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Society is commonly too cheap. We meet at very short intervals, not having had time to acquire any new value for each other. Henry David Thoreau THE STAFF
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Stan Hawthorne ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Nicholas Chigos MANAGING EDITOR: Brian F. Goggin SENIOR EDITOR: Valerie Angelovich PHOTOGRAPHIC EDITOR: Shelah Fidellman CONSULTING EDITOR: Ron Rape BUSINESS MANAGER: Michael H. Vasileff ADVERTISING MANAGER: Francis B. Majorie EXECUTIVE SECRETARY OF RESEARCH: Donna Woods DESIGN SUPERVISOR: Maxanne Kass PHOTO DEVELOPMENT: Lynne Alexander GENERAL STAFF: Dianne Barker, Cynthia Jean Bender, Thomas | Brzezenski, Kevin Carroll, Jeffrey M. D'Agastino, Donna L. Dutko, Andrejs Emars, George Fee, Corinne Hawthorne, Jae-Hak Ko, Claudia Kuehl, James Lynch, Thomas Pudlinski, Donna Riffle, Mark Semmelrock, Kenneth Strieker. PUBLISHER: Taylor Publishing Company PORTRAIT STUDIO: Delma Studio COVER DESIGN: Wulf Losee SPECIAL THANKS: Mr. Walt McGowan of Public Information and the University Photo Lab, all those at Central Mailing, to all Student Union employees, Dr. John Abbott of the English Department, Gerson Sirot of Delma Studios, Alan T. Driscoll, CORD, and a very special thanks to our friend and consultant Ron Pape.
With great respect and sincere sadness, we, the staff, ask that NUTMEG 79 be . .. DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF
DONALD E. McCULLOUGH
On June 9, 1979, the academic community suffered a great loss when Donald L. McCullough, Director of Student Activities, lost his life in a motorcycle accident. This feeling of great loss was not only confined to his family and the UCONN community which he served faithfully from September, 1960, but also touched the hearts of colleagues and students from many national and international universities.
While initiating, developing, and expanding UCONN's Student Activities Office with new and innovative programs, Mr. McC°ullough also became increasingly active nationally. He actively participated in the Association of College Unions and helped found the National Entertainment Conference (NEC) in 1968 of which he was the 1971 Board Chairman. In 1978, the National Entertainment and Campus Activities Association gave Mr. McCullough its Founders Award, and at the time of his passing, he was the Board Chairman of the Foundation for Educational Programming in Higher Education.
In memorium, Mr. McCullough's contributions went beyond his many civic and professional achievements. His greatest contributions were his warmth, understanding, and wisdom which he shared with us all. The memory of these will live in our minds forever.
For his family, friends, and colleagues we dedicate Nutmeg 1979 to a truly great man. \
We were young
^:'^ and in love with life. We learned to talk... to listen...
and to respect
10 those moments spent in...
11 song
12
14 15 in dance
16 17 in solitude
18 19 and dreamed of a tomorrow that must somehow include all the good of yesterday. Stan Hawthorne
20 CAMPUS SCENERY
21 sSQME MEM Cim^ 1tiE UDDfel 6F SU^CE<;S,
Thechief glory of ^-^ every people "AJK' tfe-ttj '.'^''•fF 1**^ I ii 5w mmv H« Ho«a<. |: WE HCNoRtP HeR OfFER arises from its iWi *jflt Kir Ui hm All, uidm L6N6 A^K JilWE iN'fie- oM rttH
1" v-t-<-a,,.,. authors. Sir d.*^; Dr.,.s fv -'(tfe,L m--e« ^tS-'- <-'• V==- Samuel Johnson / \
\} ilA'h "'
22 23 24 CAMPUS HASSELS
25 ss UConn Co-o
Procedure Procedure Procedure
26 ACADEMIC
27 28 29 We didn't like it but we did it, anyway.
30 LIBRARY . . . GALACTICA
31 32 CULTURAL CLASSICAL
t ) • -^:;ai_,''. ....*"
34 3' SOUL
Who hears music, feels his solitude Peopled at once. Robert Browning
36 FOLK
37 38 STAGE
39 40 COMEDY
JIMMY WALKER
41 NOEL NEIL
42 43 PAINTING
44 SENIOR YEAR NEWS OInnnertttut iatlg Campus Serving Storrs Since 1896
\0LLXXXIIN0 99 ISTORRS,iiirr^ .-.-—.. ^^ CONNECTICUT. -^-^ Tuesday. April3. 1979 Bubble shrinks; 200,000 have fled
MIDDLETOWN Pa. (UPI) — already have fled the area. as 30,000 rem per hour, as powerful might fail in the future. Federal officials got a happy surprise The dramatic decrease in the size as 1 million simultaneous-cheSf X- Denton also reported the reactor Monday with the sudden shrinkage of the bubble atop the reactor core, rays—signaled potential future dif- core was cooling steadily, with only of a dangerous hydrogen bubble in from 850 cubic feet a few days ago to ficulties. two of 52 monitored fuel assemblies Three Mile Island power plant's a tentative measurement of 47 cubic Harold Denton, the chief Nuclear above 400 degrees. On Sunday, only crippled reactor, but they reported feet, reduced the ^chances of a Regulatory Commission official on four assemblies were below 400 high radiation had started to knock hydrogen gas explosion and offered See related stories p.5 degrees. out reactor instruments. hope an evacuation decision could be Small levels of radiation still were Officials in Dauphin, York, Lan- postoned. the scene at Three Mile Island near being released from the plant. caster and Cumberland counties that But the first failure of an in- here, said only a single flow meter in • "I think it is certainly safer that> surround the Susquehanna River strument inside the reactor an unused section of cooling pipe had yesterday," Denton said. "I think plant estimated one-fourth of the building—attributed to the battering failed so far and it was by itself of there certainly is reason for op- population, or 200,000 people. of radiation at levels reaching as high "no significance.'" But he said more timism."
45 WHUS suspends Mayer
By JIM McGANN Mayer had previously been Committfee in November in In a Dec. 27 meeting of the suspended by WHUS for a light of his reinstatement by Federation of Students and misuse of student funds but WHUS. At the time he was Service Organizations, the was reinstated by the station. chairman of FSSO's Organi- chairman of the finance Mayer resigned his post as zations Committee. committee moved to freeze a member of the Central SEE PAGE 3 WHUS's budget for one day until the radio station sus- pended WHUS Sports Di- rector Sam Mayer. Legislator proposes According to WHUS Gen- eral Manager John Murphy, Mayer was "suspended" by pot decriminalization WHUS Station Manager Ron By MICHAEL CALVERT Williams shortly after the Dec. 27 meeting. The budget A bill to decriminalize possession of less than an ounce of freeze, which took place on marijuana has been proposed in the Connecticut State Jan. 1, was called a "token Legislature by Representative Russ Reynolds, a West Haven freeze" by Murphy, since it Democrat. The proposed bill would make possession of such took place on holiday and an amount an "Infraction", which would be punishable only "never affected us at all," by a fine. said Murphy. Reynolds said Tuesday he though the Judiciary Committee "The freeze was to show of the Legislature, which will determine whether or not the that-FSSO was upset," said bill should go to the floor of the Legislature to be voted on, JMiifphy. "it was a token should hold a public hearing on the proposed bill at UConn. gesture." SEE PAGE 5
TheVonne.ctJc.ut Pgilv Campus. Tup^day. 'November 7. 1978 Announcers stay at luxurious hotel
By JIM McGANN NThe Daily Caijipus first learned of Inn in Orlando. He called the Resort • Hawthorne said he did not know of Mayer's accomodations from Ken accomodations •'extravagant, more the details of the trip, only that funds The Sports Director ^f WHUS th^ what's needed."* had been approved. "Sam's integrity arranged for hims^f and two broad- 'Koeppcr. associate sports editor of FSSD also approved SIGO for meals is prelfy high, it might have been just casters who were covering the UConn the Daily Campus who flew down to a communication breakdown some- cover the soccer team and stayed andgas-for the stay in Florida which soccer games in Florida to stay at a Mayer said last week would not be where," said Hawthorne. resort hotel in the Disney World with Mayer, Young and Healy on Daily Campus Ediior-in-Chief John Friday and Saturday night. included in the total cost of the trip. HiU sarid he did not know Koepper complex and as late as Monday According to informatioiT r'jceive3 would be staying al the resort hotel. afternoon he still claimed to have Koepper was supposed to have from Yciing, Heaiy and Mayer, the "We assumed he was staying with stayed at a much cheaper hotel. stayed at the Langer Hotel in Winter Daily Campus figured the entire trip the Friends of Soccer (in Winter Park with the Frierds of -Soccer cost at about $6S8. not including the Sam Mayer told the Daily Campus Park). He was invited by the WHUS Thursday, Friday and Saturday cost of a car rental, instead of the last week that he had arranged for group tovisu and go to Disney World nighf. but the three invited him to S498 as reported by Mayer last week. himself. Andy Young and Bill Healy stay at the resort Hotel out of the next day. We don't condone it." to stay at a Day's Inn in Orlajido convenience because all four of them When informed .of the dtscrepency "We had. no knowJedge. of it until which would have cost $30 a night. planned to go to Disney World FSSO Finance Committee Chairman he returned. We will reimburse FSSO The Daily Campus learned Monday Saturday. Stan Hawthorne said."If this is true. for two days of the hotel bill and any that Mayer had instead stayed at a I would like to know why there was a meals he ate.' Koepper is being Walt Disney World Contemporary. Young, said he thought that the difference in the hotels. I'll talk to severely disciplined. He fedls bad Resort Hotel for $60 a night. accomodations would be at a Day's Sam." and realizes his mistake." Cminectttut SatlQ Olampua Serving Storrs Since 1896
VOL. LXXn NO. 5T STORRS. (:ONNF.(!TICUT Tuesday, November 21. 1978 Mayer resigns from FSSO
ByROBOBIE "FSSO is an organization about to crumble. I other newsmen stayed at th^ luxury Disney World Sam Mayer, the beleagured sports director of have no desire to sink with the good ship FSSO." complex instead of the closer, less expensive WHUS, and student government member, quit his Mayer ad.ded in his letter. Mayer was returned as accomodations that had been arranged for them, student government post Monday. WHUS sports director Monday also when the radio during coverage of the UConn soccer team's recent In a letter to the chairwoman of Federation of station staff voted against upholding his suspen- trip to Florida. Students and Service Organizations (FSSO), Mayer sion from the station. After being questioned about discrepancies in his said he resigned his post because he "no longer Sources said Mayer's resignation from the FSSO statement of the trip's costs, Mayer was suspended has the desire or the time to continue." Mayer had central committee may have been caused by his frotn WHUS for misusing student government been the chairman of FSSO's organizations charging his texfbooks for this semester to the funds. Mayer later paid the disputed bill with his committee, and said in his letter that his student government: Sadler said "that could have own money, claiming full responsibility for the resignation was "due to severe time pressures been one'of the reasons." incident. caused by my reinstatement as WHUS sports Mayer had been suspended from WHUS after it Mayer will continue as sports director for WHUS director." was reported two weeks ago after he and three now that his suspension has been nullified.
