thursday Feb ruary 14; 1985 Vol. 67 No. 88 Arizona State University s ta te p r e s s Tempe. Arizona Copyright. State Press. 1985 Regents’ discussion delay confuses campus officials By PA TR IC K J . KUCERA and V IC K IE C H A C H ER E Staff Writers A delay by the Arizona Board of Regents has many University officials who oversee Sun Devil Stadium confused about future leasing procedures at the facility. According to the agenda distributed when the board met last Friday at ASU, the board was to begin “discussion, consideration and possible action concerning establishment of general policy for lease or license of Sun Devil Stadium.” The item was later withdrawn from the agenda when regent Donald Pitt said there was no material for the discussion. The Regents decided to postpone discus­ sion until their March meeting at ASU, Pitt said. But many ASU officials said they were not aware that the Regents had originally in­ cluded the item in the agenda, including the special assistant to University President J. Russell Nelson. Troy Crowder said he was not aware of any planned discussion of Sun Devil Stadium until he was contacted by the State Press. “I don’t know anything about it,” Crowder said. “I see it on the agenda right now, but I didn't stay for the whole meeting.” Other ASU officials said they had no reason to believe that a discussion on the policy of leasing Sun Devil Stadium was im­ minent. Jim O’Connell, the ASU executive direc­ tor of public events who is in charge of leas­ ing agreements for the Stadium, said he would be surprised if the regents saw the need for a change in leasing policy. “As far as I know, there are no changes in the use of the stadium contemplated,” he said. However, O’Connell said the Regents may be discussing possible policy changes that could make the stadium more attractive to any National Football League team con­ sidering a move to the Valley. “I suspect it was put on the agenda with respect to the Philadelphia Eagles fiasco, or the United States Football League’s move to the fall,” he said. O’Connell said that as far as he knows, everyone, including the ASU public events office, is happy with the current policy. Current guidelines include a rule that im­ poses a 10-day waiting period between a non-sporting event and one of ASU’s home football games.’ O’Connell said the rule is not a problem to enforce and the only concern came when the Michael Jackson Victory Tour had schedul­ ed a concert in the stadium in late November. Numerous calls by the State Press to several other campus officials were refer­ red to ASU Executive Vice President P aige' Mulhollan, who was out of town. Staff p h o to by Kip WIHIm m St. Val lives Flowers will be plentiful around campus today. M.E.Ch.A., a Hispanic academic/cultural organization, Is selling the carnations, above, for a dollar on the mall. Book shortage causes problem for students When ASU Professor Robert F. Gwinner gives the first ex­ am of the semester in his marketing class today, several students will be unprepared due to a shortage of books in the ASU Bookstore, according to two students. Two students informed the State Press Wednesday that the textbook for their Marketing 300 class has been out of stock since the beginning of the semester. Phyllis Smalley, a representative of the ASU Bookstore, said at least 23 copies of the textbook arrived Wednesday, and she expected another shipment in this morning. Although the books are now available, one communications senior who asked not to be identified said she was concerned that she would not have enough time to study for the test, having tried to buy the book earlier. Gwinner said he was unaware of the book shortage until four students approached him last week and said they could not obtain a book. “ I had received no notice of there being a problem,” Gwin­ ner said. “ I called the bookstore and they said they were out of books.” He said he offered a variety of options to students without books, including obtaining reserve copies in Hayden Library, re-ordering the textbook and loaning out his own personal copy to any student who wanted it. “Two students took me up on my offer (of borrowing the book) and one had the chapters Xeroxed,” Gwinner said. “I think