INSIDE i f Weather Sprinkles; hi 57, low 46 Volume 84 Number 74 Classifieds 15 Crosswords 10 Horoscopes 19 Opinion 04 Tuesday, January 26, 1999 .■1 1 Alyson Hurt Alicia A, Caldwell --------——----- A sst Magazine Editor Reporters • Udia Kelly Andrea Bakky, jodie Lau, Stephanie Paterik, JaysonPeters, Kim frendergast, Carrie Severson, Gangs Subramanian, June D. W ih te. Mario A. Lftpez Chris Carlock, Cltnt Cume, Robert Deal, Percy Ednaüno Jr., Sam Ganczaruk, Joe Mantone, Nick Piecoro. * * Christi Foist Copy Editors —— Jeremy Hein -■ —— -------- — A m ber Knuth, Susan Schim m d. Photographers-- » ................. —---- ------------------ - Doug Flanagan Leah Fasten, Soiey Härtel, Hyyn Um, Samvuddin Stewart Jonathan Inge Scott Bracken, Staphanie Conner. Justin Doom, Brent Galoway, Scott D. GMetw, Stephanie P . Johnson, Shawna Kemppainan, Gregor McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, Brian Potcotf, Timothy Scott, Joe Wadabwala. Bead ColumnistsPercy Ednalino Jr. ----------------- Magazine Editor Production ■>-■— ————- — ———---- — ' ^ Sales R e p r & p i ^ t i y e s ^ ^ - - ----------- — — Brian Ary, Mike Gialfanza, David G oodw in, Jennifer H eddan, Michael Knievei, Jonathan. N egretti, Shane Siren, Kathy W elsh. ; Student Media Phone Numbers — 1 965-7572 Information i 965-2292 S tate Press N ew sroom 965-1695 Angelee King I ” S tate Press Magazine ’ Classifieds — - 7 _ Advertising 965-6555 KateD esio,A m anda G reen, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Plokim. . , 965-6735 Classifieds , d | | The Stole Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ http://w w w .statepress.com O n th e w eb demic year, except holidays and exam period^&Matxhe'W's Center, Room 2, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz., 85287stpress@ asu.edu E-mail 1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Marketing Team——————------- - - - - - - — ¿weftitßV dt in SA .sqme f — ■— N athan Balzer, Alyson H u rt, H e a th er Nash, Shelley Oishi, Jennifer SwHiford, Joanna W ike. . Sports Reporters — — *■■■■-**--- The State Pfess is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated oh th e ASU campus, t h e news and views published in this news­ paper are n o t necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Brian Baichumas, C a rrie L Behrens, B ruce C rosby, Brian , Fairington, C arlos Ramirez. .fjo^tvsTi nr fìtiw —— inion ■W b w w m m m b b ib A riz o n a poi ¡ties a t low point B e tte r a sk B ria n Arizonans may M la lc A n have thought the 1 column" low point in state political history was the reign of Evan Mecham. They’d be wrong. 7 . T he su b seq u e n t S ym ington A few years ago my grandmother paused away. We w en takeover proved A rizona is more very dose. She lived about an hour away, but l always made than capable of covering one scan­ sure I saw bar a t k m once a week. Since her death, Them dal w ith another — w hite c o lla r found m yselftalking to her, especially when things get bad. / crim inal succeeding w hite collar know it sounds a tittle weird, but l fe e l tike she’s kind of criminal. watching over me. Last week ! was noth' stressed out and l Like M echam , Sym ington was started talking to her when my boyfriend walked in on me. He replaced by a fem ale Republican. asked who / was W a r n to and / explained. He thinks my behavior is unhealthy; titfact, 1 think it ready weirds lam oul L ike M echam , his successor was He says th a tifl have problems ¡should come talk to hint Is notably more effective. H et^hhH m yksB d^m kernonm dT _ _ _ _ _ _ _ But the political stupidity goes oti in Arizona, well beyond the office Am i of governor. Our state legislature upheld the redneck im age o f A rizona p o liti­ Dear Am I Crazy, cians e a rlie r th is m onth w hen it No you’re not. Everybody deals with death differently. Your grandmother was obviously an essential part of your fife : released budget proposals drastical­ ly below w hat the u n iv e rsitie s — one feet yon have been unable to replace. If it mates you requested, infuriating the Arizona feet better to talk Co her, then your boyfriend is going to have Board of Regents. to 1mm»*a deal wife i t Telling him stories about your grandmother, looking at “To arbitrarily do what they have done to the budget baffles me,” said liic a ra tf ^ iu ih r ttig A to t^ so im portant to you may make it easier for him to understand. Regent Don Ulrich, who later com­ P a t of die problem probably lies in his need feeatefor pared the legislature’s methods to wants In hr die one you n s to. Make himfeel need­ Joe Arpaio’s. ‘T his is punishing the ed. It may sound weird, but he may be a little jealous. educational system. This is incredi­ As far mental stability, most of the people in the world ble.” b tieteffl i ä K sort of afteriife. Why then Is it so strange for Regents blamed the decision by that a loved one fc listening or watching from the legislature not on political agen­ somewhere abcrWSp! das or interest group influence, but I sometimes find myself calling my grandparents’ old on plain ignorance. According to number when tough times arise, although I am sorely aware President Judy Gignac, despite the •t h a t | | | | | g i fact that extensive research and data Ifitfed s right, go with it, keep on talking, I am siae she’s is sen t to le g isla to rs to review MMflMt,'* ’A* . i msm before making their decision, very few even read the information. Dear Brian, “For the legislature not to support ¡ ¡ ¡ I I Tootsie Roll cen[ASU’s requested increase] makes ■fgr o fa Tootsie Pop 7 me w onder who w e’ve elected*” concluded Regent George Amos. tL& T ii* -¿-f: A sucker Indeed it does. But Former House S peaker Don A ldridge proved it DeerSod doesn’t matter who we’ve elected — an Arizona politician doesn’t need to be em ployed to dupe his con­ stituents. D espite the fact that he lost his position as speaker in 1998,. hé has raked in thousands of dollars in per diem salary. A ccording to H ouse so u rc es, A ld rid g e was wheeled into work by family mem­ bers, signed up for his $60-a-day allowance and then left for home. In 1998, fo rm e r Sen. Jam es H enderso n re p o rte d a claim fo r $13,142 to the Senate accounting offices. The cause? He claimed to have driven more than 40,000 miles in his pickup truck from his home to the state Capitol. This w asn’t the first time Henderson’s driving had raised eyebrows. He was investigat­ ed by the. attorney general’s office in 1992 for fraudulent mileage reports. However, attorney general investi­ gator P aul Noack called the false mileage a “misunderstanding” and subsequently dropped the charge. “W ell, If I drive 100 m iles an hour to 125 m iles an hour, I can m ake it in 3 1/2 h o u rs [to the Capitol] Henderson later rational­ ized. W ell, as long as w e’re in good hands. How does this happen? How do we elect people like this to represent our interests? W hile A rizonans are w orrying about real things like taxes, health care and criminals, our politicians are worrying about themselves. Our state senators are taking road trips, our state representatives are taking field trips and our legislature is so fa t rem o v ed from A riz o n a ’s demands it can’t even recognize the need for higher education. M ean w h ile, the c itiz e n s th at Aldridge, Henderson and company are supposed to represent are facing real problem s — problem s public -J lip io w ly though, fee last time I ventured to answer this • about scientific S p b o d . H as time I was equipped with a college education. If I beganby enfotmg ray frienfe wtwhappem tobean envi- ; trwteatmM resources major. What do Tootsie Roll Pops have to do with environmental resources? I don’t know, but I didn’t want to he the tally idiot wandering around campus furiously servants are supposed to solve. Admittedly, we don’t pay politi­ cians enough. W e w ouldn’t have nearly as much corruption if they were. But they’re also riot pushed hard enough. O ur p o litic ia n s should be like workers o f any other profession: If they don't meet the guidelines vot­ ers set fo rth , they get fired. If we don’t see a positive result, they no longer have a job. I t ’s about tim e A rizona p o liti­ cians begin living up to their title of “public servant.” It’s time to move on to legislation that helps, not hin­ ders, the people. Legislation that unites the people, rather than divides them. Take, for instance, Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano’s sidewalk ordinance. His decision to fíne people who sit or lay on the sidewalk on South Mill Av„enue leaves residents wondering if there’s nothing else for our elect­ ed officials to do. Is crime really so low that we don’t need our politi­ cians concentrating on its reduction? Can our public officials really find nothing meaningful to legislate and improve? The answer to solving our politi­ cal woes lies in our own attitudes tow ard th e system . As lo n g as Arizonans expect their elected offi­ cials to act unethically, they will. They know they can get away With it. The solution to Arizona’s politi­ cal stupidity will come Only when we decide to raise fee bar and force politicians to be representative. We just can’t sit on the sidewalk ■while we come up wife the. solution. Megan N ielsen is a freshm an studying journalism and philos­ ophy with a pre-law focus and can be reach ed at mockgod@ aol.com. xvs V tm w si VERE! tfs ALtAOSTWERE'. j|j| All Tootsie Pops have almost identical compositions inde- y peadent of their cctor and flavor. It just so happens 1 chose a red Pop; my accomplice, b lu e.® | ^ j g ||| ’l s MBr J We unwrapped several pops before finding flawless lollys. 1proceeded to place the Pep in my mouth-and then remove it, sucking on die way out, white my partner chose the «tore direct route— ticking one side vigorously. Get your mind out of the gutter— remember, we’re talking about lollipops here. H e ■ H was surprisingly quick iaet it toedk less than a half hour to comjdete the research, although it ■ make us quite nauseous. My fellow researcher’s method uimod'oul to be the more expedient of fee two. He hit Tootsie on H number 309. then switched «des and got 327 for a mean of 3UJUb. ■ N .