—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, September 4, 1973 STEREO Fisher We invented high fidelity PIONEER' when you want something better mraitatit , 4amill2r. We sound better. JVC JVC AMERICA, INC (_I -,--/. I=l=l 0 Rectilinear SONY r SUPERSCOPE. You never heard it so good rizincimi I I 1-2 I , Z•\"( )( )1.) TEAC A.LLTEC: E BASF M P Acoustcßes...cp RABCO Panasonic ole KOSS .o Dual (SSONY PARTS & SERVICE DEPT. kardon PEAKERS, CORAL BX-801 3-way 8" with Lattice Grill , CORAL BX-1001 3-way 10" with Lattice Grill CORAL BX-1201 5-way 12" 6 speaker w/Lattice G. CORAL BX-1401 6-way 15"- 7 speaker w/Lattice G. CORAL BX-1500 6-way 15" 7 speaker w Horn H.F.D BECKER 104 A Famous 8" 2-way speaker .system ALTEC 886 A 2-way 3 speaker 10" speaker system ALTEC 891 A 2 -way 2 speaker 12" Delux speaker ALTEC 874 A 3 -way 12" top-rated speaker PIONEER CSE-350 2-way 8" Bookshelf speaker PIONEER CSE-400 2-way 10" Bookshelf speaker FISHER XP-568 2-way 8" Bookshelf Speaker FISHER XP-65S 3-way 10" Speaker system BECKER 103 A 2-way 8" coaxiel bookshelf speaker ULTRALINEAR 300 2-way 8" with decorator grill ULTRALINEAR 100 3-way 12" with decorator grill CORAL BX-300 3-way 10" with cloth grill . SONY SS-510 2-way 8" in walnut cabinet SONY SS-610 3-way 8" in walnut cabinet ACOUSTIC RESEARCH AR-4X 2-way 8" speaker MARANTZ/SUPERSCOPE S-82 2-way 8" top rated FISHER PL-6 SOUND PANEL SPEAKERS AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE PACKAGES GARRARD SL-55b deluxe package-cart . _ base d.c. GARRARD SL-728 deluxe package-cartridge base d.c DUAL 1219 auto professional turntable-cart. base d. DUAL 1229 auto professional super turntable pack. FISHER 220/x deluxe turntable package base d.c. RECEIVE S• AMP FISHER 170 50 Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver $2OO FISHER 180 64 Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver 250 FISHER 304 112 Watt AM-FM-4/2 Channel Stereo 350 ALTEC 710 A 105 Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver 400 MARANTZ 4430 Super 4-channel AM/FM Receiver 600 MARANTZ 4415 High Performance Quad AM-FM Rec. 400 MARANTZ 4460 Super 4-Channel Amplifier 280 MARANTZ 115 High Performance Stereo AM/FM tuner 280 SYLVANIA CR2741 AM-FM Stereo Receiver 170 MARANTZ/SUPERSCOPE QA-420 QUAD amplifier w/SQ 200 ELECTRO-VOICE 4i4 4-channel Receiver-SO watt 250 FISHER 401 150 Watt Remote Control AM-FM Rec. 450 MARANTZ/SUPERSCOPE R:250 50 Watt AM-FM Receiver 200 MARANTZ/SUPERSCOPE B-225 30 Watt AM-FM Receiver 140 Claricon,36-790A 150 Watt AM-FM Super Receiver 289 SANYO DCA-1700X 80 Watt Amplifier with Quad 219 SONY HST-220 AM-FM 40 Watt Stereo Receiver 170 SONY STR-6036 50 Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver 219 NIKKO 2010 30' Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver 160 MARANTZ/SUPERSCOPE A-240 40 Watt Stereo Amp 100 IR CHANNEL ADAPTERS-ADAPTER? SONY SQA-200 30 watt SQ adapter amphfier 130 SONY SQA-1000 SQ Full logic decoder 100 BSR METROTEC SQ/EV/QS Full logic 4-ch decoder 80 BSR METROTEC SDQA-Q Full logic decoder/30 watt 150 SPEAKER SYSTEM 200 E. COLLEG 200 E. COLLEGE AVE. 238-1001 238-5016 WELCOMES YOU TO STATE COLLEGE WITH AN EARLY BIRD SALE S TUNERS AUTOMOTIVE STEREO/8-TRACK SYSTEMS AND DECKS PIONEER TP-222 mini 8 track PIONEER TP-777 Deluxe 8-Track PIONEER TP-700 Deluxe 8-track with FM multiplex PIONEER TP-8000 Deluxe 8-track with AM/FM MPX PIONEER KP-333 Deluxe Autolßeyerse Cassette PIONEER H-22 Deluxe home playback deck PIONEER HR-88 8-track record/playback deck 145 PIONEER 11.-555 20 watt 8-track player w/speakers 120 PIONEER 11-7000 90 watt AM-FM 8-track player 240 ALL PIONEER CAR SPEAKERS AT SIMILAR DISCOUNTS MIMI' rt. 322' WW I 6'l 'l. west v POLLOCK. RO 9 Ism 1 1 40„, Imo 0 P E NN STATE MAIN CAMPUS ,S.O I AVE c. , 026 Ert 26 nort —0 h l -0 4 b S•' 01 I ACT • ....... r tn 11111111 ~. r. rI ...1 . NI E BEAVEf ----- -j . ..... N rn ' u) 0 r I' l 1 c'''', r S C to . f.,, s v4p.34 , 0 00i 4 I > ~. m co k- , m r D r" 1 - 4 z T. 4 Z DO c c u ., —4 . , ? ') . —.• SAVE UP TO 50% .......-......- ~. IJ CI rI : S A lAA A l (-' - 1 . • I H 0 0 1 12 - 1 - 1 inF i le 59 , 80 ! 149 In 219 35 110 1 160 45 I 32 I 44 . 