'' U.S. faces power shortage unless nuclear use expands WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States could suffer severe electrical shortages - and perhaps even power blackouts within as little as four years unless prompt steps Care taken to expand.the use of coal and atomic energy, electric utility officials warned yesterday. Reporting on power plant reserve capacity and fuel, , the National Electric Reliability Council said the • situation could be especially critical if recent court rulings and potential legislative action slow the growth of nuclear power generation. "Unless the electric • utility sys_tems of this country are able to con struct and. operate as presently scheduled the Antitrust bill passes WASHINGTON (UPI) A pajor antitrust 'bill which Auld empower states to obtain triple damages against businesses convicted of price fixing schemes passed the Senate yesterday. The bill would also sub stantially broaden the Justice Department's and the tederal Trade Commission's subpoena powers to pursue antitrust investigations. The measure would further require major corporations to notify the government well in can manage—most of the time with out doing anything but pressing the Record and Play buttons.— to make recordings that are essentially indis tinguishable from the best original material I can find to tape. The Advent 201 is a combination both of the kind of tape machine that Advent felt people would really value and make good use of in a home and of the design that make recording as easy as it should be. To accomplish the latter, Advent had to do some things—such as using one precise and expensive VU meter instead of the standard two cheapies —that, from the standpoint of the chromy "sales features" that ads usually shout about, made the 201 look less impressive than dozens of machines it can actually run rings around. - \That turned out all right, since enough people seem to be able to separate appearance from reality, particularly if someone bothers to point it out to them in a store. Advent Proceis CR/70' Cassette Recordings: A slightly different case. Having made a cassette machine that could indicate the. potential quality all recorded cassettes could have, Advent decided it would be enjoy able and worthwhile to make some commercial. cassette recordings thit could indicate to the public and the big record companies just how ter rific mass-produced commercial cas sette releases could soUnd. Which they did. There are now about forty "Process CR/7OTM cassette releases at Advent dealers and some of the bigger record stores. They are some thing to hear. These tapes, and more to come, wouldn't be around if Advent were , 114 ,„ i ikt,:- . *** * -aft -111114?-1 an every-product-has-to,make-a bundle company. Advent doesn't expect the Process CR/70 Tapes, in the relatively small quantity they can be produced by an audio manu facturer, to do much more than break even. It feels that some products that support others and help the com pany's overall reputation don't haVe to make bells ring in the Controller's Office—that the overall health'of the company depends on a balanced effort to put the right total product out into the world. I think that's a terrific attitude, especially at a time when the make money-every-step approach seems to be helping prices climb toward the stars..(They'll never make it; it's the wrong way to travel.) Some Other Attitudes I Like. As I sit here writing this ad (which I think is going to turn into a two page monster in Rolling Stone or someplace), I keep remembering that people often write Advent and ask why they don't advertise more. (Advent makes it into the hi-fi mag azines three or four times a year, and a couple of times in Rolling Stone and here and there.). Well, I can remember a Saturday nuclear-fueled power plants currently planned, the United States will face blackouts, voltage reductions or rotating outages as a, result of serious shortages of electric power by or in the 1980 s," said William McCollam, chairman of the council. The council, which represents utilities throughout the United States and most of Canada, issued two new . studies saying the absence of a U.S. energy policy com bined with unfavorable governthent action could result in both too few generating plants and insufficient fuel by 1985. In the past year, the council said, "the nation has moved closer to the advance of any mergers in order to give the Justice Department sufficient time to study whether any antitrust laws have been violated and seek a stay in federal court. Yesterday's final vote was 69 to 18 and sends the measure to the House. House approval would send the bill directly to President Ford where its fate is uncertain. The bill passed despite a bitter filibuster by Sen. James Allen, D-Ala., before the Labor Day recess. Allen believes the bill is unconstitutional and will tend to encourage state attorneys general to go after companies solely to advance their political popularity. But - supporters of the Measure argue that com- 0.7;r7... .. ^ . ...,,..0. 