ay Stern State P ress Tenants’ rights activists Ken Voik (right) and Jim Driscoll (left) pose with fliers they w ill hand out on the ASU campus today. The fliers are aimed at inform ing Tempo renters about the pro­ posed municipal rental housing code. A public hearing oh the code is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Nov. 26 at the Tempe Police Auditorium, 120 E. Fifth St. Students sick of sub-standard apartment living should rally behind a proposed new Tempe rental housing code, said a local ten- . ants’ rights activist. Ken V olk, founder o f the A rizona Tenants Association, will be on campus today with other tenants’ rights supporters to distribute information about strengthening housing codes. “The issue here is one of empowering tenants to have a habitable place to live, not only for now but in the future,” Volk said. “Because ASU students are primarily renters and primarily live in Tempe, they would have an interest in this seeing as how about 600 students deal with (ASU) Legal Services on landlord-tenant issues alone.” Among other things, Tempe’s proposed code would require: • Front doors to have deadbolt locks, solidcore construction and peepholes/windows. * Minimum air-conditioned temperatures of 82 degrees (88 degrees for evaporative coolers). • Minimum space requirements for countertop, shelving and rooms, T urn to R enta l , page 2. G roup boosts num ber Full o f ho t air o f m inority graduates B y J eff O w ens S tate P ress In the last five years, an ASU-led group o f southwestern colleges has more than doubled the number of minority bachelor’s degrees in science, mathematics, engineer­ ing and technology. ASU Regents Professor Gary K eller announced to a National Science Foundation panel in Arlington, Va., on Thursday that minority graduates in those fields jumped from 484 in 1991 to 985 in 19%. Keller directs the group, which helps minority undergraduate math, science and engin eerin g m ajors. The goal o f the Alliance is to quadruple the number of degrees from the initial figure. The Southern Rocky Mountain Alliance for Minority Preparation was founded in 1990 and is composed of schools in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and western Texas. Originally funded for five years in 1991 with $5 million from the NSF, the group’s success has earned another $4.5 mil­ lion from file NSF for the next five years. “The summer bridge program helps them make the transition from high school to col­ leg e,” said P rofessor A ntonio G arcia, A lliance co -d irecto r. “The peer study groups alleviate those first-year failures. Once they are sophomores and juniors,- they get to work directly with faculty, seeing an application for what they are learning. As they approach the end of the tunnel, we get them ready for graduate school.” Alliance methods to help students gradu­ ate include five-week summer programs for incoming freshmen, faculty-led peer study groups, mentoring and faculty research pro­ gram participation and extensive graduate school preparation. NSF Project Director William McHenry sad die ASU alliance is one of its best projects. “They’re doing some very interesting things in cooperative learning and have had significant results,” he said. “They are taking a comprehensive approach to assuring that we have a competitive work force in die future.” The Alliance encompasses 19 four-year institutions, 12 community colleges and several corporations, organizations, govern­ ment laboratories and support programs. Since its inception, about 500 scientists, engineers, teachers and administrators have worked with more than 2,800 students. . The Alliance sponsors an Internet study network, databases of financial aid and aca­ demic programs, a computerized prepara­ tion program for graduate study and a K-12 teacher preparation program. Food drive kicks off today The Stale Press is proud to announce the return of the Help die Hungry food drive. Beginning today and continuing through Dec. 12, we are launching our second annu­ al campaign to collect non-perishable food items for die needy in our community. Many kind people have allowed us to place collection boxes in their buildings and departments. The boxes can be found in both the North and South A rchitecture buildings, the Physics and A stronom y d ep artm en t in the P hysical Science Building Room F470, the first level of the Social Sciences Building, Campus Comer (College Avenue and U niversity Drive location only), Stabler’s Market in Tempe Center and the State Press. We are working to establish more drop-off locations for your convenience. We are also asking for personal hygiene products such as toothbrushes, toothpaste, shampoo, razors and fem inine hygiene products. These products are desperately needed, but commonly forgotten. Hygienfe products may be dropped off at the State Press office in the basement of Matthews Center (north of Hayden Library and west of the Social Sciences Building). All donations will be given to die Salvation Army at 714 S. Myrtle Ave. (one block east of Mill Avenue on University Drive). For more information or to have a col­ lection box placed in your business, office or building, please call Brian Anderson at 965-2292. Thanks for helping us help die community. Pal Shannahan/ Stata Praaa Jennifer W right (left), a junior art education major, and Tsshl Palmer, a junior studio art major, hold up W right’s Inflatable sculpture of a dog Thursday morning outride the Art Building. The sculpture was fo r a 3-D art c232 >259 >249 308 314 >707 C A C MM M T(N C MPHOMBASSONA nc* w a i« ra»- wuwnr numotAst Fm b 1» AL IMES OR PFCS K X M iM G K IM EB i S 3 AN ) $60. OCroCNG ON OCSItMDON OR HPARMC OtMIGES N p c w n i r K> fORBGN GOW M ORS. S T o rn p tm o m c c to sK N v r rowivAfREEijacETroruasJ Wc also specialize ins „ Now it’s Available at Buffalo Exchange a- A dventure Tours S- International ID Cards Issued Council Travel, Planning to streak the MU? Call the S tate P r ess photographers at 965-6826. Remember to plan ahead! T30 E. University, Ste. A Tempe, AZ 85281 Located at Forest and University I (directly across from ASU) Where Recycling Is Always In Style. 9 6 6 -3 5 4 4 TEMPE, 227 W. University PHOENIX, 724 E. Glendale http://icuiw.ciee.org/lravel.htm IB O O K YO UR H O LID A Y RESERVATIONS NOW 1 http^/desertnet/buffiilo/ CarinsurancefromGEICO. Becauseit’sneverlooearlrtobegin makiimsoundfinancialdecisions. And GEICO offers a Whéther you already have your own car insur­ ance policy o r y ou're ready to start one, our great student rates make variety o f co n v en ien t payment plans to meet your needs. Join over 2 million GEICO a wise choice. * We'll answer ques­ tions and handle claims 24 hours a day. And in many cases, your claim can be settled within 48 #y drivers who have already insurance company that’s CaUGBlCO g o fan A++ rating. Call to learn how. sw itched to an auto GEICO today, and find hours o f reporting the details of an incident. 941 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe AZ85281 Crossroads are Rural and Apache • 517-9544 Isn’t it tim e you graduated to your oum insurancepolity? The sensible alternative. out just how much you couldsave> (6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 .... ' 1 ..™ l 1 • ..... Friday, November 15,1996 State P ress Page 13 ASU site of three leaking storage tanks; impact minimal By B ecky H ill S tate P ress LUST. Sounds good on the surface, but what it means below ground can’t be good. Leaking Underground Storage Tanks were at one time responsible for holding the gasoline and diesel fuel used for powering cars, trucks and generators. Because of improper installation, corrosion and punc­ tures, most of these tanks eventually leaked, and because of poor regulation, went unnoticed. According to an Arizona Department of Environmental Quality report updated in July 1996, ASU is home to three of Tempe’s 230 sites targeted for cleanup. Bob Gomez, assistant director of Risk Management, said the areas owned by ASU have not affected ground water and the soil impact is minimal. The first spot was found during a tank replacement behind P arking Structure 2 on U niversity Drive and McAllister Avenue in 1990. Cleanup began three years ago. “We found petroleum hydrocarbon contam inants, brought in a thermal destruction unit and burned the soil,” Gomez said. “Once the dirt met ADEQ standards, it was placed back at the site.” Gomez said the monitoring for soil and ground water impact will continue until ADEQ is convinced that all con­ tamination has been found and removed. “We are still proving to DEQ that there is no threat to lift: or the