110 180 170 320 90 PROVEN QUALITY LOWEST PRICES Oa ttabb 1 00 0 0 0 0 C: '' 140 160 95 48 110 95 189 USG to to voter By TERESA VILLA Collegian Senior Reporter The Undergraduate Student Government is one organization .'students will run into this Week at registration. One of, USG's big projects this year is a voter registration drive in Centre County, according to USG Senator Bob Bricmont. The USG Department of Political Affairs will sponsor free bus and car rides from Rec Hall registration to the county courthouse•in Bellefonte tomorrow, Thursday and Friday. Bricmont said registering to vote in Centre County is important because all students will be canvassed and included in Centre County tax rolls and will have to pay local taxes. No proof of residence is required for voter registration, he said. USG has worked for two years to make voter registration this easy for students. Student government also had a say last year in the new State College - bus terminal site. This year USG will work with other universities in establishing a student lobby in the state legislature, Bricmont said. "We'll be back to business as usual," he added. USG consists of three branches: executive, legislative and judicial. Its president is Mark Jinks, • assisted by Vice President Frank .Muraca. The executive branch also includes AP New Scope Convoy reaches capital PHNOM PENH A 14boat Cambodian navy convoy reached the besieged provincial capital of Kompong Cham yesterday with troop reinforcements and badly needed U.S. arms and ammunition including 105 mm howitzers, the Cambodian command said. Col. Am Rong, chief command spokesman, said the convoy was "cheered by the people all along the banks of the Mekong River because they hadn't seen one for more than a year." He said it completed the voyage from Phnom Penh up to the Mekong River in 25 hours with little resistance. Kompong Cham, Cambodia's third larg est city; lies on the western banks of the Mekong 47 miles'northeast of Phnom Penh. The town, on east-west Highway 7, is cut off by road and only helicopters can land. The airfield, about 3 and one-half miles northwest of ' the city, is zeroed in by insurgent artillerymen using 105 mm howitzers captured earlier in their drive from the town of Skoun eastward toward Kompong Cham. Cholera spreads north , ROME Cholera spread north to Rome yesterday with one death reported in an outlying district of the capital. The death toll in the southern cities of Naples and tari rose to 13. The Roman victim reportedly became ill after eating sea snails brought to him from a town near Naples where cholera cases have been reported.; Mussels, eaten raw, are a popular dish in both Naples and Sari, and are raised commercially in the polluted waters of the Gulf of Naples. Doctors ordered the mussel' beds closed and said they and other shell fish probably were responsible for the spreading disease.- Vaccine and other anticholera drugs were running short in Italy. The government dispatched a military plane to London to bring back 1.6 million doses of British produced serum. Gas prices may rise WASHINGTON Petroleum industry figures indicate that removal of federal regulation from natural gas prices would increase the average household gas bill anywhere from 16 to 32 per cent by 1980. The 16 per cent increase. however, may occur even if prices remain-regulated, since the Federal Power Commission has been preparing to raise the ceilings. The industry has said that higher prices and removal of price regulation are needed to stimulate exploration for new gas fields and relieve the growing gas shortage. The American Petroleum Institute Monday released a 150-page study prepared for it by Foster Associates, a Washington consulting firm, analyzing the possible impact of price-deregulation. Most of the detailed figures were not spelled out by the report but could be calculated from the tables provided. Fire-fighting halted NEW ORLEANS Increasing danger of an explosion forced a halt to Coast Guard efforts yesterday to bombard a flaming ship with fire-extinguishing chemicals dropped by helicopters. The 306-foot Liberian freighter Key Largo, abandoned by its crew, burned fiercely at anchor 50 miles downstream from New Orleans. Touchy calcium carbide fed the fire which threatened barrels of tetra-ethyl lead, which spews off a poisonous gas when burned. Choppers dropped 10 tons of chemical fire extinguisher on the ship before being ordered away. A Coast Guard spokesman said fire fighting was complicated by the fact that calcium carbide, when mixed with water, creates explosive acetelyne gas. The fire, and the calcium carbide, was in the aft hold of the ship. For Ward on.deck were barrels containing eight tons of the tetra-ethyl lead. Give.sometking for free/ So yoti found a 'watch or a ring, and you know somebody's looking for get if back to them? Simple! without charge, as a service to our readers. So make