ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright, State Press. 1993 Tampa, Arizona Voi. 77 No. 58 Friday, April 16,1993 An Independent Morning Daily ASU professor promotes unity among Asians G rade Workshop to attempt to ‘build connections’ ' By D onna H ogan State P ress Tom Nakayama, an assistant professor of communications, said Asians don’t share the same culture, language, religion or food, but now they share a common goal — to make ASU and Tempe safe places to live. Nakayama will be conducting a workshop at the second annual Arizona Students in Action conference at ASU Saturday, an event that he said will “build connections” between Asians and Asian-Americans of different backgrounds. The conference had been scheduled for some time, but this week the students have added a new dimension to the theme of unity by scheduling a forum of local law officials to discuss hate-crime policy. M aricopa C ounty A ttorney R ichard Romley, Tempe Police Chief David Brown and ASU D epartm ent o f Public Safety Director William Bess will join Asian leaders for the discussion at 5 p.m . in the MU Turquoise Room. Brown said he believes Tempe police, have been responsive to the Asian students’ concerns, which were first raised by the sav­ age beating of student Lang-Sheng Yun on Feb. 26, one block from his Tempe home. Tempo firefighters carry down a 12year-old boy named David after he fell an estimated 50 to 75 feet from the top of “A” Mountain late Thursday afternoon;. Authorities would not release further information concern­ ing the boy’s medi­ cal condition.: Regents approve $250 tuition hike Board OKs 16% increase in annual rates as other ASU and UofA students. The regents voted after listening to the three presidents individually illustrate failing higher education in Arizona and insufficient budgets. UofA President Manuel Pacheco said his campus is “in a very fragile condition” citing a possible loss of numerous programs as well as accreditation for the Student Health Center. “We ate facing a state budget that doesn’t even com e close to m eeting our needs,” Pacheco said. “There is no way we can func­ tion without the increase.” Pacheco and ASU President Lattie Coor recom m ended the num bers approved by ABOR, while NAU President Eugene Hughes By T ammy M esa-Sierra State P ress After battling Thursday for more than two hours, the Arizona Board of Regents approved a record 16 percent tuition hike for the three sta te universities resu ltin g in an annual increase of $250 for residents and $350 for non-residents. The regents followed the recommendations made by the presidents of the three state uni­ versity presidents and mandated the largest tuition hike in the history of the state. The regents approved the same figures for law students, but for the first time implement­ ed an additional $1,000 annual fee. Law stu­ dents have traditionally paid the same tuition proposed $50 less for non-residents. Hughes justified the lower non-resident hike, saying NAU has the lowest percentage of non-resident students of the three universi­ ties and the consequences of such a hike could deter new students. But Regent and NAU student Rhian Evans said tuition rates for all three state universities should remain identical,' and changes to the contrary would create a “perception problem” with respect to NAU’s quality. Coor told the regents ASU has a $16 mil­ lionbudget problem for the 1993-1994 academtefyear that is threatening as many as 200 course sections. Coor added that through cuts in administra­ tive and student services, $5 million could be T urn to T uition , page T urn By Kate D f.ei.y = State P ress Arizona Board of Regents members aired their beliefs that residency classification guidelines should be “beefed up” at their monthly meeting Thursday. At the meeting, which took place at the ASU Downtown Center, ABOR Counsel Joel Sideman presented recommendations to the board to strengthen present residency classifi­ cation requirements, but some members say those might not be enough. The recommendations included strengthen­ ing criteria such as the continuous 12-month residency requirement, enforcing application deadlines and ensuring that residents appli­ cants support themselves financially. Sideman. along with university officials, developed the recommendations at the request of ABOR because they believed students were getting Arizona residency classification too easily, which has limited university tuition revenues. Regent Rudy Campbell said that since 1991, approximately 88 percent of out-of-state students who have applied for residency have received it. He said this causes a $ 15-million to $ 17-million loss in tuition revenue because the students are being charged less as a resi­ dent. Campbell said he believes there should be more stringent requirements in order to give residency classification to students who truly i deserve it. He said he only thinks 15 to 20 per­ cent of applicants should be granted residency so that A rizona taxpayers are not paying IN S ID E STA TE PR ESS Classifieds..........................14 Opinion....................... .4 Comics...............................10 Sports..... ........ 