mo fllara/ On your mark, get set... Campus groups prepare for Tuesday's vote See page 6

Vol. LXXXIII No. 95 STORRS, CONNECTICUT

Connecticut's first primaries i ayi ._- ini»i WWIJ wuiii^/uo, i uuaj, i»iai 011 e. I , I SOU Weekend Calendar

Friday 21 Saturday 22 The Bridge of Dreams. Mobius A Delicate Balance. Katharine Theatre at 8:15 p.m. Through Hepburn. 9 p.m. TV Channel 57. Sunday. Free. Part of the American Film Theatre The Conformist. Dir. by Bernardo series. Bertolucci. Italian, with subtitles. Star Trek Bloopers. 8 p.m. and 8 p.m.. in Von der Mehden Recital 10:15 p.m. in Physics Building 36. Hall. $2. $1. Robin and Marian. Sean Conncry. Spring semi-formal. Putnam Katharine Hepburn. 7:30 p.m. Refectory. 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. BYOB. tonight and tomorrow. With $4 per person. "Seduction of Joe Tynan." Alan Square dance. Hawley Armory. 8 Alda. At 9:30 p.m. both nights. p.m. $1.50. Cinestudio at Trinity College. $2. Styx: On the WHUS Unnamed $1.50 with any student ID. Special. 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Film Festival: Featuring W.C. Basketball: NCAA semifinals. Fields, the Three Stooges and the Iowa vs. Louisville at 1:30 p.m. Marx Brothers. Life Sciences 154. UCLA vs. Purdue at 4 p.m. TV 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $1. Channel 30. Film festival: Student, Hockey: Hartford Whalers at professional and organization- Montreal. 8 p.m. TV Channel 30. sponsored films screened and Hike: The Natchaug Trial. 8 to 10 awards given. 7:30 p.m. tonight miles. Sponsored by the Sierra Peter Sellers stars In "Being There," now playing at Showcase and 1:30 p.m. Saturday. Aucrbach Club. Meet at 10 a.m. at the Cinemas, East Hartford. Auditorium. University of junction of U.S. 44 and Rt. 198. Baseball: UConn vs. St. John's. I Being There. Showcase Cinemas. Hartford. 200 Bloomfield Ave.. Auditions: For the 1980 Nutmeg p.m. East Hartford. * West Hartford. $1. Also includes a Summer Playhouse season. Two- Country Silo: Plexus Jazz Quartet Breaking Away. Showcase. showing of Dick Cavctt's minute prepared monologue and 2001: A Space Odyssey. Katharine Hepburn interview. three-minute song are required. Ongoing Showcase. Saturday morning in Lincoln Today and Sunday. Room 101 in Ceramics: By five women potters. All That Jazz. Showcase. Theater. the Fine Arts Building. In the University Library lobby. Little Darlings. Showcase. Irish Beer Fcsl. Trinity II band. Chuck's: Don Ingraham. Through April 4. The Fog. Showcase; College Twin. With Guinness beer. Harp beer. Country Silo: Clockwork. Painting: Connecticut and Storrs. ROTC.8p.ni.tol a.m. Shaboo: Pousette Dart Band, with American Impressionism: The Cruising. College Twin. Hockey: Hartford Whalers vs. Grayson Hugh. $5 advance. $5.50 Artist and the Landscape. The Little Miss Marker. Vernon Cine. Philadelphia Flyers, in Hartford. door. Idyllic Land: Italian Themes in Vcrnon. . 7:30 p.m. Northern Prints of the 17th and Going in Style. Vernon Cine. Basketball: NBA game of the Sunday 23 18th Centuries. William Benton The Electric Horseman. Poor week. 11:30 p.m. TV Channel 3. Chip Carter. Speaking, with Museum. Mon. Sat. 10 a.m. to 4 Richard's Pub and Cinema. East Chuck's: Sanctuary. question and answer. Student p.m.: Sun. 1-5 p.m. Hartford. Country Silo: Clockwork. Union Ballroom. 6:30 p.m. To Forget Venice. Atheneum Coal Miner's Daughter. UA Shaboo: Leslie West. $4 at the Max Creek and Blue Lunch Band. Cinema. Hartford. Theatres East. Manchester. door. ROTC Hangar. $2.50. Kramer vs. Kramer. UA. Just Tell Me What You Want. UA. Staff Editor in Chief Mary Messina Next Week Managing Editor Ken Koepper Business Mark Becker Assistant Businees Manager The folk duo Frofut & Luxon will Graeme Brown Features Editor perform in the chamber setting of Steve Straight Jorgensen Auditorium Tuesday, Senior Writer March 25th at 8:15 p.m. Julie Lipkin News Editors Bill Crofut, a protege of Pete Joanne Johnson Seeger, has made several internat- Carl Qlendening Dave Schoolcraft ional tours, including U.S. State Assistant News Editor Department assignments during Tony Tyson the Johnson administration. He is Arts Editor Leith G. Johnson' well-known as a folk musician, and Associate Arts Editor is also active transcribing classical Rob Obie pieces for the guitar and banjo, Sports Editor Gregg Russo and setting the poetry of Robert Associate Sports Editors Penn Warren and E.E. Cummings Mark Goldberg Charlie Vachris to music. Circulation Manager Benjamin Luxon recently made Bob Giglio his operatic debut at New York's Advertising Manager Sandy Johansen Metropolitan Opera to great crit- Photography Manager ical acclaim. He tours extensively Dan Neiman as a baritone soloist. Photographers Jim Loflnk Tickets for the March 25 Ben Levitan Ken Strieker performance are^now on sale at Production Manager the Jorgensen Auditorium box Sandy Zuschlag office and at all Ticketron outlets. Classifieds Manager Maria Miro Office Manager .<■. ^^ Loli McLean Wire Editors DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau Matt Matuella Kathleen Cofek THERE HE GOES AGAIN. NOTTO MENTION , Barbara Perry Ken Meyers iES, UEVEGOTTOGETHIM IT5CLEAR THE THIRD'PER- Pollster V STOP TALKING IN THATTHE SON SINGULAR. UALTER, HIE THINK HURRY! HE'S Paul Haller THZ FIRST PERSON RIGHT. UJE'RE COUNTRY mw.Gom I JOHNANDER- STARTINGX) VERY PLURAL. £"l£j p IS READY TO SLIP HIM 1 SONCANGO MIX THEM. P0R JOHN ANOTE. ALLTHEmV. ANDERSON'S \ / Weather

Rain may be heavy at times Friday. Windy and mild with highs in the 50s. Rain mixing with, and then changing to, snow Friday night with lows dropping into the 30s. The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21, 1980 Page 3 In Connecticut primary Voters face tough decision President Carter: John Anderson: the best democrat an intelligent leader

emocratic voters are difference on the issues. Kennedy John B. Anderson needs to do gallon gaso tax. Although the faced with a difficult deci- supports wage and price controls, well in next Tuesday's tax is extremely controversial, his sion this year. national health insurance and the primary here. He needs to proposal makes sense. If Americans D Humphrey-Hawkins full employ- win a significant number of are to reduce their dependence on Jimmy Carter, the incumbent ment bill. His record of support for Connecticut delegates if he is to foreign oil and free ourselves from president, is faced with major crises progressive responsible programs is become a serious contender for the the bonds of rich, oil-producing overseas in Iran and Afghanistan unassailable. Republican nomination for nations, we must become less- and on the home front with infla- But at the same time, a number of- president. dependent on their oil. We would do tion. The problems stem in part personal factors raise questions We hope he does well next this by charging more. from his neglect of serious warnings among the voters. Chappaquidick Tuesday. We wholeheartedly en- Although Anderson has been hotted and his inability to bring about swift and Kennedy's marital problems do dorse him. and hissed at for his unpopular action on serious issues. not reflect well upon his character. Anderson is clearly a cut above all Jdeas, he ha,s earned himself the the other candidates on the ballot. respect of people from both political But the president is not entirely He seems to be an honest, intelli- parties. responsible for the actions of Both candidates show promise. Both candidates have flaws. gent, and dedicated man. He says Anderson has support from Dem- militants in Tehran, Soviet leaders ocrats and Independents as well as in Moscow, or congressional leaders But if the decision is to be made exactly what he believes and does not worry about being unpopular or many Republicans. He is the only in Washington. And his handling of on character, the choice is clear. losing votes. Republican contender who would do the delicate world situation still President Carter continues to dis- He is the man who, in the middle well in a general election. However, commands the support of Amer- play a high degree of honesty, of Iowa grain country, said he unless he wins a significant number icans—though for how long it is integrity and faith, while Senator supported President Carter's grain of primary delegates, he will not be difficult to tell—while his efforts to Kennedy's record in those areas is embargo to the Soviet Union. And given that chance. balance the budget show promise of less than perfect. he is the one who stood up for gun tempering the economy. His radio and television advertise - We therefore recommend that control in front of the state gun club ments say it all: Consider the His chief opponent, Sen. Edward Democratic voters support the pre- in New Hampshire. Anderson difference. -M. Kennedy, presents a clear sident in next Tuesday's primary. He even supports a 50 cents a Remember that next Tuesday.

