W•• ,II.r Todav's weather will be mostly fair wfth no chance of rain. The .•igh will be about 78 F (25 C) with the low about 50 F (10 C). Daily ver reen Washington State University Daily Evergreen The Women's Transit System is in jeopardy. The service, which provided more than 1,000 rider's with safe transportation to various spots on campus last spring, is faced with a lack of volunteers. Last year's coordinator. of the transit system did not return to school, Marcia Sche kel , director of the Women's Center said, and the Center has not been contacted by last year's dr ive rs. As a result The Women's Transit System is immobile. About 20 volunteers are needed to drive or dispatch drivers, Schekel said. Volunteers al-e asked to devote two to four hours per week to the service, either as drivers or dispatchers. Students who volunteer nrne to the transit system will have that service entered on a resume at the Volunteer Agency, Schekel said, adding that employers are beginning to look at such resumes more closely. The transit system was started in February because the. Women's Center had a number of women coming to them and expressing concern about walking alone on campus after dark, Schekel said. The transit system was devised to safely transport women to and from university housing to any spot on campus. Although the system got off to a slow start (o!1ly 102 riders in Vol. 85, No.5, Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978 Campus firefighting personnel were called to the scene of a grass fire adjacent to the east entrance to the Chinook apartment complex yesterday afternoon. A spokesman said a cigarette tossed from a vehicle is believed to have caused the blaze, Women's Transit System threatened Service may end if volunteers cannot be found the first month), interest increased and by the end of the semester 1,098 students had been served, Srhek e l said. The transit svstern IS financiallv supported by the Associa- tion for Women St udents CAWS), coordinated by the Women's Center and is also backed by the campus police, who allow di spa tchers to work from the police sta tion. • Why devote time to the transit system') Because, Schekel said, 'it is not only a good service, it is "a good way to meet people." To be a volunteer', a person must have a driver's license and go through an all-day training course, where they will be quizzed on driving, how to use a CB radio and how to handle a crisis. Volunteers do not have to worry about their own cars, since the system uses university cars, Schekel said. She emphasized the transit system is not a taxi service, but a safety service, designed to keep women from walking alone on campus after dark. . If the transit system gets enough volunteers to begin opera- tion, it will run from 8 p.m. to midnight, and can be reached at 335-6830. Persons interested in volunteering should drop by the Women's Center in room B-27 of the CUB. Hospital prices: He's coming to work soon -----perhaps by louise minnlck Pullman's Memorial Hospital boasts the lowest average patient bill of any Washington hospital in its class, accord- ing to a state hospital commission report. Memoria I has an a verage rate per patient-day of $202.70 and an average length of stay of 3.2 days. The average patient bill, or "rate of admission," is $648.76, the report said. (Multiplying costs per day times the a verage length of stay is the best way to determine hospital cost, according to Ger- ald Baker, hospital administrator.) Other hospitals in Memorial's grouping range from $661.14 to $1,476.73, with most of them topping $1,000. Length of stay ranges from 2.9 to 6.83 days. The report divides all hospitals in the state into five "peer groups" according to services offered, number of beds per 1,000 population, median income of the county and other factors. Peer group five has the broadest range of services and group one the smallest. Memoria·1 falls into group three, along with 23 other hospitals. It is also com- University President Glenn Ter- rell said yesterday it is probable the school's newly selected Vice Presi- dent of Academics will begin work at WSU in July of next year. However, Terre ll said, the date is not "defmite." The university has not released the name of the new VIce president but Terrell did mention in a tele- phone conversation that the man IS from Washington D.C. "I'm getting itchy myself," Ter- rell said, explaining he would ha ve liked to release the name of the new vice president days ago but has not been able to because the new man has not authorized a release as yet. When asked if the delay might be due to negotiations the man could be having with other schools or establishments, terrell replied "I don't think he would do anything like that. He's not that kind of a person." A state survey finds Pullman Memorial boasts lowest rates for hospitals in its class pared with the six other hospitals in dis- trict 13, which consists of Whitman, Walla Walla, Asotin, Garfield and Columbia counties. The prices are based on data compiled during the 50 months following the ter- mination of wage and price freezes set by the Nixon Administration "dul ing 1971- 1974. Percentage increases use the prices First-hour operating room costs are al- so very inexpensive at Memorial. At $85, up 30.8 percent, it is the lowest-priced in district 13 and the second-lowest In peer group three. Only one other hospital in group three costs less than $100. District 13 averages $130.29 for the first hour, up 70.5 percent from 1974 and the sta te averages $135.33, up 62 percent. Hospital Cost Averages Puliman Memorial District 13 Washington State operating room / first-hour $85 $130.29 $135.33 semi-private room/day $95 $94.92 $101.14 intensive carel 24 hours $250.70 $217 $229.65· of April 30, 1974 as a base. Current prices are those effective as of June 30. A semi-private at Memorial costs $95 a day, a 75.9 percent increase, as compared to a district average of $94.92 and a state average of $101.14. Memorial does not have what is defined as "intensive care" because it does not have a separate staff and facilities exciu-' sively for such care, but it can offer the same services as do hospitals with inten- sive care. The equivalent care at Memorial would cost $2 per hour in addition to in-patient costs, or $2SO.70for 24 hours. The average for district 13 is $217 and the average for the state is $229.65. Actual "intensive care" patients are sent to Spokane. Washington semi-private room rates in- creased 63.9 percent over the SO-month period as compared to a national average of 70.7 percent. Operating room prices increased 62 per- cent in the state and 79.3 percent in the nation. Washington has slowed inflation of hospital costs to less than 10 percent a year, while most states have rates of 15 percent or more, Baker said. Pullman's rate of inflation is onlv 4 to 5 percent, he said. .
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W•• ,II.rTodav's weather will be mostly
fair wfth no chance of rain. The.•igh will be about 78 F (25 C) withthe low about 50 F (10 C).
Daily
ver reenWashington State University Daily Evergreen
The Women's Transit System is in jeopardy.The service, which provided more than 1,000 rider's with safe
transportation to various spots on campus last spring, is facedwith a lack of volunteers.Last year's coordinator. of the transit system did not return to
school, Marcia Sche kel , director of the Women's Center said,and the Center has not been contacted by last year's dr ive rs.
As a result The Women's Transit System is immobile.About 20 volunteers are needed to drive or dispatch drivers,
Schekel said. Volunteers al-e asked to devote two to four hoursper week to the service, either as drivers or dispatchers.
Students who volunteer nrne to the transit system will havethat service entered on a resume at the Volunteer Agency,Schekel said, adding that employers are beginning to look atsuch resumes more closely.The transit system was started in February because the.
Women's Center had a number of women coming to them andexpressing concern about walking alone on campus after dark,Schekel said.
The transit system was devised to safely transport women toand from university housing to any spot on campus.
Although the system got off to a slow start (o!1ly 102 riders in
Vol. 85, No.5, Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978
Campus firefighting personnel were called to the scene of a grassfire adjacent to the east entrance to the Chinook apartmentcomplex yesterday afternoon. A spokesman said a cigarettetossed from a vehicle is believed to have caused the blaze,
Women's Transit System threatenedService may end if volunteers cannot be found
the first month), interest increased and by the end of thesemester 1,098 students had been served, Srhek e l said.
The transit svstern IS financiallv supported by the Associa-tion for Women St udents CAWS), coordinated by the Women'sCenter and is also backed by the campus police, who allowdi spa tchers to work from the police sta tion. •
Why devote time to the transit system') Because, Schekelsaid, 'it is not only a good service, it is "a good way to meetpeople."
To be a volunteer', a person must have a driver's license andgo through an all-day training course, where they will bequizzed on driving, how to use a CB radio and how to handle acrisis.
Volunteers do not have to worry about their own cars, sincethe system uses university cars, Schekel said.
She emphasized the transit system is not a taxi service, but asafety service, designed to keep women from walking alone oncampus after dark. .
If the transit system gets enough volunteers to begin opera-tion, it will run from 8 p.m. to midnight, and can be reached at335-6830.
Persons interested in volunteering should drop by theWomen's Center in room B-27 of the CUB.
Hospital prices:
He's comingto work soon-----perhaps
by louise minnlck
Pullman's Memorial Hospital boasts thelowest average patient bill of anyWashington hospital in its class, accord-ing to a state hospital commission report.Memoria I has an a verage rate per
patient-day of $202.70 and an averagelength of stay of 3.2 days. The averagepatient bill, or "rate of admission," is$648.76, the report said.(Multiplying costs per day times the
a verage length of stay is the best way todetermine hospital cost, according to Ger-ald Baker, hospital administrator.)
Other hospitals in Memorial's groupingrange from $661.14 to $1,476.73, with mostof them topping $1,000. Length of stayranges from 2.9 to 6.83 days.The report divides all hospitals in the
state into five "peer groups" according toservices offered, number of beds per 1,000population, median income of the countyand other factors. Peer group five has thebroadest range of services and group onethe smallest.
Memoria·1 falls into group three, alongwith 23 other hospitals. It is also com-
University President Glenn Ter-rell said yesterday it is probable theschool's newly selected Vice Presi-dent of Academics will begin workat WSU in July of next year.However, Terre ll said, the date isnot "defmite."
The university has not releasedthe name of the new VIce presidentbut Terrell did mention in a tele-phone conversation that the man ISfrom Washington D.C.
"I'm getting itchy myself," Ter-rell said, explaining he would ha veliked to release the name of the newvice president days ago but has notbeen able to because the new manhas not authorized a release as yet.
When asked if the delay might bedue to negotiations the man couldbe having with other schools orestablishments, terrell replied "Idon't think he would do anythinglike that. He's not that kind of aperson."
A state survey finds Pullman Memorialboasts lowest rates for hospitals in its class
pared with the six other hospitals in dis-trict 13, which consists of Whitman, WallaWalla, Asotin, Garfield and Columbiacounties.
The prices are based on data compiledduring the 50 months following the ter-mination of wage and price freezes set bythe Nixon Administration "dul ing 1971-1974. Percentage increases use the prices
First-hour operating room costs are al-so very inexpensive at Memorial. At $85,up 30.8 percent, it is the lowest-priced indistrict 13 and the second-lowest In peergroup three. Only one other hospital ingroup three costs less than $100.
District 13 averages $130.29 for the firsthour, up 70.5 percent from 1974 and thesta te averages $135.33, up 62 percent.
Hospital Cost AveragesPuliman Memorial District 13 Washington State
operating room /first-hour $85 $130.29 $135.33
semi-privateroom/day $95 $94.92 $101.14
intensive carel24 hours $250.70 $217 $229.65·
of April 30, 1974 as a base.Current prices are those effective as of
June 30.
A semi-private at Memorial costs $95 aday, a 75.9 percent increase, as comparedto a district average of $94.92 and a state
average of $101.14.Memorial does not have what is defined
as "intensive care" because it does nothave a separate staff and facilities exciu-'sively for such care, but it can offer thesame services as do hospitals with inten-sive care.
The equivalent care at Memorial wouldcost $2 per hour in addition to in-patientcosts, or $2SO.70 for 24 hours.
The average for district 13 is $217 andthe average for the state is $229.65.
Actual "intensive care" patients aresent to Spokane.Washington semi-private room rates in-
creased 63.9 percent over the SO-monthperiod as compared to a national averageof 70.7 percent.Operating room prices increased 62 per-
cent in the state and 79.3 percent in thenation.
Washington has slowed inflation ofhospital costs to less than 10 percent ayear, while most states have rates of 15percent or more, Baker said.
Pullman's rate of inflation is onlv 4 to 5percent, he said. .
Susan B. Anthony
Suffragette to adorn new dollor coinof coins at the outset so they surface of the moon. The coin,don't become scarce collectors' which has a raised II-sided bord-
er inside the round circumfer-ence, includes the traditionalwords" In God We Trust" on thefront and "E Pluribus Unum" onthe back.
STRATTONS DAIRYWASHINGTON CAP) - Amer-
icans could have the new SusanB. Anthony dollar coin jinglingamong their pocket changesometime next summer, Trea-sury officials say.The coin pic-turing the
women's rights advocate wonHouse approval 368-38 Tuesdayto the applause of feminists. TheSenate passed the authorizationbill earlier, and President Carteris certain to sign it.U.S. Mint officials said they
will begin minting 500 million ofthe copper-nickel coins in aboutJanuary and issue them aboutJune, releasing a large number
Pasteurized, Inspected, Fresh Milk
Homogenized, 2%, and Skim
Stretch Your Dollar !Whipping Cream Sour Cream
One mile past Ram Pub andProfessional Mall on Johnson Road
asked for a figure similar to theStatue of Liberty on the dollar,which is sligh tly larger than aquarter. But Congress decided
- on the Anthony dollar insteadand some Treasury officials saythe sometimes-heated contro-versy over the face on the coingenerated attention that willmake it likely more people wiIluse it.The "tails" side shows an ea-
gle landing on an irregular ob-ject supposed to represent the
There were a few complaintsabout a coin honoring thewomen's suffrage leader, butmost objections concerned earlyversions of the image of MissAnthony.
The Treasury estimates it cansa ve $17 million a year with thedollar coin because one coin willoutwear many dollar bills.
