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2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, December 9, 1974 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Writer defends Israel Editor: With reference to Mr. Shlhabl's misconceptions, specifically: *. . . should be enough evidence that these people left their homes because of Israeli-government organized terrorist tactics* (DC, December 3rd). •The Arab States encouraged t homes temporarily In order to be armies." (1 ■Brotherly advice was given t the Arabs of Palestine to leave nd to stay temporarily In netgh- uns of the Invading Arab armies •Thei who remained In Haifa and accepted Jewish protection regarded as renegades.* (3 "It must not be forgotten that the Arab Higher Commute aged the refugees' flight from their homes In Jaffa, I only to help the refugee it to Impugn anybody bi are these refugees I ■s agreed upon t Is Indeed curious that Arab leaders of 1948 and the years sub- »nt do not agree with Mr. Shihahl "Misconception," lt appears, t a word to be used with so great a regard for personal Interpre- Davld A. Cohen ordlnlan newspaper, Palestln, February 19, 1949. ew York, Lebanese newspaper, Al Hoda, from Azzam pasha, ecretary General of the Arab League, by Hablb Issa, June 8, 951 he London weekly Economist. October 2, 1948. ear East Arabic Broadcasting Station, April 3, 1949. ally Telegraph of Beirut, from Emll Ghoury, Secretary of the 'How to be an Administrator' - Part 5 On The Who's tenth anniversary THE DAILY COLLEGIAN By Bob Merzolan finally got things together and h settled on a permanent nan lt was a steady stream ofslngles The album which kept the Who simmering but It wasn't until the release of the concept album "Tommy" that they really showed the extent s It. The n I nevertheless From "Tommy" came such smash singles as "Plnball Wlz- jrd," "The Seeker," "See Me, Feel Me," and "Overture From SALES AND SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM This Program is designed lo develop young college grad¬ uates (or careers in life insurance sales and sales manage¬ ment It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 2 weeks al a Home Office School) before moving into full sales work lified Those who are inter for management resp in the Home Office a such w Iter an itv are assured of ample o ork in either our field offi initial period in sales. Aggressive expansion plans for those accepted Arrange with the placemerr provide unusual opportu office for an interview JAMES W. SHANER C. t. U. General Agent will be on campus TUESDAY, DEC. 10 or call 226-7600 Connecticut Mutual Life L INSURANCE COMPANY • HARTFORD THE BLUE CHIP COMPANY . SINCE 1846 en Equal Opportunity Employer 1 ' they didn't r tlnued the near flawless i output releasing the electrifying album 'Live at Leeds" (from which "Summertime Blues* was released), 'Who's Next," and last year t "Quadrophenia." So Just In tim e Who's Is quite enjoyat actly exciting t enjoyable. Rlngo had much help from his friends (no pun Intended) and what friends they are. Listen for Harry Nllsson, Klaus Voorman, Bobby Keys, Nicky Hopkins, John Len- m Kelt- unimportant record? Let's , Rlngo has never been ngle after single.. ."Happy 1 "I can See For Miles," c Bus," 'Substitute" . . . meet someone especially tor you. Call Match Makers 222-5416 ten-year anniversary MCA has very good one re-released two double-album Rlngo's singing record sets of early Who LPs (as Capitol and Reprise have done in there-releasing of earlyBeach Boy albums). One set has the 'Magic Bus* and "My cenera- It makes his apparent lack of vocal talent Interesting, Indeed enjoyable. Daltry's the beglnn is now ... and Entwtstle's the group through the last ade. Coupled with their Rlngo I music. He was sweet" Beattle . mlddle-of-the-ro politician. He re This Is not t talented because oi prove Just how remarkable (an¬ other tired adjective, but . . .) they have been and are today. Speaking of established artists, Rlngo Starr has released a new LP entitled •Goodnight Vienna." alns so today, sav he Isn't ie better drum- he's the master of the straight beat. He also