11 Crossword................. ....6 World/Nation.................... 3 Today's Weather: Sunny and warm. High 88. Low 56. Campus News k j p i y Two bu§ig£ss students rw SP W ^Êm ÊÊ are planning a calendar of ^SO events and activ­ . m ities, which will also fea­ H è ture photo layouts of BL ASU students from a ÆL variety of ethnic back­ grounds. Page 2 im page Hundreds of ASU faculty, staff and stu­ dents waited until the last minute yesterday to mail out those annually-feared papers known as tax forms. Yes, in case it slipped the mind, midnight was the deadline to file income taxes. Those who haven't filed taxes can expect late-filing penalties from Uncle Sam. “Everybody is required to file by. midnight on April 15, regardless,” said Mitch McCoy, an office supervisor for tax preparer H & R Block. “If they don’t have everything togeth­ er by (then), they are in arrears.” Many ASU students, faculty and staff waited until the final day to file, as was evi­ denced by longer-than-usual lines Thursday at the ASU Mail Service Annex in the base­ ment of the Memorial Union. The Annex was prepared for the onslaught of last-minute filers, said Richard Kawtz, a mail services supervisor. Kawtz said the Annex started providing tax forms about two weeks ago and decided T urn 8. Sports V m rw r* Ì flppippi „ n a m i » i rf ZSMk ¿K?* k'Wl Page 3 Current and former ASU football players will clash Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium in the annual Spring Game. to T axes, page r~ ' ' z >tc • J* K # / ËffE Page 11 t W Æ 7. By J udd T. W iujams State P ress 8. 'World/Nation President Clinton began cutting billions of dol­ lars from his jobs bill - Thursday in an effort to appease congressional Republicans. page Income tax deadline midnight yesterday tuition for non-residents. “Every time someone gets something for free, someone else pays for it, and this would be Arizona taxpayers,” Campbell said. Regent John Munger agreed with Campbell and said there should be different alternatives explored. In fact, he thinks there should be some sort o f contract made which would oblige a student, if granted residency, to stay in Arizona a certain amount of time after grad­ uation. “If we grant you residency status and if you don’t stay in the state for X amount of. tim e after graduation then you owe us,” Munger said. He said the student, who was granted residency classification and paid in­ state tuition, would have to pay the school the amount of out-of-state tuition they did not pay during their duration at ASU. T urn to Reaction , Asians, Tardy tax forms mean penalties for late filers Arizona residency guidelines scrutinized Regents call for tighter out-of-state requirements to / 7. Page 2 State P ress Friday, April 16, 1993 2 stu d en t entrepreneurs to m arket A SU calendar Robert Black, a prominent modeling agent, is assisting in their model search on campus today and tomorrow. "1 am confident with all of the talent we By J oy Reason have on campus that we will find enough State P ress models from enough ethnic backgrounds and Two business students are seeking to meet body types to fulfill the needs of Robert Black the needs of ASU students while starting their and our advertisers." Lye said. own business, which will produce an “ASU "Robert Black was involved in the first specific" calendar. ASU calendar." Crane said. "Robert was real­ "We have started a business where we are ly excited." going to produce an ASU calendar With ASU Black will also benefit from this calendar events." said Trevor C rane, a marketing, because he can use those men and women major. "We want that information to be easily found in the model search. accessible." ' The pictures will be "very professional and Crane said that throughout his years at fashionable looks, image. We want the calen­ ASU. he has never looked in the ASU dar to appeal to everyone." Crane said. Bulletin Tor academically important dates. He There will be "subtle advertising" for each said he would like to create a calendar listing month. those dates, as well as those of football games Crane and Lye said they have arc planning and other events of interest just to ASU stu­ to use companies and products “a typical dents. All of the models used in Campus Vision, ASU student would already purchase," such the name of the calendar, will be ASU stu­ as Dillard's. Calvin Klien, and Fossil watch dents. male and female and from different products. They said as far as advertisers are con­ ethnic backgrounds. "It will more that just a calendar." said cerned. their calendar is “the next best thing James Lye. a finance major and Crane’s part­ to a magazine, that will benefit their business ner. "We Want it to be something (students) campuswide because the purchaser will look can keep. We are hoping that having fellow at the ad for 30 days out of the year.” students in the calendar will attract student It will premiere in August and will sell for sales." $8. It will also be available for clubs on cam­ New business