46 Committee formed to oppose drinking bill
By LOU URSONE meeting is currently being Support for the opposition discussed by the subcommit- tee. of raising the drinking age In other business at Wed- here was raised at a Wed- Monday, Februarys. 1979 nesday's meeting, the Cen- nesday night student gover- tral Committee voted to ac- nment meeting. The Central cept Paul Rogers as the Committee of the Federation Chairman of the Committee of Students and Service on Organizations, filling the Organizations (FSSO) formed UConn's budget a subcommittee to oppose any legislation to raise the Volcano erupts drinking age. The UConn student in Indonesia leaders will be joining with looks grim other groups to form a JAKARTA, Indonesia coalition against raising the (UPI) — A volcano spewing legal drinking age. By MEG McGOLDRICK lava and poisonous gases A meeting to be held at wiped out an entire village at the Capitol next Tuesday dawn Wednesday, killing UConn can expect a grim Wednesday when Gov. Ella night will be a public hearing 155 Moslems during their Grasso announces her budget recommendation to the in which all students are morning prayers and leaving legislature, according to Mansfield's state senator. urged to attend. In a letter to hundreds of others seriously the Central Committee, Ed "Facing the harsh realities, people must realize that there ill. Mierzwinsk;, director of ihe The eruption in Dicng will be budget cuts for all departments," Audrey Beck UConn Public Interest Plateau, a volcanic crater (D-Mansfield) said. "It will be interesting to compare the Research Group said, about 250 miles west of the University's cuts with other departments," she added. ''Legislators ignore Indonesian capital, scattered representatives of students; There is a question of equity in treatment of all. Beck said. thQiisands of terrified wor- they might listen if hordes of Actually funding of human services is pitted against funding shippers from Kepucukan, students arrive." for primary and secondary education, she said. "The the town nearest the volcano Transportation to this taxpayers expect no tax increases, but where will the money amfifom five other villages. come from?" she asked. Students should make an effort to seek a higher appropriation from the legislature Beck said. "Students must Injunction ordered Tear gas used indicate their needs or they will lose in the process of pushing and shoving as all the programs come in," she said. New Orleans judge orders Sheriff's deputies use tear injunction against striking However, there will be no money left to distribute "or it gas on farm workers. See policemen. See page 11. would have been distributed already," she said. But students page 6. should make a good case for the money they have received, she added. In the past students have not presented themselves well on issues since they pushed ^6r the new library. Beck said. "Then they worked closely with us and did not turn off J people," she said. UConn unites to oppose cuts
By MICHAEL CALVERT forts to make clear to everyone that nesday the proposed budget cuts an apparent lack of student interest our budget is not enough to continue coulcj have a "devastating" effect on in the budget cuts. "Students must our present programs." said Wilson, the quality of the University. The UConn administration, faculty, following a meeting Wednesday af- "The AAUP recognizes the gravity come to appreciate that they have a and non-faculty employees plan to ternoon between himself, represen- of this situation and is joining with quality program and it's being chip- present a united front in their op- tatives of the University Senate, the the administration to turn it around," ped away," he said. position to the proposed cuts in American Association of University he said. AAUP vice-president ,Iohn UConn's budget for next year. Ken- professors (AAUP). and the UConn Among the areas cut in the new Brubachcr agreed, saying. "One of neth Wilson, the university's vice- Professional Employee Association. budget are 37 university positions, the most potentially vocal groups is president for academic affairs, said William D'Antonio, a professor of along with a hiring freeze on another the students. There needs to be a Wednesday. Sociology and president of the UConn 87 positions. drawing in of students, parents, and "The university is united in its ef- chapter of the AAUP, said Wed- D'Antonio added he was upset by alumni." " 1NE CAMPUS nOAY- lARC says Producer speaks Not again Prof gets grant Woodcock named no option Director Leon Bailey WINDSOR LOCKS A UConn Engineering says "The Bacchae," is (UPI)—Increasing cloud- professor has received a U.S. swears in Wood- The Inter-Area Resi- the "most difficult Greek iness today with chance NASA grant of $100,000 cock as ambassador to dent's Council has pro- play to produce." It of occasional light snow to study wind and fluid China. See page 5. posed the elimination of opens Friday March 3 at late in the day and at flow problems. Details on the Sprague and Hol- the Mobius theatre. night. Highs Thursday 35 page 4. comb optional meal See page 6. to 40 and lows Thursday I plans. Story page 3. night around 30.
