an in d ep e n dent INSIDE Classifieds 16 m o>r n i n g d a i / y Weather Sunny; High 72, low 48 Volume 84 Number 64 Horoscopes 19 Opinion 04 PoliceBeat 08 Monday, November 30, 1998 Beachfront rehab center experiences high suc­ cess rates. See page 10. Sun D evils end season with road loss to Wildcats, 50-42 NoDiffe A S U ’s d e a f com m unity detail hardships, jo y s ; f in d support in one a n o th e r B y H a y l ey R in g le S t a t e P r ess John Pirone, an ASU broadcasting senior, enjoys the same interests as most students his age. He likes socializing with his friends, playing pool and hanging out with his fraternity broth­ ers. But when he talks to his friends, he uses his hands. And when he wants someone's attention, he reaches put and touches ■them.. Pirone was bom deaf 22 years ago in Boston. He is the only deaf member of his family. His parents and older brother and sister .¡earned sign lan­ guage to communicate with him. He said he was able to. well with his disability and doesn’t feel his life has been because of it. . Because he is deaf. Pirone has a different way of communi­ cating, whether it’s in the workplace, school, personal or social life, Pirone said he lives in a culture that is misunderstood by a lot of people. , “When I tell hearing people 1 can’t hear they say, ‘Oh, sorry,' and then ask me if I can read lips,” Pirone said. “1 tell them to write down what they are saying, but sometimes still don’t understand. If people don’t have common sense, then there are problems.” He said even though he can’t hear, he can still fully function in this world something many people don’t realize,, "I can understand people by their gestures they make, or they can just write on a piece of paper,” Pirone said, “Some hearing people don't know how to react to me when they find out 1am deaf." He said his family has been supportive of him all his life and he didn’t feel like he was different. But Pirone said he feels he missed out an a lot of what his family said in the pari because they didn’t always remember to sign to him. "When we have a dinner together, they were talking without sign language, So it’s hard for them to interpret everything,” he said. “1 sometimes asked them to tell me what they said, but (I realize they can’t sign everything) because they don’t want to do it all over.” “1 missed a lot of what they said because I’m the only deaf person in the family,” Pirone said. But most of all. he just wants people to respect him and treat him like everyone else, “(Some hearing people act) like they feel pity for me or feel Meet John K rone. He looks like any other ASU student: He’s 22-years-old, a journalism m ajor and a m ember of Alpha Kpsilon Pi fraternity. But Pirone is different from your typical ASU student. Instead of speaking, he uses his hands to communicate. K rone is one of 27 deaf students attending ASU. sorry for me," Pirone said. “I don’t understand why people feel they have to do that because there is no difference between me and them.” “Deaf people are not handicapped,” Pirone said. “They don’t like people to call them hearing-impaired or handicapped because they liked to be called deaf.” When talking with his deaf friends, Pirone uses a TTY (tele­ typer) or TTD phone (a tele-communication device for the deal). The telephone is like a small typewriter, and they can talk to each other by typing. '' Pirone uses the relay service to make his phone calls when he wants to talk with his hearing family or friends. The Tum i A r t takes c e n te r stage a t Scottsdale school By So l e y H a r t e l S t a t e P ress Soley Hartal of the State Press Quetzal G uerrero, a visual a rts junior, paints during his class a t the charter high school, New School for the A rts (NSA). NSA is a college preparatory high school located In Scottsdale th at has unusually high standards for both the arts and academics. NSA has graduated three classes since 1995. Some of the colleges, universities and institutes that NSA graduates now attend are A lvin A iley Dance Com pany, Brown University, Juliard, Art Institute of Chicago, Hartford Ballet and Boston Conservatory of Music. Students leaned over paintings of orange, red and purple. Music blared in the back­ ground and the smell of paint circulated throughout the air. Next door, others plucked the strings of classical guitars. In the sculpture studio, a boy gracefully dipped N o t Your Typical School a bowl into a bucket of creamy glaze. A girl The school’s administration said they do at the next table slammed down a heap of not educate their students solely to pass clay and began to shape the clay with her ' written tests. The atmosphere that is created hands. allows the student to discover their individu­ These are not scenes from ASU art or al strengths, which in turn helps them excel music studios but the New School for the in all of their classes. Arts (NSA) in Scottsdale. Unlike many of “What this school (NSA) is doing is A rizona’s schools, this ch arter school modeling the best of what we know of mul­ emphasizes the arts as well as math and sci- tip le in tellig e n ce,” said M argaret A. — a system that has proven successful. Mangini, director of the ASU Bureau of On last year’s Stanford 9 Achievement Educational Research and Services. Test, NSA’s 12th graders placed 3 5 percent Multiple intelligence is a theory based on higher than the national and Arizona aver­ the work by Harvard professor Howard age in math. In reading, they placed 18.6 Gardener and states that there are seven dif­ percent higher. ferent levels of intelligence: And two students q u alified fo r the “(Charter schools) are looking at the National Merit Scholarship. NSA Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to die State Press in die basement of the Matthews Cent»'. Requests will not be taken over die phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the hill name of die club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU com­ munity. Requests are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • Act Out — The final meeting of the semester involving Freedom to Marry Day and Day of Silence will be held in the MU 340D Lambda Office at 5 p.m. • C o u n se lo r T raining C e n te r — Trained Master’s and Doctoral students offer free counseling for full-time students, faculty and staff from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday. Call 965-5067 to schedule an appointment. • Learning R esource C en ter — A workshop on test anxiety and finals will be held in the MU room 208D at 3 p.m. • M arriage and Fam ily T h erap y Clinic — Individual, couple and family ther­ apy is available for students, faculty and staff in the Cowden Family Resources Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 for more informa­ tion. • University Toastmasters — A meet­ ing ■ - ;' ' can read what the instructor is saying on the computer screen. parking and adapting to a class. Maurer said. “I like the language and how it’s formed,” said Maurer, “It’s the same technology used for closed-captioning televi­ "Consistency is very important" Maurer said. And in order whose brother married a deaf woman and has known sign lan­ for this consistency to happen, ideally there should be enough sion,” Yeager said. guage for more than 