'Iran' without having three letters By JIM CONDON There are a number of hour, which would be a real bonus to their general health. spotted to him. With Connecticut's alternatives to the present system. Another alternative would be to presidential primary One answer would be regional Another alternative would be to copy the British system for choosing coming up Tuesday, it primaries, where the nation would have one national primary a few- candidates. Instead of having seems like a good be split into she or seven districts months before the election. While primaries, the leader of each parly time to come out in favor of an idea that would hold their primary this might be discriminatory would be that party's candidate for whose time has come: the separately from other districts. This towards the more rural areas of the president. People would know who abolishment of the whole blasted would allow the candidates to stay country, it would be worth it to have their party's candidate would be a primary system. in one area for more than half an a chief executive who could spell couple of years before the election. This system. I believe, does more People would know the candidates harm than good. Here we have a better, and the politicians would bunch of candidates flying every save a lot of wear and tear on their which way all over the country minds and bodies. repeating the same speeches over Is it Any of these alternatives would and over and over every day for be preferable. I think to our present months upon months. After a while, system. To give people a chance to they start foaming at the mouth and sec their candidates in person is falling into fits of delirium, all the certainly worthwhile, but In do so at while being in a state of chronic jet- worth the risk of their minds turning into lag. Three Musketeers bars is By the time the rigors of the questionable at best. campaign season have subsided, It you agree, write your we're left with candidates who look congressman and tell him how you like poster-children for scurvy. By the feel. Or jump up and down and the time the campaign is over, the squawk like an eagle, whatever it overall health of these men makes takes to gel people to listen to you. them unfit to cross the street by Or if you want poliiicans to themselves, never mind taking over recognize this sentiment Tuesday. the helm of the greatest nation in fight? cast your ballot for Margaret the world. The primary system VFhatcher. If enough people did. I turns intelligent able-bodied think the government would gel the politicians into whimpering lumps general idea. ofJell-O. Regional primaries: a better way By DOUG FISHER Hampshire is Massachusetts, candidates could concentrate on a philosophical views a common region for a period of perhaps three The chaos evidenced in the another state notorious for voting purpose while allowing some opposite that of the whole country. weeks. A different region would flexibility and change. The political 1980 presidential candidate begin the selection process on a selection process makes a But every four years candidates shambles in France with majority swarm on New Hampshire and each rotatiflg basis. by coalition is the unattractive coherent and The regional primary would state in succession at one week alternative. comprehensive overhaul of the facilitate intensive campaigning intervals, leaving too little time to Independents uncommitted to a primary system a necessity. and speed the overall process. make a responsible choice party's ideals should have no stake Three fundamental flaws Large savings in time and money anywhere. The media capitalizes on in selecting a party's candidate. permeate the system: rigid for the candidates would result, as the event and a nomination is Members of an opposite party may individual state primaries, cross travel and accompanying expenses virtually determined before half the over voting. and delegate would be reduced. Candidates who have noble motives voting in country's ovters voice their opinion. assignment disproportionate to are not rich could afford to the another's primary, but top often Most criminal is the fact the same popular vote. These problems are shorter period of time and deliberate selection of a weak voters determine the nominee and obvious and easily remedied. politicians in office need not opponent is the objective. "This the same voters are never heard all The New Hampshire primary abandon their duties years prior to action reduces free choice in a the time. kicks off all presidential contests the campaign. democracy. and has a massive impact on the This system is unfair to both the Cross-over voting and the "open Registering with a particular nomination process. Yet, the state voters and the candidates. primary" concept makes a farce of party is an option to be freely comprises only 0.1 percent of Regional primaries are the the selection process and decays exercised. However, in the interest registered voters in the United answer. If the country were divided party politics. Parties moderate of correctly assessing partv States, and its demographics are into six regions sharing equal political views, allow continuity, preference, switching less than hardly typical. Following New population and concerns. and give people of similar SEE PAGE 11 Page 4 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Trustee Elections Committee Women's skaters to check failure to mail ballots discuss suit By ROLAND PERREAULT If students don't notify the activi- The Student Trustee Elections ties office that they did not receive a By BARBARA PERRY Committee will meet Monday night ballot, however, the committee will Women's ice hockey club to take possible measures against assume there is no problem, Wrob- members Wednesday discussed the recent complaints that some stud- leski said. possibility of filing suit with HEW ents did not receive student trustee Ulysses Orduz, chairman of the against the athletic department for voting ballots mailed home over the Student Trustee Election Committee discrimination charges. spring break. said the problem may be exaggerat- Claiming they have met varsity "If we find that this is indeed a ed by rumors and suggested some standards, the members contended problem, we will discuss it" and students may not have received prejudice on the part of the athletic take measures to correct the prob- ballots because the mailing list department is causing problems in lem. Milt Wrobleski, assistant dire- included only those registered be- officially achieving that status. ctor of student activities said Thur- fore Jan. 19. Thomasina Gemens. affirmative sday. Orduz blames a possible postal Nick Carbone action director and Title IX system delay and mail being mis- coordinator, said the team should placed at home as part of the document their complaints before Donen, Grasso problem. Carbone predicts they consider filing suit. Wrobleski said all the ballots "Intimation and hearsay are not discuss budget were mailed to home addresses and economic collapse enough to make or win a cause," some commuters with locally listed Clemens said. addresses may have ballbts waiting By LESLIE FINK II .STEIN "Our present economic system is Coach Bill Landwehr said he By SUSAN BAUER at home. talked with UConn athletic director Student trustee Steve Donen met Wrobleski encouraged students about to collapse." Nick Carbone, former deputy mayor of Hartford John Toner, who said the primary with Gov. Ella Grasso Thursday in who have not received a ballot to concern in giving varsity status is Hartford to discuss the budget, its bring proof of registration to the said to 15 people in the Student UnionThursday afternoon. interest by the players. influence on UConn students, pos- activities office. The deadline for Landwehr said interest has been sible tuition hikes, and other cam- accepting ballots is March 27. Carbone said the American political system is "out of tune and expressed and continues to grow as pus issues. there will be more than 20 women Addressing tuition increases, has not moved ahead with the Census Bureau complexities of society. As a matter returning to play in the fall. "Grasso said she'll look at what's "All we're doing with John Toner being proposed before she expres- of fact, it's dragged it down." The economic system needs is drumming our heads against the ses her view," Donen said, adding offers positions wall." Landwehr said. he asked her to keep in m'ind room "major restructuring" to prevent collapse. Carbone said. According to Landwehr and team and board increases for University members, the team does not have students next fall. By MIKE NASH "We have to develop an The Norwich Census Bureau is" economic system where we place funds for adequate equipment and Donen said he also asked the it is forced to play in unsafe governor to help obtain leases from seeking University students to be less value on material things," he full-time and part-time clerical wor- said. "We must move from a conditions. apartments in the Storrs area to be Toner declined comment on the used for University housing to kers and data collectors for the 1980 consumption society to one of census. conservation. Our political system planned action. compensate for overcrowding of "They (the team) have not dormitories. is too inefficient to handle the Forty part-time positions to gat- present economic system." reported this intention (to file suit) her census data on the UConn According to Carbone, one of the to me." he said. "They haven't Dean's List hits campus are open to area students main reasons for the inefficiency is even asked if there's been any according to Madeline Gauthier, that "none of the politicians who determination for their status for 20 percent mark district manager of the Norwich are elected to the state legislature next fall." bureau. Over 100 full-time data or Congress today work for the gathering and clerical jobs begin- general good of the people." Mansfield polls Nearly 20 percent of the eligible ning April 1 are available to students Because all legislative voting is undergraduates at UConn earned living in Windham, Tolland, New done by computer, constituents are gear for primaries places on the Dean's List for last London or Middlesex Counties, she now able to see exactly how their semester. Registrar Thomas J. Bur- said. Mansfield Middle School. Vinton ke said. congressmen vote. Carbone said. This forces politicians to vote for School and Mansfield Training Out of the 12.745 eligible students Clerical workers will earn $3.50 their district and not for the general School, the three polling places in at the University's campuses here, per hour while data gatherers will good of the state, he added. He said Mansfield, will be open from 6 a.m. at Avery Point, Stamford, Torring- receive $4 per hour plus 18 cents a all constituents want "minimum to 8 p.m. for the presidential ton, Waterbury and West Hartford, mile for mileage, Gauthier said. primaries next Tuesday. 2,520 or 19.8 percent made the list, Data collectors working in rural taxes and maximum federal aid," and are not interested in the Only registered Democrats and he said. areas must provide their own car, Republicans may take part in the she said. general welfare of the state. Students must earn 12 or more "Because of this openness. primary and there will be separate calculable credits, rank in the upper Interested students may contact Congress is paralyzed." Carbone voting machines for each party. 25 percent in their school or college either Dan Shay or David Krauss at said. The only persons who can still or have a semester quality point the Norwich Census Bureau recrui- Carbone. who lost a bid for mayor register between March 12 and 24 ratio (QPR) of at 30 of 40 possible ting office, between 8 a.m. and 4:30 in the September 1979 Democratic are those who have moved into town points, whichever comes first, to p.m. Monday through Friday. Pos- primary, left City Hall in December or beconje citizens after March 11. qualify for the Dean's List, Burke itions will be filled on a first-come, after 10 years on the Common or those who turn 18 between said. first-served basis. Council, . March 18 and 25. RKoCoUeae?U)u\ RTflRRC. ■# 429-6062d?Q-Knfi? BALFOUR IS BACK NOW THROUGH THURSDAY