it co6t him $3 or $4 to get the pages copied.” The communications major said she thought more students were without a textbook than just the four who approached Gwinner. “He decided that since only four students showed up, it wasn’t a significant amount,” she said. “He said he had a few suggestions for those who didn’t have the books. There was a lack of concern from him.” Gwinner said he was concerned about the whole matter and the situation could have been different if he would have known about the shortage earlier in the semester. "I was upset about the whole thing,” he said. “If I knew about this the first few days of class, it would have been a dif­ ferent situation.” He said approximately 700 students take the class and when the four students complained, he tried to remedy the situation. “As soon as I found out, I called the publisher and he said he would send out a shipment of books immediately,” he said. But an advertising major, who also requested to remain anonymous, said it was difficult to follow ¿winner's sugges­ tion. "I had to get up at 6 a.m. to borrow a book from someone who was asleep,” she said. “When I went to the reserve place, I had almost four or five people looking over my shoulder taking notes from my notes. ” Gwinner said he was “sensitive" to the situation and he is sure that other students had the same problem in other sec­ tions of the class. — PATRICK J. KUCERA Senate considers creation of teacher education committee By TOM STINSÓN Staff Writer The Arizona Senate is considering creating a joint legislative committee to in­ vestigate teacher education programs at the three state universities, a state senator said. Anne Lindeman, R-Phoenix, a member of the Senate Education Committee, introduc­ ed the bill Feb. 5. “Everyone seems to have their own ideas about what should be done (about teacher education),” Lindeman said. “I'm.not try­ ing to cause any effect. I just want to get everybody together so we can talk about this." An emergency clause included in the bill makes it effective at the time the governor signs it and would forgo the usual 90-day waiting period. The bill stipulates that the joint commit­ tee remain intact until Dec. 1. The bill requires the proposed committee to review teacher training programs, in­ cluding content and structure, at ASU, U of A and NAU. The committee would also be responsible for reviewing the educational -requirements for teacher certification in Arizona Finally, the committee would write a report outlining its recommendations for possible legislative action to improve teacher education. The committee would consist of three state senators, three representatives (the legislative members must be from educa­ tion committees) and a public school teacher. Other members would also include a public school principal, a member from the Arizona Board of Regents, a member of the Arizona School Board, and an education col­ lege dean and faculty member from any Arizona university. Lindeman said the creation of the com­ mittee was not a controversial issue and should pass. Possible changes in the structure of the bill include the addition of a local school board member and a parent of a high school or elementary school student to the commit­ tee, she said. Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, chairman of the House Education Committee, said he could not comment on the bill until it passed the Senate. “I’ll wait to see what it looks like when it gets (to the House)," said Cooper. “By that time it could look entirely different. ” Naomi Wamacks, assistant dean of the College of Education, said, “I think it’s an interesting effort on the part of the Legislature. I think they’ll be pleased with what they find.” nation/world Progress made on human rights, says State Department report WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department said Wednesday in its annual report on worldwide human rights that “real progress" was made in Latin America and the Caribbean while the “most serious” problems of political repression occurred in the Soviet bloc. The report covers conditions in 164 countries through the end of 1984 and, in some cases, early 1985. Elliott Abrams, the assistant secretary for human rights