to provide campus specific listing Brian Fitzgerald/State Press Zenobia Daruwella (left), a 19-year-old broadcasting major, answers questions from modeling scout Robert Black (right). Daruwella hopes to appear in a calendar featuring ASU students that is being creafed in part by ASU senior Trevor Crane (center). pus to sell for fundraisers, Crane said. Members of the faculty in the College of Business have assisted the entrepreneurs in their venture. The finance and marketing departments have also been extremely helpful in their endeavor. The two graduating seniors hope to expand their business venture, called JT Young, to other colleges if the ASU calendar is success­ ful. Students said they see the calendar as giv­ ing ASU a much-needed image boost after having Playboy on campus. T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed on a space-available basis as a service to'the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can submit written entries to the S tate Press, lo ca te d in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center. Room 15. Entries m ust contain the fu ll club o r organization name, description o f event, date, time, and location (including its fu ll address). They are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Incom plete o r illegible entries w ill be discarded. Deadline for the entries is noon the previous business day. M eetings sion, 6:30 p.m ., M ona Plum m er A quatic Center. A lc o h o lic s A nonym ous: clo se d m eeting, noon, A ll S aints Newman C atholic C enter, 230 E. U niversity Dr. N arcotics Anonym ous: open m eetings, noon and 5:30 p.m ., C om m unity C hristian Church, 1701 S. C ollege Ave. In d u strial Engineering Toastm asters: open m eeting, 12:40 p.m ., Engineering C enter G -W ing Room 305. A IÉ S E C (In te rn a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n o f S tu d e n ts in Econom ics and B usiness): open m eeting, 4 p.m , Business A dm inistration B uilding C-W ing Room 311, A rizo n a W hite W ater K ayak Club: open m eeting/pool ses­ A SU D e p a rtm e n t o f C o m m u n ic a tio n /D is a b le d S tu d e n t Resources: open “ Poetic Im ages” Am erican sign language sto­ rytelling, 8 a.m -, M itchell School, 900 S. M itchell Drive. A S U D e p a rtm e n ts o f A s tro n o m y a n d P h y s ic s : o p e n Astronom y display, 8 p.m ., Physical Sciences B uilding H-W ing F ifth Floor. MU A ctivities Board: open “ M oonlight R ockin’ Bowl” social,. 7 p.m ., MU Recreation C enter, MU bpsem ent. M iscellaneous SHOW US YOUR CURRENT STUDENT I.D ■w^YOU'LL GET A DINNER ^ * T his yea r w e're do in g it again! Every S unday (but O N LY on S unday). Mike Polos of the Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order* It's our 2-foM SUNDAY STUDENT SPEC IAL And it's good for the whole school year at our Tempe. Scottsdale and Phoenix locations Any day of the week for lunch or dinner. The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable pnee. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even better I Our din­ ners include a full-course meal with all the tnmrhings-from salad to dessert. So, dollar fo r dollar, when yo u ’re hungry and you need a break, you can't beat The Spaghetti Com pany! E S P E i CIALLY ON SUNDAYS!- W ith 2 dinners for the price of 1! *You m ust p re s e n t y o u r c u rre n t Student ID card with va lid a­ tion sticker to take advantage of this offer. 15% gratuity added to all discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak p i Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole. Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and orders to go . ARE NOT INCLUDED In the 2-for-1 special S c o t t s d a le G a lle r ia OTHER LOCATIONS: Beverly H ills • Los Angeles • Newport Beach • Santa Barbara San Francisco • Pasadena • Palm Desert • San Diego (Solana Beach) • Honolulu Atlanta • Chicago • St. Louis • Las Vegas (Mirage & Golden Nugget Hotels) Washington D.C. (Tyson's Corner, VA & Bethesda, MD) Open at 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays Enjoy nightly drink spedata on our patio. S ife h p tt* G^npany* R estau ran t Phoenix NOW OPEN IN SCOTTSDALE In Old Town South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend Tempe 4th St. & Mill 257-0380 483-5669 966-3848 2 0 % O FF for ASU students. SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA Scottsdale Rd./5th Ave. • Free Valet Parking Take-Out Available • (602) 949-3020 • Open Daily at 11:30 am Excluding alcohol, tax & gratuity • Student ID required May not be combined with any other offer * Expires 5-31-93 W State P ress o rld /N a tio n Page^ Friday, April 16,1993 Clinton trims jobs program in negotiation A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — President Clinton began pruning billions o f dollars from his $16.3 billion jobs bill Thursday to intake it m ore acceptable to filib u ste rin g Senate Republicans, whom he urged to help shape the package. “I am willing to compromise so long as we keep the focus on jobs, keep the focUs'on growth, and keep the focus on meeting unmet national