environment,” he said. “You cannot just say that there is no impact on the soil or ground water; we have to scientifically prove it" The second site on hold for closure until ADEQ gives its approval contained a tank ASU was not aware of until a construction team ran into it with a backhoe. The area is an empty lot on Apache Boulevard and Sunset Avenue and sits between The Vine Tavern and Calypso Bar and Grill. “We worked with the previous owners and had those tanks removed,” Gomez said. “There Was some minimal site contamination reported and we are waiting for the DEQ LATE NITE LIVE MUSIC to respond to our investigation,” According to Gomez, the University has been waiting about a year to hear from the environmental agency. “There isn’t a lot we can do until we get a response.” Risk Management completed a Phase I investigation, which includes a visual estimation of dead vegetation and aerial photos. Risk Management will then be instructed by ADEQ to go ahead and close the site, meaning it is clean, or to proceed with a more extensive investigation. The third site, located at Choila Apartments, had a tank removed and tested positive for soil contamination. ADEQ determined it did not warrant extensive cleanup and will be taken off the next updated list of LUST sites. Two of the contaminated areas were found while the U niversity w as in the process o f com plying w ith Environmental Protection Agency mandates passed during the 1980s. ADEQ is responsible for enforcement of the fed­ eral regulations which upgraded standards for tanks, leak detection and owner responsibility for leaks. Gomez Said ASU spent $360,000 to meet the new regulations. , “Over the past 10 years we have removed all of our old tanks -— 16 in all — that were between 2,000 and 5,000 gallons and replaced them with five state-of-the-art double­ wall steel or fiberglass tanks with leak-detection equipment,” Gomez said. Two of the new tanks are 30,000 gallons each and store diesel fuel meant to power the generator ASU uses when the University’s external power source goes down. The other three tanks, one with a 2,000 gallon diesel fuel capac­ ity and two that hold 30,000 gallons of gasoline each, fuel campus vehicles. S tate P ress O pinions M d / \ V 7 W Mm p l a y in g R O C K -N -R O L L HITS Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. V O F F -T R A C K B E T T IN G • D R IN K S P E C IA L S WILD! WACKY! JUBILANT! - G ene Shalit, TODAY, NBC -T V B U G S “ A m e ri M o v e e v e r M ic h a e la i t h e r e a lp la y e r s .” fajen !_ aLAAL taL| DWMuuny a te n n e . In c lu d e s V a lu e T ru c k P ackage! • Air Conditioning • Alloy Wheels • Chrome Bumpers Molding, Grill & More • AM/FM Cassette • Alarm • Sliding Rear Window Per Month for 24 Months Reach U* OuOar Utah H|e a L J M V W /^ 1997 Nissan Kmg closed end tease excess of l o t per “AM p, hilarious IIIIWIWH«} Comics Page 14 Friday, November 15,1996 St a t e P r ess bjCameBehrens off the mark Kingdoms b y Mark Parisi W '-fexx*, lÿfàjjP:tövAujj. ■|C C o .c x b ro K c , o o u jn ■ in ■foe, m idd.'e, Ln o uj*~ie,ce. ■.AC X*m i f T ria ls a n d T rib u la tio n s hey b y J o n a th a n In g e mm HE'Y! IT ’S ft BOX' OF RAMEN N00D i.ES/ I’M ßflCK FROM t u b sto re/ I HAD TO STAY ON BUDGET. J \ GIVE ME A HAND, t GOT IH MORE INI THE CAR. V HATE BEING A coue&e STUDENT sometimes . V D ilbert b y Scott A d am s IF yo u WERE HIRED, WHAT WOULD BE YOUR long-range career GOAL? s o o o • to o Irr-. s £ 1 1 1 •vl 1 I'D H A V EY O U R3DB IN SIX ,M ONTHS. IN ATEAR Y O U 'DBE W ORKING FOR(At, Y O UBIG PILEOF DINOSAUR DUNG. . f f=j^ y c. 'i SEEY O UA TTEN D EDA N'Y V A L L W O M E N 'S C O L L E G E . ■ ep ., DOESTH A TEXPERIENCE i• R E A L L YA N A K EY O UM O RE • ' CONFIDENTA N DA SSER TIV E? im ■• ■ •Ï'' EITHERA R/A . V j ___LETSGO. c. • f r-r) / ' ,U •- ~ G > /¿ ll ■ >-*/ >1 <1g C4*Im . P fr in ite ROSES/ check? CANDy**' ^ cN eckl L U P A -: x u K c k e tk ? M A N ûO B O O y W H EREAS T U E ^B U T T E R h e y ?? / E G G iB E A T E R ? h e y P IWiS i s a F IR S T * elaT A l -.> 7î NED A T C O N C EP TIO N OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH ■ « » r a w ip M E R C H A N D IS E MMHWAILABISl BUY N O W AN D SAVE BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE SERVING THE BEST HOT WINGS IN TOWN! 12 W ines_ _ $ 3.99 36 W ines_ _ $ 10.99 50 Wines .....$ 12.99 A P PE T IZ E R S Jalapeno Peppers M ozzarella Stick s M ushroom s ' Zucchinis Only $4.25 FAST, F R E E D E L IV E R Y 829-0064 24 Wing Minimum for Delivery Hot - Med. - Mild- BBQ Accepted Upon Delivery |3fifllflI|fiflfll[jÌM sÌN À L'Ì SPECIAL*J" '¿¡NMifciKifniK) H 12* 1- Item Pizza with 2 Toppings and Frat Sodas S rtir' ■ I S ports State P ress Friday, November IS, 1996 ASU looks to end skid vs. UW, W SU By D o u g C ook S tate P ress Jim Poulin/State Press Sophomore outside hitter Mindi Larsen and her ASU teammates w ill be look­ ing for their first win in over a month when they host Washington State at 7 p.m. tonight at the UAC. The ASU volleyball team’s quest for its first win in over a month won’t get any easier when it faces 1Out­ ranked Washington State and No. 15 Washington at the University Activity Center. The Sun Devils (8-12, 3-11 Pac-10), whose last win came against UofA on Oct. 11, will take on the Cougars at 7 tonight and the Huskies at the same time Saturday. Washington State is currently the hottest team in the Pac-10. The squad is on a nine-game winning streak and is in second place in the conference. Washington is right behind its rival in the standings. ASU head coach Patti Snyder-Park, whose team Was swept by the Washington schools last month on the road, said she’s more concerned with the Huskies. “Washington is all or none,’’ she said. “They’re huge, big and powerful. And if they’re passing well, it’s hard to stop them. We’re not big enough to stop them offem sively or defensively when they're on their game.” T he Sun D evils w ere m anhan d led by both W ashington and W ashington State in their previous meetings with the two schools. The Huskies (11-4, 21-5) held ASU to a -.015 hit­ ting percentage by out blocking the Sun Devils, as a team, 14-4. Sun Devil m iddle blocker Laura H ibsm an said ASU’s pace will be the key against the Huskies. “Our offense definitely needs to be a lot quicker,” she said. “We need to be a lot smarter with our shots by looking for what’s open.” Washington State (12-3, 21-4) is guided by senior m iddle blocker Sarah Silvernail and outside hitter Keren Oigman. Silvernail leads the Pac-10 in kills average (5.80) and is averaging 1.58 blocks per game. “They're very, very balanced,” Snyder-Park said of the Cougars. “So even when you're committing a two- or three-person block to Silvernail, she has all the shots in the world. What you need to do is slow down the rest of the team.” Snyder-Park said her squad matches up better with WSU than the Huskies. “Player for player, we’re very similar,” she said in comparison of the Sun Devils to the Cougars. “We don’t have a Silvernail, but we do match up as far as blocking size, defensive capabilities and the passing and serving game.” 5-way battle for Pac-10 title This is the second in a two-part Pac-10 m en’s basketball analysis. B y R andy J ones State P ress i The top five of the Pac all have the talent to win the championship, with the possible exception of the W ashington Huskies. Expect the Bruins and the Cardinal to duke it out on Feb. 8 in what will turn out to be the conference's championship game. 5) Washington The Huskies possess one of the best front lines in the conference. Washington is led by 6-8 junior forward Mark Sanford (16.5 ppg, 6.1 rpg), who entered the NBA draft last year then at the last moment decided to com e back to Seattle. Alongside Sanford, will be sophomore 7-footer Todd MacCulloch (8.8 ppg) and 71 Patrick Femerling (3.0). Keeping the two big men out o f foul trouble and on the floor together is key, said Head Coach Bob Bender. “We need to see more consistency from them,” he said. “Both of them get in foul trouble quickly . That was one of the rea­ sons we didn't start them together.” The backcourt? Two-year starter Jason Hamilton is gone, replaced by junior col­ lege transfer Jan Wooten (19.2 ppg, 2.4 apg), who Bender said is “ready to step in immediately.” Outlook: The advantage gained by the huge front line will allow the Huskies to bully many of the smaller teams in the Pac. Not having an established point will kill them in crucial games. Prediction — 16-11 (10-8 Pac-10) NIT. 4) UofA Young and skinny. UofA will head out on the court this year low on experience, but huge on talent and height. Head Coach Lute