Daily Universe | BYU Student Newspapers (2025)

Kremlin warns

Polish workers

MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union issued on
Sunday its grimmest assessment of the situation
in Poland, portraying its Warsaw Pact ally as tot¬
tering on the brink of anarchy.

In a report broadcast throughout the Soviet
Union and overseas, the official Tass news
agency said Polish subversives had blocked roads
and destroyed road signs, had tried to seize post
offices and a television transmitter and were
working to intimidate police and security agents.

A spokesman for Poland’s independent union
Solidarity in Warsaw denied the charges, saying,
“Solidarity would never even think of such
things.” Polish state radio, without referring
directly to the Tass report, said there were no
obstacles on the road the Soviet agency men¬
tioned and that the route was properly marked.

Some Western analysts saw the Soviet report
as a new warning that the Kremlin believes the
situation in Poland must be changed. Western
diplomats in Moscow have said recently they
believe the Soviets are pressuring the Polish

leadership to crack down on dissident and labor
activists.

Breaking from its usual practice of quoting
Polish news reports, Tass reported directly that
Solidarity had issued “provocative” instructions
on how to seize factories and offices.

Tass said local Solidarity groups were trying to
discredit police and security bodies and “lists of
persons who are to be isolated” were being
, prepared. It claimed the lists were being drawn
up of the home addresses of police, security
agents and people who own weapons.

Also early Monday, the Communist Party’s
Central Committee ended a marathon 18-hour
session with a vote of confidence in the ruling
Politburo after rejecting the resignations of
“some comrades,” the Polish news agency PAP
said.

The emergency meeting of the 140-member
policy-making committee was called to deal with
the threat of a nationwide strike planned to start
Tuesday by Poland’s large independent union
Solidarity.

As the session moved into the early morning
hours, there were rumors that some or all of the
10 Politburo members had offered their resigna¬
tions.

Solidarity members in the port city of Gdansk,
in a telephone call to The Associated Press, said
they heard the Politburo had resigned during the
committee meeting, which was held behind
closed doors. There was no official report of the
committee’s action until the meeting ended.

PAP issued a one-paragraph communique say¬
ing the committee had asked for the withdrawal
of resignations submitted by “some comrades.”
PAP’s own English translation said the commit¬
tee had rejected the resignations offered by
“some members of the party authorities.”

The session opened under the shadow of a grim
assessment in Moscow of the crisis and ah an¬
nouncement in Berlin that “new units” were be¬
ing sent to participate in Warsaw Pact exercises
on Polish soil and in neighboring countries.

KUThe Daily Universe

Call in news tips to 378‘3630; other calls 378-2957 = Brigham Young University Provo, Utah Vol. 34 No. 129 Monday, March 30, 1981

MONDAY

FEATURE

EDITION

_ 1 _/

Mews

Spotlight

By The associated press

iW looks for contract support

ited Mine Workers President Sam Church
whirlwind stops in three coal states Sunday
lush for rank and file approval for a contract
rment, and union officials said the decision
n the hands of a “silent majority.”
urch went to Virginia, West Virginia and
ucky to warn that the U.S. could lose foreign
lets if coal production dropped, saying a long
i by the union’s 160,000 members could
rtring the industry.

,D 'IW officials said miners were studying the
, | used agreement, which goes to a vote Tues-

£

ackers shoot escaping Yank

J '.NGKOK, Thailand — An American
' ige fleeing a hijacked Indonesian jetliner
1 lid here was shot and wounded in the back
ay in the second confirmed escape from ar-
— air pirates demanding the release of 84
■ deal prisoners” in Indonesia.

t o other Americans were reported among the
j (stages still aboard the Garuda Airlines DC-
| ked at the Don Muang Airport tarmac since
> lijackers diverted it here from a domestic
ij over Indonesia on Saturday.
u 2 wounded American, identified as Carl
| 3ider, hometown unknown, was - - listed 4n

)[) i h body found at condo site

Local phone policies
mistreat Y students

By NOLAN CRABB
Assistant News Editor

Representatives' from the ASBYU Om¬
budsman Office testified that Mountain Bell
Telephone Company mistreats students in its
rate and deposit policies, in a Public Service
Commission hearing held Friday in Salt Lake
City.

The hearings resulted from a complaint
registered with the commission by the Om¬
budsman Office on behalf of more than 200 stu¬
dents who had complained about the telephone
company’s security deposits and billing prac¬
tices.

The Ombudsman Office presented its argu¬
ments Friday. Mountain Bell is scheduled to give
its response in a hearing April 10.

The Ombudsman officials complained
primarily of Mountain Bell’s policies about
security deposits — especially the practice of re¬
quiring an additional deposit for students who
make long-distance phone calls in excess of a pre¬
determined amount.

Teri Bond, executive assistant to the Om¬
budsman, said one of the great problems stu¬
dents had faced with the telephone company was.
a lack of information concerning deposit and bill¬
ing policies. She said she met with a Mountain
Bell representative and asked to see the policies.

“Mrs. Thomas (the Mountain Bell represen¬
tative) was very pleasant,” Miss Bond said.
“However, when I requested to see the policies
regarding deposits, I was told that I could only
view it from her office, that it eouW not be copied
and some information was requested not to be
disclosed.”

She said officials told her the records were
available for public scrutiny, but only in Moun¬
tain Bell offices.

Miss Bond said there was a discrepancy bet¬
ween Mountain Bell’s policies regarding deposits
and the information formally printed.

She quoted a passage in the telephone book
which said an additional deposit may be re¬
quested if the bill is paid late. Miss Bond conten¬
ded the additional deposit was assessed to those
who had “high long-distance toll usage.”

She said most of the complaints dealing with
additional deposits were submitted because of
long-distance tolls rather than late bill payment.

Miss Bond said Mountain Bell had asked her
office to withdraw its complaint, implying that
things would improve.

She also said Bell officials have met with Ex¬
ecutive Vice President W. Rolfe Kerr and others
of the administrative arm of the university to
discuss the problems between the Ombudsman
Office and the company.

Speaking of pressure put on the university to
withdraw from the hearings, Miss Bond said she
thought other phone company officials had “at¬
tempted to contact President Holland in that
context.”

She admitted, however, that she had not seen
any official correspondence that Mountain Bell
had tried to contact President Holland.

“When you speak of ‘other Mountain Bell of¬
ficials,’ whom do you mean?” one commissioner
asked. •

“It was - my understanding that (Elder)
Thomas Monson met with President Holland
concerning the Mountain Bell complaint,” she
replied.

See PSC hearings page 2

'Glad to see you're back'

Stephen and Rita Cullip of Los Angeles. Calif., strut their stuff
during BYU's International Ball and Dance Championship com¬
petition held Saturday in ELWC ballroom. The Cullips are reign¬
ing Western U.S. Ballroom Champions and performed and
judged during the competition.

COA BEACH, Fla. — Workers uncovered
iidy of a 22-year-old man among tons of con-
and heavy steel beams Sunday, removing
1th victim from the rubble of a con-
lium that collapsed during construction,
parents and friends, who kept vigil since
nlapse Friday, wept and embraced when
l Nowakowski’s crushed body was taken
che dusty wreckage of what officials say was
vorst construction accident in Florida

Death camps 'could happen again'

arakowski, who began work as a glazier at
te Thursday, was found on what was the
floor before the five-story structure gave
smashing the floors one atop another.

The gentle, plump figure of Helen H. Waterford seems
to mirror a soft, tranquil past, rather than the hellish in¬
carceration she experienced in a World War II Nazi death
camp that left her weighing only 70 pounds.

Dressed in a well groomed blue suit, with her short grey
hair combed neatly into bangs, she now speaks of a time
when she was completely shaved, wore only a shabby
dress, never washed and “waded through excrement.”

Her eyes flicker as she laughs, and it is startling to
realize what horrors those gentle eyes have witnessed in
her 71 years of life.

Mrs. Waterford, who lived through the “pilot program
for the destruction of humanity,” devotes her time to
teaching others the horror of the Holocaust. Mrs. Water¬
ford was interviewed on campus Thursday morning and
spoke to some classes later that day.

, ,J|| ^ H____|. “The fact that it has happened is a proof that it could

•cover FBI agents posing as representatives happen any day again,” Mrs. Waterford said. “The
•or-seeking Arab sheiks, Williams was the danger is that history is not believed anymore.”

But the faded blue numbers tattooed on her left forearm
from Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp and nightmare ex-

cam trial begins for senator

'W YORK — Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr.,
iventh and most powerful federal politician
;ed in the Abscam influence peddling scan-
oes on trial today in the most complex case
te.

hough he was one of the first to meet with

Knowing their five-year-old daughter could not survive
the confinement necessary to elude the Nazis, they made
arrangements for her to live with another couple.

“We didn’t know their name and we didn’t know where
they lived and we gave them our child,” Mrs. Waterford

She and her husband were arrested in 1944 and told to
bring any children because they would be taken to a
“family work camp.” Not trusting the Nazis, they left
their daughter with the unknown couple.

Mrs. Waterford and her husband were transported to
Auschwitz in cattle-cars. The crowded conditions on the

Mrs. Waterford had lived through fiendish conditions
at the hands of the Germans, and now she was accused of
being one. She spent two days in jail until a rabbi made
provisions for her release.

Mrs. Waterford was soon reunited with her daughter
and later immigrated to the United States. She remarried
about 10 years later and has devoted her retirement to
teaching of the events of the Holocaust.

She feels it is vital to warn people of the dangers of
“somebody who wants to be a dictator,” she said.

“It’s so easy to forget. . . and so very, very dangerous if

o be indicted.

61-year-old New Jersey Democrat, a 22- - . - .

ienate veteran whose current term expires periences she encountered are real. It must not be forgot-
9 maintains hp is “total]v innocent” and ten that “millions of people were murdered,” Mrs. Water¬
ford says in a soft German accent. “I want to talk to as
many people as I can because it could be forgotten that it
ever was possible, in this the 20th century, that people
were murdered by other people.”

Born a Jew in Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, in 1909,
Mrs. Waterford witnessed Adolph Hitler’s ascent to power
in 1933 and felt the cruelties of prejudice directed at the
Jews and other minorities. She and her husband,

we of scriptures encouraged

|LT LAKE CITY — Young women should
Ik love with the scriptures before they fall in

■imball advises.

leaking on his 86th birthday, President Kim-
|old the Young Women organization of the
n Saturday that the scriptures “will
you to prepare for the future spiritually.”
[neeting in the Salt Lake Tabernacle was
d by closed-circuit television to 2,150 loca-
Ithroughout the world.

will be a better friend and neighbor, a
wife, a better mother if .you have
bped gospel attributes — of love, purity and
less — and gospel skills such as com-
:ating, listening and delegating,” he told
omen, 12 to 18 years old.

worst things that you can imagine,” she described. “It is
taking away from you a feeling that you are still a human
being.”

Their train arrived at Auschwitz in the middle of the
night three days later. Men and women were separated
into two rows for an initial “selection” of who would live
and die, Mrs. Waterford said.

A young woman with a small child, who stood in line by
Mrs. Waterford, was directed to go in one direction and
Mrs. Waterford in another.

“I was going to life. She was going to death,” Mrs.
Waterford said. An estimated one and one-fourth million
children were killed in the camps. “No child lived in
Auschwitz,” she said.

After being stripped, shaved, and tattooed, Mrs. Water¬
ford was “chased into a cold shower.” Outside, she got a
“dress, and that was all. Nothing under it, just one layer.”

She saw her husband once some time later and “that
was the last time I saw my husband,” she said. To this
day, she never knew what became of him.

At Auschwitz, prisoners were forced to stand through
daily roll call, lasting up to 24 hours, Mrs. Waterford said.
“You cannot fall down . . . if you want to stay alive,” she
said, “you must stand,”

With no water to wash with during one seven-month
period, filth and disease filled the camp compound, caus¬
ing diarrhea, contagious hepatitis and scarlet fever.

Once she was transferred to work at a labor camp where
a young Hungarian woman, a fellow prisoner, was appoin¬
ted as “Kapo” (guardian) over the prisoners. She was “ex¬
tremely large and tall and primitive,” and gave orders in
Hungarian, brutally hitting prisoners who couldn’t un¬
derstand her orders, Mrs. Waterford said.

“She hit me once because I dropped a potato,” Mrs.
Waterford said. “Probably she was basically good, but she
got a job, and little bit of power seems to turn on
something bad that we have someplace hidden in us.”

' Gaining her freedom in May 1945, Mrs. .Waterford

Elder Yoshihiko Kikuchi, a member of the LDS Church First Quorum ^egan her journey back to Holland. A 16-year-old girl
of Seventy since^ 1977, wifi be the speaker at Tuesday’s Devotional as k e d to accompany her, and although they were only

train forced them to stand “body-to-body” with no fresh we forget what happened, and can happen any day, any
air, food, water or toilet facilities, “which is one of the place, to anybody.”

Although Mrs. Waterford suffered extremely inhumane
conditions, she said she never doubted life was worth liv¬
ing.

“I have hope every day, every minute,” Mrs. Waterford
said emphatically.

“I believe in loving people. I believe that people want to
be loved and want to love. Don’t you believe that?” she
questioned.

■with men, LDS Church President Spencer Siegfried Wohlfarth, moved to Holland in 1934; their
, daughter was born in 1937.

When the Germans invaded Holland in 1940, it was the
“beginning of the end” for 90 percent of the Jews in
Holland, Mrs. Waterford said.

A year later, Dutch laws “changed against the Jewish
people,” which did not allow the Jews to keep valuables,
use public transportation, hold a job or sit on a park
bench, she said.

Soon after the order came, Jews boarded trains for
“resettlement in the east,” another name for killing, Mrs.
Waterford said.

She and her husband were able to evade the Nazis for
two years by living in the attic of members of the Dutch
underground.

Elder Kikuchi to speak

R YOSHIHIKO KIKUCHI

assembly in the Marriott Center at 10 a.i

Music at the assembly will be furnished by the A Cappella Choir un¬
der the direction of Dr. Ralph Woodward.

The Devotional will be broadcast live on KBYU-FM radio and
televised on KBYU-TV twice: that night at 8 and Sunday at 8 p.m.

Born in Hokkaido, Japan, in 1941, Elder Kikuchi is the first native-
born Japanese person to become a General Authority of the LDS
Church.

Elder Kikuchi has served as the president of the Tokyo West Branch,
as a counselor to the president of the Tokyo Japan Mission, and stake
president of the Tokyo Japan Stake.

slight acquaintances, Mrs. Waterford agreed.

For six and one half weeks they traveled together back
to Holland.

“We shared everything we had,” Mrs. Waterford said.
“If we didn’t have a bed, we slept together oh the floor. If
we had some bread, we shared it. We were full office — we
shared that too.”

But while Mrs. Waterford was preparing to enter at a
border town of Holland, the girl betrayed her to the bor-
derguard.

