6 The Daily Collegjan Friday, February 11,1977 1 HBfIHH Bv • H H iHH Hk 7 HA 7 J Lram|nn| i n hhrmh ;HH ■HHA £HHHRk £■ ■ i IHI BwmHMwBMI^MWMIBmwb i HHn i HBH ' Ha HHHHi^nHnHHnnnnHnmMMMi i_ _| , |T , \ H HH B DECK SPECIALS | gi DoLB^^ H H ' THE li.‘, j:|f' oMlv HH HB sJV& VJUSJi&g HH HH PHILLIPS GA-2 12 180 125 . W ■ •' HHB ROTELRP-1100Q 130 79 fEVERY COMPONENT IN ’k HRH GARRARD 440 M pk. 114 65 THIS SYSTEM WAS BEST—| f -" HH GARRARD 775 M pk. 155 89 IbUY RATEDI Wjgßjr J , MnHm| H HH GARRARD 9908 pk. 255 149 ' H , DUAL 1226 package 234 129 BV AYi ! HH HHI' and SUPER prices on $ 166 nHngMH | H ’ H SHU RE, PICKERING, B&O * «i|Hi> "" : WBt H| andSMrt/row CARTRIDGES SYSTEM ■|R|| Slc"'^: ■Hf Baß up to 70% off Ilbiss— B&o Hi BHH SHUREM9IED $6O 19 CITATION ;Hi H STANTON 500 E 35 13 CROWN 5H| |HH - STANTON 500EE 50 16 ' ’ DAHLQUIST •HH HHI \v Ji t^Jdlß lfok EPICURE HH ■■Vs! GARRARD . ■ W H - ... ' (tOOT HARMON KARDON ffi W /Tayawayc 1 ■ V»c EMAN IHi HH ' I HARMON KARDON 3300 $22(37 k-FNU/vnnn | Bflß| BHBI A email fipnosit B 2 HEGEMAN 80speakers 1688 PHII I IPR IHi H M small aeposil I GARRARD 440 M turntable 115|[ ! H MM W 3l> y '^ em I total retail value $503 j POLK^ !nn H or system J shure jHH H _ ■"""""Ml" ■ SONY ’ Hi HH rCDCC \ STANTON 1 H HHh “ CC fi THORENS |H BEST BUY RATED ORTHODYNAMIC B YAMAHA ;Hi H PHONES WITH PURCHASE OF ,UP TO B H HHi YAM AHA,RECEIVER OR AMPLIFIER $65 VALUE U BmH I C LISTEN SOFT! IpK : H H Hi • * Lpioweeßp fH' :HH HU HH STEREO HEADPHONES H■, iszr iM cost plus 5 10% Hi, H■ Hi e • iYf»4iu. -*(.>* ■" -\ H HHB j -' ■ 1 ' HF mRFRVIOE IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT LINE | 'IH HU , > AND IT’S FREEIIIJ/ nHI YAMAHA CR-400 receiver . $330 I H HEGEMAN 100 2 ‘ way s P eakers $228 I H hßh jotal retail value ' . I I N KYO- (wjj II 5 499 BEST SYSTEM VALUE WE’VE EVER OFFERED , B B 16 POINT LIFETIME ” ~ ’ H SYSTEM WARRANTY j■E3» §■ § § ?* g - 9,^^ e -6 B M C~~ eo f CAR ST-EREOBAffGA/^r" Hi 1 |H I CANYOFT-401 cass. $ 59 39 iH CAR SPEAKERS I 1 | MINDBLOWER 0| I SANYOFT-453cass. 110 59 Hi Vs 'OFF I I Q AMPLIFIED W| I ROADSTAR RS-900cass. 45 B HH H@Hi s3o $19.95 I | H CAR SPEAKERS El I ROADSTAR RS-2500 cass. 179 H HHbwl TS-164 $45 $32.50 J V 5 49 A PAIR 8 a H ROADSTAR Cassettes | H| HH nr , \ have3-yearWananty^9 Hi Accutrac^OOO H HHH| wm MM BWg a- A. ■ H Hnl bS9 ■ v l -- - jJMtt&lljSsSßfj&Rk JSBk MMmm |3 Hi (HHI *■“ K 3 Mcloseout i vfD H HH AMAZING ail h HhH I IvßR CB Radios H H L W IZI™ 8 ™ Reduced iHi l7" s 1 9" \ JOHNSON & PACE . I Hi BSh ' |j»| COLORTV ' S I COST plus 'Start* at B B H lowest price in town j B L ifa„- J\ BZ JLowPtices... Only V 2 the Story. Wmlßftk T/PHICEMOTECriON B/SEUVICE POLICY 3/DtftCTIVEGE«B POLICY 1£ . | ' i Wse ■ | SATISFACTION u> uW BiHHHH i fßnn/gßgßr*cltanße any compontnt or glut you a credit protildtd Iht gear hatn‘l 'vfiifljg iHBHBHIIB) BM abated and it murnfd with all pocking, occeucrlti. imiruenon TL IS3B3BBBi< THF PROFESSIONALS Bwl and iht warranty eard hain't bren lllltioul. JU JrT'’ /- 1 1 r . H ir onn E. College Ave. H B imwamiiicam 238*1001 i Spending doubles under Shapp HARRISBURG (AP) — f State spend ing has increased 100 per cent since Gov. Shapp took office, but little of that money went for new programs or ser vices. Most new funding was gobbled up by inflation. It simply cost more to do the same things. For example, the state’s medical assistance program for the needy paid $132 a day to hospitals last year for in patient care. Today the cost is $152 a day and next year the estimate is $l7O a day. Seven years ago, it cost $1 million a mile to build interstate highway, ac cording to the state Transportation Department. Today’s figure is $2.1 million. Pennsylvania’s spending now totals $8.6 billion, exactly double the total when Shapp took office in'January 1871. You’re paying for the increase with .your taxes. Shapp established a personal income tax, and two years ago the gas tax and motor license fees were in creased. On Tuesday, Shapp will present his seventh budget. It will call for future spending increases, and probably an increase in taxes. Taxes rise when spending goes up faster than tax revenues and that’s just what hap pened. Inflation isn’t the only reason spending keeps rising. There’s also: I _ uS m tertf 'S!eers r gSfsri* sßßfl " You can get ahead faster in a technical sales career with Texas Instruments. Here’s Why: 1 1 You are needed right now— Or as soon as you get your degree. Our national sales force is looking for college graduates ,J who are ambitious and can grab hold fast. Our openings are in nationwide locations. 2a Sales is where the opportunity is— Few professions can give you the freedom to succeed like technical sales can. You can control your own accomplishments as well as your own compensation. 