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Dairy «:30 9:00 Sat. Sun Daily 6:40 9:10 2:00 4:15 6:30 9:00 2:00 4:15 6:40 9:10 sponsored by APO The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 5 United States: World Court should demand hostage release By UNITED PRESS knowing'whether Iran will keep the not been elected, he should not pick Because of inefficiency and INTERNATIONAL The United States asked the 50 Americans "for a month, a year up his pen and write certain things disorganization delaying vote or a decade." World Court Thursday to demand against the elections as a whole." counting—and thus the start of a the immediate release of the In a summation reflecting second round of ballotting next Khomeini's statement was hostages in the U.S. Embassy' in Washington's frustration after month—the 270-membcr apparently aimed at silencing Tehran, saying there is no way of more than four months of parliament was now not expected to conflicting signals from Tehran, critics, including Iranian President convene until late May. Three Mile Island State Department legal adviser Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. who But Owen told the World Court Robert B. Owen told the complained of instances of fraud that there was no assurance that lhe staff search for International Court of Justice that and coercion in last week's election parliament would decide, or would Iran might have no intention of for the parliament that Khomeini be allowed to decide, to free lhe radioactive leak freeing the Americans held captive has charged with deciding the fates hostages. for 138 days. of the American hostages. HARRISBURG. Pa. While Owen completed the U.S. (UPI)—Technicians at the Three case before the highest judicial Afghan president expects Mile Island nuclear power plant body of the United Nations in The scrambled Thursday to locate a Hague, Netherlands, Ayatollah suspected leak of contaminated Ruhollah Khomeini admonished the Soviets to remain indefinitely water from the cooling system ot losers in Iran's parliamentary the disabled Unit. No. 2 reactor that election to stop complaining. By UNITED PRESS An estimated 80.000 Soviet forces caused a small release of radiation "If you have been defeated, you INTERNATIONAL have been in Afghanistan since the into the atmosphere. should not say that the entire Afghan President Babrak Karmal Dec. 27 Soviet-backed coup Iranian nation is wrong," Khomeini predicted Thursday Soviet forces installed Karmal. In a related Spokesmen for plant operator said. "Just because someone will remain in Afghanistan development. the government Metropolitan Edison Co. and the wishes to become a deputy, and has indefinitely and rebel spokesman announced cancellation of Friday's U.S. Nuclear Regulatory said fears of renewed anti-Soviet traditional Moslem New Year Commission said the release Chicano protesters rioting in Kabul forced the celebrations in the capital ot Kabul, occurred early Thursday morning government to cancel Moslem New citing bad weather. after an alarm sounded at 1 a.m. in seize Alamo York celebrations. But an Afghan rebel spokesman the Unit No. 2 auxiliary building, Karmal. in a broadcast on Radio in New Delhi. India claimed the indicating increased airborne for 30 minutes Kabul monitored in London, said cancellation came after the radiation- most of the Soviets soldiers would government uncovered rebel plans Kansas City firemen SAN ANTONIO, Texas (UPI)—A "definitely remain here as. long as to incite thousands of festival goers group calling itself the "Revolu- there is the smallest sign of into another anti-Soviet uprising jailed for violating tionary May Day Brigade" scaled provocation. interference or like the one last month. the walls of the historic Alamo external aggression against "When the government canceled ban on strikes Thursday, removed the U.S. and Afghanistan and as long as these the festival for weather, that means Texas flags, raised its own banners things are not completely the government -fenind an uprising KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI)—A and for 30 minutes shouted slogans uprooted." plan," a rebel spokesman said. judge defense attorneys claimed and threw down leaflets protesting was creating a "slaughterhouse- the "vicious oppression of Chicano type atmosphere" in his courtroom people." jailed 62 more firefighters Thursday While two young men and a tor violation of his Christmas hve young woman stood atop the histor- edict banning strikes against the ic mission with their fists raised and city. shouted revolutionary slogans and Circuit Court Judge Laurence obscenities, and angry crowd of 200 Smith showed no more sympathy gathered below in the city's main for the strikers than he did for 16 square and yelled "Get 'em down." fellow firemen who appeared for Police used ladders to climb the judgement in his courtroom the day. back walls of Alamo to reach the before. trio, then handcuffed them . Bush revives campaign President Carter's wife, Rosalyn, greets members of the for Connecticut primary Italian-American club in East Hartford yesterday. Gov. Ella Grasso is to her right (Staff photo by Jim Lofink]. WEST HARTFORD Bush told campaign rallies in (UPI)—George Bush, hoping to West Hartford and Colchester rebound from a poor showing in the front-runer Reagan's strategy to Mrs. Carter defends President Illinois presidential primary, says combat inflation was ill-advised, fellow GOP hopeful Ronald Reagan while up-and-coming Anderson was doesn't understand inflation—and the "Teddy Kennedy" of the for remaining in Washington John Anderson is in the wrong Republican Party. party. "I honestly believe 1 am best HARTFORD (UPI)—First lady "He thinks the lives of those The former CIA director positioned to beat him (Carter) in Rosalynn Carter Thursdayldefended hostages are so very important that Wednesday kicked off a six-day the fall," Bush said at his first her husband's decision to stay off of he must stay there so he can react to campaign swing for Connecicut's campaign stop in Fairfield. "But the campaign trail, saying the lives any circumstance. 1 don't know of first presidential prhnary. saying I've g*' to get that across in of hostages in Iran were more anything that would get him out of he's the best the GOP has to beat Connecticut. Pennsylvania and important than his leaving the the White House. Hopefully it can Jimmy Carter in November. Texas." White House. be resolved and he can get out. Mrs. Carter, arriving in Connec- Nobody wants to get out more than ticut for a two-day campaign swing, he does," she said. Anderson predicts GOP loss also said she expected President Mrs. Carter said her husband had Carter to do "well" in the state's made all of his views known to first-ever presidential primary next if Reagan wins nomination reporters and the plublic. Tuesday. STAMFORD (UPI)—Republican itself to the kind of lopsided "I think we're going to do well in Harris Poll reports presidential hopeful John Anderson electoral defeat of the type of Connecticut," she said. warned Thursday the GOP may 1964." President Lyndon B. "We've had a strategy to do the 2-1 lead for Carter condemn itself to a "1964-type" Johnson defeated Sen. Barry best we could in every state." electoral defeat if front-runner Goldwater, R-Ariz. by a whopping Mrs. Carter was greeted at in New York Ronald Reagan wins the party's margin in that election. Bradley International Airport by nomination. The white-haired congressman Gov. Ella Grasso, one of the NEW YORK (UPI)-President Anderson also defended his own kicked off two days of criss-cross president's staunchest supporters, Carter holds a ftl-to-34 percent lead commitment to the GOP against his campaigning in New York and and other state officials. over Sen. Edward Kennedy in the rivals' charges that he was the Connecticut in advance of the party's "Ted Kennedy." states' Tuesday primaries with a The first lady later joined Mrs. New York Democratic presidential primary, according to a Harris poll "I am assured that the speech to the Southwestern Area Grasso in fielding listeners' ques- nomination of Mr. Reagan will only Commerce and Industry tions on the governor's monthly conducted for the Daily News. ensure the re-election of Mr. Carter Association of Connecticut. radio talk show. The statewide poll. which and will ensure the kind of Anderson, labeled the "Ted Mrs. Carter said at Bradley- surveyed 800 registered Democrat economic disaster we have suffered Kennedy" of the Republican party airport that the president felt it was voters Tuesday and Wednesday, for the past four years," the Illinois by rivals Reagan and George Bush, important he remain in Washington shows Carter scores best upstate congressman said. said his positions and those of Sen. monitoring the Iranian crisis and he with a 68-to-29 percent lead, but is "I cannot believe that the Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. were was not avoiding a campaign con- strong in the city, as well, with a 55- Republican party will condemn opposite on virtually all key issues. frontation. to-7 percent lead. Page 6 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 UConn professors; Connecticut primaries may ■1 lllllll have reaching consequences 123 o< By KEN KOEPPER voter registration so thev could vote Although the Connecticut primar- for him." ies will commit only a few delegates State primary regulations state ML to candidates, some UConn political there can be no write-ins of candida- scientists believe the primaries tes from the other party, so "An- fcS#N could affect the presidential cam- derson will not be able to benefit paigns in other ways. because he isn't a conservative, and "Connecticut is an early pri- hard-line Republicans don't like mary," said W. Wayne Shannon, that," Howard Reiter, assistant ^^k associate professor of political sci- professor of political science said. »£ ence. "Sequence has become a very important thing. Most of the dele- "The independents are going to gates haven't been chosen yet." be told to go home and the Democrats will be told thay can't Bob Foree, director of the Social write him in. Anderson's vote will Science Data Center here, said be much lower than the support he "Connecticut could serve as a has in the state," Reiter said. UConn political groups modifier if the results were radically Shannon said the results of the different than New York's, it might primary could have a long-term spurred by election year suspend judgment." New York and effect if the media emphasizes Connecticut hold primaries on the them. "The media will determine By DAVID SCALZI has allowed the U.S. to become less same day. how they report the thing under Connecticut's first presidential respected. Special interest groups their 'news system.' Their rules are primaries are next Tuesday, and the sway legislatures from popular The "modifier" could also work tension and general excitement of a interests, she said. in another way, Foree said. "This so arbitrary." presidential election year has The UConn group is a member of will be one of Bush's better states. "The media pays more attention brought campus political the state Federation of College If he could win here and win in New to the primaries than the delegate organizations into high gear. Republicans. York, it could keep his campaign counts. The main-line for them is a Among established groups, the alive." Mary Huggard. president of the story to attract viewers. But be- UConn College Republicans, Young Young Democrats, said the group "But the big states mean more cause they're both on the same day, Democrats, and the Political allows students to get involved in and that's well understood," Step- New York will probably be the Science Club are helping students politics and confront world issues. hen Zwerlilng, assistant professor bigger story." develop knowledge in politics, The group is part of the State Young of political science said, "there are But the biggest story may be the discussing issues and contacting Democrats and National Young 10 states you have to do well in, and Wisconsin primary April 1, Shannon candidates. Democrats. if you don't do well in those states, said. "If Kennedy doesn't turn Other groups, such as the The National group meets twice you run into trouble." something around, and Bush, Anderson for President Committee yearly and the state groups meets and Students for Kennedy, allow Zwerling said it will be interes- whose staff is in disarray, doesn't yearly to elect organization turn his bad horses around, we'll students to work for specific members and draw up a party ting to see "what happens to John presidential candidates. Anderson. People have switched probably know it's over." platform. The platform, a group Tammy Shea, chairman of the statement on political policy, is sent UConn College Republicans, said to the National Democratic Party for the purpose of her organization is to consideration. give students a chance td get in Huggard said the conventions are touch with political campaigns they run in the same way as the national support, and give candidates a party, giving students a chance to chance to speak to students. learn about democratic processes. Shea, a sophomore in mechanical "The group is a good way to get engineering, said the group helps students involved, interested and students wishing to work in state or aware politically." Huggard said. national campaigns contact area She said many members have coordinators. Shea said the group gone to meetings of the state will set up a campus forum that will legislature to listen and express sponsor speakers with opposing views adding that many current viewpoints on controversial issues politicians got their start in the in off-election years. group. Shea said Republicans are' Jeanie Kaess. president of the gaining more popularity in the Political Science Club (Pi Sigma ^M&W$SNMYn£PKAKT?' college community because the Alpha) said the club sets up current Democratic administration SEE PAGE 11 2 Bands For $2.50 THIS AD GOOD FOR MAX CREEK DAVE THORPE FREE ADMISSION

■ FRI & SAT NITES Sunday March 23 music by 8-12p.m. ROTC Hangar Benefit For Clamshell Alliance EASY STREET

NOTICE HELP UCONN Celebrate the first weekend of Spring with a highfalutin, footstompin THE AFRO-AMERICAN CULTURAL CENTER'S SQUARE DANCE POLICY BOARD

IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP Sponsored by: UCONN Outing Club Sat: March 22-8:00pm All parties interested in applying to the POLICY BOARD are at: Hawley Armory asked to pick-up applications at the Afro-American Cultural admission: $1.50 (Bring this coupon and get Center, 214 Commons, and return completed no later than in for $1,00) March 31,1980 Refreshments provided The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 7 Connecticut primary first step in How they stand delegate selection By KEN KOI,PI EH Tuesday's Republican and Demo- Presidential candidates cratic presidential primaries, the first ever in Connecticut, are only the first steps in selecting delegates compare notes to the parties' national conventions this summer. Democrats Republicans State Demo'rats will send 54 delegates to New York August II. Kennedy Carter Anderson Bush Reagan while 35 state Republicans will attend the Detroit convention July 14, according to the secretary of yes ' yes yes state's office. windfall profits tax yes no Democrats will select 37 delega- no - no Kemp-Roth tax cut no no yes tes in U.S. congressional district yes no wage and price controls no no no caucuses April 22. Howard Reiter. no no Constitutional amendment to bal- no no yes professor of political science, said. The caucuses will choose their ance the budget delegates by candidate affiliation yes yes aid to Chrysler no no no and by the candidates' performan- yes yes Panama canal treaties yes no no ces in the primary in each district. Half of these 37 delegates must be yes yes SALT II yes no no women according to new national no no neutron bomb development yes yes yes party regulations. Reiter said. no no MX missile no yes yes These delegates will vote for the no no BI bomber no yes yes 17 others May 6. 12 at-large and five no yes from a list of party leaders. The selective service registration no - yes no Republicans will use a similar yes yes nuclear energy development yes yes yes procedure, with 18 selected from no yes decontrol of oil yes yes yes congressional districts, 12 at-large. no yes easing of environmental regulations no yes yes and five from the party leader list. * The Republicans will ratify all to allow burning of coal delegates at a state convention June yes yes gun control yes no no 6. yes yes busing to achieve racial balance in ,yes no . no Over 1000 people have applied for the Democratic slots, including 420 schools committed to president Carter and yes yes Department of Education yes no no 252 committed to Sen. Edward yes no federally-funded abortions yes no no Kennedy. The list of party leader no no Constitutional amendment to pro- no no yes applications includes Gov. Ella Gra- sso. Lt. Gov. William O'Neill, hibit abortions treasurer Henry parker and compt- yes yes federal aid to poor & elderly to yes yes yes roller J. Edward Caldwell. offset rising energy costs More than 300 have applied for yes yes Equal Rights Amendment yes yes no the Republican positions, including 99 committed to George Bush. 80 yes yes extension of time to permit yes no no for John Anderson.and 66 for Ronald ratification of ERA Reagan. Party leaders who have yes yes welfare revision with guaranteed yes no no applied include Sen. Lowell P. Wcicker and rep. Stuart McKinncy annual income and minimum from the fourth Congressional dis- standards trict. yes no comprehensive national health ins- no no no Although 21 applications have urance come from uncommitted Republi- cans. Reiter said it is unlikely one no no 50 cents gas tax & 50 percent cutjn yes no no would go to the convention. He said workers' Social Security tax the uncommitted slate must do well yes no lationingof gas no no no in the primary in order to do so. SPRING MASSAGE WORKSHOP SALE X &^Rv,*ers Are For Lovers Facilitator: Gail Finger Long Stem Roses 487-1193 $ P O. Block, Storrs 12doz This workshop will be an introduction to massage as a means of re- Daffodils $2.89 bunch lieving tension and as a way to express caring for another person. Massage techniques will be demonstrated and participants will have This is the first weekend of an opportunity to practice these techniques with eachother. SPRING Date: March 29,1980 —order corsages for Time: 10:00am -5:00pm semi-formats early loc further information on registration. fees, and meeting place, contact the Center lot Personal Growth, a bianch ol the Department ol Counseling and Student Development. 4 Gilbert Rd. 486 4737