0 . , .. n.....n... . ....—_, 'l- r, * .•,.--.- ',,,,'-i. "* . &;,.. - 1 ~" ~.-_ brink of a severe electric energy crisis." "Lacking ... decisive governmental action, the United States is !likely to face serious shortages in electric energy supply in some regions as early as the late 1970 s and in others by the early 1980 s," it said. One report said reserve generating capacity—the ability to produce more electricity than is needed at the peak of the summer and insure a reliable supply of electricity despite equipment break downs—could decline from the present 30 per cent to between 12 and 22 per cent in 1985. It said that figure appears . adequate nationally but some in dividual regions are in worse shape. panics which stand to make millions of dollars in profits through infractions of the anti-trust laws are not deterred by existing penalties of a few hundred thousand dollars. The triple damage provision, they argue, will act as a major deterrent to future price fixing schemes. The bill's sponsors, seeking to avoid a time-consuming congressional conference route—by which the House and Senate iron out their legislative differences—have worked out a compromise measure with the House Judiciary . Committee Chairman Peter Rodino which they believe will win House approval. afternoon six or seven years ago when my wife (Rosemary, mother of Chris, Ben, and Tom) and I went into the Advent factory to see a very early prototype of the Videoßeam TV set. We were standing around talking to Advent's President (Henry), and the first thing that happened was that one of his kids (Jennifer), who was \ having a good time running around among all the dead ma chines, came up to us with a toy that had broken. I don't remember what - the toy was anymore, but I do remember .that what had broken was one of those two-cent somethings on which the whole fun of the toy depended—and which the manufac turer had to know 'would break very early in the game. Henry was, to put it mildly, a bit annoyed. And after telling three year-old Jennifer that people should not make things like that, and he was sorry that they did,- he started on a stream-of-consciousness as to how a manufacturer ought to think of his responsibility to people. And on boy/ Advent was going to do things (like building a strong servic ing incentive into the structure of prices that dealers would pay for Advent products) to try to insure the best possible treatment of customers if anything ever went wrong with a product. (The policy seems to have worked pretty well, since the few people who have trouble with Advent products seem to feel even better about them afterward than they did before.) And then, looking at me as if I were the potential advertisingrman enemy, he said that this time (as opposed to last time, when a previ ous company had been taken over by a corporate giant and changed a lot) he and Stan and Fred (who had also come over from Company X to Advent by then) were clearer than ever on certain matters. The biggest —which I had better understand— was that the only advertising money they were going to build into the price of Advent products was a rea sonable cost for informing people about stuff once in a while—not a budget related to persuading any body to buy. It was just plain obscene to make people pay, in the final price of a product, for having been saturated into buying it with ads that hit you every time you looked up. That attitude of Advent's was just fine with me, since I'd come close to throwing rocks at TV sets a number of times—particularly during some of those cold-pill commercials, when I knew (as good old Advertising Age had told me) that between 70 and 80 per cent of the cost of the product was in its advertising. I also felt good when I learned a few weeks later that Advent's mar keting strategy was to pick a small number of dealers, the ones who knew the most about equipmerit and had the best, least confusing environ ments for people to listen in, and sell to them rather than every drug store. Part of the reasoning was that if the price of a product to the cus tomer wasn't inflated by factors like saturation advertising, it could be very low and still have enough mar gin to support a healthy business for the dealer. If the product were then really good enough, word-of-mouth advertising from pleased customers (plus the product doing its own Saturday buses to Lemont discontinued Change By KAREN FISCHER Eloth routes will run five days a week, Collegian Staff Writeron an hourly basis from 7 a.m. to 6 The X bus route will be modified by p.m. Oct. lof this year, and two new routes • The new routes were proposed by td replace the X and H routes will Miller because Tot trees has con begin Jan. 1, the Centre Area tributed 50 per cent more money to Transportation Authority decided the authority this year, and