10 years. “I enjoy the challenge of the lan­ The machine is based on phonetics, and each key or combi-' guage. We become the voice of the speaker through our hands.” interpreters to help all the students. Interpreters also have to deal with the rigorous job of sign­ nation of keys equal a sound and can be a word or phrase, ing, which is the equivalent of doing arm circles for a long peri­ Yeager said. Ed Bennett, Maria Symington and Chad Price con­ Each RTC has their own personal dictionary, and the keys tributed to d ie article by interpreting for Pirone. od of time. Johnson said. “Physically and mentally it can be draining after a long are programmed to that dictionary. Before and during the class­ day,” said Johnson, who has two deaf parents and has been es, the RTC is continually putting new words info the dictio­ signing all her life. nary that may come up in the class. Also, there are different types of sign language, and students “I’ve learned so much about ASL,” said Yeager, who works all use the different types. It can be Hard switching between three classes this semester. “They interpret concepts and put it those, Johnson Said. into a different language. I just put it into the spoken word.” ASL, or American Sign Language, is a conceptual lan­ “It’s very important for the students and the RTC to have guage, Johnson said. good communication,” Yeager said. / v “It's more visual and uses classifiers,” Johnson said.“ When Even thought this technology is available, only six ASU stu­ you are talkingabout a store, you actually set up the store with dents use the RTCs. Not all students want to use an RTC your hands and make it visual.” because some students find it boring, Yeager said. SEE. or Sign Exact English, is basically signing each word “It’s like playing pingpong with your eyeballs,” Maurer in the sentence, Johnson said. And PSE is Picture Sign English, said, referring to students looking up to the teacher and then which incorporates ASL and SEEcontinually looking back at the computer screen. Deaf students are given first choice of classes, whether they “The big drawback is it’s hard to put emotion in my writ­ are freshman or seniors, Maurer said, so the interpreters ing,” Yeager said. “That’s what the interpreters do.” scheduling can begin as soon as possible. Pirone is one of the students who uses an RTC, but said it “They (deaf students) know to get the services they want depends on the class whether an RTC is good. Group discus­ and desire, they must sign up for classes early,” Maurer said. J e r e m y w e t s s o t t n e s t a t e K ress “It takes time to schedule all the interpreters to fit the schedules sions and active classes are better for interpreters, and straight John Pirone needs a sign language in te rp rete r in all of his classes. lecture classes are better for RTCs, Pirone said. of the students.” Here Disabled Resources for Students staff interpreter Adam Russell “Because I grew up in a deaf school and used sign language compliments the role of teacher for one of Pirone’s business classes. Not only are interpreters used for the classes, a student in O p e n in g January 1 , 1999 • Brand N e w , 4 3 - 2 B e d r o o m , 2 B ath U n its J ‘E ighth Street M anor! 2 M o n th s F r ee R en t * * (lst and last m onth free on 12 mos lease) 1 2 0 7 E ast 8 th S treet (R ural and U niversity ) Application fee waived until Dec. 31,1998 Laundry Room, Pool, BBQ’s, Security Gates, Cable Ready Refrigerator, Stove, Dishwasher, Microwave : • j • • * F r ee C ontinental B rea k fa st M onday - F r id a y 7am - • C A L L E D A T 4 4 9 -3 3 1 5 F O R A S N E A K P R E V IE W • $850 M onth / $425 Security Deposit / No Pets / Electric Not Incl. • PoliceBéàt S ta te A S U p o lic e r e p o rte d th e fo llo w in g in c id e n ts Sunday: • There were no reports turned in today. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents: • O fficers a rre ste d a 4 0 -y e a r-o ld Tem pe wom an Tuesday on charges of marijuana possession, posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia and contributing to the delinquency of a minor: She was arrested after officers found what they suspected to be marijuana and drug paraphernalia in thè bedroom of her residence in the 100 block of East Colgate Drive. The woman reported­ ly told officers the item s were hers. A ccording to reports, she allegedly also gave marijuana to her 16year-old son. She was booked into the Tempe City Jail and released pending all charges. • A 23-year-old Tempe man was arrested Tuesday on charges of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Officers contacted the man at 1975 E. Cornell Drive and reportedly found him in posses­ sion of the items. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail and released pending all charges. • Police arrested a 27-year-old Mesa man on charges of armed robbery and first-degree burglary early Tuesday morning. He was arrested at the intersection of the U.S. 60 and South Dobson Road. The victim of an armed robbery at a Severi-11 store, 8750 S. McClintock Drive, positively identified the man in a photograph line-up, according to reports. The victim told police the suspect threatened him with a gun while demanding money from the register. The suspect was taken to Tempe City Jail. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Alicia A. Caldwell. P re s s O p in io n s Vour passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. 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Just 5^ a minute all weekend long on all your direct-dialed state-to-state long distance calls from home. W eekdays are only \05 J e r e m y H e in o f t h e S ta te P r e ss ASU freshm an tight end Todd Heap leaps for the first of his career-best two touchdown effort as W ildcat safety G reg Payne fails to break up the play in the third q u arter of Friday’s game a t UofA: Heap finished with four receptions in the 50-42 loss. C anidate cmshesjAsSy Mat By P ie c o r o S t a t e P ress TUCSON-— UofA quarterback Keith Smith knew exactly why the Wildcats beat Friday night “Tning Canidate was absolutely amazing?] Smith said. Was he ever. Thejunior tailback carried tbebaMonty 18 bat stiM amassed 288 yards rushing, » »wire-like shattering o f the 25-year Jim Upchurch held the UofA singleÌltàhingm a^(232m l973). carries for 288 yards— ihife heard of that,” WBdcaiS bead joaetdt : Tomey stud after his team’s 50-42 victoreal home tup hitter as a tuntAMT jN*-L23K)j UofA tailback T ning Canidate was simply unstoppable Friday evening as ASL defenders Mitchell Freedman ( I »1 and Ki.ui Redly (951 ra n attest to, CiuiiiUlr finished with 288 yards rutfauig and three Iniulnhiwmi similar contributions by UofA’s other quarterback. Ortege Jenkins, helped make upfor the Wildcats’ passing game. Other than a big first quarter by Smith. UofA’s air attack was ■ Utile-known wide receiver Bred Brennan, who rested m anonymity behind fellow wide receivers Jeremy McDaniel and D e n n is, Northern, had a career-high 111 yards receiving and scored the Cats’ first touchdown ■ o e te r i s e áte night, â 72-yarder. ' On UofA’s second Brennan, a junior out of Redwood'City, Calif., found himself wide open down the right sideline— a familiar Blundei by the k s U secondary — and 72. yards