“ ‘Did this woman tell you that she is an enemy of our
country. She is a German,’ ” Mrs. Waterford quoted the
young girl betraying her.

Telling students of the hell of Nazi prison camps
she experienced as Dutch Jew, Helen H. Waterford
was interviewed Thursday while on a campus
speaking engagement.

Page 2 The Daily Universe Monday, March 30, 1981

LDS workers help refugees,
says Elder Hanks at fireside

The church is being represented
by those who carry its name with
graciousness and high skill and are
doing what the Lord wants done,
said Elder Marion D. Hanks, a
member of the First Quorum of
Seventy of the LDS Church.

Elder Hanks related many ex¬
periences of the welfare missionaries
currently serving in the various
areas of Asia with the refugees. The
missionaries are orienting the
refugees in transit to new countries,
he said.

“They can never go home again,”
Elder Hanks said. “Their streets are
gone, their neighbors are no longer
there and often they don’t know
where their loved ones are.”

ELDER MARION D. HANKS

The welfare missionaries are
teaching them “how to live and stay
alive with grace in a new country
they know nothing about,” Elder
Hanks said.

They are instructing the refugees
on the basics of life, such as diaper¬
ing a child and learning the process
of plane travel to a new country, he
said.

While the missionaries were
teaching the refugees these skills,
“The refugees were watching as if
they were in the prescence of the
Lord himself,” he said. “The
welfare missionaries are teaching
with strict instructions not to
proselyte, and it is hard.”

Even though the missionaries
cannot directly *teach the gospel
they are still making an impact on
those they come in contact with, he
said.

Elder Hanks related an ex¬
perience, a sister missionary had
written to him about a 5-year-old
;irl who had never seen Westerners
>efore. When the young child saw
the sisters she rah to them and flung
herself into their arms.

“She so joyously welcomed us,”
wrote the sister.

The director of the refugee camp
said, “She could see you were dif¬
ferent from the other volunteers.”

Women's tennis 1
wins in Hawaii

In a last minute decision, BYU’s women ten
competed last week in, Hawaii instead of S
Francisco and came home with an 8-1 victi
over Hawaii and an 8-0 win over Occidental!

The trip came about because the Nike Tej
Championship in San Francisco informed Cod
Ann Valentine the tournament was changed
would involve Sunday play.

“The Nike people gave us no choice. They se
us a letter two weeks ago telling us all fii
matches would be played on Sunday and if
could not compete on Sunday they would iny

With painted faces and combat garb, BYU ROTC practice "killing" each other during Satur¬
day maneuvers in the mountains near Lehi.

another team,” she said.

The Hawaii trip was also made possible'
Linley and Tracy Tanner’s parents who hel]
finance the trip.

It's a real 'live fake' for ROTC

PSC hearings

Continued from page 1

Miss Bond was quick to point out
that if Elder Monson, a member of
the Bell Telephone Company’s
board of trustees, did talk with
President Holland, there was no
pressure put upon the Ombudsman
Office by the university to withdraw
from the hearings.

Miss Bond asked the Public Ser¬
vice Commission to require actions
from Mountain Bell including:

— Limiting the security deposit
to $70.

— Returning any deposits in
excess of $70 and stop charging ad¬
ditional deposits for long-distance
calls.

— Ceasing to threaten disconnec¬
tion if a customer does not pay ad¬
ditional long-distance deposit.

— Paying customers actual in¬
terest earned on deposits.

BYU Army cadets “played war” Thursday and
Friday — a game that one day may become
deadly serious for some of them.

The cadets, including two women, spent the
days sloshing through mud, braving snow and
learning how to lead and execute combat mis¬
sions during the ROTC spring camp in the
rugged mountain terrain 10 miles from Camp
Williams near Lehi.

They ambushed armored trucks, charged into
machine-gun fire, dodged shots from a sniper,
cautiously scouted an area and generally learned
how to shoot but not get shot.

The dead were numerous, the captured were
several, but fortunately, it was all pretend. There
were even arguments about who had killed
whom, and .on one mission the cadets got so ex¬
cited they shot all their prisoners of war instead
of escorting them safely to the prison camp for
interrogation.

But there were also many successes, and with
increased practice, both commanders and cadets
agreed, the cadets may gain the skills they need

Viavp wVipty it i.« nnt. “all nrp.t.pnH ”

— Making all individuals in a
residence jointly responsible for
basic service and each individually
liable for toll calls.

— Requiring new customers to
read and sign an agreement setting
forth obligations : of the telephone
company and the customer.

to have when it is not “all pretend.

Lt. Col. L. Tom Kallunki, professor of military
science, said the camp tests the reactions of the
cadets under stress, especially their ability to
lead effectively under pressure.

“If they react well during the missions,” he
said, “they will probably react well in the day-to-
day stress of military leadership.”

In fact, he said, one of the main purposes of the

camp is to prepare the cadets for the Advanced
Leadership Camp at Ft. Lewis, Wash.

BYU received the highest overall rating among
47 schools at the camp last year, he said.

Kallunki said the cadets are given critiques of
their missions at the BYU cartip which help in¬
dicate how they can improve their performance
at Ft. Lewis.

Besides the missions, he said, the cadets also
learn skills such as radio communication, taking
apart and putting together rifles, land navigation
skills and surviving a chemical attack.

Pamela Roberts and Sharon Foley, the only
women who participated in the camp, both said
they enjoyed it and thought they did just as well
as the men.

Miss Roberts, who is involved in ROTC at
Ricks College and came to Provo especially to
participate in the camp, said she -was “just like
one of the guys.”

She said she “loved war games,” and even
though she was “killed” in the attempt, her
favorite mission was charging toward .machine-
gun fire. “Attack is my motto,” she said.

Mrs. Foley, a BYU cadet, said the camp was
fun and she appreciated the chance to practice
her classroom instruction in a more realistic
situation.

STARCH ILD

Roger George! a squad team leader, admitted
the missions were like the war games he played
when he was a little boy, but said they were good
experience and he had learned a lot.

“It’s kind of a new revelation,” he added. “It’s
a side of life most people never get to see.”

Card: 'I can write a novel in 2 weeks'

By CHRISTOPHER JONES
Universe Staff Writer

He came to BYU to become an
archaeologist and ended up acting
instead. Then came the mission call
to South America.

While serving in Brazil, he wrote
a play. BYU produced it and it
became a hit.

“The only thitfg that’s steady in i “Write the best you can as much of the art — to communicate in ex-
as you can and make sure other peo- cellence. According to Card this
pie see it,” he said. “Anybody who takes hard work,
writes two pages a week, can forget “No one loves writing,” the
making a living at it.” , playwright asserts. “The actual act

The LDS author also challenges of writing is painful. You just have
young writers to meet the standards to love having written.”

Orson Scott Card’s “Stone
‘ Tables” is again playing on the
W. Whitman, the play is a modern
interpretation of Moses.

The 29-year-old Card considers
the play his best religious work thus,
far.

“When ‘Stone Tables’ was
produced the first time, it changed
some people’s lives,” he said. “The
problem there is that no one knows
whether it was the play or the cast
that helped the audience receive the
spirit.”

As many of his readers know,
Card has not been idle since the
days of “Stone Tables.” The
, play write/author has written and
adapted several plays and has sold
numerous stories and articles.

He has also published six books,
including: “Capitol,” “Hot Sieep,”
“A Planet Called Treason,”
“Songmaster,” “Unaccompanied
Sonata” and “Listen Mom & Dad.”
A new novel, “Saints,” will be
released soon.

In 1976, Card won the John
Campbell Award for science fiction
writing.

“I can write a novel in two weeks,
if I’m hot/’ the sandy-haired author
said, referring to his productivity. “I
write on binges. I’m not One of those
write-four-hours-a-day people.
When I’m hot on a novel, I’ll turn
out 50, 60 or 70 pages a day, working
12 hours a day, and go to bed ex¬
hausted. When I wake up, the first
thing I do in the morning is go down
to the computer and start writing.”

Card actually does go down to a
computer. He has a book-lined
basement office with an com¬
puterized typewriter set for book-
type.

As a binge writer, Card’s schedule
is never quite the same from one day
to the next.

Ihe only

schedule,” asserts the author,
“is that I swim every day.”

Card quit his job with the Ensign
magazine, Jan. 1, 1978. In his first
year of free-lancing, he more than
doubled his Ensign income.

“Now, I’m making about five
times what I was making,” he said.
“But not everybody does that. You
have to have a very good agent, have
very good stuff and very timely
stuff.”

Card said the toughest part of
freelancing is living without a
steady paycheck.

“When I talk to young writers
who aren’t selling that much, I urge
them strongly to keep a job,” he
said. “I can’t write as well under
financial pressures. Those financial
pressures really dry up a lot of
creativity.” ■

Card says he could work a lot less
and earn more in other fields.

“If you’re in it just for money, the
hassles you put up with, the kind of
labor that you do is not worth the
money,” he said. <

When he is creating, he thinks
about the novel or play all the time.
Even during his daily swim, he will
think of scenes, dry off, and jot
them down.

“When I sit down to the
typewriter, I kind of put on a per¬
sona,” Card says. “It’s the voice
that I’m writing the novel or story
in. I don’t get any grand emotions
when I’m writing. It’s, almost a
dream-like feeling of simply
watching the experience.

,“My dream now,” says the
author, “is to become a-teacher at a
good school, teaching good students
in a good program ..After that I don’t
know what my dream will be. I’m
very lucky and very blessed,”
acknowledges Card.

Card sold his house in Orem and
has been accepted to a doctoral
program in fiction at Notre Dame.

Card currently teaches fiction
writing part-time at the University
of Utah. This summer he has been
asked to t’eabh a graduate
playwriting course at BYU.

As a writing instructor, he offers
one word of advice to the aspiring
author: “Write.”

Universe photo by Joanna

Orson Scott Card sits by his computer he uses to write science fic¬
tion novels and various types of plays. Card says he can write a
novel in two weeks, "if I'm hot."

MPA

MPA

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OPEN HOUSE

Are you interested in a career in public
service?

management
policy analysis
program evaluation
hospital administration
urban management
Come find out how an MPA degree can
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Today, March 30th
4:00-6:00 p.m.

347 Wilkinson Center
Refreshments will be
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Wilkinson Center. Business and classified advertising
offices: 117 Ernest L. Wilkinson Center. Printer:
Brigham Young University Press Printing Services.

Managing Editor, Ken Bush; Retail Ad Mgr. Jill
Owensby; Asst. Retail Ad Manager, Arnie Phillips; Ad
Service Manager, Peter Brooks Ad Art Director, Steve
Keeie; News Editor, Lee Davidson; City Editor, Chuck
Golding; Campus Editor, Julie Skousen; Campus Asst.,
Anita Pennington; Copy Chief, Michael Morris; Asst.
Copy, Tammi Wright; Asst. Copy, David Schneider;
Sports Editor, Anne Thornton; Asst. Sports, Kevin
Stoker; Entertainment Editor, Donna Ikegami; Asst.
Entertainment Editor, Mara Callister; Night Editor,
Mike Perkins; Morning Editor, Nancy Henderson;
Monday Edition Editor, Jerry Painter; Teaching Assis¬
tant, Jerry Garrett; Wire Editor, Jack Walsh; Photo
Editor, Robert Harries; Asst. Photo Editor, Randy
Spencer; Editorial Page Editor, Mark Stoddard; Repor¬
ter/Asst. News, Nolan Crabb; Reporter/Asst. News, BUI
Hickman: Reporter/Asst. News, Carla Schieve; Repor¬
ter/Asst. News, Audrey Gasking.

TAKE THE
CHALLENGE!

What will you be doing this
summer?

Have you ever thought of trying
something Exciting and challengl
like the ROTC Basic Camp? Here
what you will learn during six —
at Fort Know, KY:

Repelling

Land Navigation
Rifle Marksmanship
* Basic Leadership Technlquei
Physical Training
Individual & Unit Tactics
Communications
First Aid
Water Survival

We will not only pay for your way
Fort Knox and back to BYU, but
will also give you *525, lodging a
meals — all without any obligatlo
whatsoever.

Also, you can apply for a two year
tuition scholarship if your attend
Basic Camp — again without obll
tion.

If you chose, next Fall Semester,
can join the ROTC Advanced Cou
drawing *100 per month spendin
stipend and learning how to mana
people, money, and materials.

For more Information on R01
Basic Camp, call 378^3601 or
visit us in Room 320, Walls
ROTC Building.

Monday, March 30, 1981 The Daily Universe Page 3

oaching by restaurants prompts investigation

the transaction is illegal from both ends, so not
too much (information) is ever spread about.”

Both Ware and Atkinson said commercial
poaching comprises but a fraction of the illegally
killed wild game in the state.

ing. The average officer in a year will deal with
more people with a gun than most highway
patrolmen see in their whole lives.”

Atkinson said catching area poachers and
other wildlife violators probably won’t see many
improvements in the near future because the

By JERRY PAINTER
Weekend Editor

Utah’s demand for the taste of wild game is so
peat that several Wasacth Front restaurants are
being investigated for the possibility of serving il¬
licit game animals. “The single poacher who takes five to six deer a

Jim Ware, chief of law enforcement for Utah’s year adds up to hurt us more than anything,” small number of officers in the region and a tight
Division of Wildlife Resources, said although his Ware said. budget,

department has yet to obtain a court conviction, Atkinson said his biggest problem in this area
“we have suspicions and are currently in- is people who “like to shoot just to be shooting,
vestigating some restaurants.” They’re the hardest to catch.”

Last week, Atkinson found a doe south of Deer
Creek Reservoir blinded from a bullet wound to
the head. The deer was wandering around in cir¬
cles. “Whoever shot it didn’t even stop to put it
out of its misery,” he said. Atkinson said the
carcass was taken to BYU’s zoolop department
for dissection and study. The doe had two fawns
developing within it.

Atkinson said the officers sometimes find
several deer shot down by people out to get their
kicks. Two weeks ago, an officer from the
Spanish Fork regional office found seven deer
shot to death near Santaquin. He said it’s hard to
catch or prevent killings because they simply pull
if it’s not the trigger and leave. “Many times they don’t
even get out of their cars.”

He said Utah studies estimate about 20,000

Ware said the division is investigating
restaurants suspected of serving all types of
protected wildlife, including fish, rabbit, deer,
antelope, bear, moose, duck, etc. He said the
restaurants are supplied by commercial
poachers.

Delbert Atkinson, Utah County’s regional law
enforcement officer for Wildlife Resources, said
commercial poaching is a problem in this area.
“We know there’s some of it going on — we just
don’t know how much,” he said. “Maybe if we
looked into it we’d find more of it.”

Ware said the division has been investigating
commercial poaching “for several years and

SllsriPPt it Pnn hppnm a a roal _ if i+’o i

Universe photo by Joanna Lewis

jben for study to BYU's zoology department by Wildlife Resources
|ncials. this doe is one of several thousand Utah deer shot to death
nrea mountains by people out to get their kicks. Wildlife officials
V poaching and shooting game "for the fun it" is a major problem
their department.

suspect it can become a real problem
already.”

