4,1979-Page 9 In ED Iq PPF I E13 I pop EB m Th i 0 ri~ d 4 Landlord A I 4 ppF I Landlord B t1111 Landlord C k6 i w Landlord D 9ml f tws h Landlord E n Elv~ Your place can be a student-cooperative. "Your Place" 4002 Michigan Union Inter-Cooperative Council Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG Sw ear it isn'tso Police woman-for-a-night Katrina Sanders takes the oath at a mock trial held last night at the law school by a Project Community class in court watching. The case, over an alleged incident of drunken driving, was presided over by Judge Mark Erzen, who in real life is a third year law student. Hawaii strikers back on the job HONOLULU (AP) - Public school students enjoyed hot The refuse division will have three weeks to clean up the lunches again, and garbage trucks returned to the roads as trash that has accumulated in public areas during the past 7,700 public workers returned to their jobs yesterday after a six weeks, said public works director Wallace Miyahira. For six-week strike.sy "We're still getting organized," said Robert Young, the first one and a half weeks, the workers will get paid at an Honolulu's assistant refuse division chief. His employees, overtime rate. Honoulus asisant efue dvison hief Hi emloyes, "THERE IS so much trash out there, it all won't be who begin their routes in the early-morning darkness, were pickE E sa said iahir, in fo b among the first back on the job. picked up immediately," said Miyahira, asking for public EVEN AFTER the striking blue-collar workers ratified a patience. new two-year contract Saturday, city officials in Honolulu School cafeteria workers also were back on the job, a had to work out an agreement with the refuse collectors. relief to those students tired of bologna sandwiches and to the Oahu refuse collectors work under a unique "ukupau" parents who had to make them. "My son won't eat cold lun- system, which allows them to quit work for the day as soon as ches, so I had to take him a hot lunch every day," said the they have completed their routes, regardless of how long it father of a suburban first-grader. takes. The indefinite length of their workday made it difficult Parents also welcomed back school custodians, whose to work out payment of overtime guaranteed in the new con- jobs the parents had to perform for three weeks so the public tract. schools could reopen and remain open. Entrepreneur's Iranian oil wells sink like pet rocks A house where you and other students can make a comfortable home and still cut costs by sharing the work and expenses. Spaces for Winter Term are available now. Dole t delay-Contact the Inter-Cooperative Council now at 662-4414. Greyhound's quick cure for the book blues. The book blues. It's those sleepless nights with visions of exams, pop tests and required reading dancing through your head. They just won't go away. But you can.... with Greyhound. Take off this weekend, visit your family, see your friends... just get out of town and leave the book blues behind. It doesn't cost much t and it'll do you a world of good. So, if you've got the book blues, get on a Greyhound and split. It's a quick cure for what ails you. To One-Way Round-Trip Depart Arrive Chicago 26.15 49.20 8:35am 12:30pm Chicago 26.15 49.20 10:40am 4:40pm Chcago 26.15 49.20 6:05pm 10:05pm Kalamazoo 6.80 12,95 8:15am 11:20am Kalamazoo 6.80 12.95 6:05pm 8:40pm P -s M2-551 UNION TERMINAL- -116 W. Huron- 62551l ' 7W'G GREYHOUND why you - te. LA HABRA, Calif. (AP) - Scott Triolo thought his six-inch plastic oil wells, filled with 100 per cent real crude oil, would outsell the pet rock. Instead, they sank like one. The trouble was the name he picked for his 'company - the Iran Land and Oil Co. - and the label on the product: "Own Your Own Iranian Oil Well.'' SINCE MILITANT Iranians took Americans hostage at the U.S. Em- bassy in Tehran Nov. 4, sales of the $5 miniatures have plummeted. "There's a definite misconception. My product is not from Iran," said the 24-year-old businessman. But the mood of the country is against hm, and the market for miniature oil wells has run dry. MORE THAN 100,000 gift-boxed oil wells are stacked in warehouses throughout Orange County. Sales representatives won't call on customers, and major department stores have canceled their orders. "I'm a hostage of the free enterprise system and it's costing me my ,livelihood," Triolo said. He said he had invested $100,000 in the project. "My wife won't speak to me about it," he added. TRIOLO BOUGHT the idea at a gift convention in Chicago during this spring's gas crisis, thinking it would make his marketing career. "They'll sell like hotcakes," he was told. And at first they did. His company set INSTANT CASH! WE'RE PAYING $1-$2 PER DISC FOR YOUR ALBUMS IN GOOD SHAPE. .rM7AiA up downtown offices, and Triolo took to wearing Arab headgear to work. BUT ALL his work was really geared for Christmas buyers, and since the embassy takeover Nov. 4, ,there aren't any. Each oil well comes with an onion skin deed to all mineral rights, and an instruction booklet, with a joking war- ning: "Iran Land and Oil Company is not responsible for overdosages. Overexposure can lead a user to become an overbearing dictator." One store in Brea is selling the wells at half price. A San Diego businessman has offered to buy them, re-box them with pre- addressed labels to the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the religious leader of Iran's revolutionary gover- nment, and add an "unprintable" message. A Special Gime at $ Special price Everyday to 6p.m. BILLIARDS at The UNION. Open 10 a.m. Mon-Fri 1 p.m. Sat and Sun 1 UNIVERSAL PiCTUESand COMBIA PICTURES Present DAN AYKROYD NED BEATTYJOHN BELUSHI LORRAINE GARY MURRAY HAMILTON-CHRISTOPHER LEE TIM MATHPFlSON.-TfHIR MIHIFMNF WARRENfDAEST ROERT STACK TREAT WILLIAMS