later, the W ildcats were ahead 7-3- Brennan also I a 19-yard pass to the ASU 1, setting up a Jim Weotller touchdown I Jenkins was also able m scramble five tor large chunks of yards, which is one reason why Tomey stuck with him for the majority of the second half. Whether Jenkins was forced to scramble or a draw was called, it was something that seemingly worked all night for the Wildcats. "ASU didn't bring the safety down and it was just great blocking by Kelvin Eaton (UofA’s starting fullback) and Trung Canidate,” Jenkins said. “It was just of times, it v t back and i Tanking , S a te P re u fa r M a n d e r N o v e m b e r 30, 1998 m SH O P NO M O RE! SU B A R U The B eauty o f All-Wheel Drive! + ta x p e r m o n t h 48 Month Lease 12k Miles A utom atic Transmission A /C Power Windows. Locks & Mirrors Roof Rack 1499 E . C a m e lb a c k R o a d • P h o e n i x Keyless Entry Cruise Control A M /FM Cassette O verh ead Console w /M a p Lights m b * *m * m J L *"% m m m á1 ñ1k p I -I Stock #R 9008, closed end lease with $ 3 0 0 0 total cash, includes inception fees. 48 month lease with 12,000 miles per year, O.A.C. Statt« Press for Monday, November 30, 1990 Spann, Heap provide potent options for Kealy S o p h o m ore Q B e xp lo d e s f o r a c a re e rh ig h 511 - y a r d p a s s in g p e r fo r m a n c e B y C l i n t C u r r ie S t a t e P ress TUCSON— After the Sun Devils’ painful 50-42 loss to Arizona on Friday, ASU head coach Bruce Snyder called tight end Todd Heap a star being bom. If Heap is a star being bom. then Creig Spann, a sixth-year senior who just completed his collegiate career, is a falling star. The Valley natives both had career days in Tucson, aiding quarterback Ryan Kealy's personal-best 511 yard perfor­ mance. Spann, a native of Phoenix, had nine receptions for 108 yards and a firstquarter touchdown. Heap, from Mesa, had four receptions for 84 yards and two touch­ downs. ' "I didn't want to do anything spectacu­ lar," Heap said, “just haul it in.” Heap, who stands 6-foot-5 and weighs 220 pounds, is a little on the humble side. “I’m more happy when the team wins,” Heap said. "It was a harsh game, a real eye-opener.” Heap's productivity has increased as the season has progressed. In the last two games especially, ASU has found him to be a real go-to guy. Before Friday’s game, he had a breakthrough outing against Oregon, when he made four catches for 99 yards. However, Spann wasn’t surprised with Heap’s performance. “He’s been there all year. He did it in high school (at Mesa Mountain View) and he can do it in college,” Spann said. “He’s a great tight end now and he’s going to be a great tight end in the future.” Heap and Spann teamed up for the third quarter touchdown that brought ASU back into the game. UofA had just gone up 3322 after quarterback Ortege Jenkins scored on a 13-yard draw. A fter the ensuing kick o ff, the Sun Devils received one of their many false start calls and the ball was brought back to their own 15-yard line. But on third-andeight, Kealy found Heap for a 31 -yard completion, bringing ASU into Wildcats’ territory at the 47. On the next two plays, Kealy hit Spann for 24 yards and Heap’s leaping 23-yard reception brought ASU within five, 33-28. Spann demolished his previous careerhigh of four catches (three times, last at Washington State) with a nine-catch per­ formance Friday. He summed up his play as staying simple. “We ran our routes and stayed consis­ tent,” Spann said. It was Spann’s play which kept ASU in the game until the last second. When ASU was down 50-35 with 3:52 left, Spann caught consecutive passes for 6 and 14 yards to set up Lenzie Jackson’s 23-yard catch-and-run touchdown to bring ASU within eight, 50-42. Two minutes later, after ASU forced a Wildcat punt, Spann was at it again, mak­ ing catches of 9 and 8 yards, just before ASU ran out time. The 6-foot receiver realized that his col­ legiate career came to a halt and in a wild Em otional ASU head coach B ruce S nyder interrogates tight end K endrick B ates d uring the team ’s fo u rth -q u a rte r rally, - understatement said, “It’s a little sad, leav­ ing.” Along with Spann, the Sun Devils will also lose seniors Albrey B attle, Steve C am pbell, M att C ercone, Joe C esta, Mitchell Freedman, Lenzie Jackson, Kenny Mitchell and Grey Ruegamer. “(The seniors) showed me what it was like to be a Sun Devil,” Heap said. “I have to keep that tradition going.” Once-neglected Bell amasses 2 1 tackles in satisfying victory B y Sa m G a n c z a r u k S t a t e P ress Brad Lang of the State Press UofA linebacker M arais Bell was omnipresent Friday, registering a game-high 21 tackles. outburst, made it 43-28 with 1:35 left in the third quarter. Kealy led A S U ’s frantic com eback attempt in the fourth quarter, an 11-play, 71-yard drive. He connected with tight end Todd Heap for a 17-yard TD, the fresh­ m an’s second scoring reception o f the game, and the Sun Devils cut the deficit to 43-35 with 5:55 left in regulation. But Canidate wouldn’t go away. As soon as UofA got the ball back, Canidate was handed the ball. On the first play of the ensuing drive, Canidate ran for 20 yards. Five plays later, he vanished behind an injury-depleted ASU secondary and raced 48 yards for a TD, to give the Wildcats a 50-35 edge. TUCSON— UofA junior linebacker Marcus Bell did everything he could Friday night and that was more than enough. Seeking payback, Bell played as if he had something to prove to the Sun Devil coaching staff. His past with ASU was well known; it had passed on recruiting the linebacker when he came out of St. Johns (Ariz.) High School and he felr like this was his chance to show the school it had made a mistake. “ASU didn’t even look at me, but I wouldn’t have gone there anyway,” Bell said. “When I was growing up, 1 didn’t even think about them.” The UofA defense focused on shutting down ASU tailback J.R. Redmond. It successfully held him to 71 yards on 15 carries. Bell said he made it a personal goal to go out there and hit as hard as he could. After the first few plays, he knew he was going to have a big game. “(I was) running around and hitting people, giving the most effort I could,” Bell said. “(I knew) in my mind I was going to have a big ASU grabbed the early 3-0 lead on freshman Stephen Baker’s 26-yard field goal. UofA answ ered im m ediately on Brennan’s 72-yard TD reception to make it 7-3 with 10:54 remaining in the opening quarter. Sun Devil comerback Courtney Jackson picked off quarterback Keith Smith’s pass at the ASU 32 and returned it 35 yards to the UofA 33. The interception set up senior flyback Jeff Paulk’s 1-yard TD run and gave the Sun Devils a 9-7 lead. The lead was extened to eight on Spann’s 14-yard TD snatch with 3:22 left in the opening quarter. UofA responded with an 11-play, 87yard drive, capped o ff by fullback Jim game.” As the quarters passed, Bell made hit after hit. The public address announcer kept saying over and over again,” said Bell on the tackle. Bell fin­ ished with 21 tackles, three for losses. Surprisingly, Bell had no idea that he had accu­ mulated so may tackles, tying his own single­ game school record set earlier this season against Washington. “I ended with a few tackles,” said Bell after the game, unaware of his total. Bell leads the Pac-10 with 10.7 tackles a game (139) and has had nine double-digit tackle out­ ings. He leads the Wildcats in tackles for a loss with 14 for.51 yards. Of Bell’s 21 tackles Friday night, 11 were solo. Along with Bell, the entire Wildcat defense played effectively. At crucial points throughout the game they made the big play. Even though Kealy threw for 511 yards, he tossed two critical interceptions. “We came out today with the mindset to give it our best,” Bell said. “Everybody was making plays out there, and we got some breaks. This is just a great feeling.” Wendler’s 1-yard run, giving the Wildcats a two-point lead, 15-13. The W ildcats’ next drive ended when ASU safety M itchell “F right N ig h t” Freedman picked off quarterback Ortege Jenkins’ third-and-eight pass in the end zone. Freedman returned it 11 yards to the ASU 11. However, the Sun Devils were unable to capitalize on the opposition’s giveaway.