AP digestFaculty vote to end strikeSEATTLE CAP) - Striking teachers have disregarded a
leadership recommendation, voting decisively to obey a courtorder to return to work in Washington's largest school district.School officials said classes for about 55,000 pupils will begin
tomorrow, a long with the nation's first mandatory desegrega-tion plan adopted without a court or federal government order.
Paraphernalia bill rejectedOLYMPIA (AP) - The Washington attorney general's office
has turned thumbs down to proposed legislation to ban the saleor possession of drug-related paraphernalia.Assistant Attorney General James Davenport said Tuesday
the legislation would be held unconstitutional by the courtsbecause it isn't specific about wh ich items would constitutedrug paraphernalia.The bill also includes no requirement to show that the person
intended to use the tools in a drug-related way, he said.Davenport said many of the items used by junkies also have
ordinary, legal uses. A teaspoon is an example, he said.
Egypt seeks Arab backingEgypt launched a diplomatic campaign Tuesday to win Arab
backing for the Camp David agreement with Israel, tellingArab ambassadors in Cairo that the accords are only a steptoward-a comprehensive Mideast settlement.
Most Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia and Jordan,have announced reservations about the agreement signed byIsraeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian Presi-dent Anwar Sadat on the grounds it does not specificallyprovide for the return of East Jerusalem to the Arabs. .
Arm limit talks stressedMIAMI (AP) - The special U.S. representative to the
strategic arms limitations talks says as many as six othercountries may join the nuclear arms race unless Russia andthe United States succeed in their negotiations.Paul Warnke's remarks came on the eve Of renewed arms
limitation meetings, the first of wh ich was scheduled yesterdayat the United Nations Soviet Mission in New York."Unless we and the Soviet Union can find some way to begin
to bring our nuclear arsenals under control we can't indefinite-ly expect the other countries of the world to stay out of thenuclear weapons game," said Warnke.
TENNIS RACKETS20%oH
• HEAD• DAVIS• YONEX• BANCROFT• WILSON
SPALDING AND WILSON TENNIS BALLS
PUMA AND NIKETENNIS SHOES
ALSO: CUSTOM IACKET IE·STRINGING
PullmanN.115Grand
Moscow410 W. 3rd
Assembly told of new programsAlso: ASWSU charged with discrimination
Three new programs, two for women's interests andone for married students, have been establishedthrough the Dean of Students Office.Dean of Students Arthur McCartan told the ASWSU
Assembly of the programs last night.McCartan said other student services are in "excel-
lent shape" and health and financial aid services arefull y staffed.
A full-time position was established in the Office forPrograms for Women and a half-time position createdfor the Women's Center.
The third program established was the Day CareCenter which began operation Monday, McCartansaid.Lola Finch, director of financial aid, told the assern-
bly if students bring their problems to the Office ofFinancial Aid early, she is sure there "is an avenue ofhelp."
She added, "It is hard to. solve last minute prob-lems."Help is needed to continue the voter registration
drive, ASWSU Vice President Vann Snyder told theassembly. Snyder said a student voter turnout of 4,000would mean the passage of a Pullman bus system.He said the students will play an integral partin the
bus system's passage. Passage Would entail a 2percent utilities tax being imposed for funding.
A deputy voter registrar is available in the Activi-.ties Office, third floor, CUB.The assembly was told by David Lee, ASWSU
activities adviser, that ASWSU would have to elimin-ate four structural flaws before any "big" problemscould be addressed."It may come as a shock to some," but ASWSU
doesn't represent the students on campus, he said.'The ASWSU organization has the reputation withstudents as a clique, which does not encourage in-
Apathy: bus system opposition?Pullman Mayor Karen Kiessl-
ing told a gathering of eight per-sons last night Pullman'Sproposed transit system's mainopposition will probably comefrom "apathy and ignorance,"ra ther than any organized group.The meeting in the CUB was
for persons interested in volun-teering their time and effortstoward educating students andPullman residents about thetransit proposal and for thoseinterested in applying for the
position of student adviser to themayor.
(Three persons indicated aninterest in applying for the posi-tion of adviser to the mayor. Thedeadline for applications istomorrow.)Kiessling said the transit
system will enable students andWSU faculty and staff membersto commute to the campus, willencourage students to shopdowntown and, through the 'dial-a-ride' segment of the 'system,
provide easier access to the a ir-port.She said many people are ig-
norant about the proposal andinformation is the most impor-tan t factor in the proposal's ap- .proval or defeat."It's now or never," she said of
the future of Pullman transit.She told tlJ,~ students they can
assist by informing otherstudents and members of checommunity about the system bypassing out informationa I fold-
e rs , painting posters and soforth.Another point she stressed: for
students to be able to vote on theissue, they must be registered tovote in Pullman. The deadline toregister is Oct. 7. More informa-tion concerning registering maybe obtained at City Hall.
Anyone interested in helpingwith promotion of the transitsystem or ha vi ng questionsabout the system may contactKiessling at her hr.ne , 332-4755.
A name change has been ap-proved by the WSU Board ofRegents to call the Departmentof Horticulture the Departmentof Horticulture and LandscapeArchitecture. The changebecame effective on Sept. 16.The name change will giverecognition to the landscape ar-chitecture program within thedepartment. That program nowattracts about one-third of thestudents in horticulture.
clothing to express the woman you are121east fourth, moscow
(across from city hall)
volvement, he said.He charged the ASWSU organization with discri-
mination against students through the committee-selection process and the assembly has "little exer-cise of control" over the committees.
ASWSU is not run democratically, he added.Because of poor by-laws and constitution, the studentsdo not -have the Opportunity to overturn an assemblydecision, he concluded.
The assembly took action to correct some of theseproblems by establishing a "brown-bag lunch"program between students and the assembly. Theprogram IS dubbed the "Monaghan Plan" after spon-sor Maureen Monaghan, assembly member.The first brown bagger will be held tomorrow, noon,
on the CUB third floor. All students are invited,discussion will center on obtaining a new WSU mas-cot.
Regents approvename change forhorticulture dept.
~.. ,'.
Thursday, September 28,1978 DAILYEVERGREEN-3• j • ~ • •
PERSPECTIVESApathy--so what
Possibly the most menacing problem facingAmerican colleges today is one which is rarelydiscussed.
This problem is not one of inadequate funding,nor does it involve faculty-understaffing.It is not even one of the many problems listed
by individuals who make a habit of studying thesituation in higher education institutions.The problem faced right now can be summed
up in one word. Apathy.Apathy is that state of mind which seems to
have infected the youth of country since theclimax of the anti-war movement in 1973.It is this "who cares" attitude which has spread
like a cancer infecting all but a dedicated handfulintent on making their views known.
Although last year's 33 percent turnout forASWSU elections topped the other PAC-8schools, it is troubling to think that only one-thirdof the student body here is determining policiesby which we all must live.
Case in point: In the recent controversy con-cerning the display of an Army helicopter in theCUB Mall, only two individuals presented theirviews on the matter-Tom Pirie and VannSnyder.Agreed, they are our elected officials, but does
this mean that they must be relied upon to act asthe sole sources of opinion on this campus?This is not necessarily meant to advocate or
criticize the actions taken by Pirie and Snyder.The important fact to note here is that some kindof action was taken-but by two persons only.
Is this a campus with a student populacewandering through the year with their minds insome gray void? Doesn't anyone out there havesome opinions to convey? Or are we just allautomatons, following the will of two electedleaders?
It seems as if the only thing to get studentsinvolved will be something on the scale of anatomic bomb dropped on New York.
Even the potential threat of a second Vietnamseems to have no effect. With the Nicaraguasituation, even the constant rumors of Americanintervention and the return of the draft hasapparently not stirred any interest here.The problem is definitely not one of a lack of
facilities to express ideas.In this university, there exists a number of
political unions and organizations specificallydesigned for the expressing of ideas.
This doesn't mean we should revert to thetactics of the late 1960s and early 1970 s. Theburning of buildings tends to be messy, costly andgenerally disruptive.
Make your thoughts known. Don't just accepteverything presented, absorbing it like some sortof sponge. React.
Some undoubtedly see expressing their viewson subjects as their right. Others probably see theaction as a chore. But if the students are tomaintain any semblance of self-rule and avoidfalling into a puppet government situation underthe administration, it must be seen as a duty.
But, if everyone really wishes to maintain thisattitude, fine. Enjoy yourselves. After all, whyshould you worry. Surely "George" can do it justas well as you can.
The only problem is, what happens when thereare no more "George's" willing to bust themselvesin half for your benefit. Oh well, someone else willpick up the pieces.
place to display an AHIG Cobraattack helicopter?The CUB Mall has always been
deemed the proper place to con-front the student body witheverything from frontier wagonsto political and religiousspeakers of every type. So, itappears the real question iswhether or not the attack heli-copter should be displayed forthe students. 'Tom Pirie, ASWSU president,
and Vice President Vann Snydertook it upon themselves to makethe decision for the students, ini-tially by disrupting the displaywith their sign of opposition, andthen by demanding that the air-craft be removed from the cam-pus by morning.
As a result, the display wascancelled for :the following day.If the Student Body Presidentwas acting on the desires of themajority of WSU students, hemight possibly be called a repre-sentative of the student body.
However, I'm not aware ofanypolls taken and his was the onlyopposition noted throughout theday.' It appears to me that theStudent Body President is effec-tively dictating what thestudents on this campus will andwill not be allowed to see in theirmall.Are we so impressionable as
students that we must be shield-ed from viewing such a treacher-ous machine as a Cobra heli-Copter, that our minds will sure-ly be twisted by getting too closeto such an implement of destruc-tion?I believe we should open our
eyes a little wider and take agood, hard look at reality,
That machine exists for thepurpose of waging war and thereis no hiding that fact. Removingit from this campus may removeit from your mind, but it doesn'tsnuff it out of existence.It will continue to exist in one
form or another long after weha ve departed.And why do you think it ex-
ists? Is it because our govern-ment strives to wage war? NO.
It exists out of necessity. Thefreedoms that we as Americanstake for granted didn't comecheaply in terms of money orblood. That machine exists tohelp insure the preservation ofall those freedoms that we enjoydaily, such as the right to attendthis university and study whatwe desire,If you advocate unilateral dis-
armament, perhaps you should
SPORTS EDITORISteve Weber
FEATURE EDITORIDell Burner
EDITORIAL ASSIST ANT IJim Angell
COPY READER/Jane Conrad
SEWS EDITORS/Ann SimsDan Mills
I\SS'T TO MANAGINGEDITORIGeorgia Lomax
\IANAGING EDITOR/John Leenders
EDITORLenel Williams
To the editortake a strong look a t the na tureand policy of our adversaries,
Maybe the sign of disapprovaldisplayed in front of the Cobracommunicated a disapproval ofthe recent Vietnam War inwhich the aircraft was used.Should we attempt to chop woodwith a wet noodle because the axwas once used to bust a fewheads?Students go to college to ex-
pand their base of knowledgeand to broaden their horizons.We'll do neither by refusing torecognize or analyze issues orobjects that are in any way cont-rary to our preconceived atti-tudes.
Regardless of whether yousupport or oppose the defense ofour nation or the means of itsdefense, you will never broadenyour perspective or formulatenew attitudes unless your oldones are tested.
As long as the CUB Mall isused as a showcase for cars or aplatform for speakers then yes,it is the proper place to displayan AHIG Cobra because thatmachine is part of your reality.Support or reject it, view it for
what it is or view it for theintriguing piece of engineeringthat it is, but by all means view itbecause it exists and because inone way or another you'll broa-den your knowledge of the worldaround.
If you didn't get a chance toview it, then you can thank yourstudent body president for shel-tering you from reality.
-don emerson
Poor factlltlesWith reference to the articles
on page 11 of yesterday's Ever-green (concerning motoristsparking in bike lanes, along sidean article about bike safety). Isuspect the stories point to muchlarger problems: bikers do nothave any place to ride safely anddrivers are not provided withanything which even resemblesadequate parking facilities on(or around) campus,Since I've been at this school,
I've read several artie les in theEvergreen and talked to a fewticket writers which/who sug-gested that the monies. fromparking permits, parking ticketsand other minor violations aresuppose to be used to providebetter parking facilities andsafety improvements. Unfortun-ately I've never any seen ofthese "improvements." Maybe ifthe monies were used as people
PUblished by the ASWSU Student PUblications Boardfor the students of Washington State University eachTuetday, Wednesday, Thursday and Frtday, except dur-ing the scheduled vacation and examination w~ks of theregular university year. OIuck Holtorf, chairman andW.O. Calvert. secretary and general manager.Offlce: Room 113 Murrow Communications Center,
P.D. Box 2008. cs, WSU, PUllman, Washington 99163.Printed by the PUllman Herald Second class postage atPUllman, Washington. Mail Subscriptions $16,00 per yearor 18, ~ per sem ester.
Advertising material presented herein does not neces-sarllyjmply endorsement by this paper.
ROTCwrongIt is diff'icnlt to believe that in
the post-VietNam era there arestill naive chauvinists who spoutoff about "if you went to Rus-sia ... " as if that somehow vindi-cates Our mercenary role in thatbloodbath. :
Not only that, but "machineskill people" and "highwaydeaths." Really. Because peopledie on highways, does that some-how render,insignificant the use-less deaths .of young Americansin an absurd war? And if a heli-copter picks, up our mercenariesin the field does that qualify as aRed Cross mission?As Mssrs. Pirie and Snyder
illustrated, the only reason, orpurpose, of that helicopter is forwar, which by definition is theprocess of killing, maiming, anddestroying.