Ware declined mentioning the number of of¬
ficers or restaurants involved because he said it deer are killed illegally each year “and that’s a
could jeopardise the investigation. The type of conservative figure.” About 70,000 deer are killed
restaurant most likely to illegally serve wild legally each year.

game is that which is equipped for private, “If you or I wanted to shoot 50 deer tonight, we
catered banquets, Ware said. wouldn’t have any problem doing it,” he said.

He said officers are also investigating some “We figure we’re lucky if we get 10 percent of the
meat processing places suspected of selling game violations.”

Atkinson, who wears a .357-caliber Magnum
pistol and handcuffs on his belt, said wildlife law
enforcement can be very dangerous.

“A lot of people think we don’t need guns,” he
said. “Almost everyone we deal with has a gun
and about 20 percent of them have been drink -

He said installing a toll free Salt Lake City
phone number for people to report violations and
reward payments of up to $500 for information
leading to arrests and convictions has helped
catch some people.

“We only have three officers that cover Utah
County and 13 officers to cover the six counties in
our region,” he said. “In 1970 we only had one of¬
ficer for every 8,460 licenses, in 1979 we had one
officer for every 13,315 licenses. And with the way
the economy is — it’s not going to get any bet¬
ter.”

Atkinson said he would like to see fines for
poaching and illegal killing made stiffer. The
maximum penalty for poaching in Utah is a $1,-
000 fine and one year in jail, but most fines are
usually much lower.

“A customer will go to a meat processor and
say ‘we need a deer or elk’ and the processor will
get it for him,” he said. “It’s pretty difficult to
catch them because they’re so professional and

11 w law school computer -

Nexis aids in student research

hi) ide

idents and faculty heeding to search out legal information
113 meral news items can use two computerized services
lable through the BYU Law School Library.

H (cording to Gary Gott, media reference librarian, one ser-
H (called Lexis is a legal search system. He said it is up-
ing legal education and revolutionizing the law profession,
companion system, called Nexis, gives the user access to
ill text of articles from major newspapers, magazines and
(services.

phough both systems are primarily for use of BYU law stu-
i, either can be used by other persons on the campus for
it of the computer time used,
tstead of spending hours or days searching for pertinent
ases in the books,” Gott said, “the Lexis system can help
e the same cases in minutes.”

jttt added that frequently a necessary citation is impossible
|id in the stacks, but can be found by Lexis.

Time saver

[exis saves the student valuable time and makes much
information available to him,” Gott said.

was acquired by the Law School Library in October
one year after the completion of the J. Reuben Clark
liing. According to. Gott, it was the only such system in
i until last spring, when seven systems were installed in
[Lake City.

ttt explained that this sudden increase was caused by one
irm using Lexis, and the other firms realizing they needed
e it also in order to keep up in the business,
e Law School Library bought the Nexis system last sum-
ibut it, isn’t as yet used as much as Lexis, Gott said,
this is the only place on campus where Nexis could be in-
id, so we bought it as a service to the university,” he said,
oon as the departments on campus can work tbe cost into
budgets, I think it will be used more.”

[both Lexis and Nexis, the full text of the literature is filed
an operator can use a combination of search terms in
gig the appropriate information, Lee Warthen, reference
rian at the Law Library said.

a other computer systems where the material is in abstract
search is at the mercy of whoever digested and filed it,”
l said. But with Lexis and Nexis, no information is left
iso everything can be found because the computer is
bing the full text of the materials, not just abstracts of

How it works

order to locate related cases vital to their subject,
itors instruct the computer to find occurrence of their
;ed search word, Wathen explained. The searcher is not
’ to this one word, though.

y using qualifying terms, one can find only instances
» one word occurs within a certain distance of another,”
Ided.

explained if someone were only interested in cases of
.tos fibers causing lung cancer, he could search for all
j: in which the word asbestos occurs within so many words
s word cancer.

cording to the operators manual, other qualifying terms
lake into account the use of synonyms or multiple mean-

Another valuable feature of Lexis is its ability to give the
current status on any case in its data base, Warthen said. A
searcher can know almost instantly if a case he bas found has
been overturned, or is still good law, he added.

Because of BYU’s contract agreement with Mead Data Cen¬
tral, Lexis and Nexis can only be used for educational pur¬
poses.

“They give us a tremendous price cut in the normal user
rate,” Gott said. “By training our students in the system, they
will be capable of using it when they become attorneys, and
this in turn will benefit Mead Data.”

All first-year law students are required to train on the
system, and are given some free on-line time, Gott said. After
this, the cost, as for all users, is approximately $1.50 a minute.

UnivarM photo by Mika Morris

Demonstrating a word search, Gary Gott, media
reference librarian in the law library, does legal research
with the help of the Lexis computer system. The library
has implimented the new Nexis system giving students
greater access to the news.

Ellsworth center dedication today

President Ezra Taft Benson, of the LDS Council of the
Twelve, will dedicate the Leo Ellsworth Center 1 p.m. Tuesday
in the center’s livestock arena.

Dr. Leon E. Orme, chairman of the BYU animal science
department, said the building houses a retail sales area and a
large lecture classroom, in addition to the livestock arena. It
also houses BYU faculty offices, a Utah State meat inspector’s
office with adjoining facilities, and a meat processing
laboratory and killing rooms with observation classrooms
overlooking them, Orme said.

Dignitaries who have confirmed invitations to the dedication
include Gary Wicks, state director of the U.S. Bureau of Land
Management; Robert Turley, president of the Intermountain
Farmers Association; and Alarick Myrin, president of the Utah
Cattleman’s Association.

Research
Poster Exhibit

Wilkinson Center
Gallery

TODAY

_i\\academics

~asbyu office

Are you IN LOVE? (p.232)
Are you UNDER STRESS?
(P-176)

Are you HAPPY? (p.170)
Are you WORRIED? (p.183)
Are you NEGATIVE? (p.203)
Are you IMPATIENT? (p.26)
Are you

PROCRASTINATING? (p.185)

Pick up your personally auto¬
graphed copy at the bookstore
today!

/g interpersonalN

/ ■ C Tr RELATIONS

WORKSHOP SERIES

‘Now You Two Are Three! —
Adapting to Parenthood”

Sharte Roberts, Bruce Nelson
Interpersonal Relations Center
Designed to help you adapt to the changes
that take place when the first child comes
along.

Mondays 3:10 — 5:00 p.m. 147 JKB
Two weeks beginning March 30
‘The Balance of Me and Us”

Robert Gleave ,

Interpersonal Relations Center
Participants will examine common
misconceptions concerning balance in a
relationship.

Wednesdays 3:30 — 5:00 p.m. 370 ELWC
Two weeks beginning April 1
“Solving Problems Through Self Talk”
Dr. Norma Rohde
Interpersonal Relations Center
Designed to help you understand how the
things you say to yourself influence your
ability to solve relationship problems.
Thursdays 9:00 — 10:30 a.m. 379 ELWC
Two weeks beginning April 2
“Creating Support Systems”

Dr. Susan Easton
Family Resource Management
Participants will learn how to build helpful
systems of support so that enduring
becomes more than just lasting.

Thursdays 10:00 - 11:00 a.m. 370 ELWC
Two weeks beginning April 2

svchology, Psychology,
it. Social Work, and St

Page 4 The Daily Universe

Monday, March 3

Swimmers defeated

For sports information and calendar, call Tele-Tip, 378-7420, tape 178. _

Two fencers vie for points in the epee division of the BYU fencing
tournament during the weekend. The BYU men's team took first in
all divisions, and the women's squad finished first in foil.

Y fencers overwhelm

BYU men’s fencing team finished
first in the saber, epee, and foil com¬
petitions and the women’s team

BYU had its two independent fen¬
cing teams finishing second and
third in the men’s epee competi-

finished first in foil competitions at tions, according to Zylk

BYU’s Fourth Annual Fencing
Tournament Friday and Saturday.

The best overall fencer in the
tournament was the Cougars’
nationally-ranked Pepper Zylks, the
assistant coach.

Competition involves scoring in
the use of three weapons — the foil,
saber and epee.

Zylks finished first in foil, second
in epee, and third in the saber of the
men’s open advanced competitions
to capture the title.

The Cougars dominated the tour¬
nament with the top six finishers in
mens advanced epee, four of the top
six mens advanced saber winners,
and four of the top five mens foil
winners.

Zylks credits the Cougars success
to having a lot of team depth in all
fencing weapons.

“BYU usually wins or places in
the top four places of its meets, ex¬
cept against some of the nationally
ranked fencers,” said Zylks. “When
we don’t win we finish with fencers
in the top three or four.”

BYU’s women finished with three
of the top six finishers in womens
advanced foil, competition.

BYU’s Nancy Place and Shelly
Bonham finished second and third,
respectively, in the foil.

Kayleen Anderson, BYU’s best
female fencer, finished first but par¬
ticipated as an independent rather
than a team member since she is not
in school this semester. ■

Other teams entered in the tour¬
nament included Northern Arizona
State, Boise State, Utah, Utah
State, and dubs from Price, Utah,
and Victorville, Calif.

Padilla wins 1,500
at LSU Invitational

BYU’s Jari Keihas led a talented
core of Cougar javelin throwers with
a throw of 260 feet 8 inches, good for
second in the event.

Keihas watched as the Cougars
also captured third and fifth places
in the javelin behind the strong per¬
formances of Juha Hentunen and
Lafs Henriksson.

Y tennis men

Doug Padilla, BYU’s NCAA in¬
door two-mile track champion,
raced to a first-place finish in the
1,500-meter run as BYU finished
fifth in the Louisiana State In¬
vitational Saturday.

Padilla won the race with a time
of 3:43:08 seconds to outdistance
second-place finisher LSU’s Bobby
Beck.

Coach Clarence Robison had
referred to the meet as a “miniature
NCAA tournment” and- it turned
out to have that kind of intense /a on 9 ta/in 1
competition. Will #

Oregon won the meet with 172
points, LSU was second with 100,

Michigan third with 93, Iowa State
fourth with 78 and BYU was fifth
with 44. Minnesota finished with 43,

Missouri 33, and Harvard with 30 to
round out the scoring.

In what appeared to be a difficult
day for the Cougars, Goran
Svensson, BYU’s defending NCAA
discus champion, had to settle for
second-place in the event to
Oregon’s Dean Crousser.

BYU’s Agberto Guimaraes cap¬
tured second-place in the 800-
meters, just 34-hundredths of a
second behind Oregon’s Dave Mack
with a time of 1:47:52.

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
SUPER SPECIALS

SCIENTIFIC OR FINANCIAL

Student Calculators

Amortization

• Cost/sell margins
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• 8-Digit display

• Memory

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• Easy touch operation £ _

: ToXWsW 5 49 95

Texas instruments
watch Assortment

STOKES BROWERS

A defensive showdown

Chris Smith and Paul Johnson swam lifeti f
bests and Casey Jones dove consistently, but
three members of the BYU swimming and div
team failed to score in the NCAA Swimming t
Diving Championships that concluded Saturd

Indiana, Tar Heels to finals

In fact, no member of any team from the W
conference was able to score points.

“It was just like I thought it would be,” s .
Powers, “a lot of American records were brokei 0 ; ;;

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Call it “D-Day.”
The tenacious man-to-man defense of Indiana
Coach Bobby Knight takes on the multiple zone
“junk” defenses of North Carolina Coach Dean
Smith.

Though both eschew talk of a confrontation
between two of the nation’s finest college basket¬
ball coaches, it is impossible to avoid charac¬
terizing Monday night’s NCAA championship
game as anything else.

The Hoosiers earned the right to play in the
finals after a Saturday win over Louisiana State
67-49.

Knight said the key to his Hoosiers’
overwhelming semifinal victory could be sum¬
med up in one word — “relax.”

Indiana trailed 30-27 at halftime, but out-
scored the Tigers 40-19 in the final 20 minutes. In
fact, LSU got only nine points in a period ’of
20:39.

Knight said he wasn’t concerned with the
tight-fisted first half.

Junior Landon Turner paced the seventh-
ranked Hoosiers with 20 points, scoring nine in
the first five minutes of the second half.

Indiana’s All-American guard, Isiah Thomas
was in foul trouble for most of the game, and
another Thomas — Jim — picked up the slack by
pulling down nine rebounds, blocking two shots
and gaining two assists.

The Hoosier’s opponent on Monday, North
Carolina Tar Heels will be aiming to give Coach
Dean Smith his first championship in 20 years at
the school.

A1 Wood scored a career-high 39 points and
North Carolina — circling in for yet another shot
at the national title — defeated Virginia 78-65
Saturday.

Ainge named MVP
at All-Star game

Women sweep
meet at Weber

The Cougars didn’t have much
luck this weekend in the Sheldon
Coleman Men’s Tennis Classic in
Wichita, Kan.

The Cougars lost their first two
matches, being skunked by Ten¬
nessee 9-0 on Thursday and
to Wake Forest on Friday 7-2.

On Saturday they started playing
their game, and overcame Little
Rock, Ark., 7-2.

The BYU women’s track team took first-place
and qualified two tracksters for regionals as the
Cougars dominated the Weber State Invitational
on Saturday.

Coach Cfaig Poole said the meet was in
preparation for the outdoor season and it appears
BYU is headed for a successful season.

BYU won the meet handily, competing
without the services of All-American high jumper
Maria Betioli and hurdler Tuija Helander, who
were entered in the King Games at Stanford.

BYU compiled 84 1/2 points, followed by Idaho
State with 45, Weber State with 42 1/2, Utah
State 34 and Utah 21.

Leading the Cougars were Heather Kuusela
and Jennifer Davidson, each qualifying for
regional competition in two events.

Kuusela won the discus with a throw of 153 feet
and finished second in the shot put with a dis¬
tance of 44 feet 1 inch.

Davidson, a freshman, won the 200-meter and
400-meter dashes with times of 25:87.4 and 57:67
respectively.

BYU’s women broke three stadium and also
four meet records in the invitational.

Also turning in outstanding performances were
Stacey Tangren, first in the 800-meters with a
meet record, and Cheryl Howlett, who shattered
both meet and stadium records in the 5000-meter
run.

BYU’s mile relay team and 400-meter relay
also broke meet and stadium records for the
Cougars.

Rich Bohne won two out of three
of his matches over the weekend and
holds the best dual overall record of
the team, 18-9.

The Cougars return to action
Wednesday against Utah at 5 p.m.

H&R BLOCK

TAX TEST

Income averaging
can save you money. But
only if you make more
than $30,000 a year.

□ True □ False

What you don’t know about income averaging
could cost you money.

H&R Block knows that no matter how much
you make, if your income went up substantially last
year you may be able to income average. We’ll
take advantage of this if it’s to your benefit. The
answer is FALSE, since there is no minimum
amount of income required to qualify.