Olson lost 60 percent of his scoring with the graduations of NBAbound Joseph Blair. Ben Davis and Reggie Geary. However he replaced them with a top recruiting class including Phoenix’s M ike Bibby (32.3 ppg), 6-8 forw ard Eugene Edgerson (18 ppg, 14 rpg) and Bennett Davison, a junior college transfer from California. Strength of big men 6-11 sophomore A.J. Bramlett (1 9ppg, 1.9 rpg) and 6-11 Donnell Harris (1.1, 1.1) will be a liability. “Our front line ... it’s a good news, bad news thing,” Olson said. ‘They aren’t very physical. I’m not sure how we will deal with opposing post people of any size.” Outlook: Olson has the talent to chal­ lenge for the title, but having so much youth will keep UofA from taking it. Bibby runs away with freshman of the year hon­ ors. P red ictio n — 19-8 (11-7 Pac-10) NCAA 3) O re g o n A team looking for the respect they feel is deserved can be dangerous. Oregon is such a team. “We ended last year’s season winning seven of 10 gam es,” Head Coach Jerry Green said of his Ducks, who finished 1613 (9-9 Pac-10) in ’95. “I feel we should have gone to the NIT. ... I think there is always a tear within myself that we deserve more (respect). But if we play well, those things will take care of themselves.” Leading die experienced Ducks is senior point guard and four-year starter Kenya Wilkens (13.7 ppg, 5.9 apg). Also back is a front line of seniors —- 69 K yle M illing (7 .6 rpg), 6-10 Rob Ramaker (6.8 rpg) and 7-foot junior Mike Carson (5 rpg) — who help the Ducks lead Turn to Pac-10, page 16. P a g e l5 Cross country sends 4 runners to com p etition B y J osh D eFam io State P ress The ASU cross countiy team will send four runners to the District VIII Championships in Fresno, Calif, this weekend. Head Coach Walt Drenth has decided that only junior Priscilla Boldt and freshman Mary Duerbeck will race for the women, while seniors Leo Montoya and Travis Anderson will represent the men’s side at the meet. Drenth cited the length of the race and the past few races as reasons for his decision. “(The decision) was based on how they have been running, and also on how they would do at the meet. Basically, what they were going to get out of it,” Drenth said. “Also, the men have to run a 10,000-meter race (they usually run 8,000 meters), and I think some of the younger guys are not ready to run that far.” For the women, the race serves not only as an opportunity to finish out this season strong, but also to build a strong base for next season. The men, on the other hand, enter the race fully aware that" this could be the last of their college careers. “It will be interesting, because it is mine and Travis’ last race together,” Montoya said. “But it fits, because we ran together through­ out college, so I guess we should finish it out together. I’m not nervous or anything, but it is kind of strange. I do plan on continuing to run, maybe doing road races or something like that after college.” If any of the four runners were to finish among the top three, that individual would qualify for the NCAA Championships, which will be held on Saturday, Nov. 23, in Tucson. Furthermore, several runners who do not place in the top three may also be selected for the final meet based on their performance throughout the season. M en’s ten n is hosts invitational F r o m St a ff R eports The ASU men’s tennis team will host its annual ASU Invitational today through Sunday at the Whiteman Tennis Center. The invitational will host players from ASU, the University of Tulsa and NAU. Singles play is scheduled is-scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. today and Saturday, while doubles play will begin at 1¿30 p.m. both days. The doubles finals will be held at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, while the singles finals will begin at 9 a.m. on Sunday. Admission is free. T ick et seekers, h at stealers to p lis t o f fo o tb a ll o d d s an d en d s If you want to go to the Rose Bowl d o n ’t ca ll me and d o n ’t ask Juan Roque for the hard-to-get tickets. Neither will get you any c lo se r to Pasadena. “I have a message on my (a n s w e rin g ) machine telling them where to go,” said Roque, a senior offensive tackle. “I basical­ ly said 1 can’t get them. I don’t have them. I won’t get them. Call 273-ROSE.” Speaking of phone m essages, Roque said he might have a few more words of advice after April’s NFL Draft. Roque, who stands 6-foot-8, 320-pounds, is expected to go early in the draft and make millions of dollars in die pros next year. “If you are a relative I haven’t seen in two months, I don’t have any money,” he said. “If you are a relative I haven’t seen in two years, you shouldn’t be'calling. And if you are a relative I have never met, get off the phone right now.” Save of the week It may not make national news, but exSun Devil safety (*91-’93) and current administrator Jean Boyd w as one of the heroes of Saturday night’s 35-7 Rose Bowl clinching victory over California. B oyd recovered Head C oach Bruce Snyder’s stolen Rose Bowl cap, which was given to him when the clock expired. “I was looking to see what (the referees) were going to do with the clock and just then some kid who’s right behind me pulled off my hat and went off running. I started (to run) and the policeman grabbed me.” Boyd heard the distressed 911 call and one of Snyder’s former players made the great recovery. C o rs-o ffed There is no love lost between ESPN ana­ lyst Lee Corso and the No. 4-ranked ASU football team. C orso, who was the head coach at Indiana and Louisville, has called ASU “the luckiest team in America” and claims that Turn to KrueGel, page 16. . P ac-10. C o n t in u e d State P ress Friday, November 15, 1996 Page 16 from pag e Swim teams head to L.A. 15, the conference in rebounding last year. O u tlo o k : The Ducks will pound out close wins all season, using their size advantage to the fullest. Sophomore Tank Brown w ill have a breakout season. Prediction —- 20-7 (12-6 Pac-10) NCAA 2) UCLA A bombshell was dropped in LA . when UCLA announced the firing of former coach Jim Harrick for alleged recruiting violation and a false expense report. With Harrick, the Bruins (23-8, 16-2 Pac-10) would certainly have won the Pac10 title a third straight year. Without him, even with the most talent of any college team in the nation, UCLA wilt struggle. "(This team) has a national cham pi­ onship ring, back-to-back Pac-10 champi­ onships," interim-coach Steve Lavin said. "They’ve been to the top of the mountain and they've also been through a very disap­ pointing experience losing to Princeton (4341 in the NCAA tourney last year). And we are going to draw from all of these things. That’s why I believe we can still have a very successful season.” UCLA’s starting lineup returns intact. Leading the way are seniors forward Charles O ’Bannon (14.3 ppg, 6 rpg) and point guard Cameron Dollar. Potential AllPac-10 team members J.R. Henderson (14.4 ppg) and Toby Bailey (14.8) and sophomore Jelani McCoy (10.2 ppg. 6.9 rpg) also return. O u tlo o k : UCLA will struggle early on. especially in match ups against powerhous­ es Kansas and Illinois. How they fair in B y P ercy E dnalino J r . State P ress those games will determine a lot about this squad’s ability to handle all of the adversity it will face this year. Prediction — 19-11 (13-5 Pac-10) NCAA. 1) Stanford The Cardinal are poised for a break­ through season. Stanford (20-9,12-6 Pac-10) graduated four starters from last year’s squad, but the losses are negated by the return of 7-1 sopho­ more center Tim Young, who sat out most of ’95 with a bulging disk, and All-America candidate at point guard Breven Knight. “I really like our squad,” Head Coach Mike Montgomery said. “I like our depth. I like the attitude of our kids. It’s going to be interesting.’’ Knight was an honorable mention AllAmerica last season averaging 15.5 points, 7.3 assists and 2.1 steals per game. Young will give the Cardinal a true dominant big man. This summer he com­ peted with the U.S. under-22 squad and regularly battled against All-America center Tim Duncan of Wake Forest. "He’s bigger (255 pounds), and is hold­ ing his w eig h t,” M ontgom ery said of Young. “He got a lot o f confidence this summer. Just knowing he can play with Tim and not be dominated has helped him.” O u tlo o k : The Cardinal will escape the tag of a "nice” team in the Pac-10, no longer winning 20 and bowing out early in the NCAAs. Stanford is a legitimate Elite 8 type team. Prediction—• 22-5 (15-3 Pac10) NCAA. and E d O deven The ASU swim teams travel to Los Angeles this weekend for a meet and an exhibition. The women’s team will face UCLA and die University of Florida today, while the men face UofA and USC today. Both teams face the U.S. National Team in an exhibition on Saturday. Women’s swimming coach Tim Hill said the weekend meets should provide his team with stiff competition, however the Sun Devils will remain competitive. “This should be a great weekend,” Hill said ‘W ere going to learn a lot about ourselves.” Hill said the team, on the strength of sophomores Kelly Wilson and Cindy Hoffman, should do well against the Bruins in the freestyle sprint events and the sprint relays. According to Hill, the diving events should clearly be won by the Bruins, who traditional­ ly feature strong divers. 