COMEDY FILM Summer Job? Morgan House Summer 1980 Full-Time FESTIVAL Work-Study Program Pancake Breakfast featuring applications are available at the Student $1.50 W.C FIELDS Employment Office, 13 Gilbert Road. The All You Can Eat THE3STOOGES deadline for application THE MARX BROS. has been extended to Apple Blueberry Plain Friday, March 21, 1980. tonight Presented by Call 486-3474 if you have 10AM-2PM questions concerning Admission 8 and 10 pm the application procedures L.S. 154 Finance Society WE'RE OPEN AN HOUR LA TER. ONLY $1.00 and requirements. 8 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21.1980 ..to be used as states see fit, without "Jimmy Carter sees the world as he any government control. wishes it to be, I see it as it is." Reagan also favors a 30 percent Bush likes the MX missile, the tax cut spread over three years, a neutron bomb and the Trident proposal which is always well- submarine. He says we need a received at campaign rallies. strong nuclear deterrent to keep the Reagan also favors getting the Soviets in line. Bush would rebuild government out qt tne energy the CIA, give it more power, and industy. "If we turn the energy would restore respect for America industry Jose, they'll find the by ending a "vacillating" foreign energy sources we need." Reagan policy. said. Bush, who once ran a business in Candidates Although Reagan does not the oil industry, blames the energy support a "peacetime draft" or crisis on government interference in drafting women, he says the U.S. the marketplace. He would remove should support a 1.000,000 man government regulation and control reserve army ready to be called up from the oil industry and provide tax credits for profits which are SEE PAGE 10 reinvested in energy development —a move which would give the oil companies more control over coal To fight inflation. Anderson and other alternative energy sour- proposes large spending cuts, not' Ronald ces. tax cuts or wage and price controls. Bush sees the way to fight He is against a large increase in Reagan inflation as spending cuts, not tax defense spending. He believes the cuts. "Reagan's plan (a 30 percent best way to make America strong cut in taxes over the next three abroad is to show the world we have The leading contender for the the will and the discipline to curb Republican nomination for the years) would produce 30 percent our oil appetite and to bring out presidency. Since Reagan's big win inflation," he said. economy under control. in the Illinois primary last week, he While Bush's campaign got off to has emerged as the parly's front- a good start in Iowa, he has been A conservative fiscally, Anderson runner with little hopes for his SEE PAGE 10 has attracted liberals and mod- opponents to catch up. erates to his side by favoring the As he travels from state to state campaigning. Reagan4repeats the John same message. "People don't cause inflation, government does and government can make it go Anderson away." To do this, Reagan proposes The centerpiece of the Anderson getting government out of people-'s campaign is an example of the bold business. He says government George and imaginative action the control. regulation, and candidate promises—a interference in business has made simultaneous 50-cent per gallon tax us weak and sapped productivity. Bush on gasoline and 50 percent cut in He promises that in the first 24 the Social Security tax. The gas tax hours of his presidency, he would Gejorge Bush is the candidate with the "tough foreign policy" would encourage conservation and put a freeze on the hiring of the tax-cut would protect the government employees who leave who is optimistic about America and the '80s. consumer from economic distaster. government service and would Social Security and welfare would recommend that more of the federal A former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Bush says, be aided by increases in benefits income tax be retained on the states designed to offset the new tax. The Connecticut Daily Campu s, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 9 moderate increase in real defense But Kennedy has no intentions of spending—after inflation—despite giving up. His campaign schedule is calls for more from Washington's as hectic as ever. To him, the White hawks. House has a significant role to play Carter's support among the in solving problems of inflation, voters is as volatile as it ever was. unemployment, and national defen- Voters are uneasy, and sooner or se. later, he will have to leave the Rose If elected president, he would Garden. But in the meantime, he is institute an effective wage and price counting on one thing—that most control policy. He also emphasizes w ■ ■ ■ voters, whether they like it or not, energy conservation rather than would prefer Jimmy Carter over any Carter's plan of developing synthe- of those running against him. tic fuels. Carter's biggest problem is that Kennedy is opposed to nuclear he is perceived by many people to power unless "it can be demonstra- be a "good man" who is in over his ted that it can be done safely." head. And to be sure, he seems to Kennedy is known for his propo- show some insensitivitv to critical sal on a national health insurance and issues SEE PAGE 10 program. "I think we can stop the licensing of handguns, ratification spiraling cost of health care to the of the Equal Rights Amendment, American consumer," he has said. and the right to abortion. He also said "every step necessary Anderson is trying to build a new Jimmy to ensure the viability of the Social coalition of voters. Republicans, Security system ought to be taken." Democrats and Independents, who he feels will band together because Carter Although he favors eliminating the problems which confront the The only thing more scarce than unnecessary federal agancies. he is nation are so serious. snow on the New England more conservative than some of the campaign trail this year has been other candidates on that issue. He Anderson sets himself apart from the president—Jimmy Carter. proposes reviewing each agancy. his opponents further by displaying Carter's surrogates—his wife but not cutting across the board. unusual honesty before hostile Rosalyn. his sons Jack and Chip. SEE PAGE 10 groups. In the Iowa Presidential Vice President Walter Mondale. Forum in January, he told local and a host of others—tell the voters farmers he suported President how hard he is working to solve the Carter's grain embargo. In New crisis in Iran. Hampshire, he told the members of The president is running on his Gun-Owners of New Hampshire record, and on the confidence which that he favored the licensing of people have shown in him since the handguns. And at a debate in American hostages were taken in Chicago last week he told his Tehran. While that confidence is Republican rivals he could not beginning to waver, so far most support them if they won the Americans believe Carter has acted Edward nomination. with patience and caution in Iran. Anderson says the courage to The president's anti-inflation Kennedy make these stands comes from the plan—released last Friday—calls faith shown by his supporters. for spending cuts of $15 billion or Just six months ago there was a Above all, Anderson is an orator. more in new or unessential strong Democratic movement to He speaks with authority and programs along with a gasoline tax draft Sen. Edward Kennedy to run clarity, but he sometimes goes on of 101 a gallon to conserve fuel and for the presidency. Today, his after making his point. He has been reduce the national debt. campaign seems to be slowly fizz- SEE PAGE 10 And Carter proposes only a ling out. Interested in Journalism, or Business? SPRING SEMI-FORMAL apply for Saturday, March 22,1980 9-1 Putnam Refecton' Editor and Chief "Take Nine" BYOB Mixers/Munchies provided '. Managing Editor $4 per person Business Manager Tickets available AT DOOR Apply at Delta Sigma Pi The Connecticut Daily Campus

STARRING JANE FONDA WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS March 25 (Tues) ONE SHOW 8:00 SUB ONLY $1.00 Page 10 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1990 than Ronald Reagan's. His showing Some voters are also bothered by _^ in Connecticut will be more crucial his reputation as a "womanizer" ...Carter and the fact that he does not live in decidin his R©3Q3I1 8 opportunity for with his wife Joan. Joan, however, has avidly supported her husband Bush is an "optimist" who insists problems at home and abroad. We and has said she would live in the on reminding everyone how uplifted White House if her husband was in an instant or in case of an have come a long way from the days he is by the campaign. Until his elected. emergency. abrupt turnabout in Chicago, he of "Jimmy Who?" and many Reagan's age has become his began each stump speech with a people have come to know the biggest criticism. He is 69 years president's character all too well. Jerry old. But age does not seem to be a quick rundown on how well he was While many of the problems factor on his campaign trips. He doing in the campaign. But now that which face Jimmy Carter are not at handles long days of campaigning things aren't going his way, he can all his fault, his attempt to serve Brown remarkably well. and close be moody, and blames the press for both sides of the issue do not seem campaign aides have said he rarely being too critical. to bring forth successful solutions. Unfortunately for Jerry Brown, ever tires. Despite disappointment Bush That method may lead to success if the three-point plan of "protect the Reagan seems comfortable in earth, serve the people and explore presses into the crowd on the applied properly, but at times front of television cameras and campaign, shaking hands, talking to the universe" did not catch on here large audiences, which probably the voters, mixing with the people Carter seems torn between his in New England. He has since gone stems from his career as a film in a way that some of his rivals options and frozen into inaction. on. to Wisconsin where liberal actor. shun. causes have had more success, but He is well-received by audiences, his name still appears on the ballot and with his humorous, statistical in Connecticut. attacks on the federal government, ...Kennedy he tells people just what they want- Gov. Brown's ideas may hold to hear. ...Anderson more relevance for a later age, but He is also one of only two today we are faced with tougher candidates who favors gun control, questions. It is questionable whet- her or not Brown is really running an opinion which has made him criticized for not coming down off for president. He says he is running ...Bush especially unpopular in the small the soapbox, but the impression one "to raise the issues" he finds New Hampshire towns. gets is that he is most comfortable important, he has done that, and if up there. he is successful at winning a less successful at drawing support- Kennedy is still questioned on ers away from the conservative core His wife. Keke, is energetic and Chappaquiddick, an incident which outgoing, and genuinely enjoys involved the death of a young "favorite son" place on the Califor- of Ronald Reagan's following. Nor woman. And Kennedy has insisted does he have a strong appeal to campaigning, as opposed to some nia delegation, he may do so again moderate Republicans with ideas candidates' wives, who smile tnat he has released all of trje facts at the convention this summer in which are scarcely less conservative grimly for public and press. involved in that accident. New York. niDE DOAT.0 Ride Desperately needed TODAY to Boston & return on Sunday. Call Jorgengei^ 487-7483. Keep trying. P21 Songs of Protest, Ride needed for 2 to Wash. DC. any Songs of poetry & love, weekend before end of semester. Auditorium Hopefully a quick drive for a long Songs of the people... ^^ THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT. STORRS stay. Call 429-4191 or 429-6867 any- time. RB4/12 Ride DESPERATELY NEEDED to A FABULOUS EVENING OF FOLK MUSIC Boston - Saturday, March 22nd. Will share expenses. Please contact Susan "Singing separately and together, Luxon's and Crofut's voices brought the poems 487-7387. RB21 and stories of their native lands stirringly alive, now soft, now strong, but always, always melodic...The two closed with "So Long, It's Been Good to Know You" which MISCELLANEOUS had hands clapping, voices singing and people rising to cheer these two- Need a sound system for partying? astonishing performers." —The News-Times (Danbury, Conn.) All request, continuous music df all kinds. Music and lighting profes- sionals—Earl's Traveling Disco Rock and Roll. 423-9752, 423-1508, 423-2918. May2nd

