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Collegian - 1967 July 14 - Page 1



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Should not he controlled'  Ellis heads Faculty News in fall  Beginning fall
quarter, Faculty News will  have a new editor. Dr. Fred Ellis of the
education  department was selected by the Faculty  Communications Committee
to succeed  James Mulligan, who resigned at the end of  spring quarter. 
Ellis intends to make the News a sounding  board for faculty discussion. I
would like  every faculty member with an opinion tofeel  free to express it
in Faculty News," he said.  "I don't want to make it a debate on
polarities,  but Iwant all views to be made known.  when asked his opinion
on the decision  handed down by PresidentHarvey C. Bunke  during fall
quarter, specifying that all editorial  comment and news from othercampuses
 not be printed, Ellis said it was " . . . a terrible  mistake to try to
turn the News into aschedule."  "A free press is one of the most important 
things that can exist on a campus," he added.'The Faculty News and the
Collegian should not  and hopefully, will not, be controlled by those 
whosupport them."  As to the importance of the publications to  the faculty
and students, Ellis says that itdepends  on the individual. "Some people
don't  even look at them, some just read the schedules,and some read and
try to understand every  article,'' he said. The papers should be concerned
 withviable news, not just trivia about  trees and buildings. "(Elns
commended the Collegian  for the relevance of its editorials and  news this
past year.)  Faculty News will be publishedMondays during  the
regularschool year.  THE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE  Dr. Fred Ellis,
new editor of FacultyNews  Wages stay at $1.25, says Nusbaum  minimum wage
excludes students  CalUGflN I Vol. LIX No.34 Friday, July 14, 1967
Bellingham, Wn. 98225  Wages for student employees  will remain at $1.25
for at least  one more year according to Joe  Nusbaum, Western's Business 
Manager.  He said that last yearthere  was some confusion over  whether or
not wages would be  raised to $1.40 beginning this  summer.The confusion,
he said, stemmed  from the fact that the new  state minimum wage is $1.40 
and thatmany people assumed  that student wages would be  raised
accordingly.  The new minimum wageruling,  however, specifically excludes 
students and employees  of other state agencies.  Nusbaumfurther said that
if  the school raised student salaries  at this time they would  have to
cut down on thenumber  of student jobs.  Nusbaum projected into the  future
by saying that in July or  September of nextyear wages  would be increased
to $1.40 or  $1.45.  Student employes at the University  of Washingtonare
presently  paid $1.40.  Llords to show theatre in miniature  A continuation
of Western's  1967Summer Arts and Lectures  Program will be Llords'
International  Marionettes, to be presented  at8:30 next Wednesday in  the
College Auditorium. There  will Joe no admission charge.  Daniel Llords
isthe creator  and sole manipulator of the show.  His talent has brought
him international  acclaim as oneof the  world's foremost puppeteers. He 
returns puppetry to a classical  atmosphere. The show is adultentertainment
and not recommended  for children under 12.  The program will be in four 
parts. The firstsection will be  "Fantasy on Faust" in two  scenes, to the
ballet music of  Charles Gounod. The secondwill  be "Miniature Classics" in
six  scenes.  The third section is the colorful  and elaborate "Gaiete
Pari-sienne."  It is the comic opera  of Offenbach, depicting and
satirizing  the style-conscious Paris  at theturn of the century.  The
final part is "Capriccio  Espagnel." This is a visual interpretation  of
the musical essay by Nicholas Rimsky-Kors-akov.  It is the most challenging
 number, demanding all Llords'virtuosity and dexterity. It  frames a small
Spanish village,  from dawn's religious procession  to thefiesta at
nightfall.  T h e Llords' International  Marionettes is theater in
miniature.  It offers the highcomedy  and farce of a thoroughly
profes-sional  organization.  Ballet stars arrested  San Francisco
—Rudolph  Nureyev and Mar got Fonteyn,  stars of the
Royal Ballet Company  of London, and RichardCornwell, assistant manager of 
the Seattle Symphony, were  among 17 persons arrested by  SanFrancisco
police Tuesday  at what was called by the Seattle  Times " . . . a drug
party in the  Haight-Ashbury hippie district."  Later releases indicated
that the  group had only been smoking  marijuana.  Thepair was charged with
 visiting a place where narcotics  were used and with disturbing the 
peace. Thecharges were later  dropped.  Nureyev, who has been acclaimed  by
Time magazine as  one of theworld's foremost  ballet artists, was in San
Francisco  with Miss Fonteyn and the  Royal BalletCompany for a one  week
presentation. The Ballet  Company will be performing in  Seattle soon. 