and humanitarian affairs, said that over the last five years nine countries have shifted from dictatorship to democracy in the hemisphere while “zero countries have gone from democracy to dictatorship. That’s a very impressive trend. ” Although the report praised the rights records in most democratic countries, the situation in Uganda, one of Africa's few parliamentary democracies, was described as “grave,” with tens of thousands reported killed as a result of insurgent terrorism and government countermeasures. Other countries singled out for unusually harsh appraisals were Albania, where the situation was said to be “excep­ tionally bad,” and North Korea, described as “one of the most highly regimented and controlled” nations in the world. The report said “while the Soviet bloc presents the most serious long-term human rights problem, we cannot let it falsely appear that this is our only human rights concern. It said, “Soviet performance in the realm of human rights fails to meet accepted international standards. The regime’s common response to efforts to exercise freedom of expres­ sion is to incarcerate those concerned in prisons, labor camps or psychiatric hospitals.” press One-third of people born this year will get cancer, group predicts NEW YORK (A Pt—One in three people born this year will eventually develop cancer, chiefly because they will live long enough to reach the ages when cancer is more likely, the Clarification of refugee act needed American Cancer Society projects. Approximately 22 percent of those born this year are ex for sanctary movement, says Udall pected to die of the disease. The projection that one in three people will get cancer is up TUCSON ' .1 -uper-om c mar.sweep.- aero-.- the (light. deck A n d \o u tv the pilot I lie catapuIt t i n a n d ( ì lories '.lam you hack into your seal Seconds later, w u re p u n c h i n g a h o l e ill t h e c l o u d s a n d l o o k i n y Notlimo heats the excitement ot Navi llvm o And no other joh can match the kind of m anagem ent responsibility vou V; jret soquickly mthe Navy. Tin' n'U.ml.» .in- there. loo Around the world travel opportunities w ith a ore,it siart ino .salari of'ÿlit.'JDO A- much a s. Sd'UiUO alter tour w a rs with promut ions ‘and pav increases ' l a k e ol Vl . hr t o m o r r o w i n t h e N a v v W i t h top-level tram ino to help vou build teclimeal and m anagerial .skills y 5 NIGHTS OF DELUXE ACCOMODATIONS AT THE BEAUTIFUL LAKE DILLON LODGE. AMENITIES INCLUDE: FREE HBO, POOL, JA C U Z Z I, GAME ROOM, SK I SHOP, RESTAURANT, LOUNGE AND GREAT NIGHT PARTYING. FREE TRANSPORTATION TO ALL SK I AREAS (ALL IIT H IN 10 M ILES) L IF T TICKETS FOR EACH OF THE SUMMIT AREAS INCLUDED. RENTALS AVAILIBLE WITH DISCOUNTS. rW Sm Ê S m SLH fe r» JP ' SKI V ID E O P A R T Y jb AT TIM OTHY O ’T O O L E S M ill fir* S o u th e rn R e g is te r F o r Smitty’s Shopping Center F R E E SKI TR IP 10 a.m .-6 p.m . FRIDAY, FEB. 15 • 4-7 P.M. 9 6 6 -0 0 4 2 966-3008 sun -ski tours (ra te s b ased on quad occu pancy) FRO M $ 1 5 • 1910 1965 JU B IL E E SCHUBACH JEW ELER S Page 6 Thursday, February 14,1985 S ta te P rê t» University p o lice attach in g ‘rhino boots’ to 10 cars p e r day By MELISSA SMVTH Staff Writer Between five and 10 vehicles are being "rhino-booted” every day since ASU implemented and improved the parking ticket records system in November, said a clerk in the University office of Parking and Transit. Paula Kraemer said more than 3,500 cars are currently eligible to receive the boot, which is a mechanical restraint placed on a vehicle’s wheel. Before the new system, parking enforcement officers booted up to three cars per day, she said. “Some days there wouldn’t be any and some days there would be a few more,” Kraemer said. Tony Alizio, a security officer for the Department of Public Safety, said, “We used to have five boots, now we’ve got 15." Any person who parks on campus with three or more un­ paid tickets, regardless of the amount of each fine, can find the bright orange lock bolted to the wheel of his car. According to Richard Landreth, assistant director of Park­ ing and Transit, a car owner must pay the price of the fines in addition to the $50 boot fee to have the metal lock removed. Landreth said