Mr. Lee also attacks the actionof Pirie and Snyder as a cosme-tic media event. The action itselfwas no more absurd than theexpense to which the ROTC wentto stage their own media event.
As taxpayers, we feel that theROTC should make public theexpense necessary to bring thehelicopter to campus, theamount of ad vertising in theEvergreen or for the "disco"Army commercials on TV.Whether it is to attract studentsto a military-welfare state orarouse our patriotic fervor, theevents staged by the militaryhere on campus are emptysymbols in themselves.The point of the protest goes
deeper than the presence of asingle war machine on campus.The deeper issue is the presenceof the military itself in a suppo-sedly educational center. It is thepresence of this war machine inall its forms that we bitterlyresent, whether it be little boysin ROTC uniforms playing sol-dier on the football field, orresearch contracts for a biggerand better War Machine. orpha ntoms f1ying overhead.
Glamorous things! Really, Mr.Lee, if your idea of glamour isthe systematic and scientific dis-posal of human life, then you donot belong in any institutiondedicated to the pursuit of aliberal education.We are not debating a need for
national defense, only the rolethat it plays, or should play, inour daily lives. Our thanks toPirie and Snyder for making apoint, albeit small, that mayprevent another VietNam.
gary stanglerjim wittebols
DOONESeURY
Mary Ellen WagnerKathy ZenerSteve BreedenKevin Carson
Letters continuedcont'd from page 4claim they are supposed to beused, people like the good officerButkus wouldn't have to pushartie. 'S like "you bikers are badchildren" and "vou drivers ar-en't very nice for parking in bikelanes". But then, of course, thepolice would have to do realwork.
dan mills
Sports lackingTuesday's recap of the Cougs
victorv over ASU was probably anecessary article, as it seemedthat many students missed atleast part -of the game tryi ng toget into wonderful Joe Albi ortrving to find a seat. Lots offlashv Jack Thompson statisticsinc luded too, wh ich everybodylikestosee.
But even from the twi light ofmy prime goal line seat, I noteda few other players mo vi ngabout. What were they doing?Who was the leading rusher, theman with the most tackles. thetop receiver? wheres the sta ts?Let's have some meat with thepotatoes next time' A statisticschart seems to be in or-der. Seat-tle papers may say little, and
Spokane papers, well, you know.The Evergreen remains as theCougar fan's last hope. Thankyou.
stacy smith
Bus to RotoA recent pragmatic situation
has arisen with some of the cam-pus residence halls. The StantonJ. Hall Rotunda Dining Hall issatisfactorily serving Gannon,Goldsworthy, Kruegel, McAllis-ter and Neill. (Servi ng us what,we're not a lwa ys sure ... )
But the problem has arisen inthat the Rota ser-ves 831 malesand 414 females. That's justabout a 2 to I ratio of guys overgirls. Aside from the te rrifyingaffect th is must ha VI' on thegirls's meals, this unequalit y isextremely unfair to the guys.
What I'd like to suggest as asolution is that girls would bebussed from other dorms to ha VI'their meals in the Rotunda. I'msure this would be satisfactoryfor all concerned. Th reI' or fou-rhundred girls would do just fine'We'd even accept them from thesorori ties'
theodore nugent
THURSDAY'S
TACOS3/$1.19
..AT
TACO· TIME
Seaweed investigatedMALCOLM ISLAND, "I think we can provide of bucks," he said. "It can be
Br it ish Columbia (AP) - some good economic develop- very lucrative _ $100,000 aA I tho ugh t hat not - ment and employment oppor- year for some farmers"so-well-known delicacy, tunity," said Michael Coon, .seaweed, is already found in head of seaweed research for Coon predicted that whensalad dressings and ice the provincial marine the government gives thecream, the British Columbia resources branch. green light to capitalize ongovernment wants to find Researchers consider the the market survey, it is onlyother uses for the plant. kelp bed about three miles off "a couple of years down the
A recent survey shows the northeast coast of Van- road" when developme-ntthere are good market couverlslandtobeoneofthe costs will be reasonable toprospects in North America best in the province. attract investors. Someand the Orient for kelp and "We now have an inventory fishermen fear that removingother seaweeds, with demand of most of the major stocks of the seaweed will damagegreatly exceeding supply. kelp on the British Columbia their livelihood because sal-
Kelp meal is used in health coast," Coon said in a recent man are known to swim alongfoods beca use of its high interview. the edge of kelp beds.nutritional value. One cherni- Other seaweeds would havecal by-product called algin to be farmed because theresells for- from $2 to $7 a pound are insufficient wild stocks.and is used as an emulsifier in Coon estimated that the in-foods such as ice cr-eam and t ern a t ion a I s I' awe e dsalad dr-essing. byproducts industry grosses
So a bright gr-een seaweed- $500 million a year, while edi-harvesting machine is plying ble seaweed, consumed main-nearby ocean waters as part Iy in the Orient, grosses $750of a government program to million annually.study the potentia I of a He said companies involvedseaweed industrv. in seaweed harvesting In the
Since 1974 tl;e pr-ovincial United States are owned bygovernment has given about multi-national corporations,$400,()()() in grants to investi- but he forsees a cottage-stylegate the new industry. which industry for British Columbia.could develop an ann ua I gross "In Japan, it's a cottageof $9 million. ind ust ry that's gr-ossing lot's
. I, :: _I I: ~ <' -;----.. Tu"s I"tSofRUIIf[ ... r s
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A rltudents mOOk rilortioration~ 'Jour ~Adyanced Campus Electronics" Center
#3
Thursday, September 28,1978 OAILv EVERGREEN-5
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OUND\
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ALESTARTS 10:00 AMTHURS. THE 28TH
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(.......~P_o_li_c_e_/C_o_u_r_t_s _____,)A knapsack containing books and trdyelers
checks worth $1.526 was taken from a cubicle inthe Book '.A volkswagen WdS left in Chinook apart-
mentsIot with the motor running.An unknown vehicle struck and knocked
down a sign on Farm Way. east of Forest Way_A hit and run accident occurred in OeveJand
park ing lot 56. An au to owned by Myron andCarolyn Goodwin. Box 25 FPO. Seattle. wasstruck bv another car.
About $20 was taken from an unlocked deskd ra wer in College 305.
Philip B. Dixon. 15856 4:lrd Ave. S.. Seattle.was cited for driving on the sidewalk on Or-chard Drive and Valle v Road. Bail $23.
Egg damage was ro~nd on a car parked in theRogers -Orton lot.Two small vehicles were pushed out of their
parking spaces In the Rogers-Ort on lot.A pickup truck was said to have both doors
open and stereo blasting in the Perham parkinglot.
Stray motorists using bikelanes are currently under inves-tigation by Pullman police.Crossing bike accesses next tosidewalks is also illegal, said Of-ficer Pete Butkus. However, But-kus hopes cyclists will showresponsibility by obeying therules, too.
Scot! M. Vaile". 1102 Laurel St.. Shelton. wascited for speeding on Spokane Street. Bail $39.
A citation was issued to Elizabeth L. atrry,2222 167th Ave. N.E .. Bellevue. for speeding onColorado Street. ltiil $39.
Roxanne E. Ramer. N. 10110 College.Spokane. was cited for speeding on ColoradoStreet. Bail $30.
Forties feline failed
(~ B~u_l_le_t_in__ B_o_a_r_d__ ~JButch II, Cougar mascot, died
Jan. 8, 1942 after an illness ofthree days. The cougar died ofpneumonia brought on by over-exposure.
A French Cooking class Will be offered throughthe Community Free Uru ver sitv. For inf'ormu-tion: 332·4645 or :l:l5·561!9. .
2: 10 p.m. Sign up first floor (i rc lila non desk. Phi Sigma Kappa Uttle Sisters n1l't'tlllg 0:1 1.H:JOp.m.il( Phi Slgm,t Ka pjn
"Motivated bv God's Love" IS the theme ofthe Baplist Stud-ent Ministries Palouse Powwowto be held Sept. 29-0<t. I. Participants meetSept. 29 at 5 p.m. m the Fine Arts parking 10(,More intormauon: 568-6572.
Orgaru za tiona l meeting 01 Block and Bridle'sMoUnted Drill. Team. Everyone welcome tomeet in CUB 222 Oc t. 2 <it 7 p.m.
Arab students are in vited to get to knew eachother at the meeting of the Organization orArab Students, Oct. I at 3 p.m. in CUB 220.
Persons interested in being a ski patroller forthe North-South Ski Patrol should attend themeeting 0::1. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in CUB 212. Mort:"informalion: 3:12·5121.
The caret'r Servi<.:es and Plan'men t Centerwill be holding Job Search and InterviewingSkills workshops at various limes t'(I(.'h weekthroughout the semester. More information: AdAnnex 107 or :.15·2546.
ASWSU is selling up a typing pool for studentand facultv use. Call r~. ASWSU Set'relarv:335·9676. . .
Rho Epsilon Am'uem Radio Oub will meettoday at 7 p.m. in CUB 214.216. GUt'st spe,;lKt>r:Mary Lewis.
Horticulturt' Club plant sale. today andtomorrow from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in CU B Audlobby and Johnson Hall foyer.
Environmental Task t~orce new membermeeting. tonight at (dO p.m. in CUB :l01iA.
Holland l..Jbrary tours today <.II II:)() a.m. and
ASWSU'FILMSPresents
Acaderllv A\\'arc! \I..·lnnNRobert DeNlro SLHS a~ it NewYork Clt·./ cahbie whobecomes c{}mplusl\l'I_\' In-volved with the city's "nightpeople" while driving his"beat" through Iht' seam.\~partsoftht.'ciIV.
Fri~& Sat.7 & 9:30
'CASA'BLANCA
The classit- slorv of the ex-p:ilriate cafe owrit'f ~md thewoman he on(,'e loved sta rnngHu mphrey Bogart & IngridBergman.
Sun. 6& 8:30
CUBAuditorium
ONEDOLLAR
The Christian Concert Cnmmt ttee is sponsor-mg a free concert "Bcrteytree" Sept. 29 at 7::\0p.m. In Bryan Aud.
Studen t Unit of League of Women Votersmeeting for e\·l'r~ vom' on U'-I. 2 at 6: :~Hp.m In
CUB B·15.
Dance lessons with the WSU-Pullman Inter-national Fofkdancers Sept. 29]0 Smith Gvm 115Begmners: 7·X p.m .. mtermeduue. X-X::iO p.m ..request dancing ~CiO-1O p.m.
Volunteers needed for YWCA tutor progrum.One Of two hOUfS ..I week Iwlpmg stuuents 1Il
Pullman Public Sd1001s. CIII :n:l-:J~III) or "ISIIYWC A. CUB B·27.
Society of Women Engineers informal )J;et·together Sept. :!Il. 2·4 p.m. Kruegel.MIl'Allis{(·rFormal Lounge. Ice cre-am and cookies.
Arl critiC H. J. Weeks wtlf Iee ture on rolt:' ofeducation and survival of arts Oct. .i ut ~ p.m. InFine Arts Aud. Free.
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between August 15 and October 31, 1978. Your coupon, customer inlormation card,programs in math, sta- and dated copy 01 prool 01 purchase must be postmarked on or belore November 7, I advanced professional,tl'Stl'cs an d f' nan ce· I 1971l to quality for this special oller. Book covers step-by· step programmed solu- there's a TI Programma
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"Monty Python and the Holy Gail is a marvelously particular kmd oflunatic endeavor. It's the Python troupe's version or the legend of KingArthur and the search for the Holy Grail. With no apologies at all toMalory, thou'gh it manages to send up the legend, courtly love, fidelity.bra very, costume movies. movie violence and ornhhologv."Vincent Canby. New York Times
Martin Scorsese's
kademy AWd rd winner Robert DeNtr us performance is stunmng. He IS
a New Y~rk City cabbie who becomes compulsively Involved with th ecity's "night people" while driving hi's "beat" through the seurny parts ofthe city. The controversial movie shows the e xplusrve results unleashedfrom one man's Intense aloneness. He moves alone through lilt, rrowd-jostled, brushed. Ignored. abused and hassled. and all the while detuched-until his trigger for violence finally gives way. -
FLASH GORDON Part I: Planet of Peril
CASABLANCAThe strange allure (I the story of the expatri.ue l';lfe owner u nd Ule
woman he once loved hu s never been compre tety expkuned and mdeednever Will be. Then' is t he unequalled rornanuc chermstr y worked hv th erare pair of Humphrey Bogart anti Ingrid Bergman. their long.a/!.o uffuu-played out in Paris and repla yed in Casablanca. l'here IS the marvelousl vdespH.:able Peter Lorrt.', the outrageously pompous. feZ-headed Sydm'yGreenstref'l. the dl'liuouslv l·orrupl. .4.lnus·"'Kt.'U Claude HalOS, the stalWdrl. unblinking P<.wl Henreid Then' IS s.am. wht) plays "As Tmle GOt'S
.. once; and then plays It agalO. Illsa mOVll' thal. playt"<.1 om't', mUM ht·
Francois Truffaut's
The man who loved womenFranCOIs Trutlaul"s most rec~nt film IS tht' story of Bertrand Morant', a
bachelor whf) IS Obst'"SSl>d with women. Q·rtrand IS no Don Juan -hl' is anintelligent <.Inu sensltiw mHn who adores womt'n 01 all ages, shapl's andsizes. In ~ln etTOrilO understand hIS obst!SSIOIl, Hertrand wntt"s hiS memoirsand renll'mbers all the women he has !O\'t'u. This film IS mort' lhun acomedy of the st'Xt'S, illS a st'nsItIVl' and tou<:hing exploratIOn of tht.' mitn\!fact'S of' love.4 FLASH GORDON Part 2: Tunnel of Terror
hallucinating abmu vunous ml'mDl'fS of hiS ramlly: IllS dead WII".." hiS sonand daughler-1n.law. dnu hiS illl'gltlmall' son Hl' heht,\,('S that eiIC.:hof
~ them hates him, iJnd CiI(.'h otlnor, and as Iw drinks to ('<1St' hiS pain hl' tWists
. hatred 1010 malt'nal for. new nowl.