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T'red of paying too much insurance on your auto? Call Tom Lobo 423-6374. M-MARCH25 &Ben TAILORING: I do expert taile ir.-j. Alterations, weaving, And also cus- tom made dresses on premises. Call '' Neriman'' for appt. between 9 am & 9 pm, 429-1444 Hunting Lodge Rd. Storrs, Ct. M.A.Y. Luxon i. What's better than a Pesaro's pepper- oni pizza? A PESARO'S pizza with Pepperoni and any extra item FREE! Just bring this ad befor March 22. Bill Crofut and Ben Luxon sing the songs of farmers, sailors M21 cowboys, barflies, chain gangs, and picket lines, of Don't get frustrated trying to finger type your report, call June's Typing Service and leave the typing up to me. woodsmen, wanders, lovers and losers, children, mothers, Free pickup and delivery. Very Rea- sonable. Call 429-2668 after 1:00 pm. M21 wastrels, and minstrels. They sing Robert Penn Warren, William Blake, and E.E. Cummings. You'll enjoy getting to ACTIVITIES know all these people...and Bill Crofut and Ben Luxon. The Conflict Simulations Society meets tuesdays in the Student Union Rm 216 to play Historical wargames and Dungeons and Dragons. A25

Saturday, March 22 the Conflict Tickets: JORGENSEN AUDITORIUM Buy one ticket,. Simulation Society will hold a war- Sr. game marathon from noon to mid- The University of Connecticut, get another ticket night in S.U. Room 218. A21 Regular Student Citizens

Join the Uconn Flying Club—General $3.50 $2.50 $3.00 Storrs absolutely FREE meeting Tuesday March 25 In Commons 217 at 7pm. Come find out 3.00 2.00 2.50 about our special intepductory flight offer. A25 Tuesday, March 25,1980

UConn Riding Club will meet Thurs. 3/21 in Rm 312 Commons. All members must attend. New members 8:15 P.M. welcome. A21 Auditorium/TICKETRON maste. charge Box Office hours: RUN FOR LIFE! Call KAO 429-3733 for info on women's road race In 9 AM 4 PM, Monday Friday 486-4226 Norwich on April 19. A25 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 11 agreed with Bergman on The Reader's Digest Foundation Anderson's 50-50 plan to cope with Digest grants donates $60,000 to between 50 and energy. 70 colleges each year, according to The plan calls for a 50 percent go a long way foundation president Kent Rhodes. ...groups social security tax reduction Rhodes, who is also president of the financed by a 50-cent per gallon By JIM CONDON Magazine Publisher's Association, gasoline tax with a provision to give FROM PAGE 6 This year, the Connecticut Daily said while $60,000 is not a whole lot rebates to people on fixed incomes. Campus has reporters as far as of money," the money goes right to educational talks on subjects not Kevin Nellongton. who heads Illinois and Florida to cover the available in the classroom. Unlike the individual, it makes it possible Students for Kennedy, said he presidential primaries. First-hand for him to go places he wouldn't get the two previous groups, Pi Sigma agrees with Kennedy's views coverage of the presidential primar- Alpha is politically neutral. to go to otherwise." because Kennedy best represents ies would have been impossible Rhodes said most of the writing Kaess said the group cooperates the ideals of Democrats. The junior without the Reader's Digest Foun- with the Young Democrats and under these travel research grants political science major said Carter is dation. has been published in major news- College Republicans to bring a "crisis president" and wants For the last 20 years, the founda- candidates to campus to increase papers and magazines. UConn stu- everyone to rally around his tion has provided grants to different dents have sold stories to The New student awareness on their mistakes. colleges to help pay for expenses positions and the political system in York Times. The Cleveland Plain incurred by journalism students Dealer. The Boston Globe. AP. and general. The political science and doing travel research work. This sociology major added "We hope to UPI and other newspapers and ...primary year the foundation gave the UConn magazines. educate the students to the FROM PAGE 3 Journalism Department $1000, Most of the students who use campaign issues since an educated nearly half of which has gone to -I three weeks from a primary should Reader's Digest money for travel electorate is the foundation of any help pay for three journalism stud- Democratic society." be disallowed. research work stay between Boston ents who are covering the campaign and New York, but others, have Chris Bergman, campus Finally, popular vote should as part of their independent study undertaken more exotic assign-, coordinator for the Anderson commit delegates in a proportionate projects. ments. In 1968 a student went to campaign, said there are no bosses manner. Blind selection in the New The three students are Ann Vietnam to report on the war. in the group, everyone works York Republican primary and "all Porto, Mary Messina and Daniel John Breen, a UConn jounalism together. Bergman said that he or nothing" delegate commitment Hatch. Messina is editor in chief of professor, said the student who supports Anderson because, "He in states such as California insult the Daily Campus. went to Vietnam "spent the first appeals to voters who think and look voter intelligence. Today's delegate Messina said the experience has couple days cowering under a desk beyond the empty rhetoric of other system dates back to a time before "strengthened my belief in the in the AP office while it was being candidates. The political science electronic media and travel political system." shelled by the Viet Cong." and economics major said Anderson provided widespread personal "This is the kind of opportunity Other students have gone to is willing to address energy as the exposure of candidates. The you only get once," Hatch said. Bermuda. Montreal, London and root of all foreign and economic election of delegates to make a "It's real-life practical experience. elsewhere. "We sent a guy to U.S. problems. "responsible" choice is an archaic It makes the difference between just Ireland," Breen recalled. "He took Member Charles Ballero. a concept inapplicable to today's playing at journalism and actually the $200. went to Ireland, and we sophomore political science major. societv. doing it," he said. never heard from him again." FOR RENT

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SUMMER SUBLET-apartment close to campus available from mid-May on, option for fall. Rest of May free 1.00 Rent negotiable 429-1303. FR26 Blooper ROOM FOR RENT $120 J, mo . -25 for trekies includes utilities. Walk to campus. Sat. March 22 in costume Call 429-2271.. FR21 PB36 Grad or faculty preferred to share 8:00 & 10:15PM house. OWN room. 2 fireplaces, quiet, wooded area 2 miles from campus, call Jeff 429-6541 (evenings) W21 THERE'S A REASON NURSES GET LOST AND FOUND Walking Stick lost in Coll of Agri. on Monday. March 17 Please call MORE RESPONSIBILITY IN THE NAVY. 429-5234 or return to Deans Office. Coll of Agri !!Reward. LF25

Lost: Notebook for English 109. left on THEY'RE NAVY OFFICERS. shelves of Co-op on Monday, the 17th March, if you picked it up please can 429-4803 and ask for Rm 309 Thanks' One side of her collar is the symbol of the Nurse Corps. On the other is the insignia of a LF25 LOST: Brown photo album with Navy officer. vacation pictures fell off my car on 3-7-80 on Rt 195. Please call 429-2123 It makes a difference. after 11:30pm. Reward! LF24

Navy nurses are responsible not only for the care of their patients, but for the training and LOST: Siam Silver ring in women's locker room of the Field House supervision of hospital corpsmen and other clinical and administrative personnel. Their Reward. Call Karen 429-6529 LF24

choice of specialties is from thirteen different fields, with positions in twenty-six cities. LOST: Norton Literature book and They earn an excellent salary, top benefits, and that one intangible that money can't buy- the notebook in Arjona possibly Call 429-4803 ask for Paula. LF21 pride and respect of a Navy officer. LOST: Lady's silver seiko watch For the complete story, speak to your local recruiter. between Teds and the Jungle Sunday Great sentimental value Reward Please call 487-6555. LF21

Navy Nurse Corps Representative LT Jim Wayne will Navy Officer Programs FOUND: Set of keys on steps leading be on campus March 24. You may also contact him: Leo W. O'Brien Federal BLDG. to Hilltop. Call CDC. 429-9384 Albany, NY 12207 Preregestration for Term Paper Re- Phone (518) 472-4424 search Clinics (March 5-24). at the University Library's Information Desk Level 1 Clinics will be held at the NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE. library, March 25-27. For more infor mat ion. call 486-4636. A24 Page 12 The Connecticut Daily Campus. Friday, March 21,1980