^ On the next play, Paulk fumbled the ball amidst a throng of gang tacklers. UofA linebacker Scooter Sprotte scooped it up and rumbled 12 yards for the score as the Wildcats took a 19-15 lead with 4:11 left in the first half. Battered tailback J.R. Redmond, who has battled nagging foot and ankle injuries recently, added a 2-yard TD run to give ASU a short-lived 22-19 lead with 1:50 left in the half. (Snyder said Redmond, who was sidelined numerous times during the game to have his ankle re-taped, played basically “on one leg” in die game. He fin­ ished with 71 yards rushing.) C an id ate’s 80-yard gallop gave the Wildcats a 26-22 halftime lead— a half filled with wacky plays, such as: •Kealy’s 9-yard pass to Mitchell, who immediately turned around and pitched the ball to Redmond. The play gained 23 yards. •Both teams combined for four consecu­ tive missed conversions, including three two-point attempts. r •V Chiefs end losing streak over Cards Statepress Arizona Sots University P o lic e R e p o rts T o o bizarre t o b e a n y t h in g b u t real! P age 0 8 FacingJail or Prison?.» Experience Counts! KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — When Arizona scored quickly in die fourth quarter to get within a touchdown, the Kansas City Chiefs feared the worst. “Losing six games in a row, you tend to lose your confi­ dence,” said linebacker Donnie Edwards. “Everybody was thinking, ‘Don’t let it happen again — don’t let it happen again.’” , So they didn’t. The longest losing streak in Marty Schottenheimer’s 15-year coaching career and the longest for the Chiefs in a non-strike year since 1985 came to an end Sunday with a 34-24 victory over the Cardinals. Not only had the Chiefs (5-7) lost six in a row, they had blown a 17-point, fourth-quarter lead the previous week against San Diego, . “The guys on the sideline were saying, ‘Oh, no, not again,”’ said safety Jerome Woods. Rich Gannon threw three touchdown passes and the Chiefs, struggling with many of the same mistakes that marked their six-game slide, took a 31-17 lead with 10:26 left on Derrick Alexander’s 15-yard TD catch. But the Cardinals (6-6), who had moved into playoff contention by winning three of their last four, answered with an 80-yard drive aided by a pass interference call and made it 31-24 on Mario Bates’ 1-yard plunge. “We’re human beings. Doubt came into our minds,” said linebacker Anthony Davis. J e r e m y H e in of t h e S ta te P r e s s Arizona Cardinals running back M ario Bates (24) is wrapped up by K ansas City Chiefs cornerback Jan ies H asty (40) and linebacker Donnie E dw ards (59) during the first q u a rte r of Sunday’s game at A rrow head Stadium, No. 11 Rutgers defeats Sun Devils, 67-48 By D oug Flanagan State Press E— "•"7 1 - Paym en t Plans «»a lia tile 1212 tasi Osborn. Phoenix. Arizona 1232 E. Broadway Rd. Tempe • Mesa •C h a n d le r -» « a ... no..nqu. . i . * . m m Specialist Criminal Law Before Sunday’s championship game of the Rutgers Coca-Cola Classic against the host Scarlet Knights, ASU women’s basketball coach Charli Turner Thome said her team had nothing to lose. Her squad took the same mentality into the game against the 1 lth-ranked team in the country, but lost something any­ way— the game, 67-48. In a battle of two banged-up teams, Rutgers proved it had more depth than the Sun Devils (2-1), and utilized a 14-0 second-half run to break open a close game. “This was our first real challenge,” Turner Thome said. “We played intimidated and we played hesitant. “When you’re 1lth-ranked in the country and missing key players, you can overcome it. When you’re building a program and you’re missing key players, and other players don’t show up to play, you’re in trouble.” Junior center Rachel Holt, an All-Tournament pick, led ASU with 16 points and six rebounds. ASU once again played without Theresa Jantzen, Ebony Edwards and Rechelle Lang, all of whom were out with injuries. The Sun Devils advanced to the championship game by defeating Southwest Louisiana on Saturday. Small forward Leaf Newman had her best game of the young season, lead­ ing ASU with 16 points, and New Jersey native Kitch Kitchen hit a back-breaking three pointer late in the second half to subdue a Rajin’ Cajun rally. “We maintained our focus and we played hard,” said Kitchen, who in front of an estimated 40 family members and friends in attendance, scored 15 points, grabbed six boards and had a game-high three steals. Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, ydu may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our ctassified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. . APARTMENTS 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 o ff move-in w/ad. 966-8597. HOMES FOR RENT 4BR/2BA VERY nice, close to campus, $ 1,295/m o. J eff 8931651. CLOSE TO ASU - 2bd/2ba $700/mo.; 3bd/2ba, $850/mo;; 2 b d /lb a , $450/m o.; 4bd/3ba, $ 1025/mo. 894-0288 LOS PRADOS twn hm 3 br, 2ba, w/d, ceilin g fans, alarm sys,; tennis, pools & spas. Courtyard, sun deck/ 1/2 mi. to ASU $1100/mo. call 784-2470. S. SCOTTS/ N . Tem pe -* 4bdr/2ba w / pool $1600 obo. 430-50^6 or 522-2100ext507 WE RENT HOMES! APARTMENTS TEMPE BEAUTIFUL 3, 4,5 BR HOMES SOME W /POOLS $1095-$1595 J&T PR O P 446-RENT 1209 W. BASELINE HELP WANTEDGENERAL TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT 1BD CONDO - all appl's incl'd. w /d. 2 blocks from campus. $495/mo. 625-0116 PAPAGO PARK I; A vail. Jan. 1, 2&3 bdriii units, all appl., w/d, Call 496-9872, pgr. 251-7387 PAPAGO PARK- 2&3 bdrms, $875-$1200. Bob Bullock Re­ alty Executives 998-2992 PAPAGO PARK, 2&3bd con­ dos avail- now. N ew paint, clean carpets. Very nice* Call 432-3636. TEMPE - HAYDEN SQUARE condo. 1 bd, new carpet, sec. sys, pool 155 W. 3rd St, #107,625-3827 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL A SU - 3/3 QUESTA Vida, 2story, all appi in cl w /d, avail 1/1/99. $1,195. Joel 967-6205 HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c. Near ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/ mo; $10 W. Urtiv. 