« 8 Svilii s i:* f M ille n n iu m s Better a n Brian Our n ew w ek ly Brian Pot question -1 A SU k change my ì prohead, i aA c e columnist [answer any »lationships to iW herecanl ss, get my paper ewriter, etc.") • Questii itldbe 5 2 81-li -mailed] Hnutp2.am.edu What Doyou i hinkf The S a m Press welcomes and encourage* w ritten response from our ra d a rs on any topic A l­ letterà ftiust be typed, doublespaced and no longe r than two page* to be afejbla far puMcadoa Please indude your trinam e, ID number, dais standtog major (or riHu tion with the University) and phone num ber. Requests for anonymity'wSt bfe granted only With an appropriate reason Letters are subject to edking by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability, te tte r s containing obvious factual e rro rs will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use emait Gripe Line, Fax or our wabsite for response are able to do fp,by,pp^dkjg the same informaSan required for written pupes- W ebsite: E-m ail: http://www.statepress.com m aralop@ im ap2.asu.edu Fax: 965-8484 Mail: Gripe-Line: Letters to th e Editor Arizona S tate University 15 Matthews Center Tefripe, AZ 85287-1502 9f5^688 V o'Aft? Gammage opens door to A S U student artists and multicultural in nature and work that has the flavor of Americana,” Tauss said. Both T auss and H arrison said they Aspiring ASU student artists may have a chance to have their work exhibited at encourage students to submit proposals for Gammage Auditorium during Fall 1999 and the exhibit. “W e’ve had several individual ASU Spring 2000. students and a couple different otganizaASU1s Public Events Department, tions participate which manages ■■ in the past,” Tauss Gammage said. “W e love Auditorium, is 4 4 W e like to be able to that.” accepting pro­ Rita Rosenthal, present a fu ll spectrum posals for art student academic exhibitions o f a r t a t G am m age, sp ec ia list o f the from both ASU graduate program students and n o t j u s t p erfo rm in g in the ASU school other Arizona arts but visual arts as spf a rt, said she artists. thought the possi­ Bonnie Tauss, w ell b ility o f being the exhibit coor­ in clu d ed in th is d in ato r, said fu tu re ex h ib it work in any — D a v id H a r r is o n , a would be of inter­ medium will be sp o k e sm a n fo r th e p u b lic est to undergradu­ considered for affairs d epartañent ate students. She this program, as said undergradu­ long as the work ates often have a can be displayed hard time finding a vehicle to show their hanging on walls. “We like to be able to present a full work. “W e (art students) alw ays w ant an spectrum of art at Gammage, not just per­ forming arts but visual arts as well,” said opportunity to get our work out there,” said David Harrison, a spokesman for the Public Shana Tinsley, an ASU senior fibers major. “It’s hard to do that.” Events Department. Sara Hubbs, a senior painting major, said The purpose of the exhibit is to establish connections between different communi­ she feels the multicultural aspect of the exhi­ bition will appeal to art students and lead ties, Harrison said. “We strive to be m u lticu ltu ral,” he them to subm it proposals to the public events department since the theme is so added. i “ To tie in with the varied themes of tire broad. March 31 is the deadline to submit pro­ program material presented at Gammage, we are seeking work that is international posals. IZT.» 'a TWA* By A ndrea ). Balsky State Press ;;You've w o rked hard to get A t P r ic e w a te r h o u s e C o o p e r s , you will. At PricewaterhouseCoopers, we know that you're ready for something bigger; and we have just what you're looking for. “ »’ A ssu ra n ce & B u sin ess A dv isory S ervices O ¡ k ill*Top ^Research needs healthy fem ales ages 13-40from the gen eralpopu lation to p a rticip a te in a research stu dy. Call Hill Top Research at (602) 994*8502 3225 N. 75th Street, South Scottsdale $630 IN 4 DAYS to start seein g the results? ^ o f va g in a l Bacteria during m enstruation, fto(BWElWUs%00PERS B where y o u are. Isn't it time i In order to 6 etter understand the role perational & S ystems R isk M anagement Summer Internship ABAS campus interviews will be held on Monday, February 8th. ( . / MAKE A DIFFERENCE BY ASSISTING MEDICAL RESEARCH You can be part of a medical research study at MDS Harris and earn $ 6 3 0 IN 4 D A Y S. By participating, you can help improve the quality of life for people around the world. If you meet the criteria below, call us at 2 5 4 -P A Y S (7297) to learn more. Summer Internship and Full-Time OSRM campus interviews will be held on Tuesday, February !6th. Interested candidates must access our website and complete an online profile by January 31st, www.pwcglobal.com ' ■ men and women ■ 18 to 50 years old ■ smokers and nonsmokers ■ availability: four days Harris testing pays. Call 2 5 4 -P A Y S today! P ric e w a te rh o u se C o o p e rs is a n Affirmative A ction a n d Equal O p p o rtu n ity Employer. M D S H arris Together, W e're Making Lives Better e Í 999 P ricew aterhouseC oopers LLP. Pricew aterhouseC oopers refers id th e U .S . organization a t Pricew aterhtKiseC oopen, LLP and o th er m em bers o ith e w orldw ide Pricew aterhouseC oopers organization. 4639 South 36th Street, Phoenix www.mdsharris.com/rcrt/recru it.htm M M The car might cost too nmch. The insurance doesn't haue to ♦ Low down-payment ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Monthly paym ent plan ♦ Immediate Coverage ♦ Money-saving discounts ♦ Free rate quote CHOICE Call or visit your local GE1CO representative fo r car insurance: ( 6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 - 0 7 6 6 D I R E C T Government Employées.lnsjUrance Co • GE1CO General Insurance Co. GElCO indemnity Co. • GE1CO Casually Co. / Washington, DC 20076 \ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ n i A SU police reported the fo llo w in g inci­ dents Sunday: • A man riot affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for assault in Area 50. • A man not affiliated with ASU was con­ tacted at Hayden Hall, where he had sus­ tained an injury. He was treated in his room by Tempe Fire personnel and refused hospi­ tal treatment. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for underage posses­ sion of alcohol, driving with a suspended license and displaying license plates sus­ pended for financial responsibility at 900 S. Mill Ave. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for underage posses­ sion of alcohol. » A female student was arrested, cited and released for possession of drug parapherna­ lia at the Dixie Gammage courtyard. • A male student was arrested, cited and released for possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia at Palo Verde East. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for trespassing at the Memorial Union. He was turned over to the Tempe Police Department. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for trespassing at the Nelson Fine Arts Building. • A man was arrested on an outstanding w arrant from the C oconino County Sheriffs Office. He was not able to post bond and was booked. • A man not affiliated with ASU reported his car removed from Area 17. • A n ASU em ployee reported his car removed from Lot 3. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ m m dents Monday: • A than with an unknown address^was arrested Saturday at the J.C. Penney st.g§e at Arizona Mills Mall on charges of shoplift­ ing and providing false inform ation to police. Later, police discovered he had an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in M aricopa C ounty S uperior C ourt on charges of sexual misconduct with a minor. He was booked in the Tempe City JaiL1: • A Tempe man wqs arrfested Saturday at 300 E. University Drive on charges of aggravated DUI after an investigation revealed a license suspension for a previous DUI charge. He was booked in the Tempe City Jail. • A Phoenix man was arrested Saturday at 11-5 1/2 W. University Drive on charges of ] second degree burglary. He was booked in the Tempe City Jail. • A Phoenix man was arrested Sunday at El Parque Drive and South Mill Aventie on charges of armed robbery at a Circle- K store at 501 W. Guadalupe Road. He was booked in the Tempe City Jail. • A Tempe man was arrested Sunday at 800 S. Smith Road on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol and driving with a blood alcohol level of .10 or greater. Police said he hit a stationary vehicle, then refused a field sobriety test. He was booked in the Tempe City Jail, where he refused another sobriety test. • A Tempe man was arrested Sunday m the intersection of McClintock Drive and R&ral Road on charges of driving under the influ­ ence of alcohol, driving with a blood alco­ hol level of .10 or greater, underage drink­ ing and possession of marijuana. He, was booked in the Tempe City Jail. Reports compiled by S ta te P re ss reporter, Jayson Peters. Conductor Robert Shaw dies after stroke a much higher place in classical music than it did 50 or 60 years ago, I think, is reflected in the Kennedy Center Honor,” he said. “I’m not vain enough to think I did it. It’s recognition of an area of art.” He won 14 Grammy awards, and his latest album, with works from B arber, B artók and V aughan Williams, had been nominated for a 1999 Grammy for classical album. At the time of his death, he held the titles o f A tlanta Symphony music director emeritus and con­ ductor laureate. During his tenure there, he led the sym phony from a part-tim e am ateur ensemble of 60 players with an annual budget o f about $500,000 to a 93-member orchestra with a multimillion-dollar budget. He led it on tours across the United States, including a Carnegie Hall debut in 1971, and on a tour of Europe in 1988. The symphony and chorus, perform ed at P resident Carter’s inauguration in 1977. In the ’50s and ’60s, the Robert Shaw C horale made records for RCA Victor and toured extensively, including goodwill tours to Europe, the Middle East, South America, and in 1962, to 11 cities in the ATLANTA (AP) — R obert Shaw, who as leader of the Robert Shaw C horale and the A tlanta Symphony and Chorus raised the art of choral conducting to new heights, died early Monday. He was 82. Shaw died Monday morning at a hospital in New Haven, Conn., where he had been to See his son in a play at Yale. He had suffered a stroke Sunday night, said Meredith Harris, spokeswoman for the sym­ phony, Shaw first gained fame as con­ ductor of the Robert Shaw Chorale, which he founded in the late '40s. He also held posts at the San Diego Sym phony and C leveland Orchestra. He was appointed music d irector and con d u ctor o f the Atlanta Symphony in 1967, keeping the post until his retirement in 1988. When Shaw won one of the 1991 Kennedy C enter Honors, center chairm an Jam es D. W olfensohn called him “the dean of American choral conducting.” Shaw said at the time that he was pleased “because it’s public recog­ nition o f the em ergence o f the choral art.” “The fact that choral singing has Soviet Union. “When we went to Russia, we took 30 singers and 25 instrumen­ ta lists,” he recalled in a 1991 Associated Press interview. “We did Bach’s ’B Minor Mass.’ Russia was officially an atheist state and I remember the most extraordinary thing in Moscow. It was broadcast, including half an hour of applause at the end.” In recent years, Shaw’s annual choral workshops at Carnegie Hall drew directors and singers from across the nation. He conducted a performance of Handel’s Messiah at Carnegie Hall in April 1996, on the 250th anniversary of the work’s premiere. Last year, he was inducted into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame in Cincinnati. Shaw, a fourth-generation C alifornian, began singing in church choirs. His father was a min­ ister whose five children were bom in different towns during five pas­ torates. “All five had home piano study and all five harmonized when we were kids,” he says. Before he began the R obert Shaw Chorale, he organized a glee club for bandleader Fred Waring, which he later considered “the best voices ever assembled in the history of man.” He had met Waring when the bandleader heard the glee club, which Shaw conducted during his student days at Pomona College. Choruses began to flourish after W orld W ar II, Shaw said, when musicologists discovered the. rich choral literature of the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries and technology developed to publish and transmit' the scores. “When I was growing up, there were junior high and high school choruses and fraternity sings,” he said. “When I got to New York in 1938 the major large choruses were alumni clubs of men who’d left uni­ versities and got together to drink beer and sing on W ednesday nights.” At the time of his death, Shaw was in New Haven to sec a play on which his son, Thomas, had worked at Yale University, Harris said. The play, Endgam e, was Thomas Shaw’s senior acting and directing project. B esides Thom as, survivors include two other sons, Peter and John; a daughter, Johanna Shaw; a stepson; a sister; and a brother. LO N D O N $151* Paris M adrid Rome Tokyo Bangkok C airo Rio *Fansara«KfcinaIanfew* WE DO M&R£ THAN JUST AIRLINE TICKETS! . 