WE’LL MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

H&R BLOCK

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

“We do all out of state returns.’

Provo, 110 S. 500 W. 375-3436

Orem

American Fork

Springviile

Payson

North Carolina, making its sixth trip to the
Final Four under Smith, played outstanding
defense on Virginia center Ralph Sampson, the
player of the year, with some exceptional outside
shooting in the second half by Wood, a 6-6 senior
forward who has played in every game since join¬
ing the Tar Heels four years ago.

The 39 points set a single-game scoring record
for an NCAA semi-final. The old mark was 38 by
Jerry West of West Virginia in 1959.

“Wood has done this for years,” Smith said.
“Now America saw it.”

In his 10 years at Indiana, Knight has changed
the character of Big Ten Conference basketball
from a high-scoring, wide-open brand of play to
one of the lowest scoring leagues in the country.
He has done it with a man-to-man defense ex¬
clusively, and his theory of teaching it has been
repetition and simplicity.

“My two all-time favorite people are Hank Iba
and Pete Newell,” Knight said. “If I ever played
a zone defense, they’d disown me, so I’ll hang
onto them as friends.

“All three of us feel that in our approach to the
game, we’d rather work with one defense, the
man-to-man, and bend and mold that rather
than play with a lot of different defenses.”

“We like to play our man-to-man best,” Smith
said, explaining his theory, “but then we want to
be able to throw out some junk. It’s probably true
that you can’t play each defense as well when you
play so many, but it also takes more preparation
to play us.”

Smith said he would show Indiana his entire
array of defensive tactics, “our scramble defense,
the point defense — we’ll use them all.”

At the same time, he expected to see Indiana
use variations on the man-to-man. “In a sense,
they do play a type of zone,” Smith said.

Smith's

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nny Amge i__

Most Valuable Player as he led the West All-
Stars to a 99-97 victory in the 19th annual
National Association of Basketball Coaches All-
Star game Sunday.

Ainge teamed with All-WAC selections Tom
Chambers of Utah and Charles Bradley of
Wyoming as the threesome made an impressive
showing for WAC basketball.

The comments on Ainge ranged\\ from “Un¬
believable ... he is too good to stop playing
basketball,” by Jim Valvano, coach of North
Carolina State, to “He is my idea of a perfect
guard . . . he can do it all,” by Mark Agguire, All-
American basketball player from DePaul.

Chambers scored 12 points and played an ef¬
fective inside game while Bradley scored 16 from
the point guard position.

Young Ambassadors
Auditions!!!

Singing Auditions — April 1st, 2nd and 3rd
Dance Auditions— April 6th

Call

378-2563
For An
Appointment

No Fall Auditions
Will Be Given For
the 1981-82 Cast!

ASBYU and UNITED CONCERTS present

AIR SUPPIY

IN CONCERT

with Special Guest Stars “FIREFALL”

Thursday, April 9, 1981, 7:30 p.m. BYU Marriott Center
$ 8 chairs, $ 7 bleachers

TICKETS NOW ON SALE!

Marriott Center Ticket Office
10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

BYU Bookstore Cashier's Office >

8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

a seeded 10th
gymnastics

b breathing started again for Rod and Deb-
Ill Sunday, when they were informed their
i’s gymnastic team was seeded 10th out of
ms for the AIAW National Championships,
r BYU’s second place, 144-plus perfor-
g at the Region VII championships in Albu-
ae, N.M., Coach Hill had only good things
) about his team.

an’t remember being more proud of a team,
(felt so good seeing them pull together, and
g each other up.’

commended all the girls saying every girl
es equal recogntion. “If any of the girls
t there, we couldn’t have done it,” he said.
i commented on every girl individually.

Johns did excellent, Donna Chacalos
through where they needed her and Deena
ns “was a rock out there,” getting her
t BYU score ever, Hill said. Jan Shelley
» does well, Hill continued, and Mary Lou
: can always be counted on for a solid per-
ace. Mary Ann Ewell came through on two
they needed points in and the former
bic coach couldn’t say enough about
iy Naylor’s solid gymnastics.

■ said he felt Saturday’s performance ex-
I the greatest team effort ever at BYU. “I
3d in what the girls could do, it just took
months for them to believe it too.”

I Cougars enjoyed their best meet of the
s they posted their highest team totals in
>f the four events, vaulting (36.05), balance
1(36.90), and floor exercises (36.40).

n h won the meet with a 149.35 score. Utah
vwhich qualified for nationals too, was third
42.40.

ional competition will begin Friday, April 3
t Lake City. BYU is in the third session
;ig at 2 p.m. It will be competing against
State, Pittsburgh and Utah State. Hill

II four teams are pretty equal and expects
gymnastics.

)zz nip Lakers,
lagic' gets 41

By RICK WOODEN
Universe Sports Writer

Angeles Lakers brought their “Magic”
Salt Palace Saturday night, but the
i never came out of the hat as they bowed to
zz 112-110 in overtime.

/in “Magic” Johnson showed a variety of
ifor the Lakers, scoring 41 points, dishing
assists, and grabbing 12 rebounds. But it
enough as the Jazz worked their own
titment in the likes of “A.D.” Adrian Dan-
ticky Green, and Carl Nicks,
itley led the Jazz with 30 points, nine in the

a uarter and four in the overtime period.

reen and Carl Nicks created numerous
s with a blitzing fast break that left the
in a state of illusion.

art his foot early in the second quarter,
; a career high 24.

iting the fourth quarter the Lakers had an
joint lead 81-73. The Jazz cut that lead in
119-85 with outside jumpers by Wayne
r and Allan Bristow and four baskets by
een-Nicks hat trick.

Lakers, on the smooth shooting of Jamaal
t, pulled back out to an eight point lead 95-
h 6:23 left in the game. Then the NBA’s
g scorer, the shooting wizard himself,
l Dantley took the stage,
r four points by Green, Dantley used his
natural sorcery to score seven straight un-
red points and the Jazz led 99-95.
ioked as though the Jazz had cast the right
iver the Lakers when with 4:32 left in the
Abdul-Jabbar fouled out and at the same
was stuck with a technical foul. Fifteen
■Is later Jabbar was called for another
cal foul and ejected from the game after
jg onto the floor for a few final words with
Tom Nunez. Jabbar could take the tricks
ger and kicked the team water coolers into
mds as he left the arena.

;to be outdone at his own game, Johnson
1 one last slight of hand in regulation play,
jot jumper to tie the game 104-104.
he overtime period Johnson and Dantley
1 their best magic. Dantley hit an opening
point play for the Jazz and Johnson dealt
ist to Mark Landsberger for two points and
( on a lay-up for two more.

I Jazz turned to their defensive powers in
nal seconds to secure the win. With six
■Is on the clock the Lakers brought the ball
)hnson who passed to Wilkes. Wilkes put
2-footer that fell short,
ither NBA action Boston clinched the
ic Division Title by downing Philadelphia
an Sunday. The regular season ended after
ly’s games with 12 teams qualifying for the
I Playoffs. The division winners were
.ukee in the Central, San Antonio in the
and Phoenix in the Pacific division,
per playoff berth qualifiers were
llelphia, New York, Chicago, Indiana,
Kansas City, Los Angeles and Por-

laseball squad
jfps 2 at Fresno

ig a near-flawless pitching attack, host
State struck out a record-setting 11 bat-
iday and handed BYU a 6-0 setback,
laturday, the way wasn’t any clearer as the
s concluded their tournament play by
tg a 6-4 decision to the University of
iia at Santa Barbara,
inly Cougar to get a hit in Friday’s game
rd baseman Scott Pugmire, who knocked
le and single.

Elton kept up his All-WAC performance
4 hitting and two RBIs. BYU, now 17-16,
:e the University of Utah Tuesday at 2
i the Cougar diamond. The Monday game
pled to be played at Utah was canceled
6 the Utah field is not ready for play.

|YU Counseling Center C-273ASB

Confidential personal help
for personal problems.

Free to full-time students.Call 3035
[por information and appointments.

Monday, March 30, 1

The Daily Universe Page 5

mniTnn (<<((((( ri'ani.'ii rrrn (j (n 11 vat m.'.hftth i]iffi

bUfPVDQT

fir©-*

^Translation: Summer Fun Begins
On Fakler Tires

A. Snow capped Navaho Mountain

B. Colorado River

C. Lake Powell

D. Taking picture of Rainbow Arch

E. Swimming

G. Fishing (notice "good luck” fishing hat)

H. Waterskiing

STEEL RADIALS

I. Camper truck (with mud lugger tires)

next to campfire.

J. Four wheel drive with Macho Honkin
Honcho tires on it (they'll take
you anywhere except heaven).

K. Warm spring sun

L. Budding artist's signature

Artist: Kristin Fakler
Age 5

GENERAL
DUAL STEEL II

40,000 mile warranty
Whitewall & blackwall
Free mounting

WHITE

SIZE 0R

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LOW, LOW
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56”

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HR78x14W

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FR78x15B

51”

2.57

JR78x15B

66”

3.01

LR78x15B

68”

3.13

SERVICES

FREE SERVICES OFFERED
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★ We will store your tires
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CHECK YOUR
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* Free Mounting

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mounting

pf * Retreadable trade-in

SIZE

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650x13

695x14

560x15

C78x14

18 ”

60‘

F78x14
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23 ”

80‘

478x13

078x14

20 ”

70<

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H78x15

J78x15

25 ”

90‘

E78x14

21 ”

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29 ”

1 00

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NOW
AT
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SIZE

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FET

P185/75x13
(BR78x13)

39”

t 59

P185/75x14

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49”

2 16

P215/75x14
(CR78x14)

58”

2 62

P255/75x14
(HR7 8x14)

59”

2 85

P165/80x15

(600x15)

44”

,95

P205/75x15
(FR78x 15)

58”

2 62

P255/75x15
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63”

2 95

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68”

3°9

LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

CARNAGIE

SUPER

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• New tire guarantee ALL TIRES INSPECTI

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i • Matched pairs LOW *r

• Radials & bias AS

• Mud & snow or highway Free Mountinc

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j < * ^ u f t»y* h 1 -T ■ t f~n~n i ° {ffTm n \\ \\ okm umi i .1 tu i-iAiii oym 11 ui i i 4 ^ v* i h h.'.km j m a ^ u 111 i k ^; J/.vi 4 j UTU ^ i i 11 y y n ■ i : u n j 1 i i j j i m rm 1 1 •> i n a u ^ u u (

Page 6 The Daily Universe Monday, March 30, 1981

BRIGHT
’N BRIEF

__ v _ _, _ w inly d

to maintain courtroom decorum, and in a Denver
courthouse, it was particurlarly tough.

It seems that Citizens Band radio transmis¬
sions, some laced with racy language hardly ap¬
propriate for judicial determinations, “bled” into
the courtroom’s public address system last week.

Although the problem has been fixed, stories
about it linger on. .

As jurors were listening intently to testimony
in District Judge Susan Graham Barnes’ court, a
gruff male voice suddenly boomed over a
loudspeaker directly over the jury box.

“Put your pedal to the metal!” the voice said,
following it up with a string Of profanities.

“The little old ladies on the jury sat bolt up¬
right,” the judge said.

Then in District Judge Daniel Sparr’s court,
the proceedings were interrupted by: “Hi there,
Soda Pop, this is Jack Leg.”

Sparr said the occasional electronic outbursts
would catch everyone off guard, and he often had
to stop proceedings briefly to explain things.

Geology fans rock out;
it's field trip time again

MIAMI (AP) — Everything clicked along ef¬
ficiently, as only a computer could manage it:
The city government automatically sent Wilhelm
Peters his six-month garbage bill, with the
amount printed clearly on it.

Except that the bill was for $34,050, and the
city doesn’t collect his garbage.

“We couldn’t have this much garbage,” said
Peters, a Costa Rican coffee broker who owns a
condominium. “We only come here for vaca¬
tions.”

It turned out that Peters’ bill was for the gar¬
bage of all 908 residents of the Brickell Place
complex. But city officials said no one there
should have been billed, since a private contrac¬
tor hauls garbage from Brickell Place.

“We have some maladjustments with the com¬
puter,” said Clarance Patterson, Miami’s direc¬
tor of solid waste. “In some places, the number Of
units went berserk. In others, a fee that was sup¬
posed to be for six months winds up 12 months.”

By SHANNON STARKS
Universe Staff Writer

Geology students are gearing up
to get their hands dirty and feel the
earth’s crust during field trips that
always accompany the arrival of
spring.

Each semester, geology students
and geology club members of Sigma
Gamma Epsilon gather up their
camping gear and rock picks to
troop off on field trips and gain ex¬
perience they can’t get in a
classroom, said Dr. Harold J.
Bissell, professor emeritus of
geology.

Some professors require field trips
for their classes, in which case
transportation is paid for by the
geology department. At times,
Sigma Gamma Epsilon caters the
trips and cooks the meals, said
Kathy Ball, the club secretary.

Bissell said he has enjoyed the
field trips since he came to BYU 50
years ago as a freshman. “I still
learn something new every time I
go.”

He said students need the field
trips to learn geology. “You can
memorize it in a classroom, but you
don’t learn it until you can feel it,”
he said.

“The minute you look out the
window you’re looking at geology,”
he said. “When you go back into a

Miss Ball, a senior from Provo,
said seeing how the components of
the earth fit together is a lot dif¬
ferent than studying rocks in¬
dividually in class. “It helps you un¬
derstand when you see all you’ve
learned all together.”

Another function of the field trips
is to let students and instructors get
to know each other, said Bissell.
“You’re all out there getting your
fingernails dirty together, and you
find out that everyone is human.”

Miss Ball said the main reason
she joined the geology club was the
field trips. “I can’t wait to get out¬
doors,” she-said, “And I love to cook
over a fire.”

Last fall semester students spent
a few days at the Grand Canyon,
although they usually stay in Utah,
Miss Ball said.

Many trips are made to southern
and western Utah where resources
for study are abundant, said Bissell.
He said BYU’s geology department
is fortunate to have such vast
resources available.

Bissell said although spring’s
temperamental weather prevents
some overnight trips, winter-
semester geology classes crowd as
many as they can into spring,
because winter’s weather usually
doesn’t permit much travel.

Fire puts man in dog house

Fido’s heated dog put Carter, the renter proverbial doghouse by

RBBI EDITH

Tuesday, Mar. 31

A traditional issue
in touch with
the future

K^The Daily Universe

It's worth looking into , BYU!

LYNDEN, Wash. (AP) — Billed as a “last
chance to dance,” a planned showdown between
pro-dancing forces and an anti-dancing law fiz¬
zled when the choice came down to dancing or
drinking.

Drinking won.

• Dick DeGolier, manager of the Harvest House
Restaurant lounge in this tiny town near the
Canadian border, had planned to defy a recent
city ordinance banning dancing where liquor is
sold. He was prepared to accept a citation Tues¬
day night, but the state Liquor Control Board
changed all that.