com¬ poses better-than-average ma¬ terial as "Call Me,* «Oo-Weet* and "All By Myself* on this al- m demonstrate. So t gist Birdwatcher Linda McMillin/487-3679 Who knows more about PSA, the unofficial state bird than your own official campus rep? With more California flights than any other airline, PSA is ready to take off any time you are. Next time you need a reservation, watch for your bird watcher. Or whistle. PSA gives you a lift. •Goodnight Vienna" Is nothing to cheer about . . . It's just a plain-old good-time album. And It'll probably make you smile. Finally, the answer to Cat Stevens has arrived and It's all good news! David Rlordan'a •Medicine Wheel* ts outstanding. Riordan has been around for a while, mostly writing songs for other groups; like the million selling "Green Eyed Lady* for Sugar Loaf In 1972. FALL SPECIAL ur io HI Ml WBX roa —-HYLAND-— DONOR CENTUt Monday, December 9, 1974 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN-3 Bulldogs place three on all-PC A A conference team i N>[ C By Rick Elkins Collegian Sports Editor Three Bulldog grtdders earned berths on tbe 1974 all-Pacific Coast Athletic Association foot¬ ball team, while seven others made the second team. Al Garcia, the 'Dogs long dis¬ tance placeklcker; Greg Ander¬ son, an offensive lineman and Calvin Young, the strong ttght end, all made the first team.Tbe announcement waa made last »eek by PCAA Commissioner [esse T. H1U after the confer- enc« coaches had gotten together md voted on the team selecUons. Making the second team were quarterback, Mor¬ gan Murray at center, Mike Komln at offensive guard, Don in rein at defensive lineman, Jim Mitchell at linebacker and both tpfenslve backs Calvin Lane and of the ten Fresno players hon- red by the coaches, five ofthem •til be returning as Bulldogs iMln next year as they are only un!ors. TheyareCortez,Carcla, : .me. Young and Jackson. The balloting had to be close for the kicking specialist as ,arcla, Ron Ploger of San Jose .uid Benny Rlcardo of San Diego ,11 had fine seasons. Ploger out- •.rored Garcia by seven points 71-64) but Garcia showed his ersattllty by punting at times and doing the klckoff chores. Many of those klckoffs sailed Into trie end zone, a place that the nail Is very seldom run out of. For the year Carcla kicked 2f| of 21 field goal attempts, it UOP be kicked three onsecutlve field goals of 50, 49 end 52 yards In the span of about tiree minutes. The latter kick established a new CSUF record tor field goal distance. Garcia ..jjosst a new season and career Young didn't play In the first Diego played consistently all sea¬ son which was Just one reason for the success quarterback Nef Cortez had. Cortez finished up the season with 2,198 total offensive yards, good for second In the conference and 13th In the nation. He passed tor 1,916 yards, completing 47 per cent of his passes. He also played a part In 15~ touchdowns. As a team the Bulldogs finished up third In passing offensive with 179.3 yards per game average. But they were fifth In rushing offensive and total offense. Defensively they did much bet¬ ter, as they led the conference In pass defense, allowing only 123.8 yards a game. Against the run, the 'Dogs were fourth In the conference giving up 206.9 yards Offensive first team: Wide re¬ ceivers—Ike McBee of San Jose and Dwlght McDonald of San Di¬ ego; Center-Hank Englehardt of UOP; Guards—Tony Bachmannof San Diego and Mel Vlsger of UOP; Tackles-Greg Anderson of Fresno and Morrison' England of UOP; Tight end-Calvin Young of Agali Women swimmers capture fifth place The CSUF women's swimming "am finished out Its conference om petition this weekend, taking Jirth in the Northern California ! ntercollegtate Swimming Cham- r reshman Lynn Sager paced he women, setting two meet. records in picking up two firsts. she set tbe records In tbe 100- neter freestyle (54.6) and tbe o-tree with a time of 25.78. The team scored 187 points hehlnd UC Davis (524), Stanford 444), san Jose (302) and UC Berkeley (205). Last year the ■"■men finished eighth. Awards dinner Wednesday Athletes from four sports will t>e feted Wednesday night at