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S ports Your free season pass $175* $204* $217* $317* $337* $370* $374* M issionary, 2 sons are buried after attack in India rC A M P U S n L C o r n e r -! 7 1 2 S . C o lleg e 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S t r e e t Deli 6 0 3 S . Mill A ve. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c r o s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n Everyday Low Price 2 4 ex p o su re DOUBLE PRINTS see store for details Color C-41 Process Best Price in Town B y Donna Bryson A ssociated Press BARIPADA, India -—As church bells rang out, lepers led a funeral procession in southeast India on Monday for die Baptist missionary and his two sons who were burned to death by mob over the weekend. The lepers were among hundreds who paid tribute to Graham Stuart Staines, who used to dispense drug treatment from a church-run leprosy clinic, preach occasionally and lead Bible-study camps. The procession ended on the edge of town in a Christian ceme­ tery w here S taines’ widow and' daughter were the first to throw handfuls of dry, pebbly earth, which landed with a dull thud on the three wooden coffins in a common grave. Police officers with guns slung over their shoulders were reminders of the string o f attacks against Christians in India in the past year. Staines and his two sons were' the first deaths in the recent violence. Staines, 10-year-old Philips and eight-year-old Timothy were killed Saturday by a mob that set fire to their jeep as they slept during a B ible study camp in rem ote Kheonjar district, 140 miles west of Baripada. The area is 660 miles southeast of New Delhi, the capital. Prim e M inister Atal B ihari Vajpayee has condemned the vio­ lence and Called for harsh, quick punishment for the attackers. Police said Monday they had arrested 49 Hindu militants in the killings. The suspects were linked to Bajrang Dal,-a group affiliated with the right-w ing Bharatiya Janata Party that governs India. The Bajrang Dal denied its activists were involved in the killings. However, it and affiliated Hindu militant groups have been accused in other recent attacks against Christians in India. Most of the attacks have occurred in the western state o f Gujarat, where at least 12 Christian churches and 24 Hindu temples have been damaged in the last month after radi­ cal Hindus protested that Christian missionaries were converting tribespcople to their faith. Christians make up 2 percent of India’s 1 billion population, which is mostly Hindu. Staines embraced Indian culture and was em braced in turn in Baripada. A sh o k Panda o f t h e A sso c ia te d P re ss The burned jeep In which Australian missionary G raham Stew art Staines and his two sons were burned to death is seen Saturday outside Baripada, India. A group of Hindu radicals in eastern India attacked the family Saturday m orning as they slept in their jeep after attending a Bible study. Most outsiders simply pass by this town of 130,000 people. But the 58year-old Staines settled here in a sim­ ple, concrete-floored house behind the Baripada Baptist Union Church. “The way he lived his life has been an inspiration to us all,” said Father Anand Pal, a Catholic priest. A R E YO U Quench your thirst w ith Gatorade Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week N O W The Quaker O ats Com pany is com ing to TOLLESON. Come join us an d be part of a team th a t strives for excellence. We need you to help us establish Simply the BEST MEXICAN FOOD in the Valley! ...Try us wad see why» Kids M enu Available If you possess these skills, we Want to meet you: FAMOUS GIAN T GO LD EN MARGARITAS • D e m o n s tra te d te a m b u ild in g skills • Ability to w o rk w ith d iv erse g ro u p s o f p e o p le • Effective w ritte n a n d oral c o m m u n ic a tio n skills 1/2 PR IC E D IN N E R • L ead ersh ip skills I in clu d e s: F le x p la n , P e n sio n , Sto ck B o n u s S a vin g s P lan (4 0 1 K ), g e n e ro u s v a ca tio n /h o lid a y s, h e a lth /d e n ta l in su ra n c e , S T D a n d MANUFACTURING POSITIONS Manufacturing Supervisor • Strong leadership skills and the ability to train and develop M anufacturing A sso cia te s.' • Bachelors degree in Business/Engineering or related field. • Knowledge of GM P, and understanding of product flow and processing. Maintenance M echanic • Team player with the ability to prioritize. • M echanical experience with high speed packaging equipment, excellent trouble-shooting techniques and skills, b asic electrical knowledge and skills with AC/D C circuits. P .L .C . electronic experience is helpful. Maintenance Supervisor • Ability to lead and develop M aintenance A ssociates. • B S or A S degree in M aintenance/Engineering (preferably m echanical, electrical or chem ical.) • 5 yea rs experience with a minimum of 3 yea rs supervisory experience in food/beverage manufacturing envitDnrnent. I Quality A ssurance Manager Accountant (2 positions) 1, Fixed Asset* Bachelors degree in Accounting or Finance with strong em phasis in Fixed A sse t Accounting. 2, Coat Accounting Knowledge of M aterial M anagem ent System , Bachelors degree in Accounting or Finance with strong em phasis in C o st Accounting. With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not Good With Any Other Offer » Expires 2-2-99 Mesa 2023 W. Guadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson &Guadalupe) 897-9411 Food Health, Safety, and Environmental (H SE) Supervisor • Team player with excellent team building skills. • Experience in O SH A com pliance, security, behavior-based safety, and worker’s com pensation. • B ach e lo rs degree (M asters preferred) in Occupational Safety and Health, or Environm ental M anagem ent (or in a related scientific or engineering discipline). • Experience in H S E m anagem ent, preferably in food/beverage processing operations. • Fully Bilingual (Spanish) preferred. 960 W. University \ 966-0852 see ruhiit other students olreodg know C u sto m ize P erso n a lize O rg a n ize Buy yoúr Class notes today 8Mpp«<: U8 Priority, UP8 2nd Day, or UPS Naoct Day {oil your c h u s n ates into one book year-ot-piMshce calendar Accounts PayabtafGenerel Ledger Coordinator • Team Player. • 2-3 years experience in Accounts Payabie/General Ledger or an A sso ciates degree in Accounting or Finance, com puter skills (W ord and Excel). • Fully Bilingual (Spanish) preferred. • Previous m anufacturing experience is preferred. Six-month M a s tw g jÉ p l|c | Electronically e n te r fo reseen events Labeled ta b page lor each class (8 maximum) Lined pages fo r handw ritten n otes clearly divided into 16 weeks Unique selection o f J F re e P-Cardsw ith purchase of I (Northeast Comer : University & Hardy) 4-7 p.m. Payroll Coordinator • T eam Player. • 2-3 y ea rs Payroll experience, com puter skills (Word and Excel). • Fully Bilingual (Spanish). • Previous manufacturing experience is preferred. l Tem po H ap p y H o u r B uffet M onday-Friday Fine Mexican I • Leader with excellent training skills to develop Quality A ssurance and M anufacturing A ssociates. • M icro experience, technical skills, experience in beverage/food manufacturing, S P C and overall plant operations. • B S degree in Food Scien ce or other technically related field. • Fully Bilingual (Spanish) ACCOUNTING POSITIONS • Innovative thinker with a focus on continuous improvement. • Ability to exercise sound judgm ent regarding business activities. • G ood analytical skills. • R esu lts oriented. • Understanding and knowledge of G A A P. • Previous m anufacturing experience helpful. • Proficient in E x ce l and W ord. • Fu lly Bilingual (Spanish) preferred. O U R 36"' Y E A R A ll y o u r fa v o r ite s + S p ecia l M en u Ite m s Fabulous F ajitas - Beef • Shrim p • Chicken our new G atorade facility in a team -based environm ent. D isc o v e r th e g ro w th o p p o rtu n itie s w ith in Q u a k e r. W e p ro v id e a c o m p e titiv e s a la ry a n d to p -ra n k e d b e n e fits p a ck a g e th a t /TV Thank yo u f o r y o u r patron age! A S U S tu d en ts, F aculty, and S ta ff |c o v e r designs Class Notes J Dozens dead, hundreds injured from earthquake in Colom bia By Jared Kotler A ssociated Press BOGOTA, Colombia —- An earthquake struck w estern C olom bia on M onday, killing at least 87 people and injuring near­ ly 850 as it toppled buildings across the country’s coffee-growing heartland, police and radio reported. The early afternoon quake had a prelimi­ nary magnitude of 6, according to the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo. Its‘epi­ center was located in western Valle del Cauca state, 140 miles from the capital, Bogota. The death and damage toll appeared to be highest in Armenia, Pereira and Calatea — three cities near the epicenter. “There’s no way to measure this crisis,” said the mayor of Armenia, Alvaro Pulido. Radio reports said several buildings on the city’s main plaza, including a bank and die police barracks, had collapsed. He said thousands of people were left homeless. In Armenia, there were at least 50 dead and more than 500 injured, according to the Colombian Red Cross. Radio reports put the death toll there as high as 100. One city hospital alone had received more than 500 injured, RCN radio reported. . Television footage showed residents frantically trying to extract victims trapped below the debris of a fallen building in the city, die capital of Quindio state. In Calarca, 90 miles west of Bogota, 30 people died and 250 were injured, RCN reported, citing local authorities. Several aftershocks were felt in the town but it was not clear if they added to the damage. In Pereira, a city of 550,000 people and capital o f Risaralda state, at least seven people died and 70 were injured, police said. Mayor Luis Alberto Duque declared a 12-hour curfew to aid rescue efforts and said the death toll was likely to rise. About 200 houses were damaged and some crumbled beneath die impact of the powerful temblor, police said. Television images from Pereira showed several demolished buildings, a taxi flat­ tened under fallen debris and the body of a woman trapped under the rubble. O ffices and apartm ents rattled and swayed in Bogota, where the quake was felt for about 15 seconds. Landslides caused by the earthquake blocked access to some rural areas affected by the quake. President Andres Pastrana delayed a trip to Europe and was en route by helicopter from the capital to Pereira, his office said. The earthquake was felt in most of the country, but the majority of the victims and damages were concentrated in 17 munici­ palities. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited bv Trade Michel Jalie ACROSS 1 5 36 37 38 Fu n n y d e n y T a k e s the tab Le m o n cb a t “T h e Sto ry of — H” In — of T racto rfecto r M assa ch u se tts w itch town A nother 5 Dow n M ah-jongg p iece *— Pinafore” M ahogany-coated can in e Abom inated Fo llow er H oly La d y in w aiting? C e n t u p la n t s N otedA tlantic c ra sse r Pappyts turndow n Paoio’s pelf Ista n ifin the 39 40 41 42 43 45 46 47 48 53 56 57 58 60 61 62 63 64 65 G iv e th e e y e PM Sf i i w hole C o n n o isse u r A ctor H ow ard D a — Lively Kind of partner Flight path H e w a s big in “Big” Selkirk soup G u n site M arathoner’s sound C o m p o ser S a tie M s. O yl Fem . suffix B eau t Sh in y black Point of departure P ip e part B ottom less pit 6 10 14 15 16 17 18 10 20 21 24 26 27 29 34 35 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 22 23 25 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 35 38 s s a aA P h o en ician s, H ebrew s, etc. Tartan S n o b s put them on “You betch al” L iv e s (on) C o m ic’s routine G e t out Fa sh io n m ag Lo ok the wrong w ay ? C h e ck e r hu e 1 K ett of the co m ics C o d e w o rd ? it b e a ts ketchup Not from around h ere C o p ied P rivy to C oven try clim ber R ound o f a p p lau se G iv e o n e’s w ord D o roadw ork Sch o o lb ag s 39 Babe’s word? 2 3 4 6 5 7 Experience ASU in a deep and digital way http://www.stetepress.corn J d 24 ■ 25 52 54 55 59 H O A 31 a N H3 A 0 0 Uy 1 y N 1 yH 9 8 V U S a. 0 a a H 3 9 a T a Xy H A a V d 3 s N V a8 1 1 i y m 8 S H H w 3' T y S a1 aaV s 1 Ma .1 T ick off C u rrier’s partner Authors Short retriever? 11 12 13 31 32 33 54 55 té 1 22 1 23 26 i 28 t | 30 29 ¡d » m m 37 40 ■ 44 43 49 U 38 36 d 35 ■ 39 M 41 ■ ■ 50 51 52 42 45 47 53 ü 58 56 57 SI ci 19 T ■ 59 62 65 63 1 64 1 1 B y A r th u r S . V e rd esca © 1999 L o s A ngeles T im e s S y n d ic ate ' 0 a u 1 10 ÍÉ Í 21 34 60 1 « '< 1 20 48 a 1. 17 46 DO W N 1 A ttack with the tongue 2 W ax-coated ch e e se 3 Short-legged barker 4 — d e F ra n ce n 15 14 27 n 4 2 P o rtug u ese M rs. 44 “W h a fs the — ? ” 4 5 C o vered a lap 4 7 N o n sen se 4 8 Flew 4 9 C e n so r of Rom e 50 Not fooled 51 W ine quality 41 C le o w ooer 1 A .a y A V u 1 i 0 1 n a 1 a d 1 H HA 0 u a 8 % N V H u O M N 3 S a 3 V“A i . i s N a A a 1 D 0 S O « y. MV N V X N 1; d. 8 8 a HL s 1 H a 1 a H a i l a 8. H S 1 a..'t 1 a * V H y a T Xy n a 1 T i a a *1 s Ay d N 1 /2 6 /9 9 •_1__ l l l l B B M i l S tatep ress INVITE YOUANDAGUESTTOASPECIALADVANCE SCREENING XJEViH COSTNER ROBIN WR3GHT PENN PAUL NEWMAN MESSAGE IN A BO TTLE A s t o r y o f lo v e l o s t a n d fo iin d . IN MANY COMPANIES It Takes years to prove you're Management Material... WE LLGIVE YOU 10 WEEKS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26 th • 7:30 P.M. H arkins A r iz o n a M B I s A****^ Hi 24 5 0 0 0 A rizo n a M m s C ircle (HOand theSuperstitionFwy) Tem pe BZO-OZOO COMETOTHESTATEPRESSOFFICES INTHEBASEMENTOFMATTHEWSCENTER(RM35) TORECEIVECOMPUMENTARYPASSESTO'MESSAGEINABOTTLE" ANDSUBMITYOURVALENTINE'SDAYPERSONALS! H m ài ggy» Ten tveefe may not seem like much time to prove you're capable o f being a leader. But if you're tough, sm art and determined, ten weeks and d lot o f fas hard w ork could make you an Officer o f Marines. And Officer Candidates l i ; School (0C5J is where you'll get the chance to prove you've gotw h a t it takes to leada life full o f excitement, full o f challenge, full o f honor. Anyone can say i th e/ve got w hat it takes to b e a leader, w e'll give you ten w eeksto prove it. ' M arines I k A s Ik M IliiU t is M \ R I N I O I T I Ç ER jfy o u think you've got what it takes to earn the title “M a in e Officer , see GySgt Zigabarra next Tuesday and Wednesday at the Fountain, or call (602) 257-0310. U.S. missiles strike southern Iraq By Vijay Joshi A ssociated Press In al-Jumhuriya, four homes were com­ pletely destroyed and six damaged, including BASRA, Iraq — U.S. missiles slammed Lufti Swadi’s house. The blast ripped the into residential -neighborhoods in southern front door off the 28-year-old baker’s home, Iraq on Monday, demolishing sturdy, stone­ shattered parts of the walls and scattered the walled homes as they killed at least 11 peo­ furniture. In the village of Abu al-Khaseeb, four ple, Iraqi officials said. U.S. officials said its Air Force and Navy houses were destroyed and another four dam­ jets fired at air defense systems in response aged. Iraqi officials were still assessing dam­ to “threats by anti-aircraft artillery fire” and age in the other civilian area that was struck. Hamash said there were no military instal­ by four Iraqi warplanes flying south of the 33rd parallel in violation of the no-flight ban. lations in the areas that were hit “There is not even a police station there, Pentagon officials said ft was likely that U.S. jets targeting die Iraqi air defense instal­ let alone a military installation,” he said. lations misfired and that at least two missiles “The United States claims to b e a humanitar­ may have resulted in civilian deaths in and ian nation but they are enemies of that con­ around the city of Basra. Spokesman Navy cept” At the al-Jumhouri hospital in Basra, Capt. Michael Doubleday said U.S. officials Marwa Ali, 6, lay on a hospital bed swathed were “still assessing the site damage.” The missiles hit five areas of southern in a pink blanket. Dried blood was caked on Iraq, including the w orking-class al- her nostrils. She was about to go to school to Jumhuriya neighborhood on the outskirts of take an exam when the missile struck, her Basra, Iraqi officials said. Several homes in sister Zeinab, 25, said. “It began with a big bang,” said Zeinab that neighborhood were destroyed, their roofs caved in. Broken dishes and kitchen Ali, who was slightly injured with cuts and utensils were strewn among the rubble. bruises. “I could see my house coming down Civilians worked late into the night to clean on us. There was dust all over.” Marwa suffered multiple wounds to the the debris from the morning strike. Ahmed Ibrahim Hamash, the governor of scalp and a deep knee injury. Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz con­ Basra, said two aircraft fired five missiles demned the attack and said the United States that killed 11 people and injured 59. The missiles struck in the morning and and its allies would be held responsible. His Hamash said most of the casualties were remarks were reported by the official Iraqi women, children or the elderly because many News Agency. Basra, 330 miles south of Baghdad, is men had already left for work. The missiles hit three civilian areas in or within the southern “no-fly” zone that the near Basra, as well as a site near the airport United States and its allies set up after the 1991 Gulf War to protect Shiite Muslims and another near the Rumeilah oil fields. An engineer at the oil field was reported who rose up against the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. injured in the attacks. In the northern no-fly zone Monday, U.S. Iraqi officials took reporters to the alJumhouri hospital, one of the city’s two main aircraft attacked three separate Iraqi anti-air­ hospitals. Several injured children and craft batteries, U.S. officials said. They said women were at the hospital. Iraqi officials the aircraft fired missiles and dropped bombs after Iraq targeted or fired on the waiplanes. said they had been wounded in the strikes. 1 9 9 9 H O M ECO M IN G DIRECTO R FO R A S A S U www.asu.edu/uasu Applications can be picked up at ASASU offices in the MU, 3rd floor. DEADLINE: M onday, Feb* 1 TheFu nnies i m m um m . s i ?■s s i i s : •s ■ i m. -,s s i •M l S — T rials & T ribulations fr & k l SECOND WEEK OF COLLEGE AND PM ALREADY SWAMPED WITH HOMEWORK/ B y Jo n a t h a n In g e THF PILE JUST GETS BIGGER AND BIGGER BY THE HOUR. WHY CAN'T I G ET THIS STUFF DONE/? y B ru ce Cr o sby NEVERMIND. YOU GOT HOMEWORK — HEY, ROUND, TWO CHICKS DOWN THE HALL ARE PLAYING DRVNKEN STRIP POKER. U/ANNA COME? I CAN DO IT TOMORROW cla m Bigger T han H uge B (Í B y B r ia n B a l c h u m a s / l! 'p S o rry i! r , U i 1 I a cce p t G h ,: 4 ^i*<1r a certHo-V = 3 U ood 5555 RloW u WV y X ^oftnok do wi’Vh all • ft4 K i i | hooicer4 b\oo¿ Z£ ' -f©u«<Ì ri -1 -------- &w*!| «»«i fJool >vlc? ‘X .i> S-'r oo^wA-j CK h ^ a e ^h*l/ok^cWrpifip1 » .rre O V S erling U. B y C a r l o s Ra m ir e z Jo&H'.l! oh «Y oot), Jos« ? W H EN TXT» 1 0 U c o rte fe ftC X II 1 T H o u w r ... l ?©ONT> ft tOWi TO C.CP6 utyrft nH l o s s ; louU. JUST SMAVPED U K t ft PRftl>«L£ U T T i e TU)k0-, 'fcvort'T ir? DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? • CARTOONIST APPLICATIONS ARE BEING ACCEPTED AT THE STATE PR ESS IN THE BASEMENT OF THE MATTHEWS CENTER DUPING REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS. Does A r iz o n a zL H a b it a t B y Bruce C B»we? go me sktpv f So Ya> Last Ywt Job, Mow YOO'ltE Because -xr!s not like i *m Himabl sujcsm - BUT WITH all You£ MlLUoteS O F f A te s, SO K E V , KAUF of MlUloMOte HOOKEfS áOTTEÑ V ...i H x/üT TAWsm. P ÍC U T V Fece sex? 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BO OK YOUR T I C K E T S O N - L I N E : www.statravel.com it r in g AS U freshman forward and Canadian import Theresa Jantzen hasn't had any trouble adjusting to the Valley o f the Sun ______________________ j: -r. • , St a te fta s s The city o f M edicine Hat ispeacefM fty tucked away in southeastern Alberta, along & South Saskatchewan River. The serene com­ munity o f 46,000 mostly maksstheir livings as fanners, ranchers or tradenffin the summers, the high temperature can climb to around 75 ¿degrees IZ jjjifj, gal Meanwhile, 1,430 miles soutfethe bustling megalopolis of Phoenix is, with a metropolitan population of two and a half million, one of the United States’ fastest-growing cities. is often referred to as~me'iiwlBtf^i|ig livable J city, the temperaiure in July can often approach a skin-melting 12 0 degrees. . .,.j|o it goe&s tiM o u t T^ihresa .« n t w S f f S o grew apS^m Medicine Hat and established herselfas one of theprovince’s best prep female players ever; was fating more of an adjustment process than most col­ lege freshmen when she decided feljring her jaw-dropping play, much needed height and an infectiously friendly persona to the ASU women’s basketball team this fall. * But Jantzen has m et this,-— as riRjflMl ghajlengepre — wife the ^ tfe l^ ie so ly e th at sbe shoWs while ¿shot, :gifbbihg‘rarebojpi ;:or lead­ ing her team to ■■ a vk^my: jfemg it « o n .' "■ “I think e v e ry ! fre sh m a n . goes through a huge \ ’ chimge * ASU bead coach ’ChariB Thorne sapi',;..'^&ht ■** ‘4 |ie re s a ¡knowjrf ypu.'4 & * , i “1have a lot of goals, and I'm going to work - Jantzen 'said th e contrasfing clim ates h S '® hard tin achieve my goals,” Janbeen added. *T b ee n th e o n ly .significant -d iffe re n c e ,sh e has want it and how hard l work. (I’ll) just keep working “I’d never experienced any­ \ \§ \& •“ - 'i f thing that hot b e fo re ,| she The kummar b etseen *« recalled about hef m s y ||g | a high s ij|J p f v ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ® l b e n i x area. athlete's junior “(When) my parent^ilp? .apdl' me, fcwas a little c p n s iíte r^ tó b e É e L t i n t . B ut I lovfc it ¡¿¡¡it. ffirifltiitfrfi V m o s t. g r u w j o l i ’ determ ining the ath­ lete’s fu tu re ilgh^iQition. F o r » Jantzen, feat summer was filled with f e s ^ í pointment as a result of an injured ankle that scared away tobliB programs such as Stanford rodjpd D ' .'al .É f not hapfesic k « lM made somapi ■- So, in some respects; Jantzen chosié fÁSil goodfnends and everything M because other, m orf traditioji-bound teams ihfed away from a potential ;healilfjpsk while '■ '^ 3 ^ g O o f e ^ | | f TlJmer Thome |c fc k w N m ■ S h e G o t G am e But according to Jantzen, ASU had several Thanks to a career feat sa\£mS& average 29,5 points' per g a m § ||P i other enticing elements H u g h , -:V - . :"“First of all, I really senior, hketheccacheshere.’’ f during her tfeil* s m $ * ^ P ife a l|É . JuriK^ year, and *12.7 rebounds b e l i ^ y ^ d l « ^ t * |||É had to say. And álfth e during her career I at Mediifefe H atk l lik e th e coaches \ players are knew I could dgjpe in % h School -m ere. I r e a llv b e l k v E d w h a t bére a n ^ n i ^ a,n ■(which she led to, impact if two straight Also, I w ilte d to go provincial cham p! here to' a big e w e g e íÉS| onship games), a n d m ake'an p itp a c t ilJ was weftljf e w fc l a » Jantzen’s personal tro­ h ad a good feeling phy case is fai from about this plaitó,“ empty: she was tinned 3|M JjO admit the league's MVP tM s WeU \ she .th o u g h t about (twice), Miss Alberta a good flaying at a Canadian Basketball (twice) college. She knew the and the Medidml; coaches of the Hat High !j||gk>l JU niversity of Female Edm onton, the fee Y e ^ ^ tC iU b r power forward University of Calgary y e a r ,^ __________ and the University of In:lsSf;.ftfSt:', llp f R egina, and her game in 9 Sub'*‘P *w' Devil u p ^ ^ p i, Nov. 5 against a father, Mark, played a year at the University of traveling t p ^ 'f t Q g m ^ Cpe, the 6- Saskatchewan. So the o pportunity w as there; But for foot-3 Jantzen started and. scored 13 points ai^P^ f e ed seven boards Jantzen, it just didn't add up to stay at home. “ I w o u ld ’ve loved to have played in despite playing only 15 minutes due to a sore left foot. That foot kept her out of Canada,’’ she said. “T here’s a lot o f good action until Jan. 4, when she returned to coaches and teams up there. But 1 couldn’t turn down fee opportunity to come play Div(ision)action against UCLA. Twelve days later, in TuCSpn against arch- I basketball at a Pac-10 schools % * Tumer'Th<»ne, for one, feiife s te biade fe®1 rival UofA, Jantzen had her best game of her young career, posting season-highs in points right choice. Her “She’s good enough to play anywhere in the (12), rebounds (11) and ml country,” she said. “We were a building program, point and rebound totals le not one feat was already established, After the game, in ^ ^ i- ^ te & k iij liked feat, though. I don’t think she | | ^ glow of her best i up so much in feat it had to be topd id w as n itp it evils let the “I think feat she iust„knew^ ^ m » jj|| the fact^ ¡■to.-wm;4. and begin to really live LIFE. * Pan *4-95 New York '4.25 VITAL Impact is a place to find out more about living life. Sundays at 11:15am and T u e s d a y s at 7:30pm. ComeExperience TheMma't Tradition 106 E . U n iv ersity D r. FREE 1 block East o f Mill Ave. DAYTIME on University CAMPUS D ELIVERY « h $10 MinimumDelivery 894-MAMA VITAL I m p a c t ! C o l l e g e -A g e M i n i s t r i e s G r a c e C ommunity C h u r ch Univergittf.Df. 1200 E. S o u t h e r n A v e .. T e m p e 'Mama Knows Best ( b e t w e e n R u r a l & Mc C l i n t o c k ) C h e c k o u t o u r w e b s i t ■W W W . V I T A L I M P A C T . O R G •n I m-m ek 4»' JL m, ' -•■h' e ! Call u s at 894-2201. ext. 205 Cardinal gaining momentum Squealing deals. Get wows tedaf. Can't find one? G et yours at Student M edia in Matthews Center basem ent, just nortt Hayden Library. By Nick Piecoro __________________________________________ S t a t e P r ess nr?vH IPEALS UofA ;r : o |g fl It was starting to look like UofA was one of the top teams in the country — a team capable of winning even when everyone isn’t playing their best But the Cats have played five straight games decided by two points or less and have lost two of them. They survived against Oregon, ASU and Washington, but lost to New Mexico and Oregon State on Saturday. ASU . Eddie House is again carrying this team. Forwards Bobby Lazor and Mike Batiste both had rough trips to Oregon, they combined fpr 20 points in both games, which is about half of what they usually score. The upcoming games against Cal and No. 3 Stanford are a good chance for the Sun Devils to prove that they belong in the upper half of the conference, C al' Sitting at 2-4 going into Saturday’s game against Washington State, the Bears desper­ ately needed a win. They got it, 75-68, to creep back into middle half of the conference. Cal’s last non-conference game, a 78-71 upset of then-No. 9 North Carolina, looked to be a sign of things to come for the Bears, but they’re now 3-4 in the conference. Oregon So far, the Ducks are the conference’s biggest disappointment. Oregon went 8-1 in the non-conference schedule before losing six conference games. Four of those Pac-10 losses came at home by a combined nine points and their only conference wins came against Washington State (in three overtimes) and Cal. Oregon State The Beavers snapped a 17-game losing streak against UofA with Saturday’s 60-59 win in Corvallis. That brings their home record to 9-0 this season, but they’ve still struggled on the road, most recently in losses to Washington and Washington State on Ian. 14 and 16. Stanford Off to their best conference start ever at 7-0, Stanford is looking more and more unstop­ pable. The Cardinal have won 13 straight overall and have all five starters averaging in double-figures. Thé" most recent victim was Washington, who actually held a five-point lead at halftime. But Stanford pulled out a 67-60 victory, led by Mark Madsen, who had 20 oints aand nine rebounds. points UCLA After losing by 13 to Stanford on Jan. 16, UCLA has won their last two, against USC and No. 24 Louisville, by a combined 30 points. USC . The Trojans have lost four in a row and die light at the end of the tunnel isn’t much brighter. They’ll play five of their next seven games on the road, including games against Cal, Stanford and UCLA. They’ve already lost to those three teams at home by an average of 16 points. Washington Senior center Todd MacCulloch, who has recorded four straight double-doubles, is aver­ aging 18.4 points (3rd in Pac-10), 11.2 rebounds (1st) and 1.71 blocks (1st) per game, but the Huskies are still only 3-4 in the conference. Washington State Washington State, who suffered a 49-point loss to Stanford on Thursday, has a chance to turn its season around with four straight games at home, where the Cougars are 4*1.- ASASU Safety Escort Service Would Like to Thank Their Dedicated Volunteers for Their Tireless Service in the Fall Semester of 199# Cliff Allen Kelly Anderson Ryan Barrett Amanda Blaska Aaron Blau Lisa Britten Jesus Cardiel Andrea Cam era Joseph Cassidy Andy Cheng LayChua Chris Cootes Greg Coach John Dais Patrick Destal Mike Dorsey Guiseppc Ferrara Jason Fry Brian Gustaveson Peter Hagen Elizabeth Harvey Toby Hayes GabrieBe Helminslri Brian Johnson Jess Johnson Seth Kriz Patrick Lai Phong Le Tifiurie Lewis Mike Liburdi Kristjan Lindal Renata Lux-Hoxsie Elizabeth Maas Nick Marshall Benicia Martin-Sorge Aaron McDade 1 Josh Meindeitsma Adrian Mendie Jason Oberheidc Brandon Otsodo' Sally Palmer Kevin Partusch Hannah Podlevsky Rebecca Powell K evnQ uigley Christine Kristen Remus Chris Rionx Mike Rodgers Summer Rodriguez Brooke Sargeint Alan Schornnan Chris Smith Pei-Fung Sun Kate Toth Eric Tucker Dana Varner Arme Weigel Jennifer Wheelwright Tim Wiggins April Williams Jason Wilson Sally Woher NEW RELEASES ON Foxy Brown • China Doll $13.99! Fun Lovin’ Criminals • 100% Columbian $13.99 ; Ani DiFranco • Up Up Up Up Up $13.99 COM E G ET F R E E STU FF! SUM AT H O O D L U M S p q E m v MORE HITS ON SA LE TOO! A ttO O W W O « W M N T I g ARIZONA «TATI UMVBmiTY www4tfu.edu/asasu new We hope to see all of you again this semester! Interested in joining the fun for two hours a week? Call 96S-1515 or come by our office in the MO first floor. We need YOU! used m u s ic Located in the lower level of the Memorial Union 7 2 7 • USED Sale ends n ext M onday Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact thp Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ‘rrrrrrrrm Mara Trivia... Tigers have stripped skis, not just stripped fur. APARTMENTS HOMES FOR RENT I BDR APT. Minutes from ASU. New carpet, ceramic tile, full kitchen, outside storage. $45(Vmo. 303-6412. 3BD/2BA, 3.5 miles to ASU, 1 car carport, fenced yard, a/c, $800/mo. Jane, Owner/Agent. 831-9024. , .* EL DIABLO Apts. NE comer of Apache/McClintock, quiet lux­ ury living, lbd $500/mo, 2bd $620/mo. 921-0699. 4BD HOUSE w/ pool. Fam. rm, living rm, & b o n u srm . All app. At Broadway & McClinNEAR ASU, 5th St./ Priest. * tpek. Call 432-3636 Large 1 BR apt. $365/mp. + dep. 996-5419. DUPLEX HOUSE in old TempeQiiaint old adobe. 2bd, fenced RIVER RUN Apts. 1 mi. from yard, trees, quiet and secluded. • Campus. Spacious 1bdr, pool$550/ma 967-600& * side avail, now; $525 mo, 1st month free! Hurryf 1065 W 1st LG HOME for lse, 1700 sq ft+, st., Tempe. For appointment 4br/2ba, garage, nice, by ASU, call 968-2042. $1300 4 1st, sec, cred. refs. HOMES FOR Avail 2/1. 359-4828 cell or 893-2784 lv msg for call back. RENT ANNOyNC|M BiT| GET A Glimpse of India. Come to the Jan. 30 cultural program at Camelback H.S. and experi­ ence dance, drama, music and an authentic Indian ' homecooked meal. All proceeds ben­ efit Asha-AZ. Tickets $15. For tickets & more info 'Call 92 I8706or9664363. www.asha-net.org OMEGA PHI Alpha national service sorority info meetings Jan. 26, 7:30pm in the MU, rm 208E (Kaibab) & Jan. 27, 7:30pm in the MU, rm 206A (Plata). SAMURAI SAM'S Teriyaki Grill is having a 1-yr celebra­ tion this Thu., Jan. 28. Every­ thing will be half .off! plus lots of giveaways. We look forward to seeing you. APARTMENTS Boring?? T ire d of n o is y , lo u d n e ig h b o r s ? We o ffe r q u iet liv in g . 1/2 b lo c k from campus. Beautifully furnished. Huge 1 bed­ room. 1 bath apartments. All bills paid. Cable T.V. ready, heated pool, and sp acio u s laundry fa c ili­ ties. Friendly courteous m anag em ent. S to p by | today!!! #1 4BD / 2Ba. 5 min. bike to caqipus, huge house, w/d, dish­ washer, fireplace, cov’d patio. 808-3697. C la ss ifie d s W O RKI HELP WANTEDGENERAL TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT 1BEDROOM CONDO, all appl incl w/d, free H 20/trash, pool/jac, evd pkg, $495/mo. Call Jeff893-1651. 4 BLOCKS ASU- Large 2 bd in fourplex, new carpet and paintcarport- air pond. $495/mo. 967-6000. PAPAGO PARK 3bd/2ba condos avail, in Feb. All applianc­ es, very large. Call 432-3636. 2 BLKS TO ASU, 2bdr, 1 ba TH, $700/ino, Jane, owner/agent, 831-9024. ASU- 3/3 QUESTA Vida, 21 story, all appl incl w/d, avail now. $1,175. Joel 967-6205 2BDR QUESTA Vida $800; 2BDR Papago Park $850. Bob Bullock Realty Exec. 998-2992 CONDO 4 rent 3bd/2bk, 2 nii walk. Univ. Shadows. $800/mo. 966-8398. After 4pm C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 ^ 3 5 HERMOSA PLACE, pool, w/d, a/c. Near ASU. 2bd/2ba, $675/ mo; 3bd/2ba, $865.966-0987 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Security Officers 1 BLOCK to ASU, 2br/2ba, w/d, refrig, fenced, no pets, $800/mo. 831-9024 Jane O/A 3/2 NEW Paint & crpt Close to ASU. $950/mo $1000 SD 712 W 12th St, 804-7458 avail 2/1 FLEX SC H ED U LES-F T APT WE RENT HOMES! STUDENTS W ELCOME! BEAUTIFUL TEM PE 3BD/2BA, 3.5 mi to ASU, 1 car carport, fenced yd, a/c, $800/mb. Jane, O/A. 831-9024. HOMES 1-5+ BR, SOME W/ PO OLS $595-$1695 J& T 446-RENT C la ssified s FËM RMMTE wanted, n/s, 2bd/2ba, a/c,- laundry, Close to ASU: $352/mo. Nice place to live. Call 968-3428 HELP WANTEDGENERAL PAPAGO PARK Village furh'd, 2bd, own bath, $40 mo. F NS pref. 759-6216 , . RMMTS TO share newly rem deled 4bd, 3.5ba house pool. in. Scotts next to SC $325/mo + util. No dep* av now. Call 590-8048. Thlmshould bo your md Call 965-6735 HELP WANTEDGENERAL C ity o f Scottsdale Com m unity M aintenance and R ecreation D ivistoli. Models - Fimilt print/ promo models <|M 18-35. Mik* top 8$ modelle) P/T. Ne exp. rt). Costiej it FREE! Don’t mitt tbit opportunity. Cettii) info 425-5834. Preboard Screeners HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARINt W A N TED : and Must be 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass background check. We offer low cost Medical Dental, Vision, Uniforms supplied & maintained. COACHES) & OFFICIALS Boys & Gilts B a sk etb all $7.30 - $9. 