14—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 16, 1982 Just in time for Christmas Gift Giving i 15,0113111 %NW.. s est voc itffitet, ettNeciezAS Vl6O k4ezts octe\oes Since early' last summer our buyers have been working hard to assemble a special collection of gift ideas at 1 / 3 to 1 / 2 off the regular prices. DIAMOND COCKTAIL RINGS GIFTS OF GOLD FOR HIM & HER DIAMOND PENDANTS. & EARRINGS GENUINE STONE RINGS CHAINS, CHAINS & MORE CHAINS DIAMOND BRACELETS .WATCHES BY SEIKO & PULSAR PEARL RINGS & EARRINGS FASHION PINS & PENDANTS IMPORTED JADE SOLID GOLD CHARMS ENGRAVABLE GIFTS LOOSE COLORED GEMSTONES PEWTER MUGS MEN'S RINGS & JEWELRY Hundreds of Gift ideas beautifully priced to save one third to one•half Lay-away now for Christmas FREE GIFT WRAPPING of course Open to serve you.• Daily 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m Saturdays 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 11 ° KW COLLEGE AND ALLEN DOWNTOWN STATE COLLEGE BERRY CYCLE 7968-135-9 Your Cost..s4l/$3.99 $6.95 A SIAR:BPICI4I. 111, ' 'NE 'pRICI . PP. BACKGAMMON 7642-007-4 _ Your Cost $5.97 $12.95 TYKE BIKE 8150-003-5 Your Cost sia:T•6sl 1.96 $17.95 Last RAGDOLL 7968-1364 Your Cost s44:gsl2 A cip si4Rseici4 l 'hi. PRIMIS "F IS BARBIE'S PIANO 8052-213-9 PLAYSKOOL PUZZLES SMURF 8150.938-2 GARFIELD 8150.939-0 Your C05t531452.99 arartce PIPE LINE EXPRESS 8390-049-8 Your Cost $34:911532.90 ESCAPE FROM DEVIL COUNTY 7970-001-9 Your Cost $l-5 - 17 $11.97 nute TROLLEY 7968-992-3 Your Cost-467M 1 3.99 . . $19.95 WESTERN BARBIE 8052-196-6 Your Cost,sBl6 $8.49 $10.95 PF $ 8 49 114 Mfg. $1 Rebate sr Atter Rebate PYRAMINX 8326-043-0 Your Cost $8:.9•454.99 $8.95 RUBIK'S REVENGE 7932-909-0 _,. Your Cost .$911956.99 $12.95 $39.95 $1 9.95 headliners by The Associated Press Ronstadt inspires Cher to be actress HOLLYWOOD (AP) Cher, after nearly 20 years as an entertainer, decided to become an actress when she saw Linda Ronstadt in "The Pirates of Penzance." "Watching her I thought, 'lf Linda can do this, what am I doing wasting my time? If the studio people won't take me seriously, then I'll go to New York and try my luck,"' the raven haired singer said. Cher had never acted on the stage in her life, not even in school. She turned to acting because she felt her career had begun to peak and was in the doldrums. The first thing she did was star on Broadway in "Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean." Then she did the movie version. The critics gave her good marks. She also stars with Meryl Streep in "Silk- wood." Runny makeup plagues Hoffman NEW YORK (AP) Dustin Hof fman, who dresses up as a woman in order to land a role on a daytime soap opera in his new movie, "Tootsie," says that wearing all the makeup required for the role was no easy task. "We had to refrigerate parts of the set and shoot in the winter because my makeup would melt under the hot lights after several hours," he said. "In fact, after a few weeks of shoot ing, my skin turned out to be Appala chian." Makeup artist George Masters was responsible for the transformation. U.S. tourist in Arthur's Court? HOLLYWOOD (AP) Malcolm McDowell plays the title role in "Ar thur the King." Candice Bergen is the witch, Morgan Le Fay. And Dyan Cannon? Oh, she's an American tour ist who drops in on Camelot. Cannon is visiting Stonehenge, En gland, when she accidentally drops into a time warp and ends up in the days of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Those Druids are tricky. Tonight at the BREWERY BOBBY KEYS and the Igniters Gin and Tonic Specials NO COVER Frenc every Thursday night at the &mar Xounse Above The Corner Room Polly wants a Personal Around the world Marvin Creamer and N. Jeffrey Hardelin, visible at the stern, navigate their 35-foot sailboat past the aircraft carrier Saratoga in the Philadelphia Navy Yard yesterday. The waters of the Delaware River are the first to see the boat, which is beginning a 30,000-mile voyage around the world. •• . , • • • •••• • .• • , • . . -. • • „.. .•• • - . •. • . •• . • • • - . .. • , • • . . • . • ••• -- - -- Jose's Hot Ham & Cheese Burrito Only $.99 reg. 1.39 75'S I I L. J On the run again? Stop by Hi Way Pizza Cut Pie Shop for a fast, inexpensive lunch. For only 5 1.50 you get either • 2 CUTS SICILIAN•STYLE PEPPERONI PIZZA WITH A SMALL SODA OR • 1 CUT SICILIAN•STYLE PEPPERONI PIZZA, A SALAD & SMALL SODA cb starting daily at 1 1 :30 .4 45 40 4 oi l II 1 e- fr a Tasty, right and light ... 4116. 