a car with three or more unpaid tickets is entered into a computer which prints out a list every week. The new computerized records system compiles informa­ tion about parking offenders into organized rows. ASU Police and parking enforcement officers are given copies of the list and each officer familiarizes himself with a specific parking area, he said. “It rings a bell with you.” Landreth said. “You begin to recognize vehicles if you’ve cited them once or twice. ” The old system simply listed one citation with one license number, so someone with numerous tickets could be on dif­ ferent pages, he said. “ It was very difficult to amass information on one par­ ticular license plate,” he said. According to Landreth, parking offenders are paying their board with a lighter. Police are investigating the incident and will report their findings to the county attorney. The county attorney’s office will decide whether or not to bring Saul to trial, said Steve Reynolds, public informa­ tion officer for ASU’s Department of Public Safety. Police released Saul on his own recognizance. In other activity, University Police reported the follow­ ing incidents in the 24-hour period ending at 6 a.m. Wednesday: •An ASU student became ill in the Business Administra­ tion Building Tuesday at noon. He refused medical help p o lic e r e p o r t ASU student Jeffrey Alan Saul was arrested Tuesday in connection with a bulletin board fire which occurred early Monday morning in Sahuaro Hall, police said. Saul was charged with arson. Two dorm residents reported Saul to the resident assis­ tant after they saw him ignite the 4-by-8-foot cork bulletin FR€€* D€LIV€RY CHICKEN • PIZZA BURROS • ITALIAN GRINDERS CHICKEN WINGS • BREAD STICKS 894-2662 D€UV€RV HOURS 5 P.M.-I2:30 R.M. DRILV •MINIMUM $5 OBD6R FOB f f i « D6UV6BV $2 O F F $1 O F F • A n y larg e pizza or • O r d e r o f 30 o r m o re ch ick e n w in g s • A n y m e d iu m pizza • A n y o rd e r o f ch ick en LONDON GOLD DIRECT D IA M O N D IM P O R T E R S LARGE SELECTION OF WEDDING SETS P E A R LS PEARLS SOLITAIRES 14K M o u n tin g Retail PEARLS ROPE CHAINS 1 8 ” Solid Compare and save Our Price Retail 1/10 Ct $400 $99 1/5 Ct. $750 $199 1/3 Ct. $1,400 $275 1/2 Ct. $2,500 $499 1 Ct. $4,000 $949 1h Ct. $8,000 $ 1 ,9 9 9 2 Ct. $12,000 $ 2 ,9 9 9 1.8mm 2.2mm 2.7mm 3.2mm 4.0mm 5.0mm 6.0mm PHOENIX 936 W C a m e lb a c k west of McDonald’s In Camelback village Square 277-7080 MON.-FRI. 10-6 S A T . 10-5 1 dK T H E U L T IM A T E GUARANTEE We guarantee our prices to be the lowest In the valley Bring us any quote o f comparable quality and value, and we’ll dis­ count It by an additional 5 to 50 percent Our Price $350 $450 $600 $1,100 $1,900 $2,400 $2,700 $ 78 $117 $140 $165 $3 2 5 $520 $675 fines instead of leaving their cars locked up or trying to find innovative ways to remove the boot. The total amount of the fines has gone down from a December high of $350,000 to$312,000 this month, he said. Sawing the boot off of a car will not eliminate an offenders’ problems, he said. “We know who the individual is, we know the vehicle," he said. “Now all they've done is compound the problem.” Along with the increase in booted vehicles comes an in­ crease in irate faculty and students, Landreth said. Once they learn of the need for such a rigorous sy tern, they usually cooperate and pay the fines, he said. “I won't say they leave with a smile on their faces, but they do leave with a better understanding,” he said. Kraemer said offenders come up with some unusual names for the contraption they find on their cars, “They have an idea that it’s named after an animal, but they can never pinpoint what it is,” she said. from Tempe Fire Department paramedics, police said. He became ill again two hours later by the fountain on Cady Mall and refused treatment from ASU Police. •A custodian slipped and fell, injuring his left shoulder, while he was working in the Life Sciences Building Tues­ day. Tempe Fire Department paramedics took him to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for treatment, police said. •A set of front doors in the Moeur Administration Building was filled with paper and taped so they would not lock, a custodian reported to police Tuesday. The