The planned protest was canceled abruptly
When restaurant co-owner Dennis Hindman was
told Tuesday that swaying to the music would
mean ticketing by the Liquor Board.

Hindman, a Bellingham lawyer who has two
other liquor permits for establishments in
another northwest Washington town — Oak Har¬
bor — didn’t hesitate.

“I told them I wouldn’t violate their rules un¬
der any circumstances,” he said.

house at 945 E.
North in Orem got a lit¬
tle too warm in the wee
hours one morning last
week.

It caught on fire. And
burned to the ground.

Orem Fire Depart¬
ment said the fire was
caused by a lightbulb
the dog’s owner in¬
stalled to heat the
animal’s house.

Heat from the bulb
ignited the doghouse
then spread to the home
of the dog’s owner, J.
Carter, causing at least
$2,000 to $3,000
damage, Orem Fire
Captain Vernon D. Par¬
tridge said.

Partridge said no one,
not even the dog, was
hurt in the blaze, but
officials reported the
dog’s house as a totally
loss.

Whether the fire will

who lives in the^ now the home’s owner has
damaged home, in the not been determined.

“^ou, too, can earn
a year’s living expenses
in three summer months

Typing classes packed,
student demand rising

Last summer, first-year
Eagle MarketingCorporation
employees averaged over
$4300 for three months'
work.

A tidy sum. Not as tidy,

1 however, as the $7700 that
second-year employees
averaged.

All of which means free¬
dom from part-time work
during school. A chance to
earn higher grades. A head
start for carriage or a mis¬
sion. New ski equipment. A
stereo. Et cetera.

And while the compensa¬
tion is darn, good, so is the
working environment.

You’ll associate with peo¬
ple who share your stan¬
dards. And you’ll receive free
training from some of the
country’s top businessmen.
At a seminar held in Park
City.

C’mon. Earn what you’re
worth this summer.

Even if you're not sure
about it, it won’t hurt to call
and get more information.
What do you have to lose?
Except a couple thousand
dollars. Freedom from part-
time work. And some valu¬
able life-long skills.

Dail 225-9000 today.

By DANE S. RIGBY
Universe Staff Writer

More than ever before students
are realizing the importance of be-.
ing able to type. In fact, the demand
for typing classes at BYU is “mam¬
moth,” according to Ted Stoddard,
chairman of the College of Business
Education and Administrative
Management.

Beginning typing classes" are in
the biggest demand, Stoddard said.
Students are taking them for a
number of reasons. For some, typing
is required as part of their
.curriculum. Others may take typing
with the misconception that it will
be an easy grade. But many stu¬
dents are taking typing simply
because they don’t know how and
they find being able to type is
critical while they are in college — a
skill students just have to have.

“Typing should be a G.E. class
required of all BYU students. That’s
how important I see it as,” said
Janet Howard, instructor over the
two-year secretarial program in the
business education department.

Mrs. Howard said many of the
students ’ taking beginning typing
classes are computer students.

“The computer is a keyboard. In
order to be an effective user of the
computer you must be adept at the
typewriter,” she said. Mrs. Howard

said she sees the time coming when
we will do everything by computers.

In such a world, “typing is a tool
that every individual should have a
degree of proficiency in. That may
not be 100 words per minute, but
they should have some degree of ef¬
ficiency,” she said.

Mrs. Howard said many students
have the misconception that
business education is an easy major
and the courses taught are easy. It is
a difficult major, she said, and a
student must put in the necessary
time or he won’t make it.

“It’s something you can’t just
read and learn. It’s something you
must read, learn, and apply,” she
said.

BYU has an excellent program
with a good reputation, Mrs.
Howard said. While attending the
International Word Processing
Symposium in Washington, D.C.,
Mrs. Howard said she received
many compliments about BYU
graduates working in the
professional world.

Many people told her the stu¬
dents were “very well trained,
almost over-trained.

“The facilities here are the best
anywhere,” she said. “You won’t
find the kind of equipment we have
-here anywhere, and we have more of
it and more student hours on it.”

“I'd recommend Eagle Marketing to .
anyone that wants to be their own
boss and earn Jar more than
minimum wages"

“It provides great financial growth,
and an opportunity to serve people
with a great product."

Kent B.

"Eagle Marketing teaches a person
to implement tools which cultivate
success in life."

Richard J.

After

this

summer

YOUR

PHOTO GOES
HERE

"Afahtastic — and very profitable -
experience!"

Your Name

“A job worthy of consideration by
any achieving individual."

Jerald J.

"Tve never had as much fun at a job,
or made as much money, as I have
while working for Eagle Marketing."

Robb T.

"Its the greatest opportunity for •
personal and financial develop¬
ment available to anyone
anywhere."

Joseph H.

“Few things have influenced my
personal growth and progress as
much as my association with Eagle
Marketing."

Cougar Marching
Band

Flag Squad
Auditions

Any female with interest is welcome to
audition. We are particularly interested
in anyone that has had any experience
with RIFLE MANEUVERS.

Mandatory meeting in E250 HFAC
April 2nd 6:00 p.m.

A clinic will be held April 3rd at 3:00
p.m.

Auditions April 4th at 10:00 a.m.

Robin L.

"It’s given me financial indepen-
dence through school and taught
me how to set achievable goals."

"Eagle Marketing is a real close-knit
group. Everyone is super friendly."

Brad P.

"It s a great way to round out your
education."

"The experience was worth more to
me than money, which, by the way,
was the best l have ever made."

Greg H.

"I’d recommend it because of the
opportunity for personal growth it
offers. And because of the financial
benefits."

Brett H.

Eagle Marketing’s leaders sincere¬
ly care about each individual that
works for them.”

Michael B.

“One of the most fulfilling Jobs I’ve
ever had.”

"No matter what you end up doing,
the principles learned from this
work experience will lead to great
success in life."

John B.

* AIM

^-4M1

t/wi

Monday, March 30, 1981 The Daily Universe Page 7

1906-1981

DIAMOND JUBILEE SALE

in the General Book Department of the Bookstore

till I\\l\\\\|>IM;

t S U ROI

OF THE HITH

March 30-April 25 or While Supplies Last

SPENCER W. KIMBALL FAV0R1T1

reg.>10.50 SALE *7.50 OUT OF H

DEFENDER OF THE FAITH «w- 'r.»s

by Truman G. Madsen

reg. >9.50 SALE *6.95 PAUL ANI

A LAWYER LOOKS AT ERA

by Rex Lee reg. *7.95 SALE S 5.49 SALE 99

J. REUBEN CLARK: ANSWERS

THE PUBLIC YEARS h

reg. '10.95 SALE *7.95 *■“" re °-

THE EXPANDING CHURCH

by Spencer Palmer reg . $ 6.95 Q A j F ^ V ° at * ’ Wl

PUT ON THE WHOLE ARMOR OF GOD DE !™

by Leon Hartshorn r

reg. *6.95 SALE S 2.99 k

THE ARTICLES OF FAITH s

by Talraage, recorded by Rex Campbell ‘ for additional ,

(Boxed Set ol Nine Tapes) specials including ^ 1

reg. *34.95 NALL “.Ho great savings on nrilTT

selected scriptures. VitlAjl

THE HOLY TEMPLE by Boyd K. Packer complete

reg. *7.95 SALE *5.75 reg. *1

LOOK FOR DIAMOND JUBILEE SALES

FAVORITE SELECTIONS FROM
OUT OF THE BEST BOOKS

reg. *7.95 SALE S 1.99

PAUL AND THE EXPANSION OF
THE CHURCH TODAY reg. *4.95
SALE 99 c

ANSWERS TO GOSPEL QUESTIONS

by Joseph Fielding Smith

(Boxed set) reg. $ 8.95 SALE s 1.95

FREE GRAN PRIX CASSETTE RECORDER

valued at *39.95, with purchase of one of the following sets of tapes:

DELUXE TRIPLE COMBINATION

in attache case V€Q. $ 109.95

SALE *69.95
HALLOWED JOURNEY

(a dramatization of the Book of Mormon)

reg. *69.95 SALE *49.95

DELUXE OLD TESTAMENT

(complete in 2 sets to qualify for the free recorder)

reg. *7.95

reg. *139.90

SALE *89.90

byu bookstore

The Daily Universe

Monday, March 30, 1981

Classified Ads.JMIerk

iDaily, 8:30 to 4:30 p.m., except Sat. 8- Sun. 378-2897 8 378-2898, Room 117ELWP

f' CLASSIFIED AD POLICY
We have a 3-line

• Deadline for regu¬
lar Classified Ads is
10:30 a.m. 1 day
prior to publication.

• Deadline for Classi¬
fied Display is 4:30
p.m. 3 days prior to
publication.

Daily Universe - room
117ELWC, 378-2897 or
378-2898. Open 8:30-
4:30, Monday-Friday.

CLASSIFIED

AD

DIRECTORY

33 Instruction & Training

06 Situations Wanted

08 Help Wanted
10 Sales Help Wan
12 Service Director

iry effort will be made to protect
readers from deception, but ad-
tising appearing in the Univc
s not indie ' ' ’

19 Roommate Wanted
>0 Houses for Rent
21 Single’s House Rentals

8?*

Due to mechanical operation

23 Income Property

. 26 Lots & Acreage
28 Coal & Wood

T: i’riMI'T

tain Property
& Ranches

ed Department by
irst day ad runs

34 Livestock
36 Farm & Garden Produc

38 Misc. for Sale.

39 Misc. for Rent

wrong. We cannot bt _„ r _

for any errors After the first day. N
redits or adjust-‘ -«•»-- — J

its will be

after thi
NEW CLASSIFIED

41 Cameras-Photo Equip.

42 Musical Instruments

43 Elec. Appliances

1 day before date of publicatii
Cash Rates — 3 line
1 day, 3 lines . . .

3 days, 3 lines .

5 days, 3 lines . ■

Above rates subject to

44 TV & Stereo
46 Sporting Goods

48 Bikes & Motorcycles

49 Auto Parts & Supplies

50 Wanted to Buy
52 Mobile Homes

5—Insurance Agendas 5-Insurance Agencies 10-Sales Help Wanted 17-Unfam. apt, for rant 18-Fum. Apts, for rent 1>-Furn. Apts, for rent 18-Fum. Apts, for r

OPERATIONS and Hospital
rooms cost a lot more than you
think. Call me today for
details on State Farm health
insurance for singles, married
couples, and missionaries'.

> David A. Powell Agent.

465-9263.

Supplemental Ins. Pays $520/-
day in Intensive care. Covers
pre-existing cond.(incl. mater¬
nity). $8/mo. American
Family Life. 374-9050, 377-
1506.

HEALTH

PROTECTION

Including:

MATERNITY

BENEFITS

Health with Maternity
Benefits Guaranteed

Summer Employment
Applications for College stu¬
dents are now being taken.
Don’t wait until school is out,
by then most good positions will
be filled. Secure a position with
us now. For an interview, call
377-2251

room with W/D hookup. C
play area. $195-$200/mo.
N. 100 W. apt. D, Orem.

Complications are covered.
Buy from one of the largest
health insurance companies
DAVID BLACKWELL

224-2523.

GUYS, DO YOU WANT a
$6000 summer? Are you will¬
ing to work hard for it? Call
Gary for an interview. 373-
6119, 7:00-7:30 AM is the best

COUPLES: 2 bdrm apt.
$180/+ utils. 1524 S. 400 E.
Orem. 375-4636 aft. 4.

BROADMOOR APTS FOR
WOMEN1 (formerly
Brockbank apts), Openings for
Spring/Summer $55./mo. Fall
and Winter contracts avail,
now for $80./mo. + Its. Great
ward!

* 377-3649

THE AMBASSADOR

Womens luxury apts. $110/mo.
Pvt bdrms, Dishwasher,
Washer/Dryer, 461 E. 100 N.
Provo, 375-4133.

1/4 block BYU.
private room $116. NIC
5079, 374-9395.

2 BDRM* DUPLEX. Cpt
drapes, appl.’s, couple;
$175/mo. 377-1361.

6 girls/apt.
or $48/mo.

18-Fum. Apts, for rent

41 E. 400 N. 374-5426.

THE NEIGHBORHOOD. •
Singles, living at it’s best. I
Priv. bdrms, deluxe kitchen, I
frplc, A/C, upper I
Silvershadows, new. Im-
mediate vac. for guys and

CHIPMAN ASSOCIATES
225-7316

We’ll tell it like it is.

7—Reunions

HEALTH

INSURANCE

UTAH SLC REUNION. Pres.
Eldon W. Cooley. UTC
cafeteria, 1200 S. 800 W.
Orem. 7 pm, April 3. $6.50 din¬
ner; $1 refresh. 374-6264.

Phone Directories Co. will have
3 openings to sell advertise¬
ment. Must be willing to
travel. $25,000-$50,000 comm,
direct sales or mission
suggested. Call 377-8330. Ext.
10 for interview.

CLOSEST OF ALL
TO BYU
Great floor plan.

PINEGAR APTS.

girl!

224-

MATERNITY

BENEFITS

8—Help Wanted

job market

EXCELLENT EARNINGS sell¬
ing memberships to Real Es¬
tate brokers in your home area
for the summer. This oppor¬
tunity will be especially in¬
teresting to those seeking

We tailor-make our policies to
fit your individual needs. We
also take pride in giving you the
best service possible when you
have a question, a problem, or a
claim. Call

GARY FORD &
ASSOC.

489-8691 or 489-9101

largest selection of jobs
(No commission)

(No Percentage)
Smployment Supermarket”
125 E. 300 S. Provo

careers in real estate & invest¬
ment practice. No previous
real estate experience re¬
quired. Call Narex Systems
Inc. 374-8888 for interview.

4-MAN, 2 bedroom 2
dividualized studies, 2
bathrooms. Livingroom,
kitchen and laundry facilities.
Spring/Summer, $45/mo. +
heat and lights. Fall/Winter,
$85/mo. -Also girls or guys
houses-Spring/Summer
$30/mo. Landlord pays all util,
Fall/Winter$65/mo.

** Girls *•

2nd block contract, $75 & $78
Spring/summer, $50-$55
Fall $80-$90, deposit $80.

* 4 & 6 girl apts.

* All utils paid.

"Close to campus.

Call 375-5479. 240 E. 600 N.

Fairmont Square
Apartments

* Single men & women. 4/apt.

* 2 bdrms, with bathrooms. |

* Laundry facilities, A/C.

AUTUMN MANOR

1 375-2609

* 45 So. 900 E. j

* Sp.ring/summer $45. I

Sign contract by April l-$20 I

Couples Sp./Su. only: ‘1
Fall/Winter: ’75
Includes all utilities excep (
lights

Robert E. Lee Apts

men & women-Sp/Su. $50.

Fall/Win. $64, couples
Sp/Su. $150. 3-bdrm, pool,
laund. firepl. 350 So. 900 E.
373-0276, 375-4133.