The rest of the starting line-up should be: Tom Capalbo. first base. SPORTS Mike Johnson, second base, Talli Four gymnasts Noble, . and Jim Considine at third base. The catcher should be sophomore Doug Elliot. Elliot hit .630 on the southern trip. headed for The outfielders should be John Huskies take on Redmen Gallic in left, Dennis Donovan in center, and Joe Vincente in right. Baylock has not decided on a regionals starting . By GREGG RUSSO St. John's has not played a game "The attitude and morale is good Four members of the UConn The first sounds of spring sports yet this season, but they had a so far," Baylock said. "Our guys women's gymnastics team will part- (baseball bats cracking and umpires complete fall schedule, in which arc u.uwl in that u/nv " icipate in the Eastern Association of screaming) will be heard this they went 21-6. The starting hurler Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Sunday when the UConn baseball for the Redmen should be John (EAIAW) gymnastics regionals at team plays St. John's in their Franco. Franco was 5-0 in the fall, Penn State Friday and Saturday. northern season opener here. The and posted an excellent 0.75 earned Joan Barnacle, a sophomore vaul- Huskies are coming off a 1-8 run average. ter from Newington, Laura Shipley, southern swing. The Redmen have three players a sophomore specialist from Sims- "Everyone is out to get UConn," who hit over .300 in the fall. They bury, freshman Nellie Lyons of UConn coach Andy Baylock said. are outfielder Doug Latrenta (.345). Greenwich on the balance beam, "When we were down south we catcher Don Giordano (.342) and and senior Janice Pasquale from could hear everyone say how we first baseman Carl Comyathy South Windsor on the uneven bars, were ranked last year and how nice (.317). Comyathy also lead the team are the first Huskies ever to qualify it would be to beat us." in runs batted in with 27. Giordano for the regional competition. The Huskies last played St.' had 24. and Latrenta had 17. "The four girls have done an John's in the finals of the NCAA Dennis Long and Mark Winters outstanding job," Geri Henle, the regional tournament last May. will share UConn's mound duty. first-year UConn coach said. "It's UConn beat them twice to advance Long was 3-3, last year, while really exceptional to see UConn to the College World Series in Winters was 6-4 with a 2.09 ERA. being represented at the region- Omaha. "Both players will probably pitch als." "We eliminated St. John's last because we don't have another All four girls will enter the year, so you know they will be game until the following Saturday," competition with high rankings in looking to get us." Baylock said. Baylock said. "Denny has been the region. Lyons is currently "They will have those losses coming along really well and Mark Robert Hoffer second, Barnacle is third, Pasquale looking them right in the eye." lost a three-hitter down south." is fifth and Shipley is sixth. Staub can clog up the base paths Chris Speier had a back problem sometimes the way he runs and right before the All-Star game, I could be a little short defensively moved Scott over to short and put Williams looks for first baseman around first base. As for Cromartie, Tony Bernazard on second because who probably will win the job I was going for defense. Cash more eventually, he hasn't been that or less thought he was being good a clutch hitter up to this point. humiliated but he never quit CLEARWATER. Fla. homers in 158 games. When the "I'm not leaning either way," (UPD—"How do I feel about it? I working. I used Cash down the Expos got center fielder Ron Williams said. "We have room for stretch when Speier had trouble love it. Every manager wishes for a LeFlore from the Tigers this past both of them on this club no matter situation like this." Dick Williams with his back again in September December, they decided he'd be how it turns out. Last year this time and he did a tremendous job for us. said, watching his one of their regular outfielders we had pretty much the same take infield practice from the Cash got tired near the end. All of along with Andre Dawson and Ellis situation at second base between us got tired, but he kept playing and. dugout before their game with the Valentine and Cromartie would Rodney Scott and Dave Cash. Scott Philadelphia Phillies. helped us a lot." battle it out with Staub for the first became the regular second Cromartie and Staub are friends. The Expos' manager was .base job. baseman the day before we broke surrounded by nearly a dozen While each is confident he can win "I haven't made a decision yet camp, only a couple of days before the first base assignment. writers and radio men. one of whom who'll be the first baseman," the season started. had asked him how he felt about Cromartie isn't crazy about the idea Williams said. "I probably won't "Cash didn't like his role. I that this is, being generally Rusty Staub and Warren Cromartie decide defintely until our last five or wouldn't have either if I were Cash. characterized as some kind of each claiming he would be six games down here in Florida. But he kept working hard and Montreal's regular first baseman drarna at high noon or Gun Fight at What I'm doing now is playing each stayed in good shape and when OK Corral. this year. one every other day and whoever "To me, it isn't the one-on-one Staub. 35. and slimmed down shows most will win the job. appreciably from last season, was "You can say something for both competitive thing the Montreal newspapers are making it out." almost strictly a designated hitter of them," Williams went on. said the 26-year-old product of and pinch-hitter last year, which he "They're both working very hard. Miami Dade North Community split between Detroit and Montreal. Staub always has been a great RBI He hit .236 in 68 games with the man and a good clutch hitter. He College, which also sent Bucky Dent and Mickey Rivers into pro- Tigers, for whom he had 40 RBIs hasn't played in the .field regularly ball. and nine homers, and after coming in the last three years and he never "The way I look at it. I'm going to to the Expos on July 20. he batted was a gazelle but we all knew he can play somewhere. First base, .267. drove in 14 runs and hit three hit. homers in 38 games with them. "Cromartie is a pure hitter. He's shortstop. the outfield or Cromartie is nine years younger more agile and younger. He enjoys somewhere. I don't think this thing between Rusty and me is any life- than Staub. He played left field for playing first base and moves around or-death situation the way some the Expos last year, batting .275. there pretty well." people are portraying it. Rusty is driving in 46 runs and hitting eight What Williams did not say is that expos working hard. I respect him." ■

would come from television reven- locales range from downtown Bos- ues although there are no official ton to Worcester 40 miles to the Alternate games planned sponsors yet, corporate contribu- west to Marblehead 15 miles to the tions, the federal government "and north. as many T-shirts as we call sell." Despite the heady plans, there is BOSTON (UPD—Despite no go-ahead by mid-April. The committee downplayed the still no official backing from the guarantees of official support, seed "Boston is a natural for hurry-up difficulties and drawbacks, such as White House, nor any assurance money or approval from athletes, games like this," said committee the lack of an eight-lane track, a that athletes will participate. Orga- optimistic city officials have annou- chairman Francis X. Meaney, who suitable rowing course, a velodrome nizers said they hoped both prob- nced plans to stage alternate Oly- noted Boston was the only city for bicycling, a 10-meter diving lems would be settled by April 13 mpic Games this summer on only offering to stage an alternate Sum- board, limited seating for swim- after various meetings between the four months notice. mer Games. ming and basketball and the enor- White House, the athletes and the The 11-member Mayors Commit- mous responsibility in staging the U.S. Olympic committee have con- tee For the Boston Summer Games "We have the best games on only four months notice. cluded. outlined its plan Wednesday, say- facilities for athletes, for housing "They had six years at Lake ing they could sponsor the games and we have the media outlets for Placid," noted Boston University without a hitch once the White events of this magnitude." President John Silber, a committee WHUS to broadcast House decides to back the idea. The At the core of the committee's member. "But that was a rural town proposal features competition in 22 proposal are the city's colleges, just as the name indicates. This is home opener events Aug. 17-25, just after the whom Meaney says can house up to Lake Turbulence. We're used to it. Summer Olympics and the Demo- 20,000 in what would normally be It wont be any strain at all." The UConn baseball home opener cratic National Convention. empty dormitories. Organizers said Boston's much- Planning for such an Olympian with the St. John's Redmen will be Meaney emphasized no city or maligned public transportation sys- broadcast on WHUS 91.7 at 12:55 endeavor usually takes six years. state funds would be used unless tem could handle crowds and that But organizers are confident thej p.m. Sunday. The action will be there were promises of reimburse- school buses could be used to broadcast by Andy Young and Tony can pullit off if they get the ment. Such funds, he indicated, shuttle visitors to events. Possible Savino. The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 13 By LEITH G. JOHNSON Two art colonies developed in Sailing ships are docked in New Connecticut, one at Old Lyme and London's harbor. The American the other in Cos Cob (dubbed the Thread Company mills dominate "Clapboard School" because of the Willimantic's country setting. A artists' fondness for the structures Reflections of quiet locomotive crosses the bridge span- as subjects.) Connecticut drew im- ning Mill Pond in Cos Cob. A pressionists from New York thanks wooden ship waits for further to its accessibility and quaint rural days past construction at Noank. Sitting on setting. Millstone Point, a young lady gazes The works, ranging from the late across the water at White's Point. 1800s to the 1930s, capture the area Those scenes of quieter, slower at a turning point—suburbanization 'Connecticut and American days are subjects of some of the was already changing the cultural paintings comprising "Connecticut and physical landscape. The pastor- Impressionism' and American Impressionism," an al paintings, with broad strokes of exhibition at the William Benton warm, subdued colors, capture Smith House, and DeForest House. shows a demure woman, sitting at a Museum. Connecticut before the onslaught of By 1922 all three had been destroy- white-tablecloth-covered table, ap- Rather than recreating a realistic bedroom communities, the streetcar ed, two in the wake of the new parently pondering fruit. Shadows image, the 95 works by 25 artists and automobile, and the "greater County Courthouse. "Willimantic, subdue the tone; in the background reflect attention to mood and color. metropolitan area's" expansion into Connecticut" features one Ame- lavenders and pinks suggest a "The themes of American Impres- the state. . rican Thread Company mill, its lilac-bordered garden. sionism were, by and large, the Several of the artists headed to smokestack dominating the view. The shore was also a popular familiar commonplaces of the coun- the cities for material. Childe Not all of the paintings had an stomping ground. William Howe tryside, village and the shore, or the Hassan's "New Haven Green" urban setting. Walter Metcalf capt- Foote preserved Millstone Point in a urban pleasantries of park and (1909) shows the New Haven Free ured brooks, meadows, the mid-day 1920 painting. Edmund Greacon's boulevard," according to Dr. Har- Library under construction (comple- sun throwing shadows on a tree- "Noank Shipyard" (1912) has a old E. Spencer, professor of art here ted 1911) and three of the "Quality shrouded farmhouse. "On the partially completed boat as subject; and guest curator of the exhibit. Row" houses, Trowbridge House, Porch" (I908),by William Chadwick. a sailboat, powered by the Long **»-*>- Island Sound breezes, is featured in Theodore Robinson's "Anchorage. Cos Cob. Ct." (1894). An interesting photography exhi- bit accompanies the art show. They include pictures of the artists at work and their subjects. They-provide an objective backgro- und to the artists' subjective views. Etchings by the artists are also displayed. Frequently, they were studies later incorporated in the painted works. From the standpoints of both art and local history, "Connecticut and American Impression" is an illumi- nating presentation. The Benton show, which will run through May 30. is part of a larger exhibition of 213 works presented in conjunction with the Hurlbert Gallery. Greenwi- ch, and the Lyme Historical Society. Will Howe Foote 'White's Point from Millstone Point' [c. 1920] (L) and Edmund Greacen 'Noank Shipyard' [1912] (R) Old Lyme. {ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS!