47 The Connecticut Daily Campus. Friday. March 2. 1979 UConn blasts BC—'never in doubt'
By MICHAEL SOLOMON "Their shooting so well made our kids, PROVIDENCE. RI—the UConn bas- especially our young ones, lose ketball team had a first half confidence. " said Tom Davis, BC's coach. "extraordinaire" and the Huskies "They attacked the ball and we didn't have went on to beat Boston College 11 ^, many unmolested shots. Their 74 before an estimated crowd of 11.800 at aggressiveness disrupted us." the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference In the second half others rose for UConn tournament. It was Jeff Carr's 19 point ef- besides Can- Randy LaVigne hit for 11 fort combined with a tenacious SHcjtching points. 17 for the game and made two steals defense that caused 18 first half BC tur- to keep the Eagles from coming back. Mike novers that proved the difference. McKay netted 18 points, 10 in the second The game was never in doubt. half, and grabbed five rebounds. He was "We gotta go some to play better than we eight of 11 from the field. did in the first half." said UCinn's Coach Corny Thompson finished with 15 points, Dom Perno about his team's 21 point lead nine rebounds and three steals, while at the half. "We confused them and played Bobby Dulin had ten points. All told, five active defensively." Huskies scored in double figures. BC cut the 47-26 deficit to 10 points early Dulin's worth, however, was on defense in the second half, but a Mike McKay along with Clay Johnson an() Jim Sulivan. three-point play a couple of minutes later the UConn guards held Ernie Cobb, BC's put the Huskies out of reach. 61-45. main threat. Once Cobb's outside shooting But it was the first half that stands out. was shut off, BC's vulnerability showed. Carr went seven for seven from the field Perno and LaVigne complained about the and was overpowiring offensively with 15 officiating.which was questionable for both points. The UConn defense held BC star clubs. guard; Ernie Cobb, to no pi'ints and five "I was mad about the first half turnovers in the half. officiating." said LaVigne. "One time I was "We opened up with our defense on top. just standing next to Beaulieu. and they When he was shut off they tried to put the called a foul on his turnaround jumper. I ball inside but McKay was in front of didn't even touch him." Beaulieu (,loe. BC center). Luckily we were "They (the officials) got Randy mad. It stationed in the right spot," said Perno was a big. big mistake." Perno said. about Cobt-.who hit only three often shots BC. which was paced by guard Jim on the nighi for ten points. Sweeny's 19 points and Beaulieu's 17 Connecticut's overall shooting percentage rebounds, falls to 21 and 9 for the season was a blistering 62.5 percent (66.7 in the and looks for a National Invitatio.ia: second half) while the Eagles hit for a Tournament bid hHAw-nar 37.3 percent. UC >in will face Rhode Island Saturday
The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, March 8, 1979 12 The Pick - Syracuse by 8 But if Syracuse can control the court... seen enough pressure all year, so I'm confident we can The matchups: always more than mere statistics attack their press." doesn't seem to bother "We'll have to establish Boeheim. ourselves inside, and it is "We're a tournament Syracuse possible to do that. They'll proven team. We won't UConn probably do things just like change very much because points rebounds assists points rebounds assists last time, so we'll takS ad- they don't have to." says Jeff Carr (C) 10.0 7.4 24 Roosevelt vantage of some things. Corny Boeheim. "In the first game, Bouie (C) 14.8 8.5 13 Right now the kids have con- we were more in the front Thompson (F) 18.6 9.9 51 Dale fidence they can play with line. Connecticut's got a lot Mike Shackleford (F) 14.1 6,4 109 anyone. Either the pressure more games under its belt McKay (F) 15.7 5.3 71 Louis Orr (F) 13.0 7.8 57 will be on them or they could now. but experience still Kandy Marty be looking past us," said LaVigne (G) means something." 10.7 3.2 109 Headd (G) 12.2 1.4 43 Perno. Clay When Boeheim speaks Hal Cohen (G) 8.7 1.9 81 If UConn could beat about inexperience he's Johnson(G) 6.5 1.5 63 Rhody inside.(who,according talking about UConn's three to Perno is as physical as any starting freshmen, forwards front line in the country, they Corny Thompson and Mike ter's play. The usually mild- Deiagrange is still having "We'll have to have real can beat Syracuse insidetoo, McKay and guard Clay mannered center who's ankle problems, so expect to good* execution and be whose only advantage is Johnson. Thinking of that season scoring average is see Jim Fearon as a^ forward aggressive, no matter what height. The Orangemen threesome as "just fresh- 10.0 has hit for a 16.3 clip sub, while Jim Sullivan could they throw against us," said haven't done much in NCAA
48 Norwich BuiJefIn. Friday, May 25, 1979 TWENTY-ONE Edge Navy 5-4 Huskies Win In Six Innings ByTIMTOLOKAN score from second on a single. Bulletin Sports Editor The Midshipmen finally scored in the ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Larry Panciera fifth, chasing across three funs without was the first to admit his University of benefit of a hit. In that frame, Connecticut had gotten a "helping McLaughlin issued four walks and hand." UConn was guilty of three errors. "It's a win and we'll talce it, said the Three walks loaded the bases with veteran Panciera after his club held on one out and clean-up hitter Jim McKee to nip host Navy 5-4 Thursday in a rain- got an RBI when he grounded into a abbreviated opening game in the NCAA short-to-second force play. Division I Northeast Regional Baseball On the would-be return throw to first, Tournament. second baseman Johnson threw the ball "We started good and got a 5-0 lead away, allowing a second run to score but then we lost our momentum and we and putting a Navy runner on first. could have been in trouble," added After another walk, Jim Roberts hit a Panciera moments after the UConn- hopper up the middle which UConn Navy clash went into the record book as shortstop Tally Noble hobbled near the a one-run Husky victory. bag for an error. As the ball skipped The game, which was delayed at the away from Noble, second baseman start for 70 minutes while close to 20 Johnson scooped up the ball and threw grounds crew members worked to get wildely to first, allowing the third riin to the field in shape for tourney action, score. was stalled on three different occasions In the Navy sixth with one out, Terry during the game. The third rain delay, Deitz tripled to the right field fence and which totally drenched the diamond, number nine batter Bob Ravener singl- forced the game to be called. ed to right for the fourth run. "A win is a win ... but it's no fun this The victory for Connecticut improves way," stated UConn assistant coach its overall mark on the year to 28-10 and Andy Baylock as he talked about the ties the school record for most wins in a "shortened" triumph. single season (1977 club was 28-8). The Winning pitcher Colin McLaughlin, verdict also hiked Connecticut's record who again battled wildness but tied a in one-run decisions this season to 10-2. UConn record by notching his 11th pit- Navy, with the loss, dropped to 22-8 ching win of the season, said, "this type and saw an eight-game winning streak of win doesn't leave a real good taste." snapped. The victory was the fifth UConn took a 1-0 lead in the third inn- straight for UConn. ing against Navy starter Paul Kelleher, McLaughlin allowed seven hits, scoring an unearned run. With two outs, struck out six and walked six in not- Gary Woodfield singled and continued ching the six-inning triumph. to second on an outfield error. The 6-* righty and his catcher Al Gar- Al Garray plated Woodfield with a ray both agreed that "lack of concen- ground single to right. tration" again troubled the Husky UConn added four more in the fourth hurler. with sophomore second baseman — "I got perturbed when they (Navy) Mike Johnson providing the biggest hit got some of those early scratch hits ... of the day. and then I lost my concentration. I don't Jim Considinc reached on an error at think for a while today I was even keep- third base and designated hitter Rich ing my eye on my catcher's glove," Tasi beat out a bunt single attempting McLaughlin commented. to sacrifice. "Sometimes when you get a big lead Groton's Joe Vincente drilled a one- (5-0 in the fourth) you don't concentrate two pitch into the left field corner for an and I didn't really think Navy had RBI single and Johnson jumped all over many good hitters. The triple was the a two-two serving from Kelleher and only real good hit tliey had," yanked a curve ball down the left field McLaughlin stated. line for a three-run home run. For Johnson, who also poled a clutch UConn had eight hits in the game, two two-run home run in the deciding ECAC each by Vincente and Johnson, the New England title game last Sunday number seven and eight hitters in the against Massachusetts, the round trip- lineup. per was his third of the season and was The win for UConn, and then the rain, only the fifth home run hit at Navy all means the Huskies will have the entire season long. day off Friday when the four-team, dou- The high drive was aided by a favor- ble elimination tourney is scheduled to ing wind and cleared the fence near the resume. 323-mark in the left field corner. Because only one ot Thursday's two McLaughlin Struggles scheduled games were played due to Navy, which won the Eastern Inter- the rain, St. John's and Nebraska will collegiate Baseball League (EIBL) to meet in a first round game Friday at qualify for the Northeast Regionals, 11:30 a.m. and the loser of that game came out swinging against UConn's will face Navy at approximately 2 p.m. hard-throwing McLaughlin, the today in game three of the tourney. sophomore from Woodbury. UConn, in the winner's bracket after Navy got one hit in the first but did losing the opener last weekend in the not score and despite three straight New England tourney only to charge bioop singles in the second the Middies back and win four in a row for the NE ti- still failed to score when UConn left tle, is scheduled to play at 11:30 a.m. fielder Randy LaVigne cut down Saturday against the St. John's- George Patro at the plate as he tried to Nebraska winner.
