ACADEMIC LEARNING SERVICES WINTER TERM 1994 SCHEDULE TEST PREPARATION WORKSHOPS Love *0iou*>Y y^KT UteTofy (JRK Preparation: $75 (Test Feb 5. 1994) Tuesdays K Thursdays Jan. IS. 20.25.27; Feb I. 3 6 00 pm 8'OOpm 1-06.2 practice exam 5 30 pm 9 00 pm I .SAT I Ye para t ion: $95 (lest Ivb 12. 1994) Jan. II. 13. IK. 20. 2S. 27 I 30 pm s oo pm Feb. I practice esant 3 30 pm 6 30 ym (»MAT IVrparation: $75 (Test Jan 15. 1994) Tucs . Weds A- linns Jan 4. 5, 6 3 :30 pm 5 00 pm 3 Saturday. Jan K 9 30 am 11 30 am. 12 M) pm 2 .30 pm MCAT Preparation: $200 (Test April 23. 1994) Saturdays Feb 26. March 5. 12. 26. Apnl 2. 9. 16 9:00 am 4:00 pm TI-81 Graphing Calculator: $25 Tuesday. Wednesday & Thursday Jan. II. 12. 13 3:30 pm 5:00 pm To register contact A.L.S. at 346-3226 NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL Oregon west Fitness Is the place to work out! Oregon West fitness Best Hours Best Prices ★ 7 Days a week 6am-11 pm 485-1624 NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL • $35 Per month for 6 months • NO Initiation Fee • Pay by the Month Expires 1/24/94 OKI UA W I-ST 1475 Franklin Blvd. Across from Campus 485-1624 Science finds use for Navy listening posts BKl.I.KVUE. Wash. (AP) — ()m e, this nation trained giant electronic: ears on the rx enn. Its tening for Soviet submarines traveling its depths. Now. with the Cold War waning, m ientists are being given ao.ess to those Navy listening posts On(* group ih listening to undorsoa onrth<|uakf?s. another to w hales A third seeks to gather evidence on global warming bv mea suring how fust low frequem \ sound travels through vast streti lies of ou‘iin (The warmer the water is. the faster sound will travel.) Among the partners in this third projei t is the t Iniversity of Wash ington’s Applied Physics LalMiratory f ounded during World War II to solve torpedo problems for the Navy, the laboratory still does a lot of defense research. However, as lab dire* tor and Bellevue resident Robert Spindel says, nowadays "a lot of the problems we worry about as a nation are environmental problems, and a lot of those problems have to do with oceans Another group of Applied Physic s laboratory sc lentists headed by Kirkland, Wash . resident Jamie Morison has l«*en engaged in anoth er "swords-into-plowshares'' effort to measure global warming and to understand what's happening in the oceans Morison and Belle vue resident Roger Colony participated in a U S. nuclear submarine s first c iv ilian mission, spending six weeks this summer amid and In'iieath Arctic: Oc cum ice. There is debate, Spindel says, over whether buildup of greenhouse gases IS c ausing irreversible global wanning by trupping heat. Some sav yes Others say the effect is self-limiting. They say that as the earth warms up. evaporation and cloud formation increase, less solar energy gets through and the earth cools back down. What s needed is a means of taking the earth's temperature repeat edly over time. Right now, Spindel says, most temperature measurements are tak en on land near population centers There’s no question that cities are heating up — but that doesn’t necessarily mean that the rest of the planet is. Also, land temperatures are hugely variable — which makes it dif ficult to detect changes in the magnitude of a few hundredths of a degree [Mir year. The temperatures of the deep waters of the oceans, on the other hand, are very stable. To measure changes in the temperature of a particular ocean, you could monitor the readings of a large number of thermometers strung from one side to the other — or. says Spindel, you could set out one transmitter and one receiver and periodically measure the speed at which sound traveled from the one to the other. This is possible bee a use loud, low-pitched sound travels easily through water; it's detectable many thousands of miles away unless blocked by some underwater mass Scatter a number of transmitters and receivers around the ocean basins of the world, he adds, and you’d get a good picture of ocean temperature changes all over the planet Just how many transmitters and receivers would be necessary is still being worked out "We think maybe 10 transmitters and 30 receivers,” says Spindel. The first transmitter was installed this spring off Kauai, Hawaii, and is being listened to by Navy receivers in the Pacific. Another is lieing installed off the coast of California near Monterey. Transmitting underwater sound is not without controversy. Some scientists are concerned that marine animals are being bom barded by rnan-made sounds from such sources os industrial under water explosions, ocean drilling, ship engines and submarine sonar devices. Some experts have observed that loud sounds can frighten whales away from their usual migration routes; others say loud and underwater sounds may damage the hearing of certain animals, which could impair their ability to communicate and navigate. Spindel agrees that this is a concern. However, he believes that the effw;ts of the 195-decibel sound being used in the ocean temperature study should be minimal because transmissions will lie as infrequent as possible — perhaps once a week for 30 minutes. Also. Spindel says, carriers and other ships produce sound that's just as loud — and so ian whales. Announcing the Opening oi the New Agate Apartments University Housing is now uking applications lor Wintei Term assignments to the Agate Apartments The Agate Apartments are located across from campus on the southwest corner ol lttth Avenue and Agate Street There are a variety of twenty apartments ranging in rent (rom $ WO per month to $655 per month Rent includes water, sewer, on site laundry facilities, waste collection and recycling The Agate Apartments are next to Campus, close to shopping and boutiques, and central to a variety of recreational activities These apartments are energy-savers and insulated to 'Good Cent$' insulation standards You will have first month's prorated rent and only a $75 deposit is required 11 you are interested in a site tour or an assignment to the Agate Apanmems, please call the Family Housing Reservation Coordinator at 146-4280 1 Urmrwiy Housing Family Moutm^Apanmenis Umvtruty of Or|oa An Affi'muiivr At lum tdud Opportunity Employer Commuted to Cultural Dive rule unj umfJutrkf wuh the Amentum wuh Dhaktluf* Ait