(Eimtwttrat Satlu (Eamfma Serving Storrs Since 1896 X

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1967 VOL. LXXI NO. 26 fctnrra. CCo.iurrtirut

S3 Student Involvement in University Plans Announced for Homecoming ; 7) Decisions Topic of Annual Meeting Coed Open Houses To Be Allowed Student Involvement in deci- ance would almost certainly pre- sion-making at America's col- cipitate tensions, probably pro- Homecoming Weekend begins leges and universities was the tests, and possibly disorders that F riday, October 27, with a dance chief topic of discussion at the would prevent free and open dis- Open House Allowed for Homecoming sponsored by the Student Amer- 50th annual meeting of the Am- cussion. Timothy Leary enjoys ican Physical Therapy Associa- erican Council on Education in freedom of speech on most cam- Homecoming Weekend this year has a special added attraction, tion a t which the Homecoming Washington, D.C. puses, J. Edgar Hoover on few; Yesterday, the Student University Relations Committee decided to Queen and her court will be pre- Dr. Samuel B. Gould, chan- Nelson Rockefeller and Robert allow resident houses to register for co-ed visiting hours. cellor at the State University of sented. The dance will feature The Committee, presided over by Dean Robert E. Hewes, is com- Kennedy on many, Richard Nixon "The Centerfield Blues" and , said in his keynote and Hubert Humphrey on few." prised of students, faculty, and administration leaders. Acting within address that the "power of stu- the "Rags" and will be held In the recommendation of the recent report of the Committee on the Con- Generally, there was confu- the Student Union Ballroom from dent activism cannot be mini- sion among the college adminis- ditions of Student Life to President Babbidge, the Student University mized nor can its potential for 8 to 12 p.m. Relations Committee proposes this Homecoming visitation as the ma- trators as to what to do about A soccer game at 10 a.m. creating and maintaining unrest student demands, but the student jor step in the implementation of the recommendation on Open House. be taken lightly". He expressed Saturday morning will start the Resident houses may register for one of the following time periods: representatives at the confer- traditional Alumni Day with the the dual feeling of most of the Friday, October 27 -- 6:00 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. ence had some definite suggest- Huskies hosting Middlebury Col- 1,700 administrators present Saturday, October 28 -10:00 a.m.-1:30 a.m. ions. Former University of Mic- lege. Also at 10, the Judging of when he pointed out that student Sunday, October 29 -- 10:00 a.m.- 11:30p.m. higan student body president Ed- house displays will begin and activism could be "dynamic fac- ward N. Robinson said that the A separate telephone registration of the Open House and the hours tors for university good", but at continue until 12. Four trophies, should be made by each house to the Activities Office, Ext. 412. This administrators "don't see the two for the men and two for the the same time, there are ele- problem...beyond how many stu- must be done prior to noon on Thursday, October 26. This registra- ments of student movements women, will be awarded. tion is in addition to the normally registered activities. dents should be on a certain com- From 11:30 a.m. to 1:30p.m., which advocate "disruption and mittee". There are a few stipulations that all houses must follow. Visitors destruction". tailgate picnics will be held for to a particular house must be accompanied by a host or hostess living Robert S. Powell Jr., the for- the Alumni at Memorial Stadium. The president of the Univer- in the house and a sign must be posted to inform all residents of the mer student body president at the At 1:30 p.m. will be the Home- sity of Rochester, Dr. Allen Wal- University of North Carolina, hours that the Open House will be held. lis, said that the student activist coming football game with Da- Further steps for visiting hours on a semester-wide basis will be said that students have faith vidson College, a small school movement has actually under- in the institutions of higher learn- discussed at the next Student University Relations Committee on Nov- from North Carolina. During hall mined the freedom to present ing because the institutions "have ember 2. controversial Issues on campus. time, the Queen will be crowned. truly lost any real sense of edu- After the football game, the In a paper prepared for the con- cational purpose". In order to ference, he stated: Alumni are invited to attend Cof- Ticket sales for the Home- There will be a maximum of two re-establish the students' faith, fees at the Lower Lounge injor- coming Concert will begin on tickets for each student ID card. "Stokely Carmichael can it will be necessary to "reorder Monday, October 23, according tc Residence halls desiring a block speak without hindrance, but gensen Auditorium or the Fra- the process of decision-making." ternity-Sorority and Independent the policy released yesterday by of tickets are encouraged to con- George Wallace creates sograve The conference , if nothing Arthur C. Forst, Jr., Assistant tact the box office. a threat of disorder as to pre- Houses. > else, demonstrated that today's Director of the Albert N. Jor- All seats will be reserved for clude the possibility that he would At 8 p.m. the Stan Get/. Quar- students' demands are meeting tet and "The Seekers" will be gensen Auditorium. the concert featuring Stan Getz be listened to calmly and fairly. with considerable success, but presented in concert in Jorgen- Tickets will go on sale at and the Seekers which will cli- Senator Fulbright would be given It is not likely that college ad- sen Auditorium. Admission will 9:00 a.m. at the ANJ Box Office max the 1967 Homecoming Week- a respectful hearing on any camp- ministrators will grant all the be $2.50 per person. at the price of $2.50 per person. end. us; few would dare invite Sec re- consesslons which the students tar McNamara, since his appear- are demanding. Interview with Schlesinger Waterbury Plans Parade To Support Our Men in Vietnam' On Vietnam, America and Elections Response to the coming Oct. dertaking, and that we are in 22, 1967 "Support Our Men In "Mr. Schlesinger, in a recent thing they do long after Kennedy second World War. The compar- their corner giving them our full book of yours, you said, 'The ev- Vietnam" parade in Waterbury support." is dead. When Kennedy died, there ison that can lie made is with the has been so great it has been ex- idence thus far is that bombing were only 16,000 troops in Viet- Korean War and there was no In order to gain more public the North has stimulated infil- tended to include a massive rally support, the Brass City Marine nam; now there are over a half a disposition there to continue a around the American Flag. The tration.' Is this your personal million. It's a very different war democratic administration just Corps League and the American feeling on the subject, or is there parade will form on the west side Legion Commander join in". . . than it was in 1963. because a war was going on, and something else which you feel of Freight Street. From there urging the operator of every mo- Q - What are your feelings on I think that it is going to be much backs this up?" the assembly will march to Grand ving vehicle to turn on his lights the possibility of our increasing more the situation in 1968. SL, on to South Main St. on the "Statistics back it up. For the number of American civilians At this point, the interview and keep them turned on during example, when the bombings south side of the Green, to West the two days. That every home in Vietnam? turned to domestic problems, Main St., to Meadow St., and back started, there were 400 North A - I think that one of the pro- specifically racial tensions and apartment, public building, of- Vietnamese troops In the South. to Freight St. where it will dis- blems is that the larger the num- also the upcoming election. fice, plant, etc. keep a light burn- Now there are 50,000. This ap- perse. ing, visable outside, on the night ber of Americans in South Viet- Q - Recently, an official of the Support for the parade was plies equally to weaponry; When nam, the more it changes the Americans for Democratic Ac- of Oct. 21. That flags and other the bombing began, the only wea- voiced by Governor John Demp- character of the war. As we con- tion, with which you have had appropriate symbols be displayed ponry the Viet Cong -had were sey. "Our men in every branch everywhere on Oct. 21 and 22." tinue to make it an American some involvement, said that li- of the Armed Forces, who are small arms and mortars. Now berals should stop defending the This will be Connecticut's they have all kinds of quite so- war. we are making it bard to risking their lives in that bit- win. There is already evidence actions of some of the more mi- participation in a nation-wide phisticated weapons. I think it ter conflict, deserve the full sup- that the size of our presence is litant negros what are your feel- demonstration of loyalty. It is is quite clear that our escala- port of every person who calls causing more and more resent- ings about thaf hoped that this effort will off- tion stimulated counter escala- himself a loyal American . . . set the false picture of our na- ment in South Vietnam, causing A - I would agree, although I don't tion. more anti-Americanism, and on- remember having heard any li- "It will be a real help to them to tion that the draft card burners, Thus beean an interview Wed- know that their fellow citizens "peace-niks" and "Viet-niks' ly encourages the South Viet- beral defenses of Carmirhael or nesday evening with Arthur Sch- namese to do less for themselves. H. Rapp Brown. back home are aware of the dan- are giving the world,Mrs.Stock- lesinger Jr., an interview which gers they face and of" the grim I think it would be a great mis- Q - Do you think the recent de- man, of the coordinating commit- centered on the war in Vietnam, task that they are gallantly un- tee said. take to increase the civilianpre- feat of the $24 million rat con- but which also covered domes- sence; there are already too many troll bill was a contributing fac- Draft Status Report Forms Late tic problems, the upcoming elec- Americans roaming around over tor in any of the rare riots of tion, and Schlesinger himself. there. recent months? Registrar's Office Reports Highlights of that interview Q - Do you think the nature of A - I think it was a contributing follow. Questions continued con- the wa r is such that with the up- factor because not only the cal- Reports from enrolled stu- cerning our bombing in North coming elections, American vo- lousness with which the bill was draft boards that the reports Vietnam. dents were expected to be re- from UConn students will lie de- ters would lie willing to change turned down, but also some of the ceived by the Draft Boards one Q - You think then that the in- administrations or, as in past bad jokes over it. This must have layed. New forms that were re- creased infiltration is due sole- month after the beginning of the quested by UConn were not sent by wars, do you think that the ten- discouraged people living in ghet- semester. This year the only re- ly to the American bombing. dency will lie not to change ships tos where rats are such pro- the October 1 deadline. The forms A - It didn't happen until the quirements are: that the individ- should be received by October in mid-stream? blems. It had to have given peo- ual be enrolled for a full pro- bombing began. One can't say if A - It is a mistake to compare 22. sce page nine gram, in good academic stand- it is solely because of that, but this war with either the first or According to 1'ranklin O. Fin- one can say that they did not make ing, and making normal progress gles, registrar, the reports toward his degree. Students will the increased effort until we did. should b e processed and deliv- Q - Do you have access to in- be given the reports, which they ered to the students by Friday, Alpha Sig, Delt a Chi9 TKE are to forward to their respec- formation concerning peace ne- October 27 or Monday, October gotiations. tive Draft Boards. 30. for postmarking by Novem- Selective Service headquar- A - I've heard of nothing, liut ob- Brought Before IFC Judi Board ber 1. viously, if this was going on, it ters will send a notice to all would have to be done in secrecy. aware of the disturbance at the Hippies and 'What's Happening' Q - It was once stated that this The Interfraternity Council time and apparently was not made war was thought up and is being Judiciary Board heard two cases aware of it later. The case was involving three fraternities Wed- managed by the men John?'. Ken- dismissed. Dr. Cohen's Topic Sunday nedy brought to Washington, and nesday night. A bottle fight between some that the liberals shouldn't stand Alpha Sigma Phi was brought brothers of Tau Kappa Epsilon Hippies are what's Happening What do hippies do? Whit is before the board due to a dis- and "What's Happening" is the their significance in the future" beside and say we have no part and Delta Chi on October 5 re- of this war, we don't want any turbance during a dinnerat Alpha sulted in a 30-day social proba- title of the Board of Governors What about the non-hippie world? Epsilon Pi attended by former faculty lecture Sunday, October These are questions Dr. Cohen part of it, because in a sense they tion (suspended) and a $100 fine have been tied up in it already. Senator Barry Goldwater just lie- for TKE and a 30-day suspended 22. Fascinated by this topic, the asks. fore his lecture here last week. speaker, Dr. Albert K. Cohen of The author of DEVIANCE AND A - The logic is rather baffling probation, no fine, for Delta Chi. to me; the fact that Kennedy ap- While Goldwater was at dinner, The difference in penalties ap- the Sociology department, has CONTROL and DELINQUENT the state car in which he had ar- spent some time in San Francis- BOYS: THE CULTURE OF THE pointed Rusk and McNamara, for parently resulted because of the example, doesn't commit every rived was splashed with water "greater amount of control" co, often in the news recently GANG, Dr. Cohen will lecture at from a water fight then going on for reports of itsHaight-Ashbui> 3 p.m. in Commons 217. Coffee member of the Kennedy admin- which Delta Chi exerted over its istration to supporting every- in \lpha Sig. Goldwater was not hippy enmnmnitv. will lie served. members. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