4C OInnnecttcut iailg Olamjrug Serving Storrs Since 1896
VOL LXXXII No. 42 cjORpg. roNNECTlCUT Tuf.'sday. Novemher 7. 19'. FSSO committee dxmips clubs
By DAVE SCHOOLCRAFT S32.809 from the accounts of all of its were: The Norwich Volunteers. Willi- tion Manager Ron Williams to pre The Federation of Student and 63 organizations, and declared all but mantic Tutorial. Mansfield Tutorial. sent to the committee a complet Service Organizations Finance Com- 14 of those 63 organizations to be Dialogue. Photopool. and the Ama- salary breakdown According to Dianne O'Hara. man; mittee, the pocketbook of the student ineligible for any future budget teur Radio Club. Of these organiza- of the organizations being droppee government, cut off funding Monday funding. Of those 14 organizations tions. Mansfield Tutorial had $100 are "sports clubs or departmenta for all but a handful of the clubs and spared the "final blow" by the rccinded. Photopool fost,S408. and clubs." that do not meet the criterior organizations under its wing, after Committee, eight are integral units of the Amateur Radio Club was told to of a "service organization." having consulted with the FSSO the student government's central give back S550: Although some of these group" Central Committee. Although radio station WHUS did body. might possibly be eligible for "one In what one member of the The decision is subject to approval not have any funds recinded. it too shot" grants, in the future th( committee called a "radical re- by the Central Committee. was cited for possible cuts. Promising further scrutiny, committee chairman student government will not financf evaluation of the purpose of FSSO." The six non-FSSO organization limited.interest groups. the Finance committee recalled accounts not completely terminated Stan Hawthorne ordered WHUS Sta-
Tucsdav. November 14. 1^7H Lack of surplus cause of club cuts By FRED DeCASPERIS The marvel of history is the A nonexistent budget surplus of about $45,000 and the lack of adequate bookkeeping procedures were among th< combination of factors responsible for last week's studen patience with which men government decision to terminate funding of 63 UCpnn club; andj^anizations, the FSSO finance chairman said Monday. "Tile problem we've always had is that we run on i surplus," said Stan Hawthorne, finance committee chairman, and women submit to referring to previous years *hen finance and central comittittee chairmen counted on a'surplus when planning the tj|(#semesters budget. According to Hawthorne, surpluses burdens unnecessarily laid evolved over the last few years when some orgaii.ization; failed to used their allotted money before .June 30, at which time the money returned to the general fund and was carried upon them by their over into the next semesters activities budget. "In the past this figure has been about $45,000 to $SO.OOQ and this semester It caught up with us." Hawthorne said. Each semester the Federation of Student Services^, governments. Organization is given $100,000 for appropriations and it's operation. For the last several years, FSSO has appropriated William E, nearly $80,000 for the funding of WHUS. the Photo-pool, the FSSO Forum, salaries, check cashing, the FSSO central Borah committee and other miscellaneous expenses. This left an additional $20,000 for club . appropriations plus around $45,000 in surplus. This was the case last spring when the finance committee appropriated a total of $145,000 for the fa' of 1978. "We went on the assumption that we could budget over $100,000 and took the 60 grand right up to the hih with the SEE PAGE 3
50 GOOD TIMES THE PUB
52 53 54 When do WE get served?
55 The Connecticut Daily Cam Brawls mar good tim
By FKED DeCASPERIS and fidor. .The crowd came to their fee MEGMcGOLDRICK and surged toward the two, eventual It was 12:45 and the lights had been ly pulling them apart. turned on as Thursday night's pa- Seconds later, another fight brok< trons began to file out of the out and subsequently three mon Anonymous Pub. Several employees chain-reaction fights ensued. For n( had begun to clear the tables when a apparent reason one onlooker threw i fight .erupted between a bouncer and thug in the vicinity of the brawl. one patron who was reluctant to Within minutes three UConn polici leave. cruisers arrived on the scene, an( Rolling to the floor, the two two officers escorted one participan slammed against a table' causing into the pub office. The othe; chairs and glasses to crash to the patrolman tried to clear the crow<
56 ms, Monday, November 20, 197S ?s at Anonymous Pub
from the building. "There's more night, although in past weeks, sever- action here than at a Muhammed Ali al students have been arrested in fight," one student said leaving the connection with, vandalism in and building. "This happens all the around the pub afrea. time," his friend replied. "I am upset that this happened," The pub is not normally like that, Skidgell said. When people are according to Tim Skidgell, the pub subjected to a fight innocent by- ihanager. There were a few broken standers could be seriously hurt, he glasses, but no extensive damage to added. There is more violence ev- the pub or building, he said, "just a erywhere now, he said. "It is feast of few broken Spirits and a few swollen famine," he added. There will be a lips." year without a fight, then three in a No arrests were made Thursday month, he said. 58 What do you expect after TEN Pitchers?
59 RELAXING
60 S-TK m iFr^t * '4 ^ «.r
r- K
61 FUND RAISING
It is more blessed to give than to receive. Acts, XX,35 New Testament
.'•. ""-. ''' ~ % 1 • V *
.jp ^ '^ i^ 0 P^H * «
itc ^StKW '^Ik^..^
62 63 Dorm Life
64
66
68 69 70 71 FRATERNITIES
During our years at UCONN we participated in the revival of an institution — The Fraternity.
72 s^GW^
73 COMMUTING STUDENTS
74 75 COSTUME PARTIES
76 199 ^^K^jH
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HVi, i^^H V 3 77 FIFTIES PARTIES
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. George Santayana
78 79 SEMI-FORM ALS
80
82 83 INFORMALS
84 85 6S F • r
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86 87 88 89 TOGA PARTIES
We made the 'Animal House' characters look like amateurs
90 didn't we?
91 92 93 WET-T WET-BRIEF CONTEST
In February, to the delight of many and despite protests by few, the First Annual Nutmeg Wet-T Wet-Brief Contest was held. The event drew over 1500 spectators, and national media coverage.
The winners, Christopher Zui and Debra Worth, appear on the Centerfold with the obvious disapproval of The Women's Center displayed on its reverse.
94 95 96 "If they can do it, so can I." IU^CTU
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SENIORS
98 LOUIS ABARE EDWARD ABLE DAVID ABRAMS DAVID ACAMPORA JOAN A. ACCUOSH
CHERYL ADAMS DOREEN ADAMS GARY ADAMS, JR. JONATHAN ADAMS SUSAN ADAMS
ROBIN ADDLEY BARBARA J.ADLER KAREN AGRES PAULAGRIMIS ROSS AINLEY
BARBARA ALDRICH YVON ALEXANDRE NANCYALLEN HELEN MAY ROSEMARY AMICO ALLINGER
ROBERT J. CASPER AMODIO DEARRA ALBERT BARBARA L. AMMANN ANASTASION ANDERSON ANDERSON
99 'X^^iJ
LINDA ANDERSON BONNIE ANDREW RONALD ANGELINI VALERIE ROBERT ANGOTTA ANGELOVICH
MARK ANHALT CAROL-LEE BLAIR ANTHONEY ROBIN ANTHONY MICHAEL ANSTEY ANTISDALE
JEANNE C. ROBERT ARAGON CAROL ARESCO CYNTHIA ARGRIO PATRICIA APANASCHIK ARMONAITIS
KAREN JANE C. ATTWOOD SUSAN ATWELL ERICAUFRICHT JOHN AUGUSTYN ARMSTRONG
PAULAUNER ROSEANNE EDWARDO BAEZ ANN ANDREA BAGGISH AZARIAN BAGDASARIAR
100 RAYMOND BAHR MARYANN BAILY MARK BAIN DIANE BAIRD GREGORY BALL
STEPHEN THERESA BALUT MARIE ANN KAREN BANIS FRED BANNON BALLIRANO BANACH
BERNADETTE JOAN BARFIELD SANDRA BARNES SUSAN BARNICLE DAVID BARRACK BARABAS
JEAN BARRASSO CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM BARRY ANDREA BARTMAN BRUCE BARTO BARRECCA
KAREN BARTOES MARIANN CYNTHIA BASIL JACQUELINE JEANNIE BACHER BARTOLETTA BATES
101 EVELYN BAYNA JENNIFER BAYNE CHRISTINE BEAR IRMABENEDEK KATHLENE BEATSON
JOHN BEAUCHAMP RICHARD WILLIAM BECCARO LEE BEEBE VINCENT BERNOTA BEAULIEU
ROBERT ELKABELFER CYNTHIA CAREY BEILLY BRUCE BENEDICT BEIWIRGHT BELONICK
4
DENISEBEMENT NANCY BENINCASA GEORGE BENINGO JANICE BENSON KRISANN BENSON
JOHN BENTLEY ROBERT ALISA BERMAN GARY BERNSTEIN BETTINE BESIER BENZINGER
102 REGINA BETTE PAUL BETTS PAULA BIELIK LINDA BIBEAU DIANE BIGENSKI
ELIZA BILIK MACIA BINDER MARTIN CARRIE BISHOP BINKOWSKI
JIM BISHOP CAROLE BLACK SUSAN DOREEN BLAKE LESLIE BLAKE BLACKWOOD
HARRY MICHAEL JANMARIE BLINN SANDRA ROY BLUMBERG BLANCHARD BLANCHARD BLINSTRUBAS
GERALDBLUME LINDA BOENM PAUL BOIANO STEPHEN ELIZABETH BOK BOJORQUEX
103 ANDREA BOKUN ANN MARIE ROBERT BONNEAU FRANK BORAWSKI JANET BOSSE BONANNO
1/ / ROBERT BOSSLEA JOANNE BOUVIER NANCY BOWERS ROGER BRAHN PATRICK BRAND
WILLIAM BRANDON KATHRYN BRAUN SUSAN BRIDGES CATHERINE BRAY PAUL BREMAN
h s.