somebody happy, give something for free! give rides registration the , departments of Political Affairs, A.cadeMir Affairs, Commonwealth Campuses, Legal Affairs and Student Welfare_ ; The legislative branch includes the Senate, with representatives from the dorms and downtown, and the Academic Assembly, 'With members from the 10 colleges who discuss academic affairs. Supreme Court members are appointed by the USG president, as are heads of the executive departments. All Senators are elected by their constituencies. As USG president, Jinks heads the Executive Council, which includes the presidents of all major campus organizations. • Students with problems or questions can contact their USG Senator or the USG office in 218 HUB. The USG Supreme Court registers student organizations. Without a USG charter an organization cannot receive University funds. The court also hears grievances from students and groups. Last year a student brought suit against the University Union Board for sexual discrimination in the Homecoming selection of outstanding University women. The 213-foot Cutter Acushnet was en route from Gulfport, Miss., under a tentative plan to try to keep a cooling spray of water on the barrels of tetra-ethyl lead. Delia heading for La. MIAMI, Fla. Tropical Storm Delia moved toward the Louisiana coast yesterday and forecasters said they expected the storm to reach hurricane force before it arrived. The National Hurricane Center here said Delia" was expected to hit hurricane strength sustained winds of more than 74 miles per hour.— by late yesterday. The storm already registered winds of 60 miles an hour. Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Christine regained strength in the Atlantic Ocean as it pushed toward the Leeward Islands. It too had maximum sustained winds of 60 m.p.h. Yesterday afternoon. Delia was reported about 240 miles south of New Orleans and wasmoving northwest at 12 m.p.h. An area east of Lake Charles, La. extending to the mouth of the Mississippi River was/placed on hurricane alert. Gale warnings were also in effect. Food costs fall slightly NEW YORK—Grocery prices have fallen a bit from their mid-August peaks. but are still about seven per cent higher than they were six months ago, an Associated Press marketbasket survey shows. The AP surveyed the prices of 15 food and nonfood items in 1 cities on March 1 and has rechecked then t the beginning of each succeeding mop _ . An additional check was made on Aug. 13 ;the day after the Phase 4 economic program began. During the six-month period, price ceilings were first imposed and then lifted on virtually all foods. The only food still under a ceiling is beef which will remain limited in price until Sept. 12. The Sept. 1 check showed that pork chops aid eggs, which rose sharply during late July and early August, have declined in most 'cities. In every city, however, egg prices 'which topped a dollar a dozen in some areas on Aug. 13 were higher on Sept. 1 than they were on March 1. Congress to reconvene WASHINGTON Congress returns to work tomorrow after a month's vacation and prospects appear slim for passage this year of key measures sought by President Nixon. Congressional leaders say the White House is giving top priority to a trade bill which would give the President substantial new authority in this field. Negotiations with America's principal trading partners are to start in Tokyo later this month. But the Nixon bill has not yet cleared the House Ways and Means Committee and, even if it can pass the House in October, it still faces highly uncertain Senate prospects. Other major presidential initiatives for revenue-sharing plans in the fields of education and housing seem to have little chance of enactment in 1973. Teacher talks stalling PITTSBURGH Teacher contract talks have moved down to the wire as thousands of school children await the outcome of weekend negotiations. Teachers and other school employes have threatened to strike in 11 Western Pennsylvania school districts while walkouts continued in five others. In Allegheny County, negotiations were stalled in five school districts. involving 1.300 teachers and 25,000 pupils. State mediators were called in on talks between McKeesport. Carlynton and West Mifflin boards and representatives of the Pennsylvania State Education Association. Talks were progressing in West Jefferson Hills and Allegheny Intermediate Unit districts and no mediation was scheduled. Meanwhile. 13 secretaries threatened to strike the Babcock school system.