the annual Fall Awards Dinner to be held In the New Residence Hall Letters will be awarded tn football, cross country, water polo and soccer. There also-will he various special awards handed . The dinner will begin at 6:30 ">d tickets are $6. Tbey are '•■aliable at the Bulldog Founda- ■lon office In the Men's Gym and at the Athletic Department office. Fresno; Quarterback — Craig Kimball of San Jose; Running backs-Wlllard Harrell (offen¬ sive player of the year) of UOP and Bill Kramer of San Diego; Specialty - Alvaro Garcia of Fresno. Defensive first team: Down¬ line — Wilson Faumlnla of San Jose, Mike Gilbert of San Diego and Dave Wastck(defenslveplay- er of the year) of San Jose; Llnebackers-Burt BUckweU of San Diego, carl Ekern of San Joae, Bobby Henderson of Son Diego and Larry Zajonc of-San Jose; Defensive backs — Greg BaUey of Long Beach, Johnnie Gray of Fullerton, Monte Jack¬ son of San Diego and Louis Wright of San Jose. San Diego head coach Claude Gilbert was voted coach of the year. He guided the Aztecs of an 8-2-1 record and Its third title In a row. The Aztecs were 4-0 in conference play, beating the 'Dogs 24-21 after trailing 21-0 early in the game. Of the players selected to the two teams, 33 were seniors, six were Juniors and three were sophomores. Cagers topple Buffaloes 78-75 for first win The Bulldog hoopsters rallied from a slow start with an 18- polnt spree midway through the first half to claim their first hoop victory of the year, a 78-75 victory over the University of Colorado. Playing In Boulder, the 'Dogs fell behind 34-18 to the fast starting Buffaloes, but then reeled off 20 straight points to go Into the locker room with a 38-34 halftlme lead. In the second half the Buffaloes could only keep pace with the In the victory. Bulldog head coach Ed Gregory got several Impressive efforts with four players scoring In double figures. Roy Jones led all scorers with 18 points while Rodney Shanks came off the bench to score 17 and Joe Koslnskl entered the game late and scored ten points. But the most Impressive play was put in by Mark Haddan, who started In theplace of injured Pat O'Leary. Haddan shot and drove for 16 points. O'Leary didn't even make the trip to the land ot the Rockies. He was Injured In the game with Los Angeles State earlier In the week. Jones not only led all scorers. also pulled down tbe most , 15 for the night.Bruce Hennlng, the 'Dogs 6-11 center, fouled out In the second halt after scoring five points. The Bulldogs connected on 35 of 71 shots for a 49.2 per cent and made eight of 16 free throw attempts. Colorado managed only 44 per cent (32 of 72) but went 11 for 15 at the charity line. Monday night the Bulldogs will travel to Denter to play the Uni¬ versity of Denver. The game will be played In a new 6,000 seating field house. The 'Dogs defeated / Denver 77-66 last year In Sel- land Arena. This Christmas, ask for a gift for a lifetime. Hie HP-45 Advanced Scientific. Performs 44 scientific functions including vector arithmetic, rectangular to polar con¬ version, meamand standard deviation. Has 9 Addressable Memories. At $325rifs the pre-programmed calculator for a//scientists, engineers and students of science and engineering. *AII HP pocket calculators have Hewlett- Ptcfcardt patented RPN logic system wtth 4 Memory Stack. Prices exclude state and local taxes. The HP-35 Electronic Slide Rule. Performs all basic arithmetic, trig and log calculations automatically. Has ah Addressable Memory, displays 10 digits in fixed decimal or scientific notation, auto¬ matically positions decimal point through¬ out its 200-decade range. Cost. $225T •All HP pocket calculators have Hewlett- Packard* patented RPN logic system with 4 MexnoryStack. Prices exclude state and Make this a special Christmas. Ask for an instrument crafted to last your working lifetime and designed to solve the problems you can expect to encounter throughout that lifetime. THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE (IN THE HEART OP THI CAMPUS) OFFER GOOD 'TIL DEC. 20th A Hewlett Packaixl^
Object Description