custodian re­ quested extra patrols for security, police said. — MELISSA SMYTH Tb protect you, calls charged to your num ber w ill have to meet w ith your approval. We want to protect you from fraud or mistakenly having long distance calls hilled to your number. So we require verification on all pay phone calls billed to a third number. That means if your number is to be billed, an operator will ask either you or someone at your home or business to approve each call when it’s made. If the line is busy or nobody answers, the operator won’t complete the call. If you place a third number call yourself, you do have billing alternatives, "iou can call collect or pay for it in coin. The fastest, easiest way, however, is to charge the call to a Mountain Bell Calling Card* But should someone want to charge a call to vou, we II make sure it meets with your approval, lliat way, calls you don t want to pay for aren't made at your expense. For the way you live. TEMPE 1 8 1 4 E. S o u t h e r n Southern & McClintock, Behind Jewelry Exchange Mountain Bell 820-3909 MON.-FRI. 10-6 S A T . 10-5 BRING IN THIS A D A N D RECEIVE 3% D ISCO U N T W ITH C A SH ..ill )uursmice wpreädiiüü Stale Press Thursday, February 14,1985 Page 7 ASU journalism professor shares what he has learned from others By JOHN CONWAY Staff Writer W. P arkm an Rankin, faculty associate in the ASU journalism and telecomm unications departm ent, began teaching at the age of 65 for a. simple reason — to share what he has learned from others. “I didn’t want to retire and just play golf," Rankin said. "I like young people very much. I wanted to give something back and this is a way of doing it.” Rankin earned his doctorate in W. Parkman Rankin business education from New York University at the age of 63, two years before he retired from an executive vice president position at Newsweek magazine. Rankin, or ‘Perk,’ as he is called by his colleagues, joined the ASU faculty in 1982, and is currently teaching a course in print media management. He spent the first week of February in New York where he attended a seminar designed to “educate the educators" about current problems and practices in print media advertising. The International Newspaper Adver­ tising and Marketing Executives Association (INAME) foundation seminar examined problems and prac­ tices in advertising that will be faced by students soon to enter the field, he said. INAME is interested in the needs of its members from the academic com­ munity, he said. “They ask you while you are there, What do you need?’ "h e said. According to Rankin, INAME is wor­ ried that schools have emphasized broadcasting and editorial practices too much and have not concentrated on the newspaper medium. Newspapers and advertisers nation­ wide belong to INAME, which is now located in Washington D.C., he said. “It’s the only seminar-in education where all of your expenses are paid,” he said. “It cost an average of $1,000 per person to attend. ” Rankin began his career with the Albany Knickerbocker News, and was later propelled into the upper manage­ ment divisions of such magazines as This Week, Time, Redbook and Newsweek, as well as working for the New York Herald Tribune. At Newsweek, he worked with Peter Benchley, who Rankin said “could buy Newsweek now." Rankin worked for Redbook before he accepted a salesman position for This Week magazine, a Sunday supplement found in many of the nation’s largest newspapers that at one time had a total weekly circulation of 14 million. Rankin worked his way up to the posi­ tion of executive vice president and stayed there for the last five years of his employment with This Week. Television contributed significantly to the folding of the magazine, but Rankin said he was undaunted and soon found employment at Time magazine. Rankin only stayed at the magazine for one year before moving on to take a job with Newsweek, where he spent the next 12 years. Rankin attended night school while working at Newsweek and earned his doctorate degree in business education at New York University at the age of 63 before retiring as a divisional advertis­ ing manager, he said. Although colleges are still offering Rankin teaching positions, he said ASU appeals to him the most. Rankin consulted the advertising staffs at Phoenix Newspapers Inc. and Better Homes and Gardens Magazine, he said. Yeshivat Hamivtar/Michlelet Bruria for m en for w om en “The Thinking Person’s Yeshiva” Courses include: Mishnah, Talmud, Bible, Jewish Law, and Jewish Philosophy Many different levels to accommodate all students. For more information: Beth Hait, 1 West 85 Street, Apt. 2F, NYC 10024, (212) 496-1618 Rabbi Chaim Brovender, Ph.D.