Actorsare victimized in  lonesco play about duty  Play "Victims of Duty" to
be shown  Thursday through FridayPlay questions the reality of time  Time
makes slaves of people,  thinks innkeeper Ambrosio, and  the only logical
thing to do is get  rid of it.  Thus begin the happy, farcical  events of
Arthur Fauquez' The  ManWho Killed Time, a fast-moving  French children's
comedy  to be presented by the Western  Playersat 3 p.m. July 21  and 22 in
the Old Main Theater.  The play, according to director-  designer
GayleCorneli-son,  is " . . .entertaining for all  gages, but probably more
informative  for older children andadults."  Ambrosio, played by Howard 
Lockman, reasons that by eliminating  all mechanicaltimekeeping  devices
men will be  freed from the chains of time  and will be able to enjoy life.
He  finds,however, that a world devoid  of time can be chaotic.  Other
characters include  Merle Gebers asSpazzino, Douglas  Foster as Regolo,
Carolyn  Ross as Padrona, Didge Pearson  as Fantesca andJohn Mo  Cann as
Romeo.  Costuming for the production  is by Vic Leverett. Dennis Cat-rell 
is technicaldirector.  Stark, tense, psychological,  unreal, comic, tragic,
burlesque,  commercial, didactic,moralizing. . .  Eugene Ionesco's Victims
of  Duty, being presented by the  Western Players Thursdaythrough Saturday
under the direction  of Dr. Thomas Napie-cinskL  is all this and more. 
Victims of Dutyis an expression  of psychological reality set  in a
backdrop of physical unreality.  Superficially itwanders as  extensively
and randomly as the  human mind itself, but always it  remains consistent
to itsmajor  theme of duty. It is a dream  playt in which the audience
leaps  jerkily and abruptly through timeand space, following the
subconscious  gyrations of the leading  character's mind.  The play begins
withChou-bert  (Al Simpson) and his wife  Madeleine (Ellen Catrell) sitting
 at home arguing about thetheater. Choubert insists that  all drama, past
and present, is  nothing but glorified detective literature,presenting a
problem,  a method and a solution. In the  midst of the argument a real 
detective, known only as "Mr.  Chief Inspector" (Don Krag)  knocks on the
door and is invited  in, whereupon discussion on thephilosophy of theater
ceases and  a search for a criminal, "Mal-lot  with a T," is begun.  In the
name ofduty, Madeleine  and the detective force Choubert  into a mind-trip
in search of  Mallot. He is pusheddown, deep  down into his subconscious, 
searching his past. He does not  find Mallot. But he finds many sordid
examples of the demoralizing  effects of obeisance to  duty.  Finally a
neighbor, Nicholas  D'Eu(Frank Jenkins) enters and,  as the detective feeds
wood and  iron to Choubert "to fill the  gaps in hismemory", renews  with
the detective the argument  about the theater. D'Eu takes a  disliking to
thedetective and  stabs him to death.  Madeleine decides that in order  to
atone for the death, someoneshould take over the detective's  search for
Mallot. D'Eu  readily agrees, and enlists the  help ofChoubert, who
reluctantly  succumbs as D'Eu stuffs  more wood and iron into his  mouth. 
"We are allvictims of duty,"  Choubert suddenly shouts, and so  saying,
shoves wood and iron into  the mouths ofMadeleine and  D'Eu, making them
join in the  suffering of duty.



