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Show Page 4 KBelllston & Norton's r) Find the rock contest jtf Look in the want ads for ) fl the next clue. Special astronomy class to be offered Thousands of Topics Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail o.-der catalog. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11322 IDAHO AVE , 206 LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 (213) 477-8474 Our research papers are sold for research purposes only. by Val Williams "Contemporary Astronomy," a class featuring more indepth coverage of certain topics, will be offered winter quarteraccording to Dr. David Tripp of the Physics Department. Now in its third year, the class, Physics 203, will feature the solar system, stellar evolution, galaxies, cosmology, and high-energy astrophysics. The Mariner and Viking expeditions to Mars will also be discussed. "We've made an effort to treat some interesting topics in a 5 UlAMUNUb IN I bKNAI IUIMAL Ur U I An m Introductory Special &3 fr Diamonds Pendants Wedding Sets $1 Wa guarantee two things: Our quality and your satisfaction. $ DIAMONDS INTERNATIONAL " Wosh. Blvd. Prop. M. Myr greater depth, but to keep the math level required to a minimum," Tripp said. The text for the class will be "New Frontiers in Astronomy." The book is a collection of reprints from "Scientific American," and provides a wide variety of authors and topics. Tripp will teach the .class, scheduled for Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 10 a.m. in the Planetarium. A term paper will be required, and it is preferable for students to have already taken Physics 103 (Introduction to Astronomy). QD0QDQD q nana Don It is not those who tell you all they know who create problems. Rather it is those who tell more than they know. HDD QDDD0DDD0 I - 4.--. '.-J 'fp V i rl ' A- j Sol . oft Hardback Remainders These and other titles drastically reduced! New books excellent for your library or Christmas presents. THI AM CB CAN AUTOMOtllE. Ralph Stoln. Mora than 70 extraordinary con-tamporary color photograph! by tha author plui 150 UW photot and ported reproductions. Pub. at S 19.95. ONLY $8.98 'II, THE AMIES OF THE ANT by Charios L Hoguo. d. by Alrod Moyor. Noarly 100 fullolar photot. Pub. at $12.50. ONLY $2.98 AMERICAN QUILTS, QU1LTNC AND PATCHWORK. Th Comptvta history aid Tochnlqu. By Adelaide Hchtllngr. 19 four aolor and 100 BAW photot, mor than 500 dlagromi of designs and pat-hrns. Pub. at $14.95. ONLY $6.98 Teleford predicts election The results of the national and state elections have been predicted by Professor I.R. Telford who is chairman of the Department of Political Science and Philosophy. Gerald R. Ford will be elected as President, says Telford. He realizes he is going against the polls, but he claims he is sticking to the incumbant theory with his predictions. On the basis of having seniority in Congress, Telford also says Senator Frank E. Moss (D-Utah) will be reelected.Congressmen to be seated will be Rep. Gunn McKay (D-Utah) and Dan Marriot, Republican, for the first and second districts of the Beehive State, says Telford. Attorney General Vernon B. Romney will be the next governor of the State of Utah. Telford says that he bases this prediction on Utah voters casting their -ballots for the Republican Party and they will not start scratching the ballot until after they have voted for Romney . Telford admits he has been wrong in the past, and he is not supported by his associates in his predictions, but he is standing firm with the anticipated results of this year's election. David L. Duncan will be elected Secretary of State Lieutenant Governor. The new Attorney General will be Robert B. Hansen. Telford relates what he bases his predictions with regards to the polls conducted and on the independent voter. "When a voter gets inside the booth you never know how he is going to vote," says Telford. "Various things could change his mind during election day." "The independent voter is one that's really like an apathetic voter," points out the political science chairman."The independent has a low degree of education and is usually a blue collar worker without much political involvement.Telford says the independent voter usually ends up going with the victor as outlined in the last poll taken prior to election days. "What good is his independence? " asks Telford. He says the independent voter has to come down off the fence sooner or later, and Telford wonders what good there is to having the independent when he doesn't really show independence as he follows the lead in the polls. Telford was asked his predictions a month ago and they were the same. He's sticking with the Ford outcome based on the in-cumbancy, and adds that the President was ahead in the polls in the State of California last week by about six percent, and he's going to be the victor of today's election. : J Loose money? by D.A. Willis Inside a machine in the UB by the gaming room is a piece of paper which reads: . "Do not use Canadian money. If you do, you will LOOSE it." I've heard of LOOSE women, but loose machines? Will the insertion of Canadian money in this milk and juice machine make it behave differently? Or does the informant mean that one should part with his Canadian money because he will LOOSE it that is, to infer that it will injure or contaminate whatever it comes in contact with. Now I wonder: Is it the machine that will be LOOSED or the money? If it is the money, maybe it is the root of all evil after all. Open forum to be hosted The Utah State Historical Society and the Utah Endowment for the Humanities will offer a public issue forum to be held at the Salt Lake City Public Library Lecture Hall, 209 East . Fifth South. On Nov. 3, 1976, Dr. Bruce Mayfield of the University of Utah will speak on Campaign Rhetoric. The discussant for the issue will be Richard Richards, Chairman for the State Central Committee for the Republican Party. The program will begin at 7 p.m. |