Robert Wise's
THE SOUNDOF MUSIC
Beautiful 5(.'l'nt>s of thl' Austrian Alps. till' rll'ar slI1gmg VOIl'(' of .Julu,'Andrews. and Robert WISl"'S I'_',.'ad~m!,AWilrU·winning dsn'l'tllm l'omhlnt''l.Ito make "The Sound (~. Music" an l'Vl'n olggt.'r hit on till' S(:H'l'n than It wason the st.age. Widowt'd Admlr..d Christopl1t'r Plummt'(s martial law mt.>ltsto tenderness when novl<:t' .hdil' Andrt'ws t.:on1t's to gm't'm his St'Vt'nchildren.FLASH GORDON Part 3: the Sharkmen
ON THEWATERFRONTMarton Br<.Jndo. Kitrl Midden. Eva Marit' Saint ilntl Lt.'t' .I. Cobh star 111
this winner of eight Pt:adl"my Awards. This IS lht' true stnr~' of II f"I..'arlt·ssJesuit priest who sets out to smash the terror rule of'l mob whu,:h has woncontIol of a big c11.v's wateri'roOl area. Filmed on the Nl'W York \v.ltt'rt"ront
wi th a superlative cast by tht· noted director, l-Jia Ka l.un,
30
Fred Zinneman's•A true story of loyalty, courage and love ... Juli~, "IS .H:<.'I,IIl11edpJa~'\\'nght
Ullian Hellman's tribute to her rl'markable rriend and childhood idol."Julia" also offers two superb actresses JI1 their finest performanct's: Jant·Fonda as the gritty. determined ullHin whose one grei.lt t'eilr IS beingafraid; Vanessa Redgrave. solemn, charismatic and overwht'lmlngl~' bCclu-tiful,as the courageous Julia, It Isan unforgettable film experience.
FLASH GORDON Part 4: BattI the Sea BeastSunday Oct. 22 6& 8:30
AonesVordo'S -6~' 'tanetf,e~~
"Ole SlOgS, the Other Doesn't" fOllows the friendship of two youngwomen over a period of 14 years.a lime when each seeks to take control ofher destiny and eventual! yfmds contentment.
With feminine Insight and feminist ardor. but )N,thout hea vy-hJndedpolitical statemenLS, director Varda has made a very warm movieabout women and human I
1900"1900" IS an' epic film of massive scope and power (and controversy). It is
both a V'dSthistory of 20th Century Italy and an Intimate portrait of twofamilies. It is also the story d the lives and conflicts between a peasant(Gerard Oepardleu) and the landowner (Robert OeNIro) as they passth rough the uphea V'dls of the modern world. An astonishing internationalcast gives a magnificent ensemble performance as the people whose livesaffect and are affected by. the rise al'Fascism and $9Cialism
FLASH GORDON Part 5: The Destroyer Ray
Suspense and intngue art:' skllltully interlaced.1I1 thi s superb thrillerwhich celebrates the unique genre director Alfred Hltc~<..'(x:k smgle-handedly created over the course of hIS career while dellghtlully spoofingit at the same lime. Car v Grant brings Just the nght blend of ingenuous-ness and suavitv to his role as an unsuspecting American bu sm es smanwho becomes involved in a sinister espionage plot
INYASION OF THEBODY S.ATCHERS
An invasion of extra-terrestrial bemg s starts producing lifeless shapesthat look like bodies A doctor's warning to his townspeople goesunheeded for they have already surrendered LO this mystic power fromouter space. HIS struggle to save those stili unaffected will keep you In aconstant state 0" suspense.
John Huston's
TBEAFRICANQUEENBogart won hIS only Oscar as the unshaven, unheroic. hurd-drinking
skipper of a rundown river steamer. Kathurine Hepburn plays the pnmsIster of a ml~sionary who IS forced hy l'Ircumstances to travel With him.Even tually they fall in love and their romance In the midst \)f dangerprOVIdes <:10experience you'll never forget.
GORDON Part 6: FI Fortune
WernerEVERY MAN fOR HIMSElfAND GODABAIIiST All(The Mystery of Kaspar Hauser)
"Every Man for Himself and God Aga 111s( All" IS based on a realhistorical event. One day in (he U~20'sa young man named Kaspar H.luserappeart:!"d in a town in Germany, He was hardly above the i..IIlirrw.llevel. Hecould nO( speak and was oorely able to stand Taken in by the (own'speople. he was taugh t to speak, read <lnd wriH' and, as mysteriously as hefirst appeared, he was murdered.
Based on ?-dtricia Highsmith'S thnill!r "Ripley's Gaml!", the baroquelycomplex storyline (enters on an ordinary Hamburg artlS<1I1(Bruno Ganz)employed as an assassin by a Fn.'n('h gangt,ter (Gercl.rd Blain) through tht:'manipUlation of a mysterious Amerkan (!)ennis Hopper). Wenders stagestwo specta('ular action set·pit'Ces, 111 a Paris Metro "statIOn and on aspeeding train, and his visual style. based on a red-blue color schemt' ofneon -like intensity, is overpoweringly rich and allUSIve,
DON Part 7: Shatte Doom
ORSON WElLES'
(~I'I'IZI~NI'i'NI~
Orson Welles f"irst film is a landmitrk of modern moviemaking for itstech ica I virtuosity. The emotion packed story Dr Charles Foster Kane,golii.lth of the publishing world, is told with dynamit' editing, back ward andforward in time. Directing his own vital performance. Welles created atruly cinematic masterpiece in "Citizen Kane",
Claude Goretta'sTHE WONDERFULCROOKOlarles Goretta based "The Wonderful Crook" on a news ite-m about OJ
small businessman lNho pulled otT robberies in order to pay his employet:s.Go ret ta 's hero. played by the excitin~ new star Gerard Oepardieu, is apleasant but secretly troubled family man who vomas after hIS firstrobbery. hides his l.oot in a tree like a squirrel. comes back to pay for aIa-mp he broke dunng a heiSt. and .falls Intensely in love with a lady heholds up.
FLASH GORDON : Tournament of Death
Lewis Milestone's
ALL QUIET ON THEWESTERN FRONT
StJllthe most famous and most pO'W'E'rful of all antl·War films. The sLOryfollows a group of young Gennan recruits 111World War I through theirpassage from idealism' to horror to disillusionment. until the centralcharacter declares. "we live in the tren(,hes and we fight. We trv not to bekilled-Ihat'sall" -
8,uno 8ozzetto's New Film
MY BROTHER S'UPERM.4NA Journey Thlough the Galaxies
FLASH GORDON Part 9: Fighting the Fire
Peter Davis'
HEARTS AND MINDSWinner of the Academy Award for Best Oocumentary Feature of 1974.
"Hearts and Minds" is one of the most I<Ilked-abaut films of the pastdecade, and a film of Lremendous emotional impact. "Hearts and Minds" ISmore than a study of the Vietna m Wdr. It is an exploration of the Americanpsyche and a look at cherished ideals In conflicl with reality. "Hearts andMinds" dtgs into our recent past to illuminate the trends of thought thatled to the Southeast Asian war.
ISS OTHERWISE.OID) _E DOLLAI • liE CUI au•.Fri. & Sat. Dec. 15,167 & 9:30
Akira Kurosawals
DERSU UZALAThis Russian-Japanese co-production IS the latest work of director Akira
Kurosawa, winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Film. it tells the story 0'the real-life fnendship of a Russian surveyor and an old Oriental ~unterNamed Dersu . A gripping story or life. survival. and progress. set 10 thedisappearmg Siberian wilderness of the early Twenueth Century.
GORDON Part 10: The Unseen Peril
A buoyant and delightful film designed to change the minds of thosewho don't believe in Santa Cia us, this is the tal e of a kindlv white-beardedold man hired by Macy's New York store to play Kris Kringle for the kids,t Christmastirne. Edmund Gwenn won an Ac ade mv Award as the kindlY). nta Claus who overflows with good tidmgs and cheer. .
BaRRYtvnoonAlter exhibiting his a rusuc genius in "2001- A Span' Odvssev." "Clock-
work Orange," "Doctor Strungelove." "Lulua" and mnre . S·li.tnl~v Kubrickpaints another screen rnasterpiece in "Barrv Lvndon." Rvan 'O'Nelll ISLyndon, a role derived from William Ma kepeace Fhucherav's 19th cen rurvnovel about a rags-to-riches rogue who ga l•.rvants through Europe fromcasinos to ca sties as u spy, a soldier, a wile-ben ter. ..tnd a gambler.
LASH GORDON Part 11: In the Claws of the Tigron
THE MAGIC FLUTEEasily the most lighthearted of Bergman's recent films, this ada pta uon
of opera is a luscious, thoroughly enjoyable triumph. Although Bergmanconstantly reminds the viewer that ..I staged opera is bemg persented. thefilm is remarkable in its cineme uc values, fusing slilge ilnd scn.:-en withextnwrdinary smoothness. MOl.(lrt's score, accompanied by it Swedishversion of the lyrics, supplies the backbone of thiS tale of ]ovt'. magll.: imdquest
Luis BUDuerSThat· Obscure .
Object of DesireFernando Rey stars as a fiftyish gt'ntleman who has fallen head OVl'r
heels for a woman ha If his age: she spurns hiS arre('lion wuh an ardor t>qualtc? his own hopele-so;; pctssion. His obJe('t of' affection is portrayed by twodifferent actresses, who alternately display the eX('esses of his dt"sire: Ont'
is a dainty virgin, the Other a blowsv whun'. Into this not un('ummonstruggle of love intrudt' thf> violenl..'.~oIIn·d <:tbsu.!"ditv of t11l~outsldt' world.ilsperceiv(>d by Bunuel's incomp.lrable wit .FLASH GORDON Part 12: Tra in the Turret
George Lucas'
,.HXlliBTHXI13X IS A MAN LlVIN0 IN A SUIHERRAN EAN CULTURE
COm-ROLLED AND TYRANN IZED BY COMPUTERS. Humans are keptsubservient to machines and the new order by a steady diet of "'downer"drugs which keeps them from feelmg and relating. A story of rebellion bythe director of "Star Wars."
Jim Sharman's ,
~Probably lhp oddest, most ott·the-wall 111m ever madt' b~' anYbudf
anywhere, this kinky horror t.cde has been playmg In l·erl..;.lIn theatres inNew York and other cities across thl" countrv for wars now. The filmconcerns a young couple who stumble into iI ~astlt· I~nhabltcd by wierdosfrom the planet Transylvania. At the castle they meet Dr. Frank N. Funer,a trdnsvestitt' Frankenstein III rhanestone heels.
Part 13: Rocket to Earth
DOUBLE INDEMNIfY"Oouble lndemrutv" IS the storY of ..In in~urdll(_:e iJgt'nt (Fred MacMur-
rdY) and a greed v blonde (Barbara StdnwycK) who conntvl" to bump offher husband and 'colle(" the premium!... More than that, It IS tlw deflllllivefilm noir of the '40's. Lea\,lng behind tht.· stanuard Ne\\' York selllll}::, oflo\~r ..dass crime, the whole film ('ould be summed up in that one
with the add ition of thiS mottO-" Everything IS seedy.
flASHPt. I (Sept. 29& 30) Planet of PerilPt. 2 (Oct. 6.7) TUnnel of TerrorPt. 3 (Oct. 13, 14) Captured by the SharkmenPt.4(Oct.20,21) 81ttling theSe. Il!aslPt. 5 (Oct. 27.28) The Destroying RayPt. 6 (Nov. 3,4) tlaming Fortunept, 7(Nov. 10. II) The Shattering DoomPt. 8 (Dec. 1,2) Tournament of DeathPt. 9 (Dec. 8.9) FIghting the Fire DragonPt. 10(Dec. 15.16) The Unseen PerilPt. II (Jan. 12.13) In the Oaws of the TigronPt. 12(Jan. 19,20) Trapped in the TUlTetPt. 13 (.Dn 25.26.27) Rocketing (0 Earth
GORDON
IN OUR ADS
THE 65e MOVIE!Season Passes
10 films for $6.50
THEY NEVER EXPIRE
Plus our new 11m serifs:THE BIG KIDS/UTILE KIDS
FILM FESTIVALON SUNDAY AFTERNOONSAT 2 PM
Little Kids 50C Big Kids $1.00
AND THECHOCOLATE FACTORY
When the mysterious owner of a fabulous candy factory Includes fivegokten passes to his chocolate-flavored fantasies inside his wondrousWonka bars, the whole world goes wild trY'ng to edt Its way tosweet-toothed bliss. Lesson fur the five winners: Greed and selfishness (anbe their own reward.
alt Disney's20,000 LEAGUESUNDER THE SEAJules Verne's incredible science ficuon storv blazes across the screen 10
this spectacular, star-studded film. TIll' ume is lKflR and all ships sallmg 10the Pacific Ocean are threatened by some strange sea presence. The U.S.S.,.\brdham -tmcoln. sent out to m veaugute the unknown creature. fallsVictim to it and three of the men aboard the fflg~U'-..1 soenust. hrs cormcassistant and a captured
WINNIE THEPOOH
Walt f"'>lsnt'v's production of the furtht'r adventures of Winnie- the Poohand his fnt.·nds; Christopher Robin, £eyore, Tigger, Kanga and Roo.