966-0987 LU XURY 3B D /2B A Condo. Questa Vida, w/d, pool. A v a il. Dec 28 $900mo 949-673-3122. You can VIEW and SEARCH the State Press Classifieds on the Internet! Fo cus M arket R esearch Help Wanted Start Building Your Resume & Business Skills Nowl Become a Market Research Interviewer o r a Client Qualitative Assistant We offer: • $7.50/hr (eve. shift) + Bonus Plans • Flexible schedule • Convenient Location - about 4 miles from ASU • Absolutely NO Salesl No experience Necessary Call Ray at 874-2714 - Focus M arket Research statepress.com / cla ssifie d s/ classifieds .htm l City of Tempe HELP WANTEDGENERAL KID ZONE Before & After School Programs Program Manager positions $9.76-$10.25/hr, 20-30 hrs/wk, morning and/or after-; noon hours available. Paid training. Req. 6 month exp. working w ith children grades K-6. Kid Zone is looking fo r en th u siastic an d e n e rg e tic in d iv id u als . Job descriptions available w ith application. O ther Kid Zone positions include Activity Leaders ($7 .4 4 /h r), S pecialty Instructors ($ 8 .6 3 /h r), & Ass't A ctivity Leaders ($6.25/hr). Be a Kid Zone Employee I Apply Nowl Apply at: C ity of Scottsdale Com m unity M aintenance and R ecreation Division COACHES & OFFICIALS Boys & G irls B ask etb all $7.30 - $9.75 p er h ou r For a p p lic atio n in fo rm a tio n c o n ta c t th e C ity o f Scottsdale. A pplications w ill b e accepted u n til M onday, February 1 ,1 9 9 9 . 994-7642 CENSUS 2000 Census Workers Needed!! 4 - 6 w eek tem porary job, flexible hours, fu ll/ part tim e, w eekly pay. N ow h ir in g Listers: starting at $ 9 .7 5 /h o u r and .32.5 cen ts/m ile. Accepted donors compenseted $2,000. 3500 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, AZ (60 2 ) 350-5423 For m ore in form ation co n ta ct you r local E m ploym ent Services O ffice or ca ll 888-325-7733 For more information call (602) 860-4792 EOE E.O.E. EGGS NEEDED Healthy women (ages 21-30, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. tièyeffWupe So cial Sendees Dept. RENTAL SHARING ROOMS FOR RENT LOOKING FOR 2bd/2ba $300+/m o. in S. Tempe or Chandler. Stacy 63 7 -9 9 0 6 lv. msg. ROOMS FOR M AVAILABLE JANUARY - Mill & Superstition, 10 min from ASU. Non-smoker pref. to share 2bd/2ba apt. U tilities + cable included, $39Q/mo 897-9420. ROOMS FOR RENT HELP WANTEDGENERAL L = ROOM IN 2br / 2ba apt. avail, nbw Rural 7 Southern nice $334/m o. +1/2 utils, master yours. 777-7788. RURAL & University, Atm in 2bd apt. $360/m , avail 12/15. Ryan 774-0551 or 770-8858. RMMT FOR Beautiful 4bd house, pool $ 2 8 0 /m + l/4 u tl Warner & Price 7562307 2 ROOMS available in W Phx home, $275 & $300/m o., 20 min. from ASU, N/S, N/D, 8499562, please leave msg. S HELP WANTEDGENERAL Find it FAST in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL Kyrene School District in Tempe seeks instructional assistants for special education students. F/T and P/T positions available with excellent benefits. Please fox resume to 783-4071 orm ailto 8700 S. Kyrene Rd., Tempe, AZ 85284. ** N O W H IR IN G SERVERS * HOSTESS* KITCHEN STAFF We’re an Oklahoma based upscale casual dining concept with aggressive growth plans. Our menu features steaks, prime rib, chicken, pasta, fresh fish, speciality sandwiches and salads. Apply today and secure your spot on our opening team. Day’s / Evenings - Flexible Hours Mon. - Fri. 10-6 pm, S at 10-2 pm NE Comer o f 1-10 & Ray Rd. CHANDLER, AZ T elem arketers W anted In G ainey Ranch. Earn $9/hr, p o ten tial month­ ly bonus $$. No sellin g AUTOMOBILES CASH PAID, for Guitars, Amps, PA equip., & drum mach., Call 451-4040,401-7809 pg. 1999 TOYOTA $12,788 call 604-6510. M ARSHALL JCM 800 head, Marshall 4x 12 cabinet, must, sell. Call Mitch 424-7817. AUTOMOBILES $$ FOR BOOKS! Cash or credit for your quality used books at Changing Hands Bookstore! 2 locations 414 M ill Ave:: 966-0203 & SW corner of M eClintock/Guadalupe: 7304)205 ’92 TOYOTA Celica GT convr white, 47K, like new, cold air, premium CD sound, loaded, $12K obo, 935-2641 x 6221 TRAVEL I m ent - 6 07-1069. G reat springbreak environm ent. 3 ASU grads em ployed now . G reat opportunity fo r $6 and fun! TRAVEL 8 0 0 -3 4 7 -4 7 3 1 F L IG H T S V IA re g io n a l p o rtio n o f a n a tio n a l e v e n t. 4 - m o n t h p ro g ra m m [1999 (8 8 8 ) 32M A K A I www.makaievents.com 9» !■ ULTIMATE PARTY PAK ♦F R E E ★ free ★ free ★ FR E E m e a ls e ve r y day d r in k s e v e r y d a y T - s h ir t $200 VALUE - LIMITED OFFER CALL TODAY , t =51I51 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Office Cleric M-F, l-5pm. Data entry, typing, phones, w orking w ith real e sta te sa les & deliveries. Requires stro n g d a ta entry, 30wpm p referred. M ust have valid d riv er's license, a ccep tab le driving record, d e p en d ab le car. Professional a ttitude, a p p earan ce a n d cu sto m e r service skills a m ust. Incentives: Tuition Fleimbursement, Paid Time Off, Advancement Potential, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package Trustee ’s Assistance Carp. Subm itA pplications To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. *9 Tempe, AZ 85262 756-1223 Ik Yourself... 4041 N. C entral Ave., #860 Phoenix, AZ 85012 Fax; 602-264-0818 A A O p p o rtu n itie s available: s graduation approaches, you have some serious choices to make-choices which can determine which direction your life will take. Make the sm art choice by choosing Enterprise to give you the foundation for a successful career in business. Front Desk • Concierge • Housekeeping » Restaurant • Banquets * Security • Administrative • Bell Desk • Retail • Fitness Centre/Salon «landscaping O u r business philosophy has always been centered on providing solid skills training in all areas o f business management to eager and motivated college graduates, allowing you to ru n your branch the way you want to. You see, o u r business grows if you do, and we realize that your inherent enthusiasm and sensibilities coupled with real life business training can spell true career satisfaction for you. A p p ly In Hum an Resources M onday - Friday 8am -4:30pm Tri-Property fo b Hodlne 906-3886 Resorts Pointe Hilton Resorts Tapatio Cliffs • I t i l i N. 7th Street Squaw Peak • 7677 N. 16th St. South Mountain * 7777 S. Pointe Parkway A G REA T CHANCE T O J O IN O U R T EA M ! • D ata E n try / W !n95 • C le ric a l / G en O ffic e Goldstar Staffing 5150 N. 16th St, S te. #B -130 M o n -F ri 9 -1 1am o r 1-3pm N o Fee 2 6 4 -4 2 6 0 EOE f ,O p E N ÍN q IX ¡N pECEIVlbER ApplicAiipiNs For : • • • • • • Assi. Resimjrant Mqn Bar Mqii/ BariencIers Food Servers U ne & P rep Cooks HosiEss/MERchANdisiivq Staqe/ Audio/Vidto Tec!) • Promotions M çr BeneRts pkq avaìIaU e to PT/FT EMploytEs Apply In person M-F. 1Oam- 12pM, 2pM-4pM 141 E. iAcksoN Si., so. of Ameríca Wesi Arena The next course. The most important course. And A Great Teacher To Boot! Pointe Hilton Resorts? Pointe H ilto n . ff i" MANAGEMENT/SALES TRAINING w ith a relaxed and frien dly w ork en viro n ­ ment. A t the Pointe Hilton Resorts w e under­ stand that our people are out greatest asset, just ask any Pointe Person. It’s w hat Pointe Pride is all about. Here you’ll find a compre­ hensive benefits package, com petitive wages and plenty o f career path opportunities. So why not reward yourself w ith a career at the < $ > t iÆ Now ACCEptiNq Earn $6.50 - $7.50 per Hour Working With Adolescents IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE IN SOME P O S m O N S III! 11/1/96 B p h g B ä ß lw e s . TCH Is W ring - FT/PT. $7~$7.50 • Excellent Benefits. ÇaH w w w . s tu d en texpress, com DBC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, and Behavlorally challenged. Apply M-F, 8a-5p • fax resum es to 966-5148 6 0 E. 5th S t • T em pe 85281 u c e a Work with people Psych & Social Work Majors Gain Valuable Experience Benefits include: ✓ Competitive Pay ✓ Daily Meals, Health Insurance ✓ Long-term Savings Plan ■ DIFFERENCE S A ILB O A T T R IP 1 -8 0 0 -2 5 8 -9 1 9 1 For updated openings, call the JOB HOTLINE (602) 894-1400 ext. 578 HELP WANTEDGENERAL L o o kin g fo r: Pi SPRING BREAM M akat Events |P LOW DOWN, low monthly for new VW beetle. 