4 ¡The backstroke is another event the Bruins could capture, especially with junior Ashley Bigbie, the ASU’s top performer in that event, not making the trip because of injuries. Despite the expectations of a close finish, Hill said the meet will prepare the team for it’s season home-opener.The team makes its regu­ lar-season debut at home next Friday against BYU and Colorado State. On the men’s side, senior All-American FelipeDelgado said it will take speed to beat UofA and USC. “USC is a little stronger than UofA, but we are going to have to be fast»'than them to beat them,” D&agdo mid. Delgado is anxious to get back in racing mode. “I’m just ready to go out there and race,” said Delgado, who placed first in the 50 and second in the 100-yard freestyle in ASU’s last meet Farrell is pleased with the tough level of competition the Sun Devils will face this weekend. “Between the U S. team, USC and UofA, there should be some really good swims this weekend,” Farrell said. “I haven’t seen either team (UofA or USC) yet so I’m kind of spekaing in the dark, but both teams have some great swimmers.” The ASU men’s diving team, which had an impressive 36-5 victory over UNLV earlier tins season, will take three divers to Trojan country. Junior Justin Eck, who was ASU’s top scorer at last season’s Pac-10 Diving Championships, freshman Allen Sonkin, who won the 3-meter event at UNLV, and sopho­ more Todd Brenneman will make the trip. As for the exhibition on Saturday, ASU assistant men’s swimming coach Sean Farrell said the meet against the U S, team should be a good learning experience for ASU. “It’s always a good test (to face the nation­ al team),” he said. “It’s always nice to learn from the best” Run for the Roses Cactus Sports wil b e carrying a huge selection of "ASU Rosebowl M erchandise" K ru egel and over 25 different ASU Football T-shirts! C o n t in u ed from FAge 15. fifth-ranked Nebraska deserves to be ranked higher than the Sun Devils. ASU shutout then-No. 1 Nebraska 19-0 on Sept. 21. "I think he has helped us. 1 should send him a check,” Snyder said. "I really do think you need Someone to stir the chili and I think that is Lee’s role on that program to stir things up. (But), I know why he’s not coaching.” Roque calls C orso, "the dude from ESPN with the funky hair or the old man on ESPN." No one on the football team actual­ ly calls Corso by his name. “He gets paid to criticize and it doesn't necessarily mean he is right or what he says is accurate, because he has never seen us practice," Roque said. “That’s his job. Sure, it pisses you off. but at the same time who cares. If Coach Snyder would say those things about us or (Offensive coordinator Dan) Cozzetto or (Defensive coordinator Phil) Snow, then we worry. That’s just a guy behind a desk talking smack. “It doesn’t bother me. At first, the cou­ ple of times it does, but you kind of learn just to say, ‘Hey, if our coaches are the ones talking like that, then we should be pissed off. Then we should be worried, but if it’s a guy sitting behind a desk. That’s his job. That’s kind of like your sports editor.’” Poor State Press sports editor Jeremy Stein. His 4-6 record picking the Sun Devils games still is taking a lot of heat. Looking for GOLD item s to show your support? We have one o f the LARGEST selections of gold t-shirts, sweatshirts and golf shirts in the valley!! Cham pion is the official o utfitter o f Sun D evil Football! “t * 921-1 ASU 401 S. M ill A ve. • A cross from th e S paghetti C om pany C l a s s if ie d s Notice to bur readers; Before ; responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in pur classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business . Bureau at 264-1721. M ore T r iv ia ... Women earn only 76 cants fa r every dollar earned by men when 1214 E. ORANGE. Marianna Apts, remodeled studios. $50 off move in w/ad. 966-8597. HOMES FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR ncM T KtlMI location. Others also. 894-0288 i PEOPLE NEEDED to assume leases at the;Commons on Ap­ ache Call 3 0 3 - 7 ^ ; ^ 3BD, 2BA, S850/mo. tile floors, walk to ASU. Others also available. 894-0288 home, lyr lse, Jan |>. Scotts ’ 3bd, 2ba, study, pool, frpLc furnished. $900 + ulil 423 ’ 2BD/2BA 1100 sf condo, 400 yds from ASU, $630/mo, first, last deposit. 1-509-786-4088. 2BD/2BA CONDO. Under 1 mile to ASU. Loaded, immacu­ late, $630/mo. 945-3002 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS FOR RENT-BIG Ibr in Papago Park Village, upper level, all ap­ pliances. Avail Dec. 1. 8 or. 12mo. Ise, $625/mo. $500 sec. Call 921-9173 or 227-3947(pg) UTILITIES PAID, I-2BDR, pool, covered parking, laun­ dry, Mill & Broadway, $475/$575. 517-1318 C la s s ifie d s W O R K t GREAT DEAL: 4bd 2ba $900/mo., 4bd 2ba W/pooi $975/mo. 894-0288 SMALL DETACHED guest stu­ dio for rent. Use of pool, yard, & laundry room. 15 min. from ASU. $310/mo. Call 2249870 for appoihtment. APARTMENTS comparing 1994 median weekly earnings o f f u ll­ tim e workers, a* Vs APARTMENTS S339/MONTH W alk.to ASU. Quiet, spacious, 1 bedroom, u n fu rn ish e d o r fu r­ nished, A/C, poolside apartments G e o rg e A n n A p ts . 8 9 4 -3 6 9 0 Q uiet Tempe Neighborhood $100 Off F R E E U T IL IT IE S ! Hayden Place Apartments 625 W. First St. 968-5444 W a lk to ASU. S p a c io u s , 2bedro o jn a p a r tm e n ts . A /C f u r n i s h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d a v a il­ a b le . F ro m 5 5 2 5 / m o n th . B e a u tifu l p o o l area, la u n d ry f a c ilit ie s available. FIE STA P A R K APARTMENTS 1224 E. L e m o n Assistive Pets Only 894-2620 Great for grad students & Faculty • Studios $395 • 1 Bdrm $495 • 2 Bdrm $568 9314 Find it EAST in the C lassifieds APARTMENTS Apache Terrace Apartments 1 block from ASU One IT’S YOUR MOVE... ' t s e t t l e [ £ n' eth Se b e s t ! d o n ’t LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ Mini blinds ♦ Vertical blinds w ith valances ♦ Brass ceiling fans ♦ European cabinetry ♦ Walk-in closets available ♦ Private balcony/patio ♦ Security alarm systems available Free h o t water Free cable TV! S pools, 2 spas Barbecue areas Covered parking Laundry facilities Large exercise room bedroom apt. available CaN 968-6383 APARTMENTS / = QUADRANGLES VILLAGE APARTMENTS 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 9 6 8-8 1 1 8 S.E, Corner o f University & Rural If y o u e a r n less t h a n $ 2 4 ,0 0 0 * p e r y e a r , y o u m a y q u a l i f y t o g el a m o n t h l y r e n t a l d is c o u n t! C a ll N ow ! R |N ^LS H A R IN G _ RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING ARE YOU looking for a re­ sponsible room mate? I am in need of a place close to ASU. Move in late December. Glenn 913-8215 ' PAPAGO PARK I! Female needed to share 3bd/2ba con­ do. $350/m. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ROOM MATE WANTED for 3 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. Walk to ASU. Large room, cool roommates, $268 a month. Call 966-7203. Move in Dec. 1. Com m unity service agency in Tempe seeks a Program Supervisor fo r our Early Thla mhould ba yo u r ad Call 965-6735 Intervention Services. The q u a li­ fie d applicant w ill be responsi­ - HELP WANTEDGENERAL b le fo r agency staff, program budgets and providing in-home services fo r children w ith physi­ cal and developm ental d is a b ili­ ties. The position requires someone w ith strong com muni­ cation and organizational skills w ith a m inimum o f a BA degree BANQUET SERV ERS in e a rly childhood education or 2 years experience in the field, S alary ranges from $18 ,000 - i $ 1 9 ,5 0 0 DOE Contact 421 -9511 fo r add itional inform ation. EOE * * < £ * * Come make some "HAVE FUN WITH MUSIC ON THE PHONE. NO SALES! $7.00 AN HOUR TO START, to MINUTES FROM ASU. CALL 964-4000. NCI it extra money. Busy banquet season. I bedroom: $375 Studio; $325. 