Walt Disney's
THESHACGYDOC
Prompted bv ('urloslty and lhl:' suggesuon of a myst~nous must'proft'ssor Wllb.v urtf!r~ ma~ic WOrth. from the 1O.5(.:nptlonon an anCient flngand is ('hanged into'l shaggy 9"alislavian shet'p dog. Stars Fred MacMur·ra~'. Jean Tom Kirk, Annette Funicello, Tim ConSIdine.
Victor Fleming's
THE WIZARDOFOZA fairybook story of wizards. witches, goblins and piXieS and a place
where good alwHYs triumphs. &sed on the novel be L. FrHnk Baum.Starring Judy Garland. Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr. MargaretHamilton and Jack Haley. " ..No children's tale is Hollvwood's "Wizard ofOz." L:lvish in sels, adult in humor it is a broadway spectacle translatedinto make·believe."
Walt Disney's
THE ABSENTMINDEDPROFESSOR
A colJegt> sl'Ience professor blows up his home and finds by dcclde-,m hehas created an oozy substance possessing powerful anti·gra\,itationalenergy. He calls it '·n'Ybber." Stars Fred Mac'Murray, Nancy Olson,Ke-E'nanWynn, KIrk.
THAT DARNCATAn elusive SIamese cat hecomes the onlvclue to a bank roblx-rv when a
kidnapped teller scratches the word "help;' on her wrist ' ....atch arid slips itaround the animal's neck. Since the cat can't talk, the duthonues' onl\'recourse is to follow the feline. And so begins one of the funniest chases I~
the history of cops n' robbers!
.BLACKBEAUTY
"Black Beauty" tells the story of the life of a magnificent horse from ItSfoaling to its end as a tired YtIOrkhorse. The novel's sad, biuf'rsweE'[ toneemerges unrestrained from the film, which offers the touchmg contrastt>e-tween the horse's handsome pf'dncing for hiS mlstre-ss and, latrr. hisspiritless ploddmg in front of an overloaded wagon. A favonte chIldhoodstory that appeals to a 11ages.
Richard Fleischer's
DOCTORDOOLITTLE
Physician Dolittle who would ratht!'r communicate- \\1th anmlals thanpeople has an office filled with animals from ~om h~ I~.m.-d 491'languages. Eager to find the Great Pink Sea Snail. he finan<'('s his ,.....,:h.by exhibiting his rare two-headed llama, Pushmipullyu, 10 a ('"In.-US. "'Ilhthe funds, he. a carefree lrishman, a small boy and a pretty Sh"\'aWil~ ~ulin a flower--bedecked \ol!'ssel. "'The Flounder," for lht" noalJnt:, St'a ='I~lrIsland ruled William
DAll..Y EVERGREEN-9
r
\\f.~'
NOWOPEN!(FINALLY)
In Focus•
Museum haven for art:Parad~se=::records and:GroundFloorCUB -_plan.s_-(Student Union IIdg.) ...
Open Mon.·Sa I. 9 to 5 "Your" Record and Plant Store
by mary stohr
When you enter the Fine ArtsBuilding turn right, then rightagain. Go past the huge bulletinboard lin ing one wa II, to thespacious gallery beyond-the FineArts Museum.
W~LCOME BACK SALEII.September 27 - 30 . . .
... $7.90 EA.MUNSINGWEAR Shirts.GANT RUGGERS & Other Shortsleeves-
ALL SHORTS
GROUP SWEATERS
OFFI
OFFI
Buy First Pair At Regular Price &Get Second Pair At 112Price!
JEANS:
Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thursdays till 8:00 p.rn,
568·8141
fOl men
Sale Good At Pullman Store Only 209 E. Main Pullman
The museum is a showcase formodern art such as the facultyexhibit currently on display.Within the ceiling studio lightsilluminate colorful paintings byJo Spohn. And there is the woo-den circle c rtss-c rossed withelectric gadgets and stretchingout its octopus arms-eachtopped by a light bulb. The workis entitled "2·Part Harmony", byJack Dollhausen .
. 'One of the purposes of thisexhibit is to show students andthe P.ullman community recentwork done by WSU faculty", saidPatricia Watkinson, museumcurator.
Besides faculty art, sculpture,and other contemporary exh i-bits, the museum has had majorhistorical shows such as aphotography exh ibit and alandscape painting exhibit.
The Fred Harvey CompanyIndian exhibit, scheduled forNov. 27 through Dec. 21. is inkeeping with the past with itsIndian pots, blankets, beadworkand clothing from the turn of thecentury.The company was a conces-
sioner of food and lodging in theSouthwest and became involvedin the retail sale of Native Amer-ican art.
Of the diversity of art whichthe museum shows, Watkinsonsaid "We try to be as representa-tive as possible but still havequalityexhibitions."
Besides the e xhi b it s i , themuseum has an annualsymposium. This year'ssymposium will feature the fiberarts. The symposium, Oct. 13and 14, includes a film, musicand lectures by artists known fortheir works in the fiber arts field.
Along with the symposium andexhibits, the museum has "anongoing program of specialevents" including receptions,guest lecturers, films, gallerytours and print sales throughoutthe year.
"We serve an educational pur-pose not only as far as studentsare concerned but for the rest ofthe community", Watkinsonsaid.
"It is a chance for students tobe exposed to the visual artswhich they may not be in theirhome towns. Our goal is for artto become a part of their Iivesjust as literature does", BruceGuenther, the museum directorsaid.
Guenther, who replaced Har-vey West, said he will be tryingto find additional money for thegallery this year.
"To put on the kind of programthe University has come to ex-pect and demand would take abudget of three times as much"he said. .
Symphony backsconcert, contest
The Washington IdahoSymphony is presenting a bene-fit concert Oct. 8 at 7: 30 p.m. atthe Lewiston, Idaho Elks Tem-ple.The symphony is also sponsor-
ing, for the third consecutive
I~DAILY EVERGREEN Thursday, September 28,1978
ougarott age
I POUNDERS ITODAY %%. am · 2 am
ALL NEW PIZZAS6 PACKS TO GO
900 COLORADO
Help us celebrate your return to"Old Wazzu."
t+A ATTRE
"~OUg
year, the Young Artists Competi-tion. This competition is formusicrans who have not reachedtheir 23rd birthday by Oct. 29.Young musicians who are inter-ested in applying for the compe- .tition must do so by Oct.!. Inter-ested students mav contact themusic departme-nt in Ki rn-brough.
The benefit symphony, to beheld in Lewiston, will featureguest conductor CarmenDragon, who won an Academyaward for "Cover Girl" in 1944and an Emmy for a Christmasprogram.
Also being featured are sopranoKathy Knight and fiddler PatsyBuckley Mercer.
Tickets for the symphony areavailable at David s DepartmentStore in Moscow, Corner Drug inPullman, J.C. Penney's, Or-chards' Pharmacy and EasyTravel in Lewiston and the Val-ley Art Center in Clar kston.
All proceeds from this eventwill go to the Washington IdahoSymphony Association.
The Washington IdahoSymphony's second concert willfeature the winners of the YoungArtists Competition. Out ofusually 40 applicants, aboutthree or four are chosen, H.James SchoepfJin, chairman ofthe Music Department said.
The competition is divided intohigh school and post high schooldivisions. Applications are $7.50and are available at theWashington Idaho Symphony Of-fice at 108 E. 2nd St., Moscow.
Friendship is Love withoutits wings! Bryon
Black studentsretreat Oct. 6
The Black Student Union willhold a retreat Oct. 6, 7 and 8 atthe North ISouth ski lodge.
All black students and faculty,new, returning or other, are en-couraged to come and partici-pate, said Mike Taylor, BSUpresident for both this campusand state of Washington.Taylor explained the purpose
of the retreat is basically to sitdown and analyze the whole his-tory of the black student move-ment."We'll try to decide if we are
living up to their commitments"Taylor said. '
The BSU will also try to hringback a semester by semesterplan to coordinate all black func-tions on campus."There are a lot of people here
who won't show their commit-ment for some reason" Taylor
Mike Taylorsaid. "The black faculty andstaff have lost focus on the goalsof the black movement-they'velost their commitment.""I can't understand it," he
said.
Four foodservicers winFour WSU students have
received awards administeredby the National Institute for theFoodservice Industry.
Terry Umbreit was awarded a$1,000Heinz graduate fellowship,one of three such awards made
Free U. new Wazzu competitorOne of Moo-U's biggest educa-
tional competitors boasts a tui-tion price 342 percent less thanits Palouse big brother.
One dollar.
"In some ways we're one ofthe larger educational institu-tions in town," said Paul Brians,coord ina tor and co-founder ofthe Community Free University.
Tuesday the Free U. will holdregistration for its 22nd semesterof classes.
The Free U's own specialblend of non-traditional, non-credit education has been aPalouse alternative since 1968.
This fall 28 classes are offered,from sewing to soapmaking,from hatha yoga to everydaylaw."A switchboard between
teachers and learners" is thedescription Brians ga ve Free U.Revolving around VOlunteers,the informal institution likes tostay decentralized, flexib-le-with a dose of fun.
Community Free U. blossomedover 10 years ago as an offshootof cross-countr-y alternative cur-rents. "I was very active in al-ternatives and radical politics,"Brians said. "We were tryingnew things, breaking barriers."It was born with a bang. Over
500 people registered for onlyfive classes back in '68-to saythe least Free U. was a little"oversubscribed. "
Last spring it had its 'mostsuccessful semester. 40 classesdrew over 407 registrants-Brians said the huge numbersmade it difficult to keep the FreeU. mellow.Several classes now part of
WSU's curriculum were firsttried and tested in the Free UNative Am er ic a n studies,women's studies and a class onthe work of Hermann Hesse allstarted as Free U. offerings."We can be a testing ground,"
Brians said. "Since there's no~******************************~Besides being free,
the Community Free U.offers some pretty "offthe wall" classes. Theyaren't kidding whenthey call it non-traditional! Here's a"beyond the blurb"look' at three of themore unusual offer-ings.
**********Jogging for the Elderly
(Over 29). Instructor ......Frank Delaney calls thiscourse "a more laid-backapproach to fitness." Hesaid the "over 29" is some-what tongue in cheek."If you aren't in good
shape by the time you're35-it'll be quite a battlethe rest of your' life,"Delaney said."Personally, I've always
been turned off by jocksand all that. This class is toimprove' yourself-not toimpress anyone."
So, as Delaney explainsin the course description,"you rationalize your obe-sity by telling friends thatyou're beefing up for theOlympics," this may bejust the thing for you. As-sertiveness' Training willteach you how to say no ina tactful way withoutbeing offensive. Jim Niel-sen and Barbara Rexwin-kel will center the classaround personal goals--students will keep jour-nals to record theirprogress in turn ing usualp rob lern situations intomore assertive behavior.
The class, in its third
offthewallofferingsyear, has had a goodsuccess record, accordingto follow-up and feedbackstudies done by instruc-tors.Nielsen and Rexwinkel
will use mini-presenta tionsshowing pupils how tostand up to people. Theclass will be limited toabout 30 participants.Massage for Couples will
limit its enrollment to fourcouples. "New modes ofcouple communication,"as the course description
explains, will be explorerelaxation."We're finding that a lot
of people are kind of"touch-phobic" aboutsituations other than sex"explained Bruce Palmer,the class instructor.The course stresses ser-
ious relationships-notsex. "Using massage as amethod of expression-asa giving act," Palmer said.
"The massage exper-ience is relatively rare inour culture," he explained."Rather than go off andhave some professional doit, why not build massageinto a mature relation-ship?"
The class will be keptsmall for pragmatic rea-sons: the instructor'shouse is "kind of small."
What about sex?"Maybe after class whenthe couples go home-whoknows?" Palmer said.
400 "Big Macs" Trademark
#0 be given away
Fr••Find oufqualify
how youfor yours'
WSU 'Field House
10 AM·3 PM Sept. 28
I Now renting for fall term 1978·79 Ii9 month lease-Sept. 10, 1978-June 10, 1979 i- . $100 PER STUDENT . -! (Based on 4 ~ per apartment) !
AI units furnishedLarge 2 BedroomApts.