(Eflttttfrttntt Sattg (Eatttpufi tion of providing scholarships year. In FACT he was a student One Half Answers for the President and Vice-Pre- senator at the time and had serv- sident of ASG. This action fol- ed for two years without a de- Serving Storrs Since 1896 Editor: lowed a bill proposed by Bonnie feat. Miss Oliver seems to have Bryan, which would have estab- 2-1 never said Jay Kalner or misconstrued the whole Idea of FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1967 lished the scholarships without Susan Salvo were on the Com- the October 18th editorial con- stating when the funds would be mittee on the Conditions of Stu- cerning the draft. She states: awarded (now or after the spring dent Life, In FACT I said that "...women would be assuming elections) or who would decide Jay Kalner and Sue Salvo brought traditionally masculine roles." on the specific amount (the Sen- it to the attention o f students What exactly does Miss Oliver ate Finance Committee, an ad and focused student interest In mean by "traditionally mascu- hoc committee, or the entire Sen- its successful adoption, which line roles." As we see it, all ate). After Bryan's bill was tab- no one can dispute. If you remem- jobs, except the running of the led for four weeks (automatic- ber It was Jay Kalner that spon- household, were traditionally ally denying a student referen- sored the referendum concerning masculine. However, to free the dum on the Issue In the coming visiting hours and worked hard male from the many tedious de- elections), Wiener Introduced his to bring it before the students. tails necessary to the efficient bill In an effort to determine stu- Now If you will just think for running of an organization, wo- dent opinion on this matter before another second, If you are capa- men, being freed from their tra- the Senate votes on the scholar- ble of doing so, you will also find ditional roles by technological ships. We voted for this Mil be- that Sue Salvo as President of advance, began entering the field cause we believe that we should Associated Womens' Students, of business. Due to the great num- not take such a radical step as spearheaded support among the bers of women taking over secre- allocating $1700 worth of student women. Who's To Decide? tarial and clerical Jobs, the char- funds for elected representa- 3-If by chance all the mem- acter of these jobs is becoming tives without consulting the stu- bers of the Student Life Com- more and more feminine. dent body first. Although some mittee were USA members (which There has been much discussion lately about The point of the October 18th senators, Including Senator Bry- I doubt) it is also relevant to editorial was that women, having an and Vice-President Fraser, consider the fact that Lee Grief, a recent proposal to give the top two Assoc- successfully assumed the burden thought that this allocation does Past President of the USA, made iated Student Government leaders (president of clerical work In the business not differ from budget alloca- all student appointments to that and vice-president) annual scholarships of field, should be allowed to use tions for WHUS, Photopool, etc., committee as President of the $1,000 and $700 respectively. A bill has now this valuable, accumulated ex- we can see no relation between ASG. perience to make the overall budgeting monies for tangible 4-Incldentally, the FACT is been introduced on the Senate floor to this ef- structure of the military more services and the awarding of that the bookstore is mentioned fect, with the funds to come from student ac- efficient. By drafting women "... scholarships to elected officials. in the Student Life report on Countless men would be freed for We all believe that the ASG lead- page twenty of the single spaced tivities fees. An attempt was also made at more demanding and suitable ers well deserve these scholar- edition. Perhaps if you read the Wednesday's Senate meeting to bring the ques- duty." (As stated in the October ships, but we also believe that report you would know. 18th editorial.) the student body should be con- 5-By the way it WAS Miss tion before the entire student body, in the form We believe that, by allowing sulted on this issue. We believe Holt's fine committee that was of a referendum vote, but the motion was nar- women to assume the more fem- in democracy and in the use of Instrumental In getting the Pass- rowly defeated. inine tasks involved in the mili- referenda as a tool to maintain fall system in as much as she tary, men would not be losing communication between the stu- and her committees have been their masculinity, but , Indeed, dents and their representatives. ACTIVELY working on its pas- There is an important question involved would be reaffirming it. Our interest in REPRESENTING sage from both the honors de- here: who should decide whether or not the our constituents is borne out by partment and the student senate. Sincerely, the fact that we are all vitally Yes, the credit, although not president and vice-president of Associated William Croughwell concerned with Bitch-In and the entirely hers of course, must be Student Government should receive scholar- Kenneth Novak Gripe Board. We have enough given to her If it is to be given ships ? Mason House faith in the intelligence of the to anyone at all because of the student body and enough Interest work she and her committee We, like many senators, are in favor of Referendum Bill in their opinions to present this has laboriously completed. the proposal, but we also feel that the ques- referendum to them for their 6-The only pushing Lee Grief tion is of such a nature that it should not be Opposed consideration. ever did was to push the burden Editor: of getting things done on other left in the hands of the senators alone. Certain- We who opposed Senator Patrick Ruta, Senior Senator committees, i.e. academics. ly the proposal is a significant and progressive Wiener's bill for a referendum Larry Weiner, Junior Senator 7-No, It wasn't Lee Grief's move -- and of sufficient importance that it on ASG Scholarships wish to Glenn Goldberg, Pres. Jr. Class talking with state representative clearly state that our reasons for John Nirenberg, Senior Senator Ratchford which resulted in the merits a student vote -- the referendum. We opposing this bill did not include Susan Halperin, Junior Senator absentee balloting program. As strongly take exception to the Senate's failure personal self-interest. Donna Holt, Senior Senator a matter of FACT uninformed to pass a measure making such a referendum The SteeringCommittee voted interested student, the original possible. unanimously, 4-0, to recommend idea was John Dolan's (ISO) who that the Senate not pass this bill. N irenberg Replies probably graduated before you The Committee felt that the bill began attending this University. represents a very poor prece- Editor: As a matter of FACT I worked dent. We felt that this bill was Re: Uninformed Interested Stu- on this very problem along with As mentioned, we ARE in favor of the an improper delegation of the dent Dolan before Lee Grief ever scholarships and we ARE in favor of polling Senate's powers, that the Senate thought of it. And It was our work the student opinion on the matter. But an im- could not pass the buck on an Is- I am always pi eased to hear of along with others which saw it sue which the Senate may consti- interested students, but when In- pass the Intercollegiate Student portant possibility is being overlooked. tutionally decide itself. Passage terested students lack the know- Legislature. From there It was As we understand it, funds for the two of this bill might permit in the ledge of what they say and lack seriously considered in the Gen- future, public -vote on other ex- the courage to sign their names eral Assembly of our State. Yes, scholarships would be allocated from the penditures such as thoseforCDC to letters they write, then they Interested Student, get your facts student activities fees. We wonder, however, or WHUS. We believe, however, are not contributing to the bet- straight. thai the Senators are elected by terment and the honesty of stu- 8-You also have a hell of a why it is necessary for the students themselves the student body on the strength dent government. nerve claiming that the Com- to pay for the program. Instead, we would sug- of their judgment and are fully So here are the FACTS. munity Involvement Committee gest that the University should give some sort competent to be and constitution- 1 - Jay Kalner was not mak- had nothing to do with the eight- ally required to be the only judge ing a last futile attempt to get een-year-old voting lobby last of recognition - in the form of scholarships-- of how the Senate spends student into student government last spring in Hartford. If youhadany to these student leaders. funds. We also would like to note that the scholarship bill applied Incidentally, in return for their services only to the Executive Branch, not to the students and the University, resident to the Senate Itself. There was Draft Hampton advisors receive free room, board and tuition, no conflict of interest in the Sen- ate's voting on the bill. The bill, while chapter assistants in the fraternities even if passed, would not pro- receive only room and tuition. Certainly the vide any scholarships. Scholar- efforts of the two most Important positions in ship money could only be pro- Associated Student Government should be con- vided through appropriation by sidered at least as valuable. the Finance Committee and sub- Editor-in-Chief sequent Senate vote. Dennis Hampton We believe the article to have misinterpreted our views. The precedent established by Senator Business Manager Morrison is also Inaccurately re- James Knobel presented. This precedent ap- plies only to paid employees of Managing Editor Advertising Manager ASG organizations voting on funds for the organization which em- Juliet Cassone Michael Sherman ploys them. Again we believe the bill to be bad precedent, an im- Circulation Manager proper delegation of powers, and Michael Britton no conflict of interest. Sports Editor News Editor Edward Abrahams Harold Lovy Bill Evenski (for the Steering Committee) Lay-out Editor Features Editor 'UILUHID DAILY WHILE THE UNIVERSIT Y I* IN SESSION IXCII-T Senators Coll UTU«D*'S UNO SUNDAYS. 1ECONOCUI1 POSTAOE PAID AT Jackie Longo Jeff Thomas 1TORRS. CONN. MEMBER OP IME ASSOCIATED COLLEOIATE PRESS, For Referendum ACCEPTED POR ADVERTISING BY THE NATIONAL ADVERTISING Copy Editor Photo F.ditor SERVICE, IN*. EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICES LOCATED IN THE Editor: STUDENT UNION EUILOINO. UNIVERSITY OP CONNECTICUT. STORRS, Wednesday the Student Sen- Marilyn Moger Howard Goldbaum CONN. SUBSCRIBER ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW* SERVICE, »U»SCRIP- ate voted 12-11 against Bill No. RION NATE*. 11.00 PER SEMESTER. SS 00 PER TEAR. RETURN NOTI- 33-13, which was proposed by PICATION OP UNCLAIMEO DELIVERIES TO CONNECTICUT DAILY | 1 Larr* Wiener lo provide for a 'CAMPUS, UNIVERSITY C*P"C©NNP«TICU'T, IT6N R¥I''^ON'NCCTICVT', ' student referendum on the ques- 'i>,V..'.,.'. ■■...>..'. .-.;■.;. ■.'. ... ■. ■ i ».v.*vA \\ # <.■ i ^ FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1967 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS PAGE THREE letters (continued) Idea 01 the Issue you would Im- ed with Provost Gant to gain final Art Buchwald mediately know that the Com- approval of Pass-Fail, a program munity Involvement Committee which should be instituted next had everything to do with It. You fall. Also, without Peter Duffy Teaching China A Lesson would also know that I, as chair- there probably would be no buss- man of that committee, coordin- es here because the Arrow Bus Washington -- "Dao, I'm surprised at you. There are 1 bil- ated all of UConn's activity con- Line would not have re-submit- cerning that issue, and you would Secretary of State lion Chinese people and they are committed to ted its petition. Lastly, it cer- Dean Rusk announ- taking over 1 billion free people, and If it weren't know that the committee lobbied tainly was John Nirenberg's com- ced last week at his for the United States bombing us, they would do and demonstrated In Hartford mittee which stimulated Interest press conference it tomorrow." along with all other major col- in the 18-year-old voting on this that the real reason Several fields caught on fire. leges in our state. Next time you campus, and It is he who will go we are fighting in dare write at least get your facts "ok, I grant you that the Free World has a to Hartford this year to check the Vietnam is to con- great stake in Vietnam. But even so I don't enjoy straight. state legislature's progress. tain Red China. 9-Incldentally, the first pro- being bombed." Again, letltbeunderstoodthat This came, as "Nobody likes being bombed. But once you un- gress made in real branch stu- all the Issues should be brought good news to the Vietnamese people, many whoare derstand the reasons behind it, then it all makes dent communication was made out -- it will only substantiate still not too sure what the war is all about. this year not last year. sense." the belief that student govern- Two Vietnamese peasants were huddled In a "If this is really a contest between the Uni- And by the way, I did Not try ment is indeed a viable force in foxhole during a bombing raid. to mislead the student body Into ted States and China, why don't the Americans Student - University-Community "Say," said one of them totheother. "Did you bomb China? Why don't the Americans bomb Chi- believing that the ISO party is relations. But let's stick to the hear the good news? This war has nothing to do na instead of us?" solely responsible for the pre- truth. with us. It's really between China and the United "Because that would get China into the war, sent progress that student gov- States." and the United States doesn't want China in the ernment has made, I just couldn't Sincerely yours, "No kidding," the other peasant said, hugging war, stupid." think of the contributions that Tim Jerman the earth as a bomb exploded. "Where did you "Don't call me stupid. I don't see why we the USA Party has made besides Sophomore Senator hear that?" should be bombed just because the United States the Train ride last year to the "On the radio. You see, the reason why the doesn't want to bomb China." Mass. game and the election of N ew Holiday? United States is fighting in Vietnam is to contain "Good grief, Dao, do you want to remain a Lee Grief who, in case you don't China's expansionist ambitions. This is Amer- peasant all your life? Secretary Rusk has spel- know, was graduated last year Editor: ica's way of telling China to keep her hands off led it out as clearly as possible. He's even wil- So my dear interested stu- Standing in silent vigil for an Southeast Asia." / ling to stop the bombing if Hanoi will go to the dent, next time you write, sign hour! Indeed. It must all be very Another bomb exploded. conference table." your name and let everyone know religious. Perhaps someday "I wish tl\ere was another way of doing it," "Why won't Hanoi go to the conference ta- who was responsible for that Wednesday will be a holiday also. the peasant said. ble?" warped letter of yours. Yes, next "That's the trouble with you, Dao. You .ever "Because If it does the Chinese will lose time you write, sign your name Frederick Chou can see the big picture. If the United States doesn't face." and let everyone know the per- Arlington, Va. show that it's willing to honor its commitments "I was afraid of that." son without the facts. in Vietnam, then every country in Southeast Asia Another bombexploded a few feet from the Marching Band will fall." foxhole and dirt fell on both men. John Nirenberg A bomb hit a hut about 100 feet from the fox- Dao said, "When did Rusk say the Chinese Senior Senator Praised hole. would see reason so he wouldn't have to bomb "I guess I'm Just selfish at heart," Dao said. any more?" Editor: "I really can't get too excited about what Is hap- I dedicate this plot of ink to "He said he wasn't sure, but possibly in the That T ime of Year pening in the rest of Southeast Asb -' the mom- next generation." the UConn Husky Marching Band, ent." Editor: whose steadfast efforts in the Ah, it's that time of the year role of music makers will not Commentary: again. The time of class elections remain unsung. I refer, natur- and the traditional mudslinging ally, to the unquestioned en- that precedes them. The time thusiasm of these die-hard Hus- 0n when those who have voluntar- kies, who faithfully perform in- b A> Ma Schlesinger ily given of their time and work- der any and all circumstances. y y Undoubtedly, you must have Arthur Schlesinger, in his ap- of morality from politics. Ev- position to the bombing merely ed hard to help their university because it was destroying civi- are blasted and degraded bv those noticed how their familiar close- pearance here last Wednesday, erything political is viewed on- order march to and from Memor- did not reaTly say anything which ly in terms of whether it works lians and ravishing a land in who for various reasons want to which we had no business being get them out of student govern- ial Stadium pries the school spi- could be classified as novel or or not, not in terms of whether rit out of each and every stu- perceptive. Yet, for those who It is moral or Immoral. Thus, in, Is viewed as irrelevant. Fe- ment. As of yesterday's letter asibility is the key in this train from an "Interested Student", dent, witnessing this rallying ef- attended, the night was far from In regards to Vietnam, Schle- fort. Wny, just the hearty chant a total loss. For theirs was an singer could say that while it of thought, not right or wrong. the axe has already fallen on re- The logical result of all this sponsible senators Nirenberg, of the Husky fight song, echoing opportunity to see and hear a was not practical to oppose the from '.heir instruments, is e- man who represents a growing bombing at Its inception, main- is that, had the bombing been Holt, Kalner, Salvo and Duffy. "successful," no one would have Before the campaign is over I'm nough to move even the hardest mode of thought within the peace ly because we, as citizens, owed of the hard-hearted. movement. It is a mode which the President a chance to try out had any legitimate case to oppose sure the reputations of other hard the war. To show the absurdity working campus leaders will be Aside from essentially uniting has its main adherents among his ideas, it was practical to op- the student body's school spirit, the members of the Americans pose the bombing now because it of this position one need merely smeared; familiar names like use the analogy that the only rea- Goldberg, Giampa, Weiner and there are other important attri- for Democratic Action and which had not brought about the results butes of the Band, which need to could probably best be labeled desired, namely a reduction in son Hitler was wrong in bombing Brown. London was that it too failed to I certainly realize that during be exposed. One, among the many, as a moral dovism. infiltration and the bringing of is its sound. Just mosey on over The principal feature of this Ho to the conference table. achieve the desired effect, name- a campaign, records and person- ly, the conquest of England. alities of candidates must come to the vicinity of Mirror Lake, type of thinking is a separation From tnis point of view, op- to the surface. But at least let's around 5 o'clock, any weekday get the facts before we start cut- afternoon, and listen to the sound ting up the students who care of a good band. about what's going on around Finally, one cannot discuss Richard Duggan's Original here. For Instance, yesterday's a marching band witho^ com- "Interested Student" referred to menting on its marching. And Jay Kalner's "irresponsible at- here, the only word that comes 4' titude during the last of his many to mind is precision. futile attempts to get into student And now, without fu.-ther ado, tf government." This is absurd. Jay my hat comes o"?f to you, UCotn