265-6600 A P P L Y TO D A Y ! C a ll A m y @ Banquet Setup Supervisor Facilities Maintenance Engineer (2 years Elect: Eng. Exp Req) Busser- AM Room Attendants Security O fficer- PT Wknds Hostess- AM, P/T CARS $100-^500 - police im­ pounds. Hondas, C hevys, Jeeps & Sport Utilities. MUST SELL! 1-800-522-2730 x4740 P T & FT A v a ila b le w o rk in g fr o m h o m e a n d o n -s ite . C urrently available: BAD CREDIT, no credit, no problem. We can help you buy a new Toyota. For more info call Rick or Frank @604-6510, B U Y 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 Send your deposit in NOW to get the hotel of your choice. There is very limited hotel space!! MEXICO TOURS Camry 86 MITSUBISHI/DODGE C olt-1 owner, ’99 tags, reliable, 5sp, 4dr, a/c $2100obo 587-0531 Used Cars/ Trucks/ Jewelry/ Antiques/ LP’s/ Misc. MAZATLAjV Paid in te rn s h ip p o s itio n fo r Looking for team players who desire a position in a Newly renovated, 4 star Hotel with pleasant surroundings... • 1000 USED vehicles for sale with photos on-line. @ www.earnhardt.c0m All makes & models TWIN B ED & mattress, $39. Call 396-9643, oj^. 593-0662 (pgr) and leave message. R O C K Y P O IN T Event M anager Tempe Mission Palms Hotel R ew ard •88 FORD Escort, 59K mi, 2nd owner, $1600obo. '62 Ford pickup, runs good, $700obo. 252-1342 or pager @ 4405381. BOOKS hours. C all fo r appoint­ A p p r o x im a te ly 1 0 h rs /w k Catering Manager (Social) Security/ Pkng A ttend.- PM Room Server- AM Night Maintenance W orker • • Housekeeping Supvsr• • AM &PM • Food Runners • TICKETS DEPECHE MODE tickets want­ ed. Prefer floor section, closest to stage. I f you have 1 or 2 extra ticket(s), please call Paul at 965-6735. required. P/T fle x ib le b e g in n in g F e b ru a ry 1 2 , 1 9 9 9 . • • • • MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FURNITURE NEW RESTAURANT O pening Dec. 7 SPRINGTREE CONDO, 2 mstr bd/2ba, McClintock/Broadway, avail. Jan. '99, all appls., w /d ,: fridge, xlnt condition, unfurn. $700/mo. + dep. w / 1 yr lease Contact 999-9896. SAN MARBEYA- Share luxury rental on Scottsdale Rd., 1.5m from ASU. Brand new, move in D ec. 18 2bd/2ba, poolside $440. Trenton 577-3298 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ** TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR ; Superstition Fwy. : Í an 1 1 s And, a quick career track can mean excellent financial reward. The potential exists to earn $35-55K w ithin 3 years and m ore as you progress. As you can probably guess, this is no easy course...it takes hard work, dedication to task, arid the foresight to see your goal. If you believe this is the path you'd like to take, please call Erin at (602) 804-0700 ext. 557"or fax your resume to (602) 954-6811. Baseline Visit our website at http://www.cnc.com ( E n t e r p r is e D illard Ticketing j Customer Support Services P T positions to assist custom ers & clients in Support Services. I M ust have strong com m unication Skills & com puter experience. M ust w ork w ell under pressure. N ights/ vveekends. Accepting applications M -F , 9a-4p , 1616 S. P riest D r., Tem pe A n equal opportunity em ployer. >*«T HELP WANTEDGENERAL $6.50+/HR. Preschool or afterschool teach­ er. F lex ib le hours. Training avail. Children's Village Learn­ ing Center, 949-5552. A WINNER $9/hr + bonus. Medical benefits, w eekly pay,. G ive awfty C el. phones. Day and nights. Robert 315-6198. CASHIERS & COOKS needed F/T day/night @ Sky Harbour Airport. Gieat benefits, apply @ Lefty's, Terminal 2.273-4837. CHANNEL PARTNERS - look­ in g for c e ll phone reps, $1013/hr. approx . C e ll ; phone w /airtim e provided. Contact Scott at 507-6545 ext, 24 CHASE IS firing! F/T & P/T positions available with cu s­ tomer service, account reps, fraud reps, mail openers, data entry, and collections. Apply in person 8:30am-4pm, M-F. Chase cardmembers services: 100 W est .University D rive (U niv. & M ill) Tempe (prkg. avail, on Ash), jo b -lin e 9026000 HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLIENT CARE worker for girl’s group home in Mesa. P/t wknds? Must be 21 yrs, old. Call Stacey or Mary 854-8559. NIGHT STUDENT fem school aide needed for disabled girl. MF, 9:30-3:30pm, 12/1-6/18/99, $9 /hr, own car. 423-5903. FRONT OFFICE work for Tempe doctor's o ffice , lpm 5pm, M-F. 838-2277 FUN PEOPLE Wanted! Appointment setters fo r Universal Portraits. $7$12/hr. 777-1054 GREAT JOB! Caregiver for active quad. 3-4 eves/wk. or wknd. moms. Seek­ ing healthy, smoke/drug free ass't. w/ positive attitude. Good pay, w ill train. Tom at 9492789. HELP SANTA Nov30 - Dec24 $7+ p/hr. On/offload aircraft. Driver's license necessary, p/t am/pm shifts, M-Th 225-2066. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HOLIDAY JOBS for the environment. $225-400/ wk. Work w / Sierra Club. Pro­ tect our wilderness and wildlife. Call Dana 966-1541 JOHN HANCOCK Arizona Kersting general agen­ cy needs agents. $2000m o training subsidy. Call Jim 5222100 ext507 EOE MFVD 304061198-019 LOOKING FOR a creative^ in­ teresting work environment? Cowboy CiaO wine, bar, & grill has imm ediate openings for server, hostess, cook, dishwasher, janitor. Singing ability a plus. Call W INE-111 for in­ terview. LOOKING FOR front desk co­ ordinator pref. male for upscale trendy salon. Must be multi task comp. literate, good peo­ ple skills. 25-30 hrs. nights & wkends. 759-0232 Please fax resum e to Rachel Kleinm an 312-255-8868 Security Officers and Airport Security Officers FLEXSCHEDltlES-FT APT background check. • • • • HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE P/T WORK - F/T pay. Come to play not to work. Day & eve. shifts avail., $9/hr. University & Priest, Ms Tobin 517-1977 TAX PREPARER Asst. $8/hr. close to campus. Start after Jan. 1. Interviewing now call 9687202. AUSSIE OUTFITTERS is now hiring FT/PT sales associates for its new est retail store on Mill Ave. Call 228-0748. BAR MAID 16-24 hrs/wk $812/hr. Fun neighborhood bar, The W oodshed I 19 W. B ase­ line. PROTOTYPE SHOP looking for mold in g/c as ting tech, w ill train 40 hrs/wk $10/hr. Call Stevp 443-3227. THE WORLD'S Largest Auto Retailer has many career oppor­ tunities. Call Human Resources - 813-9009. Earnhardt Auto Centers, Tem pe, G ilbert & Chandler P/T RECEPT., must be avail­ able holiday breaks. Icon Hair Architexture, Scottsdale Fash­ ion Square. 