Title | 1974_12 The Daily Collegian December 1974 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Dec 9, 1974 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | 2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, December 9, 1974 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Writer defends Israel Editor: With reference to Mr. Shlhabl's misconceptions, specifically: *. . . should be enough evidence that these people left their homes because of Israeli-government organized terrorist tactics* (DC, December 3rd). •The Arab States encouraged t homes temporarily In order to be armies." (1 ■Brotherly advice was given t the Arabs of Palestine to leave nd to stay temporarily In netgh- uns of the Invading Arab armies •Thei who remained In Haifa and accepted Jewish protection regarded as renegades.* (3 "It must not be forgotten that the Arab Higher Commute aged the refugees' flight from their homes In Jaffa, I only to help the refugee it to Impugn anybody bi are these refugees I ■s agreed upon t Is Indeed curious that Arab leaders of 1948 and the years sub- »nt do not agree with Mr. Shihahl "Misconception," lt appears, t a word to be used with so great a regard for personal Interpre- Davld A. Cohen ordlnlan newspaper, Palestln, February 19, 1949. ew York, Lebanese newspaper, Al Hoda, from Azzam pasha, ecretary General of the Arab League, by Hablb Issa, June 8, 951 he London weekly Economist. October 2, 1948. ear East Arabic Broadcasting Station, April 3, 1949. ally Telegraph of Beirut, from Emll Ghoury, Secretary of the 'How to be an Administrator' - Part 5 On The Who's tenth anniversary THE DAILY COLLEGIAN By Bob Merzolan finally got things together and h settled on a permanent nan lt was a steady stream ofslngles The album which kept the Who simmering but It wasn't until the release of the concept album "Tommy" that they really showed the extent s It. The n I nevertheless From "Tommy" came such smash singles as "Plnball Wlz- jrd," "The Seeker," "See Me, Feel Me," and "Overture From SALES AND SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM This Program is designed lo develop young college grad¬ uates (or careers in life insurance sales and sales manage¬ ment It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 2 weeks al a Home Office School) before moving into full sales work lified Those who are inter for management resp in the Home Office a such w Iter an itv are assured of ample o ork in either our field offi initial period in sales. Aggressive expansion plans for those accepted Arrange with the placemerr provide unusual opportu office for an interview JAMES W. SHANER C. t. U. General Agent will be on campus TUESDAY, DEC. 10 or call 226-7600 Connecticut Mutual Life L INSURANCE COMPANY • HARTFORD THE BLUE CHIP COMPANY . SINCE 1846 en Equal Opportunity Employer 1 ' they didn't r tlnued the near flawless i output releasing the electrifying album 'Live at Leeds" (from which "Summertime Blues* was released), 'Who's Next," and last year t "Quadrophenia." So Just In tim e Who's Is quite enjoyat actly exciting t enjoyable. Rlngo had much help from his friends (no pun Intended) and what friends they are. Listen for Harry Nllsson, Klaus Voorman, Bobby Keys, Nicky Hopkins, John Len- m Kelt- unimportant record? Let's , Rlngo has never been ngle after single.. ."Happy 1 "I can See For Miles," c Bus," 'Substitute" . . . meet someone especially tor you. Call Match Makers 222-5416 ten-year anniversary MCA has very good one re-released two double-album Rlngo's singing record sets of early Who LPs (as Capitol and Reprise have done in there-releasing of earlyBeach Boy albums). One set has the 'Magic Bus* and "My cenera- It makes his apparent lack of vocal talent Interesting, Indeed enjoyable. Daltry's the beglnn is now ... and Entwtstle's the group through the last ade. Coupled with their Rlngo I music. He was sweet" Beattle . mlddle-of-the-ro politician. He re This Is not t talented because oi prove Just how remarkable (an¬ other tired adjective, but . . .) they have been and are today. Speaking of established artists, Rlngo Starr has released a new LP entitled •Goodnight Vienna." alns so today, sav he