ROSS STEVEN BRENNAN SUSAN BRENNAN MICHAEL ARLENE BRENNAN BRENSINGER BRENNICK
WILLIAM BREUER DOROTHY JAMES BRITT NANCY BRESLOW GENEVIEVE BRINDAMOUR BRESMAN
104 KEVIN BROGAN MARTHA BROOKS CANDIS BROW DOUG BROWN GARY BROWN
JUDITH BROWN LOIS BROWN JOHN BROWNE CYNTHIA JEFFREY BRUNO BROWNLE
_ /4> .A Wk ^ LOR! LEIGH BUGKHOUT DANIEL BUCKSON GARY MARC BURATTE BRUMBERGER BUCZKOWSKI
HENRYBURBANK JUDYBURBANK DEBORAH MAURA BURKE ROBERT BUTERA BURGHARDT
1^
BEVERLY ELLEN BURNS KATHLEEN BURNS MARY BUTLER WAYNE BUTSCHER BURNHAM
105 JEAN BUTTZ AUSA BYER LINDA LETA BYRNE LAWRENCE CAROLE CAIN CAFERO
LINDA CALATAYUD DAVID CALDEIRA DEBORAH JOHN A. CALKA CELIA CALLAS CALDEIRA
MARIETTA NANCY CAMERON BERNADETTE DARRYL KATHLEEN CALOUTAS CAMP CAMPAGNA CAMPRELL
JOSEPH LINDA CANFIELD SCOTT CAPLIN WILLIAM CARBONE ROBERT JAMES CANCELLARO CARD
PETER CARELLA MARYLEE CAREY CAROLL CARHART SUSAN B. KENNETH CARIFA CARHART
106 BONNIE CARLIN JOE CARLOS BRIAN S. CARLOW LENNART LYNN CARROLL CARLSON
RICHARD CARSON VICKIE CARTER ROBERT ANTONIO JOSEPH CASALY CARTOCETI CARVALHO
PATRICIA ANNE MAURA BRIGID SHARON CATLIN FRANK M. VINCENT CASEY CASSIDY CAVALEA CAVALIERE
LEEANN SUSAN THOMAS BRUCECHENAUL CAVANAUGH CAVANAUGH CHAPDELGINE
NICHOLAS CHIGOS DIANNE CHISNALL ANNETTE JAMES CHOW YONG KYUN CHOROMANSKI CHUNG
107 DANCIABURRI GEORGE CIAGCIO DIANE CICCONE WALTER CIESLAK JEFFREY CIUCIAS
CAROLYN CLARK CATHERINE E. KATHLEEN M. BARBARA CLARK CLARK CLAWING
SIMON CLAY ANN CLEAVER JOSEPH CLESTE RACICOT CLEMMONS CLINKENBEARD
DEBRA L.COHEN LINDA ELLEN M. COLE JONATHAN COLE CAROL COLLINS COLCLOUGH
CONDIE COLLINS MARK COLLINS CIANE COMBA ANNECOMEAU PETER COMEAU
108 JOHN MARK CONLEY CAROL CONNERY WILLIAM CONNORS COMMANDER
ALISON CONWAY AMY CONWAY JUDY-ANN COOKE CHRISTOPHER C. COOPER
MARYANN CYNTHIA CORNA NELSO CORREA MICHAEL LAURA COTE COPPOLA CORSELLO
ROBERT COTTON JOANNE COUTURE KURT COWLES DENNIS COYLE LAURIE CRAIG
JOHN A. CRAVEN EDWARD CREEM JOAN CRETO MARKCREVIER
109 ROBERT MARYCROCE LAURIE CRONHEIM CHERYL CROSSON CAROL CROTHERS CRICHTON
CHRISTOPHER JEFFREY GLORIA CRUZ WILLIAM CULLITON DEBORAH CROWE CROWELL CUSHMAN
CHRISTINE CZAJA JAMES DADDONA DENISE DALBIS EUGENIA DAMAS KEITH DANIEL
. \ ' PATRICIA ANDREW DANZIG DOUGLAS GENE V. DARIN JR. SUSAN DAVIDSON DANNAHER D'AQUILA
\ %
SUSAN BRETT PHILIP M. MARYBETH DEBBIE ELLEN DeHUFF DAVIS DEDANATO DeFILIPPIS DeGURMAN no ROBERT M. ADRIENNE NANCY DeMAlO JEANNETTE SANDRA DelBUONO DELUCCA DeMARIO DeMARTINO
KIMA. DeMATTEO TOM DEMBOWSKI DENISE NICHOLAS DAVID DENISEVICH DeMERCHANT DEMETRIADES
CONSTANTINE LESLIE DENRER THOMAS PATRICIA DeROSA TOM DeNOVA DeRIENZO DesSUREAULT
LINDA DEVERNA DEE DICE JOANNE DICK JENNIFER DICKENS
JEANNE DILWORTH RONALD DIMICCO CONNIE DINERMAN ANDREA DIONIS MARKDiORIO
111 MICHAEL DiPIETRO PATRICIA DiSANTlS MICHELLE DISCKO BONNIE L. DOBKIN MICHAEL DONOVAN
MARION DONDI CHRISTOPHER!. BUDDY DONOVAN MATHEW DATTILO MICHAEL DONOHUE DOUGLASS
'cm^''^ JOAN DOUWES DARRYL DOWLING JOHN W. DOYLE LORRAINE DOYLE ELI DRAZEN
JOHN R.DREW CYNTHIA THOMAS DRUGE TRACEY E. DUBEE ROBERT DUDDIE DROZYNSKI
STEPHEN P. DUFFY PAULDUFILIE BILLIE JEANNE CYNTHIA DUL JOSE DURAN DUKE 112 PHILIP DURAN DERMOTDURNIN MARIANNE DUSTIN DONNA DUTKO THOMAS M. DYJAK
MARYDZIEDZIC JOHN DZUBAY MARGARET EARLS CHARLES EARLY DAVID EASTLACK
MICHAEL ECSEDY DAVID EDGAR JOHN EDUARDSEN ELIZABETH EGAN GRACE EICHELBERG
DANIEL EIGNER SCOTT W. HOWARD ELITZAK MARY ENGELS KELLEY ENGLAN EKSTROM
THERESA ENNIS ANDREA EPSTEIN MAJORIE MARLA EXAKOY CHRISTOPHER ERICKSON ESEPPI
K: CLAUDIA ESSER ANN ETRE WILLIAM ETTER RONALD EVANS WILLIAM EVERS
STUART FACTOR HEATHER GEORGE R. CONSTANCE CHERYL FAIRFIELD FARRAH FASSULIOTIS FATTIBENE
JUDY FAULKNER ANTHONY FAZIO THOMAS FAZZINNA JACK FEINBERG
DONALD FEINER MARGARET C. LOUISE FERENCE DOREEN ERNEST FERRARI FELLOW FERNANDES
ROMANO M. KURTFERRUCCI STEVE FERRUCCI RICHARD FIESELER LYNN B. FERREIRA FILANOWSKI
114 RONNIE FILKOFF ELLEN FILM WILLIAM FINCH RAZZELLE FINE GARY E. FINGERMAN
ANTHONY RICHARD FIORITO ELINOR M. DEBRAFISH ROBIN FISH FIORILLO FIRESTONE
WILLIAM T. FISHER DONNA MARK FITZGERALD SHARON GERARD JR. FITZGERALD FITZSIMONS FLANNERY
JEANETTE THERESA A. LINDA FOGLER JOHANNA C. FOLEY MAUREEN FOLEY FLEMMING FLORIO
ALAN FOLMSBEE CAROLYN ELIZABETH FORAN CHRISTOPHER KEVIN FORD FONTNEAU FORBES
115 RUSSELL FORTIER DANIEL FOX LARRY FOX ELIZABETH FOY KENNETH FRANCO
LINDA FRANCOIS ROY FRANGIONE ARLENE ERASER ALLISON PATRICK FRIEL FRIEDMAN
BARBARA FRITZ PETER FRUEMAN ELIZABETH ROBIN FUSCO ANNEM. FULLER GAGLIONE
ROYGAILIUNAS KATHLEEN DEBRAGALKA FREDERICK GALLI ALAN GAMBINO GALGANO
CHERYL GANGELL LAWRENCE GANIM ROBIN GARCIA MARK L. CHRISTOPHER GARLASCO GARTH
116 THOMAS GARVEY RICHARD KATHLEEN RUSSELL GAULIN JOHNGEBHARDP GAUDREAU GAUGHAN
MARYELLEN MARKGENTA DEBRAGENUA STEVEN GERMAINE SANDRA GEHRKE GIAMPETRUZZI
SHEREE GIBSON JUDITH GIFFORD ELLEN GILBERT THOMAS SUSAN GILLIN GILCHRIST
VINCENT CAROL GIVENS MICHAEL GIZA NANCY GLATER IAN GLEN GIORDANO
LAURELGLENNEY ROBERT GLICK MARGARET JEFFREY L. RICHARD GODERE GODWARD GOLDBERG
117 EILEEN GOLDEN NANCY CHRISTOPHER M. JOSEPH J.GONINO, KAREN GOLDENBERG GOLEC JR. GONSALVES 1 Vm
A ^ KAYVAN BRADLEY BEN LYNN GORDON NEAL GORMAN GERALD GOODARZY GORDON GORNEAULT
EDITH GOULD FRANK GOULD THOMAS GOW MICHAEL R. LINDA GRABEN GRABAUSKAS
VI »\ ROBERT GRANOW SANDRA GRAVES BARBARA GRAY GAIL GRAY FRANK GRAZIANO
EUNICE HENRY MARYGRENIER CHARLES W. GREY, NANCY GRIFFITH GREENBERG GREENSPAN JR.