CATA has yesterday. contracts with Hills and the Nittany Starting in October, the X route will Mall. not go to Lemont on Saturdays Thomas Collins, a member of because, according to ridership CATA and the Finance Committee, figures, most people there use the bus stressed that ridership figures must mainly to commute to work during , increase on these new routes or the the week, James Miller of CATA said. routes will be evaluated and One new route will go from Toftrees modified. He also said that CATA can to the eastern part of College Heights, only afford these routes for six into town, out to Hills Plaza and then months because of a $14,000 cut in back again. The other will go from the funding by the Pennsylvania Nittany Mall to campus, town, the Department of Transportation. western part of College Heights, to PennDOT made the cut because the town and then back to the Mall again. demand for assistance from across Few Swedes escape tax woes STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Ingnriar Bergman fled Sweden in a rage over what he called income tax persecution. Gunilla Jansson, who is neither rich nor a famed movie director like Berman, stayed behind, her anger just as real, but with her life re-cast by the tax man. Bergman chose to move „ to Munich, West Ger many, and will soon begin a film called "The Ser pent's Egg,” a story whose vague theme is money. Without Bergman's mobility, Mrs. Jansson says she closed her private practice as a physical therapist because of taxes, and went to work for the Swedish state, a painful compromise with her ambitions "Bergman carries his worth around with him in his. head," she said. "He could go anywhere. I'm just another body." ' • Statistics are difficult to compare, but Jan Bjorklund, information director of the National Tax Board, says he wouldn't argue with a description of Sweden's' tax system as the toughest in the world. Israelis sometimes pay more, and the U.S. Internal Revenue Service has a reputation for vigorous pursuit of fraud, he says, "but what we consider ordinary, they think of as extraordinary in most places." , This means: a businessman earning $36,000 a year retains $13,240. A factory worker whose yearly advertising 'when it was turned on for a friend in somebody's house) could help create a steady stream of business that would be so easy and efficient for a dealer to handle that things would get better as they went along. • I thought that was a super-intel ligent approach g s . t the time, and I like it even more now when I see supermarkets more and more full of mediocre, essentially identical prod ucts, with prices reflecting tremen dous expenditures to bend people's minds to buy them. I think Advent's attitude is almost a prototype for doing business in today's world. I don't think it's super-moralistic or holier-than-thou. It simply represents adult, responsi ble behavior. And, by the way, it works. For example : The Advent Loudspeaker. Every reader-survey'rve seen by the hi-fi magazines (and Rolling Stone) over the last two years indi cates that the Advent Loudspeaker is the best-selling speaker in the country. Now, when the Advent Loud speaker can become a best-seller even though it's sold only by about 180 dealers in the country (as opposed to thousands for some of the big-name, mass-distribution types), and when the company spends less than a percent of its income for national advertising on all its prod ucts (the speaker gets less than a third of that), it is obvious that the word about an exceptional product gets around. _ The speaker is every bit worth its reputation and sales. I've been lis tening to every shape, size, and price of speaker I know of since 1949, and I don't know of any speaker at any price (and there are some that cost ten to twenty times what the Advent Loudspeaker does) that has wider usable frequency response or that strikes me as having better, more natural sound. There are other good ones, and some that sound different on particular material (some people would think better, some worse— and there's obviously room for taste on such judgments). But I've never heard any I feel has more to offer for day-after-day listening on all kinds of musical material in a home, in X bus route to begin Oct. 1 salary is $lO,OOO takes home $6,200. A very suc cessful executive who makes about $340,000 gets to keep $67,000 The Tax Board's control division has had the power since the beginning of the year to enter any business office and remove tax records without a court order. With a subpoena, it may enter homes. Almost every one of five million tax returns is in dividually checked. In return for high taxes and strict enforcement, Sweden's welfare state provides free education, a medical care program under which the maximum price for a visit to a clinic is $3.40 and generous sick and retirement pay. Someone making sll,oooa year gets 90 per cent of that if he's sick and $8,700 a year at retirement. Bergman