— Dean ^ P Q H JC F R E S H FR U ITS & V E G E T A B L E S • G R A IN S « N U T S « D R IED F R U IT A N D T R A I L M IX E S Come in and take a look around. We have two big walk-in coolers! 10% off any purchase with ASU I.D. NOT GO OO WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. EXPIRES 5-2S-85. GREEN GR Plenty of Just a short drive from ASU at Parking Available 2111 E. Apache, in Tem pe °P£N rÜüisL” 966-5401 Need a CRT? Modem? Coupler? Printer? $40 Lease • Purchase • Rent Rent applied towards purchase $5 cash or credit For All Paid Referrals C ontact Business Resource service 3464 w . Earn nc e P h oen ix, AZ 85018 Ask fo r Charlie 269*6916 THEREARE TWO SIDESTO BECOMINGA NURSE INTHEARMY. A n d th ey’re b o th repre­ sented b y the in sig n ia yo u w ear as a m e m b e r o f the A r m y N u rse C o rp s. T h e ca d u ce u s o n the left m e an s y o u ’re part o f a health care system in w h ich e d u catio n al a n d career a d van ce m e n t are the rule, n o t th e exception. T h e g o ld b a r o n the rig h t m e a n s y o u c o m m a n d respect as a n A r m y officer. If y o u ’re e a rn in g a B S N , w rite: A r m y N u rse O p p o rtu n itie s, P .O . B o x 7713, C lifto n , N J 07015 . A R M Y NURSE CO R PS. BE A LLY O U CAN BE. 14/ F S 7 For reporter Malcolm Anderson, i t i the story of a lifetime. But getting it could cost him his career. And her life. CELEBRATES VALENTINES DAY! K u tR u n d i MoridHBmbgM M y All red merchandise in the store THE M EAN S E A SO N 10% OFF Warm-Ups Sweat Shirts T-Shirts Baseball Caps Basketballs Hacky Sacs Cycling Apparel Baseball Gloves Shoes, A TURMAN-FOSTER C0M f*N Y *_ KURT RUSSELL MAUI HEMNGWAY THE MEAN SEASON* RCHAROJORDAN RCHAROMASUR •LALOSOffRM ¿SZFRANK TOY. BSC — 25S r ? 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MITCHELL Staff Writer An ASU graduate who recently obtained a job as a painter for one of the oldest porcelain companies in America returned to Dorè, a goddess of youth, is one of Kyle Conley's porcelain works that was on dis­ play at Scottsdale's Borgata. e x c it in g The finishers then draw in the details of the piece that include hair, fingernails, palm lines and other small details that molds don't pick up.. “We’re (Cybis) known for the details on our figures,” Conley said. The parts are sealed together with liquid porcelain called “slip” and allowed to air dry, she said. ~ After they are dry, they are as brittle as pie crust and must be handled with great care, she said. Conley said the pieces are then baked in a kiln and artists complete the process by painting the figures. After Conley left Arizona she said she at­ tended Trenton State University and worked as an airline flight attendant while she worked to obtain a master's degree. Conley said the Cybis Studio was started in 1940 by Polish artist Boleslaw Cybis, who had been painting for the World Fair in the United States and was returning to Poland by ship when World War II started. The boat turned around and returned to America. Prices for the Cybis pieces range from around $100 to more than $3,000. Cybis is based in Trenton, which is considered the center of the American porcelain industry, Conley said. the Valley Wednesday to display her work at The Borgata in Scottsdale. Kyle Conley graduated with a degree in fine arts in 1977 and then moved to Trenton, N.J., where she eventually became an ap­ prentice with the Cybis Porcelain Studio. “I’ve always loved porcelain,” said Con­ ley. “I love how it’s translucent, pure, clean and white.” I just enjoy traveling and being the spokesperson for Cybis,” she said. “It’s a lot of fun.” Conley gave a demonstration of porcelain painting at the display and the piece, valued at $395, was given away in a drawing. “I didn’t realize how much I missed Arizona," She