needs,” Clinton said at a Rose Garden ceremony . But as Clinton reached out to the GOP, there were new threats of .Democratic defections that clouded his chances. Sens. Russell Feingold and H erbert Kohl, both from Wisconsin, raised their own objections to the program. , Two other Democrats, Sens. Richard Shelby of Alabama and Robert Kerrey of Nebraska, also have declared their opposition. “Our opponents have been asking for a smaller pack­ age,” Clinton said of the Senate Republicans. “And today I ask them to join me in determining exactly what kind and what size package Congress can approve that actually meets the needs of the American people.” Hoping to avoid his first major defeat in Congress, Clinton asked Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell of Maine and Senate Appropriations Chairman Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., to open talks with Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole. “Let’s see if they can talk it out,” Clinton said. D ole and C linton talked tw ice by telephone on Wednesday. The senator said he told the president the two sides had “a fundamental difference” over how the measure would be paid for. Clinton wants to borrow the money, thus boosting the budget deficit, but Republicans want to pay for it by cutting other programs. The Senate will vote on Tuesday on whether to cut off the Republican filibuster. Three earlier attempts failed When the Senate’s 43 Republicans held their ranks. Sixty Votes are needed in the 100-member Senate to end a filibuster. Even while shrinking the program , Clinton tried to sweeten the pot for law-and-order minded Republicans by adding $200 million for rehiring police laid off during the recession. He said the federal money, combined with local President Clinton, accompanied by Attorney General Janet Reno, addresses law enforcement officials in the Rose Garden of the W hite House. funds, Could put 10,000 officers back on the streets. Clinton’s program includes money for a wide range of projects, from summer jobs and childhood immunization to unemployment compensation, small business loan guaran­ tees, community development block grants and student loans. Clinton declined to say how much money he was willing to chop. A senior administration official said the president was talking about “a Substantial amount” in the billions of dollars. Sen. William Cohen of Maine, one of a handful of Republican senators courted by the White House, said he was open to compromise. Cohen offered to endorse $8 billion of the jobs bill', say­ ing he favored inclusion money for unemployment benefits, childhood immunization, summer jobs for teens and high­ way construction. Asked what programs he considered vital, Clinton listed sunimér jobs, highway spending, the rehiring of police, employment of more meat inspectors and health-care pro­ grams fpr AIDS victims. À White House official said Clinton also wants $4 billion for unemployment compensation, which Republicans also have endorsed. “I don’t think any of it should be cut,” Clinton said even as he acknowledged that he would have to scale his program down. President to m eet w ith gay leaders in Oval Office Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton will meet with gay and lesbian leaders in the Oval Office on Friday afternoon as the first president ever to invite gay leaders to the White House. •' . * “Clearly he's the first president to support gay and les­ bian civil rights,” said Robert Bray, a spokesman for the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force. “He’s making history with this meeting.” The six men and women meeting with Clinton plan to thank him for the support he has shown for gay issues so far. They also plan to urge him to attend the gay rights march scheduled for next Sunday and continue to support overturn­ ing the ban on homosexuals in the military. They also want to remind him of his campaign promises to support federal anti-discrimination protections for gays and lesbians, Bray said. “The meeting is really to impress upon him that we are the unfinished civil rights challenge in America and he could be the John F. Kennedy of our generation by embrac­ ing gay and lesbian people,” Bray said. W hite House C om m unications D irector G eorge Stephanopoulos announced the m eeting at a briefing Thursday when questioned about Clinton's plans to be out of town on the day of the gay rights march. Clinton will attend a retreat with Senate Democrats in Jamestown, Va., next weekend and will deliver a speech to the American Association o f Newspaper Publishers in Boston on Sunday. White House spokeswoman Dee Dee Myers said plans to attend the retreat were made a long time ago, not as a way to avoid the march. “I think this is something he’s been discussing for a long time,” Myers said. Gay and lesbian leaders are still making a pitch for the president to change his mind about the march, said Bray. “We’re disappointed but we’re holding out,” he said. “If he can’t appear in person, he can certainly appear by video or phone. George Bush used to do phone-ins to anti-abortion