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     Collegian - 1967 July 14 - Page 2



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2 The Collegian Friday, July 14, 1967  editorials  tell it like it 'tis 
Means to the end  News item: Congressof Racial Equality, at convention  in
Oakland, strikes from its constitution  provision which made it
a"multiracial organization."  New wording defines CORE as " . . . a mass
membership  organization toimplement the concept of black  power for black
people."  The leaders of CORE have made a fateful andprobably irrevocable
decision; a decision which nationally-  syndicated columnist James J.
Kilpatrickscornfully labels a ". . . backward leap," explainable  "only in
terms of the pathology of madness."  But is it madness?  The Black man has
been taught, from the day he  set foot on the American continent, togrovel
at the  feet of his White master. He has been told day in and  day out that
Black is bad and Whiteis good; that the  "good nigger" is the one who most
thoroughly imitates  the ways and manners of Whitesuperiority. He has  been
taught to be ashamed of his heritage, of his talk,  even of his body. 
TheAmerican Negro is a man without a cultural  identity. He has been forced
to mimic the culture of  anotherpeople, to study another people's history
while  knowing nothing of his own. He has lost his sense ofprice; in
himself and in his people.  And now the White liberal has decided the Negro
 has beendowntrodden too long, so he has passed civil  rights laws and
given economic aid and been sincerelyconcerned about righting the wrongs of
the past.  But the Negro cannot be truly equal in our society  untilhe has
regained enough self-confidence to know  that he is really as much a human
being as any otherperson. The job of rebuilding pride and confidence and 
dignity can be neither instituted nor aided by theWhite  man. It is a task
which must be achieved by the Negro  alone, and black power is the means
tothat end.  Black power is not the devilish witchcraft it has  been made
out to be; rather, it is the onlysalvation of  the American Negro. The
Negro must cut himself off  from White society until he has foundthe inner
strength  to face his old masters with the assurance of his own, 
individual, worth. CORE hastaken a necessary and  inevitable step in the
evolution of the American Negro to  a position of socialresponsibility,
identity and equality.  —Robert W. Hicks  The great hoax
 "Tut, tut, child," said theDuchess.  "Everything's got a moral if only you
can find it."  Alice in Wonderland-  Lewis Caroll  When theworld's two
foremost ballet artists,  Rudolph Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn, get arrested 
in Haight-Asburyat a party where people are smoking  marijuana it makes one
stop and wonder.  When Life, one ofAmerica's largest circulation  and
allegedly responsible magazines prints an article  whose tone supportsthe
legalization of marijuana it  makes one stop and wonder.  When Leslie
Feidler, one of America sleading  literary critics, is arrested for
permitting people to  smoke marijuana in his home it makes onestop and 
wonder. „. ,„. ,.  When Robert E.
Craig, state senator from Michigan,  is planning tointroduce a bill to
legalize marijuana it  makes one stop and wonder.  The reason it makes US
stop andwonder is because  we were all brought up to believe that marijuana
inevitably  leads to sin, degradationand heroin.  Now we look around us and
see that millions of  people, about 200 million world wide, most ofthem not
 even hippies, are smoking marijuana and are not  especially sinful,
degraded or using heroin.Could it be that we've been lied to? 
—Chris Condon  . . . just bitching . . .  Editor, the
Collegian:  As aregular reader of the  Collegian for the past year, it  is
obvious, to me, that the sole  justification for theexistence  of this
impotent journalistic effort  is to provide Western's so-called  community
of scholarswith a bitch-box. This given, I  would
liketocontributemybitch-of-  the-week, thus joining this illustrious,and,
certainly, enviable,  pride of pedants.  Teachers ft use this term  loosely
as, not even by thewildest  corruption of the term, can  most members of
Western's fac-.  ulty be called teachers) atWestern  who administer,
unannounced,  tests during the first class  meeting after a four dayholiday
 need to examine their motives.  Certainly, such a teacher  (there's that
inappropriate  wordagain)isnotconcernedwith  teaching his students
anything,  nor is he concerned with the  knowledge theymay have
accidentally  acquired by their fifty  minute exercises in patience  and
tolerance. At best sucha  teacher (?