said. “ I really like it here.” Conely said a lot of things take place before she actually sees the porcelain and begins to paint it. The artist mixes the powdered mineral pigments with heavy oil and turpentine which causes every piece to have its own unique shading, she said. “We use light colors so we don’t hide the beauty of the porcelain," Conley said. Before the porcelain is painted, each in­ dividual part is poured into a mold where it takes shape. Once the piece dries, the molds are cut open, she said. a s 9 ic | n r o e r r t 9 -far im aqìna+ìve people Conley likes to use light colored paints on the porcelain pieces she works with, as she did with her interpretation of Romeo and Juliet. Sandía National Laboratories an equal opportunityemployer McKELLIPS & SCOTTSDALE RDS. (ALPHA BETA SHOPPING CIRI STUDENT DISCOUNT 25% OFF DRY CLEANING SHOW I D. CARD WITH INCOMING ORDER Sahdk National Laboratories» has career opportunities -for ouTstandinq M SI P h D candidates in enqineerinq ¿the ph\|M& science». Ore. of th e hationfe Imgest multi* prvqram ^ ■ ¡1 laboratories,Sandia is erepqed in research dk developm ent, ^ addressing important national security issues with emphasis on nuclear weapons, advanced energy system s & related technoloqfes. 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Chari 967-3747 evenings. LETTER QUALITY word processing $1.90 par page (double spaced), spalling edited, draft copy avallabia. Must be legible. Dobson Ranch area (BassHne-Prioe). Trish 639-1961.______ N O R TH W EST PHOENIX, quality typing. Thetas, dissertations, research projects 936-3397.________________ QUICK, EFFICIENT typing. Low rates. CaMFay»8494)689________________ TUTORING MATH by graduate student. Cell 968-4799 ask for Dave.__________ TYPING-EXPERT word processing ser­ vices. Term papers, resumes, any documents. 8 years legal experience. Reasonable rates. Cali Robin anytime weekends or weekdays before 8am or altar 6pm at 991 •1468. Page 16 S ta te Presa J jh u re d a y jF e b o ja ^ J ^ J Ç S S ^ Cagers hope for California sw eep By JERRY BROWN Assistant Sports Editor With its overall and conference records again at the .500 level, the ASU men’s basketball team travels to California this weekend looking for a little revenge. The Devils (11-11 overall, 6-6 conference) visit Pac-10 leader USC (15-5, 9-2) tonight and then head to UCLA (9-11, 6-5) for a Saturday night contest in Pauley Pavilion. The Bruins and Trojans both defeated. ASU last month in Tempe, but the Devils have won six of the nine games since then. ASU began the week on a down note, drop­ ping a 81-63 decision to Washington on Mon­ day night. The Devils trailed by just one point at halftime, but Husky guard Detlef Schrempf scored 20 points against ASU for the second time this season as Washington cruised to the win. If they hope to pull the upset, the Devils will have to do a better job stopping the Tro­ jan transition game. USC forward Wayne Carlander scored 25 points and guard Larry Friend dished off 10 assists in the first meeting, which the Trojans won 73-54. Bobby Thompson led ASU in that game with 13 points, but he was the only person in double figure for the Devils, who shot just 32 percent from the field. The Bruins have fallen upon hard times since their visit to Tempe. Among the Pac10 leaders early on, UCLA has slipped to fifth place and has lost its last four games. Forward Reggie Miller had 17 points in the Bruins’ 64-61 win over ASU. Guard Steve Beck and center Jon Taylor each had 16 for the Devils. Tonight’s game will be shown on ESPN and TCS-MetroSports. Terrace Road Apartments WALK TO SCHOOL! V2 block from campus. Huge, well furnished 1-bedroom, 1-bath, and 2-bedroom, 2-baths, all utilities included, plus many amenities. New cable hookups. 950 S. Terrace Rd. 966-8540 Support the Dimes d p March MgBlPTHOfMCof ISFOUNOAnONa Now! D eal-O f-A-M eat only *1.99 Enjoy any Regular Size Sub Sandwich and a Regular Size Drink all for $1.99. Bring this Coupon in now thru February 28, 1985. 1726 East Southern Tempe, Arizona 8971810 Comer of McClintock 6 Southern S o u t h e r n P a lm s C e n t e r One coupon per customer per order. Not valid with any other offer. 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