Dill ........ , GIrtNIp DispGSll, SeIf~1 OYensShaI ca')Iet, ,IMp W.. 4i closets,Two blthroomsUtIIty room with ...... " ., .. In ......Private patios or decksEJectric hutAr-concltionlncReeI.1ion III.... with Indoor swlmmlnl poolJec:uuJ, Samas, ...... ,. with color T.V. " Fireplace" KItch.. centw
SORRY, NO CHILDREN, NO PETS
For MIdtionII Info",."".", c.tklde Keller, ........ lit
332-6814
leverage to keep students ar-ound, only the well-taught andpopular classes survive."
The school's flyer stresses that"many instructors are hurt anddi scour ag ed when folks whosigned up for their classes fail toattend." Brians also emphasizedthis point.
"People sign up on a whim,then find someth ing better to dowith the meeting hour," he said.
"We are not pros-just ordinaryfolks-and it hurts our feelings.We've lost some good teachersthatway."
You do not have to swear toattend, however. Brians said totreat the teachers as friends, notemployees.
Oh, yes=-the Koinonia Housedoes not sponsor Free U. Briansasked that people not hassle theK-House staff with phone callsand questions, which seems tooccur each semester.,._._._._._.-I1•I-I-
I-II•I-II-II-I-II·•I
uFFICE HOURS
across the nation.Seniors Brooks Hogle and
Steven Mindemann and BrianGuimond, a junior, won GoldenPlate Scholarships, sponsored byIFMA (International Foodser-vice Manufacturers Associa-tion).
; Based on a formula which ranks passers in four categories: TD Pct., CompletionPet., Interception PeL, and Average per Attempt.
No. Yds.
INTERCEPTIONS
TD No. Yds. TD
I KimAnderson, ASU 4 24 00 A. Washington, CAL 3 139 I3 Herb Ward, USC 3 64 I2 Kenny Easley, UCLA 3 2 03 Mike Snow, WSU 2 36 0I Tim Smith,OSU 2 33 00 Gary Teague, WSU 2 29 00 Tim La vender, USC 2 17 [)
2 Dennis Smith, USC 2 16 040
181714131211II111099
J 4212119416922115715311518212887
Patera pleased with HawksSEATTLE (AP)- The Seattle Sea-
ha wks, with two victories in theirfirst four games, are "learning howto win," says coach Jack Patera.Quarterback Jim Zorn fired three
fou rth -q uarter touchdown passesSunday to rally the Seahawks to a28-16 National Football League vic-troy over the Detroit Lions in theKingdome.
"Defensively. we didn't get pan-Icky because they made a fewyards. Offensively, we didn't throwthe bali allover and let them getilnypilsyones," Patera said.12-DAILY EVERGREEN
"The best thing was that weplayed a pretty good opponent whotook it to us, and we came back. Wekept our poise and gave ourselvesan opportunity to do something inthe fourth quarter," the Seahawkscoach said.
Patera said Zorn and Seattle'swide receivers played well.
"Jimmy showed alot of poise,"said Patera of his third year quar-terback wh 0 now leads the entireNFL with a passing percentage of64.9 and is ranked second in theAmerican Conference in quarter-
Thursday, September 28,1978
back rankings.Steve Largent is the leading
receiver in the AfT with 21 catches.Sea ttle 's defense played "very
well," Patera said, despite the run-ning of Detroit's Dexter Bussey.Bussey carried 20 times for, 120yards Sunday, including a 29 yardtouchdown gallop that gave theLions a 16-7 lead late in the thirdperiod.
Patera said starting defensive'tackle Steve Niehaus will be out foran undetermined time with a kneeinjury sustained Sunday.
Things are looking up for the Cougar field hock-ey team, says Coach Manlyn Mowatt. Even thoughthey have lost six out of eleven starters from lastyear, Mowatt thinks her team will be at the top ofthe NCWSA hockey league, along with Idaho andOregon, barring injury and other problems thatmight come up during the season.
11,'1
Coug field hockey improved
A good crop of returnees will make up the backbone of the team. The group includes captainsAnna Zachwieja and Kathy Smith. Freshmen willfill out the rest of the positions on the team. Amongthe most promising are Sharon Hecker and CathieTredgold.
The Cougs begin play Oct. 4, In Moscow againstan experienced Idaho Vandal team.
Keyingon Sports
by dave brumbaugh
New York Jets 33, Miami 20. Washington 16, New England 14.Green Bay 24, San Diego 3.Okay, upsets happen every year in the National Football
League. But have you taken a look at the shakeup in thestandings this year>!
After four games, the Washinzton Redskins are one of thetwo teams still undefeated in the NFL (the Los Angeles Ramsare the other team).Teams like Oakland, Miami, New England are only 2-2.
Former playoff contenders St. Louis, Cincinnati and SanFrancisco have yet to win a game!And what are the New York Giants and Green Bay Packers
doing tied for their division leads? Their combined win total fora season can usually be counted on two hands. .Statistician Bud Goode fed relevanr'data into an Univac 1106
computer and had it predict the results of the complete NFLseason this year for Sports Illustrated.'After four games, it predicted the Giants and the Packers
would have only one win between them. It also forecasted thatthe. Seattle Seahawks would go 1-14-1 thls season, picking uptheir- WJn on the last game of the season. Too bad the Seahawksdid not agree with the computer as they have already' pickedup two wins. •Maybe the draft is doing a better job of balancing the league.
Maybe some top teams are getting a little complacent.Maybe... '
At any rate, quarterbacks Joe Theisman of Washington andDavid Whitehurst of Green Bay are big reasons for their teams'success.
Da~id Sims of Seattle is making the loss of Sherman Smithmuch easier for Seahawk fans to handle, while unknownWilbert Montgomery of Philadelphia carried for over 100 yardsagainst Miami. .
These and many other "unknowns" are making names forthemselves and making predictions of NFL games harder andharder to make. -
Bailey Field will be the site forthe Pan American Games base-ball trials Oct. 7-8, Cougar base-ball coach Chuck "Bobo" Bray-ton announced yeaterday.
"Players who feel they cancompete on a major college andinternational level are eligible.
Input sought onticket policiesAn open forum for discussion
of ticket policies for football andbasketball games will be heldMonday in CUB 224, according toASWSU Assemblyperson DanBoring.The meeting, scheduled for 7
p.m., will be open to any ideasconcerning the new random tick-et system used for Spokane foot-ball games. Also slated for dis-cussion are current ticket poli-cies for football and basketballgames in Pullman.
Other open topics will be homefootball games in Spokane,stadium expansion and replacingButch.WSU Athletic Director Sam
Jankovich and Assistant AthleticDirector Bill Cords will attendthe forum, Boring said.
Golf tourneyThe fall golf championships for
men and women students will beheld Saturday, 8 a·.m. to noon, atthe ASWSU Golf Course.
An entry fee of $3 is required,which includes green fees. En-trants should sign up at the golfcourse clubhouse for tee times.
Big AI an iff/posing figure on lineby steve weber
Standing 6-7 and weighing in at270 pounds, Washington StateUniversity offensive tackle AllanKennedy very seldom faces adefensive opponent as big or big-ger than he is.
"Defensi ve people do not pushme around, I am just too big,"Kennedy said. "Usually thedefense will try to brush theoffensive lineman off or maybeslap him in the helmet so as toget around him. But they don't'do tha t to me beca use I am tootall and they can't reach."Kennedy, a sophornoreout of
Woodland Hi lls.. Cal. tore liga-ments in his right ankle in thesecond game of the 1977 seasonagainst Michigan State and wasallowed to. red shirt for theremainder of the season.
"I had a total reconstruction ofmy ankle and it is holding upnicely now,,' added Kennedy. "Itis usually a little sore after aworkout but I ice it down afterevery practice."The entire Cougar coaching
staff has been extremely pleasedwith the progress of Kennedy,especially offensive line coachPat Rue!."We worried about AI's
progress during la it sprmgspractice because he was so slowgetting off the ball," Ruel said."But he worked very hard dur-ing the summer and now he isquicker than he was before hegot hurt."
Kennedy was recruited duringthe reign of former coach JackieSherrill, now with Pittsburgh.Defensive line coach DaveWalker, still with - the Cougars,did the actual recrui ting of Ken-nedy for the offensive line. Atthat time Kennedy was a beanpole at 6-5 and 215 pounds. Arigorous weight trainingprogram has been responsiblefor the change in his physicalsta tus.
"Missing a year and being red-shirted was to my advantagebecause I feel I have maturedmore and grown more, physical-ly." Kennedy said.
"Allan knows what it takes tobe a good defensive lineman. Hegets a good angle off the ball andhe can hold his block," Ruelsaid. "AI has all the makings ofan All-American. He has excel-lent size, good speed, excellentattitude and he is very intelligentwhen it comes to playing foot-ball."
Ruel went on to say Kennedy isamong the top three linemen inthe Pac-lO. .
If there is any disadvantage to
.:Vol;':
Allan KennedyKennedy's size it is that a lot ofdefensive players will get into afour-point stance on the line andwill sometimes go right under-neath Kennedy because he does
not get low enough. But Ruel hada good solution to that. "If Ken-nedy can sit on them it is okaywith me, just as long as his mandoes not make the tackle."
Greyhound Rx·0;.The cure for \~ ~'.college blahs. - ~ .).._'\
\ r·-It's a feeling that slowly descends upon --=:you. The exams, the pop tests, the requiredreading, the hours at the library, the thesis-they won't go away.
But you can. This weekend, take off,say hello to your friends, see the sights,have a great time. You'llarrive with money inyour pocket because your Greyhound tripdoesn't take that much out of it.
Ifyou're feelin'g tired, depressed andexhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It'sa sure cure for the blahs.
Greyhound Service0_ Round-
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Pan-Am tryouts set for PullmanThere is no age limit and players Players from other trials infrom Oregon, Idaho, Montana Los Angeles, Tucson and Tulsaand Washington are encouraged will also be selected, and thereto report for the trials," Brayton will be a friendship series earlysaid. next summer. From this series
Players will be responsible for and a similar series to be heldtheir expenses. Those wishing to east of the Mississippi River, theattend the trials should report at Pan American Games team to10a.m. Oct, 7to Bailey Field. If a represent the United States willplayer is selected to stay until be named.Sunday and play in a contest The Pan American Games areagainst WSU, his room and scheduled for Puerto Rico Inboard will be paid, Brayton said. July of next year.
" Tire Chains" Ammo Boxes,',Field Boots*KhakisShoes
., Assorted Junk
LUMBERJACK CAFEin Troy
announces the
GRAND OPENINGFriday & Saturday
of
LA CANTINAauthentic Mexican Dishes.
La Cantina will be located in the frontdining area of the Lumberjack cafe. Thefamous 7 course meals will continue tobe served in .the rear dining area.
For reservations call 835-2811
THE LUMBERJACK Troy, 10Thursday, September 28, 1978 DAILYEVERGREEN-13
-
.....
..
ALTHOUGI-J SOME WORK is still being done on theMoscow Mall, some stores are open and more busin-esses are opening each day. -russ howser photo
New business profs arriveFor an your
j insurance needs Two new staff members joinedthe Business Administrationstaff last week-H. ThomasJohnson and Kenneth G. Baker.
Johnson, a native of, Seattle,was appointed associate profes-sor of business administrationafter a term as associate profes-sor at the University of WesternOntario in Canada.
A certified public accountantin Massachusetts, Johnson is amember of the editorial board of"The Accounting HistoriansJournal," and holds membershipin the American Accounting A,>-sociation and the Academy ofAccounting Historians.
Baker was appointed assistantprofessor of business administra-tion. He was research coordina-tor for the Exp rim ent al Centerfor the Advancement of Inven-tion and Innovation at the Uni-versity of Oregon.
He has served as a marketing
consultant to private corpora-tions and owned his own inde-pendent retail firm.
Moscow Mall providesnew shopping outletsThe Moscow Mall, which
opened last week, has haJ a"steady" stream ofcustomers, Mary Westberg,mall manager, said.
Ten parking lot will holdapproximately 1,000 cars andhas been "close to full" everyday since opening.
"Business has been prettysteady and sales have beenexcellent," she said.
A.. ********
So what
Business has been "excel-lent" for the nine storeswhich have already opened,she said. Two more smallstores and a Giant T drugstore are scheduled to open bySunday.
The mall is the only one ofits kind in the Palouse, withthe next closest enclosedshopping malls being locatedin Spokane and Coeurd'Alene, she said.
The mall is owned by theMoscow Mall AssociationLtd., which includes partnersfrom California, Utah and.Moscow.
See Bill Pa ul atFarmers Insurance
More than 600 st ud e n t sreceived their degrees from WSCin the spring of 1941, compared tomore than ViOO in 1978.
******A new department of policescience and administration wasopened at WSC in the fall of 1941.The department accepted "onlyyoung men of highest characterand having excellent recommen-dations," according to the Sept.17, 1941 issue of the Evergreen.The men had to be at least IIIyea rs of age, 5 feet 9 inches ta IIand weigh at least 150 pounds.
Westberg said the mall costbetween $10-12 million andcontains 170,000 square feet offloor space, or more than fourcovered acres.