14—Contracts for Sale

876 E. 900 N. No 17
Jay Jolley or Dan Beal
5-6 p.m. 375-5637

HEALTH

EDGEMONT CLEANERS
needs a few good men &
woman for pick-up and
delivery work. Must have your
own car. App. at 3167 No. Ca¬
nyon Rd. No calls please.

COUPLES: 2 bdrm. apt. avail,
now. $185/mo. + lights. 650 W.
750 S. Provo. 373-0152 after

EXCELLENT BENEFITS
w/Immediate Coverage. Call
Chris Anderson 375-6089.

4—Special Notices

ELECTROLYSIS: Perm
removal of unwanted hair of
face & body. Ladies only.
373-4301, 374-6430 for appt.

ft. sandwiches for your special
ions. Very reasonable.
f. Center Provo or

Attention Students of the Den¬
ver Area! “A Brand New
Day”-1981 Young Adult Conf.
May 23, 24, 25. Winter Park,
CO. Workshops, seminars,

■ recreation, entertainment.
Cost $55. Contact home ward
YA rep.

HEALTH INSURANCE
WITH THE

BEST MATERNITY BENEFITS

LDS family needs live-in
Mothers Helper immed.
Childcare + housework in ex¬
clusive Chicago Lakefront
suburb. Close to train,
downtown. Own room, TV,
phone. 1 yr. minimum,
$400/mo. 312-433-6348.

GIRLS: 11 room white house.
Summer only. $65/mo. + util.,
$35 of deposit will be left
behind. 287 E. 200 N. Call
Donna 375-8260.

MONSON APTS

Men’s Apt’s taking applica¬
tions for spring/summer. Air
conditioned, $45/mo. + elec¬
tricity. 377-6737.

COUPLES: 2 bdrm, 2 bath
apts. Spring/Summer
$120/mo. you pay gas & elec,
or 1 bdrm apt. Spring/Sum¬
mer $120/mo. Landlord pays
all utils., Fall/Winter $140/mo.

Robert E. Lee Apts.

2 BDRM, unfum., A/C, W/D,
carpet, dis. $225/mo., utils
paid. Near stores. 374-9541.

Cinda Lee Apts

Now taking appl. for Fall/Win
’81-2; $80/mo., & spr/sum;

6 E. 900 N. No. 17
Jay Jolley or Dan Beal
5-6 pm. 375-5637.

-, --... - spr/su

$50/mo. 2 blks to BYU.
girls/apt.

Jaynee Cox, 377-3995.

DANVILLE PLACE.

WOMEN: IVt blks to campu

16— Rooms for Rent

LOSE 5 lbs a week without
dieting. Fun, safe, efficient, at
home, aerobic exerciser. 375-
6588, 375-3235.

378-2897

Daily Universe Want Ads

mation call

LUCAS & ASSOC.

489-8241, 489-3058

NURSES NEEDED now at
Utah State Hospital. RN full
& pt time positions avail.
Salary based on experience.
Call Marion Swingle or Jess
Logan 373-4400. Equal opp.
employer.

1 VAC. for male students. 1
bdrm. all utilities paid. Fur¬
nished. $90/mo, $100/dep.,
older home, good location. 195
N. 300 W. Provo.

Call 224-8800.

CHALFONTE

3 bdrm, 2 bath.Cable TwT'
Spr/sum $50, pvt. rm $75
Fall/Winter $86
737 E. 700 N. 375-4133.

$ Le Chateau Apts.
For Men

hsd * Air Conditioning j

* Underground parkinj
* Laundry Facilities next door

Spring/Summer
Singles, *55 & s 75
Couples *140

Fall Rates for Men, s 85
Fall Rates for Couples, s 22

66s North SOO East, Provo

374-8363

SPEND the summer in
JACKSON WYOMING. Must
love horses. 373-3110.\\

Spr/Sum $40-$80
Fall $80.

Includes all Utils!
Cable TV, HBO.
377-9331.

GIRLS-Brand new duplex,
single & dbl rms. W/D, low
price, no contract, 373-2773 or
375-1617.

COUPLES: 2 bdrm apt. Close
to campus. Laundry ,fac.
$185/+ heat & Its. 375-0852.
btwn 10-7pm.

Inflation Fighter Special! 4*

Call and compare prices at

Cinnamon Tree Apts.

5—Insurance Agencies

LOST: Plastic bag w/long br.
sweater, 2 ski hats, & figured
blouse. 377-2156, eves.

3—Instr. & Training

GUITAR • DRUM • BANJO
Given by former BYU inst.
225-9060 OR 225-2166

PIANO LESSONS
Private. Qualified teacher,
reasonable rates. 377-2384

Experienced Piano Teacher.

$2.50/lesson. Close to BYU.
Call Sharon 377-8712.

NO NEED TO ASK
for an ext. Call Universe Want
Ad B direct, 378-2897.

Mutual

^tDmahav

• MATERNITY
BENEFITS (optional

any other sickness)

• Major Hospital

• Indiv'l or Family

• Life Insurance

• Home Appts.

scon o.

RANDALL

226-1816

1834 S. State St.

OPERATIONS and Hospital
rooms cost a lot more than you
think. Call mq today for
details on State Farm Hospital
Surgical Insurance.

Harold R. Little

EXECUTIVE CHEF to manage
& operate new restaurant at
Bridal Veil Falls. Must be ex¬
perienced & willing to accept
responsibility. Please contact
Mr. Nelson aft 5 at 373-3047,
or Sue for appt. at 373-2192.

utils paid, $65/mo. 3 blks from
campus. Avail immediately.
Donna 378-5489, 8-12.

17—Unfurn. apt. for rent

18 N. 100 E. Provo. 374-1749.

Health Insurance
with

Maternity Benefits
& Complications
covered on

MOTHER and BABY

GIRLS to work for board &
room. Small salary.

Call 377-8519.

SPACIOUS 2 bdrm apt. Large
living & dining areas. Large
bedrooms, W/D hookups. Air
cond. Fenced play ’ *

10—Sales Help Wanted

College Students!

Do you want to earn $1,500 to
$3,000 per month this sum¬
mer? Call this number to place
your application: 375-4393.

cond. Fenced playground for
children, pool, BYU approved.
No smoking, pets. 224-1273
between 9 am-9pm. North
Orem. $211./mo.+ gas &
lights.

NEW HEALTH COVERAGE
W/MATERNITY BENEFITS

Free phone quotes 9-7pm.

SAVE MONEY!!!

PERSONS WANTED
To do telephone calling.
Good pax, your hours. Call
Kallie aF374-1232

ONE Bedroom Apt. A/C, W/D
hookups, disposal, appliances,
carpet, drapes, pool. No pets
or smokers. 4 mo. lease,
$172/+ electricity and heating.
$150 deposit. 226-3623.

Crestwood Apartments
Private Bedrooms
Spring and Summer: 75/mo.

j • Two bathrooms • Laundry facilities f\\
'/ • Recreation Room# Swimming Pool
i/# Air Conditioning • Free Cable T V
l) • Sauna • Dances

• Fireplaces

1800 North State, Provo 377-0038

• 1285 North 200 West

Xf 1 ' ) Provo 373-8023

• Newly Remodeled

! Discount 1st Months Rei

MEN--WOMEN—MARRIED STUDENTS

• 6 per apt.:

• 4 per apt.:

• Own bdrm.:

Spring/Summer Fall/Wint

»60

*65

*70-75

enclose to Campus ^ Great Ward
•^Utilities paid. Heated Pool & Sund /

*^Air Conditioning •m Laundry
t^Cable T.V. hookup 2 baths

Quality Insulation of SLC is
proud to announce the opening
of its Provo office. Manage¬
ment as well as part and full
time salespeople needed.
Wages depending upon
qualification. Call Rick or
Tom collect at 966-4213.

SPACIOUS 2 bdrm
Townhouses w/garb. disp., lVi
bath, W/D hkups, laundry rm,
carport, A/C, pool, garden,
fenced in childrens playgr:
Just 10 min. from Y. 224-3924.

Liberty Square

Apartments

COZY 2 BDRM APTS. Gar¬
bage disposal, gas heat, within
easy access to church, shopp-

formerly Pennsbury

NOW ACCEPTING
SPRING/SUMMER/FALL/WINTER APPLIC.

For men and women

jjCanyon Terra<

Now accepting applications for sin

£ Blocks from Campus

I Spring & Summer *65/mo.

Fall Semester *7 OO/mo.

Across street from BYU campus.

Service Directory

2 BDRM APARTMENTS.
Garbage disposal, gas heat,
within easy access to church,
shopping, 10 minutes to BYU.
377-5855.

Appliance Repair

Recording

Typing

CURLING iron, blow dryer
broken? We fix. $3 and $5.
Also other small appliances.
375-8123, 375-0329.

8-TRACK STUDIO+ t

Very nice 1 bdrm apt. $190; 2
bdrm $220. Balcony, D/W, gar¬
bage disposal, storage. $190.
226-2375.

* Homes

* Duplexes

* Four plexes

* Six plexes

* & Bigger!

* Several Town
Houses

cessoly equip. $10/hr. EMS
RECORDING. 375-4363.

Shoe Repair

The Home Office

BILL KELSCH
FOOTHILL SHOE

MARY KAY COSMETICS

, 375-5121

REPAIR
374-2424.
438 N. 900 E.

Closed Wednesdays

657 N. 500 W.
Professional Typing
Guaranteed Work
For our low rates, 377-2252.

AVOID THE LAST-MINUTE
RUSH. Get your typing done
early. Ann,375-6829. $l/pg.

COUPLES: Lg. 2 bdrm. $235
utils included. DW, near shop¬
ping, BYU. 375-9177.

Air-Con

* Laundry Facilities F

* Lounge with
piano & Color TV I

* Swimming Pool

* All in one Block!

* All utilities paid

566 N. 400 E.

375-7169 Call 10-6 M-F a

Utilities paid
Heated pool
Laundry room
Rec. room

Fully furni$
Carpi
Air conditii
Storage ri

Fall Semester too!

Call 374*6680

TYPING. IBM corr. selec. II.
Type 108 WPM. Thesis, legal,
all. Mary 226-1863. Guar.

TYPING. Self correcting selec¬
tive. Pica or Elite. Legal &
tech, balls. 224-6841.

Storage

PROFES. GUAR. TYPING:
IBM selec., Regis, grad,
sch. Myma 374-0481.

FORMER Tvpe Instructor and
legal sec. All typing needs.
IBM Selectric. 225-8726.

AB Diaper Service 798-8096.

FOR your barn dance call Don
Mac for pro square dance call¬
ing. 373-6889 or 377-6786.

ASA Travelsound Machine

UNCLUTTER YOUR LIFE ...

AT EXTRA SPACE
SELF STORAGE.

Over 650 private self-service
storage units located at the in¬
tersection of 1-15 and Center
St. in Orem. Sizes from 5’x5’
to 10’x30’ with rentals starting
at $15/mo. Call 226-0050 and
ask about our SPECIAL
RATES

PROFESSIONAL TYPING:
Thesis, dissertation, reports,
etc’. 5 yrs experience. 374-2370.

Professional Typing: Quick
service, best rates, top quality.
377-2300.

RESUME WRITING
A professionally written
resume is a must for the best
job. Get the competitive edge!
All print options! Call 374-
6024, Mr. Goewey.

COMPU-TYPE offers best
typing in area. Fast. W.P. Ser¬
vice only. $l/page. 374-0155.

• newly remodeled • heated pool open • large, spacious apts.

• men & women early in Spring • new laundry-room

• all utilities paid • air-conditioning • close to campus

except lights • gas barbeque and shopping

Contracts now available for^Spring and
Summer $ 56-65/month

Wedding

Join the Fun Set!

IniUersity

U Villa

Our Year-round Pool — the i
exciting in Provo

ELECTRIC MUSIC CO.
Great Dance Music.
377-4081.

ATTENTION STUDENTS!
Going home for the summer?
Store your thing up to 4
months. $10/mo. 61N. Univer-
sityAve, or call 377-9450.

ON CAMPUS: Pick up &
delivery. IBM correcting selec¬
tric. Sally 224-4316.

ATTENTION GIRLS!
Before you buy wedding in¬
vitations see Orem-Geneva
Times for prices you can af¬
ford. 546 S. State

EXPERT TYPINGI Word
processor. Resumes, papers,
•’ ' ’ ’ ..Ca ’

thesis’, etc. 225-5185, Carol.

SILK FLOWERS-weddings,
dances, INVITATIONS.
Professional. Debbie 375-7678.

POLYNESIAN SHOW for
church functions, parties, etc.
“THE POLYNESIANS” 225-
8227 or 377-1891 aft. 5.

Typing

Quality typing. Overnight.
Handwriting OK. IBM, car¬
bon ribbon. Sharon 375-6829.

Professional Typing IBM
electronic 50, proportional
spacing 225-7695 anytime

Enjoy the Spring weather tvnimr

with you favorite date $, pi vf e

RISING SAGE STABLES. III!

LET ME HELP with all your
typing needs. IBM Electronic
60. Merlene 225-6253.

I EDIT ERRORS!

Solid English skills. 110 wpm,
self-correcting IBM, on
campus. 377-0758.

WEDDING GOWNS &
VEILS. Limited number
beautifully crafted. $50-$200.
226-0496, 375-4478, or 373-
3403.

WEDDING GOWNS-Big sale!
Dresses $75 & up. Hats &
veils, $30 & up. 225-4744.

Hair Styling

TYPING. IBM Selectric H.
Carbon Ribbon. All kinds typ¬
ing. Myma 225-8164 aft. 5:30.

TYPING: Quality work
guaranteed. IBM self-
correcting. Cathy 224-4310.

SILK FLOWERS! All occa¬
sions, Professional work, ex¬
cellent prices. 226-2615 after 5.

* Spring/Summer Openings

* *60/mo. includes utilities

* Large Pool

* Recreation hall

* Organized activities

* Central laundry

* Dishwashers v

* Central air-conditioned

* 3 bedrooms, 2 baths

* Fall/Winter contracts avail.

Air Conditioning

1 Sauna

1 Enjoy lawns and
landscaping
1 Weight Room

Coble TV indu

1 Security Lock
» lVz Blocks to Ca
1 Laundry
1 Storage Space

• Only 4 Persons Per Apt.
Singles: Spring & Summer Spring Only

s 70/mo. s 75/mo.

| Worried Students: 2 bedroom 3 bedroom

T Spring/Summer only . $ 175/mo. s 200/mo.

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDE j|

iTt’

OSD. N. 1D20.1. jfrooo. or+-iroo

865 N. 160

THE HEADLINER

HAIRCUTS $5!!!
Tues-Thurs. 375-
6526.

elite. ,Toni 377-3451.

Jewelry 8. Repair

PROFESSIONAL TYPING.
Papers, resumes, letters, etc
226-8059, 377-9227.

VALLEY SPECIALTIES.