118 11^ CHARLENEGROM JEFFREY MARYGRUSSE JUDITH GROVES KARIN GRZELLA GRUNWALD
ENRICO DENISEGUERTIN DAVID GUGLIOTTI MARY GUGLIOTTI KAREN GYNTHER GUERRERA
v\ 1 ALEXANDER BRUCE HABER KAREN HACKETT PAUL HAGERTY JAMES W. HALE GYURE
SUSAN HALGAS ANN MARIE HALIK JANET RAE THOMAS MARSHA HALLACK HALLIWELL HAMERNIK
GLENN E. SUANNE SUSAN W. FRANCIS HAMM HEIDI M. HAMPTON HAMILTON HAMILTON HAMILTON
119 PATRICIA BETH HANRAHAN LOIS HANSEN PHYLLIS LYNN HARDY HANNIGAN HARDWICK
DAVID HARMED CHRISTINE FREDRIC HARRIS DEBORAH HASKO WALTER HAVCK HARRIGAN
SUSAN HAVRILLA RENEE STAN HAWTHORNE CATHERINE F. CHARLES L. HAZEN HAWTHORNE HAYES
JOAN HEALEY PAMELA HEATH MARY HEFFERNAN DALE R. HELFRICH JULIET HENDERSON
LISA HERBST MARY JEAN HERDE LUX HERNANDEZ DEBORAH HERR FREDERICK HESSE
120 EVAHIGHSMITH BRIAN HILL ELYSE HILLER DARLENE MARY-JEAN HINCHLIFFE HINMAN
.A JANICE HINTON BILLHIRSGH JUSTIN HIXSON KATHY LEIGH HOFFMAN HOELSCHER
HUBERT HOGEMAN LISAHOLLENDER ANNEMARIE CHARLES HOLMES LISA HOLOSZ HOLMES
DEBRAL. HOLT JOAN HOLZWEISS CATHERINE MARY-JANE DUANE HOUGH HOOVER HORNER
CAROL HOUSE ELLEN HOUSER FREDERICK DOREEN HOWARD DAVID HUBBELL HOUSTON
121 CHERYLHUDAK KATHLEEN HUGO WILLIAM HULL JAMES HUMPHREY
LINDA HUNIHAN DAVID H. ILSON DAVID INGERSOLL KATHLEEN THOMAS lONTA INGRAHAM
ANTONINO MARGARET JOHN HACOBELLIS AMY JACOBS lORFINO JACKMAN
DANIEL JACOBS THOMAS JENSEN STEPHEN JESSUCK BARBARA CHRIS JOHNSON JOHNSON
DAVID R. JOHNSON GREGORY JANICE JOHNSON JEFF JOHNSON KAREN L. JOHNSON JOHNSON 122 MICHAEL W. STEVEN JOHNSON WENDY JOHNSON DENNIS M. JONES MARK JOYSE JOHNSON
JEANS.JUDD TERRIE-ANN MELINDA KALIN JOAN KAMINSKI MARY KANE JULIANO 1 mSm 1 ^:^ f
r^ 1 ^ 1 ALGIS KAPESKAS LYNN C. KAPLAN STEPHEN KAPLIN DAVID LEE J. KARNS KARAMESSINIS
VIRGE KASK JUDITH KASSAY STEVEN P. JOHN KAUKAS LUCIA KAWA KAUFMAN
KATHY KAY JULIA KAZAN PETER KEENE TERRY KEENEY MAURA KELLY
123 DANIEL KERNA LAWRENCE J.KIEL DEBORA KILLIANY WILLIAM KINAHAN STEPHEN KINDL
DEBRAKING SALLY KING CINDY KINKADE CHARLES D. MARY K. KINSELLS KINNEY
BENJAMIN WILLIAM KIVELA CAN DACE A. DAVID KLEIN JEAN KLEIS KIRTLAND I KLAUS
MARGARET WALTER J. RONALD KNAPP ALBERT KNAUS DIANNE KNEER KLIMAS KLIMEZAK, JR.
PETER KNOWLES JAE-HAK KO DAVID KOHN KATHRYN KOLB BRUCE KOLOWSKY
124 CHERYL KOLVEK NANCY KONDUB FREDERICK P. JEFFREY M. KEVIN KOOTZ KONON KONSPORE
DAVID KOPPEL FRANCIS JOHN KOSTRISAK ROBERT KOSTUCK DONALD K. KOSOWICZ KOUNDAKJIAW
SANDRA WILLIAM KATHLEEN AMY KOWOLENKO MICHAEL KOWALSKI KOWALESKI KOWALYSHYN KRZCZKOWSKY
STEVEN M. IRAKRONICK ELLEN KRUK JUDYKRUPNIK NANCY KUBASEK KRAMER
LINKA KUCKY MARY KUCZYNSKI NANCY KUNTZ BARBARA KUNZ BRIAN KUPER
125 ARTHUR MERLE KURTZMAN ELIZABETH SANDRA L. KWEDE KEVIN LABELLA KURELZKA KUZMICKAS
>^) ^\ KEITH LABOLT ARTHUR LABRIC LINDA LEIGH PAUL LAGEL ELLEN MARY LAFRANCE LAING
JOAN LALLY MARK LAMANA DAVID LANDERS JAMES LANE CLIFFORD LANGE
SUSAN JANICE LAPPAN SUZANNE LARKIN KURT LARSON LISA LaSPINO LANGENHAN
;\^ 1-^^ i
SUSAN LATINA FRANCESCA MICHAEL P. JAMES LAWRENCE PAMELA LAZINSK LAURIELLO LAWLOR
126 WILLIAM LEAHY KATHLEEN SCOTT M. LEAVITT GLORIA LEBLANC STEPHANIE LEAVITT LECKER
DAVID LEE LYNDA LEFEVRE JAYLEMELIN CYNTHIA LEMONTE KAREN LEMOS
L NOREEN LEROY BRIAN LEVEY MICHAEL LEVIN ALISON LEVINIS MARCY LEVY
ANDREA LEWIS KAREN LEWIS CATHERINE LIBBEY STEPHANIE KEITH LIMBACH LIGHTBODY
PENNY LINCOLN R. KELSEY RUSSELL SUSAN LINK GARY R. LIPSON LINDNER LINDQUIST
127 DAVID LIS MARY JEAN LAUREN LOCKE EUGENE SALLY LOGUIN LITVINSKAS LOCKROW
KENNETH DEBORAH LOOMIS MARGARET LOOS LAUREN DEBORAH LOSI LONGLEY LORINCHACK
DALE LOTRECK MAUREEN ELIZABETH LOVE LYNN LOVERIDGE KATHY J. LUCAS LOUGHREY
KENNETH J. LUCAS LOUIS LUCHT JEFFREY LUMPKIN THEODORE W. KRISTINE LUND LUNDGREN
A J .-h DONALD LUNDIE BARBARA LUSK DONALD J. LYNCH, MAUREEN LYNCH DAVID B. LYON JR.