75 p e r h o u r For application information contact the • : 'City of Scottsdale. Applications will be accepted j until Monday, February 1,1999. 9 9 4 -7 6 4 2 Apply at: Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. 627 South 48th St. #105 Tempe 966-0141 Im agine AHahlng 9 3 5 -6 7 3 5 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS QUADRANGLES VILLAGE APARTMENTS Tm illE^ TH E^ ym TN EY APARTMENTS See Why People Prefer O u r Pait-Tiine Shifts! I SU M M ER STO R A G E PROGRAM ! M CI WORLDCOM is n ow hiring part-tim e O utbound T elesales R epresentatives. If y o u are a M gh-eneigy, career-oriented individual w ho w ants to earn g reat m oney, M CI WORLDCOM Is looking for you! W e need Sa le s Representatives to handle Incom ing and outgoing calls a t our Phoenix location. Sa le s exp erien ce is preferred but not required: STUDIO, ONE BEDROOM6 TWO BB>R< • VWVLKING DISTANCE TO ASU AND DOWNTOWN TEMPE • SAVE ON UTILITIES - HOT WATER INCLUDED • . ALARM SYSTEM AVAILABLE • PRIVATE BALCONY/PATIO • i POOLS (1 HEATED) • BARIEQUE AREAS • CEILING FANS ■ CUSTOM VERTICAL/M INI BLINDS • EUROPEAN CABINETRY • LARGE STORAGE AREAS 40 • Excellent Ben efits ■ Tuition Reim bursem ent * lK and Stoch Options * Unlimited Career * Opportunities • Outstanding Bonus Plans • C o m e in to o u r o ffice read y to a p p ly an d In te rv ie w : 1801 E . C am e lb ack R o ad , S u ite 201 (C o lo n n a d e P laza) For mòre information, call our JOBUNE at (602) 5 3 0 -6 4 5 9 M C I WORLDCOM Is an eq u al o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r. - QUADRAN6LES VILLAGE APARTMENTS 2 ' < l ■ --¿I U S B EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE 1SMPE. ARIZONA SS1R1 6 0 2 .9 6 8 .8 1 1 8 T e r r a c e R oad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S . T e r r a c e Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT = 1s J (fodftty ieufice fltiM jm ekt ptfax. to {m~.. in N O W HIRING HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL TUITION REIM BURSEM ENT SEMI-ANNUAL M ERIT REVIEW S Get a good, dose look at the NEW advantages of joining The FACS Group, Inc. FAGS provides financial, credit, and administrative sendees to Federated Department Stores, Inc,, including Macy’s and Bloomingdale's. Full and part-time opportunities are currently available in the following areas: - *' ^uU and time pofitioHf Mattoide fot* tkote witk tjooò comm ieatioHt (kills to woiJt ta let yourself be drawn to Chase and see w hy w e are the nployer of choice in Tempe! $ 8 AND $9/HS in person, f fonday-Friday, 8:3Qam -4:00pm Or l your resum e to: Chase Caidm em ber Services, B o W . University Drive, Tempe, A Z 85281. Jobline: 02) 902-6000. *iso Apply on-line at: www.chase.com * * R f i w • Part tim e REFERRALBONUS!!! • FU LL B EN EFIT PACKAGE • 2 n Ê jb b • FULLUE0ÍCAL BENEFIT'S • Ftedbte Sehsdul« |§ é m tm im a .' i | • Excellent starting salary *Paw HoSdays, Sick Pay *.1 • MedicalfDental Insurance I y • after 90 days Advancement opportunities ■'Interested cabdtdates can apply Si ÍÜp b I Mill ] Superstition Fwy. JM rW fg P h flW ^ p ijp ^ 8 K I n s tr u c t io n a l D e s ig n A n a ly st opportunities available s are an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative on Em ployer M/F/D/V. 1 Jo ining u s o n a F T o r F T b a s is , th e se outgoing indi­ vid u a ls wiH h an d le inbound s a le s c a lls on an easy-to u se W in d o w s-b a se d co m p u te r sy ste m a t o u r Phoenix & Scottsdale C a ll C e n te rs. Id e a l C andi­ d a te s m ust h ave a p ro fessio n a l te le p h o n e m ariner: ’ c le a r sp e a k in g v o ice & b e a b le to co n vert inbound c a lls in to s a le s u sin g e x c e lle n t c u sto m e r s e rv ic e /sa le s a b ilitie s. S u c c e s s fu l co m p letio n o f a (p aid ) S a le s R e p train ing program w ill b e e sse n tia l. Job testait j ...c h o o s e Choice H otels International - th e w o rld 's #1 rated fra n ch ise r in th e lo d g in g industry! R e p re se n tin g m ore than 4 ,0 0 0 h o te ls in 3 3 co u n ­ trie s, o u r exp anding organ ization s e e k s th e follow ing re su lts-o rie n te d in d ivid u als to m ake an im m ediate im p act: Reservations Sales Reps N e w J o b • Stock option eligibility Ffoil and part-time positions - from Customer Servian cxnunt Reps, and Fraud Rep* (bilingual EnjJisfVSpantsh | a plus), to Mail Openers, Data Entry and Goledions. ;g 9am-6pEnatourTempe Call Center : Baseline C o n su ltin g /a ssistin g in th e d evelo pm ent & refine­ m ent o f in stru ctio n al m aterials fo r P ro p e rty S y ste m s D ep t, em p lo yees, d u tie s in clu d e d e sig n in g co u rse w ork, training m aterials, In te rfa ce d o cu m en tatio n & stu d e n t co lla te ra l. M ust b e an effe ctive com m un ica­ tor w ith a t le a st 2 -3 y e a rs o f In stru ctio n al D esig n e xp e rie n ce, stro n g pro blem -so lving s k ills & a co lle g e d e g re e o r re la te d b a ck g ro u n d in E d u ca tio n , In stru ctio n al D e sig n o r eq u ivalen t fiè ld . P rio r training b ackg ro u n d , kn o w led g e of g ra p h ics so ftw are p re ­ sen tatio n p a c k a g e s & p ro ficie n cy in M S O ffice req u ired . • i' To in vestig ate o u r co m p etitive sa la ry and e xcellen t b e n e fits, p le a se forw ard you r resu m e IN D IC A T IN G D E S IR E D P O S IT IO N in . c o n fid e n ce to : Choice H otels International, Attn: H.R. Dept. A SU , 4225 E . W indrose Dr., Phoenix, AZ 85032. F fx : (602) 953-7535. E O E m /f/d/v 7 5 2 $ 8 1 4 0 C H O IC E H O TELS I N ^ . ,y & w b o o t 3 '89 CELICA, 5/spd, white, tent* clean, highway mi-» cold a/c, new müff/bàtt. Call 638-1426. $2850 obo. 1975 VW CAMPER- 15k in­ vested, custom interior, only ' 3k mi. on restore. 609-1603 $3500 HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL Spring Break Cash $7-$8.38/hr Wk w / DD Adults & Child. You make schedule! Must be 18+yrs. HS/GF.D. Apply in persoil : Good Shepherd 86 W. Univ. #216 or 532-9715 x l. Miller Brewing Company/ On Premise Management Full Time Marketing and Promotions rep. Enthusiastic, selfmotivated, afternoons, nights, w eekends. In b ars 4 nights a week! Must b e 21 . Applicants with 9 hours or less an d n ea r graduation. Bj-lingual a p lu s y Fax re su m e 'to rr* ' 512-457-8332. IMMEDIATE AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS StartNow, Pay Weekly Like t o talk to p eo p le rind work, where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Coif Resort Is th e place to be!' • Eve. Hrs/Scottsdale • Big $$$$«$$»$ U niversity, # 2 0 4 • T % § e liversity in thé Bank One building. me Id Chase Cardm ém ber Services to find out w hy and I u p aN the attractive reasons to land » job here: I M edicafdental benefits I that start im m ediately AUTOMOBILES •N o Exp. Necessary m >iase IS The Employer of Choice! I Free covered paiking TWO R/T plane tickets in your name. Within 48 states, fly an­ ytime. $300/ea. 947-7406 Location (602) 557-8483 C l r * ie Thrill of the Chase. I Fitness center on-site TICKETS J{P Psych & Social Work Majors mis $$. No soilin g ■had. PITflexible HP LASERJET 5L Printer + 4 discs* new loner cartridge & in­ struction booklets Only used 15mos. $125.967-3566 I E R N A T I O N A I S8/HR GUAR + BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK Scottsdale 333-0109 Downtown Phoenix 253-2100 Ask for Irene (Leave m essage for sam e day interview) - • S a lo n R eceptionist • F itness Centre R eceptionist ' Fast pace energetic environm ent looking for outgoing, friendly, an d pleasant individuals w ith v custom er service iu background to m ake appointm ents and greet guests. 8:30am - 3 p m ,; M-F, som e weekends... . Please fax resume to"? , (602) 431-6165 or 1 Apply In person a t , H um an Resources 7777S. fo in te Parkway Phoenix, AZ 6 ^ 0 4 4 * Jo b H o tlin e a i4 1 6 1 - Drug free worirplace/EOE AUTOMOBILES 73 PORSCHE 914, 1.7L, new clutch, tires, brakes, exhaust. Gfeat body. Must sell. $3500 657-7463 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED GENERAL ANIMAL CLINC in Tempe needs p/t vet tech. for after­ noons. Will train 820-2822. puter & good comm, skills a must. Flex. hrs. Opportunity to make big $$$. Call Lori at 4430322 ext 226. 8pm 7 days/wk. Pay negoti­ able. 231-6516 LEGAL CAREERS. Car and Professional appearance re­ quired 452-1826. ed by national daily pub. Edi­ tor must have home computer. Call 520-219-5760 Of EM letter to support@rockies.com graphic design, writting copy and be able to con fresh ideas to increase re~ Fax resumes to 368-2840. P/T RUNNER wanted for. pag­ ing co. in Scottsdale. Must have reliable trans., valid AZ li­ cense, Ins. & reg. Approx. 2030 hrs./wk. $6.50/hr. + 25 cents/mile. Call -970-t676. Ask for David. PT, M-TH 6-9pm $ # h r. ASU. Survey telemajtketi pressure presentation. N nec. Call for interview , Norm Gifford at 829-3460 ASU STUDENT, male quad needs attendant. Mon. & Wed. morns. 1-2 hrs. Possible eve's. 1 m from ASU. Good pay. Must be very, reliable. Call 967-, 1223 ; CARS FROM $500- Police im­ pounds & tax repoes. 1-800319-3233 ext. 4740. JEEP WGLR, 89, wht, 76k mis, sft top, good cond. $7500 obo. Justin 968-6121 AZ BIKINI Team- female/ males for promotion modeling. 5179557; upscale and legitimate. BICYCLES BICYCLE MECHANIC, pt, shop exp. Apply in person, Ehrhardt's 111 W. Univ. Dr. Tempe BIKES: VARIOUS used bikes •to choose from approx 30. From $30-180. 