3 blocks, from cam pus. Call Jeff 967-3037 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE T e m p e o N e mile from a s u Modem bright 2 bd/2 ba. Faces pool. W/D. $675/mo. 3509046. MISCELLANEOUS F O * M L ^ s_ _ _ HIP HOP mix tapes for sale. 100 min. each. More new music for less $. Cali Flipside DJYat 804-1710. . COMPUTERS HP DESKJET printer top cond. $225 IBM TC com patible in­ cludes monitor. 'Complété W./ •WordPerfect, Lotus, & Resume softwares* $250. Call 491 5931 CONDO FOR sale. $75,000. 2bdrm/2ba. Very close to ASU. Call 921-7432. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Classifieds 905-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Intern Intern needed to help plan, install, support video confer­ encing. Related exp. req’d. $9$11 per hour. Call Nancy, 506-1109 Needed: Techie-type w ith a heart! Experience w ith PC hardw are, MS Windows. NT and MS O ffice req'd. Support users of dial-in/telecom m uting system. S9-S11 per hour. C all Nancy. 506-1109. BUY/SELL RÓSE Bowl tix. Top $$ paid. 800-916-9589. BUYING ROSE Bowl tickets Top dollar paid. Confidential. Western States ticket service. 3rd Ave. & McDowell Rd. 2543300. SUN VS. Lakers, Sunday N6v. 17, $20 & up, free delivery* 253-3800 SUNS VS. Lakers, Sun. Nov. 17, $20 & Up, Chicago Nov. 20. $55 & up. Steve 678-0316 AUTOMOBILES *♦94 HONDA DEL Sol VTEC**, black 2dr convert­ ible. Roof stores in trunk. Alarm system. 27k miles, ext. condition. $ 12,900. 5350085. 1992 DODGE Colt 62500 miles . 35+ mpg blue-green w/grey int. Only $4500. Josh at 967-9235. 85 BMW 325E red, 4dr, 5spd, sunroof, Ithr, good cond. $3680 obo. Call Ann 5Ó28639 lv msg. I supports a drug-free w ork force: •• EEO strongly encouraged te apply. C o u n selo r s Social Service Agency has hill /p t positions available working with adults who are developmentally and mentally - challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx./ Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. DOE, Pd. training. Call @ 431v951 EOE 1990 SUZUKI GS500E, cherry red, clean, fast bike, low miles, $1565 obo 929-0860 lv msg. GSXR 750 MINT cond. Must see. $4,000 obo or poss. trade for Blazer. 610-9480. TRAVEL LOS ANGELES to London for Xmas $399 round trip 12/24, return 12/31, Tax is additional. Hayden Road Travel 9949671. Bring ad for $5 discount. WANT TO travel? Set up affordable travel packets, tick­ ets* hotels, tours. Call 4 9 13445. WINTER BREAK Mazatlan De­ luxe bi-level condo on best beach. Sleeps 6 , 2 bedroom, kitchen, pool, TV, maid, avail­ able from Dec. 15-22. $600. (415)381-2884 - HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ 1000’S POSSIBLE Reading books, Part Time. At hdme. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. R-1676 for listings. $500-900/WKL Y $ 10/hr guar: 2:30-9pm M-F or Sat & Suh. only, pd trng * com­ puter dialing* close to ASU, learn & perfect sales & comm, skills, pd weekly on Fri. 3509336 ACCOUNTS PAYABLE gener­ al office clerk* Construction exp . a plus, p/t flex, hours! Please fax resume 921-9456 CO -ED. S leep-aw ay! M AN Y COUNSELOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE! W e need ro le m odels, sensitive, ca rin g and skilled sta ff m em bers. FOR THE BEST SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE! In NE P ennsylvania's Pocono M tn s. C all 1-800-61 - W A N D A o r Em ail tow a nd a@ interca m p.com o r v is it o u r w e b site h ttp ://w w w .in te rc a m p .c o m /to w a n d a fo r in fo rm a tio n , a p p lic a tio n an d to schedule in te rv ie w . T his is a g re a t cam p an d an aw esom e experience. C am p T ow anda, H onesdale, PA. T ru e ‘T e c h ie s ’ n e e d only apply. In te rn n e e d e d to h elp w ith d ata co m m u n ica tio n s n e tw o rk p la n n in g . E x p . w ith IP X /S P X , T C P /IP a p lu s. $ 9 - $ l l p e r h o u r. C all N a n c y, 5 0 6 - 1 1 0 9 u al. Food H andler's card re q 'd fo r the fo llo w in g positions in o u r BUSY b a r & g rille . P M W A IT STAFF BUSSERS BROILER C O O K Com e jo in o u r sta ff w here w e o ffe r com petitive w ages, »a uniform s, free em ployee m eal and much m ore. Please a p p ly M CALL TODAY!!! Resort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9am-lpm or 5pm9pm. $9-$l2/hr ayg, no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Beth 491-4921: DATA ENTRY. Dispatch, back­ up on phones. Will train. 1 mi. from ASU M-F, 1-5 pm. Call Toni 968-8440. DELICIOUS DELIVERIES is hiring enthusiastic order takers. Flexv day, and/or evening hrs. ft/pt. Make great money, boost your resume, &. impress your friends Call 967 7632 DELV. & SETUP person w/truck w/shell, or van. Lifting req’d. i-800-288r8824. DIRECTQRY INFORMATION operator, 20 wpm, good area knowledge, ail shifts, $6.50/hr start, 225-9661. Métro One, 5025 È. Washington #110. W ANTED L o o k - A - L ik e s Call Dream Higher Services UNABSANCE GOTTONIfOOOS XESOnr Scottsdale Resort currently hiring for the following positions: F/T Restaurant Manager Restaurant Supervisor F/T F/T Housekeeping Supervisor F/T AM Restaurant Server F/T Bell A ttendant P/T G ardener P/T Banquet Scrub C aptain P/T & F/T Banquet Servers P/t & F/T Banquet Set-Up F/T Coffee Server in person a t Human Resources, We support a drug free work place 5001 N . Scottsdale R d., M , T, W o r F, 8 :3 0 -1 0:30am o r 24pm . Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports a Drug-Free W orkplace. EOE ♦ ♦ the thing to do when you have a lo t to d o ! If you're looking for a great part-time job with a schedule that’s a perfect fit for your busy lifestyle, check out The FACS Group, Inc. We provide financial, credit and administrative services for Federated Department Stores, Inc. Uke M ac/s. Immediate openings exist for: • Central S to tt Operators • Authorizations • Collections • Customer Service • Express Credit In addition to very flexible scheduling, you’ll enjoy: • 17.50/h r to sta rt • G enerous 80% discount « Paid training o n m ost M a c /s purchases • Casual dress co d e « Perform ance awards To apply: Cafl to ll fre e , 8 4 hours 1 - 1 H -8 8 4 -3 8 8 7 , or apply In person, M on.-Fri. 8am - 5pm a t 1345 S. 52nd St. in Tem pe (northeast com er o f 52nd S t & W est 14th St. b etw ee n B roadw ays University Drives). Equal O pp o rtu nity For All. ATTENDANTS NEEDED for flôn-personal care of quadri­ plegic. Tues. & Thurs. 12^5pm $7/hr. Craig 966-2059. 840-5990 rig h t career oriented in d ivid ­ m ASU STUDENTS po k in g for part-time Work? The ASU telefund is now hiring. Looking for fun, outgoing students to call our parents and alumni to update them on our programs & ask for their financial support. Students req to work 10 hrs./wk but; can work more. Starting pay $5,50. Cal 1 now for more info. 965-6754. £ Y e a ra ro u nd w ork fo r the 4** \J& ASSISTANT FOR outdoor fur­ niture showroom. Good organ­ izational skills needed. Tasks to include; cutting fabric sam­ ples, maintaining sample area and photocopying. Flexible schedule, 10-15 hrs./wk. $7/hr. 994-1060. I 4TH FLOOR BAR & GRILLE P a rt T im e HELP WANTEDGENERAL P R O V ID E R Looking for individual to work with developmentally and physically handicapped men in our Personal Skills Program. Employees will teach various living skills and involve th e ; individuals in recreational activities. Hourly positions available. $7©0-$7.50 DOE. Call Vince @ 431-9511. EOE, CAMP only between 8:30am -10:30am Scottsdale Embassy Suites j State Tress \ Certified Dolphin Safe! HELP WANTEDGENERAL r. SUMMER Please a pp ly M , W , o r F o r 2pm -4pm . M g T O R C Y C L |^ _ TICKETS P E R S O N A L S U P P O R T Human Resources Women and e s id e n t ia l WALK TO CLASS 5001 N . Scottsdale Rd. minorities are R WALK TO ASU own bd & ba in 2bd apt. All amenities fur­ nished, util's paid. Male prefd avail now. Nov. rent free.: $400 bonus + sec dep. $541.42/mp Call Ed 303-7148 TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Scottsdale Embassy Suites •n equal opportunity employer. Page+7 Friday, November 15,1996 State P ress FACS FINANCIAL and CREDIT SERVICES m g. $150 SIGNING BONUS 6160 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85253 Please apply in person NEED SOME $$ c a s h $$ F o r th e H o lid a y s LE TS MAKE A DEAL WE WILL GIVE YOU $7.00/hr + BONUS!!!!! Part tim e positions (flexible hours) Paid Training ‘ ■ Casual Dress TEAM EFFORT!! Paid Days O ff Relaxed Environment N o Cold Calling Walking Distance from ASU You Give Us A Call 894-9816 a a QSM 1310 E. Broadway Rd. Suite 103 Tempe, Az 8S282 Part Tim e Help Wanted Tempe company seeks reliable, hon­ est and hardw orking part tim e help to w ork flexible late afternoon/early evening henre help­ in g w ith clerical, data entry end m ail handling type tasks. Starting pay Sb.RO/ hour. G row ing com­ pany w ith opportu­ nities fo r advancem ent. C a ll 711-H M to schedule in ter­ view . Em eUent , opportunity fo r stu­ dents seeking part tim e clerica l job. Friday, November 15, 1996 P ag e 18 St a t e P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL DO YOU have lots of enefgy & love working' w/people? We are looking for you to twist bal­ loons at restaurants & parties. We will train y o u A l l you need is reliable transportation. Pt/flex hrs. Great money. Call 486-5879. GROUP HOME staff needed in Tempe to work with boys with behavioral problems. Evening hrs. avail. Must be min. 21 yrs with clean A2 drivers license. 