128 ANDREA E.LYONS RICHARD McARDLE DIANE McCABE GAILMcCANN ROSEMARY MCCANN
JOHN McCARRICK CAREY JANE EILEEN MCCARTHY JAMES MCCARTHY MARY MCCARTHY MCCARTHY
SCOTT McCAULEY MAURA ELIZABETH JANE F. EUGENE McCORMACK McCONNELL McCORMICK MCDONNELL
COLLEEN WILLIAM McENTEE PATRICIA McEVOY BRYNAMCGILL GARY MCGIVNEY McDONOUGH
MARGARET JANETA. McGRATH KEVIN TIMOTHY McHUGH ELLEN McKENNEY MCGOLDRICK McGUINNESS
12V CYNTHIA DEBORAH NANCY STEPHEN ALISON McNALLY McMAHON McMAHON McMORROW McMORROW
JOHN McNALLY KATHY McNAMARA WAYNE McTIGUE TONI MACARI DOUGLAS MACARY
NANCY HANS MACK KIM MacKENZIE MARY MADZIK MACDONALD
TOM MACRO CARMEL C. MAHAN J. MICHAEL MAHER EILEEN MAHONEY ELLEN ANNE MAHONY
ELIZABETH MAIN MAUREEN MAIO IRENE MAJNICH GREGORY DEBRA MALJANIAN MAKOWSKI
130 CHRISTINE PAUL MALONEY ROSEMARY WILLIAM LISAMANCUSI MALLETT MANASSA MANCHUCK
KENNETH DONNA M. MANESS ALLISON MANGELS JOSEPH DENISEMANGIULLI MANDERVILLE MANGIONE
THOMAS J.MARGO ROBERT MANIZZA WILLIE MANN DONNA MANSFIELD ROBERT MARCINEK
STEPHEN J. PETER MARCUS ANTHONY MARINO DOMENIC MARINO, SANDY MARCOUX JR. MARKOWSKI
SUSAN M. LINDA FRANCINE KAREN MICHAEL MARUSIC MARKOWSKI MAROUARDT MARTINELLI MARTINSON
131 NANCY MARZANO MARGARET ELAYNE MASCIA SHELLY MASSO PATRICIA MASUCCI MARZULLO
LAWRENCE MASUR JOSEPH MATIS GEORGE MATTERN DEMISE MATHEWS CONSTANCE MATTINGLY
ARI MAUNULA GAILMAXIMINA ELSIE MAYES TIMOTHY ANN MAYO MAYNARD
JERRY RITA MEDIATE THOMAS MEEHAN JOHN MEGGIE GENE MEKEN MAZANOWSKI
CHERYL JAYNE MARIE ROBERT MEROLA J. PRESTON ROBERT MESKILL MELKONIAN MERLINO MERRITT
132 RICHARD MESSER PHILIP MICKELSON CAROLYN MIELA SUSAN MIHALRK JEFFREY MIKUTIS
VINCENT MILANO ANDREA MILLARAS CAROLYN MILLER DAVID MILLER LISABETH MINDERA
k \ •: ^ «i . m i\\7 i ANTHEAMINOTT THOMAS MITKOSKl JESSIE ARTHUR MOE ANNE MOELLER MODZELEWSKI
A iim/ PAMELA MOFFITT COLLEEN MOLLOY MICHAEL MOOMEY PATRICIA MOONEY CYNTHIA MOORE
JAMES R.MOORE JOSEPH MORAN MARYC. MORAN SHEILA MORANO JANET MORATTI
133 ''Mtf'^^W-'—'-—'—.,J|W
ROBERT E. JOHN D. MORGAN NANCY D. MORGAN KENNETH MORIN MELISSA MORK MOREHOUSE
LAURA MORKAN MARGARET MORM STEVEN MORRIS DOUGLAS ANITA MORRISEY MORRISON
LISA MORROW CHERLY MORYAK KAREN MUCGINO SCOTT MUFFAT CHRISTIAN MULARSKI
-i*#^ 1 NANCY MULLINS THERESA MULVEY LYN M. MUNLEY DAVID MURLEY CAROL MURRATTI
DANIEL MURRAY JOANNE MURRAY KEITH MURRAY MAUREEN MURRAY RICHARD MURRAY
134 DONNADENOR JILLMUSLER JANE MYERS SUSAN NASH MONISHA NAYAR MUSCENTE
ELIZABETH NEALE ANDREA NELSON KRISHNA NEUFFER PATRICIAS. NEVIHS
DOREEN E.NICE JAMES NISCH NARY NOLAN PHYLLIS NOLE PAULA J.NORRIS
MARIANNE KAREN CAROL O'BRIEN JOHND. KATHLEEN NOWACKI OBERLANDER O'CONNELL O'CONNELL
KEVIN O'CONNELL SARA O'CONNOR RICHARD O'DAY MICHAEL LYNN OEHLER O'DONNELL
135 DORENEO'HARA GEORGE L O'HARA KRISTIN O'LEARY VIVIAN OLIVER JANICE OLSHESKY
ROBERT OMAN PETER ORR LAWRENCE MICHAEL OTNISKY JULIE OVERBAUGH OSiPOW
KAREN PACE LAUREN D. PACE CHRISTOPHER SUSAN PACKER MICHAEL PAINTER PACHCO
MICHAEL JEFFREY PALMER DIANA PALUMBO LINDA PANNULLO FRED PAELETTI PALINKOS
ANTHONY PAELITTI DONNA JEAN PAPA PATTI PAPAPIETRO BARBARA MICHAEL PARADIS PAPPINEAU
136 LISA PARENT LEONARD M. LISAPARISEE MARY PARKER NANCY J.PARKER PARENTE
WSFr m^^M P ^ 0 ^ \ %, A ANDREA PAROZA JOSEPH PARSONS RIGHAR MARIANNE TED PASHOS PARTESANO PASACRETA
mi JAY PASQUALONI DEAN PASSANESI CONNIE SHAREN PASTER LAURIE PATE PASSULIOTIS
m.;"-:::t-aii: - VALERIE J. PATO JAY PATRICK DENIS W. WALTER PATTI, JR. ROBYN PECKHAM PATTERSON
LOU PELLETIER MARK PELLETIER MATHEW SHARON PEPE MICHELE PELLEMBERG PERREAULT
137 LINDA PETERSON SUZANNE PETTEE STEVEN PETTIT TARYN PHELAN
PATRICIA ELIZABETH KAILAPILVER KELVIN PINCKNEY DOUGLAS PIRC PICARAGGI PERSON
^-~. \ ^.-^
NANCY PIRE RICHARD PLATT ELAINE POHORYLO DAVID POLCYN
JOYCE SALLY POPE JOHN R. POPKINS MARJORIE PORTER THOMAS PORZIO POLLANSKY
A \ ANTHONY POSNER STEPHEN POSSER LAUREUCE JONATHAN SUSAN PRESCOTT POTTER PRANITIS
138 WALTER PRICE STEPHEN DAVID PRISLOE RONALD PROCKO PRZYBYLSKI PRIGODIGH
ROBERT GEORGIA PUFAHL MICHAEL RAABE RONALD RADIN ANDREIR RAGOZA PRZYBLSKI
SUSAN RANDALL EVELYN RAUPACH ELIZABETH GARY RAUTIOLA RAUSCH
ROBERT RECKLET LYNN REED ELLEN ALAN RESLER DONNA REYNOLDS REPCZYNSKI
LEIGH REYNOLDS THOMAS E. TIMOTHY J. DAVID RICE PRISCILLA REYNOLDS REYNOLD RICHARDS
139 RANDALL PHILIP REGINA RIDLEY BARBARA RILEY LAWRENCE RICHARDS RICHARDSON RISTOW
DALE BITTER PAUL RIVKIN JAMES ROBBINS DONNA ROBERGE ANNE ROBERTS
RICHARD J. SHELBY RICHARD RICHARD ROBERTS ROBERTSON ROBINSON ROCKWELL
KAREN RODRIGUE KRICIA ROGALA DAVID ROGER JAMESROHDE SUSAN ROLSETH
RITA ROME CARL ROSA LIZ ROSA DEBORAH A. STEPHEN ROSCHEN ROSENBERGER 140 JED ROSENFIELD PAUL ROSSI ELIZABETH ROWE SUSAN RUMANOFF
LOUIS RUOTOLO JOANNE RUPPE CATHERINE DOUGLAS DON RUSSO RUSHLOW RUSSELL
MARINELLA RUSSO CHARLENE RYAN TIM RYAN REGINA NICOLE GERALD RYERSON RYBA
DONNA RYFFEL KATHLEEN RZANT DAMASO LEONARDSADEK KIM SADLER SAAVEDRA
MARILYN SALESKY MICHELLE SALVAS NANCY CHARLES SALVATORE SALZMAN
141 KATHLEEN PATRICIA LINDA SANTORO CAROLE THOMAS MICHAEL SANDERS SANTANIELLO SAUNDERS SAVING
JANICE SAVOCA CLAIRE SCHAEFER CLAUDIA JEAN JANE SCHAEFFER SCHAFFER
STEVEN MARY-CARYL GARYSCHLEGEL ALLISON SCHMIDT STEVEN A. SCHIAVONE SCHIESS SCHMIDT
DEBBIE SCHOLL WILLIAM JOAN SCHROEDER WILLIAM SCHRULL DEBRASCHUR SCHREIBER
CRAIG L. JAMES HEIDI WILLIE SCHWITZER JOSEPH F. SCHWARTZ SCHWEIKERT SCHWENZTEIER SCIARRA
142 JEFFERSON R. TYLER SCOFIELD CHRISTAL SCOTT JAMES SCOTT ROBERT E. SCOTT SCOFIELD
VIVIAN SCOTT THOMAS SCOTTON CARLSEEBACH LUCYSEGER KATE SEINFELD
BETHSELMAN MARK ANNESERDECHNY DOUGLAS KENNETH SEMMELROCK SEYMOUR SGORBATI
JONATHAN HOLLY SHANK ROSANNESHEA JAMESSHEEHAN JOHN SHEEHAN, SHAFNER JR.