marches.” G-7 gives $28.4 billion in urgent aid to Russia Associated P ress Associated Press Russian Foreign M inister Andrei Kozyrev, left, and Deputy Premier Boris Fyodorov exchange words during Thursday's joint news conference with Japanese counterparts at the conclusion of a two-day meeting with G-7 leaders. \ **i agreed to make it easier for Russia to repay TOKYO — Seven of thé w orld’s rich $15 billion in debts o f the. form er Soviet nations gavé Boris Yeltsin a solid vote o f Union, confidence Thursday by offering a $28.4 bil­ Although there is no formal link' between lion aid package to promote his chances in a The m oney and the referendum , some leadership referendum and push R ussia Russians worry the Group of Seven Could toward a free-market economy. reconsider the package if Yeltsin loses. Although the Group of Seven did not for­ Some o f the loans require proof that mally tie the aid to Yeltsin’s victory in the April 25 nationwide referendum on his poli­ .Russia is undertaking corrective economic cies, Secretary o f State W arren M. measures. Blit others will require little more Christopher pointedly said, "The world will than a promise by Yeltsin and his government be a considerably more dangerous place if to do their best. President Yeltsin does not prevail.” The financial help is intended to boost Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev praised Yeltsin’s program to transform the Russian the aid plan and that Moscow and its former economy to free markets and private owner­ enemies are meeting “each other midway.” ship, an effort that is being fought by hard­ The aid w ill come from developm ent line lawmakers elected before the Soviet col­ agencies such as the W orld Bank end International M onetary Fund, which are lapse. It also is an attempt to persuade Yeltsin’s financed mainly by the industrial powers. It is in addition to individual aid packages countrymen to support him in the referendum announced by several nations during the two with promises that their lives will be better after infusions of W estern assistance and days of talks on emergency aid for Moscow. Earlier this month, major donor nations advice. O pinion Page 4 ■ Friday, April 16, 1993 State P ress State P ress ■ W~ oos & JDravos W H E R E Y O U ® ^ P C S T PARTY! ASSOCIATION O f YOLLtrtALL PNOfttSKMtALS ^ I P Mr P j NT ^ ■Roomate matching service Ù Z-- WPlanned social attfvities * A p r il 17th from 7 P M to 1 A M RICHARDSON & MORNINGSTAR Music Starts at 9 PM Summer And Fall Reservations Being Accepted ; But Hurry, Spaces Are Limited. 3 Q BIG MEET THE 7 0 BEERS PROS Miller Lite & fr o m th e  V P T ou rn am en t Genuine Draft 715 SOUTH HAYPEH RP . , TEMPE AZ 85281 • 9 6 6 - 1911 GOMMONS M i l East Apache Tempe, Arizona f LM lit.RS»»N 1.Y ? M 2 blocks from campus 8 2 9 -0 9 3 3 State P ress Friday, April 16, 1993 P age 9 Tuition_________ R e a c tio n CONTINUE!) FROM PAGE X. removed from that deficit, with the balance, to be covered through tuition revenues. But Coor qualified the magnitude of his tuition proposal by recommending that need-based financial assistance increase by $3.2 million over last year’s $5.8 million grant and scholar­ ship distributions. ABOR President Andy Hurwitz said this figure adds $250,000 above the current 60 percent to 40 percent ratio of grants and scholarships versus loans and employment respec­ tively. But Arizona Students Association executive director, Patrick McWhortor, said he was disappointed with the vote and called the financial aid numbers misleading. McWhorter said there will be $6 million in newly created need with the drastic tuition hike, while the disbursements will grow by only $3.2 million. Evans pleaded with her fellow regents to consider the Stu- C ontinued dents and swayed from ASA proposals by m oving for approval of a $200 resident increase and a $350 non-resident increase. A fter successfully thw arting a hike last year, ASA acknowledged the budget problems facing the state and rec­ ommended early this year that resident rates increase by $150 and non-resident rates by $440. “I understand the situation the presidents are in, but { have a feeding the proposals are too high,’’ Evans said. “The bottom line is, if we raise tuition even $10, there are some students that won’t be able to come back to school.” But only Regent Doug Wall supported Evans’ motion and alluded to the Arizona Constitution that specifically calls for education “to be as nearly free as possible.” “My preference, frankly, would have been to have the lower numbers,” said Hurwitz, who did not participate in the vote. WATCH THE SU N S RISE OV ER SEATTLE from page 1. “I don’t see why we can’t put a condition on it,” Munger said. Munger also asked Sideman to look at the possibility of a “three-tiered tuition’’ which would include in-state'tuition, outof-state tuition and a new tuition rate,, higher than in-state, for a student who obtained residency. ABOR President Andy Hurwitz said his main concern with residency classification is the time requirement. He said the 12-month domicile residency requirement