—!!+-!!—) is arbitrarily  asserting
his didactic  sense of authority in order to  "catch"someone and to conceal
 the ineptness he displays  daily in the instructional  setting. 
HURLEYDRUG MART  1311 Commercial  • Prescriptions 
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Western Washington State College,  Bellingham, Wash.  PHONE 734-88QQ.
EXTENSION 269  Second class postage paid at Bellingham, Washington 98225 
COPY DEADLINE—MONDAY 5:30  FOUNDINGMEMBER PACIFIC
STUDENT PRESS  Affiliated with United States Student Press Association,
Collegiate Press Service  Intercollegiate Press Service, Associated
Collegiate Press  CHRISTOPHER B. CONDONEditor-in-Chief  COPY
EDITOR—Neal Johns BUSINESS MANAGER-Kenneth Riddell  ART
CRITIC—Bob Hicks AD MANAGER—Eric Warn
 CARTOONIST—Mike Condon PHOTOGRAPHER-Scott
FinleyADVISER-Ed Nichols  STAFF REPORTERS  Rich O'Brien - Jim McKay - Dail
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COLOR PRINTSTRANSPARENCIES  'S  Camera Shop  108 E. Magnolia  734-5900 
Perhaps, these fools are,  merely,pro-primary teachers  and are engaged in
a crusade  to keep alive the popular myth  that teaching is at itsbest at 
the bottom of the academic ladder  and progressively degenerates  until it
reaches the dismal state at which we find it.  Could it possibly be that I 
am the only student who had a  four day holiday? Did everyone  else
ravenously devour large  chunks of knowledge? Was the  holiday for faculty
membersonly? Is there an unwritten law  that states —
students shall not  have holidays?  Just Bitching andWondering  Featuring 
LIVE MUSIC  By  INTERLUDES  every  Friday and Saturday  9:30 until dosing 
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     Collegian - 1967 July 14 - Page 3



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Friday, July 14, 1967 The Collegian- 3  'More troops"—
Westmoreland  U.S. should be winning, isn't  ByFRANK SINGEWALD 
Contributing Writer  If the "kill ratio" — the ratio of
Viet Cong  killed to Americans— is even approximately 
correct, the U.S. is winning the military war in  Vietnam. This is the view
of thePentagon, U.S.  officials in Washington and most newsmen.  However,
in what is called "the other war"—  the struggle of
pacification — it is widely conceded  that little
progress is being made. The  VietCong, says an article on "The Struggle to 
Rescue the People" in the April issue of Fortune,  exercisecontrol "over
nearly two thirds  of South Vietnam's 12 million peasants."  "Nobody," the
article goes ontosay,"really  knows how many of South Vietnam's 12,000 
hamlets (average population about 1,000)are  under total Viet Cong control.
The number is  at least 4,000. Thousands more are'contested,' 
usuallymeaning that So. Vietnamese authorities  enter in the daytime, while
the Viet Cong, who  More casualtiesmean more troops  needed on both sides 
rule at night, make terror the dominant law.  No more thanperhaps one out
of five hamlets  nationwide is secure enough for American or  Saigon
officials to entersafely by day or night  without armed escort
— although U.S. authorities  claim a higher figure.
These2,000 or so  hamlets are the only ones that can be counted  as
'pacified' and really under the control ofthe Saigon Government"  No area
in So. Vietnam has received more  "pacification" attention thanQuangnam
Province,  in which Danang, site of the great U.S.  air and marine base, is
situated. About100  square miles of this province was given a  "national
priority area" rating at the Honolulu  conference inFebruary 1966. About
half of the  73,000 U.S. Marines in Vietnam have been  used in local
"securityoperations," a large  proportion of this area where Marines have 
been getting mortar fire from the time they  landed at Danang in March
1965. As their commander,  Lieut. Gen. Lewis W. Wilt, put it,  "I had
astudy made and it turned out that  180,000 people live within 81-MM.