Russians May Be Planning Moonflight Chapel Plans by Sean Cronin Congressman oiln Teague says he believes the Russians are pre- A series of six films which I read in the paper today that the leaves of fall, carrying them paring for a roundtrlp night to the moon by an unmanned spacecraft. reveal the religious insight of the Air Force bombed another crying. The leaves danced sadly The Texas Democrat says that more than 30 Soviet Ships already are film maker Ingmar Bergman village. There were pictures, to the wind's dirge, round and deployed In the Atlantic and Pacific, indicating they expect the space- highlight the activities of the too. Wisps of smoke spiralled round in reds and yellows. I felt, craft to make an ocean landing. Observers in Washington say Teague Newman Club of the St. Thomas in ever-broadening circles tothe then, circles, large and small in as chairman of the House Subcommittee on Manned Space Flights, has Aquinas Chapel this yeai. sky. the swirl of the day. Circles in access to secret data and probably knows the exact positions of the The film series is only a I felt patterns In afield today, the swirl of today and yesterday Soviet ships. small part of the activities plan- without thinking; I believe it was and tomorrow. the first time. There is a good- ned. Among these are a series I read 33 people were killed Mariner Five Flies Near Venus of discussions by Rev. John Zleg- ness in the subtle sweep of the long fields of grass; in the fluid in that raid. There werepictures The U.S. Mariner-Five Hew within 2,500 miles of the planet Venus ler, a seminary Professor of too. Wisps of smoke spiralled In today. And a scientist at Pasadena, California, says Mariner's Instru- Moral Theology for twelve years. violet of clover spinning in the wind. It was a long, swift wind ever broadening circles to the ments generally confirm the findings of a Russian capsule which land- His topic will be the "New Mor- sky. ed on the planet. ality" and It's practical Impli- that swept from the skys to catch Military Spending Lower Las* Month cations for the student. The dis- cussions began October 18 at The Treasury Department reports military spending dropped off 7:30 p.m., and will continue for Alumni Fund Chairman Named last month but stayed well above the six billion-dollar mark for the consecutive Wednesdays. third month In a row. September's figure was six billion, 331 million The four sub-topics are dollars. Thus military spending for the first three months of the fiscal "Who Needs Laws", "Love - A year totaled about 19 billion dollars. Projected to an annual rate, this Many Splendoured Thing", "What would be 76 billion, 160 million. It would be In line with President If Everybody Did It?", and final- Johnson's revised military budget of up to 76 billion, 300 million dol- ly "Love, and Do What You Will". lars. Also at the Club, In the base- ment of the Chapel on North Ea- Paratroopers To Protect Pentagon glevllle Road, Rev. Ronald Raf- Army paratroopers are being flown to Washington to protect the ferty is conducting a series of Pentagon against a planned anti-war demonstration this weekend. Two lectures for Catholic and non- C-130 transport planes have flown in about 120 troops from Fort Bragg, Catholic alike, exploring the fun- North Carolina. Several other planeloads are scheduled to arrive later damentals of modern Catholic today and tonight. The total number of troops to be used has not been thought. This series has begun, announced. and continues through November 2, every Thursday evening at 7 Senator Attacks Peace March p.m. Senator Robert Byrd today sharply attacked this weekend's plan- "The Theology of Ingmar ned march on Washington. The West Virginia Democrat told the Senate Bergman", title of the Film Fes- the demonstration Is chiefly the work of a highly-organized group of tival, gets underway Thursday, Communists, fellow-travelers, and leftist extremists. He called for November 2 at 7:30 p.m. when an Investigation to determine whether funds for the demonstration are Bergman's story of a man's being supplied by Communist Cuba or other Communist countries. search for meaning in life, "The Seventh Seal", is presented. Expulsion of Protesters Leads to Boycott The November 9 film will be Left to right: Carroll Caffrey, Donald Jacobs, Bernard Enright "Wild Strawberries", an aging Expulsion of 13 students who led an anti-war demonstration has doctor's journey through the pa- touched off a student boycott at the University of Wisconsin. Hundreds ges of his life, with a series of Carroll Caffrey of Norwalk of angry students immediately set up picket lines outside buildings on haunting flashbacks which reveal (class of '51) has been appoin- the Madison, Wisconsin, campus. Anti-draft demonstrations continued his very soul. ted General Chairman of the Al- today In New York, Chicago and Portland, Oregon. Demonstrators in umni Annual Giving Program Oakland, California, switched to peaceful picketing at the Army induc- which this year has its sights set tion center. on a $100,000 goal. Also recent- Sportscar ly appointed was chairman of the Vietnam Ground Contact Reported Light General Appeal Committee, Ber- Ground contact across South Vietnam has been reported light, as nard R. Enright, of Norwich allied troops continued 04 operations. A Viet Cong regiment appears Destroyed (class of '59). Hugh R. McCann to have eluded pursuing U.S. troops in jungles 40 miles from Saigon, of Westfleld Mass., (class of "33) after a big battle Tuesday. U.S. B-52 bombers have pounded Commun- By Vandals was appointed chairman of the ist positions In two sectors of South Vietnam, 400 miles apart. Special and Selective Appeal Sometime between the hours Committee for the Association's Jury Still Out in Mississippi of 5:30 p.m. Saturday and 3:30 1967-68 campaign. a.m. Sunday, vandals did approx- Still no word on the Jury deliberations under way in Meridian, Mis- imately $200 damage to a 1960 Caffrey announced that the sissippi. The Jury of seven men and five women Is deciding the fate of MGA belonging to Curt Zlmmer goal for the Alumni Giving Pro- 18 men accused of conspiracy in the slaying of three civil rights work- of New Carman. The damage was gram Is $70,000. An additional ers in 1964. The Jurors reported earlier today they were deadlocked. discovered by Zlmmer and Ro- $30,000 expected from alumni But the judge told them to go back and try again. bert Muir of Alpha Sigma Phi, gifts to the University of Con- at 3:30 a.m. on Sunday. The car necticut Foundation and various Arrest Orders for Martin Luther K ng was parked along the road be- other gifts from alumni sour- tween the fraternities and the ces. A year ago more than 4,500 Alabama has issued arrest orders for Dr. Martin Luther King. And North Campus Quadrangle. UConn alumni contributed some the civil rights leader says he's looking forward to a rest in a Birming- According to Robert Muir, $58,000 to the Alumni Giving Pro- I. L..1UP -U.^I._J ham jail but only after he completes some unfinished business. Th« apparently the persons involved gram, totalling $156,000 during U.S. Supreme Court paved the way for the arrest of King and seven toyed with the vehicle before the past four years. other negro ministers when It refused to overthrow contempt of court slashing the top, snapping the convictions issued In 1963, after the eight paraded In defiance of an Al- aerial, pulling out wires in the The alumni funds have fi- abama court Injunction. engine and kicking in the left door. nanced awards for faculty ex- Some books and clothing were cellence, public service Intern- Penn-New York RR Merger Approved also reported missing. ships for students, library and has been report- art acquisitions, visiting lectur- A three-Judge federal court In New York City has approved the ed to the Security Department ers and scholarships. A portion six billion dollar merger of the Pennsylvania and New York Central of the University and a reward of this money also has been ear- Railroads. The judges dismissed all complaints against the merger has been offered for evidence marked for the new Faculty-Al- -- the largest in U.S. history. But they gave opponents 15 days to ap- leading to the arrest of the de- umni Center and recreation fa- Q peal to the U.S. Supreme Court. linquents. cilities for the University com- munity . Unrestricted alumni WHAT'S SO EXCITING Cords Mailed to Justice Department gifts have also provided support to the President's Contingency ABOUT THE KICKOFF ? The Justice Department has received what is described as a "sub- PEACE Fund. stantial number of draft cards" in the mail over the past week. An of- u: ficial says Its sending them to the?'. B.L for investigation. The spokes- An offshoot of the Alumni man says most of the draft cards were sent in by a group calling it- ON Giving Program is the Century self "The Resistance" (of 5 Beekman Place, New York City). Club, whose membership is re- stricted to alumni who contri- Brooklyn Students Battle Police bute $100 or more to the pro- EARTH gram. Several hundred angry, shouting students staged a bloody, pitched battle with police at Brooklyn College In New York today in the wake of an antl-war demonstration during which 33 students were arres- ted. The demonstration began with a sit-In protest against installation IWILLIMANTIC 423-30271 of a Navy recruiting station in a Student Activities Building. The fight- FOR HUNGRY GIRLS ONLY ing began when the 33 students were arrested. Several students were CAPITOL left bleeding. They shouted "Hell, Heil, lleil" andgave the Nazi salute (and you non-eaters also) as one policeman was carried away on a stretcher. call 429-6351 Maryland and Texas Before Court Maryland and Texas have taken before the Supreme Court an Im- IN TO HEAT portant test-suit challenging extension of federal minimum wage and On Sat. & Sun. For hour standards to about one million, 700-thousand state employees. OF TO The suit claims Congress exceeded its constitutional power when It Speedy Service And extended the federal wage law to cover teachers, hospital staffs and NIGHT" other state workers. Super" Star At UConn Good Looking Delivery Boys Co-Hit'Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum' The Metropolitan Cpera Company, now playing its longest sea son in its entire history, will boast a UConn student as a supernu- $10.00 Worth Of Food MATINEE SATURDAY merary this year. The "super" star is Darrel Couturier a Junior ma- joring In Art-history. This will be his fourth year performing with Rates a dote 'Spanish Show' at 1:00 the world-famed company. WED'Rough Night in Jericho' FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1967 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS PAGE FIVE Mr. Fields is a great commedian because he traffics in high and cosmic matters related to man's