needs to be exam­ ined and perhaps increased. “There seems to be an interest in beefing up the require­ ments,” Hurwitz said. Sideman said he will review the recommendations and explore other alternatives. These will be discussed at the next regents meeting. HOULIHAN'S TO N IG H T ON O U R W ID E -S C R E E N TV 's B R O A D C A S TE D VIA SATELLITE. W HEN TH E SU N S A R E A H EA D , H O T W IN G S C O S T 1 CENT. Grab For The Green $500 Cash Machine 50« D RA FTS LADIES NIGHT - SW IM SUIT FASHION SHOW & AUCTION 9 9 i D rin k s for L a d ies 8 p m - C lo se . A u c tio n s ta r ts 7p m . ERD. Fiesta Mall. Mesa 833-8000 Between Robinsons & IJillards £D FROM PAGE I I . Sun Devils’ confidence as they play i I of their last 12 games at home. And that is not the only place where these two teams are bat­ tling it out. The Trojans are led by catcher Casey Burrill, who is second in the conference with a .447 hitting average. The leader in that category is ASU; junior catcher Paul LoDuca. who skims by Burrill with a .448 average. The two catchers have been nose-to-nose all season long. ASU is scheduled to pitch with the rotation of Marc Barcelo (8-3, >.17 ERA). Dax Winslett (6-3. 4.97) and Kevin Rawitzer (3-3. 2.94). USC has not determined a starter for Friday's game. . Last week, the Sun Devils took three games from Cal and lost a maieup game to the Golden Bears. The wins were a feat that impressed Brock. "Ve were concerned how the team would come back after the loss (of the makeup game),” Brock said. “But we came back and played as well as we have all'season long in three straight games.” State P ress, SPORTS DIGEST SIX-PAC Standings Upcoming Games USC ASU Arizona UCLA California Stanford TODAY: Sun Devils at USC ’ SAT: Sun Devils at USC SUN: Sun Devils st USC ■ W 12 10 11 7 8 6 L Pci. 9 .571 8 .556 10 .524 8 .467 10 .444 9 .400 GB - 7* 1 2 ¿7a 3 Upcoming Games and Matches TODAY: Men’s G olf-Sun Devil Invitational all day, at Karsten G olf Course SAT: Men’s G olf-Sun Devil Invitational all day, at Karsten Golf Course SAT Olympic Sports/ Spring Football Softball ye. California (OH) 1 p.m ., Sun Devil Club Stadium 0 0 if) G) C D 0 0 Football - Spring Game 1 p.m ., Sun Devil Stadium o O c t C l I Baseball C vl OÖ ^ E 5 - J =3 Q o O ) £ 0 0Ö yCK T O B A S s t in k i A i e e d s new an d used c d s ta p e s vinyl s in g l e s im p o r t s in d e p e n d e n t s 897-7109 dobson and baseline • m esa JON with guest dj JAMIE WHITE morning dj for THE VALLEY S O N LY ALTERNATIVE SCENE LADIES NIGHT 75< DRINKS FOR LADES 941:30PM NO COVER FOR LADIES UNTIL 1030PM $1JO LO N G N EC K S ALL NIGHT AT THE SCOTTSDALE GALLERIA 5th Avenue & Scottsdale Road 949-3009 FOR EVERYONE 9-11¿0PM C/3 KEYSTONE $3 Û C Cam pus _ Co rner : i 1 State P ress Page 13 Thursday, April 16,1993 T en n is to e n d P ac-10 p la y w ith W ild cats First home tourney on tap for mens golfBy Shaun Rachau . State P ress . T h i ASU m en's golf team will try to defend its 1992 Sun Devil Thunderbird Invitational title when it plays host to its only home meet of the season today and Saturday at Karsten Golf Course. The 12-team tournament will be a chal­ lenge to the third-ranked Sun Devils, as it will consist of six of the top 10 collegiate teams to Ife. the nation. The Sun Devils hope to combat the tour­ ney's talented competitors with the distinct advantage of playing on its home course. “There’s definitely an advantage,” coach Randy Lein said. “We’ve played enough and we kind of learned where not to hit it. “The course is being set up in such a way that it is going to be fair, but challenging. So we are not going to have any real advantage. as far as the pin settings go. If is just a matter of feeling comfortable with a course that we play so often.” The Sun Devils’ first team will consist of Todd Demsey, Chris Stutts, Cade Stone. Ben Weir and Rob Mangini. Larry Barber, Keith Sbarbaro, Joey Snyder, Christian Hills and Kelly Korlevski will comprise the second team. ■/ W eekend P review Softball to host Cal b y M ichael State P ress B ranom ! The 18th-ranked ASU softball team will host Vo. 8 California in what Coach Linda Wells GOLF Ad> golf Ad> golf- Pikes will w in Ad> O pen. Love, your coaches, Gregory & Kane. SIGKAP SUE: Thanks for being such an awesome mom! We will rage at formal! Anne. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Facials/waxing. Student dis­ counts. C all fo r more inform ation. 969-6954. Ad> OPEN! Get your clubs out and put those shoes oil. Get ready for a day of fun!; I K BUFFY- Oh my God, I can't believe w e're going active. You’re the best friend ever. I love you- Muffy. AGD AMIE S.: Get ready for activation!. Tm proud of you! Love, Mom. . * I K DANIELLE: Tomorrow's the big day! Congrats- you are the best dot ever! I love you! IA Q , Ma. AGD INITIATES: I hope you're excit­ ed for tomorrow! Now you'll be ac­ tives! Yeah!! Luv, Tami. ALPHA PHI open is tomorrow! Gen­ tlemen, get ready for good golf, great girls and lots of fun. ALPHA PHI'S are far above par for Phi Sig mini golf. Love, your coaches. CONGRATULATIONS;: Í1KA Brian F. and AT Candy C. on 1994 Greek Week co-chairs. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CASHIERS, SERVICE personnel, pizza , makers and food prep. We are looking for enthusiastic part tim e help days, nights, w eekends fo r the follow ing Sbarro locations: Scottsdale Fashion Square, 941 -8863:411 South Mill, 921 3187. Call or stop in Monday-Friday 9lia m of 2-4pm. Y PERSONALS BABY SNAKE Katie- One moré day til we can truely live pne heart one way. Your mom loves you.'XAQ, Katie. INC. Tonight LOS LOBOS outsidein Hayden Square Am phitheater S a tu rd a y ONE 990 Kamis For a Good Time call 966-1300 Balboa Cafe . 404 S. Mill Ave., Suite 101 ■ Á lam o is th e pe rfe ct place to b e g in and fu rth e r a rew ard­ in g career in th e travel in du stry. W e're lo o kin g fo r sh a rp ; q u ick th in k in g students w ith h ig h energy and an enthusi­ asm fo r people. W e o ffe r; jk •P aid com prehensive tra in in g •E xcellent benefits »C onvenient Scottsdale lo ca tio n •O p p o rtu n itie s fo r career advancem ent •T u itio n reim bursem ent program •F u ll and p a rt-tim e positions •D ay, evening, weekend schedules available O penings req uire go od keyboard skills (35 -40 W PM ) and an exce lle nt telephone m anner. Please a p p ly in per­ son fro m 9am to 7 p m M on da y to Saturday a t 86 55 E. Via de V entura, Suite F3Ü0, Scottsdale, o r send a resum e to : D ire c to r o f Reservations A lam o Rent A Car, Inc. Suite F300 8655 E. Via de V entura Scottsdale, A Z 85258 An Equal O pportunity Employer XK PATTI: One more day until activa­ tion! Watch out for the snake pit! Love, Mom. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING X K ROCKY- You are the best! Don't forget to keep the. roses- maybe they'll grow. Love always, Wendy. 1 DAY turnaround - most papers. Pro­ fe ssio n a l w ord pro cessin g / papers/ resumes. Lkser: Reasonable. Caroline, 892-7022. IK WENDEL: I can't wait to go active with you tomorrow! Move you! Danish. IK WENDY: Tomorrow is it! You're a great dot. 1 love you; Your mom Heath­ er. X Q 'S CELEBRATE tradition! Sip a mint julip at Plantation Ball. Rho Beta Pledges. It's the last formal for our sen­ iors. I N WILL definitely take À 0 golf this year! IN 'S WILL snake FlBO's Arrowspike. AAA THE Delts áre looking forward to getting sloshed with you on Saturday at sloshball! XN'S WILL snakeTIBO's Arrowspike. DEKE LOUIE, can't wait to find out who you set me up with for formal. P.S. Have fun with Christy ! Love, G. I N , PIKE and b G - Thé Alpha Chis can't wait for Luau on Saturday! IN 'S WILL snake ÍIBO's Arrowspike. D oc & Eddys DELTA SIG- Get ready to take Pi Phi Arrowspike on Saturday! Love; your coaches. THETA DELT 2-man invitational Sat­ urday, April 24th. Sponsored by Lite, Club, Revo, and more! B a se b a ll G am es A ll D ay Long DKE LOUIE, all kidding aside, I am psyched for tonight!!! Love, Gina. TO OUR almost Fili Sig coaches Corey and Ryan: Thanks for the banner. We'll be there next year. D oc & Eddys Aid» JAY: Can't wait to see you sport­ ing the tux for Plantation Ball! XQ Nik­ ki. ' y'-'z D oc & Eddys 14 P oo l T a b le s F u ll F ood M enu t i l M id n ig h t D oc & Eddys Open 11AM -1 AM Daily 8 3 1 -0 6 3 5 9 0 9 E . M inton yfMtMÁyM/ P IZ Z A & A1 0 WILL dominate AO golf! Good luck!! Love, your coaches, TO THE men o f Phi Sigm a K appa: We’re excited for the mini gólf tourney. See you on Saturday. - Sigma Delta Tau. DU GET psyched for A-Phi golf! Love, your coaches. TRI SIGMA Christine, you were won­ derful on W ednesday! W ill you re­ m em ber me w hen y o u 're fam ous? Sigma love, Mom. AY PETER, get psyched for tonight! W ell have a blast! We'll see how tail you really are. Ann-Denise. TRI-DELT- DELT sloshball! Tri DeltDelt sloshball ! Tri-Delt-Delt sloshball ! Tri-Delt-Delt sloshball ! OZK MINI golf- AAT1 sees victory on the 18th hole. CHILD CARE PA STA SUNNY'S DELIVERS IT FREE. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA 12" o r 16" 1 C oupon Per Pizza AK'P LITTLE bro Suzie, good luck at court. Ybu're almost there. Remember fo sm ile. W e love y a ! K im berly & Christina. HOVLAND AND Dodd, Cannery, Fri­ day, 8 p.m. KAPPA SIG Jeff: Happy Birthday cutie! Hope you have an awesome day. Love, your "invisible" friend, r LAMBDA CHI Andy: Honey, "What are we going to do" tomorrow night? I remember- you, me, formal- it should be another "magical night." I'm so very . smiley t Love and little kisses, Debi. LAMBDA CHI Tony: I'm excited for fo rm al. W e'll have th e b e st tim e! Yeah!! Love, Tami. O NE NIGHT, ope place, Mike Dodd and Tim Hovland. See you at Cammery Friday, 8pm. 1 3 0 1 E. University BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES HEALTH AND fitness part time home business. Flexible hours. High income potential. Leading international corpo­ ration. Call Lifestyle Plus, 951-4141. PERSONALS A DOZEN red long-stem roses $20 de­ livered in Tempe. Also balloons: After Hours Flowers, 894-3419, AX- SOFTBALL semi-champs.L. good luck in the finals! We're all rooting for you.' • Ad» ANNC G : Good luck on theMCAT tom orrow . Your hard work will pay off. Love, your sisters. Bright, happy •! year old boy; 36-40 hours p e r w eek, split in four 8 hour shifts including Friday-Saturday even­ ing; usually 2 consecutive days off. Live in guest house with private entry, bed­ room , k itc h e n ette; TV , telephone. Meals or allowance provided. Vacation and bonus after 1 year. Send resume with photo and references to Julie Jackson, 6001 East Naumann Drive, Para­ dise Valley, AZf85253. PIKES BRIAN, Charlie, Brad, T y-G et ready for A 0 Open! Good luck, you guys will take it all! Love, your coaches. PIKES CHARLIE & Brian- You will win AO golf! Get psyched for a great day! Love, your A 0 coach. PIKES WILL dominate A 0 golf! Good luck you guys! . 