266-8720 pgr. -■ 1 ' ' ""—■■■■•■c "— 1 . ; • SCOTT VANTAGE M-15, 19" frame, never ridden, $300 obo. Call 968-2136 CASHIER CHEVRON Scot­ tsdale. Evenings & weekends $6 and up. 945-2629. CASTLE SUPERSTORE.COM, an adult retail website, is look­ ing for people to help with graphic design, web content & order processing. FT/PT. posi­ tions avail at our Phx location. Contact Brian @ 266-1558. CRUISE SHIP EmploymentWorkers earn up to $2000+/mo (w/tips &' benefits). World trav­ CAMPUS CORNER el! Land-tour jobs up to $5000Exp'd, friendly, hardworking cashier needed; MiistNbe avail ’ $7000/summer. Ask us how! 1517-336-4235 Ext C59183 btwn 8am-2pm, MWF or TTR. Nights/wknds also avail. DELI HIRING sandwich makers Apply at 712 S. College. & delivery drivers. PT/FT, 921CAREER OPPORTUNITY- 20 ■7827. '• yr old barter organization has FULL/PART TIME rental agent openings for pt trade broker & needed. No exp. nec. Hrs. 7full or p/t sales reps. Basic com- HELP WANTEDGENERAL 500 SUMMER jobs, NY, PA, Maine. Arlene Streisand; www. summercampemployment.com; 1-800-443-6428. FUN & FRIENDLY Sales Rep. needed for jewelry & gift cards at Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall. P/t flex., $6/hr. + comm. Call Wendi at 860-5788. FUN PEOPLE Wanted! Appointment setters for Universal Portraits. $7$12/hr. 777-1054 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR . for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic, dedicated, and gréât w/ kids 3-5 years. $8-I0/hr; doe. 200-8255 HIRING NOW! M, W , F; 9amlpm. Answer phones, set up in­ terviews & other odd jobs. $7 p/hr. 921-8282. JOHN HANCOCK Arizona Kersting general agen­ cy needs agents. $2000mo training subsidy. Call Jim 5222100 ext507 EOE MFVD 304061198-019 , I 1 -8 0 0 -F L O W E R S ® WKKKm.9377 nsm j>\Fw(wrrr 'R.osi'n |s h iring custom er service rep re se n tatives, f—un I—rieridlq ^^tmospkere r PT re c e p tio n is t &. e v e iy o th e r w eekend. Pay DOE. 0*™* ¿¡ft, (based on attendance & - punctuality A*1* Immediate interviewing or ONLINE NIGHT content editor ($l l/hr) + 3 sports writers need- w e e k , 4 -8 p m V ,A^pply in Person j'^jonJcjq tkru X/allcI picture 10 &-« lOam - 7pm :.reej 4^* Incentive l-^TOgvav iÊÊmi Call Kelly at 6 7 5 -0 0 1 5 . Green Gables O f f ice Complex 2345 I-—. Tk omcis RJ. pi, oenix, A Z 8&016 Tempe Mi«ssionPalms Hote : Looking for team players who desire a position in a NeWly renovated, 4 star Hotel with pleasant surroundings... Equal Opportunity Employer Must be a minimum of 16 years of age Drug & Alcohol F isa Work Environment £¿2 Currently available: join The SAM'S Club® Team W e 're loo k in g fo r a m b itio u s p e o p le se ek in g full o r p a rt-tim e e m p lo y m e n t. Y ou'll b e p a r t of t h e W al-M art fam ily, n a m e d "A m erica's M o st A d m ired R etailer!" The Secret To L iving W elt™ P O S IT IO N S & TR A IN IN G A V A IL A B L E IN T H E FOLLO W IN G A R E A S : FRONT-END SERVICE • Cashiers • People Greeters • Parking Lot Attendants AUTOMOTIVE • Tire/Battery Sale • Tire Mounting STOCKERS • Groceries FOODSERVICE • M eat Wrappers • Bakery Clerks • Pizza Makers • Demonstrators • H ardlines • Freezer/ Cooler • Apparel • Forklift Drivers SALES/MARKETING • M arketing Representatives • Telemarketing • M embership Desk TEAM LEADERS FOR: • Sales/ Marketing • Grocery/ Freezer/ Cooler • Hardlines • Automotive • Apparel Wal-Mart Stores. Inc is committed to maintaining an alcohol/ drug-free workplace. In honor of this commitment, a dmg-sareening test is required as part of our selection and hiring process. ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS • A ssist. Pool Mgr ($9.22/hr) • W ater E x Instr. ($8.84/hr) • Swim/Dive Coach ($8.23/hr) • Swim Instructor ($8.23/hr) • Lifeguard ($7.59/hr) • C ashier ($7.59/hr) Various shifts • Several Scottsdale pool locations • Sum m er & Year-round positions • Tuition Reim ­ bursement • Certification cla sse s available Excellent working conditions Advancem ent opportunities Holiday pay Stock purchase plan SAM SHARE Incentive Plan Bereavement Pay • • • • • Competitive w ages (Rate of pay based on experience) Com plimentary m embership Profit sharing (Requires 20 hrs/wk average) 401 (K) (Requires 20 hrs/wk average) Personal tim e • • • • Group health insurance Group life insurance Short-term disability insurance Long-term disability insurance Temporary Location: Wyndham Garden Hotel 7475 W . Chandler Hvd. Chandler, AZ 85226 961-4444 ext. 136 s mm. ■ 1 W- i P Must have basic i ;. p RESUME TO 243-1395 a t t n : L is a o r M a r in a , OR CALL 2 4 3 0 6 4 9 X 104 TO APPLY IN Monday - Sunday 8 a.m . - 7:30 p.m . % SAM's Club an d Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. are Equal O pportunity Employers. Excellentoust sve STARTING PAY OF rn.cmmtm.rn. M m ti s s s ¿mámH m kimmnmm Cum * kaz mm IMMEDIATE EM PLOYM ENT A V A ILA BLE IN SOM E POSITION S!!!! 1/24/99 POSITIONS AVAIL, $ 8 .5 0 / h r . Fa x -f-g i Apply M -F, 8 a -5 p -fa x resum es to 966-5148 60 E . 5th S t • Tem pe 85281 W e h ave openings in th e following d ep artm ents: PT & FT CSR FLEXIBLE HOURS 8 . W. n u n mir Application it Interview Tim es: JC’s G la ss has W E OFFER w Benefits Include: - ✓ Com petitive Pay V Daily M eals, Health Insurance ✓ Long-term Savings Plan E x p e r ie n c e t h e r e w a r d s o f a c a r e e w ith a w o r ld c l a s s h o te l! KEYBOARD SKILLS. A PPLICATIO N S W ILL B E TAKEN: JOB HOTLINE (602) 894-1400 ext. 578 AT C I VIC PLAZA COMPUTER a • Paid vacations ». Sick leave • Dental insurance ■Cooks • Food Servers- AM & PM • Cocktail Server • Pool Food Servers • H ostess- AM & PM • Laundry Attendant • Security/ Pkng Attend. JP T , Flex (D P S card req) For updated openings, call the 7575 E . Main 9 . #205 Scottsdale, AZ (602) 312-7665 & PHONE SKILLS REQ. W E A L S O O F F E R A D D ITIO N A L B E N E F IT S FO R FU LL-T IM E A S S O C IA T E S : • Front D esk Attend.- AM •D ishw ash ers ■Bartender • Pool Bartender • B usser-A M & PM • Room Attendants • Security O fficer - Flex. (D P S card required) •R e ceive r A PPLICA TIO N S D U E A sst Mgr. Feb m aiy12 Instr/LG/Cashier March ! A L L A S S O C IA T E S R E C E IV E TH E FOLLO W IN G B E N E F IT S : • • • • • • PROMOTIONS/ MARKETING Director needed for lge Night­ club venue. Must have exp. in 2 -3 e v e n in g s / j—-/T G#-1 P / T temporarq positions A' Pmploqee Discounts of 3 0 % A ' f\]o experience necesserrq . A T Q n e daq paid training „ . „ ON-SITE VIDEO: seeks a PT of­ fice assistant enthusiastic per­ sonality, good customer rela­ tions, phone and basic Com­ puter skils desired. Camera and video exp a+. College ¿¿South­ ern, area. Call Betsy @967-5062 PHOENIX OPEN attendants in parking lots $6/hr. 1/25-1 /3 1, 362-7288. A cu ra n e e d s a I . d elive r flow ers crroun d thl e w or*U Earn up to. $9/nr. LOOKING FOR f/t & p/t stud­ ents for re ta il job. Hrs. flex. Less than 1 mile from ASU. Call Good pay. 829-7171 PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p /t, $8.45/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting,req'd. 804-0300 PUBLIC RELATIONS. C media co. seeks Public tions/Administrative fotesponsibilities include: cr press releases, following newspaper editorial/sta trieving editorial coverag entry, report generation & adm inistrative tasks. hrs;/wk., flex, betwefen 8 & 5:30pm. $7/hr. Fax r to 350-9365 or email to pusop@netcrawl.com. S c o ttsd a le Inbound Call Center Positions |—|elp LIBRARY ASSIST @ Rio Salado'College Library in Tempe. P/t, temp. 10-15 hrs/wk. $5.65/hr. Individual - should have good custodier service skills & basic computer/office knowledge. Job responsibil­ ities include filing, shelving li­ brary m aterials & answering phones. Sherry @ 517-8428 PERSON. CONVENIENT LOCATION© HO a U n iv er s ity ! , NETWORKS BAR & GRILL • COMPASS RESTAURANT • TERRACE CAFE a EINSTEIN’S BAGEL SHOP •BEVERAGE • BANQUESTS • CONVENTION SET UP • STEWARDING • FRONT OFFICE • GUEST SERVICE • CULINARY • HOUSEKEEPING S We offer excellent benefits, flexible ! schedules & vast opportunities. Interviews available Mon. 3pm - 6pm At the Human Resource Office (1st St. & Monroe entrance) e. 24 Hr. JOBLINE: (602) 4403154 | g | EOE/AA M/F/D/V HELP WANTEDGENERAL STUDENT TEACHER needed for in-home teaching program for my 4 yt. old special needs child. Will train - no experience necessary. 503-3993 PERSONAL CARE attendant wanted for P/T work: getting in & out of bed, laundry, no exp. nee. Hrs flex., pays $8. Calf Jake @ 884-0444 STUDENT WORK: Natl firm must fill 37 openings for '99. PT flex hrs, up to $11.25. Scholarships avail, 9onditions exist. Call 10am-4pm 246-8427. TELEMARKETERS GIVE away home security system. M ill/ BroadWay location. $12 v s , commission 894-5112. U P T O $12/ H R $9/hr guaranteed + commis­ sion. 15-25 hrs/wk. Survey marketing in a professional en­ vironment. Camelback & Scottidal e Rd. location. No boiler • room 9am-6pm M-F with flex­ ibility. Contact Dean 949-1088. C la ss Iflsd s 965-6735 HELP WANTEDG |N |M L _ _ WEB DEVELOPER Internet mortgage co. seeks can­ didate with command of FP98, MS apps & networking. Com­ pensation will be based on pro­ jects & exp. Send resumes & in­ quiries to ctawney @home.com or call 602-625-3019 HELP WANTEDSALES PUT YOÜR money where your mouth is. Set appts. for travel agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. + comm. $ 12/hr. avg. 829-6222 HELP WANTEDCLERICA L BOOKKEEPING ASST. PA per­ son wanted to assist book­ keeper & answer phones at lunch. Hours are 12-4 or 12:304:30 M-F. Starting pay $9/hr. Raise in 3 mo. and 6 mo. Please fax resume to 437-9232! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDF O O D M R V IC |_ HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE PT ADMIN AsS’t needed 3 days/wk. in city office w/int’l exposure. Computer/communication skills a must 534-7359 GARCIA S NOW hiring food servers, FT & PT. Great pay, great benefits. Apply in person @ 4420 E Camelback Rd are very flex to your needs & skills. If you are ready to have fun please call 453-0842. HELP WANTEDF O O D jg R V IC |_ HOSTESS & BUSSERS-Ruth’s Chris; Steak House is now hir­ ing friendly, efficient staff. P/T eves. 15 min. from ASU, $7/hr. Apply daily 2pm-4pm in per­ son at: 2201 E. Camelback Rd. FUN, MATURE iridiv who loves kids .needed for after school care M-F 2-6 for 2 kids ages 8 & 13. Tatum/Shea loca­ tion. Resp incl homework, so­ cial activities & car pooling. Starting salary $8-$ 10/hr. Refs req, valid drvrs lie & rel trans. Xtrahrs avail. Julie 483-2200. CORK'NCLEAVER Accepting apps. for lunch ’ host(ess), lunch food server & dinner cocktail; Will train, p/t. Concern w/ appearance, re li­ ability & personality are im ­ portant. Apply in person M-F, 2-5pm o r by apjpt, 5101 N. 44th S t (952-0585) DON & CHARLIE’S, One of the valley's busiest restaurants is hiring fo r host/ess, cocktail servers. Exp. req'd. for cocktail servers. Apply in person at 7501 E. Camelback Rd. Scottsdale FOOD SERVERS Immediate openings, good $, lunch or dinner, pt or ft. Mi Amigos 1285 W. Elliot Rd. Tempe HELP WANTEDGENERAL Scottsdale Lexus Customer Service Associates Work with one o f the best names in the appliance industry! As an affiliate of General Electric, Advanced Services, Inc. (ASI) is a n atio n al service cen ter providing te le p h o n e assistance to custom ers regarding GE appliances. As a m em ber of our in b ound Custom er Service D epartm ent team , you m ust have a dynam ic telephone personality, type at 20 wpm and be ready to work w ith a great team . Previous custom er service experience an d W indows com . i puter skills are preferred. • • • • • • HELP WANTED- $8/hour after training Paid training Fan, m otivated, professional work environm ent 3 to 8pm sh ifts available Advancem ent opportunities Excellent benefits for IT and FT em ployees (health, dental, vision, tnitiou reimbursement, profit sharing and more) A p p ly n o w - classes á r e b e g i n n i n g so o n ! A p p lic a tio n s a re a c c e p te d M o rtd ay -F rid ay , 7 a m -4 p m a t: 3 1 3 7 E. F.lw ood S tre e t, S u ite 100, P h o e n ix , AZ 8 5 0 3 4 (U n iv e rsity , e a s t o f 1-10). For more information/ directions, please call: 414-2592. Equal Opportunity Employer I Advanced Services. Inc. ASTK0 Ü0& C A I FORECAST b y S id n ey O m arr Tuesday, January 26, 1999 proceed for partnership. ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Emphasis on financial -security, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): bright ideas that pròve practical. Universal appeal, language involved, spotlight will be on Keep resolutions concerning public relations, marriage. News • minor digestive problem. TAURUS (April 20rMay 20): received concerning activities of Reins loosened, y.bu*ll have. relati ve abroad, Aries, Libra pert 'mprç room to fulfill intellectual sonsdnvOlyed. curiosity. Love relationship will SAGITTARIUS (Noy. 22-Dec. r include travel, purchase of 21): Let go Of losing proposition, wardrobe. pronto. Light shines bright; sym­ GEM INI (May 21 - June 20): bolizes fresh start in new direc^ Check Taurus/message fcff valu­ ; tiòn; w hat was broken will be able hints. Bargain counter fixed in record time. 1 proves deceptive _ stick to CAPRICORN ( Dec 22-Jan . selection of quality goods. Leo, . 