941-8656 QUAD. NEEDS attend. MonFri, PM $7/hr. Will train. Near ASU. Dennis.968-5295. SECRETARY/ RECEPT7 Admin. Assist, for sports law firm. Bi­ lingual pref d for filing, phone & correspondence,P/t. 24th St. & Camelback, 957-0083 . STATE PRESS - Accepting ap­ plications for on & Off campus circulation for the spring se­ mester. Applications avail @ rm 2, Matthews Ctr basement. < EARN H o lid a y C A SH !!, z w % ZooLights! j) Medical/Dental benefits Tuition Assistance Uniforms supplied & maintained Monthly, Quarterly Bonuses Dec. 6 through Jan. 10 Nightly 5:30-10:30pm The Phoenix Zoo 35 positions available Food Carts » Admissions Gift Shop • Custodial $6-$6.50/hr. Apply u : Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. «27 Sooth 48tb S t *105 Tem pe 9 6 6 d tl4 1 J o b F a ir ** Tuiikm Assistance ** PItone Bill CrtEdirs * * UNbdiEVAblE BeneHts Order Clerks M CI * * Fun Wonk Environment * * Earn full tíme WAqss wudtiNq part tíme IioursI 4 0 n e e d e d im m e d i ­ a te ly in s e r v ic e a n d m a r k e t i n g d iv is io n . N o e x p e r ie n c e n e c e s s a ry - w e t r a in . $ 1 2 /h r + bonuses. W e e k ly p a y , f le x ib le p / t d a y e v e n in g o r w e e k e n d h o u rs . D o w n to w n T e m p e lo c a t io n . F o r d e ta ils c a ll J a n e 8 9 4 1 1 5 1 . To A p p ly ANd 8 :3 0 - 1 0 :3 0 a m o r 1:30-3:30p m • B q t. S e r v a r e *R oom S en d ee /T ...!!.. ..— * S w itc h b o a r d O p s. • co • B e lt S t e t f FT & PT work available Please apply w ith Hum an Resources, 5001 N. S cottsdale Rd. S cottsdale Em bassy S uites supports a D rug-Free W orkplace. CO < Û ^ • o O CD t í > S o w § « 8 ,o • m 'S • Who Says You Can’t Have Fun At Work? A t the FA C S G roup, In c., w e h ave found a w ay to com bine w ork and F u n . Full and part-tim e openings exist for: P art-tim e days. with alternating Saturdays W e offer: tuition reim bursem ent, sem i annual m erit review s, Concern w / appearance, reli­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (952-0585) ___RESORT ¿ ,AZ Ave. & Warner VALET PARKING atndnts, PT eves $6-$9/hr (incl. tips), must be cleancut, 548-0599 lve msg HELP WANTEDoyygC A L ^ ^ Part-Time Custom er Monday, 11/30, 3-6pm Offers will be made that night! 455 N. Galvin Pkwy, Phx. You're smart. Do the math! $$$ UP TO $12/HR $9/hr guaranteed + com m is­ sion. 20-25 hours per w eek. Survey marketing in a profes­ sional environm ent. Camelback & Scottsdale location. No b oiler room. 2pm-7pm M-F with flexibility. Contact Dean 949-1088. Service Reps ing for men, women and children, has immediate full time openings for wholesale reps/sales associates. Duties include working part-time in the stores and part-time as a wholesale rep. Must be enthusiastic and energetic. Immediate openings. December graduate preferred. May graduate ok, too. Wc offer HELP WANTEDGENERAL MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, m/f needed immed. for natl commercials/print! 941-6922. FfTIGUES - Upscale retailer of casual cloth­ Must be 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass HELP WANTEDGENERAL Attention ASU Grads Tempe-based Insight is a $628 'million, publicly-traded telesales organization marketing computers, hardware and software to business customers nationwide. We need professionals to Join our 1200 + employees in a fast-paced and fun environment. Insight o ffe rs a c o m p e titiv e salary, b o n u s p la n s a n d e x c e lle n t b e n e fits p ro g ra m s in c lu d in g 4 0 1 K a n d sto c k p u rc h a s e p la n , in te re s te d c a n d id a te s m a y FAX re s u m e s to (6 0 2 ) 9 0 2 -1 1 5 7 o r m ail re s u m e s to 6 8 2 0 S o u th H arl A v en u e, T e m p e , A rizo n a 8 5 2 8 3 . P le a s e In d ic a te s a la ry re q u ir e m e n ts . S m o k e -fre e w o rk p la c e . D ru g testin g . EOE m /f/h /v . 6 8 2 0 S o u th H a r l A v e n u e (N e -1 0 a n d E llio t , R d .) T e m p e , A Z 8 5 2 8 3 • N atio n widm solas • Paid job training • B asa + Bonus + Bona fits + Stock O p tio n s • First yaar incorna opportunity is from S30-3SK • Talasalas a n d /o r computar solos axparianca is prafarrad HELP WANTED- JO B O P P O R T U N jT I|S _ HELP W ANTEDF O O D S |^ IC |_ HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE C H IL D C A R ^ ^ HELP WANTED- D eli person pt, days/wknds, flex. hrs. Exp. pref. but not nec. Apply in per­ son: Capistrano's Italian D eli, 655 W. Warner, Su ite #110, Tempe, Kyrene & Warner. 4969044 IN TOWN over break? Flex sched, ft/pt & temp, 24/hr peo­ ple business. $6.50/hr, free pkng & meals. Call now 4831862. Paradise Bakery & Cafe, Sky Harbor Airport, T-4. SERVER NEEDED 9am-5pm, & Relief Server/Bartender needed, must have flex hrs. Lefty's 2734837. hardt Auto Centers. Call 756C k lL D CARE - Earn xtra $ working special events. Fix. ■ 3512, 813-5580, 756-3601 for more details. hrs. $7-9/hr. Exp/ref. req'd. 800942-9947 ... TC EGGINGTON*S an exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is hiring servers w/ M-W-F or TTh + w eekend availability. Apply in person 1660 S. Alma School Road 345-9288. JOB OPPORTUNmiiS^ C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL LUNCH SERVER, 10-2:30, $5/hr + tips: Dinner host(ess), 5-11, $6 to start. 598 -0 5 0 6 , 5061 E Elliot, Phoenix. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Create Your Own Schediile $200 Hiring Bonus CRUISE SHIP em ploym entworkers earn up to $2000/m o (w/tips & benefits). World Trav­ el! Land-tour jobs up to $5000$7000/sum m er. Ask us how! 517-336-4235 eXL €59182 UPTOWN BREWERY looking for enthusiastic, energetic, posi­ tive personalities to fill the fol­ low ing positions: buss- / ers/driyers* server/cocktailer. Flex hrs. dày/eve. 2 mi. from ASU , Apply w ithin, Uptown Brewery, 1470 E. Southern. EARN $700 extra cash for re­ ferrals, Join our "No Bull" Cash' Referral Program.. Earn- RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP W ANTEDGENERAL RESTAURANTS/ BARS DJ - 7 0 ’s, 8 0 ’s, 90*s, popular music« no hip-hop or metal. Thirsty Beaver 350-9888 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FREE CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com FOUND: ONE ladies gold watch on Tuesday, N ov. 24. Phone 557-0508. FREE WINNERS, scores, lines. N o m oney, no operators, no hassleswww.line-busters.com PERSONALS LAMSON JUNIOR College has day and evening classes for Legal Assistants, Legal Secre­ taries, ParaprofessiOnal A c­ countants, B usiness & O ffice Managers, and Computer Tech­ nicians. ’’Learn a Living at Lamson" Call today! 898-7000. W |T /F O y N j^ _ AFFAIR TO Remember: Suc­ cessfu l & Safe dating guide. She's a communication expert,., he’s a street wise. cop. Learn what they know. Mail $8 James & Assoc. PO 41323 Phx 85080 C la s s ifie d s W O R K ! Call for information on Classified Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale s leadins datins service located in O ld Town Scottsdale. Have fun callins singles to invite them fo r a free to u r o f our center IT P A Y S! • NO SELLING • Permanent Part time Evening & weekend shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d • Women Excel • Casual Dress • Automated Dialing System • Fun Atmosphere ACM E Commercial BAR » G R I L L Display advertising - 965-6555 d C re d it “Your Neighborhood" Ban P a rt Tim e D ata En try • $ 7 .2 5 /h r to s ta rt • F le xib le A M & PM schedules • C asual Dress • N o Sales • Paid W eekly • S chedules A d ju ste d Each ' Sem ester • C lose to C am pus ■ Food • S pirits • Pool • • Bowling • O g ars • 4245 N. C raftsm an Ct. O ld Town Scottsdale O ! W O O D S H E D II Professional Word Processing & Desktop Publishing Services FO O T B ig S c r e e n 963-3537 M onday N ight Football term Papers »Theses »Dissertations Resumes »Editing • Graphics APA/MLA/Gradijate CollegeFormatting N eighborhood B ar ¡ Cheap • AS ÂppütütofS T o q u a lify y o u m u st ty p e 4 5 w p m , be w illin g to w o rk w eeke nds, have re lia b le tra n s p o rta tio n an d e n jo y a fa s tpaced a tm o sp h e re . C a ll to d a y Hr, W ß. TYPING/EDITING THESES : »$$$ S y s t e m , • ab nfl GameF!