says he suffered a nervous breakdown after his arrest and interrogation this spring on tax evasion charges. A criminal charge against him was dismissed, but another administrative in vestigation is going forward. Bergman left Sweden saying he had no intention to live in a place with a "bureaucracy that grows like a galloping cancer." "I felt humiliated," he told a newsman in his first interview since the affair. "I couldn't just sit here like a sacrificial lamb. That's not my role in life. So I got up and left. It wasn't a politically motivated The Smaller Advent. Advent's attitude toward things is also pretty well indicated by another speaker, The Smaller Advent Loud speaker. That came about because the Company saw the chance to get the same frequency response and overall sound as the original's for half the size an 4 two-thirds the price in a speaker whose only limitation would be that it couldn't play quite as loud as the original. (You'd have 'lard time noticing the difference.) 'pro by ince 'ent thinks products ought to do what they can and find their own place. (What happened is that the sales of the original increased and the Smaller does fine too.) Farewell and Thank You. The reason I can write an ad like this (and believe that Advent will pay to print it someplace) is that I think there's room in advertising for people to state personal feelings, if it's with the idea of presenting infor mation that does justice to the reader and the things described. I hope I've done that, and if there's anything you would like to say back. I'd be happy to hear it via a letter to Advent. Thank you for reading this. 1. 4„s:r - ---'-g-f•-•,tl We sell what you want to hear. *. High fidelity House 366 East College across from McLanahan's 237-8888 The only authorized Advent dealer in State College. Advent Corporation 195 Albany Street Cambridge, Massachusetts 92139 the state was not yet known, William Barrett, CATA manager, said. However, Barrett said, PennDOT may give CATA more funds later in the year if ridership trends continue to increase. Collins stressed that good ridership figures on these new routes are essential for obtaining additional funding and keeping the new routes in service. Barrett told the authority that he has received many complaints from riders of the RE and R bus routes because they have been unable to get on a bus in the early morning. It was estimated that 90• to 100 people were left to wait for a later bus this morn ing in the Parkway Plaza-Waupelani Drive area. . Barrett said two RE buses and one ATTENTION SOPHOMORES! Alpha Lambda Delta, - Freshmen Honor Society - is now accepting applications for admission. If you are 4th or sth term and have a 3.5 cumu lative average, you are eligible. Pick up a form _at the HUB desk and return it by Friday, Sept. 10 to the address stated therein. .._ I: 24 UZ I ....•,„ . , clialtivorks by Glemby International Hairstyling,/or men & women Naturalizing Our own method of natural highlighting. Reg. $35. . sus° • Henna Organic Highlighting ' Used for thousands of years. Reg. $l4. $lOO Hairworks Salon ' Lower Level 110 E. College Ave. Now thru Sept. 18 The Daily Collegian Thursday. September 9. 1976--- R bus are operating in the morning, but a new R will be added im mediately to help with the overflow. Barrett -- also received complaints because the W bus cannot stop in Ferguson township. Barrett ex plained that since Ferguson Town ship does not contribute to CAM., they do not receive service. Park Forest receives service because it contributes, he said. In other business, Barrett said shuttle buses to and from the football games will be in service on game weekends. Tickets, on sale at Schlow Memorial Library on Beaver Avenue the day of each game, will be 50 cents one-way and one dollar for a round trip. No ticks will be sold at the stadium. action or revenge. I haven't regretted a minute of it." But Mrs. Jansson her real name is not used because she is now a government employe has regretted the loss of her practice. And she insists she is a much more typical victim of the system than Bergman. In setting up her private practice, Mrs. Jansson said she had to pay her own social security, health insurance and an employer's tax even though she had no employes. She said she made $14,000 a year and was paying 60 or 70 per cent of it in taxes. "I never had more than $2OO in hand to live on, and I was in the best bracket, because I was living alone with my daughter. My entire time was spent filling out forms, writing letters and seeing people about what I owed the state." Now, working for the state, she makes $977 a month and takes home about $6OO. She gets an hour for lunch, takes two coffee breaks and quits 45 minutes early "because everybody who comes to the clinic comes when they can use it as an excuse to get out of work and never at the end of the day. So I'm part of the system. But I'm not proud." Do your good deed for today.