eternal helplessness,

frustration, and defeat.

New York Times January, 1938

AN EVENING WITH

W.C. FIELDS

TONIGHT VDM AT 8P.M.

M———» M* This is your chance, Student #7026941. for Information leading to the arrest and conviction of Drink Sprite and be those responsible for the MR.BIG destruction of a white '58 somebody. MGA Saturday night parked Take heart. Take a dime. next to the Jungle. 429-0287 Then take a bottle of Sprite from the nearest pop machine. Suddenly it's in your hand. Cold. Biting. Tart and On Wt 1t» — Tel. 4»-«m tingling. You Impulse cackle fiendishly NOW THRU TUESDAY I.I.I vt:>i RKMmX and rub your hands TOUGHER THAN together. (You Records should; they're HE'S EVER BEEN! probably chilled to Presents the bone by now.) LEE MARVIN You tear off to a "POINT BLANK' corner, alone, but within earshot of your fellows.

In P«m»l«l«riiri Mttrocolot | JtXTZZL PLUS COLOR CARTOON And then? And then? And then you unleash it. Fri-Mon-Tues, 2:00 6:30 9:00 SPRITE! It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with Sat-Sun, 2:00 4:15 6:30 9:00 good cheer! Heads turn. Whisperings. "Who's that strangely fascinating student with the arch smile.And what's An inspired musical tribute. WED-THURS. OCT. 25-26 in that curious green bottle that's making such ■OHM . DOWN!1S a racket?" The voice of John F Kennedy. And you've arrived! The distinctive taste and ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart. The music of Oliver Nelson. KCNNETH ANGER'S You're somebody, uh...uh, whoever-you-are. SCORPIO RISING I impulse! I® I THE IEST 0E SPRITE. SO TART AND [THE UNOERCROUNO FILMS' TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T (1 I'JDI'H C«iSl I l» •MMDU'RIU T*«M«- T.iii! • 3UIET. LOADS OF FREE PARKING