::~:~::.::~:~::·:=i=~::.: :~:~::.::~:~::. ::~:~::.::~:::: .::~:;:: .::~i::.:~~::.:~~::.~:~::.::;~::.:!~:~::.::::~::.::~:~::.::;:~::.::~~::.::;:;::.::;:;::.::;::'• •¥ ¥t~~~iWbeatl;iidRealtyS. 445 Grand 332-2668
S.;QS Grand ;)64 -661 I
New College Crest Apts.
NE 1555 Merman Dr.Mgr. A1A 332-6777
furnished quads or iridividual units
$360/mo.-quad lease$50/person damage deposit
$1OO/mo.-regular lease$llO/mo.-month to month
qJou uhe ~nvltedto .
Dinner Special
Fill~t (we cook) U Glass j
01House Wine lor $8.95
Happy Hour4-S:30
,********
%%00 Johnson ad;
IFYOU ARE ...
'I' Mechanically inclined;
'" Interested in aviation;
*Looking for a challenging and meaningful career;
* Finishing up your degree, preferably in engineering.science, or mangement;
* Interested in any of the above statements then it couldbe worth your time to see the Navy Aviation InformationTeam at the Placement Office Oct. 3-6 from 9 am-4pm.
I4-DAILY EVERGREEN Thursday, September 28,1978
. , \, \ -, \ ... ,
elossifieds.... s .. •• 1.
Daily ..Eve - . v
Apartments for Rent
Attention: Pipe smokers! Get your free samplepouch of custom blended tobacco! Only at Puff'N Stuff. Inc. "ldaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer"61(',., Main. Lewiston. 208·746·9641 (next toBonanza 88¢).
Very nice, spacious 3 bedroom furnished apt.,will rent to anyone who is clean, non-smoker,no pets. S275.00. Ph. 567·7171.
Near campus, two bedroom furnished. wall towall carpet. washer dryer option. $210.00. 208-882·1694.
Two bedroom furnished. All utilities. $210.00.568·5541.a-bedroom apartments, sui table' for 4 students.332·6700 or 564·1219.
Male roommate needed North Campus Heights.Semi studio. S75. 332-7046.
Male roommate wanted to share two bedrooma(JIrtment. Close to campus. Washer dryer in·cluded.567-6111.
Female nonsmoker roommate needed for
Jobs
WE ARE HIRING NOW!! Wrappers & Clerksneeded for the 1978 Chinook. Starting on Sep-tember 5!h & working 8 hours a day untilThanksgi ving vaca tion. Must be able to type 50wpm or more. Good pay. Room 113 MurrowCommunications Center.
Licensed beauty operators needed at Head-quarters Hair stylist on campus. Also part-timefloral designer. NE 1000 Colorado. 332·2013.
Pullman Public Schools accepting applicationsuntil October 6, 1978, for a full-time Switch.~oard Operator and Secretary. 12-month posi-lion. Musl have high school diploma or G.E.D.and preferred 6-months' experience as a tele-phone operator. ~ginning salary, 57,320 peryear. Apply at Personnel O'fice, N.W. 115 State,Pullman, WA 99163, 332-3581 AA/EOE
Attention: Pipe smokers! Get your free samplepouch of custom blended tobacco! Only at Puff'N Stuff, Inc. "idaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer"61()I;, Main, Lewiston. (208) 746·9641 (next toBonanza 88c).
Help wanted. Assistant director campus movie.:;-;;~~~9~~UdYonly. Equal opportunities employer.
Needed immediately, full time medical recep-tionist. Call 332·2519.
Washington State Patrol is seeking qualifiedwomen and other minorities interested in careeropportunities as commissioned officers. Salaryand fringe benefits are assorted, Minimum quali-fications are high ochool graduate in goodhealth. Contact personnel office WashingtonState Patrol. Olympia, W A 98504 or call I·206.753·6565.
SAVE MONEY on pop & mixers. POP SHOPPEOF PUUMAN S. 935 Grand, Additional dis-counts on 10 case llarger purchases.
SPEAKERS SPECIAL Stereo Plus stomps corn-petition, w/dynaco A25 NAV S250;pair. SpecialSl69/pair. 564·9222.
SPEAKERS SPECIAL: dynaco A20 NAYS160.00/pair. Now SI09.00/pair. On Grand Ave.564-9222.
STEREO PLUS qualities high fidelity comport-en ts Areas most competitive prices. 564-9222.
CASSETTE DECK at Stereo Plus, next to Cor.r
dova. 564·9222.
TURNT ABLE SPECIAL Marantz 6110 S99.00.Stereo Plus. 564·9222.
U,S. Divers aluminum twin 50 scuba tanks.Excellent condition, with manifokt for 2 separ-ate regulators. $200.00. 332·4031 after 5 p.m.---_._----Pre-cooked roast beef by the pound $2.49. :CiO-5::iO Mothers Cupboard Delicatessen. Wed.Th urs. Fri. Sept. 27. 2M.29.
Single bed. two ten speed bikes. one needs work,one perfect After six o'c ..lock please. :n2-6149.
Panasoni<: stereo console. phono. AM/FM.$50.U() or ()ffer. :i:l2-H-t 70.
M1!iCeilaneous
COMFORT ZONE has the ·BEST REST IN THEWEST", See your Wa terbed Professionals at the"BEDDER PLACE" 1102 Mlin Street. Lewiston.746-9888.
Contact Lens Wearers. Save on brand namehard or soft lens supplies. Send for free illustrat-ed catalog. Contact lens Supplies, Box 7-i53,Phoenix, Arizona 85011.
EQUIPMENT SERVICE HAS TYPEWRrrERSFOR RENT TO SruDENTS, MANUAL $35,ELECTRIC $80 PER SEMFSTER OR BY THEMON11i @ $18 &. $20. FIRST COME, FIRSTSOlVED ,t.T THE GENERAL STORAGE BLDGON FARM WAY. 335-88111.
Attention! Pipe smokers! Get your free samplepouch of custom blended tobacco! Only at Puff'N Stuff, Inc. "Idaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer"610';' Main, Lewiston. (208) 746-9641 (next toBonanza 88¢).
Garage Sa le-Sa turda y & Sunday 10:0(}""4:00.Ba bv clothes. calculator, kitchen utensils &more. N.W. 1415 Hall !1r.
For Sa Ie: Refrigerator, $20; Royce 1-680 CB withantenna. $75. 332·1354. evenings.
Attention: Pipe smokers! Get your free samplepouch of custom blended tobacco! Only at Puff'N Stuff, Inc. "Idaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer"6UM Main. Lewiston. (208) 746·9641 (next toBonanla 88c).
Sell-Buy-Trade your car or truck at Walt Hous-ley's Pullman Auto Sales. Peross Ckand Avefrom-the Oriental 564-8601.
CARRIER WANTEDFOR EARLY MORNINGD.ELlVERY OF APPROX 300DAILY EVERGREI;:NS,FOUR DAYS PER WEEK--NO COLLECTIONS. AREATO BE CARRIED INCLUDESCOLUMBIA VILLAGE,_CHINOOK VILLAGE, OB-'SERVATORY HILL COURTAND WASHINGTONSQUARE. SHOULD BE 12YEARS OLD (OR OLDER)CALL 335-4573 OR COME
TO 113 MURROW COMCENTER (ACROSS FROMTHE WSU LIBRARY)
JOB OPEN TODAY!!
lecture notetakers needed in Bact. 412, Bot. 320,Plant Path. 329, Psych 333, Soils 301. Physics101. Pay rate $5.50·$7.50/Iecture hour. Call 335·1730 or stop by the dfice CUB 233 for moreinformation.
Room and board for somt.'ont;' willing to do lightwork in exchange. 3:{2-69H:t
(Parl*ume jobs Clre open to Jr. Sr. Graduatestudents in S<:ience and Engint:'erin~. Be a tutorat Science Supportive Sforvices. we rxty $].00 perhour and an averdge of five hours per week.Come to Room ]06 College Hall for i.I pplica tionsand interview. Old tutors should renew thl'irapplications. Science SupportiVt.' Services Room306, College Hall).
Part-time housekpeper. J mornmgs a week.Subcook for Mondct y in sorority. Call :n2-~4:{I.
Nt'ed money for tuition. Stereo system. Phillipsturntable. K~nwood KA-7100 amp. 60 wtHts.Marilntz Sprl Kers. Great Price :I:l..'j-SHIO.
Two E-7H x 14 lIwdw-ar studded snow tires onmini Pu wh~els. Ust:"Cione wintt.'r. $45. Two !i55 x14 studde<.t snow tires*sume wheels. USt.'d twowinters $40(KI. Call Rand;' 567~IOII Days.
One ~ir Speakerlab 4's in good condition.S275.00. Call Jim ~wler :1:15·1;'96.
I or 2 roommates to share Campus Commons SmitJ;>. --------~ ----- ---- ~------~
Professional DirectoryOiltsun Pickup Tires-like new Brid gest oneApartmenl; 332·5665 or leave message Campus
For Sale mounted. balanced, original wIH:·els.dduxe hub-Commons. caps. $:15.tKleach. :I:I2·7i19.
Female roommate v.-anted. Prefer non-smoker. Attention: Pipe smokers! Get your free samplepouch of custom blended tobaccot Only at Puff WantedCall after 5p.m. linda 332·5441.'N Stuff, Inc. "Idaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer"
W ANTED: Female Roommate to share two610;, Main, Lewiston. (208) 746·9641 (next to Room <.Ind board for somt'ont.' \V11Img to do light
~D~
'W' •bedroom furnished apartment with AS_ major. Bonan'" 88c). work In l'xch •.tnge. :n2-69X:tWil-Ru complex. 332-124~Diane. -'--- -~--..--. _ ..-- ~fC4U~Wanted to rent: gctrage. shed etc. ~th ell'("~nciNon -smoker roommate wanted at ::: 3 0.8. r
'""ly for workshop and stLKIio. COIl14ct SteveSmith. NE (;00 Maidenl"",' =: 4. -Court, only $85/mo. Call 332·7312, Hurry!
Daily E"ergreen WHITE DRUG STORE WHITE DRUG STORENeed a roommate. $SO/month close to campus. "Since 1 885" "Hallmark Card Center"Plen ty of room 332-8764 after 5:00. Classified Ad Rates Announcements 9 a .m.-9 p.m. Mon. thru Sat. 10a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. & Holidays
Female needed to share a room in 3 bedroom Low cost travel to Israel. Toll Free 800·223·7676, WORRIED ABOUTduplex. $77.50 mo. Few utilities. 332-8271. 15 words 9OOa.m.·7:00 p.m. NY time.PREGNANCY?
Roommate wanted. Own bedroom, $95/month. Attention: Pipe smokers! Get your free sample .'or confidential COUNSELING, FREE PREG· SIMS GLASSMaiden Lane Apartments. 332·2751. $1.80 pouch of custom blended tobacco! Only at Puff NANCY TESTING-and family planning infor·'N Stuff, Inc. "klaho's Leading Tobacco Dealer" mafion, caU-Pregnancy Counseling Service. Everything in glass • automolive,
Female non-smoker roommate to share two 6Hl';' Main, Lewiston. (208) 746-9641 (next to We have free clothing. baby items and referrals household, plastic & screening.bedroom apartment. $100 per man t,h. Close to
MINIMUMBonanla 88c).
to other heJplna Blencles. Hours: 1-3 p.m., Mon.campus. 332·8422.BUDGET TAPES AND RECORDS will honor thru Frt., and Sat. 10 •. m.-12 noon, Room 12,
S. 195 GRANONon-smoker roommate wdnted. $75 month + insertion ANY SPECIAL advertised by any record dealer O'Connor Bldg. 208 So. Main, Moscow, ID. 564-1157elect. Apt =: 44 Wtl·Ru 332·7257. per in Pullman or Moscow. STOP IN and see whats. Phone 208-882·7534,
--~--- -- - -------- - _ -------~. happening TODAY.Mille roommate needed to share one large Cash in Advancebedroom ap.Htment. Rent negotiCible. College ~arn to skydive? Free information about jump- CORNER DRUG STORE Family Center PharmacyHill apartments = 104 :132·HMI2. ~n3~.;5';;!. lessons. Jim Lawier ?r &-ian Opi tz.
._--_._-------- Deadlines E. 255 Main 564·1116 Dissmore's Family CenterRoommate needed. Chinook Village. non· .smoker, $90 per month. 332·61:15. For Publication Dog Cbedience aasses through Pullman Park~ Mon Thru Fri 9 • 8 Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 • 8:00uKay. & Recreation. Puppy basic & advanced. Terry Saturday 9 • 6 Sat. 9:30 • 6:00
NOON Ryan Instructor, 332-2831.Female desires one bedroom apt. or own room Sunday 10-6 Sun. 10:00·6:00near campus. 332-4660 Mary.
DAY BEFORE LOOK FOR SPECIALS AT MOTHERS CUP- 332-2694Fema~e n~n-smoking housemClte wanted: Quiet
BOARD DELICATESSEN 3:30-5'30 MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY BULK PURCHASES ON AS. TWO REXAU STORES TO SERVE YOUresidt.'ntict I neighhorh(xxl. $90.00. Marge 567· PUBLICATION SORTED MEATS & CHEESES.