mortar range  of our airfield. Thatmeant that we could not  have real
security unless we could get those  people on our side, so we went into the
pacification  business ourselves." (Fortune, April 1967).  Fortune charges
that where the Viet Congmeet resistance they resort to terror. On its 
face, mere is something fishy about the assumption(which is apparently the
premise of the  pacification effort) that the Viet Cong hold the  people by
terror. Isay "on its face" for the  simple reason that it is axiomatic that
no  guerrilla organization can operateanywhere  for any time without the
support of the people.  Former Master Sergeant Donald Duncan of  theGreen
Berets, who served 18 months of  combat duty in Vietnam and was an area
specialist,discussed the "terror" theory in his  essay "The Whole Thing was
a Lie." Saying  in part, "Scv Vietnam isa relatively small  country, dotted
with thousands of small villages.  In this very restricted area
companiesand  battalions of Viet Cong can maneuver under  the very noses of
government troops, but the  peopledon't betray these movements, even 
though it is a relatively simple thing to pass  the word. On the otherhand,
government movements  are always reported.  Those who back up the terror
theory by  pointing to the murder of village chiefs, wrote  Duncan, fail to
note that — "province, district,  village and
hamletchiefs are appointed, not  elected. Too often petty officials are not
even  people from the area but outsiders being rewarded  for political
favors. Those who ai#  from the area are, thought of as quislings because 
they have gone against their own by  cooperating with Saigon."  By
murdering officials recognized by the people as agents of the corrupt
government in  Saigon and the landlord class, Duncan pointed  out, theViet
Cong actually gain friends among  the populace.  A more logical explanation
for the Viet  Cong'scontinuing hold on the countryside and  its people: 
First, the people of the villages (with exceptions  ofcourse) are
convinced, on the basis of  harsh experience, that all they can expect from
 Saigon and itsrepresentatives are oppression,  exploitation and extortion.
 Second, rightly or wrongly, they are alsoconvinced that the Viet Cong is
fighting to free  them from this oppression, exploitation and 
extortion.Another "new" pacification program is now  being launched. It is
more elaborate and costly  than anyprevious program. Yet the Fortune  piece
gives it only a fifty-fifty chance of success  and even then "theeffort
will take years, perhaps  as much as a decade of persistence and 
patience."  What is "new"about this pacification program?  The same 59-man
pacification teams that  were hailed a year ago asthe "solution" to the 
problem — and that failed dismally —
are to  stay in business. And this time halfthe So.  Vietnamese army
(ARVN), a full 75 battalions,  is being shifted to pacification duty. "What
 bettermission for ARVN," said an American  official, "than protecting
their country's most  precious possession— its people." 
The trouble with this theory is that whenever  ARVN troops move about the
countryside,they  behave like a conquering army, appropriating  livestock,
raping women and extorting tribute invarious ways. ARVN's officers are
notoriously  corrupt and contemptuous of the rights of the  people.Should
civilian victims of their thievery  object, they are regarded as "suspected
VC's"  or "VCsympathizers." Ineither case the standard  practice of ARVN is
torture and, not infrequently,  murder.The cold fact is that ARVN is a
logically  exrescence of the Saigon regime and logically  shares its
corrupt and brutal characteristics.  Fortune quotes a "cynical American
official"  as saying that he expectedARVN to take  its new assignment "as a
license to sit and do  nothing." And Fortune, aware of ARVN'scharacter, 
added, "as counter productive as doing  nothing might seem, ARVN troops
could do evenworse if they continue to treat the peasants as  badly as they
have in the p a s t . . ."  Desertions in ARVN in recent years have  been
so great that the problem threatened to  demoralize the entire army.  With
asituation of this kind it is no surprise  that Gen. Westmoreland is
appealing for more  American soldiersand more support and can  see nothing
but a long hard struggle ahead.  WARMLY WELCOMESWESTERN'S ACADEMIC
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733^246  STUDENTCO-OP  BOOK NEWS  New titles are in from Vintage: Old Myths
and New  Realities by Fullbright,Utopian Essays   Practical  Proposals by
Paul Goodman, The New Radicals by  Jacobs   Landau, TheNext Generation by
Michael,  The World of Zen edited by Nancy Ross, and The  Shape of Content
byShahn.  Living Ideas in America edited by Commager is new  in the
American History section.  Our current biggest best sellers are Siddhartha
by  Hesse, any Tolkien titles, I Never Promised You a Rose  Gardenby Green
and the book of the guarter Man-child  in the Promised Land by Brown. 