,,,!-<■■ - ' ■■ I r' ''•■ • i PAGE SIX CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1967 es today a re far more liberal than Non-Violent Co-ordinating Com- the first time the cops have come they were only a decade ago." mittee badge, which shows a black Dean Low added that It has been on the campus in 20 years," said and a white hand clasped against Ken Kessler, an editor of one of increasingly difficult to justify the background of a confederate the regulation of women's hours Hag. the student papers on campus - broadened the protest to Include Beyond Storrs since neither contemporary par- SSOC prides itself on Its ental practices nor educational demands for reform of the col- southern credentials -- its staff lege's disciplinary system. The fcwCoU**** philosophy tends to support such members are from the states regulation. students have asked that disci- S«*M. ItwrnltortUti PNM. MKI they work in to avoid the "The way a student uses his pline be put entirely in the hands "northern agitator" epithet. It of a student-faculty board. As or her time clearly- has an effect Is nevertheless subject to har- on the individual's academic suc- assment by "the power struc- it Is now, the President has the cess and social life, but the re- final say on disciplinary ques- ture." tions. lative effect varies greatly on SSOC chairman Tom Gard- individuals and at different ner and two other speakers were He Indicated that the protest times," Dean Low said. leaders feel they have won a vic- And In another recent case d ragged off platforms at Miaml- "From an academic point of Dade Junior College by campus tory by getting a delay In the con- two young men who had been pro- view, it seems likely that self- struction of the hut, and they are testing the draft with a sit-in In police last year, while speaking Washington regulation, with its inherent nec- on academic freedom. not going to use last week's pro- front of the Selective Service essity for the sometimes painful test methods to press for dis- headquarters in Washington -- development of selfdisclpline ciplinary reforms. March Rodney Robinson of Redwood and an Increasingly intelligent Hut At C.C.N.Y City, California, and Matthew sensitivity to priorities and pro- Canadian Clark of Clarkesburg, Vlrglnia-- New York, N.Y.(CPS) —Af- Washington (CPS) - Opponents portion, has a firmer educational Birth Control sald they were pushed Into cor- justification than a gradually re- ter a week of protest, students of U.S. policy In Vietnam are ners and handled very roughly at the City College of New York shifting their tactics from pro- laxing system of arbitrary hours Toronto, Canada-(LP.>- The by police, even though they said set by the college." have won a delay in the con- tests and demonstrations to ac- neither resisted nor co-operated struction of a temporary "hut" student administrative council at tual attempts to disrupt the war Dean Low said the self-re- the University of Toronto has with their arrest. gulation of women's hours will on a scenic hill in mid-cam- effort. At a press conference last pus. endorsed a birth control educa- The new tactics will be tested apply without regard to parental tion program to be run by a group week several reporters suggest- permission, adding that the col- The protest, which last week on October 21 when thousands ed that by sitting In at the Pen- resulted in the arrest of nine stu- of senior co-eds. of people will gather In Wash- lege Is unwilling to continue to They have been distributing tagon the demonstrators will be undertake regulation over and dents, culminated in a mass ral- ington for a protest which, for Inciting violence. "There is no ly on the site. An estimated 600 contraceptive information to any- some of them, will include an above that which parents are able one asking for It and referring reason to club people who are to encourage. students participated, and cheer- attempt to "sit down Inside the sitting in non-violently," replied ed when a tree was planted In a inquiries to the Planned Parent- Pentagon and stop it from work- "The responsibility must rest hood Association and Toronto Mrs. Donna Allen, co-chairman with the individual student and ditch dug for the temporary of- ing." of the Washington Mobilization fice structure's foundation. doctors who have agreed to co- Dave Delllnger, chairman of with her parents in their normal operate. Committee, "They can be arrest- family relationship," she added. According to one of the pro- the National Mobilization to End ed peacefully." test leaders, the tree symbol- The council's president, Tom the War in Vietnam, emphasizes But Delllnger predicts that ized the students' anger at the Faulkner, thought he might face that there will be three parts In "even the police will be orderly Draft Sit-in removal of other trees to make jail as a result of the council's the October 21 demonstration: action, since it is against the law and non-violent on October 21 be- Gainsvllle, Fla. (CPS)- A room for the hut. a march, a rally, and "an op- cause it will be political suicide CCNY President Buell G. in Canada to sell or dispose of portunity for civil disobedience." member of Students for a De- for the Johnson Administration mocratic Society and two mem- Gallagher announced that he had any instructions "Intended or re- According to Jerry Rubin, or- If they aren't." gotten approval from the State presented as a method of pre- ganizer of the demonstration, bers of the Southern Student Or- venting contraception." Delllnger, who just returned ganizing Committee are being Dormitory Authority to delay the hippie communities from New from a meeting with North Viet- building of the hut for two weeks. But Ontario Attorney General York, San Fransico, and possibly held In the City Jail here on' Arthur Wishert says, "I have not namese and members of the Na- charges of "disorderly conduct.'' He said a faculty-student com- Washington will hold a religious tional Liberation Front, also mittee would be set up to con- thought of taking action in this ceremony in which they will form The three, Steven Horowitz, matter." fears tactics bv the Administra- 22, of SDS; Michael Meiselman, sider alternative sites. a circle around the Pentagon to tion, which he says must either Ron McGulre, one of the stu- Toronto is not the first Can- drive out the evil, which, accord- 21, of SSOC; and Brian J. Heg- adian university with such a pro- pay attention to growing opposi- gen, 20, a past staff member of dents arrested for trying to block ing to some Indian religions, re- tion to the war or attempt to MI SSOC, were arrestedaftersltting construction at the site, said he gram. Carleton University's sides in five-sided structures. press or evade it. He points to and other leaders of the move- chaplain says there was a simi- After the rally, those who wish down to stop a bus carrying in- new ordinances "against free ductees to Jacksonville for med- ment had decided to call for a lar club on the campus and there to will hold a sit-in at the doors speech", such as the one limit- moratorium on protests because was no trouble either from the of the Pentagon. The object wil ical examinations and inductions ing the number of pickets In front into the Army. of the delay in construction. university authorities or the law. be to stop people from entering of the White House and another, "I think it's now the time to Such clubs have also been for- the building. Doth Delllnger and under consideration in Congress, About 40 people, many of them consider alternative locations, med on U.S. campuses, as well. Hubin say that anyone who wishes which would strictly limit pro- members of the University McGulre explained. "We want to The first was at Hofstra Univer- to leave the building will be wel- tests on Capitol Hill. of Florida Chapter of SSOC, took sity, , New York, last part in the early morning demon- have a two-week dialogue, with- come to do so. out the intense pressure of try- year. Rubin says the sit-in will be stration, which protested the In- ing to stop the construction with Although many studentgroups both "symbolic and disruptive." Women's Curfews duction of SSOC Vice-chairman Nick Levin. our bodies." In the U.S. have pressed for health The Mobili/.ation doesn't really When the protest began last services to give out birth con- expect to shut down the Pentagon, Grinnell, la. -O.P.)-Grinnell Levin later refused to sign College has abolished women's papers disavowing membership week, the few students who were trol pills, a survey of 315 health where as many as 10,000 people then involved sat on the limbs of services last year showed that will be working that Saturday. hours effective immediately. in "subversive" organizations, President Glenn Leggett said the and has been temporarily defer- the trees that were supposed to only one In 25 campus clinics "The Movement hasn't yet reach- come down In order to halt con- will give pills to unmarried wo- ed the stage where It can do that," Board of Trustees approved the red pending an investigation by new policy in the belief "that any his draft board. struction. One of them climbed men and 55 percent will not pre- says Rubin, but Delllnger adds, into the scoop of a power shovel. scribe the pill under any circum- "We hope people will at least regulation of college women's Levin was classified as a con- stances. hours, either bv the college or by scientious objector until Novem- The site at issue, once a have to step over our bodies to lawn-covered mound with sev- get into the building." the individual, is a matter of sec- ber 1966, but was reclassifled urity rather than morality and I-A after he distributedanti-war eral tall trees shading it, is now North Carolina Father Richard McSorley, a a bare patch of earth, with only theology professor at George- that reasonable security can be leaflets at his pre-alternateser- assured within the women's res- vice physical. His reclasslfica- the small "symbolic" freestand- Greensboro, N.C. (CPS>The town University, says the policy ing on it. The ditches that had of the Mobilization Committee idences without the necessity of tlon is apparently part of a tend- University of North Carolina has the college's maintaining an ar- ency among some draft boards been dug for the hut's foundation, hired a controversial civil rights is non-violence "in the Gand- however, were filled In by stu- leader as a lecturer in social hian snse. If we are hit we will bitrary 'hours' system." to use the 1-A classification as Dean of Women Alice O. Low punishment for anti-war or anti- dents Monday. During the rally, work despite Governor Dan It. not retaliate. We will not break students set up a "tray brigade," Moore's