Isn't ie better drum- he's the master of the straight beat. He also com¬ poses better-than-average ma¬ terial as "Call Me,* «Oo-Weet* and "All By Myself* on this al- m demonstrate. So t gist Birdwatcher Linda McMillin/487-3679 Who knows more about PSA, the unofficial state bird than your own official campus rep? With more California flights than any other airline, PSA is ready to take off any time you are. Next time you need a reservation, watch for your bird watcher. Or whistle. PSA gives you a lift. •Goodnight Vienna" Is nothing to cheer about . . . It's just a plain-old good-time album. And It'll probably make you smile. Finally, the answer to Cat Stevens has arrived and It's all good news! David Rlordan'a •Medicine Wheel* ts outstanding. Riordan has been around for a while, mostly writing songs for other groups; like the million selling "Green Eyed Lady* for Sugar Loaf In 1972. FALL SPECIAL ur io HI Ml WBX roa —-HYLAND-— DONOR CENTUt Monday, December 9, 1974 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN-3 Bulldogs place three on all-PC A A conference team i N>[ C By Rick Elkins Collegian Sports Editor Three Bulldog grtdders earned berths on tbe 1974 all-Pacific Coast Athletic Association foot¬ ball team, while seven others made the second team. Al Garcia, the 'Dogs long dis¬ tance placeklcker; Greg Ander¬ son, an offensive lineman and Calvin Young, the strong ttght end, all made the first team.Tbe announcement waa made last »eek by PCAA Commissioner [esse T. H1U after the confer- enc« coaches had gotten together md voted on the team selecUons. Making the second team were quarterback, Mor¬ gan Murray at center, Mike Komln at offensive guard, Don in rein at defensive lineman, Jim Mitchell at linebacker and both tpfenslve backs Calvin Lane and of the ten Fresno players hon- red by the coaches, five ofthem •til be returning as Bulldogs iMln next year as they are only un!ors. TheyareCortez,Carcla, : .me. Young and Jackson. The balloting had to be close for the kicking specialist as ,arcla, Ron Ploger of San Jose .uid Benny Rlcardo of San Diego ,11 had fine seasons. Ploger out- •.rored Garcia by seven points 71-64) but Garcia showed his ersattllty by punting at times and doing the klckoff chores. Many of those klckoffs sailed Into trie end zone, a place that the nail Is very seldom run out of. For the year Carcla kicked 2f| of 21 field goal attempts, it UOP be kicked three onsecutlve field goals of 50, 49 end 52 yards In the span of about tiree minutes. The latter kick established a new CSUF record tor field goal distance. Garcia ..jjosst a new season and career Young didn't play In the first Diego played consistently all sea¬ son which was Just one reason for the success quarterback Nef Cortez had. Cortez finished up the season with 2,198 total offensive yards, good for second In the conference and 13th In the nation. He passed tor 1,916 yards, completing 47 per cent of his passes. He also played a part In 15~ touchdowns. As a team the Bulldogs finished up third In passing offensive with 179.3 yards per game average. But they were fifth In rushing offensive and total offense. Defensively they did much bet¬ ter, as they led the conference In pass defense, allowing only 123.8 yards a game. Against the run, the 'Dogs were fourth In the conference giving up 206.9 yards Offensive first team: Wide re¬ ceivers—Ike McBee of San Jose and Dwlght McDonald of San Di¬ ego; Center-Hank Englehardt of UOP; Guards—Tony Bachmannof San Diego and Mel Vlsger of UOP; Tackles-Greg Anderson of Fresno and Morrison' England of UOP; Tight end-Calvin Young of Agali Women swimmers capture fifth place The CSUF women's swimming "am finished out Its conference om petition this weekend, taking Jirth in the Northern California ! ntercollegtate Swimming Cham- r reshman Lynn Sager paced he women, setting two meet. records in picking up two firsts. she set tbe records In tbe 100- neter freestyle (54.6) and tbe o-tree with a time of 25.78. The team scored 187 points hehlnd UC Davis (524), Stanford 444), san Jose (302) and UC Berkeley (205). Last year the ■"■men finished eighth. Awards dinner