864-1159. MALES WITH spinal cord injury needed for research study; Effects of exercise on fat metab­ olism. Stipend of $200 for par­ ticipation. National Institute of Health & ASU. Call MaryBeth 965-7524. £ OUTGOING GYMNASTICS coach. McDonald/Hayden. $15/hr. Beg-level 7. 946-8894 / 9910668. PT DRIVER needed, courteous responsible, neat appearance. Flex, hours, pays- $7/hr. 9669929. P/T DATA Entry. Mon,- Fri. Start immediately. Call 7360034 RECEPTIONIST/VET ASST., people skills a must. No exp. nee. p/t • M-F 7:30am-noon. Contact Dr. John Clark @ 9976313 fax 311-1936. STUDENT CLASSIFIED Ad­ vertising counted clerk-p/t. must be familiar with Macintosh, we will train and work around your schedule. See Pat, base­ ment of Matthews Center, State Press reCeptibh desk; for ap-’ plication. TELEPHONE OPERATORS. 1229hr$/wk thorns., eves, & wkends. 7 Close to ASU. $6.50/hr + raises. Efficient typ­ ing, spelling 1, 'cust. Serv. skills a must. Fam iliarity o f Metro Phx & Tucson a +. Bilingual helpful. 966-8798. TELEMARKETING' SALESHELP the : handicapped. $9.00/hr + comm 813-1000 ext. 208. TICKET AGENT: part-time aftem oons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 ENTHUSIASTIC HARD worker needed for warehouse/delivery position for Tempe area @ 30 hrs./wk., flex. Must lift 50 lbs. easily. $ 6/hr. DOE Coiftact Richard at 968-8975. FAST GROWING company is adding new shift to meet sales growth. Needing: money moti­ vated minds needed to hustle $7.50/hr. + bonuses. Benefits. Excellent opportunity 5765. '■ ■ FITNESS WORKS Athletic Club, Center/McKellips-M esa now hiring highly motivated, energetic, fun-spirit­ ed. customer service team mem­ bers. p/t, all shifts $5.50/hr to staft. Apply in person MonThurs^between. 10am-7pm. 6441901 ■ FUN PEOPLE W anted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Uniyer-.; sal Portraits. $ 6 - 10 /hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054. GENERAL OFFICE 1-10 & Baseline location. Pi. M-Th 4p-9p & Sat 9-3. Must be flexi­ ble! Phone, customer relations, WP. & general office skills feq. $6/hr. Rene 443-8883. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR, experience & enthusiasm a must, work well w/children, 6 l2hrs/wk. 940-4041 IN HOME providers. Ft/pt workers heeded to provide cure to deyelopmentaHy disabled persons living in natural family settings. Salary $7-7.60/hr. College tuition reimbursement program, health, dental, and op­ tical coverage for fA. B.R.I.T.E. Inc. Call Chris 254-2785 KENNEL WORKER needed p/t for holiday rush. Must be neat, dependable. 7311,E. Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692. MALES WITH paraplegia need­ ed for research study of body composition, bone density and metabolic rate. S I45 cash bo­ nus. Requires 2 night stay on research unit. Call Maty Beth Monroe 965-7524 ASU. ^ MANAGEMENT Mgr. trainees. No exp. needed. Will train. Rapid advancement. Managers earn $4000/month base. 252-6711 MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN ft/pt some mechanical exp. de­ sired. Some tech school or col­ lege desired. Starting pay $6 10/hr. w7 advancement. Day timé 956-8200, evenings & weekends 955-8514 MODELS/ACTORS, I n ti scouts want yod for music vid­ eos and local print work- 941 6922. PAUL S HARDWARE is seek­ ing cashiers & sales people p/t. We offer competitive salary & benefit package. Apply in per­ son a t *1153 W. Broadway, Tempe. R O XSAND Restaurant: Hiring p/t host/esses, f/t, line cooks & bussers. Apply at 2594 È. Camelback in Biltmpre Fashion Park, 25pm. PERSONAL TRAINER wtd. Experience req’d. physiology bkgmd helpful. Sales p/t, flex hours. Up to $19/hr. 7861020. SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Flex, holiday hrs. avail. Call Jon for intv. between-3-5, 9218282. - PROGRAMMERS Students wanted for pt posi­ tion. Visual Basic required, other programming experience a plus. Fax resume to 929-% 11. COMMUNICATION ^ ASSISTANTS RESTAURANTS/ BARS [ W OODSHEDT J ncstnmn Fiin atmosphere and busy desk. Need: responsible, reliable, flex­ ible/ good comrnunicatioh and customer skills, enjoy working with people. Shifts 7 days a wk, . 7am -3pm / 3pm-11pm ÿ l l M V ’C f m k & PASTA ) Where A S U Goes for Pizza $900 L I K E D O U G H OFF ANY PIZZA ? If chocolate chip cookies make you feel at home, how about a career that does the same? Doubletree would like you to join one of the fastest-growing companies in the hotel industry. Looking for Fun, Friendly, Professional people who are committed to Providing Quality Guest Service! Ft/Pt positions Quality Paid Training Accommodate School Schedule F ro n t Desk A g en t RESTAURANTS/ BARS Put It In the Classiflops! ¡•CASH Pool Tourney ; ! ! Sat. Nite 9:00 ,4 ¡* Pool & Darts j '• Home of the $1.25 Shot ■ j* Satellite TV (NFL) (NBA) j i & (MLB) ~ i [• Greeks Weteome ¡ ;• Ladles Nlte Thurs. $2 Teas > ¡•1/2 Your Wing Order FREE ! ¡ Sun. S Mon. 8 3 1 -W O O D Baseline & Mill NEW GRAND re-opening, all pos. avail for wait/bar. cocktail starting 1st wk o f Dec. Exp. nec. App. in person @ NW comer of Scottsdale Rd & 202 fwy. Tombstone Brewing Co. Type 50 vypm 75% Accuracy No se llin g ! Flex hours/Casual Dress Pd. Benefits, Pd. T raining N ear ASU $6.30 Rapid A d v. 9 2 9 -4 8 4 8 ■ Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! 1 Coupon Per Pizza Dine-In or Pick-Up or S1 Off Delivery 968-6666 1301 E. University Currently hiring for Reservation Sales Agents N ig h t A udit : reliable, needing little supervi­ sion, front desk, customer service, phones, light accounting, hours 11 pm-7am, D Apply in person FIESTA INN 2100 S. Priest » Tempe EOE o u b l e T ref H O T F I. S' C O R P O R A T I O N ' 410 N. 44th Street, Suite 700 Phoenix, Arizona 86008 M-F 8:30am - 4:30 pm NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! EOE 2 miles from ASU campus C H A N D LE R U N IF IE D S C H O O LS EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Flexible Schedule/Part Time Job Opportunities Include: no selling. Bus Drivers n o k id d in g . Starting rate $8.86/hour Approx. 4/hours daily Noontime Aides ' ' E xcell A g en t S ervices Crossing Guards Starting rate $6.29/hour Approx. 3/hours daily Sunday Night " the ^ CHADWICKS . 404 5». M ill Ave. 966-1300 F ull-tim e an d p art-tim e shifts availab le starting a t 4am , Sam 4 Sam . Starting rate $6.29/hour Approx. 3-5/hours daily Interested persons should apply in person at the D istrict O ffice which is located at 1525 West Frye Road in Chandler. O ffice hours am Monday through Friday 7:30am to 4:30pm. For further job inforamtion please dial our job hotKne812-7016. J B ui your workday-tarty... Special Education/ESL/ Regular Education Inatructionai Assistants Starting rate $8.43/hour Approx. 8/hours daily S SANCHO v CLEMENTE a com petitive starting w age o f $ 7 .0 4 ,.b ased on m eeting ad herence a n d attendance guideline», with the potential to earn up to $ 8 .2 4 p e r hour. Starting rate $5.43-6.00/hour Approx. 2-3/hours daily Warehouse Worker öfters o ur f a c t o r y A ssista n ce A g en ts Food Service Workers Starting rate $7.29/hour Approx. 4/hours daily Saturday N ight Balboa Cafe Starting rate $6,29/hour Approx. 1-2/hours daily Bilingual School Clark rM IS S IS S IP P I > lM U D S H A R K S ; Gain Valuable Experience A p p ly in p e rs o n M o n d ay-F rid ay Bam to 6pm , S atu rd ay 8am to. 4pm o r c a ll o u r J o b In fo L in a DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are D evelopm en­ t a l, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. at 1 - 8 8 8 - 6 2 3 - 6 7 9 6 . Earn $6.50- $8.00 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package fu tu r in m m tm bk BBC Reside ntial Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. «8 Tempe, AZ 85282 : | mssm 756-1223 1919 W. Fairmont (off 40th Street between Broadway & Southern, near MO) r v r n 4250 E. Camelback Building K Suite 300 CameISquare Atrium 1906 E. Main (NW corner of Main 6 Gilbert) t A G E N T S E R V IC E S E o e hH/f/WD • Drug dofm ntng b moondkbn ot gmpbyrrmnt U V E JA ZZ TONIGHT! 