1 DAY TURNAROUND: Professional typing. W alkable/ASU: R easonable ra te s. E xperienced, L aser, Faciilty/Students. Diane 829-1602, ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED typing/ w ord pro cessin g W P5.1. R eports, charts; graphs, theses. Laura; 820-0305. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/ word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-:5744. ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, transcription, WordPerfect, las­ er: C all anytim e fo r fa s t service, 966-2186. C REA TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resumes, essays, laser printer, fax, reasonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. - : . DO YOU need extra help creating qual­ ity papers? ASU graduate profession­ a lly ty p e s, e dits, A PA/M LA. Laser printer. Fast turnaround. Theresa, 9241976. 1 WANT, It Now Desktop Publishing: Term papers, resume service, c h a rts,' graphs, manuscripts, thesis; quick serv­ ice: Call 966-1984. Near ASU. MRS. SPAVIN, retired secretary, near Alma School and University, 964-6334. RESUMES $15 High success rate! Reports, editing, fly­ ers, Laser printing, same day. SP Secre­ tarial, near ASU, 967-0907; G RAD U A TIO N PH OTOS H urrydon't wait until the last minute! Crea­ tive ideas, reasonable prices. Julie 990-1626. WANTED WOMEN WHO have been in psycho­ therapy. Will you answer a questionnaire/talk about your experience for a serious Houghton Mifflin book? Write Deborah A. Lott, Box 1022, Pacific Pal­ isades, CA 90272 or call 3 10-302-9318. ADO PTIO N A LOVING couple seeking a newborn for open adoption. Confidential. Call collect, (408) 298-5608. YOU’VE FOUND us! Your baby will enjoy happy, music-filled, loving home, family and friends, biking, beaches, travel, good schools, good values, lots of hugs and kisses. Expenses paid. Ron/ Diana, 1-800-377-6740. SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS TODAY'S HOROSCOPES CAN BE FOUND ON PAGE 6 SERVICES SOFT SUD c Touchless Uwl 1 U VU PHI SIG mini golf- Good luck to all. Coming soon: All-Greek Luau. , Automatic * Jet Wash \ftasV 3 Only $2.00 Apache & J Soot Free Rinse O pen 24 Hours Terrace PIKES: CONGRATS on a "true" phil­ anthropic! W e're looking forward to our trolley exchange! Dee Gees. SAE, THETA, Sig'E pt We’re looking forward to our exchange on Saturday night! Love, Kappas. Mirror of Fashion M SIG KAP Jen S.- Congrats on going ac­ tive this week- All o f your hard work has finally paid off. Love, Brent. SIG K A P KIM BERLEE, congratula­ tions on going active. One more day! Sigma Alpha Omega, Mom. SIGMA PI- Throw on your togas and come to our party on Saturday! lb your exact m easurem e a u m m eents! n ts l P i " PHOTOGRAPHY LIVE-IN $800++ AAfl WILL win Phi Sig mini golf ? All others stay home. Where all die m iles are free" I K MA: I ’m so happy to be your dot. I love you very much! Danielle. SWEETIE- I'M so glad you'll go to for­ mal, and that all is back to normal; to the way things ought to be- You'll hâve all the love in me. Blue Eyes. ym tim w im iw tm w i EMPLOYMENT SHOPPER- This rev­ olutionary way of circulating resumes will greatly improve your chance at ac­ quiring that career you've been work­ ing for. Each month that you participate we will deliver your resume to 100's of businesses. Call today, 947-4046. SUMMER SPECIAL: A Hair Today G one Tomorrow Electrolysis, blend method for permanent hair removal, Southem/Rural, private suite, student discount. 9 2 1-1146. XQ TERESA: Hey lit sis! Return phone Calls J/K! Are you psyched for Planta­ tion Ball?! Luv, Nikki. PAUL-YOU make me crazy! L.S. RESERVATION SALES REPRESENTATIVES XK HEATHER? Thanks for being my mom- Can't wait till tomorrow. Love your dot, Wendy . DELTA SIG is gonna bump set spike their way to the top of Pi Phi Arrowspike! Dine-ln. Pick-Up. D elivery / Page 15 Friday, April 16,1993 «Bridal, form al, party, career, a n d m e n , wear •Alterations D e s ig n e r : A ia n a A u g u s t T r a il e d i n E u r o p e 947-3101 6925 5th Avenue, Scottsdale, AZ W e accept A m erican Express» M astercard a n d Visa Page 16 Friday, April 16, 1993 State Press THE WORKS f r id a ì AFTER N O O N CLUB < POOLSIDE AT THE WORKS featuring 5.^ \ HOT BOD BIKINI CONTEST ; f > \ i \ Winners receive 2 round-trip \ tickets to San Diego & $300 in cash. ^ 1oc ICE COLD DRAFTS 3-8 p.m. B I K I N I C O N T E S T STARTS AT 5 :3 0 p . m . THE WORKS ■ SCOTTSDALE 7223 E. 2nd