Wednesday Athletes from four sports will t>e feted Wednesday night at the annual Fall Awards Dinner to be held In the New Residence Hall Letters will be awarded tn football, cross country, water polo and soccer. There also-will he various special awards handed . The dinner will begin at 6:30 ">d tickets are $6. Tbey are '•■aliable at the Bulldog Founda- ■lon office In the Men's Gym and at the Athletic Department office. Fresno; Quarterback — Craig Kimball of San Jose; Running backs-Wlllard Harrell (offen¬ sive player of the year) of UOP and Bill Kramer of San Diego; Specialty - Alvaro Garcia of Fresno. Defensive first team: Down¬ line — Wilson Faumlnla of San Jose, Mike Gilbert of San Diego and Dave Wastck(defenslveplay- er of the year) of San Jose; Llnebackers-Burt BUckweU of San Diego, carl Ekern of San Joae, Bobby Henderson of Son Diego and Larry Zajonc of-San Jose; Defensive backs — Greg BaUey of Long Beach, Johnnie Gray of Fullerton, Monte Jack¬ son of San Diego and Louis Wright of San Jose. San Diego head coach Claude Gilbert was voted coach of the year. He guided the Aztecs of an 8-2-1 record and Its third title In a row. The Aztecs were 4-0 in conference play, beating the 'Dogs 24-21 after trailing 21-0 early in the game. Of the players selected to the two teams, 33 were seniors, six were Juniors and three were sophomores. Cagers topple Buffaloes 78-75 for first win The Bulldog hoopsters rallied from a slow start with an 18- polnt spree midway through the first half to claim their first hoop victory of the year, a 78-75 victory over the University of Colorado. Playing In Boulder, the 'Dogs fell behind 34-18 to the fast starting Buffaloes, but then reeled off 20 straight points to go Into the locker room with a 38-34 halftlme lead. In the second half the Buffaloes could only keep pace with the In the victory. Bulldog head coach Ed Gregory got several Impressive efforts with four players scoring In double figures. Roy Jones led all scorers with 18 points while Rodney Shanks came off the bench to score 17 and Joe Koslnskl entered the game late and scored ten points. But the most Impressive play was put in by Mark Haddan, who started In theplace of injured Pat O'Leary. Haddan shot and drove for 16 points. O'Leary didn't even make the trip to the land ot the Rockies. He was Injured In the game with Los Angeles State earlier In the week. Jones not only led all scorers. also pulled down tbe most , 15 for the night.Bruce Hennlng, the 'Dogs 6-11 center, fouled out In the second halt after scoring five points. The Bulldogs connected on 35 of 71 shots for a 49.2 per cent and made eight of 16 free throw attempts. Colorado managed only 44 per cent (32 of 72) but went 11 for 15 at the charity line. Monday night the Bulldogs will travel to Denter to play the Uni¬ versity of Denver. The game will be played In a new 6,000 seating field house. The 'Dogs defeated / Denver 77-66 last year In Sel- land Arena. This Christmas, ask for a gift for a lifetime. Hie HP-45 Advanced Scientific. Performs 44 scientific functions including vector arithmetic, rectangular to polar con¬ version, meamand standard deviation. Has 9 Addressable Memories. At $325rifs the pre-programmed calculator for a//scientists, engineers and students of science and engineering. *AII HP pocket calculators have Hewlett- Ptcfcardt patented RPN logic system wtth 4 Memory Stack. Prices exclude state and local taxes. The HP-35 Electronic Slide Rule. Performs all basic arithmetic, trig and log calculations automatically. Has ah Addressable Memory, displays 10 digits in fixed decimal or scientific notation, auto¬ matically positions decimal point through¬ out its 200-decade range. Cost. $225T •All HP pocket calculators have Hewlett- Packard* patented RPN logic system with 4 MexnoryStack. Prices exclude state and Make this a special Christmas. Ask for an instrument crafted to last your working lifetime and designed to solve the problems you can expect to encounter throughout that lifetime. THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE (IN THE HEART OP THI CAMPUS) OFFER GOOD 'TIL DEC. 20th A Hewlett Packaixl^ |