1111 1111111 ... any day or night( Chunky ham, choice cheddar cheese, onions & tangy sauce all melted together in a soft, warm, flour shell. good w/coupon only until Dec. 23rd PEDRO'S 131 S. Garner 234-4725 Open Mon• Thurs 11 AM-12 PM Fri & Sat 11-2:30 PM Sunday 12.12 PM located on 112 South Garner Street Fort Lauderdale Spring Break! The deadline to save $5O on the Ft. Lauderdale Spring Break trip has been extended to Dec. 17 Sign up now! Applications in 203 HUB or call 863-0295 U-268 Sponsored by USG *********** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *********** * * * * * * * * * * * EU-WAY PIZZA PUBS TODAY is the LAST DAY to buy your ticket to: New York City for Saturday, Dec. 18th Bus Leaves Sat. at s:3oam & Returns Sun. at 3:ooam ONLY 'l7w/person (Round Trip) Sales in Pollock Union Bldg. During Lunch & Dinner ALL ARE WELCOME! Presidents prefer . . . Former President Jimmy Carter suns himself aboard the Song of America, as the ship sales throughout the Caribbean. Carter and his wife visited Nassau, San Juan and St. Thomas on the seven-day trip. Study discusses age of 'Lucy' Suggests not as old as discoverers believed By PAUL RAEBURN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) The fossil skeleton known as "Lucy" suggests it is not as old as its discoverers believed, according to two studies-that could lead to a new picture of the evolution of human ancestors who lived more than 3 million years ago. The leader of one study, Noel Boaz of New York University, said yesterdy that the studies challenge the evolutionary family tree proposed by Lucy's discover er, Donald Johanson of the Institute of Human Origins in Berkeley, Calif., and his colleague, Tim White, of the University of California at Berkeley. The studies, to be published today in the British scientific journal Nature, suggest that Lucy, whose partial skeleton was found in the deserts of Ethiopia in 1974, lived between 2.8 million and 3.2 million years ago. Johanson and White put the skeleton's age at 3.7 million or 3.8 million years. Johanson and White have concluded that Lucy and her kindred, found in Ethiopia and at an area called Laetoli in Tanzania, are a new species of human ancestor, one they have named Australopithecus afa rensis. They believe the spedies has a pivotal role in evolu tion, as the common ancestor of humans and the so called australopithecines, extinct human cousins who ,had characteristics of both humans and apes. "THE DOWNTOWN GROUP" Rental Applications are currently being accepted on one bedroom and studio apartments for Beaver Hill, Penn Towers, Cedarbrook & Garner Court for 1983-84. All apts. are furnished with all utilities, TV cable, wall to wall carpeting, drapes, air conditioning, laundry facilities on each floor. For rental info UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Thursday, December 16 Holiday Festival Noontime Entertainment, Phi Mu Alpha Brass Ensem ble, 11:30 a.m., Kern Lobby; Bread and Chocolate, 8:30 p.m., HUB Ballroom. CDPC seminars, "Resume Preparation," sth period, Room 312 Boucke; "Interview Skills," 6th period, Room 312 Boucke. PSU Students for Life meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 318 Willard. Eco-Action general meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 308 Willard. Kern Classics, Journey to the Center of the Earth, 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Campus Crusade lecture, 7 p.m., Room 311, 312 and 314 Boucke. Student Performance Organization meeting, 7 p.m., Room 323-324 HUB. College of Science Student Council meeting, 7 p.m., Room 307 HUB. IFC Dance Marathon meeting, 7 p.m., Room 102 Forum. Common Cause meeting, 7 p.m., Room 308 Boucke. Liberal Arts Student Council general meeting, 7 p.m., Room 124 Sparks. College Republicans meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 169 Willard. Microbiology Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 305 HUB. Dr. James Smith, USDA, on microbial injury in the food industry. Hum. Dev. Honor Society organizational meeting, 8 p.m., S-209 Hum. Dev. Percussion Ensemble concert, 8:30 p.m., Recital Hall. The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 16, 1982-15 Boaz said the new studies, one led by him and the other by the geologist Francis Brown of the University of Utah, argue that Lucy does not represent a new species, but instead is related to other human ancestors found in South Africa called Australopithecus african us. The studies show that Lucy lived at the same time as the South African ancestors, he said, and are structu rally similar to them. The fossils found in Laetoli (in Tanzania) might be a different species, but he said that will not be known for certain until more fossils are found. "You have two hominids (human-like creatures) that are at the same time period, and they look exactly the same," he said. "I think they (Johanson and White) would have to change their theory." Johanson, reached at his office in California, took issue with the methods used by Boaz, but said that the re-dating would not affect his interpretation of the fossils. "We've demonstrated beyond anybody's doubt that the Hadar and Laetoli collections are the same," Johanson said. "There are lots of species that have existed for long periods of time unchanged. An exam ple is Homo erectus (an early human) which you find from 1.5 million years ago to half a million years ago." Johanson and White argue that Lucy's physical makeup shows that she and the other Ethiopian fossils are clearly different from the South African fossils. _ 237-0363