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Earn $170.00 Per Month Plus Hundreds More Each Summer! The Connecticut Army National Guard has a new program, Reserve Officers Training Course/Simultaneous Membership Program, designed for students that will provide financial assistance and an officer's commission without interfering college or career plans. FOR MORE INFORMATION NO CALL OR VISIT THE: GREAT LOANS BENEFITS CAREER INFORMATION CENTER 360 BROAD STREET NO LATER HARTFORD, CT., 06115 MANAGEMENT PAYMENTS 566-7900 TRAINING v_ Page 14 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 By CAROLE A. SMITH There is a very sensual aspect to For the next three nights a them, too, and soon their seemingly unique and intriguing experience good intentions toward Tadasu will be presented at the Mobius become questionable. ARTS Theater—"The Bridge of Dreams." Bob Tanski plays Tadasu with a It is a splendid adaptation of the certain innocent quality that draws Junichiro Tanizaki novella. the audience towards him as they The play is unique because it is sympathize with his confusion. creatively adapted for Chamber Donna Greene (Shebumi) theater, used to dramatize the compliments Tanski well, moving movella. The characters come alive about with him as a distant shadow. Jerry Krasser's as they act out the piece in narrative Alan Girelli portrays the solemn style. Although there is one father, Otokumi, with crisp, clear narrator. Tadasu. his interpretation actions that speak louder than his of each character is skillfully woven words. 'A Bridge of Dreams' into the story. The' characters' The true genius of the production actions are projected through this is the director, Jerry Kir ass er. He narrative approach. not only directed and adapted the The play deals with the search for play, but also designed the setting, "Mother" and the theme of lighting and costumes (with the An eerie atmosphere help-of Kathy Roy and Marilyn nuturing. The forbidden taboo of Wilson). The setting, consisting of incest is also involved and is dealt in multi-level platforms with Japanese of smoldering sensuality an indiscreet manner at times. Tadasu. the main character, is screens and mats, is imaginative. torn between the love he had for his Shadow effects are combined with screened images adding to the dead mother and the new love he has generated for his stepmother. sensual atmosphere of the show. The play centers around his The costumes are . traditional relationship with both mothers. Japanese kimonos, symbolizing each character's position. He is portrayed in two Krasser's direction is excellent. perspectives as himself and as He creates an eerie atmosphere of Shebumi. the feminine aspect of the smoldering sensuality. His use of bo). Because the boy wears white multi-levels adds time and space to and the girl wears black this the piece—he has the actors move feminine perspective can be about in Japanese-like steps, their explained by the Chinese hands defining the action. Music is cosmology of "yin-yang." The yang heard during crucial points, is fhe male principle of light that climaxing with the events and combines with yin, the female disappearing. passive principle of dark producing The only flaw is the treatment of all that comes to be. Unfortunately incest. Although handled discreetly the true meaning of Shebumi is at times, some action is too graphic unclear, and one can only speculate and blatant. The technique of about its meaning. suggestion could have been used This confusion is soon forgotten, more for a better effect. though, because of the Fine "The Bridge of Dreams" is an performances of the excellent cast. enthralling endeavor which creates Both the mother (June Sjostrom) a very enjoyable experience. It's Left to right: Bob Tanskl, Donna Greene, Allan Girelli, June SJostrom, Nina and the stepmother (Jane Dewey) pleasing to see theater presented-in Golden, Tim Paine are sensitive in their portrayals. a creatively different manner.

Chevy Malibu '69—Runs perfect, Green Shag Rug. 12 1/2 ft. by 15 1/2 Cut Roses $1.00 each delivered to Looking for a place to live this Clean, must be driven to appreciate. ft. Asking $75 Call 429-4452 Ask for FOR SALE UConn Friday and Saturday 3/21 and summer? Rooms available in house 1 3/22. Catalano Florist 423-2167 FS20 $500 or BO. Bruce, 429-5983. FS21 Mark FS3 mile from campus. Large rooms, Rare 1965 ES 345 Gibson. Black w/ kitchen, living room. Call 487-1414 FR27 SUPER T-SHIRTS BY SOLAR white binding. Semi-hollow body. 6 SUPER T-SHIRTS BY SOLAR GRAPHICS highest Quality. Free channel tone variation. 423-7467. FOR RENT GRAPHICS highest quality Free help help with artwork. Two dozen mini- Kevin. FS28 Apartment for sublet—May. Wood- with artwork. Two dozen minimum. mum. Call for prices. Noon until haven Apts. 2 Bedrooms. Heat and Call for Prices. Noon until Midnight Woodhaven Apt. to sublet for summer midnight 429-8784. FS21 BEACH BOYS-1 ticket only. Asking water included in rent $245. per 429-8784 FS28 $245. per month plus telephone and month. Call 429-6017 for information. $11 (no profit), transportation includ- electric. Two bedrooms —11/2 miles ed! We leave at 6:00. Call 423-7908 Fr25 You won't be a student forever! Learn TAILORING: I do expert tailoring. off campus. Call 429-6515 FR27 anytime. FS20 to cook. Cookbook sale. S.U. Lobby Alterations, weaving and also custom Summer Sublet—Norwegian Wood Spacious Summer Apartment availa- 3-18 & 3-21. 10-2:00 FS21 made dresses on premises. Call Apts. — 5 miles from campus, own I "Neriman" for appt. between 9am & HUNGRY? Learn -o cook! The Nutri- ble for two people at Knollwood acres. tion Club's cookbook sale in the S.U. room - female non-smoker. Rent For sale: 650 Yamaha. Call 456-0852 9pm. 429-1444 Hunting Lodge Rd. 1/4 mile from campus. $225/month. $110./month. Furnished- tennis court after 7p.m. Ask for Steve. FS28 Storrs, C FSallyear Lobby Tues. 3/18 & Fri.3/21 10-2:00 Call 429-3447 or 487-7432. FR27 FS20 call 875-5773. FR27

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JEANSACOtDUROVSm EASTWM C0WKCTICVT' (thousands in stock!) _AU SIZES FSSO Budget Workshop CHINOS " 10.99 up sntrus U:\TF* Wednesday March 26,1980 7-10pm Do»-.ntov ,i Whlitmar.Jic "Whcrelt's AH At' Commons 217

