Page 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1978 ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS IF YOU HAVE ORDERED A 1979 AGGIELAND, PLEASE STOP BY THE STUDENT PUBLI CATIONS OFFICE, ROOM 216 REED MCDONALD, AND PAY A $2.00 MAILING FEE ALONG WITH YOUR FORWARDING AD DRESS SO YOUR AGGIELAND CAN BE MAILED TO YOU NEXT FALL WHEN THEY ARRIVE. Walnut Cabinet optional MARANTZ PUTS GREAT SOUND UNDER SMALL PRICE TAGS COMPLETE SYSTEM: $649.80! A complete Marantz System for just $649.80. Whether you’re looking for the con noisseur’s small system or the ultimate starter system, check this one piece-by-piece: The Model 2218 AM/FM Stereo Receiver. 24 Watts per channel into 4 ohms from 20 to 20,000 Hz with no more than 0.15% Total Harmonic Distortion, or 18 Watts per channel into 8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz with no more than 0.08% THD. Even this most economical of Marantz receivers doesn’t skimp on technology. Dual Gate MOSFET FM Front End, Phase-Locked Loop FM Multiplex De modulator for superb stereo separation, Full Complementary Direct Coupled Output Cir cuitry, and much more. The Model 6170 Direct-Drive Turntable. Auto-Lift and Auto-Shut-Off. All the steady ef ficiency of Direct Drive — just 0.03% wow and flutter (WRMS). The exclusive Marantz Low Distortion Tone-Arm — because of its design, tracking error distortion is 30% lower than with conventional tone-arms. Pitch Con trol means precise adjustment of platter speed — perfect for play-along. Damped Cueing and Anti-Skating add to stylus life. Model HD-440 High Definition Speaker System. An extremely compact 3-way, air suspension, bookshelf- system incorporating., an 8-inch Woofer, 3 1 /2-incn Midrange and 3 1 /2-inch Tweeter. Handles up to 50 Watts of integrated program material with a Fre quency Response of 45 Hz to 18 kHz ± 3 dB. The results: powerful, punchy sound from a very small package! Finished with walnut- grain pattern vinyl to be both attractive and durable. That’s it — a lot of performance for a little money. Because the whole Marantz idea is to give you more than you’d expect to get, even though you expect a lot from Marantz. THERE’S NEVER BEEN A BETTER TIME TO BUY MARANTZ. We sound better HOMECRAFT ELECTRONICS “ONE STOP SHOPPING FOR ALL YOUR AUDIO & VIDEO NEEDS" 693-8097 1921 S. TEXAS-C-S. (ACROSS FROM BUD WARD VOLKSWAGEN) Radio /haek 1125 Villa Maria Biyan 846-7384 Culpepper Plaza College Station 693-1444 f ■ HI ‘Traditional’ values threatened Movement discourages buying United Press International NEW YORK — The de marketing movement now appears to be part of an emerging “counter economy,” that could have a great impact on the so-called “tra ditional, American values. The movement — persuading consumers not to buy — probably grew out of the counter culture that mushroomed in the 1960s, but really came into focus during the 1973 — ‘74 energy crisis. It is not the same as the “subter ranean economy” described by Dr. Peter Gutmann of New York’s Baruch College last year. Some of the denizens of this underground economic world are tax dodgers but many are dropouts from the regular economy who are looking for an al ternative life style and work in jobs or businesses not counted in the Gross National Product. In an address to the Direct Mail Marketing Association at Miami Beach early this year. Hazel Hen derson, who runs what her pub lisher calls a “mom and pop think tank” called the Center for Alterna tive Futures at Princeton, N.J., gave a description of the counter economy. She said its decentralized world is filled with people who question the competitive high technology urban rat race and “who think the goal of ever rising material wealth in mass consumption societies is no longer realistic. ” The term was defined in the early 1970s by Philip Kotler and Sidney J. Carter calls for boycotts against anti-inflation foes United Press International ST. LOUIS — President Carter Monday virged the nation’s urban leaders to boycott businesses that refuse to join his voluntary anti- inflation fight, saying “the future of our cities, is at stake. Carter addressed the National League of Cities meeting here be fore flying to Salt Lake City to ac cept the Mormon Church “Family Unity award. In St. Louis, he warned the mayors there will be “severe limits” on federal aid for their cities in the 1980 budget and called on them to stop doing business with firms not in compliance with the adminis tration’s wage-price standards. Columbus, Ohio, Mayor Tom Moody, president of the league, told Carter, “You have our fidl sup port in this crucial work.” There will be exceptions in his tight 1980 budget, the president said, but for the most part it will be WE BUY BOOKS EVERY DAY! And remember we give 20% more in trade for used books. 