TYPING for any need. IBM
Selectric II typewriter. Call
Sharon at 373-5987.

CAKES BY ROBIN. Beautiful
wedding cakes! Prof,
decorating, reas. prices. 375-
6986 after 5.

PARK PLAZA

SPARKS II

BULLOCK & LOSEE
JEWELERS

, quality watch and

EXPERT PROOF READING.
Pick up & delivery. IBM Elec-
A ic 75. 375-2477.

’’The obvious choice”

is Right for you!

Call Sharon 225-8343

ry repair,
e. Rapic

EXPERT TYPING
15 years experience. Nice
typewriter. .60/page. Call
Gerri 224-3631

CALL NOW

to reserve time for error free,
high speed production of term
papers, reports, etc. DATX
Word Processing Services. 494
N. Univ. 373-3737.

GETTING MARRIED? Harp
background music for that
heavenly touch. Receptions,
banquets, etc. Sarah
377-8781, 378-2910.

Now accepting applications
Spring/Summer: 6-per. apts.-$65/mo. {

SEWING: Brides maid
dresses. Good rates! Other
sewing too. 375-4391 aft 1.

PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz

CHUCK, YOU'RE 60NNA
PRIVE ME CRAZY 1 . CAN'T
YOU UNPERSTANP IDE
PON'T NEEP YOU TO PITCH ?!

4-per. apts.-$75/mo.

Couples (Sp/Su Only): »160/mo. + electric^

• 1 block from campus

• Heated swimming poo!

• Recreation Room

• Laundry facilities

• Sundeck

• Cable TV & Stereo hookups

• Bar-B-Q Area

You have got to see
it to believe it!

Heated Pool
Air conditioning
Dishwashers

Fireplaces

Dark wood panelinj
Townhouse style
One Ward

Fall/Winter (81/82) contracts
available : *92 a month plus lights.

910 North 900 East 373-8922 J

Spring/ Summer rent onlyi |
$ 65 00 per month
999 E. 450 N. 375-6808

Monday, March 30, 1

Classified ADs Continued I It-l-GlaiOC

Apt*, for rant , lS-Furw. Apts. for rtnt 18-fum. Apts, for rant 21—Single's House Rentals 44—TV and Stereo

Notary service — Notary sei

__'LEX-Males. Priv.
■le TV, W/D, frplc,
cond. Great area.
. less with annual
il March 1 st.

MARIAN

APARTMENTS

Special S

FOR RENT-girla Duplex, near .
campus. 3 bdrm. W/D,
Spring/Summer. $60/rao. in¬
cludes utils. (Spaces also
available for Fall). 226-1546.

-4 8 1 900 N. No. 17.
SJ| illey or Dan Beal
)n i pm. 375-5637.

pies $150-175. Study, lounge,
laundry, pool, utils paid. Fall
>. use a menus poor. * ^““ bined ' 243

ifor Spring/Summer E - 500 R 374-9788.

i OR GIRLS

{. Use a friends pool.

MEN: $50/mo. + utilities. $25
depo. DW, single rooms. 373-
0545 aft. 6 .

LOVELY, fum. 3 bdrm. N.
Orem. Women, frplc, W/D,
$300 + utils. 224-0854.

applying fo

1850 N. Univ. Ave. Taking GIRLS: has W/D & A/C, Avail
appl. for Spring & Summer. Spr/sum, F/W. Call eve; 374-
$65/mo. utils pd. Lg. pool, air 1430, Dan.

SORTER APTS

ow signing for
11/! I Exc. atmosphere;

in storage, 2 blks to
k*| i»40 E. 600 N. Call
rj 98 limited:
kj I cad 373-0838.

N RSON APTS.

, A Fall/Win $77/mo.
r apt.
375-4133.

Spring & summer openings.

4Apt, 2/rm, DW, lg. kitchen,
lg. closets, balconies, off street
pkg., exc. location. Only
$60/mo. Fall $90/mo. 377-3018
after 9 pm.

CROWDED?

Moon River apts now renting
to 4 singles or couples. A few MEN-
discounted contracts. Lg. 2 Al ~"*
bdrm, cable TV, A/C, con¬
venient shopping area close
by. Call Almeda 375-6716 or
after 6 pm & Sat’s, Lynn 375-

HOUSE FOR RENT-Single atmospnere. We 1;
women, Spring/summer, low NOW for 2 lovely girls, in a
rent. 4 blks from BYU. Hurry! girl home. BYU standard
224-6910. 224-5984.

4 girls apts.New carpet
Spring/summer $41
Fall/winter $79.

488 N. 100 E. 374-1735.

- . blk from campue

4/apt. $40 spr/sum. 760-770 E
750 N. 224-1656.

LARGE 1

U S FOR GIRLS: 4
le to BYU. 462 N.

>r374-2766(Fali A/C”’ laundry'

Campus Plaza

bdrm apt. avail.

- r _ig & ya

Mapleton. 226-2300 between!

2 VACANCIES-girls-
spring/winter. 410 N. 800 E.
374-0880 after 5:30 pm.

22—Homes for Sale

MARRIED STUDENTS!

If you think you can’t buy a
home while going to school,
you haven’t talked to Greg
Wild 0 ’- p oi

RENT A TV.

color or B&W, & microwaves.

Alexander Bros.

Good time rentals

377-7770,

BOSE 501 SPEAKERS.
Kenwood 701, 80 watt amp.
Pioneer TX D100 digital
tuner. Sony TC K75 cassette
deck. ADC eq. 12 bond. Sansui
FRD 4 turntable, audio timer.
1 yr. old. $1000 takes all. 377-
0357, ask John, eves.

44—Sporting Goods

BEAT THE RUSH
repai " ' i Ski & Cj

are now being accepted for the
ASBYU Ombudsman in 115
ELWC, for ASBYU Attorney
General in 431 ELWC and for
ASBYU Public Relations Director
• -5 ELWC. Deadline for resumes

deadline for students, faculty and

is 5 p.m. Wednesday. Rental forms
turned in after this date will be
charged a S3 late fee and delivery

ditional forms and information call
Beverly Yates at 378-6745.

Play tryouts — The 1981 produc-
tion of “And It Came to Pass,” for¬
merly Oakland Temple Pageant,

. chorus and dance Thursday g at Oak
Hills Chapel, 1600 N. 900 East,
Provo, at 9 to 11:30 a.m. and noon

The Daily Universe Page 9

For lecture information,
call Tele-Tip, 378-7420, tape 177.

students from San ing should telephone the Salt Lake
ifica, Menlo Park, City VA Regional Office toil free
Jose. Morcan Hill 524-5960 in the Salt Lake City area.

399-4433 in Ogden. 375-2902 in

rn'juiy irto'25*at'the in Utah.

it $75/mo.

, . . OWN ROOM -Now & fall. * , ----- - —

,njoy the summer w/a cool Guys & Gals Deluxe duplex John West Realty, 377-8140,

efreshing pool, sundeck, near Y. $75-$105. 224-0854. or eves. 225-9315.

patio, BBQ, lounge, piano, - -—

beauty Girls Vacancies

RONG MANOR
g to student status
Item; 2 bdrm units,
Jj. $80/mo. per stu-
flbdes utils. Applica-
- ' „ epted.
175-7647.

1 28th. Cool, quiet,
i' 0 /mo. no utils.
Mcadults only. NO
! 378-7409.

salon. 1 blk south of Social

Hall! $49-66. Spring/summer. 4 girls/apt. 1 blk to campus.
4& 6 per apt. Call 374-1160 af- Util pd., air, washer, dryer,
ter 6 & Sat., Lynn or Carol storage. 150 E: 700 N. No. 5.
375-6039, $80. 377-6165 or 374-1771.

MENS Apt. near BYU.
Spring & Summer $53
- 81,82 Fall & Winter $85

All utils, pd. A/C 356 N. 200 E.
374-5976, 768-3754.

LADIES: Duplex a
1st. $70-$75/mo. 'A
BYU. 374-0501.

- iper/Fall contracts. New __ ~~

BEDROOM TO YOURSELF Rivergrove duplexs. Double & , WEDDING SET. 26 pt dia-
tmd the comforts of a real single bdrms. 3 bathrooms, £766 ty '

house. Houses avail, for
girls. Spring/Summer
‘ T andlord

I.-vacancies in nice $60/mo. Landlord paj
Jlblks from campus. ut ils. Fall/Winter $100/r

r girls. ROBERT E. LEE

single harms, o oainrooms, "*o--~~ ~ n

living room, dining rm, family Sacrifice, $500, 377-6.
rm, kitchen, fireplace, dis- Engagement Set. Beautiful
lays all hwasher, washer/dryer, and G f d s Ne Annr»d

.-fridgerators. Call David

at 377-5505.

igirls 3 bdrm apt.
:. DW, W/D in each
J irooms, lots of park-
' g/sum/fall. 377-1448.

876 E. 900 N. No. 17.

Jay Jolley or Dan Beal
5-6 pm. 375-5637.

AVAIL. MAY 1st. Extra .....
and roomy 2 bdrm. Great loca¬
tion, Only 5 blks from campus.
Laundry facilities. Air cond.
couples only. $100 dep.
$185/mo. + gas & elec, unfur¬
nished. $ 210 /mo. + gas & elec,
furnished. M-F 8:30-5:00. Call
374-9082 eves & Sat. 798-8882.

BEAUTIFUL HOME. 2 blocks
from campus. Pool, laundry
Spr/Sum/Fall. 830 N. 100 W

GIRLS brand new duplex

Spring & Summer. $80 single,

$60 double. No contract. 375-
1617, 373-2773.

MENS APT. Available i'm-
med. $115 single, $60 each COUPLES: Fum or unfum. 2
double. 483 N. 400 E. Provo. ’ ’ • ’ ’

375-5706, 2264720.

Spr/Sum $50!

MILLER I APTS.

Central air. 2 blocks from
campus, utils included. Call
375-6212,
apt. 24.

r see manager u

ACADEMY

ARMS

469 N. 100 E.
377-6545

(after 5 pm only)

• 2 bedrms., 2 baths

• Air conditioned

mpus Ski & Cycle
W. 1450 N. Provo
375-6688

Heritage Sports

Pajama
Sale
Coming

Mar. 27, 28

Bike Repairs

. Fine Ten Speeds

Peugeot, Fuji
Raliegh, Panasonic

We Buy & Sell
Used Bikes
New & Used Ski
Closeouts

275 8. Univ., Prow 377-9977

49-Auto Parts and Supplies

DIAMOND FOREIGN AUTO PARTS

Must sell 38 pt, G color, VSI2 • Parts for all foreign cars. 235
for only $400 or best offer. Call W. 300 S. 377-9991.

374-9957 aft 5:30 pm.

25—Investments

SNI- 808. A diversified,
professionally-managed, in¬
come property investment.
The benefits of real estate
w/out management
headaches. $2,000 min. Call

37—Jewelry

w Chemi8try lecture - Donald P.

Eastman Kodak Company, will
speak Tuesday at 3 p.m. in 231
MARB. His lecture will be entitled.

RENTA
COLOR TV

$o P er

^ W month

Also rent stereo systems, home
entertainment centers, washers,
dryers, microwaves, fridges and
B/W TVs.

STOKES BROWERS

SALTUKE MIDVALE WEST VALLEY OGDEN PROVO OREM LAYTON HILLS

‘A carat solitaire diamond.
Cert. appr. $2000, $1500 or
best offer. Jon 373-2658.

WEDDING RING SET. 14k
gold with white gold offset and
6 diamonds. 373-1870, Lee.

§§302

50—Wanted to buy

OLD COINS WANTED
United States & Foreign.
225-5887, 225-9042 Orem

SPRING

UNCLUTTER YOUR LIFE!

DIAMOND SPECIAL Housecalls. Van 224-8445.

52—Mobile Homes

SPACES Available for 40’

Silver Fox Cam]

Ca •

Casa Grande;

APARTMENTS FOR ,
MEN <

• *42.50 (includes <

utilities) ' ,

• Close to .Campus

• 4 men per apt. ,

• Nicely furnished

Air conditioned <

374-8543

o. + utils. 355 E. 500 N.
375-1605.

FOUR man apartment. 14
blks from campus. 642 N. 300
E. $40/mo. Call 374-8401.
FAMILIES-Spr/sum only! 3
bdrm, 2 bth, air. $145 + lights.
2 bdrm $129. 57 E. 400 N. no.
2. 375-9274, 377-5712.

MEN-Spr/sum, 3 bdrm, 2 bth,
air. $40-45. 2 bdrm $35-45 +
lights. 57 E. 400.N,. no. .2-377=
5712, 375-9274.

MEN-Fall, $55-75 + lights.
Close to campus. See manager
57 E. 400 N. no. 2. 377-5712,
375-9274.

FANTASTIC APARTMENTS.
Avail. NOW! 3 single girls
$60/mo., 4 single girls $40/mo.
A great way to spend the sum¬
mer. 57 W. 700 N. 377-1208.

COUPLES: 2 bdrm, 1 block
from campus. Fum or unfum.
420 E. 700 N. $215 + utils.
375-1476,

MEN: 6 vac. 2 avail immed.
Nice home. 5 blks to Y. Free
W/D, $45. 377-8716.
COUPLES: 2 bdrm home.
ApivAug. W/D, Yi blk. from

Sierra West Diamonds

Special Diamond Purchase

1/4 cts-$225

mp grounds.
-0033

10x50 Mobile Home. 2 bdrm,
furnished, shed, W/D, extras.
$4650/offer. 375-9143.

DO YOUR SPRING CLEANING EARLY AND STORE
YOUR BELONGINGS WITH US!

Vi cts-$500-$700 14’x65’ Mobile Home 3 bdrm,

Regular prices 50% higher fireplace, shed, fenced yard,
Call 224-6371 for appt. $10,500/offer. Call 375-9769.

38—Mist, for Sale

54—Travel-Trans.

RCA & Sony TV’s at really
special sale prices when ad
mentioned. WAKEFIELDS

SO. CALIF RIDE home for
summer. TKS charter bus.
Call Karen, 377-6284.

• Kitchen things

• Trunks

• More...

UPHOLSTERY Supply items
at wholesale prices. All kinds
roll end fabric at Vi price.
Fabric Center 763 Columbia
Lane, Provo. 375-3717.
HOOVER VACUUMS. Lowest
prices, all models. SAVE.
Don’t pay more.

WAKEFIELDS.

1. $165/mo. + utils. 377-

tSummerhays

Apts, for Men

1457.

4 OPENINGS in NEW duplex.
W/D, 3 bath, quiet, good ward.
$85-$115. 2 pvt. rooms avail.
375-6822 or stop by 746 N.
1250 E. after 3:30 pm.

MARIAN

APARTMENTS

Special Summer rates
Single girls & fellows, $45
w/out A/C, $55 with A/C. Cou¬
ples $150-175. Study, lounge,
laundry, pool, utils paid. Fall
& winter, $640 combined. 243
E. 500 N. 374-9788.