fororganizatibns requesting FSSO funds. NUTRITION CLUB Better Homes & Garden

Any questions call 486-4308 or come to FSSO commons 218 COOKBOOK SALE S.U. Lobby Tues. 3/18 Fri. 3/21 10:00-2:00 Budgets will be accepted no later than Monday March 31, Oriental, Mexican, b-b-Q, 1980 in Commons 218 Many Others. TheConnecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 Page 15 TEACH OVERSEAS! All fields, all LIFEGUARD OPENINGS— Part-time Al—Happy 22nd to my Favorite waste levels. For details, send self-address spring weekends, full time in summer product. Have a good one, but not too ed, stamped, long envelope to: Teach- WSI, previous experience guarding, good without me. Love, Bear P21 I mmm—.—_._ __. ing, Box 1049, San Diego, CA 92112. teaching lessons preferred for most HW24 HAPPY 20TH BIRTHDAY DIANNEM postions; advanced life saving, limit- Hope my Sweetheart has her best ed experience acceptable for others. MARKETPLACE $$$$$$$SUMMER JOBS: OGUNOUIT B-Day ever! Love, John-Boy. P20 Contact Mansfield Recreation Dept., MAINE. Thousands of positions must 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs, CT Max Creek and Dave Thorpe will do a be filled NOW in Restaurants, Motels 06268, 429-3321. Deadline for applica- Di— Happy 22nd Birthday! Remem- EVENTS benefit concert, this Sunday, March Banks, and more. Enjoy Maine Sea- tions March 28. Equal Opportunity ber all the great times from "Burgers' coast for summer. For job/living 23rd, from 8-12 p.m., In the ROTC Employer. HW28 in the cafe, crushes, singing Beatle hangar. Tickets are $2.50 - proceedsinformation send $1.00 to regional songs (I get by with a little help from Start your weekend oft right—come to will go to Hartford and Storrs Clam- representatives at: Ogunq Job Place- my friends), Happy Hour at the Pub, Hollister B this Saturday March 22 shell groups. E21 ment P.O. Box 107, Amherst, MA trips to Boston, N.Y., and 2x Florida! 9:00 am to 1:00 PM for a PANCAK& 01002 HWM PERSONALS i'll miss you when we FINALLY BREAKFAST. All you can eat for Looking for waiters to work for meals. E&Zl****'™***™** $i.50 with plain, blueberry and Storrs Community Against the Draft — — — — — _ ^ ______^ _ ain't no stopping us nownntew —we're—Ufa' on Start immediately. Russell D in Frats. chocolate chip pancakes. E21 still has tickets available for the bus to the move! Love Ya —AM P21 Call Larry at 487-7766 HW21 ToCarla, the T A who I actually know the March 22 March on Washington. personally: So it's your birthday. That Spring Semi-Formal. Saturday, Bus leaving Student Union, midnite is sufficient reason for everyone in the TRACEY Disco those cute buns across Lifeguards wanted. Early Spring thru March 22, 1980 (9-1). Putnam Refec- Friday (21st) returning Sat. night, lat. entire world to celebrate (including the ice in the Uconn Ice show on Labor Day. Must have W.S.I, and tory, BYOB. Mixers/Munchles pro- Late. Tickets $18.00, available from pesky freshmen( - the future governor Sunday night! Love ya, K.J.R. P21 vided.$4per person, tickets available Good Food Truck, or call Lenny CPR Training. Apply in person Frank Davis Resort Moodus Ct. Call at S.U Lobby Mon. March 17 to 487-6239. Come show your opposition Hey Capt. Kurtz, Crown lounge and HAPPY BIRTHDAY TRISH (your not 873-8681 between 8-5 for interview. Thurs. March 20 10 am - 3 pm. to draft registration! E21 the strip will never be the same. You really old) Love, Kenny P21 HW25 Sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi E21 —~~r~.~Z7l.~~~~.'~T were no fuss. The trip proved most 1 . PANCAKE BREAKFAST Saturday CRUISESHIPS!/Sailing Expeditions! fruitful (get it?) Hope next year is a Comedy Film Festival, featuring: March 22. 9:00 am - 2:00 pm date. See you at Huskies for pitch. CARLA-- Happy Birthday! We still W C FIELDS THE THREE Batterson D Frats All you can eat for /Sailing Camps. No experience. Good Pay. Summer. Career. Nationwide, Don't forget Dinner. Fla. scoping is love you, even though you're old STOOGES and THE MARX BROS. $1.50 We've got: Banana, Chocolate tops, I know you burned your eyes 1st -The ancients P21 Worldwide! Send $4 95 for Applica- Friday, March 21, L.S. 154 at 8 and 10 Chip, Blueberry, Plain & Whole officer. P21 — pm. ONLY $1.00. Presented by the Wheat. Meet the real Captain Crash. tion/Info/Referrals to CRUISE1 WORLD 145 Box 60129, Sacramento, Attention—All UCMB Members— Finance Society. E21 _Z^—!-}—— — —. CA 958f-f' ——— You afe cordially invited to the __. Phantom Turtle, You bet your sweet ~^»T~~ni~~~~aZ t~~~Ti PANCAKE BREAKFAST—Saturday, infamous Harunetta's Funf 'al. Friday xxx am Burz P21 SQUARE DANCE: Sat. March 22 March 22, 10-2. $1.50 all you can eat. Jobs! Lake Tahoe California! " ' night 7:30, 310 Commons BYOB Be Plain Little exp. Fantastic Tips! Pay! $1600- there Aloha! Please dress appropriate f EL, ,o ,hl ,ir^ Ejlnn ^ - Blueberry & Apple. Morgan "Earth to Sin, Earth to Sin-" Don't Uconn celebrate the first Weekend of ____ rr„...„..\ o„ .K«r,Ti BM $3800 summer. Thousands needed. ly (i.e. black). P21 Spring!! $1.50 at the door-$1.00 with _>_*__°™ __*___■ _2_ Casino's, Restaurants, Ranches, Cru- mean to be a Payne, but thought I'd wish you a Happy 2nd Oay of Spring. coupon In Friday's CDC.JS1_ Come t0 Sousa House Pancake sale. isers, Rafting, etc. Send $4.95 for P.J.— Now that you have reached the Feast on But with vealy weather like this, it will big 21, I hope you are prepared to OAMP/VKC RRPAKPAST M«rritt R chocolate chip, coconut, and Applicantions Info/Referrals. Lake- AN probably rain. P21 have some fun. Get psyched for L .K? <« o I . H 7J I. oo strawberry ppancakes. All you can eat world 145 Box 60129, Sacto, CA (south) 10-2, Saturday March 22. g s Mflrch 23 1Q 95860. Friday Happy Birthday. I love you, Banana Strawberry and plain. All you * E Doug, Good luck on Sunday. Don't go Your Bear, Always and Forever. P21 can eat for $1.50. E21 r Professional QUALITY Male Dancers. 0-2 like some people Love, your • No experience necessary. Gymnastics secret admirer. P21 To Buckley S 308. Ellsworth 720, Sousa 408. And TNE World At Large: S U 8 helpful. Earn $100-200 nightly. For when you're hungry? PESAROS 1 U° , h„ T, ""' '' JUDY-Thanks for two great years, it n,0rma,ion Auditions call 487-8439 or 634-1760. A Bad-Lizard from Tucson is whip- DOES! 5pm-1am EVERYDAY (1pm- %£*> K Ik WTJ f°« Ask for Marcus. HW24 can only get better. Love, Barry PS. ping into Storrs May 10th. When 12pm Sundays.) Call 487-1404 now. SSLiflSSSJ!!! Alapocas before work? Why not! P21 these dry bones hit UConn, all hell's E21 "FREE FILM" ANNAPURNA Cllmb- PLAYGROUNG OPENINGS- gonna break loose! So, tie down the m" »«_ i._ » ~^~~~~Ci»rti lnQ ,ne South Face. Presented at To Carla our favorite T.A. and buddy - women and burn the cows! JMMP is pt Me- I m a p^ancake breakfast/ Q« c Wednesday ttJSVSgSfiS^ :Have a happy! Julia and Mary -coming!!P21 P25 rU Ch Sundayc rt?, MarchM %%%L 23, from US^mSm9:00am - 2:00 n'ght^^ March 26th 7:30 in S.U. Rm 306 Supervisors and Assistants—previous Dear Mef, Lynnzie it was great fun seeing you at pm for $1.50 all the pancakes you can experience leading/supervising child- Roses are Red the Bidwell Tavern. Let's meet there eat, egg Mc Muffin $1.25 or scram- ren in arts & crafts, exercise & play, games, field trips etc. preferred. Violets are Blue again next Thursday. P21 bled eggs & ham $1^50. 621 Tag Sa|e Baked Goods.grinders. Happy Birthday to you — Limited experience acceptable. Con- 7"~ ~ „ " _ E.O.Smith school cafeteria, Saturday tact Mansfield Recreation Dept., 4 Shoo-Bi-Do-Bi-Do HEY BUMBO! I'm sick of Wesson Oil Preregistration for Term Paper Re- .. . ,. . ,_ „ __ . _- „_ Have a dynamite day, Parties! Let's meet at the coffeehouse search Clinics (March 5-24), at the March, 22"d .1?°° PT*5 pm South Eagleville Road, Storrs, CT 06268, 429-3321. Deadline for applica- and year too!!! You're the best roomie in Belden Lounge, Friday night University Library's Information Desk Be^e«tjtuden^^Wp_to Qerrony^ ever. Lots of love, Paula P21 (3-21-60 hat 9 P21 Level 1. Clinics will be held at the tions March 28. Equal Opportunity Employer. HW28 library, March 25-27. For more .._..,, . Joe, Bob, and Greg. Remember: Ft. inigin«tion^t4w-4aa6_ HELP WANTED Lauderdale, Biltmore Happy Hour, WANTED Summer Job Interviews Tuesday If socialism scares you, come to the surprise swim, humps in the backseat One person looking for efficiency or March 25th at 3*30, 6:30 p.m. In Space Mountain, "speed much," College Republican meetings Every FINDING, GETTING Teaching Posi- small apartment to rent for Sept. 80 tions Beach 443. Looking for good workers; Mickey Mouse Revue, the ghetto, Wed. 6:00, Commons 202. — secondary, elementary, pub- through May 81. preferably near lie, private — Publication 'rom school students should make $320/week. "suck on this!" porno clicks, Yankees t HW24 campus, call 429-3014 W25 ATTENTION ALL YOU HUNGRY administrator with experience recruit- Beefsteak Brian, "eat much," Tasha, PEOPLE! Breakfast at Crandall A in0- hirin0 teachers, covers: job TENNIS TOURNAMENT COORDINA Cockroaches, "I'm only gonrja tell you Male vocalist for newly tormed~rock Sunday, March 23rd till 1:00 PM. sources, dossiers, resumes, inter- TOR OPENING—Flexible hours- once, thanks for all the good times in band with much potential. If interest- Omelettes - all styles: Cheese, ham viewing, more. $3.95 * $.75 postage, some week nights, weekends. May - the sun!" Love, Cindy, Lisa, Pattie, ed call Mark or Craig Ellsworth 212. and cheese, onion, western and plain, handling. Check, money order. June. Contact Mansfield Recreation Suzanne, and Wendy. P.S. Sid is 429-9301. W24 Teac 9 - 7 156 Deerhaven Bai God!! P21 All the pancakes you can eat! Toast ^ D„ ., ' . " Dept. 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs, and beverage. A bargain at $1.75. No _*______CT 06268, 429-3321. Deadline for Senior female, quiet, nonsmoker seeks room in house apt. for fall rM2rva^sjieeded._E21 oamp T,mber Traj|8 ' To||an(j MaM applications March 28. Equal Oppor- tunity Employer. HW28 Hey Lou-Lou! Loads of. luck on that '80-Spr.'81 Call 487-7821. W24 BRUNCH- 10-2 Crawford C (South) «« »«'" lookln0 ,or, ~a^ "V"86'0™ exam today! Party begins at 1:00!! Pancakes or French toast. Bacon or «* program specialists, bo h ma le BASEBALL/SOFTBALL OPENINGS P21 Looking for a female who enjoys Sausage; O.J. Coffee, tea, $1 .M female. Positions are avalable in Part-time - baseball umpires - league Beach Boys music and would like to Saturday, March 22. E21 r,dl"0- fly™""™, waterfront, small- for 10-12 year olds. May-June. Base- Ms. Moore of McMahon, Have a good be escorted to their concert March craft, unit, and other areas. Program ball umpires for Pony/Colt League weekend I'M SURE you'll miss me!! 20th at the Hartford Civic Center. Have vou had a breakup of an specialists - $750-$950. Assistants - (13-17) year olds), June-July. Slow P21 __^__-_l_i__i____l m'matrreiaVionshlplnthJMast year. W0M600 Unit Leaders - $750-950 Pitch Softball Coordinator for 7-12 Q Hear Ye, Hear Ye. Yea olde Military WANTED 3 bedroom house for Call 429-5314. Ph.D study. Conflden- Salary Includes room and board for 9 year olds, May-June. Contact Mans* graduate student preferably within 5 field Recreation Dept., 4 South Eagle- Bade will be held at the Colony, tiality assured. Rikke Wassenberg *_*_> ** ___*____** _*__ Vernon, CT on March 29, 1980 miles of campus starting in May P«. ' Valley Girl Scout Council, 74 Forest vill Road, Storrs, CT 06268. 429-3321. Tickets per couple (laddie & lassie) is Contact: 429-5898. 423-4039 after 5pm — St., Hartford, CT., 06105. Or call Deadline for applications March 28. $35. Come one. come all!! P21 W21 Where's your head at? Find out at the 249-2495 HW25 Equal Opportunity Employer. HW28 Map Sale. S.U. Lobby 4/10. E28 i Complimentary Hors D'oeuvres A career in law— featured at BRUNCH without law school. ROSAL'S After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a CRAWFORD DC stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — RESTAURANT without law school. Monday thru Frrday As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of Pancakes or the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at French toast Thetnstitute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of 4:00 to 6:30 seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of Bacon or Sausage ; your training, The Institute's unique Placement Service will cocktail of the day find you a responsible and challenging job in a law firm, March 22 1-4 bank or corporation in the city of your choice. 10-2 89$ The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first $1.50 Route 195, Storrs 487-1043 and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 3,000 graduates in over 85 cities \ nationwide. THE BLACK HOUSE If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement 7 GILBERT ROAD Office for an interview with our representative. The following events will be sponsored by the We will visit your campus on: Black House during the w eek of March 21 to TUESDAY, MARCH 25 March 28,1980.

3/22/80 Caribbean American Student An order dinner open Organization (CASO) to public The Institute 235 South 17th Street Special Academic and Study fioutj Philadelphia, PA 19103 3/23/80 enrichment Program Summer Program 4 CEMS for Students ft Counselors Paralegal (215) 732-6600 Training

operated by Para legal. Inc 3/24/80 NAACP Meeting Approved by the American Bar Association. Page 16 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Friday, March 21,1980 MR EASTERN CONN. PHYSIQUE CONTEST PANCAKE and REPETITION BENCH PRESS CONTEST GEOGRAPHY BREAKFAST SAT. MABCH 22,1980 at SCAFER AUDITORIUM COURSES June's Typing EASTERN CONN. STATE COLLEGE Service (corner of Valley and Windham St. in Willimantic) ARE Sat. March 22 Batterson D Prejudging for Physique 1p.m.—Bench Press 9-2 starts at 3:30p.m.—Presentation of Physique Guarantees to meet pm $6 reserved front for spectators ALL your typing dead- M General Admission for spectators lines! Free pickup $2 General Admission for students I.D. and delivery. Very rea- sonable rates. H BOG SOCIAL/DANCE COMMITTEE PRESENTS seep. 39 of the Fall Call 429-2668 after 1:00pm 91 Course Schedule SWING INTO SPRING

x ,- NOTICE * There will be a meeting on March 23,1980 at 7:00PM at Black House 7 Gilbert Rd. THE ANNUAL BOG SEMI-FORMAL for all persons interested in planning this year's SATURDAY MARCH 29,1980 9 pm-1 am JORGENSEN AUDITORIUM AFRO-AMERICAN TICKETS $6.00 per couple on Sale now through Thursday, March 27th 314 COMMONS

SENIOR HOT HORS D'OEUVRES, LIGHT SNACKS AND RECOGNITION BANQUET MIXERS PROVIDED MUSIC BY

Juniors, sophmores and freshmen are invited The Great Estate

ANOTHER IRISH NIGHT OF MADNESS WITH

^^ITF7/

Door Prizes Friday, March 21 Drinking Beer Contests ROTC Guinness Beer 8:00-1:00 Harp Beer TONIGHT TONIGHT

"AN IRISH REBEL BAND"