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Show Conservative Trend national survey of 328,000 college freshmen conducted by UCLA and the American Council on Education suggests that today's freshmen are more conservative on social issues than their predecessors. For example, three of every five (59.7 percent) believe "there is too much concern in the courts for the rights of criminals." In 1971 only 48 percent thought that. For the first time in the survey's history, the number of liberals does not outnumber conservatives by a majority. The number of students who call themselves liberals declined last year from 28.8 to 25.6 percent, while conservatives increased from 14.5 to 152 percent. Regardless of labels, many freshmen continue to express strong liberal views when it comes to personal rights. Only 28.4 percent believe that a woman's activities should be confined Jo the home; 48.8 percent think couples should live together before marriage, and 49.4 percent think sex is okay if the people like each other. An updated gests that any participant who fails to complete the designated job satisfactorily be returned to the courts for sentencing. The offender would also be required to contribute a portion of his salary toward the compensation of' his victim. Such a program, in Etzionisopinion, would save society $7900 in direct expenses per criminal. The Law Enforcement Assistance Administration under the Justice Department is currently scrutinizing the benefits of assigning work to offenders. Its evaluations will be completed sometime in late 1978. Crime Solution Sociology professor Amitai Etzioni of Columbia University prefers an e alternative to sending young offenders to jail. He has proposed offering minimum wage public service jobs to those aged 16 to 25 who've first-tim- committed misdemeanors. Etzionis plan is to permit first offenders to work closely with people who live constructive lives rather than limit their contacts to hardened criminals. To avoid the image of providing a free ticket for criminals, Etzioni sug 2-- 1 r It broils! It bakes! It toasts 4 slices automatically! Its the Toast N Broil toaster from GE. Toast-R-Ove- rf If you want a toaster oven that does everything this toaster oven dot's, get yourself a GE. broiler. It's a This GE toaster oven has a separate broil setting that lets you broil steaks, hamburgers, hot dogs easily and conveniently. And because it broils, GE'stoasteroven makes more than two hundred dishes you can't make in most other toaster ovens! The - broiler pan helps protect the m.enor from spatters and it pops into the dishwasher for easy cleaning high-wa- ll Its a great oven. GEs toaster oven handles the dozens of small cooking jobs youd hate to heat up your big oven for. Like sandw a hes. baking casseroles, warming leftovers. And it toaster. It toasts breads and rolls, both sides at once, and shuts off automatically. A bell rings when toast is odd-siz- e foods that require different temperatures. It's an automatic toaster. It takesthepLkeofa4 slue models include Toast-R- - Features! Features! The thermostatically controlled oven has settings from 200 F to 5O0F. Automatic Top Brown setting is great for melting, crisping and browning. And ready Removable rack, oven trav, broiler pan and swing-o)ecrumb tray make clean- n in tandem with vour big oven when vou want to cook g the Deluxe ready. a signal bell rings when food is works broils, bakes and toasts 2slices. ing easy. Only GE givesyou so many models to choose from. See them all at your GE dealer's now. The model featured here is theT2fi. TheT23 OtNf item' mjf t)yGoprd' f iJoc use DuPont Tetor non stick coattns Jeansomania Oven toaster (T93B) as well as Toast-R-Ove- n the King Size toaster (T97). There's a size for every family, a price for every budget. Whichever model you choose, once you own a Toast toaster from GE, youll wonder how you ever managed without it. GENERAL) ELECTRIC Soviet youth is being warned against jeanso-manithe habit of wearing blue jeans at all functions, no matter how formal. A Soviet fashion designer recently complained that Russians were wearing blue jeans while attending performances of the Bolshoi Ballet. Enthusiasm for blue jeans should not be turned into jeansomania, warned designer Vyacheslav Zaitsev, pointing out that for some strange reason young Russians seem to prefer patched and worn blue jeans. A real red square, that Zaitsev! a, |