SEWING MACHINES.
Special close out prices. SAVE.
Quantity limited.

WAKEFIELDS.

PANASONIC tape rec
Don’t pay more. Really i
prices. SAVE. W/-

RCA TV’s. Special low prices
if ad mentioned; SAVE.
WAKEFIELDS.

Hewlett-Packard HP 41C.

Boxed, 2 mo. old. $169!
Gary 377-5704.

’77 Chevette

Nice! $1995 or best offer
377-6695

’78 MONZA HATCHBACK.
Small car ecn. w/V 8 power.
PS, A/C, AT, 3900 MI Exc.
Cond. $3600/offer. 374-5612

MUST SELL NOWl‘79 Chevy
Malibu. Mint condition. Low
miles. Only $3500. Call 374-
8109, ask for Jeff.

1968 BUICK ELECTRA.
PURRS LIKE A KITTEN!
$495/OFFER. 377-4398.
LOADED

1978 Camaro. 38,000 m
or offer. Call 489-8084.

‘78 Subaru Brat.
377-4088, SLC-561-9112.

EXTRA SPACE
STORAGE

* vWatch for our special in Heritage Edition, Mar. 31)

ly four per apartment, two hardy duplexs. n ow
’ bedroom. Plenty of stor- * § GIRU5!

i, air-conditioning. LOW
.TES several openings
ailable: Spring/Summer *60
month, Fall *87 per month.

620 N. 100 W. Provo
374-8255

39—Mist, for Rent

PROFESSIONALLY equipped
wood shop. Big ' ' T '

room for 2 full
time people to w
shop. Rent, bj
Spr/Sum. Call for more i
Steve, 224-6329, 226-2716.

‘69 GRAND PRIX. Power,

VS Orem High
choir travels

person/apt. BOYS! 300 N. 770 AA Furniture & Appl. 450 W.
ft vSTSiAoil! Center. We buy-sefl-trade new

™" ” ' “ ' & used furniture, appliances,

ii rent $60/mo. incl. utils. Fully
air conditioned. 3 bdrms/apt.
/Call 373-0287 after 5 pm.

5*2 20— Houses for Rent

TRI-PLEX 2 bdrm. Fum or
unfum. 864 N. 600 W. $190 +
utils. Till Fall.

The Orem High
School A Cappella
Cihoir is preparing for a
nine-day tour of the

--. Parts & service for Washington D.C. area

vacuums & appl. Call 374- flnd gome surr0U nding
states in April.

J 375-1476.

v xqp FLOOR of lg. lovely split
, level home, fum. Avail April
15 ‘81-Nov 15 ‘83. Must have
■ references. No children, pets.
Mature adults only. Professors
prefered. $300/mo. $150 sec.
deposit required. 224-3779.

BRICK HOME. 4 bdrms, 2
baths, garage & carport, gar¬
den spot. New plush carpets,
drapes, paint. Near campus &
town. F amily-$300/mo.
Sum/Girls-$75 for Fall. 756-
6750.

l PJn« View Ails.
i wanted!

-*) ng & Summer Tenants
Only $ 65/mo.

Reward!

g pool x bbq area

ililities pd. x air cond.

21—Single’s House Rentals

NICE furnished home for men.
Close to campus. $65/month
plus gas and water. Call us to¬
day 756-6571.

4 Plus Alot More x
1-9090 1565 N. Univ. Ave

ifif fall openings still

HOMES

Live in a hotpe away from
•home. Enjoy the convenience
of your own yd. Access to pool
& laun. facil. $49 & up.
Spring/summer. Call Almeda
375-6716 or after 6 pm & Sat.,
Lynn 375-6039.

tnings for # Close to river

itral air-cond. Q A INTREE * 3 bdrms/2 bths

s anized activities apartments * mo • («ncl.

T mitMSOOWcel UtiB,ies)

Mttuepits prQvQ 37? m .4 great wards

Fall/Winter openings too!

41— Cameras-Photo Equip.

CANNON A-l w/Cannon 100-
200 zoom, 35mm lens, metal
case, flash, all acc. incl. 1 yr.
old. $550, 377-0357 eve. John,

42— Musical Instr.

GUITARS, harmonicas, auto
harps, banjos, low prices.
Don’t pay more. SAVE.

BANJOS, ukeleles, drums, _ _ 0 _

' har P 8 > ba89es / am P. 8 ’ PA work projects and jog-f

sms. Ruitars, and ac- ,1 i i

systems, gi
cessories. He_ 0 ._
So. 100 W. Provo.

GUITAR STRINGS. Mention
this ad & SAVE. Big dis¬
counts! Top makes.
WAKEFIELDS._

PIANO’S. Used, returned, ren¬
tals. Don’t ps
SAVE. WAK1

OLD REED ORGAN. Antique
treasure to be played. First
w/$495 takes.

225-8702.

43—Elec. Appliances.

KENMORE Whirlpool washers

and dryers. Fully recon¬
ditioned. Guaranteed parts &
labor for 100 days.

$75 & up. 377-4450
795 S. State, Provo.

Eureka, & all other r_

Furniture & Appl. 450 W. Cen-
ter. Call us 374-6886.

SELL gas dryer or trade for
electric dryer. Work out
details with owner. 375-0063.

44—TV and Stereo

FOR SALE 19” color TV. Ex-
i cel. cond. $140, will bargain.
Everet 378-3828, (2-6) Lisa
) 377-0467.

Besides the nation’s
capital, the choir will
visit Richmond,
Yorktown and

Jamestown.

The students had to
be able to raise nearly
$500 each to be able to
go. “The students ear¬
ned the money for the
tour by selling items,
work projects and jog-a-
thons,” Preston Woolf,
director of the choir,
said. “A couple of kids
made the money totally j
on the jog-a-thon.”

Wayne Golding, a
member of the choir,
said he is excited about
going on the tour. “I got
all my money from jobs
and fund-raisers,” he
said.

“I look forward to
representing Utah and
seeing my aunt again,”
Catherine Hyde,
another member of the
choir, said.

Even though this is
Woolf’s first year
teaching at Orem High,
he has high expecta¬
tions for the choir. “For
the talent, this group
can be the best group
I’ve ever had,” he said.

The choir will be do¬
ing concerts at stake
centers in exchange for
lodging in LDS Church
members’ homes.

Page 10 The Daily Universe Monday, March

Who will win the Oscars?

For entertainment calendar, call Tele-Tip, 378-7420, tape 175.

Professor aids selection

Predictions made

I

It’s Oscar time again. And with
the help of a BYU faculty member,
the winners of the annual Motion
Picture Academy Awards will be an¬
nounced.

Tad Danielewski, a professor of
theater and cinematic arts, is also a
member of the Motion Picture
Academy. As a member of the
Academy for three years,
Danielewski explained the require¬
ments to becoming a member. “The
minimum requirement is to be
nominated for an Oscar or the
equivalent,” he said. The Academy
now has 3,000 members.

Danielewski has directed'a num¬
ber a feature films including “No
Exit,” written by Jean Paul Sartre.
He won an Emmy award for the
production “Africa,” a four-hour
feature film, starring Gregory Peck,
that was telecast on ABC. He has
done television shows for all three
networks and has made films all
over the world.

He said all of the voting Academy
members see all of the films that are
nominated. Nomimations come
from members with various
specialties, such as editing,
directing or acting, voting for five
people to be nominated from their
category, Danielewski said. Then
the whole body of the Academy
votes on each of the categories.

He said the judging goes on all
year, with the cut-off for entries on
Dec. 31. After nominations have
been made, a sort of campaigning
by distribution companies and
production companies starts. “ x

Who will win the Oscars? As the tension and
excitement mount, this is the big question
everyone is asking. The climax of the event of the
year will be reached when the winners are an¬
nounced tonight from 8 to 10:30 on KTVX Chan¬
nel 4.

The 53rd Annual Awards of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences ceremony will
be televised live from the Dorothy Chandler
Pavilion of the Los Angeles Music Center.

Several staff members of The Daily Universe
got together and put in their votes for best actor
and actress, best supporting actor and actress,
best director and best picture of the year.
Although “Raging Bull” and “The Elephant
Man” lead with eight nominations each, the staff
predicted a big sweep for “Ordinary People.”
Here are the results of the Universe’s unofficial
poll:

The staff predicts that Robert De Niro in
“Raging Bull” will win the Oscar for best actor in
a leading role. The other nominees, include
Robert Duvall in “The Great Santini,” John
Hurt in “The Elephant Man,” Jack Lemmon in
“Tribute” and Peter O’Toole in “The Stunt
Man.” All of the best actor nominees will attend
the ceremony.

In a split decision, the staff predicts either
Timothy Hutton, the disturbed teenager in “Or¬
dinary People,” or Judd Hirsch, the psychiatrist
in the same movie, to be the winner. Other actors

The staff was unable to come to a consensi
best actress in a supporting role. The nom
are: Eileen Brennan in “Private Benjamin,”
Le Gallienne in “Resurrection,” Cathy Mor
in “Raging Bull,” Diana Scarwid in
Moves,” and Mary Steenburgen in “Melvii
Howard.” Eighty-two year old Eva La Galli
is the only actress in this category unable
tend.

For best achievement in directing, the
predicts Robert Redford will win for his direjf
of “Ordinary People.” Other nominees
David Lynch for “The Elephant Man,” M
Scorsese for “Raging Bull,” Richard Rus
“The Stunt Man” and Roman Polansk
“Tess.” Polanski will he the only director ui
to attend.

For best picture of the year, the staff pre
“Ordinary People” will win. Other films ii
category include: “Coal Miner’s Daugl
“The Elephant Man,” “Raging Bull,

n the category include: Michael O’Keefe in “The.
Great Santini,” Joe Pesci in “Ragirig Bull” and
." i Howar

Jason Robards in “Melvin and Howard.” Jason
Robards is the only actor in this category unable
to attend the ceremony.

Mary Tyler Moore will probably win the best
actress Oscar for her first dramatic role in “Or-

Universe photo by Gary Neuenswander

Tad Danielewski, BYU professor and voting member of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Science, busily carries on two phone conversations.

_y People.” However, several staff members

said Sissy Spacek in “Coal Miner’s Daughter”
and Ellen Burstyn in “Resurrection” are also
strong contenders for the award. Goldie Hawn in
“Private Benjamin” and Gena Rowlands in
“Gloria” are the other nominees. All the ac¬
tresses will attend the program.

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Skate

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Classic Skating Cente
250 S. State, Orem
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It wouldn’t be fair,” he said.

get Danielewski said he won’t be at-

calls from places like Texas to come tending the awards qeremony this
"Tm,” he added. “If I year, though he was there last year,
a film, they’ll send a He said it was a gala event, but this

copy and arrangements will be year he’ll stay home and “vs
made with a. theater here for a on the tube.”
he said.

private screening,

, , When asked to make some predic¬
tions of to comment on his
preferences, Danielewski said he
couldn’t, because that was one of
the rules of the Academy.

Currently, Danielewski is
directing an original musical en¬
titled “Neighbors,” to be presented
at BYU during spring term. The
show incorporates country music

“It’s a good policy because it’s a
life membership and preferences
could develop and be made known.

It was written by Carl
member Of Danielewski’s original
acting workshop in New York.

Who attends the awards?

HOLLYWOOD (AP) — The 53rd
Academy Awards will be presented
tonight, and most of the potential
winners will be in the glittering
audience, even such non¬
enthusiasts as Henry Fonda, Robert
Redford and Robert De Niro.

The 75-year-old Fonda, who has
long decried the competitive aspect
of acting awards and who has never
won an Oscar in a 46-year film
career, will receive a special award
for “his enduring contributions to
the art of motion pictures.”

Redford and De Niro; who detest
the hoopla of such affairs, have
agreed to attend and are favorites to
win as best director and actor,
respectively.

President Reagan — an actor tur¬
ned politician — will also appear on
the program in a message taped
earlier at the White House.

, A notable absentee is Roman
Polanski, nominated as best direc¬
tor for “Tess.” He declined the
Academy’s invitation because he
would be arrested on a fugitive
warrant if he came here from his
Paris home. He fled the country af¬
ter his 1977 conviction for statutory
rape.

Norman Jewison, producer of the
Oscar show, almost provided a sur¬
prise presenter of the best-picture
award — George C. Scott. The actor
was reported to have considered the
invitation but finally declined. He

created a sensation in 1970 by refus¬
ing his award as best actor for “Pat-

The ceremonies, which will be
telecast by ABC starting at 10 p.m.
EST, will find most major nominees
in the audience. Besides Polanski,
the only probable no-shows are in
the supporting categories: Jason
Robards, who is reported to be suf¬
fering from dysentery, and Eva Le
Gallienne.

Johnny Carson returns as emcee
of the telecast. Presenters range
from 87-year-old King Vidor to 15-
year-old Brooke Shields.

Other presenters include Richard
Chamberlain, Steve Martin, Mary
Tyler Moore, Peter O’Toole,
Luciano Pavarotti, Richard Pryor,
Lily Tomlin, Peter Ustinov and
Billy Dee Williams. Sean Connery
and Dyan Cannon were last-minute
dropouts and have been replaced by
Neil Diamond and Diana Ross.

Jewison hopes to close the show in
less than three hours, preventing
the usual post-midnight viewing of
the major awards in eastern time
zones. “But you never can predict
over-length acceptance speeches,
like Dustin Hoffman’s last year,”
said an aide.

Hoffman will present the award
to the best actress of 1980, and last
year’s other major winner, Sally
Field, will bestow 1 the Oscar for best
actor.

Men's Chorus to sing

There is a choir on campus which
has been compared to the Red Army
Chorus of the Soviet Union, sharing
the similar characteristics of a
strong, masculine, forceful sound.
But according to its director, the
Men’s Chorus has a more refined
sound than that of the Red Army.

Dr. Ralph Woodward, a professor
in the BYU music department and
director of the Men’s Chorus, will
lead 52 male voices in a concert
Tuesday, in the deJong Concert
Hall at 8 p.m.

“This is the most unique concert
of the year because of the variety of
songs,” said Neville Tuft, historian
of the choir.

Selections will include classical
songs by Debussy as well as Franz
Schubert’s “The Night.” Spirituals,
such as “Were You There,” contem¬
porary music about “Faustus” and
a requiem in Latin, “Cherubini,”
will also be sung.

Becky Wilcox, the first female
director that the choir has ever had,
will assist Woodward in the concert.

According to Paul Dymock, vice
president of the Men’s Chorus,
“This type of choral music is more
exciting than any other type
because of the selections of songs
available to male voifces.”

Free tickets can be picked up at
the Music Ticket Office in the
Harris Fine Arts Center.

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Restaurant

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I Lipdo *

.-10:00 p.m. Sat< 380 E. 1300 S* Orem

US SPRING

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CROSSROADS PLAZA 328-3982
UNIVERSITY MALL, OREM 224-2330

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