eo e—- ELS SS OE I TE SF = eae 7 eee oe Page Eight — Pads and rollers are key com- ponents of a cassette’s tape transport system. This system guides the tape past your deck’s tape head. It must do so with unerring accuracy. And no cassette does it more accurately than totally new Memorex. Roller precision is critical. The new Memorex tape trans- port system is precision engi- neered to exacting tolerances. Flanged, seamless rollers guide the tape effortlessly and exactly. An oversize pad hugs the tape to the tape head with critical pres- sure: firm enough for precise alignment, gentle enough to The Other Press Hf you think “pads and rollers’ are just a California craze, you're not ready for New Memorex. dramatically reduce wear. Our unique ultra-low-friction polyolefin wafers help precision- molded hubs dispense and gather tape silently and uniformly, play after play. Even after 1,000 plays. In fact, our new Memorex cas- Sette will always deliver true sound reproduc- tion, or we'll replace it. Free. .Of course, re- production that true and that enduring eae eg owes a lot to Per- mapass™ our extraor- — dinary new binding process. It even owes a little to our unique new fumble-free storage album. But when you record on new Memorex, whether it’s HIGH BIAS II, normal bias MRX | or Paneer (© 1981, Memorex Corporation, Santa Clara, California 95052, U.S.A. Pore 8h tte pe oe October 2, 1981 = METAL IV, don’t forget the impor- tance of those pads and rollers. Enjoy the music as the tape glides unerringly across the head. And remember: getting it there is half the fun. baths Faas NOW MORE THAN EVER T WE ASK: ISITLIVE,ORISIT _..° MEMOREX Douglas College to aquire that ‘run down look’. by Ian Hunter Budget shortages are a dirty business. And when Douglas College administration learned they would have to cut costs this year, says college president Bill Day, instead of cutting educational items they de- cided to reduce the cleaning staff. .One and one half janitor- ial jobs will be sliced this year. .‘‘I told Bill Day it is going to get dirty if there are only three people cleaning the college now,’’ said custo- dian Gary Thind. ‘‘There is just not enough time to clean everywhere.’’ .‘‘But when there is no _money what can you do?”’ he said. .Assistant physical plant manager Sooz Klinkhamer said the college should acquire ‘‘that run down lok’’ before it moves to another campus next year. It doesn’t really make much sense to refurbish in the last year of occupancy. If there are scuff marks on the floor we would just leave them. .She added, however, that the impact of anticipated cutbacks will not be fully felt for another two weeks. And ‘‘there are a lot of people feeling apprehension over the cutbacks.’’ =