8-7:30pm S am P ilafian & Frank Vignola 60 oz. B u d P itc h e rs O n ly $31.00 O P E N 7 * m - M id n ig h t e v e r y d a y 2 22& U ñhm nlty0Í.*(acrom km A 9 U i*967-7744 $2 A n y D r in k 9pm - C lose H ip H o p D a n c e M ix P ag e 19 Friday, Novem ber IS , 1996 S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRADER JO E 'S p/t clerks & stockpeople want­ ed. flex hrs. good pay. Scot­ tsdale 948-9886 VIRGIN RECORDS college rep Get music industry experience as our local college rep. 10-20 hrs per wk. Pd. pos. Please fax resume and cover letter to Elizi abed) Gruenewald at 310- 2882433 or call 800-242-7421 to apply . Sophomore or junior w/ car pref. Previous music indus­ try exp. a +. ' HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTED- HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDC y R jC A L _ _ _ _ _ _ WORK P/T 4:00pm - 8:00pm Mon-Fri processing ad claims. We will train. No phones. Basic math & PC skills needed. Casual dress code. Apply at ACB 1919 W. Fairmont Dr. Ste 7 Tempe 438-2320 EEO M/F. APPOINTMENT SETTERS, am/pm shifts, ft/pt, top salary + comm., S min from ASU, dean envir. No pressure sales. Need ext?* $ call 967-6883. SALES/ MARKETING person wanted for unique lighting pro­ ducts. We sell A rent to the en­ tertainment industry. P/t, hour­ ly & commission. Spectrum 968-5002. Tempe. EXECUTIVE ANSWERING service (a Tempe co.), has 2 p/t operator positions. Second shift/wkends. Must type 45+ wpm, 10 key by touch, com ­ puter exp. $7/hr. Call 2644000. X-MAS CASH Cellular phone co.seeking asst, to help with holiday rush. Big $$$ 868-0729 to interview. Find it F A S fin the Classifieds JOB OPPORTUNITIES JOB OPPORTUNITIES T ra v e l A b r o a d & W ork! Motion Picture ft Television shows hiring! Earn to $4000Wmo. World Travel. Room/board. No exp. nec! Call for FREE info: (818) 385-1555 Ext.M-50302 (M-F 9-5 PT) Make $25-$45/hr. teaching basic conversational English abroad. Japan; Taiwan, & S.Korea. Many provide room A board + other benefits. No teaching background or Asian languages required. (206) 971-3570 e x t 159181 SERVICES SERVICES FAST GROWING company is adding new shift to meet sales growth. Needing: money moti­ vated minds needed to hustle $7.50/hr + bonuses. Benefits. Exc. opportunity. Bill 9665765. FT A PT SALES associates needed. If you are outgoing, have good math skills A a good eye for color, this could be the job for you. Call 9666535. Ask for Lora on Sat PHONE REPS, call exist, cust. base. Top pay! 4-8 p.m. M-F. Start immed. 736-0034. JOB OPPORTUNITIES Cmlsa Ship« 4 Vacation Resorts Hiring! Earn to $3000+Atk). World Travel. Room/board. No exp. nec! Call for FREE info: (818) 385-1555 ext. C50302 (M-F 9-5 PT) SALES/MARKETING POSI­ TION, salary + comm. Insideoutside sales. Resume req'd. Job avail Jan '97. Call 9669900. WILD & CRAZY Wanted 5-10 people w/ a great attitude. Call 491-5136. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL APPOINTMENT SETTER. Fun, friendly dental office seeks propie person. Mon-Thurs. 6p.m.8p.m. $7.50/hr + bonus. Up to $40/day, Scotts A Shea. 4838822. CLERICAL HELP p/t 1-6pm Mon.-Fri. Office exp. ceq. Skills neede^: customer service, phone, data entry, fíling/typing/copying. $5.70/hr. Rio Sal­ ado College 2323 W. Fortune St. Tempe. Call Jackie at 5178293 SERVICES kinko's makes the grade! Get reports, resumes & flyers fast! Color prints, Mac & IBM rental, scanning & more! Open 24 hours, Rural & University 966-2035 . ■B u r n t o u t w it h YOUR JOB? RESUMES FROM SCRATCH Au.I KNOW 6 THE MORE FUN I HAVE, THE MORE $ I MAKE. CREATIVE, PROFESSIONAL Resumes for jobs, internships & career fairs, CVs, cover letters, updates & salary histories. C all 8 4 0 -3 3 6 4 ARIZONA’s I st MICROBREWERY Fresh Beers Brewed Here! BANDERSNATCH sth£ £ Z e* ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by F rances Drake Friday, November 15,1996 ARIES (M ar. 21 to Apr. 19) C areer o p p o rtunities present themselves, but you could be in a bit o f a lazy mood and not inclined to take advantage of them- Still, rise to die occasion. Social life has business over­ tones in the coming weeks. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Luck is with you in creative in terests. A fam ily talk sets things straight. Romance and going out for good tim es are accented now and in the coining weeks. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Eidier you or a ckH£ tie tends to fin an cial ex trav agance. Distractions could well interfere w ith yo u r ro u tin e. Y ou’re inclined to daydream as concen­ tration is not at its best. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You could be self-indulgent and go to excesses where food and drink are concerned. Social life may not live up to expectations. Others are vague and noncom­ mittal and seem disinterested in what's going mi. LEO (July 23 to Aug 22) Y ou’re yery m uch into your work and could inadvertently shut out a close tie. At night, you’re inclined to take yourself too seriously. You need to laugh a bit more at life’s vagaries. VIRGO (Aug: 23 to Sept. 22) Y o u 'll be m aking plans that affect a child’s welfare. A ten­ dency to dwell on limitations needs curtailing. Concentration is not at its best regarding work. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A chance to do something differ­ ent from your usual routine aris­ es in business. Organizational skills are tops and lead to addi­ tional success. Family matters preoccupy you once the sun ..sets..-'.-' SCORPIO (O ct 23 to N ov.Zl) You’ll be planning an unusual entertainment for the children in your fa m ily . M eeti ngs with advisers are favored. Creativity is a plus, but someone you deal with is opinionated. SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 22 to Dec. 21) Ease tq) on your criti­ cism s o f có-workers who are try in g to do th e ir best: The evening looks good for socializ­ ing, provided you find some inexpensive entertainments to occupy your time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Listen carefully lest you mistake someone’s intentions. Nearby outings afford you plea­ sure. Family interests predomi­ nate late afternoon hours. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You’re not happy with what occurs at home during morning hours . Leave this behind and concentrate bn what m ust be done at work. The domestic cri­ sis soon passes. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) An assignment is coming your way th at y o u ’ll tru ly enjoy. However, don’t forsake other projects that need your atten­ tion. Be sure your schedule is properly prioritized. YOU BORN TODAY are a good communicator, but may be slow in taking others into your confidence. You have an adven­ turous approach to life and are often found in creative fields; You seem to work better on your own than in conjunction with others. You need to be clear in the objectives you set for yourself in order to offset a tendency to d rift, N aturally sy m p a th e tic, you could be . drawn to a medical career. T em pe 9 6 8 -7 7 3 5 Mon.-Sun. 8am-8pm C R U IS E J O B S Students Needed! HAIR»HAIR»HAIR Earn u p to $2,000+/m o . working for Cruise S u p s or Land-Tour companies 4- World Travel. ; Seasonal and Full-Time' employment available-' Call: (206) 971-3550 ex t C59188 FR EE services & products for show & class models. Clipper cuts, cuts, styles & " up-do's." Call Bryan at MAKA Beauty Systems 968-7980 Make M oney R eading B ook s! Cam 51000's. Call for FREE info: (818)3851555 ex t R50302 (M-F 9-6 PT) PHONE SURVEY/NOT salesmarket research co, located near I-10 & Baseline needs p t shifts Mon. thru Th. 5-9 & Sat. 9-3. Must be dependable A enjoy phones, office exp. desired. $6/hr. Emily 443-8883 SECRETARY / ASSISTANT, Paradise Valley, f/t. Must be Comp. prof, no MS Word. Avail, immed. $8-12/hr. DOE/ benefits. Msg. at 417-1098, fax resume 607-9030 HELP W ANTEDr o O D J |R V IC ! _ BOJO’S Hiring delivery drivers. Must know Tempe area well. Excel­ lent pay. Apply @ 829 S. Rural Rd. BUSSERS A SERVERS want­ ed. Apply in person. Monti's at the Ranch. 