calling the appointment police lines." But Mobilization said the decision was made after draft activity. careful and lengthy discussion He had just been released passing dirt along on cafeteria "a very serious mistake." leaders admit that they can't gu- trays to fill up the ditches. Approval to hire Durham, arantee against the actions of in- among Individual students, the from jail after paying a $60 fine The original group of protes- representatives of student gov- for "operating a mobile broad- ters first asked for a delay of N.C., civil rights leader Howard dividuals. Fuller had been given by the UNC If there is a problem of vio- ernment groups, the Faculty Co- casting studio without apermit," the construction at all seven mmittee on Student Afalrs, and even though the by-law under sites, but later agreed to let work board of trustees executive com- lence on October 21, "it will mittee September 8 but was ques- be caused by the police," Dell- the student deans. which he was charged applied at six of them proceed. It was "The college Is aware that specifically to commercial sol- early last week, when construc- tioned at a full meeting of the lnger says. significant changes have occured board here last week The committee leaders say icitations by a PA system. tion workers arrived at the one over the years In attitudes and He was arrested In the course Fuller's appoii ent had they have reason to fear police site the students wanted to save, touched off a controversy in the attacks. They point to Septem- practices which affect the social of an August 27 demonstration that the physical stoppage of the regulations of women," Dean Low attempting to challenge the Flor- work began. state and Governor Moore had ber 20, when demonstrators from said. "These changes have been ida law that makes it illegal to sided with those who did not want Women Strike for Peace were On Thursday, when classes the leader of many Durham pro- attacked with clubs by police be- reflected in a gradual relaxation attempt to dissuade young men were called off because of the of the time limits which have been from voluntarily enlisting in the Jewish holidays, nine students test demonstrations during the cause more than 100 were at- imposed on college women In armed services. summer tolecture on the school's tempting to picket in front of the came to the campus to block the their freedom to remain outside SSOC is a predominantly white Chapel Hill campus. Fuller had White House. A recent rule lim- construction. They were arres- also led a demonstration against its the number to 100. the college dormitories, and the organization that acts on peace, ted by the police, and are now hours imposed on most campus- academic freedom, and civil free on bail. President Galla- National Guard troops taking rights Issues in the southern anti-riot training. gher has said he will recommend Governor Moore, who is also states. It identifies Itself with two that the charges against them buttons, one which says "a free chairman of the UNC trustees, be dismissed. sat impassively during the meet- university in a free south," and The arrest of students on the other, adapted from a Student ing last week as UNC President Looking for a Package? campus by city police -- "It is William Friday defended the Ful- ler appointment. Dr. Friday said the civil rights leader had been Steamers & Fried Clams hired for the $1,500 lectureship ART'S PACKAGE STORE \ \RIHII S Ot only after the faculty of the school of social work had ascertained l'\\( \kl S his experience and academic Route 12 qualifications to lecture on com- munity organization. South kVillingtoii RED APPLE SPECIAL President Friday said Fuller TOP-SIRLOIN STEAK $135 was only one of 1,700 part-time lecturers the school would hire Breakfast-Lunch & Dinners (Daily Specials) during the year. "Such disputes have occured Keg Beer, Case Discounts, Ice OEEN Wed. through Mori, 7 am to H pm before and will occur again," kClo<"ed all day Tuesday Dr. Friday said, "so long as the University of North Carolina re- mains a place where ideas are Free Delivery 4295225 RED APPLE RESTAURANT exchanged, current practices ex- amined and new solutions pro- »»WMWIIMMWMWMWM»««MMMWMW«MWW«W»MW» Route 195 (Mansiield C ente 123-9772 posed for the problems of soc- The Department of Theatre Presents Albert (Iannis's CALIGULA October 20-21, 23-28

Photography by Nancy Kendall PAGE EIGHT CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 from page four CAMPUS CLASSIFIEDS The final film of the fall ses- sion will be "The Virgin Spring", BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: call 429- 950-ask for steve presented November 16. It is the for a couple or for about or Jerry. story of the ruthless vengeance 2 and repentence of a father whose FOR SALE: Mannequin, virgin daughter Is raped and mur- 3 or 4 students to« form a dered. partnership, UConn area, run Full size, female and in Alter each film, the modera- and manage your own rest- Excellent condition. Call tor will lead a discussion period. aurant business. Grinders, 429-3765. The final 3 Bergman films, to be etc. Call 643-1442, Manches- shown In the second semester ter. 196) Olds Cutlass Convert- are "Winter Light", "The Si- ible-beautiful yellow, ex- lence", and "Through a Glass RIDE WANTED: To Walling- cellent condition. Full po- Darkly". ford, anytime-companions Currently on the rear of the desired. Call George Plagan- wer. 11450.00 - 429-0139. Chapel grounds, construction Is is, 429-2703. nearlng completion on a new stu- FOR SALE: 8 room house, dent Center. It will be ready In AVAILABLE: PART TIME 4 bedrooms, 4 acres of land, about three months and provide Variable cloudiness and sun 2 car garage, swimming and shine today and quite cool, the JOBS- $2 and up depending a snack bar, lounge, and a large high near 50. Fair and cool fishing areas-600fo6t"fron- hall for social functions and lec- tonight, low in the upper 30's. upon your qualification. Call Saturday, increasing cloudine on river. 116,500-reduced tures. Also the Womens Guild ss and not quite so cool. 423-0356. will hold It's annual Christmas from 18,500 for quick sale- Bazaar Saturday Nov. 11, from WANTED: Ride to Lehigh, no agents. Tel. Walnut B— 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. There will ACTIVITIES ON CAMPUS 3371° be a greenhouse, baked goods, Oct. 27, can leave anytime. SPORTS CAR CLUB: will SKI CLUB: Meeting Tues. MEN'S SHIRTS washed ir- country kitchen, Christmas Bou- Will share expenses. Call tique and much more. meet for all persons interes- night, Oct. 24, 7:30pm, S.U. oned, starched. 25?. Call Sue 429-6500. Everyone is always welcome ted in establishing a sports 101. Competition, beginner 429-6221, after six. to attend any function at the cha- pel. There are a number of In- car club. The meeting will lessons, ski trips will be FOR SALE: I960 Pontiac in FOR SALE: Fender Band- formative and entertaining func- be held Mon., Oct. 23 in Rm. discussed. A representative fair condi tion. Asking 82.00. master Amp. 40 watts undi s- tions taking place, and the price 207 at 7:30 pm. from Killington will present a Call Doug. 423-7874. Is always right. torted 2-12" speakers. Six program. All skiers and pro- months old, excellent con- HELP WANTED: Two wait- spective skiers are welcome di tion. $200 firm. Rick Kokel CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Saturdays Puz* ers needed at A.K.Pi. Work 420-2437 in exchange for meals, (ion- UQUEJQ anriun ALPHA PHI OMEGA NAT- tact Jerry Levine at 429—2427 WANTED: 4 busboys to work ACROSS 3 Teutonic deity 4 Danish island IONAL SERVICE FRATER- at local country club this IB* in debt 5 Atmospheric NITY will hold its third and 1960 TR 3: Radio, wire wh- 4 Conjunction r Saturday night Call Jacquel- disturbance av wLim(J -i asiara 6 Cubic meter final rush meeting on Monday eels, TR 4 Transmission. ine Longo, 429-9525 or 429- 6 Quieted Must sell. 429-0163 or 429- 11 Neglect 7 Metal aariE uaun evening, Oct. 23, at 7 PM, 2592 for more information. 13-Striped animals 8 Urges on 4877. 5 T 0 WISMS R.IEIS T S.U., Rm. 201. Dr. Robert TO SELL: 1963 Volvo P 1800 15-Pre position 1 Note of scale TAR M| 1= L A T SMT A 16 Wearing away 10 Worn away £ ►J L 1 T s A P Miller, Foreign Student Ad- WANTED: Ride to and from BRG-overdrive, clean, must a. ■ '' 18 Preposition 12 Earth goddess $■311 E P ■ P|A T E 19 Note ol tcale visor and Administrative Hartford on Friday Evenings sell. Call 429-0346 after 3pm 14-Scort e ElR A|S E D for NBI lectures on Object- ?l City in Russia 17 Transaction TIEIAIV S R|AT|E 1 Assistant of Men's Affairs, 22 Take one's part 1 ■> ivism. Will pay. Call 429- 20 Preposition lb will be guest speaker. All Seniors Asked 24 Tear 23 Supposing that 5106. 26 Beer ingredient 24 Sun god 39 Simpler 51 Region male students, Freshmen and 28 Toll 25 Lairs 41-Had on 53 Former To Pre-Legal 27 Cravats one's person Russian ruler Upperclassmen alike, are LOST: Pair girl's glasses; 29 Poker stakes 30 Edible lish 43 Frankness 57-Finish cordially invited to attend. light brown rims. Call 429- 31 Hawaiian 32 Trjnsdction Institute wreaths 35 Irritates 44-Printer's 58 Half an em Refreshments will be served 1241. 3.3 Physician 3/ Abrasive measure 60 Wine cup On Saturday, October 21, 1967, (abbrl a limited number of seniors are instrument 46 Note ol scale 62 Note of scale following the meeting. FOR SALE: '66 Sunbeam Al- 34 River in 38 Studs 48 Approaches 64 Prefix: down invited to attend the Eleventh An- Siberia CONCERT CHOIR: Special pine ! 1725cc) 4 speed, R&ll. nual Institute for Pre-legal Up- 36 Hard ol hearing rehersal of concert choir from Good condition. $1,395- Call perclassmen. 38 Symbol lor The Institute will be held at cerium 4-5:00 pm in Rm. 101 Music Manchester 644-0529. Boston College Law School, 40 Killed Building for all who can Brighton, Massachusetts. 42 Sliver WANTED: Projectionist to 45 Rodent attend. Interested students should 47 Short jacket show films in S.U. Commut- contact Professor Jeffrey Ossen, 49 Verve ers Lounge on Monday and Room 209B, School of Business 50 A continent 52 Allowance (or KAPPA KAPPA PSI: There Wednesday 11-1. No exper- Administration, for further In- waste formation. 54-Pr inter's will be a meeting for all br- ience needed. Contact BOG The Boston College Institute measure others, Sunday at 8:00 in the or Pat at 429-1511. program Includes exposure to a 55 Note ol scale 56 let go banc! room. sample law school class, a dis- 59 District Attorney UP FOR GRABS: Honda CB cussion of careers in the law, (•Mr.) and matters pertaining to ad- 61 Calm 160, runs perfecdy-low mil- 63 Haphazard age, S295, Further info, mission to law school. 65 Peruses 66 Senior (abbr.) 67 Period ol time