Student Co-Op BookNews  501 High Street  Campus W W S C  BELLINGHAM, WASH.
98225  "HE STOPPED IN ATENNEN'S THRIFTWAY FOR THE  REST OF HIS SCHOOL
SUPPLIES."  ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY  HIGHAND HOLLY  "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS
IMPORTANT"



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     Collegian - 1967 July 14 - Page 4



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4 The Collegian Friday, July 14, 1967  Summer session draws 2,900 
Approximately 2,900 students  willattend Western this summer  quarter,
revealed William  O'Neill last week. The total enrollment  for thesix and
nine  week sessions is 2,750 students.  The extra 150 will be enrolled in 
shorter courses.  Buttotal enrollment is not  the significant figure, Dr.
J.  Alan Ross, dean of summer  sessions, said Tuesday.The important  figure
is the total number  of student credit hours, of  which there are 30,063
beingtaken  this summer. This is a seven  per cent raise from last summer, 
and a 17 per cent raise  fromsummer, '65.  The largest gain in the number 
of classes at a certain level is  in the 500 level, with a 20 per  cent
raise from last year. "This  is primarily due to expansion of  the graduate
program," said  Ross.  The number of men students  compared to the number
of women  students is almost equal,  1,372 to 1,368, four more men  than
women. However in the six  week session, the women outnumber  men 555
to306.  The number of summer ses-  RELIEVES \  HUNGER PANGS!  . . . quicker
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Have fun! If pangs persist,  eat 2 every 3 hours. CAUTION:  Habit-forming)
if taken inlarge quantities.  SHEETS  1234 N. STATE STREET  Open 7 Days A
Week  Ph. 733-3020  PIZZAPARLOR    ye PUBIIC house  C 1966 SHAKEY'S INC. 
sion students from the state of  Washington is2,340. From other  states in
the union, the number is  250. From Canada, 179 and from  other
foreigncountries, 160*  Freshmen on campus this  summer number 104, sopho- 
Summer sports includeswimming, softball  Summer sports activities at 
Western prove to be varied, offering  everything fromfamily  swim nite to a
morning recreation  program for elementary  school children.  The program
forchildren of  faculty and students at Western  is sponsored by the
women's  PE department and givesyoung^  sters age 6 through 11 an
opportunity  to hike and take part  in other sports activities. 
Thesesessions are held Monday  through Friday from 9 to  11. There are
currently 60 children  involved withthis program.  Sessions in the pool are
offered  from 4 to 5 p.m. Monday,  Wednesday and Friday toindividual 
students, and Tuesday  and Thursday to families.  In addition, intramural
activities  offer asoftball league that  meets at 4 p.m. Monday through 
Thursday in the practice field.  mores, 181, juniors,314, sen- out-of-state
students than any  iors 727, and 1,412 graduate other state with 52. Oregon
isstudents. The masters programs next with 26. Hawaii and Arizona  have an
enrollment of 479. follow with23 and 19, respec-  California sends us the
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 hours.Good job for someone with darkroom  experience. 20 hrs. per  wk.
Must plan to continue through  67-68school year.  Need two boys to paint
house. 2  day job.  WOMEN  Rm.   Board—Free for girl  to
spendnights assisting with  household chores.  Barmaid wanted. Fri. and
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I  DANCING )f  FRI.   SAT. )f  NITE  7* 17,11 11th St.In The Swinging South
Side J  A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A 3 .  1  DESTITUTES: Guitar,
bass,drums, baritone doubling  L alto clarinet and flute .  Now Appearing 
for a  limited engagement  THEBOILER ROOM I  FOUR j  3 Years at the Boiler
Room ~  Lounge in Sun Valley A  LEOPOLD HOTEL'S ICASINO ROOM £ 
9-2 Nightly 733-3500 f  NO COVER NO MINIMUM j