19): Direction, motivation wilt I CANCER ( June 21 July 22): grab headlines. If you meditate, Investigate, prepare report, flirta­ answers* will come before brood­ tion that began as joke is becom­ ing takes over. Tie loose, ends, ing serious. Y ou'll be asking, take care in handling of sharp : "W h at happened?” Excellent adjects. Caution. dining experience soon, revel in AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): it- —enjoy! Highlight diversification, fun and LEO. (July 23-Aug. 22): Family frolic, ability to enjoy small member m akes surprise gifts. Expand activities, musical announcement, good news. Be composition compels interest. alert to foreign exchange ratés. PISCES (Feb 19-March ¿0): Stock market in dipsy-doodle, Traffic could be especially dan­ works to your advantage. gerous, be careful, Steer clear of VIRGO (Aùg. 23-Sèpt 22): Do one who is bibulous, Stress not equate delay with defeat inventiveness, personality, good tidings com e tonight. charm. Accept dinner invitation [ Patience truly is a virtue for you. food will be delicious. ■Neptune, planet of deception, is IF JANUARY 26 IS YOUR involved. Pisces and another BIRTHDAY: When it comes to Virgo dominate scenario. handling pressure you excel. L LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Your Aquarian, instinct for inno­ Saturn blends with your Venus vativeness shines. Check bank, Kr- means love is not being credit card figures computer thwarted, you merely are warned m ight choose this day to be to be careful. Utilize elements of "haywire.” © 1999, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate lim ing, surprise. Negotiations SERVERS/ COOKS- High en­ ergy restaurant & bar, ft/pt, Scottsdale. 949-7959. WAITPERSON: BREAKFAST & lunch. Excellent pay & tips @ Left Seat Restaurant 991-2030 ISLANDS RESTAURANT now hiring host/ess & food servers. Looking for positive & friendly people who like a fast paced work environment. Flex. hrs. exc. pay. Apply M-F 2-6pm @ 730 S. Mill, Centerpoint Plaza, next to Harkins HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE SITTER 2-3 days/wk fo r % daughters (ages- 3 & 4), Ahwatukee area. Darci 893-0377» BOYS & GIRLS Club of Scotr tsdale, Fountain Hills Branch is. now hiring area directors. Starts $7.50/hr. Call Valerie 836-0620 LUNCH SERVER, 10-2:30, $5/hr +. tips, Dinner host(ess), 5-11, $6 to start. 598-0506, 5061 E Elliot, Phoenix. FEM HOME aide for 15 yr-old disabled girl, M-Th, occSat/Sun, 3:30pm - 9:30pm, $9.50/hr. Need CPR, first aid. 423-5903. LESTER’S CAFE & Catering Company: No ; weekends, nights Or holidays. Need 'bright energetic & outgoing in d i-. viduals to join our team. FT/PT avail, including counter serv­ ice, delivery & marketing. Wages from $8-10/hr plus in­ centives & hiring bonus. We HELP A child feel special. Be a volunteer tutor. 1 hr./wk. Tues., ’ 3:30-4;30p.m., ASU campus. Please call 661-7901 . • b ln need of pt Valet/ Car Washers. Must INTERNSHIPS MERRILL LYNCH seeking p/t interns to market investm ent seminars. Great resume builder. Bonuses avail. Greg 607-8808. JO h OPPORTUNITIES INTERNET SUPPORT Rep. Must know internet, win95, Unix, good,com skill. $7.50lOhr doe. Fax resume 912-0883 MARKET RESEARCH - lead­ ing commercial finance compa­ ny seeks a P/T (20 hrs./wk.) market research asst, Please for­ ward resume to: M arket Re­ search, 3550 N. Central Ave., Suite 102, Phoenix, AZ 85012. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL NANNY/ BABYSITTER need­ ed: perfect opp for student. Care for 2 girls (4 & 7), approx 25-30hrs/wk during school, 40+ during summer. Prime Scotts location, 10 min from ASU. Liye-in/out option* flex sched, refs & exp req. 9496572 (day), 970-6113 (eves). M Milton's have AZ drivers N ow Hiring: ✓ W aitstaff ✓ Barstaff ✓ Kitchen staff All Positions! W ill Train! Evening Shift Apply in person 10am-4pm 3159 E. Lincoln Dr. P hoenix license, dean record, drug free. Flex his, $6/hr. • Apply in person at 6905 E. McDowell Rd Sco ttrid e Ask for Mike OPPORTUNITY with GREAT PAY! H i nil 1 Kÿ® gra & TALENT NEEDED Actors & Actresses needed for Indie Film; 485-5470/ zenroberts@aol.com RESTAURANTS/ BARS GRILL COOK $7-10/hr. Fun neighborhood Sports Bar/restaurant New Times award win­ ner. 16-24 hrs/Wk. Apj>ly the Woodshed II. Dobson/Univ. See Louis after 5:30. MAJERLE’S SPORTS grill is hiring for all positions, apply in person at 24 N. 2nd St, Phx, No phone calls please. PERSONALS HILL TOP Research needs healthy females, ages 13-40, from the general population to participate in a research study. One visit r’qrd. Study" partic­ ipants will be paid $70. Call Hilltop Research at 994-85Q2. 3225 N. 75th St., S. Scottsdale. VOLUNTEER TO help with ASU’S AIDS Awareness Week, Feb. 8-12. Many positions available. Call Freddy at 9658276 to sign up or to get more information...and thanks! SERVICES 50% OFF dry cleaning bill w/ ASU LD. Pueblo Cleaners SE Comer of Rural & Univ. 966-7454. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Don’t let it pass you by... if* fes; Ssss College Students and Teachers! Red Valley offers: • $15-$40 per hour Base +■Bonus + Commission • Paid Training • PTevening hours w/ FTpay • Casual Business Atmosphere » Fun Telemarketing Take a step in die right direction and join a winning team, No experience necessary E m Call Now! _ 9 5 6 -2 6 0 0 _ L o o k in g for a #j cre ativ e , ' In terestin g w o rk j e n v iro n m e n t w ith flexible sc h ed u lin g ? ■' 4 JO B o^ RTU N m n^ Children's Summer Camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for Counselors with expertise hi Horseback Riding, Riflery, Music & Songs, Nature, Ropes Course, Lifeguards, Camp Nurse, and Cooks to work May 26 - Aug 7* Good salary, job experience, plus Room/Board. E-mail us at campman@azstarnet.com or call 1-520-884-0987. RESTAURANTS/ BARS T EM B A SSY S U IT E S RESORT SCOTTSDALE Now open the follow ing S a tu rd a ys ACCEPTIN G WALK-IN IN TERVIEW S M, Tu, and F 8:30 - 10:30am or 1:30-3:30pm COWBOY C1AO w in e b ar &. grill h a s im m e d ia te ii o p e n in g s for BAKER. LINE COOKS, SERVERS, C reativity a n d / o r sin g in g ability a plus. Call W IN E-111 for Interview tim es. I WOODSHED I ! 9am - 3 p m :: Jan. 30 Feb. 13 Feb. 27 : . •• • ¡ ! ! !• NBA, ESPN, Full Court, MIS ! j• Greeks Welcome - 3 pool ! ■ tables ! • 112You Wing Orda- FREE « Sun. &Mon. \ >Room S ervice A ttend. • »Bell Staff ’ H ouseperson j-OldestnejghMrtioodbarin Tapine Est J979 »New Tinea award winner !• Cheap Bear S $ l 35 Shots 8 3 1 -W O O D Baseline & Mill »S ervers 5..- ' * B a r t e n d e t ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ X PERSONALS FT & PT work available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. ' ' ASU Box 871502 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S ta te P r e s s Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form §a a i M i ^1) Now selling Cabo San Lucas 5 nights from $ 5 1 9 Mazatlan 7 nights from $ 3 6 9 5 to 14 free m eals, 1 0 to 2 0 hours of free (kinks ( 1 5 0 In M egaBucks CALL FREE 1 -8 0 0 -3 9 5 * 4 8 9 6 V M s s rw k d iii •F ra tern ities* •Sororities* •Clubs* P le a s e b e su re to e fte ck y o u r a d . M a k e s u re it re a d s e x a ctly a s y o u w ish ft to a p p e a r in th e S ta te Preee, in clu d in g p u n ctu a tio n . P le a s e c h e c k y o u r a d th e first d a y it a p p e a re -th e HabHtty o f th e S ta te P ress sh a ll n o t e x c e e d th e c o s t o f th e a d a n d c re d it m a y b e g iven fo r th e lira t In sertion o n ly . M in o r s p ilin g e rro rs d o n o t q u a lify fo r m a k e ­ g o o d s. N o re fu n d s w ill b e g iv e n , b u t if y o u n e e d to c a n c e l y o u r a d a c re d it w M b e h e ld o n a c c o u n t fo r fu tu re a d v e rtis in g . n A _ g P riv ate P a rty 1-4 days* $ 1.70 p e r lin e, per d ay 5-9 d a y s, $ 1.65 p e r lin e, p er d ay 1 0 + .days, $ 1 .49 p e r lin e, per d ay C o m m ercial 1 d ay. $ 2 .6 0 p er lin e 2 -4 d ays, $1 -99 p ar lin e , p e r d ay 5-9 d a ys. $ 1 .7 6 p er lin e, p e r day IO* d a ys. $ 1 .6 0 p er lin e , p e r d ay 3 lin e m inim um , A d d a 1 3 -ch aracter b d d h ea d lin e for th e co at o f 2 lines. ü WMiMw Ií 1mpwt* ( mmzm ... ZSrr.-- - ■ . "w n i l lllü I ¡lilili« •S tu d e n t G rou p s* Earn $1,000-18,000 this sem ester wHh the easy CIS three hour fundraising event. No sales required. Fundraising dates are fitting quickly, so call tochryl Contact Dan VfdttnenatCiS, ■ 0)988-5579 ........... ........ ................ Hardcover T h esis & Dissertation binding *16?° each* 3 week service! The Final Paper & Pencil GRE is April 10*h! Your GRE score is critical to your grad school application and financial aid award.» Many students prefer the Paper & Pencil test, and how you prepare can make all the difference. Kaplan, the f t name in test prep, will help you get the high score you need. Classes are starting now, so call today. Have your hardcover journals, books, and thesis bound by Arizona’s only Library Binding Institute approved binder. • Over 35 years experience • 1 & 2 week RUSH service available • On-Demand book production service • W e also offer book & document restoration, conversion of paperbacks to hardcovers, and custom portfolios and boxmaking. • Call us and we’ll send you by fax or mail bur easy-to-fill-outorder form today! Our Minimum charge is $65.00. * Basic price • Some.extra charges mayalso apply. Roswell Bookbinding 2614 North 29th Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona 85009 /Telephone (602) 272-9338/ F a x (602)272-9786 E-m ail: Bookblndng@aol.com C la s s R e u n io n You’ll see lo ts o f y o u r frie n d s. Earn up to $192 a month by donating potentially life-saving plasma! Visit our friendly, modem center and find out more about the opportunity to earn cash while helping others. As part of a Company research program, an experimental test will be performed on your plasma which'Could potentialy benefit plasma product recipients in the years to come! Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required ityoU want to donate plasma. 968-6139 KAPLAN 'V I C G N T G O N O to * S e f v Ic s s . I n c . 1-800-KAP-IEST 1334 E. Broadway, Ste.102 • Tempe www.kaplan.0om WORLD LEADER IN TEST PREP C L af .■ v* " Must be 18-49 years of age, possess a vaftd ID and proof off local e »& Social Security number. h e c k o u t t h is h o t d e a l f r o m C om m ons on th e L em o n G et H ie lease Ippce p it a 9 TiiGnlli ; r;/ .¡academ ic year rental agreem ent. 1 shared room ¡*495 private room (regularly 5315 shared poem & 5515 private room) At the Commons on Lemon, we provide the life-style and amenities to make your ASU experience even more enjoyable. • Pool and Spa • Gazebo • Washer and Dryer in Each Unit • Contemporary Furnishings Throughout U niversity Dr, 'j M ill Ave. Terrace Rd. ASIT Apache Blvd. Broadway Rd. N S . \ rl .. Cholla Hall Lem on S t THE COMMONS on Lemon • Microwave Oven • Barbeques • Extra Large Walk-in Closets • Private, Off Street Covered Parking • Covered Bicycle Parking * Lighted, Sand Volleyball Court TH E C O M M O N S ON LEM O N 602-968-6427 • FAX 602-921-0564 1215 EAST LEM ON • TEM PE, AZ 85281 Only Two Blocks from Campus and Walking Distance to Downtown Tempe and Shopping.