DOWN

1 Frequently (poet.) 2 Made ol wood Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

FRESHMAN SOUL-FUNG (UJHV N0T?J) u October 20 1 U 9:30-1:30 n Honoring UConn's Freshman Jszl?Sr Jit*S

Football Team I HAVE NO DESIRE TO SUSTAIN A KNEE INJURY THAT MI6HT x PLAGUE ME THR0U6HOUT THE Featuring the Helody Bath's' REMAINDER OF MY YEAfcS!

SPONSORED BY BALDWIN HOUSE

NORTH CAMPUS DINING HALL I FEEL GUILTY FOR NOT Bring Your ID And Get HAVIN6 CONSIDERED THAT Your Free Dance Ticket At The Freshman Football Game Earlier That Evening

• -;^ AV^V; .v.'.v;v. ■ ■ ;,.:•:,,, -V-v.y.v m I ,.,,wv „.v .' ...... ■■■ .•'■.'.•''.' '.•••' v.v:,v!v: .v«.v.*.v«v ' ' FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS PAGE NINE Schlesinger Column Marching Skating Rink Opens from page one pie odd feelings, especially where we are spending $20 million dol- lars to do something about rats. For Third Full Season Q - If we were to assume mom- Behind the Scenes With the winter season just Last April, the Northeastern entarily that for some reason As the Husky Band prances group functions throughout the around the corner, UConn Is pre- Loggers Association presented President Johnson did not run in onto the field each Saturday, few year planning social events and paring Its award-winning ice UConn Its "Outstanding Use of 1968, do you think that Robert of the eager spectators realize establishing policies for the skating rink for its third full sea- Wood" award for 1967, citing Kennedy would have enough sup- the complex hierarchy of hard- group to follow. The 1967-68 of- son. the rink for Its "economy, ae- port to win In a presidential el- working people that compose the ficers of the band, active in the The rink, located at sthetic appeal, architectural fin- ection? backbone of this organization. council are president, Roger Ca- ot Stadium Road beyond the var- ish and resistance to condensa- A - I would hope so; I think that Freezing Into place after a ra- hoon a fifth semester Music Ma- sity tennis courts, will be opened tion." out of the men that are around pid entrance, all eyes turn to- jor; vice-president, Ray Fried- November 1, with the season ex- Designed by the architectural now, Robert Kennedy would make ward the man responsible for man, a fifth semester Music Ma- tending through March 31. firm of Westcott and Mapes of the ablest president. the band's reputation as "Best jor; secretary, Eileen Grlndal, New Haven, the rink was com- When asked about his own In the East" during the last ten a fifth semester Political Science pleted about three years ago at political future, Schleslnger re- years. Allen E. Glllesple, be- Major; and treasurer, Bruce Blood a cost of $305,000. sponded, "I am out of politics; ginning his 11th year as direc- Taylor, a fifth semester student Last season, recreational [ have retired from politics In tor of both the Husky Marching In Business, Representatives Donors skating accounted for 65 percent so far as I was ever in It. I Band and the Concert Band, has from their respective classes of the rink use. Officials counted am a writer of history, and that earned the admiration and res- are: Ken Brlggs, a seventh sem- Needed a record 17,900 paid admissions, Is what I want to do. pect of all band members. As- ester engineering student, Leslie but at least an equal number of Q - Would you consider writing sisting him, straight from Mich- Hunt, a fifth semester Music ma- com temporary history. Nov. 15 and 16 will be Blood- students, not required to pay, igan where the Marching Band jor, Joe Novak, a third semes- also made use of the rink. Stu- A - No, I have done my bit in tradition began, Is David Maker ter liberal arts major and new- mobile days In Mansfield with ap- contemporary history. What I pointments running from 10 a.m. dent and season ticket holders who Is responsible for the fine ly elected freshman, Ron An- to 4 p.m. in the ROTC Hangar have priority In using the rink, want to do is to finish a study arrangements which have become crom majoring In Music. Repre- but others may use It on a daily of the Franklin Roosevelt era, a trademark of the UConn Band. senting the band's honorary so- on the UConn campus. Donor re- which, unfortunately is no lon- cruitment began October 17. fee basis during specified general Aiding in the administration du- rority and fraternity is Janet recreation skating periods. ger contemporary history. ties of the band is Art Krleger. Abbe, Tau Beta Sigma's Presi- In making the announcement, Q - How will the Kennedy ad- A.J. Brundage, new chairman of A generous number of public Krleger, a graduate student, Is dent and Louis Cohen, Kappa skating sessions have been ministration be looked upon years a stronghold In the percussion Kappa Psi's Secretary. the Mansfield Branch of the Wil- from now; will it be regarded as limantlc Chapter of the American scheduled. section. The whistle blows and Drum Group lessons for beginners, simply another short admlnistra- Quietly handing out music, Major, Jeff Fahey leads the Hus- Red Cross, said that a goal of :lon, or will It be looked upon 1,000 pints would not be too high junior and senior skaters will fixing buttons, supplying reeds ky Band downfleld as those who be offered again this year for a as a period which gave America and offering moral support are spent the week preparing, reap in view of the growing student a new outlook. and resident population of Mans- nominal fee at scheduled per- two gals, Cathy Conners and their satisfaction in a job well field. It would top by 275, the re- iods during the season. Hockey A - It Is usually a very danger- Rheta Beers, who have efficient- done. cord of 725 pints collected In the lessons are offered Saturdays ous thing to predict how some- ly earned the title of "band- and Mondays on a fee basis. thing as recent as the Kennedy ades". This year the group Is previous Bloodmoblle visit. In administration will be regarded, addition to more donors, this new In addition, there are free especially fortunate in having Instruction sessions on Satur- but If I were to say, I would say Howard Goldbaum as Its photo- goal will demand earlier regis- that it will probably be regarded trations, more scheduled ap- days from noon to 12:45 p.m. for grapher. His color films of the pointments, a considerably lar- beginners during November and as a period of change In person- games are Instructional and pro- ger volunteer staff, and more December starting November 11. ality of America, and a change vide the band with many pleas- equipment and professional staff On Friday evenings, professional of direction of the country also. ant memories. Instructors Ruth and William Ar- Included In the ranks are ten from Bloodmoblle headquarters people who compose an organi- in Hartford. Brundage empha- endt of Bolton will teach and de- ce sized that the need for blood is monstrate pair skating and danc- *5 zation to which the band owes ing, for couples only, during ot ts unity and high spirit. Under critical at this time both for the cV^ armed forces and the new sur- "Moonlight Mixers" starting No- N\°v he title of Band Council, this gical techniques for civilians. vember 10, The chairman also announ- Weekly schedules will be a- Tic cets on So le ced some changes in committee vallable at the warming hut ad- personnel and In registration jacent to the rink or by mall from S .U. Lobby IT is nut procedures. Mrs. John Farllng the UConn Recreation Office, U- of the University School of Nurs- 78, Storrs, Conn. 06268. 1-4 pm Most Hotel Dining Rooms Serve Good Food ing Is now chairman of the Blood a. But The Prices Are Rather High Donor Program In Mansfield, Boa 4 ST** "O- CWKJ* succeeding Miss Vera Kaskawho THE NATHAN HALE HOTEL DINING ROOM has resigned after several very serves delicious food at successful years In that position, regular priceb Mrs. Frank Laudlerl has become chairman of volunteers. STUDENT'S LUNCH tl .25 Councilors will distribute FULL COURSE MEALS $2.25 and up registration cards In student liv- D Take The Family Out ThU Sunday For ing units. Alpha Phi Omega and A Trent Gamma Sigma Sigma, student / aznmi\ service organizations, willdothe HL At The NATHAN HALE HOTEL follow-up there, while a commit- ,tP SUNDAY SPECIAL tee of seven University • staff members advise and assist In the 2 Broiled Live Lobsters $4.25 coordination. Staff donors them- Boneleea Fried Chicken, Seuce Supreme $2.2i selves will be recruited by ap- pointed members of each col- ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY lege or other organizational un- it, and a similar plan will be See and Hear THE ANNA MARIA fc FREDDY DUO followed for the Mansfield Train- In THE DRUM ROOM ing School staff. CONNECTICUT'S FINEST COCKTAD. LOUNGE All other eligible residents (18-65years) are urged to call For Reaervationa pnone 423-2547 the scheduling chairman, Mrs. John Trail, at 429-4685, to make J their appointments. NOW AE0 OPEN B. O. G. Save A Heart FREE UCONN Week DELIVERY 'Dogpatch' 2 pm — 8 pm Is Coming KFOOD SERVED IN Sadie Hafokins Dance THE HEARTY STYLE ■ OF THE OLD WEST. ANTIQUES - CURIOS - GIFTS Oriental Porcelain ud Biasa El FAST - EXCELLENT 8-12PM Hawley German steins, English, Pr- each, Genaaa China, Art Gl SERVICE I.D.'s Armory aaa etchings, print* palnt- iaga, aaaaaal andirons, Tab- lea: hanreat, trestle, ead, cV efiy, pine hatch, hooka and booacaoea, aaaaaal gifts and bric-a-brac. Shop Now Tonight tor Malbeny Hoaae, Wanaaoofl Bill Road, Mansfield Ceatcr, 1 aille off Beats 88. Opes aaa] by appoint- Soul Survivors fttt~4U4n PAGE TEN CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1961 Jimmy Cannon Guaranteed To Happen The mother of one of the play- scream "go for it"" because a field lege won't mention he flunked ers will cover her eyms with her goal will not beat the spread. out. hands every time her son Is In- A spectator will be hospital- Students will talk about hang- volved In a play. ized because he Is Jabbed in the ing the losing coach In effigy. After diving for a missed eye with the staff of a pennant. A boy will weep when he drops pass, a player will pound the turf The marching bands will a perfect pass. •f*;.W fc/ojjfr with his fists. sound like every other marching A father will mention Knute ••v.9: . »l .• An old man will mention Bron- band. Rockne and his freshman son ko Nagurskl and a younger one A buff will explain Intricate won't know who he is talking will ask if he means the wrest- plays that the coaches will have about. ler. to watch In slow-motion movies An old grad will be depressed The cops will pick up some to understand. when his college wins because student for ticket scalping. The coffee will be pale, cold, he bet heavily against them. Guys will meet men they went weak and sweet. The wife of a hungover old to school with and both will won- Some people will train their grad who finally took her to a der if they look as old and beat- binoculars more on the crowd football weekend will guarantee up as their classmates. than on the field. him she never wants to go to an- The finishings of the houses in each division for points One of the players will wear In the press box, reporters other one. a wrong number on his uniform. will discuss professional football One of the coaches will hope toward the All-Sports trophy are for Independent: First: Troy One linesman will pluck the between plays. his team loses so he can duck out House, Second: Sous a and, Third: Lafayette. grass every time he crouches. A man will drop his specs and of his contract for a better offer. For Fraternities - First: Chi Phi and Zeta Psi tied for A student In the cheering sec- the party next to him will step on At least one lush will never tion will yell as loud as anyone them. get into the stadium and sleep first place, and Phi Sigma Kappa was third. although he Is getting paid by a Girls in mini-skirts will act In his car through the game in bookmaker for information about as If it were summer while their the parking lot. the team. guys sit bundled In heavy over- At least one man will drop Two prunes who never at- coats. and smash a fifth of whiskey as tended any college will slap each A runner will heave a football he labors up the stadium's stone Intramural Incidents other on the back and jump up into the stands after scoring a steps. and down after every touchdown. touchdown. A coach will risk a boy's fu- by Bob Cipu At least one marriage will be The man who considers him- ture by playing him with an in- ruined because of the husband's self a true football fan will con- Jury. There are a number of In- TABLE TENNIS SINGLES will action the night before at the fra- centrate on the line play and Ig- Every time a receiver falls, tramural events that are start- ternity dance. begin on October 30th for the nore the ball carriers. cries of "interference'' will go ing and should be noted. Fraternities, October 31st for the An old man will drink whiskey A kid will show up in a racoon up. HORSESHOE DOUBLES com- Independents and November 1st out of a thin sliver flask. coat as a gag. A sub wiil warm himself up petition In all three divisions, The animal mascot will break for the Freshmen. The same pro- A host of the station-wagon on the sideline with high-stepping F raternlty, Independent and cedure will be used as that In the away from its guards and people sprints but never get into the Freshman, have been started. will Ignore the game to watch the picnic will neglect to bring a handball, where there is no limit corkscrew or bottle opener. game. Those men participating in this as to the number of entrants, but chase. The girl who contends she's event should check the Intramu- The girl cheer leaders will Guys who were considered your first man should be ready grinds will be elated because the a hot fan will be looking into her ral board just beyond the entrance for seeding at 7:00 p.m. and your leap high with a calculated ex- purse mirror as she renovates to the Men's Gym. The parti- uberance so that their skirts will All-American of their time has second best at 8:00 p.m. run to fat, and appears seedy. her face during the goal line cipants should check the time that It should also be remembered flare enough to show their stand. they are scheduled to play and panties. An old man will be laughed at that the Fraternity Decatholon At the lunch in the gym a plate then be sure that the matches are will be held tomorrow at 10:00 A back will have a clear field when he claims the winning team of cold cuts will be tipped Into the played at the indicated times, ahead of him but slip on a dry could hold Its own with the pros. a.m. behind the Field House. The field. lap of a girl wearing a brand new because the participants house Independent Decatholon will be The guy who says he never dress. will be penalized for forfeits. at 10:00 a.m. on November 4th Guys betting the points will missed a game since he left col- A long line at a gate will be and the F reshmen Decatholon at held up while a guy frisks his HANDBALL SINGLES will be 10:00 p.m. on November 11th. pockets for the tickets he has starting for the F raternities on stuck into his hatband. October 30th, for the Indepen- No matter how gentle the aft- dents on October 31st and for the ernoon, at least one guy and a freshmen on November 1st. UMass vs. URI girl will huddle under a blanket There is no limit as to the num- all across the game. ber of entrants allowed to par- The winning coach will say ticipate from each house, but on- in Top Battle the losing team was well-coached ly the best two players from each which is also what the losing house will be needed. On the op- The University of Massachu- coach says about him. ening night of your division's setts football team faces a major The losers will say they handball competition, your house obstacle In its defense of the couldn't "get up". should send your best man to be Yankee Conference championship The old grads will give the seeded at 7:00 p.m. and your se- Saturday when the Redmen host kids credit if the team wins, but cond best player at 8:00 p.m. the undefeated Rhode Island Rams blame the coach if it loses. at Alumni Stadium. The Home- coming Day game will get un- derway at 1:30 p.m. UMass takes a 2-0 Confer- Recreation Today ence record Into the game while the Rams are 1-0-1. Overall Friday Saturday T'Mass is 2-1 and URI is 3-0-1. The Rams, under Coach Jack Zilly, have kept their always- Gym: Gym: formidable passing attack while OPEN 10-5 augmenting it with a sound and OPEN 12-1 Two of the defensive stalwarts of the Connecticut foot- maturing defense. Rhody, in de- OPEN 3:40-10 Pool: feating Delaware, Brown and ball team have been letterman guard STEVE SMITH (left), and OPEN 2-5 New Hampshire and tying Ver- soph tackle PHIL DOR AN (right). Smith has started all sea- Pool: mont, has allowed just one touch- son, and has turned in a steady job each ball-game, while down since opening game and none OPEN 11:40-12 Squash Courts: in the last two. Doran has alternated at one of the tackle slots with George OPEN 12:40-1 OPEN 10-5 Kollcr. and has looked very impressive on several occasions. OPEN 4:45-5:50 The Redmen will be putting Tennis Courts: several streaks on the line Sat- OPEN 8-9:30 urday. UMass has won 11 straight All courts OPEN all day Conference games, six straight Squash Courts: All facilities open to all co- Homecoming games and has se- DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE OPEN 12-1 ed and university families ven straight decisions over the The University of Connecticut OPEN 3:05-10 from 7-11. The pool will be Rams. But URI has the weapons to end all three streaks and take Storrs, Connecticut open to those under 15 only possession of first place in the Tennis Courts: until B:30. After that only Conference. The Rams offense is PRESENTS Varsity-OPEN after 3:40 adults will be allowed in. paced by junior Larry Caswell who has completed 44 of 106 Hawley- OPEN after 3 FRATERNITY ALBERT CAMUS" North Campus- OPEN all day passes for 527 yards. Chief tar- Decathalon 10 AM gets are split end Frank Geisel- man with 16 receptions for 281 yards and flanker Henry Walker CALIGULA with 14 catches for 133 yards. BOG Fullback Bill Bjerke is the lead- ing rusher with 165 yards and a October 20-October 28 HAWK 3.5 average. Defensively the Rams have two outstanding line- backers in Ken Kuzman and Ed (No Sunday Performance) SADIE - HAWKINS Kassak. UMass, meanwhile, came out Harriet S. Jorgensen Theatre Girls: it's YOUR day of the 35-14 win over Connecticut in good shape. A solid effort by the defensive I.Y.O. Boy or find secondary of sidebacks Mike Tickets and Reservations Now Available McArdle and Bill Frye and safe- one fcert. ty Steve Rogers was pleasing to Auditorium Box Office: 429-3311 the coaching staff since Rhode Island's expected aerial fire- works will put the Redmen un- Admission: $1.50 Curtain 8:15 P.M. SUB Today 3-5 der constant pressure. ■ v.v.v'. PAGE ELEVEN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1967 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Harriers And Soccer Men Travel, AP bports wniri p, /n Key Matches 0n The Road