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Tomorrow is an electronic world, based on computers — and it's already here! Your entire family can be pleasurably elevated into this brave new world. The priceless gift of tomorrow now has a price: $599 . . . and a name: The Radio Shack TRS-80 Microcomputer. Radio Shack's computer system surely ought to be on the gift list of every family. Despite that $599 — though less than a moped — is costlier than an electric train. Or two! A proud father writes to tell us "this investment is one of the most significant in value to our family and to the future education of our child that we have ever seen." Radio Shack's TRS-80 computer is the ideal "family Christmas gift," and one which has only become affordable in recent months. Until now, the possibility of owning or giving a computer was unthinkable. A computer? That can teach? Remember? Display on its own screen? Keep the family budget? Catalog recipes? Play games? Be programmed easily from its own typewriter keyboard? Now, the Tomorrow Machine is not only thinkable, but practical, affordable, and available. The Radio Shack TRS-80 microcomputer system is for your family. Discover Tomorrow or Christmas morning . . . this year! Big city people want out United Press International ST. LOUIS — One third of the nation s urban residents would move away from their cities if given the chance, according to a survey conducted for the National League of Cities. Crime was given as the major rea son for dissatisfaction with cities. The findings by the Gallup or ganization of Princeton, N.J., showed the proportion of those wanting to move holds for small and medium-size cities as we r the largest urban areas. By contrast, in communities with a population less than 50,000, only 15 percent would like to leave and in open country areas only 12 per cent want to leave. George H. Callup, board chair man of the polling organization, re ported the survey’s findings at a news conference Sunday during the opening session of the league’s an nual convention. President Carter delivered an urban policy address to the conven tion Monday. Gallup said 4,000 residents of cities with populations of more than 50,000 were polled in the first three months of the year and an additional 1,200 urban residents were ques tioned in a sampling completed last week. “Those people most likely to ex press the desire to leave their cities are from the same upper socio economic groups which have been moving away for the last three dec ades — residents the cities can least afford to lose, Gallup said. “These include the younger, better-educated, more affluent population who provide the largest share of local tax revenues as well as most of the people needed to fill public and private leadership roles. “Conversely, the least likely to want to move away are the older, less-educated, less affluent popula tion segments, including the more public service-dependent groups such as the retired and the unem ployed. ” He said an important exception was low-income blacks, a larger per centage of whom want to move away than low-income whites. “Key factors influencing the de sire to move away from the cities are crime; overcrowding or population congestion; the poor condition; maintenance and appearance of res idential housing; unemployment or low pay; air pollution; dirt; traffic congestion; racial problems, and poor schools,” Gallup said. th By P “bare,” impacting on defense needs as well as social programs. “Plainly,” said the president, "the future of our cities is at stake in our fight against inflation. I call on you today (Vlonday) not to buy from firms that fail to comply with our wage-price standards. “But these steps won’t be enough,’’ he added. “The 1980 budget will be very, very tight. It will disappoint those who do not take inflation seriously.” Levy in the Harvard Business | view as the efforts of business toi courage customers from buying | cause