*« W SPte TERM PAPERS RESUMES APPLICATIONS 8 4 4 -S H E D University & Dobson Your ad should be here! Call 965-6735 414-7800 EOE WANTED: PARKING structure 3 decal. If you are leaving school. I would like to com ­ pensate you for allowing me to follow you in line when you c lose out your account. Call David 965-6736 daytime. A D O P TIO N A SPECIAL life awaits your newborn. White couple would love 2 share their hearts+honie. W ill provide love, happiness, educ. + security. Med/legal exp paid. Eager 2 help. Laurie+Cliff 1-800-368-7555 SERVICES 40% OFF dry cleaning bill w/ ASU I.D.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap flu ff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SB Corner o f Rural & Univ. 966-7454. W ANTED! 79 people to lose 10-29 .pounds in thé next 25 days. Call 888-268-6506. WANTED WANTED - OS 8.1 and Ap­ ple works 5.; Call Rüth @ 520689-5568. THE WRITE STUFF 990-7111 ! T Y P IN G /W O R D PRO CESSING RESTAURANTS/ BARS PERSONALS -t'TS- 1-Day Service > INSTRUCTION BARTENDING ACAD EM Y Leant to be a bartender over the holidays. Earn up to $20/hour 1 o r 2 w e e k progra m P lacem en! assistance Phx Campus 957-3771 K athy @ 2 6 2 -5 4 5 4 Tempe Campus 921-9925 www.bartendingacademy.com ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S ta te P re s s Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form N am e Hom e Phone B u sin ess P h o n e A d d ress C ity , S ta te Z ip ÂSTO0C0ÔICAC FORECAST by S idney O m arr M o n d a y , N o v e m b e r 3 0 , 1998 ARIES (March 2 1-April 19): Moon in your sign emphasizes sex appeal, personal courage, staying power. Focus on where you live, ability to beautify sur­ roundings, receiving proposais that include career, marriage. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You'll hear these words: " Wait up." It would be a good idea. Play w aitin g gam e, defin e terms, especially in connection with property, real estate. Pisces plays dramatic role. GEMINI (M ay 2 1 -June 2 0 ); Anxiety will be converted into creative force. You meet, beat d ead lin es -- accep t o ffer o f Overtime and m oré m on ey. C ancer native h elp s get accounting procedures in order. CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Potential is tremendous, know it and act as i f aware o f it. O verseas journey w ill blend b u sin ess, p lea su re. L eave behind emotional debris; Aries, Libra persons in picture. LEO (July 23-À ug. 22): Past performances evaluated -- make this performance the best ever. Imprinrstyle, avoid heavy lift­ in g , fo llo w hunch and your heart. Emphasize showmanship, color coordination, entertain­ ment. VIRGO (A ug. 2 3 -S e p t. 22): Don't complain, " Nothing ever happens to m e. " B efo re thé M oon takes over for thé Sun, you will receive exciting offers^ in clu d in g m arriage. C ancer, Capricorn persons represented. LIBRA (S ep t 2 3 -O c t. 22): Focus on music, entertainment, p ossib le trip to foreign land. Serve fo o d that represents tastes, habits o f »those living in another country . Your prestige surges as result o f efforts. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): Legal agreement will be signed, sealed, delivered. You recently made marvelous impression on one in position o f authority. Taurus and another Scorpio dominate scenario. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): People talk and write about you —be aware o f it, add fuel to power o f promotion. You are going places, a headliner, refuse to take back seat to anyone. Virgo involved^ CAPRICORN (D ec. 22-Jan. 19): Focus on property, priori­ ties, ability to put best foot for­ ward. S c e n a r io h ig h lig h ts design, color, architecture, his­ tory. You will hear much sweet talk -- get promises .in writing. AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): L ook b efo re you leap ! F lay w a itin g gam e. A v o id ‘s e lf d e c ep tio n . F am iliar p la c e s, faces - - deja vp. Pisces becomes ally in putting on magic perfdrmance. Taurus is also involved. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2 0 ): Ypu are plenty involved. People are drawn to you, confide their most intimate questions, prob­ lem s, Ypu ask, " W h y me?" Answer: "It was meant to be." Capricorn in picture. IF NOVEMBER 30 IS YOUR B IR T H D A Y : Y ou have a delightful sense o f humor, are intellectually alive, have ability to laugh at your ow n foib les. You admire those with quick wit and who are versatile. You are knowledgeable about fash­ io n , e x o tic r ec ip es, can be su p e r -c o n sc io u s c o n cern in g bpdy image. December relates to creativity, marriage. © 1998, Los A ngeles T im es Syndicate P le a s e p rin t o n e le tte r p e r b o x, le a v e a b la n k box b e tw e e n w ords. P lease be sure to che ck y o u r ad. M ake sure it reads exa ctly as you w ish it to ap pear in the State Press, includ ing punctuation. P lease che ck yo u r ad th e firs t day it ap pears-the lia b ility o f th e State Press sh a ll n o t exceed th e c o s t o f the ad and c re d it m ay be given fo r the firs t in s e rtio n o n ly. M ino r sp e llin g e rrors do no t q u a lify fo r m ake­ goods. N o re fund s w ill be given, b u t if you need to cancel y o u r ad a c re d it w ill be h e ld on account fo r fu tu re ad vertising . D. A j P rivate Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day Com m ercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1,76 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.60 per line, per day 3 line minim um . A d d a 13-character bold-headline fo r the cost of 2 lines. D ate* yot* w l8h y o u r ad to run^. Q ig f . □ j #ofl Éric*!»* lililí: I ■ I C lassification Name/Ní*mt>erí -NFi ill 098 065 010 020 061 064 061 077 054 066 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Autom obiles Bicycles Books Business O pportunities Computers Free Lost/Found 088 052 049 401 074 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-ChHd Care 072 Help W anted-Clerical 073 Help Wanted-Food Service 070 Help Wanted-General 071 Help Wanted-Sales 030 Homes fo r Fiant 040 Home for Sale 102 Housecleaning 107 ln8truction 103 Insurance 135 Intemet-Ftelated Services 130 Internet URLs 075 Internships 056 076 015 120 050 045 063 048 082 090 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes Motorcycles M oving & Storage M tiitc Personals - 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurant8/Bare Rooms for Rent Services Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 Townhomes/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomes/Condos fo r Sale 060 Transportation 067 Travel 108 Tutors 105 Typing/W ord Processing. 115 W anted 0 1998 Levi Strauss & Co. All, rights reserved. Finally, a store to satisfy your pocket fetish. Announcing the opening of the Levi’s® Online Store, w w w .levi.com