KC Comments Dominican All-Stars. The series The University of Connecticut Jewett (soph-East Haddam), Ray Amby Burfoot, a senior who pla- ced sixth nationally last year, and Like the injured party in a wUl benefit the Dominican De- varsity soccer team will be tra- Strong (Junior-East Hampton) and velopment Foundation, an institu- either Paul Loeffler (senior- number two man, Bill Rodgers, divorce case, the citizens of veling this weekend, meeting the top freshman runner last year. Kansas City took time out today tion devoted to bettering the lot University of Maine hooters at Westport) or Don Emery (soph- of the poor farm worker. Elllngton). The goalie will be Don Connecticut's number three posi- to assess their feelings over the Orono, Saturday, at 10. Connect- tion will be a toss-up between departure of the Athletics for Giacomin Aroused icut is 2-2 on the season, while Smith (Junior-Cranston, R.I.). The New York Ranger goalie, Maine has lost to Massachusetts Connecticut's victories were Steve Flanagan and Cralg Mc- Oakland, California. Coll. Wesleyan's number three The prevailing mood was one Ed Giacomin, said yesterday that Connecticut's foe of last weekend. over Wesleyan, 2-1 and Coast he is hoping to get a good shot at Injuries will hurt the Husky Guard, 5-0; while the Huskies man is David Wild. of ambivalence . . . sorrow over Following the top three men, fact that the A's have gone and the aggressive forward of the team, as Coach John.Squlres will have lost to Yankee Conference Montreal Canadiens, John Fer- foes, Vermont, 5-4, and Massa- Connecticut vastly out-mans the hope for the new team which will shift offenses to make up for the Cardinals, with Fred Barker come Into the city In 1969. guson. temporary losses of attackmen chusetts, 2-1. Maine lost to Giacomin insists that Fer- John Sahnas (Norwalk) and Fer- Massachusetts, 3-1. (Swampscott, Mass.), John Slade Whatever bitterness there (Westport) and Lloyd Cochrane was among Kansas City fans was guson has been roughing him for rlngton Langa, along with half- The Huskies will play Am- years, going back to their days back Sal Lonero (New Britain). herst at Storrs on Tuesday. (Btddeford, Me.) all top conten- directed at Charles Flnley, the ders. wheeler-dealer owner of the A's In the Minor Leagues. Ferguson Squires will use the standard was accused of roughing up Ed "W" attack offense, with three Meanwhile, the University of Connecticut won the match a who engineered the move. year ago, 29-30, by displacing One lady said: "I sure don't Wednesday night and also got In- backs. At outside left will be Connecticut cross country har- to a fight with Reg Fleming of Gary Schwarting(senior-Storrs), riers will travel to Mlddletown, the fourth and fifth Cardinal run- mind Flnley moving." ners, a phenomenon that should A man commented: "Flnley the Rangers in a game in New inside left, Lloyd Grant (soph- Saturday, to meet Wesleyan, at York. The game ended in a 2-2 Hebron) or George Schneider (ju- 2:30. The Huskies,with a 3-2 re- repeat this year, according to is a troublemaker and I'll bet Connecticut coach Bob Kennedy. the American League will have tie. nior - Weston), center forward, cord to date, lost to Springfield Clark Dlckerson (junior-East- College, 23-37 , in their last trouble with him in Oakland, too." The varsity meet willbepre- A priest remarked: "Mr. Fln- Hampton), along with Jack meeting, while edging Massachu- Soccer Matches Wright (senior-Middlebury) or setts last weekend, 26-27. Wes- ceeded by a freshman encounter, ley should stay in the insurance with the Cardinal frosh (1-1) business and leave the sports Matt Kuplnski (Junior . New Bri- leyan has a 1-1 tally with a vic- The two soccer teams playing tain) at inside right, and Jack tory over Worcester Tech and hosting the Connecticut Pups world alone." 0-2). McCormick Wins Award for the world club championship, Daniel (soph-Verona, N. J.) or a loss to Coast Guard. the Celtics of Glascow and the Connecticut will run sopho- Southpaw Mike McCormick of Marc Roberts Qunior - Massa- March f or Peace the San Francisco Giants, the racing club of Argentina, now pequa, N.Y.) at outside right. The more John Vitale (East Haven) National League comeback play- will move to Buenos Aires for halfbacks will be Al Cowles (se- in the front spot, but Vitale should Tickets on Sale er of the year, said Thursday the second game on November nior-Longmeadow, Mass.) at see a lot of competition from top that he wasn't surprised over first. right half and Al Lyon (senior- runner of last year Bill Young S.U. Lobby winning the award. Said Mike: The Celtics won the first West Essex, N.J.) or Pat Man- (Cromwell), a late-starting jun- "Someone told me In mid-sum- game, 1 to 0, last night in Glas- dowa at left half. ior. Both boys will meet stiff 1-4 pm gow. It was a rough game and The fullbacks will be Dana competition from Wesleyan's mer that if I kept pitching the way the Glasgow fans complained that I was I' d be a cinch for it." the Argentine club roughed up McCormick won 22 games the Celtic star, Tiny Jimmy John- for the Giants and had an earned run average of 2.85. stone. Duncan Tops Poll The Associated Press has tapped Speedy Duncan as> defen- sive player of the week in the Landry,.. American Football League. Speedy is only 5-10 and weighs from page twelve 175 pounds but he made two spec- tacular touchdowns in the 45 to halfback Paul Couturier (New 31 victory for the San Diego Hampshire), end Frank Geisel- Chargers over the Kansas City man (Rhode Island), fullback Jim Chiefs last Sunday. Cohane (Vermont) and quarter- The San Diego cornerback back Pete Petrlllo (Connecticut); picked off a Kansas City pass on defense- linebacker Pete Quack- the goal line and zipped 100 enbush (Maine), linebacker Bill yards for one touchdown. The Wolf (Vermont), cornerback Mike other was a 3-yard run with a McArdle (Massachusetts), line- fumble. The 100-yard run with backer Ken Kuzman (Rhode Is- the interception was the longest land) and tackle Steve Dixon In the history of the league. (Connecticut); sophomores-half- Kicking Star back Bob Rudolph (New Hamp- College football scouts, at- shire), end Harry Canning (Ver- tention: there is a high school mont), flanker John Crisp (Con- punter in Durango, Colorado, who necticut), and defensive end Tom Is out-kicking all the collegians. York (Massachusetts). He is Ron Long, a 170-pound end, who is averaging 45.8 yards for 22 punts this fall. The top major college pun- ter is Steve O'Neal of Texas A and M who has an average of 45.2 yards. Pirates Win The Pittsburgh Pirates are in the Dominican Republic for a five-game exhibition series, which they began Wednesday night with an 8 to 2 victory over the

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PAUE TWELVE CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 Huskies Face Maine Frosh Gridmen Open Season , In "Must" Contest Face Boston University Tonight Connecticut, in contention for 19 catches for 191 yards. The Connecticut freshman gala and Crouch, tackles; Man- the Yankee Conference football Maine's best offense centers football team opens its schedule cuso and Germanowski, guards; title, hopes to strengthen its pos- on the throwing arm of QB Dave here, Friday night at 7:30, play- Sullivan and Fleck, linebackers; ition, Saturday at Orono, Me., ing the Boston University year- Bill Fiorentino, safety; Ted Fer- Wing, who has connected on 37 lings. rari and Welch, halfbacks. when the Huskies clash with the of 82 passes for 415 yards, and Maine Black Bears in a 1:30con- Connecticut Coach Andy Bay- Others who may see action his talented receiver, Gene Ben- lock does not intend to name a are linebackers John Losh and test. ner, who has caught 29 for 410 The Nutmeggers, with a 1-1 "starting" team since he pro- Les Stacy; halfbacks Chuck ya rds and a score. Both a re soph- Leary, Erlck Peterson and Ed YanCon record and a l-2overall, poses to play several complete omores. units, both an offense and defense, Buckler; ends Glenn McNamara, stack up against a winless Maine Injuries have forced some In order to give as many players Dick Lamoutte and Jim Hutchln- eleven which will lx> playing its changes to the back-up person- fifth contest. Maine, usually a as is possible a chance to play. son; fullbacks Bernie Robillard nel in the defensive unit for U- For instance, one backfleld and Hal Crlne; Guard Gene Max- top contender for Conference Conn. Jim Solomon fills in at the Is comprised of quarterback Rick field and tackle Bruce Carter. honors has a 0-2 league record. starting' left end spot for Nick Hobustelli, halfbacks Vinny Cle- Brian Hermes and Vinny Cle- Pete Petrillo, Connecticut's Turco, with Doug Woolley mov- lefty throwing quarterbark, leads ments and Bobby Welch and full- ments have been named game ing over as secondary man from back Pete LaVenia. Another captains for this game. his team In offense with 188 y.irds a similar place at right end. Mov- in 49 rushes and 223 yards pass- backfleld is made up of Bobby ing up to the :ui1111•<■ i two right Warren at quarterback, Joe Mes- ing. He is also the leading scor- Pictured here are the end will lie sophomore JimKeri- sina and Dick Armstrong at the Freshman er with four touchdowns. Next is van. two starting ends for the Billy DlYeso who won the start- halves and Randy McCue at full- Two more sophomores will Connecticut Huskies. Above back. Another unit is made up of ing runningback assignment for also l>e moved up on the depth Soccer Saturday on his strong showing is GEORGE KUPFRIAN, and Bill Florentino at the signal- chart. Bob Stowell replaces Bob calling position, Messina and Jim Connecticut's Husky Pup in last week's game with Mas- Tice as back-up man for Henry below is DON FISCHER. Olzacki at the halves and Tommy booters will host the Massachu- sachusetts. A "pony" si/ed op- Palasek at a linebacker position, Golden at fullback. setts juniors Friday at 2:30 on erator, he has carried 14 times Both ends are veterans, who while Bill Miller moves behind Mike Zito, a halfback, quart- Gardner Dow Field. The Pups for 120 yea ids and a touchdown. know how to loosen up a de- Ron Grlnage at left halfback, as erback Kevin Coady and Jeff Os- boast a 1-2 record, defeating The fullback is Jimmy De- a replacement for Ben Stefano. fense, and both proved that troff, an end, will sit this one out Coast Guard, 3-0, while losing Witt, a strong blocker, who av- eraged li.2 yards in 15 carries; Line-up they can catch the football. due to injuries. to Springfield (3-1) and Mitch- and a 6-4 sophomore John Crisp Their performance will He One unit on the offensive front ell (3-2). is the flankerback. Crisp leads CONNKCTlClfT line Is made up of Bobby Nichols The Pups new tri-captalns one key to the success the and Carlo Latino at ends, Bruce will be the booters to watch. They the team in pass receptions with George Kupfrian ( 19(1) Huskies have at Maine on Carter and Tony Arcaro at tack- are John Scheffner (Hartford) Stan Rajc/cwski (220) Saturday. les, Brian Hermes and Bill Spen- manning a forward position, Landry Is Tops Al DcHciudictis ( 185) cer at guards with Danny Sullivan Frank Lupo (Paramus, N.J.) at Hen DcGcnova 217) at center. halfback, and Tom Potter (Tol- Another offensive line is land) at fullback. Roy Lawrence (195) In YanCon Poll formed by Don Miller and Bill Freshman Coach Pete Mc- Steve Dixon 1240) Armour, ends; Ken Ryngala and Devitt called his team, "well- Massachusetts quarterback Don 1-1 scher ( 195) Bobby Schlump at tackles; John balanced, with no spectacular Greg Landry (Nashua, N.H.), New Pete Pctrillo(182) Thies and Jim Mancuso, guards; players, but good depth." Hampshire end Bill Vasilios and Morris Gross at center. Mak- (Manchester, N.H.) and Maine Hilly DiYcso' 165) ing up another offensive line are CONGRATULATIONS quarterback Dave Wing (Brew* John ( nsp (195) Bill Hogan and Mike Florentino er, Me.) have been chosen as the The CDC has learned Jim DcWiet (IBS) at ends, Scott Imperatore and top offensive, defensive and soph- Kenny Crouch at tackles, Larry of a very rare feat in the in- omore players In the Yankee Con- MAIN!-: Hodson and Paul Germanowski tramural softball program. ference lor their performances at guards and Vic Fleck at center. last Saturday. LI- Tom Dyer ; 225) A defensive unit includes Ho- Last night, Pete Vainoris, Landry, C'3" 200-pound sen- LT ( harlic MacDonald 1207) gan and Mike Fiorentino, ends; of Morgan House, Pitched a ior, scored three touchdowns, Jay Vance! IBS) Chuck Goode and Arcaro, tack- perfect game against Troy. netted 200 yards rushing on 21 I.G les; Hodson and Spencer at In the 11—0 win, he struck tries, and led Massachusetts to Don White (185) guards; Hermes and Thles, line- ( a 3">- 14 Conference win over Con- John Sherry [ 18") backers; Clements, safety; War- out four of the 12 men he necticut. Landry broke the U- ren and Golden, halfbacks. KG Dill Pasquill ;200) faced, and not one runner M.iss career total offense record Another defensive combo has and now has gained 3.G3C yards. Rl Gene Benner ( 177) Miller and Armour, ends; Ryn- reached base in any manner. Vasilios, a senior, sparked RE George Platter (178) MARANTZ-PICKERINC—N.G. SCOTT New Hampshire to its first Con- Tickets for the Home- ference win, 17-0 over Maine. OB Grant \latkins ( 185) coming Day football game He threw the Maine quarterback TLB Garth Ouillia (1S7) three times for big losses and with Davidson on Oct. 28 You're Invited To... RB returned a fumble delivery 40 ( harles Yanush ' 197) are now on sale at the ath- yards to set up a UNI! touchdown. letic ticket office located in Wing, Maine's tricky sopho- Hartford Hi-Fi Show 1967 more, w.is a standout in a losing the Field House. The same cause. He completed 18 ol 35 Decathalon siudent ticket policy announ- passes for 174 yards as Maine ced for the Band Day game lost to New Hampshire. Admission Free Saturday 10 with Massachusetts is ap- Other nominations were: of- fense- end Gene Benner (Maine), plicabi e. Sponsored as a public service by the Stereo Shop Inc. a. See all the new models for 1968 ■■■ I ■■■■ -over 12 leading manufacturers represented Eastern < onnccticut State ( ollcgc HEAR LIVE V.S. RECORDED PERFORMANCES JUST HOW GOOD IS THE STEREO YOU OWN? Presents i Hear the Ultimate Stereo System The E one of a kind lovin' Spoonful Talk to factory people directly about what you want your stereo to do for you

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