1666 S. Dobson Rd. Mesal BUSSERS & SERVERS want­ ed. Apply in person. Monti's La Casa Vieja, 3 W. 1st. st. Tempe. BUSY DELI, pt, M-F, 8am2pm, needs counter help and some prep work. Also 4pm8pm. Call 967-1411 CORK'NCLEAVER A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess) A lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are im portant. Apply i n . person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th SL 952-0585. DAY A NIGHT cooks needed. $5.50 to start, raise in 30 days based on perform ance. Vine 894-2662. See Chip or mgr. on duty.' Find it FAST in the Classifieds SERVICES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES LOW A LOW COST H EA LTH INSUR ANC E *• I ■• ■ *• I I* | Lowest Cost Plans per semester or m onth, M ost pre-existing conditons OK International Heatfh Plans D ep end ent H ealth Plans ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! G u m * ta n u u m n t v i u u raau w onkhb ! NO REPAYMENTS EVBXl Fo« Info Call: 1-800-400-0209 -797! SERVICES Western Health Services Millions of dollars in public & private sector scholar­ ships an d grants are now available. ALL STUDENTS ARE ELIGIBLE. Student Financial Services' program will help you g e t your fair Share. Call 1-800-263-6495 Ext F59I87 OFF-LEASE COMPUTERS • • • • Laptops starting a t. 386‘s starting at 486's starting a t . Mac's starting a t . . . $749 w /color screen! $199 w /color monitor! $449 w /color monitor! $299 w /color monitor! Plus a large selection of printers, monitors and other computer equipm ent Ask for Bill or Tom - v Shuffle over to the MU Recreation Center and iday our new Shuffleboard game. Located In te c lower level of th e MU -965-3642 DOC & EDDY'S Hiring 4 p/t waiter/waitress. Must have exp., flex work schedules. Apply in person at 909 E. Minton Baseline/Rural Tempe. 831-0635 Computer Warehouse O utlet (60 2) 780-0500 2021 W. Melinda Lane • Phoenix Call fo r Appointm ent OPP. OF a lifetime! Earn full time income with less than part time effort with a growing Itit'l company. Perfect for students. The best thing I have ever done! Call Dina for more info. 502-4335. HELP WANTED Deli person 20-30 hrs./w k flex. hrs. Ex­ perience preferred but not .nec­ essary. Apply in person Capistranos Italian Deli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene A Warner) 496-9044. UNLIMITED INCOME. Work from home. For free info, rush sase to: Freedom Enterprises, 1630 30th Str. Suite #501, Boulder, Co. 80301. MR. GOODCENTS Subs A Pas­ tas is hiring for ft A pt posi­ tions. Drivers, make up to $8.50/hr A more. Managers A inside help also needed. Please applyuit. 528 W. Broadway, Tempe. 8§4-6065 B A R S _ _ :_ CROCODILE CAFE is now hir­ ing btissers and hosts. All shifts. Apply 525 S. Mill Ave­ nue. NATIVE NEW Yorker, 1301 E Broadway, Tempe. Now accept­ ing applications for bartending. Exp needed A must know l i ­ quor laws. 921-2556 BUNDY CLARINET exc. cond. for sale at appraisal value of $200. Call Kristi at 939-3727. PARADISE BAKERY at Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square is look­ ing fo r ft/pt sm iles daytime. Start at $7. Great pay A great fun! Call 423-9233 or stop in and see us. RED ROBIN Tempe has immediate openings for experienced w aitstaff & cooks. Have fun & make good money. Apply today 1375 W. Elliot. PITA JUNGLE looking for wait staff with exp and good atti­ tude, great smile req'd, must be in town for the holidays. Apply in. person 804-0234 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE AFTER» SCHOOL Child care/tutoriiig 15yr old/lOyr old, M-Th 2:30-6:30pm, some driving/ laundry, $7.50-9/hr, N/S, Tatum/Shea area. Call Lory 9968928 ■ / ' _ CARE FOR 2 children in N. Scotts. Must like floor play. Days & Hrs. flex., but need commitment. Ref. Call 9915547. Lv. msg. on bus. line. BABYSITTER Occasionally Pref. female. At my home. . Contact Shawn @ 706-1431. BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ dise Valley Mail,$6.50/hr own transportation needed. 788-6333. RESTAURANTS/ _ M USIC PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set of nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studio. 967-2360 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. Avoid the ’chop shops'. Wiz­ zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 BIG PIPE: what do you mean chipmunks can't talk? They probably can't open doors eith­ er, but I swear that's what hap­ pened. Have a nice day! SERVICES ASU Student Financial A ssis­ tance can help fin d money fo r you without, charging a pro­ cessing fe e , Call 965-3$55. I f you choose to use a private company to obtain grants or scholarships, be sure to get verifiable references before re­ mitting. DON'T FORGET. We found a way for you to nevèr forget an important date again. For free info, call 602-832-5534 HEALTH & FITNESS WILL POWER in a bottle. Lose fat w/o exercising. All natural, Dr. recommended and Herbal based products. Call Doris/Vicki at 649-7215: TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING NANNY WANTED 3 days/wk. flex hrs. in our home. Bell Rd & 1-17.375-1386 $1.98 PG. APA/MLA. Exp'd edit. Fasti accurate. Rural/Univ. Full editing Jim 967-2360 WANTED FOR 6yr old girl in Mesa, vehicle needed, flex. hrs. afternoons M-F, 1-2 evenings per week A occasional wkends. 461 -9646 or pager 208-6427. Ask for Lisa, S1.99/PG, $15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near A$U. Brian 967-5987 BECOME-A member of a legiti­ mate International Networking Business. Yon could be mak­ ing over $5,000 a month in 6 months. Call C hristine, Tel: 413-9905 Ma r k e t ­ opportunity available in Japan. For more info call 8325477, ' . V; ' . in t e r n a t io n a l APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. Editing services available. ASU AREA. APA/MLA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription Charts/graphs 966-2186 any­ time. EXCELLENT APA/MLA typing/wp A editing, Accurate, quick. Steve A Leah. 831-1384 TUTORS in g MAKE MONEY for the holi­ days and beyond! Huge $ po­ tential- Opp. of a lifetime. Call now at 966-8487 or 784-0624. TUTOR:ALL MATH & comp. sci. Great prices. Co.#/private ext. 784-1008 ext. 4 TUTORS NEEDED: math, sci­ ences, business, 'statistics/psy­ chology, philosophy. Help col­ lege students while making money. FYÉ & LRC are hiring for Spring ’97. Apply at Stud­ ent Services Building, A361, MISCELLANEOUS TYPIN G /W O R D PROCESSING T H E W R IT E S T U F F Protafioael Waid Pronssing t Desktop Publishing Stnkas 9 6 3 -3 5 3 7 Tirm Papan *Tbtsas * Dissartatioiu APA/MLA/Gradnota Collage Formats .©19% King Features Syndicate Inc. BUSINESS f2 2 E H ^£ L : oppogTUNiTgs_ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES • C ai now for your FREE ¡EnroHm enM O H HELP WANTED- Rtsumti *Graphics rr m , 4 J STEEL BUILDINGS (for custom factory orders) canceled enro­ me. Must sell for invoice bal­ ance by 11-21. 30x48, 35 x 62, 45 x 80 and 54 X 98. Buy­ ers only. 1-800-606-8424. INTERNET URLS "ON THE net, Scientology is the Antichrist.” (Time Maga­ zine) http://w w w .tiac.net/users/modemac/cos.html D o n ’t r o l y o n l u c k t o m o k e y o u r a < lv « r tis ln « | w o r k - Classifieds make It happen! S te tte P r e s s C a ll D a v i d S o a d w l n - » 6 3 - 6 7 3 6 PagezO Sta te P ress Friday, November 15,1996 i 1 5 th A nniversary > i _g c k s u j u .^ s h o .h ^ > s > a \n - 1-a c ic ^ i p i^ Civic EIS We v. py ^ have w hat ON SALE! E arly —S ave BIG! you w a n t S ho p a iiiiii Save with lis this week! You*!! fin d deep discounts on first quality brand^neme clothing, accessories and bicycles. Come in and take advantage of TEMPE BICYCLE'S huge inventory! Friday, November 15 Saturday, November 16 Sunday, November 17 3 DAYS ONLY Gigantic Clothing Clearance Sava on: • SHORTS • HELMETS • GLOVES• SHOES• SOCKS • TIGHTS • JACKETS • T-SHIRTS • KNICKERS • SHOE COVERS • RAINWEAR Come se e and save on all: • HARO • WHEELER •ROSS»BALANCE •TERRY»SCOTT*GT • MASI • DYNO Components/^ Parts/Tools Make it better than new. Whether if* handlebar tape, new rimf, or item s from Shimano, Mavic and Campy-you’ll find them all reduced. T im id itie s Super savings on your 96's hottest bikes PLUS floor favorites, including the latest models, demoa, pro bikes, mgmjtrtn and race designs one-of-a-kind special frdjp%nouSi brands includ­ deab shop early and ing Ritchey, Avocet, IRC, SAVE BIG! Papjtrecer and ConlineiiM . Spare tubes, regular P reah w BICYCLES OHSALE Accessories C ycing's more fun when you hav* the latest gadget. You'll sa v f« bundle on re d o , pacfe^ car carriers, bicycle lights, lubricants and elec­ tronic item s. -‘ ■ 3 BIG DAYS!!! Friday, November 15, 9am -9pm Saturday, Novem ber 16, 9am -6pm Sunday, Novem ber 17, lla m -5 p m S ave o n A ll B icycles , P a r t s , C l o t h in g & A c c e sso r ie s ! 3 DAYS TO SAVE! Storewide savings on hundreds o f items! Full list o f salt items available at store during sale. No pre-sale, layaway, phone or mail orders. Sale prices apply only to stock on hand; TEMPE BICYCLE 330 W. University • 966-6896 (Across the railroad track, west ofGentle Strength Co-Op) Financing Available c□ Mill Ave. NI vs-s-*,. All '96 Bicycles Priced to Sell 10%-50%Off 9am-9pm 9am-6pm llam -5pm AMERICAN EXPRESS M IM iM M i University Dr. ASU