future supplies were untT tain or because particular prodJ were not very profitable to male L etca j£ ^ But Henderson, who callsll| ro P^ ex movement The Decline of Jom ism,’ said the counter-econoc®'' ass ' c ’ people have their own de-inarkettl- 0 ^ two oi ideas and their impact is being(elM™ ’ iprestigious She cited a 1976 study by Strl “We le ford Research Institute and a HrSteani in th Poll survey, both of which shojre did in millions of Americans are deli‘ Metcalf sa mined to return to a simplerwnlinent we h; living not based on high technolo® or keeping up with the Joneses, One of the most striking poll t- lj/T'1 suits showed the respondentsfelti « a 2-to-1 margin "that inflationcaiiT better controlled by buying ijiI less of those products short in«J ply and high in price, rathertfcr] producing more goods to su$| demands. ” out Uniti dalla; Beaffused ; The counter economy alsorei8| e g' or t higl nuclear power as hazardous aa!p 0 y morn interested in solar power anil jL- e p are ^ j newable sources of energy, gut to be a It considers the GNP econ jbver the excessively competitive. Acomr|S atljr day. view is that competition hascrK® I workei a national neurosis of aggressive 4 se ll w that can’t he reconciled with®onday. J tenets of Christian brotherhood, - Self image i said. Bnirself as ;think of yc “A far more important reas« jj on 't y 0U that the goal of ever-rising mail some ] low t wealth in mass consumptioniac» ressec j a i) trial societies is simply no Im* His plan v ery realistic despite what adveJU b e fb re ing tells the public," she said. s at imJ a y \ This legitimate non-marketcm e ’i nc ^ vv ponent of the national econo®B 11 P" a ^' ze vastly bigger than realized. H» am n ’ derson said it could amountIom "hen y billion a y ear that is not includeiB/Py , I ? out the GNP. That’s half again as Gutmann estimated for the iw 10e c ° n * < dost our first ;We had bee terranean economy. FBI probe of King called flawef jand when v pfore the [pits. “Anybody is game k it is easier i lose it i We kne lexas we v United Press International Pam aroun WASHINGTON - The Housefce it each sassinations Committee into that < Monday the FBI’s investigati whole week the Martin Luther King Jr. mwlonfidence. was “flawed because it failed*Teaff beg check a possible conspiracy invfunday nig ing members of James Earl f lame, family. I"! met wi Ray, the convicted assassin W a half, claimed for years he was thediif-Nd. “The t a much wider conspiracy to ^mmitmer King’s life, and that his conlawher that t. the scheme was a man narflay the bt “Raoul.” Bay.’ Chief committee counsel I Teaff also Robert Blakey said the FBI s would u: have closely investigated tbr ^am at qua tivities of two of Ray’s brotlr'P^d off ha see if one or both could havebP e Ms game, the mysterious Raoul. BlakeyM* Then or tioned the FBI’s response “to:i Um ped on t stantial evidence of contactfimir at tween Ray and his brothers, ^ trying and John, at various times bet'F't said T his escape from prison and tklwers they sassination, ’ April 4, 196f facial ha Memphis, Tenn. L ^ though “Coupled with these indiatil* 63 ^ sa ’d- of a family-based association »j|® a t way • Tl the indications that the mysteiw '*• ’Raoul might actually have!*® one or both of the brothers, He also cited “the notable‘f sence of active participation inf assassination investigation b)'| ; J tice Department attorneys. He<* I ceded, however, that thismaykl The Texas been due to poor relations: ball team v existing between the FBI and 5 Southwest I department. ment over tl Blakey said the FBI closely in* | The Aggi tigated some 50 previous df ; tniversity i threats against King, but, he52-45. The v seemed to lose interest once as the Aggi was caught. Von Bunn “Candor requires the com®* B Texas A& that the evidence indicates that* found to performance of the FBI, as wfl Garbondale the Justice Department, jthe Aggies n flawed,” he said. fcecond garni The flaw, he said, was not in i Claremore 1 pursuit of Ray “but in the searttl Pope was 1: others who might have beenj volved in the assassination. Ag I HOUSE OF YOUR SUPERMARKET FOR NEW AMERICAN CARS Can Broker any American made car straight from Detroit & save you hundreds, possiblf thousands! You can probably buy a ’79 model cheapei than what you paid for a ’78! AL GUTIERREZ - BROKER ALSO OWNER OF HOUSE OF BOOTS & HOUSE OF TIRES.