6781.Rides ESTABLISHED 1871 If-"- Audio Electronics R.epair
~. needed to share three bedroom MEfvlBERS OF NEW ~M Instrumt;>nt Rt.'palrduplex. Must fumish own bedroom. $90.00 per Bring Ads to Murrow YORK STOCK Precision Machine Worksmonth. 332·7:l:lO. Ride wdnled on weekends bt'tween Pullm<.ln & EXCHANGE INC Edward D. i>Ji Specialt.\" Welding~i:lII<.I Walla. Will split gas. Call J:I5-fi:191"wn· "an~.&- Ca.Female roommate $70/month & I/J utilities. Near Communications mgs. 1.&5 IlIIdn ..........' •.fILSTOCKS· BONDS· MUTUAL FUNDS .campus. Must like dogs. Call Patty Iflebbie 3:12·
Center 113 Lost & Found TAX FREE & INSURED SECURITIES N.1218 C Grand Ave.8289. The Pl-ofessional Mill PUllman, WA 99163
ACCURATE 65 to 70 wpm typist needed now!! MlsceUaneous
@FINCH',
Good pay, interesting work, half-time work or ~4 or Write Plant Sale: small plants 3 for a doliar. 4" pot Wheatland Realty [Btime work. (I.E. average 20 hours per week or 30to 35 hours pel'" week. This is a permanent P.O. Box 2008 CS
51.75 each. Larger size is a vailable at specialposition_) Worker should be free of tests and prices. Lande's Aower Ek>uUque. CXientai Res-
(Formerly Baenen Realty)studies. Must ha ve proven ability. Work will be taurant Building. 332·2566. EQUALHOUSI.'It At 'DO ..
lale afternoons and nights 4 days per week. Call ~ullman,Wash. 99163 Special! Mixed mwn ',enter pieces, $6.50. LandesIJ'I'I'JmWTY Management & Sales
335-4573 for an appointment or come to 113Murrow Communication Center. Ao~r Boutique. O'iental Restaurar-t Building. S 445 Grand "Alwavs Professional Service" 332-2668332·2566.
You CQn Pick ;'Up"-
You, 1978 Ch• 00kInPick Them Up At The Sasement Of m UIIOW Communication Cente, (Next to S,yan, Hall)
• •Don't Fo'get You, Student ID Ca,d fo,m of Identification. ' .0' some
Thursday, September 28,1978 DAn. Y EVERGREEN-IS
Now comes Miller time.
@1978Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
I8-DAR.V EVERGREEN Thursday, September 28,1978
'loutAdvanced Campus Electronics Center
will provide you with the finest available brands of:
A.C.E. Calculatorof the year
El·5806,_- Billfold Type Advanced ;. Scientific Calculator IISHARP only 7.6mm Thin. !\
Pre-programmed for 24scientific functions.
~A"CHIII fORl * Buy of the Month .:
* New Product of the Month 'II* Specials .* Competitive Pricingall the time.
i;' Featuring Such Names As: !!IIISharp Memorex Ii iHewlett Packard SCM \i
ITexas Instruments EST 1.\
I Canon Panasonic" 11il General Electric Duracell
'-I~.MaxellSugg Retail only $29.95
Check this Section for.your A.C.E. Priceson Merchandise
business management andgeneral business math problemsfaster and easier.
nessTexas Instruments
electronicbusiness calculator
The mBA'"Powerful preprogrammed businessand financial functions. Statisticscapability and programmability too.
Sugg, Retail $70.00
Texas Instrumentspocket portable
electronic calculatorwith memory
SLimLin~1030·Thin as a pencil to fit easily in apocket or in wallet folder; up to 3000hours of normal operation on oneset of batteries.
Sugg. Retail $15.95
for Scie
Texas Instrumentsscientific colcolotor
t<,~ SLlmlln~25'"~ Specifically designed for today's pro-
fessionals and students on the move,with 52 functions and up to two years ofnormal operation on one set of batteries.
Sugg. Retail $30.00
electronic slide -rulecalculator
SR·40_'-=- _=--_ ~-~ r.. ~\ l~ll"c",~--
A full function slide-rule calculatorcombining powerful capabilitiesand economy.
Sugg. Retail $24.95
• A.C.E. Best Buy •
isticsTexas Instrumentsadvanced slide rule
calculator with programmability
TI-55Successor to the SR-51-1Lan advancedslide-rule calculator with statisticalfunctions and simple programmabilitywith Calculator Decision MakingSourcebook.
Full Featured Scientific! Today's m-ost underrated Scientific Programmable
Model EL-500110+2 Digit SophisticatedScientific Calculator FeaturingLinear Equations, ComplexNumber, Integration, QuadraticEquations, Vector and StatisticalCalculations .. $49 95
Sugg. Retail •
Model El-8133Thin (7.6mm) Con-temporary Calculatorwith "FEM" TypeLiquid Crystal Display.
Sugg, Retail
$17.95LCD Wallet
Credit card-size, no keys, with storagecomputer & safe guard circuitry (holdsany number when shut off)
Sugg Retail $39.95
A.C.E. Calculator of the YearBased on features, price, quality and customer
demand, A.C.E. has selected the Sharp El-5806 asCalculator of the Year!
ModelEl·5808
Super Slim Execu-tive ScientificCalculator withIndependentMemoiy andBrackets in TouchTone Slim design.
Sugg Retail $39.95
Model EL-1201Advanced Programmable Scien-tific Calculator with a PermanentMemory.• Retains program when shut off
• 128 merged steps• 12 memories
• 4 types of conditionaljudgements
Sugg. Retailonly $89.95
ModelEL-_8143E
An Electronic Clock& Alarm Built into aFull-Feature Com-pact Calculator. \
Sugg Retail
$29.95
ModelEl-203
8-Digit ElectronicCalculator withTotal Memory.
Sugg. Retail
$10.95
Model EL·5806Bill fold Type Advanced Scientific Calculatoronly 7.6mm Thin.• Pre-programmed for 24 scientific notation.• Statistical cal, "lations.• Easy to read Hi-Contrast LCD.• Indicators for minus, memory, battery and
statistical calculations.• 1,000 hrs. operation on two watch batteries.• Soft vinyl carrying case included.
SuggRetailOnly $29.95
.. AdVanced Campus Electronics Welcomes Freshmen A
• Complete with Owner's Hand-book, introductory booklet,coupon for applications books,battery pack, AC adapter/ re-charger and case.
Sugg. Retail $75.00
Advanced Programmability withContinuous Memory
HP-29C--~--~:;:--:---~--"-:--I ? "3 - S i) I ~ . ::':! \
:,£'~.;".'.~;~~~~~:~\1:..--- 1D~~\
~i:~~:'~.pj!. e '~~i.'\~..~t~_'~:'i~~~-=--",--~-"
• Powerful programming features• Preprogrammed functions.• Complete with Owner's Manual,
Programming Guide, Appli-cations Book, Reference Card,battery pack, AC adapter/re-charger and case.
SUg~ Retail $175.00
Mag Card Programmable
HP-67• Identical programming power
of the HP-97 without the print-ing capability.
• Complete with Owner's Hand-book, Standard Program Pac,
t battery pack, AC adapter/ re-charger and case.
Sugg Retail $450.00
A.C.E. is your Hewlett-PackardAccessory Headquarters
Battery Packs for all ModelsChargersLibrariesSolution BooksCasesApplication BooksSecurity Cradles
RememberDon't Be Caught
withA Dead Calculator!
A Advanced Campus Electronics Welcomes FreshmenA
CanonIf you ·think
that Canon only builds great cameras,your A.C.E. Store has a surprise for you!
MEANS QUALITY
CanonPalmtronic Le.S
• About 3000 hours battery lifecontinuous use.
• Extra Thin (3.9mm thick).• Choice of finishes
(black metallic or silver)• Pocketbook-type accessory
case. $Sugg Retail 34.95
Canon cOfJ I
Palmtronic ~(QLC-MEMO
Stores and remembers up to 21,12-digit numbers and 21,B-Ietter words.It helps you to remember!
Sugg. Retail $89.95New! Pocket Memo .11
The world's first hand-held rechargeable print & display impact printer.
,e~~~~~~ ~~~'!.!!Pl0-D
Canon ("OfJPalmtronic ~(Q
LC-6Credit Card-Size with Memory.
Sugg Retail $29.95
Canon~~!!!~!!~~~8S
• Rechargeable• 8-digit fluorescent display• "Canon touch" keyboard• Automatic constant in the
four-arithmetic functions
Sugg. Retail 514.95Quality is worth a little more
A feature-packed, lightweight (24ozs.)calculator that operates on either ACorwith its own built-in rechargeablebatteries.
And the Canon, P10-D also features; aversatile memory, item counter, deci-mal point selection including add-mode, percentage key, automatic con-stant, buffered keyboard and more .
Credit Card-Size
Sugg. Retail $99.95
.£ Advanced Campus Electronics Welcomes Freshmen A
SOUNDS
\
YOUR A.C.E. CENTERCARRIES BATTERIES FOREVERY USE
Duracell® now featuring
Alkaline Batteries EVEREADYFlashlights
MODEL GF-1750AC/BATIERY OPERATED PORTABLECASSETIE RECORDER WITH AM/FM I ,RADIO AND BUILT·IN CONDENSERMICROPHONE• ALC (Automatic Level Control).• Built-in condenser microphone.• Automatic end of tape shut-off.• Tape monitor switch.• Simplified rrusc, mixing with optional
external microphone.• Sensitive AM/FM tuner section for noise
tree reception.• Slide-rule tuning dial.• Off·the·air record capability.• 4" PM speaker.
MODEL GF-9090AM/FM/FM STEREO/SWl/SW2PORTABLE STEREO CASSETIE RECORDER• APSS (Automatic Program Search
System).• VU meters for each channel that double
as tuning and battery indicators.• Bias and equalization switches to
optimize performance with Cr02/FeCrlnormal tapes.
• Mechanical pause.• Cue/Review system.• Two built-in condenser microphones.• LED FM stereo indicator.• Two amplifiers and two-way speaker
system with 6\-1" woofers (2) and horntweeters (2).
• Stereo expander switch.• Balance control.• 1 ndividual bass and trebel controls.• Fine tuning.• AC/DC operation.
VORdiscleaner,
Size AA - 4 packSize CSize D9-VoltWatch & Calc, Batt. from
Sugg. Retail
$2.99$1.80$2.00$1.89$1.65 up
Sugg, Retail
Size AA - 2 pack $1.59
Size C - 2 pack $1.89
Size D -- 2 pack $1.99
9-Volt $1.89
Watch & Calc. Batt. $3.78
-~
from51.49 up
soss. Retail
Just buy acharger & theright module.for you -you can gethundreds ofcharges fromone set ofG.E. batteries!
GEN ERAL. ELECTRIC Rechargeable Battery SystemsMC22·C Module
with two C rechargeablebatteries.
Sugg Retail $9.00"
I:I!Ii"
M919· ChargingModule'
with 9-Volt rechargeablebattery.
Sugg, Retail $9.49
BC·3Charger
MA21·AA Modulewith two AA rechargeablebatteries.
Sugg Retail $8.52Sugg. Retail
53.98
MUSIC COMBO-SHARPJI
The ultimate recordpreener; anti-staticfluid included.
FORRECORDING-SHARP MODEL RO-610
AC/BATIERY PORTABLE CASSETTERECOROER• ALC (Automatic Level Control).• Built-in condenser microphone.• Auto-stop system.• Input jack for external remote control'
microphone with onloff switch(optional).
• Auxiliary input for recording directlyfrom radio or TV.
• Earphone jack for private listening.• Soft-touch, jam proof piano key controls.• Buitt-in AC power supply with detach-
able power cord.• Simplified loading plus separate eject
button tor easy tape access.• One-touch recording system.
wacerecRecord vacuumPreserves Your
Albums inBrand-NewCondition
Permanently.jI
A Advanced Campus Electronics Welcomes Freshmen .A
!!!!!~a~II,.! ~For All Reasons ~
MEMOREXQuality Sound at the Right Price...
MEMOREX 90BUY lWO CASS[ T n s
Gl 1om FREE'New MRX 3
90 minute cassettesBuy two-Get one Free!
~.. ~. . . ..,.\ only $7.98 .
Sugg. RetaiI
Ultra DynamicUD-XL-IC90UD-XL-IIC90UD-60
Low NoiseLN-90 minute
$5.75$5.75$3.80
$3.90
MEMOREX Recording Tape"Is it INe or is it Memorex?"
\ i InterMagneticsi, Super1./
I:: Values!' Free1 ;f1 with purchase of 3
1 gO-min. cassettes.
gO-minute cassette
$1.69 Sugg Retail
-\lii!uli\:l!j ,; ;'!'iiil$ I
Tape Tote!
RADIO RERUNSonly $2.98 each
Sugg. Retail
• Abbott and Costello• Jack Benny Show• The Green Hornet• W. C. Fields• Amos and Andy
- • War of the WorldsEach 30 minute show as originally aired
including commercials.
only $4.99Sugg. Retail
3-Pack, 60 min. cassettes
S~ Retail
Iii /' Record Care Accessories H -Diarnond Needles1;1 Record Care I;
Electronic Accessories'I for all types ofRecord Cloth $l.00 t.il !lTape Accessories Cleaning Kit l.50 Ii' phonographs
)'. I 'i.1 by Stylus Cleaner 1.69· if Magnetic CartridgesI' Dust Devil . 3.95, I Pfanstiehl j, Ji featuring Shure,I'