3a You’ll be involved with one of the fastest growing product lines in the computer industry- You’ll be trained by our competent technical staff to sell terminals and computers. When the training is completed, you’ll go to the geographical, region of your choice ' with ah excellent benefits package, company car, expense account,and a base salaryt liberal commission plan. < We will give a presentation on campus February 14 &15 See your placement office for details. Repayment of loans.that were used to finance past highway projects. Unemployment, which has in creased welfare rolls. Collective bargaining, which may have given state employees larger settlements than if they had not been unionized. Federal regulations, which order the state to do things without providing the necessary money. Federal matching funds, which offer up to 90 per cent U.S. funding to some programs, but still require a substantial state share. Powerful special interests, which have statewide constituencies and power to get funding through the legislature. . Programs the Shgpp ad ministration. purposely expanded, such as day care, mass transit, aid to the aging and community living for the mentally ill. Repayment of the highway debt is costing taxpayers $182.6 million this fiscal year, ahd it’s not buying even a chunk of new concrete. . 1 In fact, it’s seriously draining the fund that also goes for road maintenance and tha't’s why PennDOT has had trouble repairing potholes. Pennsylvania’s mistake was borrowing to pay its share, a tactic that left today’s taxpayers with the bill. The state borrowed $2.6 billion for highways We’re the Digital Systems Division of Texas Instruments, We’ve got jobs right now in Technical Sales for: BS in Engineering BS in Computer Science BS in Industrial Management BA in Marketing with technical course work Texas Instruments INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer since 1949, mostly for projects that had federal matching funds. “It’s a carrot and stick,” said John Ingram, director of the Pennsylvania Economy League, a private research organization. “If you buy the carrot, you buy the regulations that gtf with it. Even if you get 75 per cent, the 25 per cent is a big piece of change." Unemployment has a major impact on the general assistance category of welfare, which is funded solely by the state. If a worker’s unemployment runs out, or he fails to qualify for unem ployment, he can go on welfare under general assistance. In January 1974, before the current recession worsened, there were 80,000 general assistance recipients: Today there are 150,000. About 90,000 of the 108,200 state em ployees are covered by collective bargaining agreements. State salaries have risen enough to increase the state payroll while the number of employees have declined. Salaries, which averaged $9,530 in 1973, now average, $12,754. State payrolls, $1.02 billion in 1972-73, now stand at $1.3 billion. State government employment in July 1976 was 108,200, down from 110,400 in July 1975. The decline was even greater, 4,000, if you count employees paid with 100 per cent state funds. Are you independent, creative, flexible, Father Bruce doesn't let his idealism go to waste...or his love of God remain abstract. He’s a doer—not just a dreamer. A man on the move—from his Paulist parish in downtown Manhattan over to The Juillard School of Music to talk to the students; across to Roosevelt Hospital to console the sick; down to the Tombs to visit the im prisoned. You’ll see him running with his guitar to meet his youth group (numbering over 1001) for prayer and recreation; or to conduct a longer retreat with teenagers and young adults. What motivates this young Paulist Father? His conviction that people can encounter God today—no matter what their ethnic group, economic class, or living environment.... i Father Bruce joined the Paulists because he saw in them a unique chance to use all his talents in a free and creative way. But he did not want to work alone. He wanted a community; a fellowship of Catholic priests all committed to speaking the Gospel message In the many different idioms and in the many different ways it takes to trans form our society. Coast to coast, the Paulists' scope Is broad —from Manhattan to Greensboro to Houston to Los Angeles to Fairbanks. And so are their techniques—parish work, preaching, adult education, campus min istry, publishing, mass communications. The Joy and inner satisfaction Father Bruce experiences as a Paulist can also be yours. His unique gifts permit his personal con tribution. Find out what your unique gifts can contribute. Discover our, community. Turn your dreams Into reality. Fill out the coupon below for more information about the Pauliits. Dear Father DeSiano: Please send me more Information on the work of the Paulists and the Paulist Priesthood. Rey. Frank DeSiano. c.sp Director of Vocations NAME PAUUST FATHERS Dept. C-162 STREET ADDRESS 1 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 COLLEGE ATTENDING CLASS OF. STATE l. ZIP