/ SUZANNE DAVID SHEPHERD TIMOTHY SHINE WILLARD SHINE MELINDASHORR SHEPARD
143 DEANNA RHONDA SHULMAN THOMAS C. GARYSiEGEL JOANNE SIEGEL SHOVELTON SIEDZIK
JONATHAN SIEGEL MILTON SIERRA ANNE SIKORA FAYSILBERSTEIN DEBORAH H. SILVERMAN
KATHLEEN SIMONS WILLIAM SIMMONS ANITA SIMPSON LAURIE SIMPSON PATTISIPPERLY
DAVID B. SIPPIN SUSAN SIRAGUSA JOHN SISSON LYNN SKENE JANICE SKONIPSKI
SUSAN CAROLYN SMART KATHLEEN A. NANCY E. SMITH SMALLSHAW SMITH
144 STACY ANN SMITH STEVEN T. SMITH DENISE MARIE EARL R. SOKOL JAMESSOMERS SCARES
JOAN SOMERVILLE ROBERT SOMMERS WILLIAM SOPCHAK DEBORAH L. JILLL. SORTERUP SOUTHWORTH
PHILIP W.SPAK TONYSPINELLI LISA STAMOS JAMES CAROL STANLEY STANIEWICZ
DAVID STANWICKS DAVID STEADLY ROBERT STEARNS MARK STEELE RUSSELL STEINGISER
SVANTE SUSAN STEPANSKI PEGGY STEPUCHIN MARK STEVENS LAURA E. STENBECK STEWART
145 SANDRA STOKES CATHY STREATER PAMELA KATHRYN JOYCE STORCH- STRICKLER STOCKTON FRIEDMAN
PHILIP STRUTHERS MARTHA STUBBS ELLEN SULLIVAN KATHLEEN ROBERT SULLIVAN SULLIVAN
THOMAS E. ROBERT SUMMA VIKKI SUSMAN JOHN W. ZEREPHA SULLIVAN SUTCLIFFE I SUTHERLAND
CYNTHIA G. MARCIA SWAN MARK E. SWANSON STEVEN SWANSON WILLIAM SWEENEY SUTTER
RONASWIRSKY LINDA SWOPE SUSAN SYMONDS LUCIA R. GUY TALLEY SZARZANOWICZ
146 LORITANENBAUM MICHAELS. MARKTARDIF THEATARR MARK TORTAGLIA TANSLEY
GLENN TASHJIAN SUSAN TASSINARI CYNTHIA TAYLOR KATHERINE LINDA TENNER TELSCA
PATRICIA WENDATHIELKING KENNETH ROBERTA THOMAS LAURA THOMPSON THIBEDEAUR THIESING
DEBORAHTHOMS JAMES THOMSON WILLIAM M. MARYTHORPE ERICTHUNEM THORTON II
11 M FRANK TIEDEKEN CLAIRE TIERNIEY VOLOSTOLBERT ADAM ALLISON TOTH TOPOLANSKY
147 SHELDON FRANCIS DONALD TRAESTE MARCTRAMONTE ERICTRANQUIST TOUBMAN TRACESKI
DAVID A. TRAYLOR, JEAN MARIE WILLIAM TREMKO PATRICIA CHRIS JR. TREMBLAY TREPANIER TRAINTAFILOU
PETER B.TRIMBLE MARKTRINKLEY WILLIAM TRO- LINDA TRUESDELL DEBORAH LEE PETER TRUFAN
ROBERTA LYNNETUBRIDY SUZANNE TUMICKI DEBORAH TUOHY JOHN TRUTNAU TURKINGTON
•jj £• i \m PATRICIA A. NANCY TUTKO ELAINE TZEPOS JEANNE UNTIED PAULVALENTE TURNER
148 JAMES VALLEE WALTER VARHUE JANE VASAS MICHAEL VASILEFF ROBERT VASSALLO
DOUGLAS THOMAS VAUGHAN JOHNVELLTURO LARRY D. GARYVERMETTE VAUGHAN VENEZIANO
WILLIAM VERREY MICHAEL VICTOR WILLIAM J. JEANNE VINCENT BARBARA VIK VICTORY
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JAMES VIK ROBERT VONSTEIN MAURA WANDA LEE JOSEPH VORCHHEIMER WADDELL WAGENBRENNER ^^4 •^ iflM • ^^^B-^^ \ m ^
^
II^W7 MARK WAGNER MOLLY WAITE JAMES WAKIM BETH WALLACE CAREY WALLACE
149 1 19^ ^^^H
FREDERICK SHEILA WALLENT PAMELA KATHRYN WALSH RICHARD SCOTT WALLACE WALLERSTEIN WARREN
STEVEN KEVIN JAMES WASKEIL JASPER WATSON SHARON ANN MARY WEISSKOPF WASHINGTON WEBB
SUSAN WENGER BARRY WENICK LINDA WENNER MELANIE KENDRAV.WEST WENTWORTH
RHONDA WEST THOMAS WESTON BARBARA WHALEY DARRELL JEFFREY WHEELER WHEELER
KATHLEEN A. NANCY WHITE TIMOTHY WHITE HOLLY D. WIEMER DAVID WILLET WHITE
150 RAMMIS WILLIAMS JOHNWILLSEY CATHERINE KATHLEEN WILSON KERRY WILTON WILOWSKI
ROBERT WINROW HENRY J. WINTER EDIE WITTENBERG JOACHIM BARRY WOJTCUK JR. WOERNER
EMMYWOLTERS ELAINE B. WOOD SUSAN WOOD DONNA WOODS NANETTE WOODWORTH
PATTI WORTH NANCY WOVERS LAURA WRIGHT MARY ALICE CHRISTINE D. WYNNE XANTHOPOULOS
\wN J GERALD YEDLIN DAVID YELLEN ROBERT R. RONALDYUNGK JOHN YERRINGTON ZAKOWORTNY
151 ROBERT BEIWIRTH JEANNIE BOUCHER ROBERT BUTERA DARLENE CIPRIANI CATHERINE GEROWE
CHRISTINE JOANNE MICHAEL PRYOR CAREY REILLY EUGENE MURPHY PELLETIER SHIMSHOCK
JEANZAMPINO NORENEZANDRI ELIZABETH M. TERRIZDONICK STEPHEN ZAWISZA ZEBROWSKI
RICHARD FRANCES ZEVIN GERALYN A. LAURIE CHRISTOPHER G. ZETTERGREN ZIENTARSKI ZIMMERMAN ZIU
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KARLJ.ZOTTER MARIE ZULLO ANDREW ZWICK
152 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATING SENIORS
153 !??*«*
154 155 156 157 158 159
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160 STAFF PHOTOS
VALERIE ANGELOVICH
IM STAN HAWTHORNE
JEFFREY M. D'AGASTINO
MARKSEMMELROCK
FRANCIS B. MAJORIE
BRIAN F. GOGGIN AND SHELAH FIDELLMAN
162 STUDENT GOVERNMENT
If men be good, government cannot be bad. William Penn
K-l Serving Storrs Since 1896
VOLLXXXIINo. 4i <^TORRg. rONNECTlCUT Tuesday. No\'ember 7. 1978 FSSO committee dumps clubs
By DAVE SCHOOLCRAFT $32,809 from the accounts of all of its were: The Norwich Volunteers. Willi- tion fClanager Ron Williams to pre: The Federation of Student and 63 organizations, and declared all but mantic Tutorial. Mansfield Tutorial. sent to the committee a complete Service Organizations Finance Com- Dialogue, Photopool. and the Ama- salary . breakdown 14 of those 63 organizations to be According to Diannc O'Hara. many mittee, the pocketbook of the student teur Radio Club. Of these organiza- ineligible for any future budget of the organizations being dropped government, cut off funding Monday funding. Of those !4 organizations tions. Mansfield Tutorial had- $100 are "sports clubs or departmental for all but a handful of the clubs arid recinded. Photopool lost $408. and spared the "final blow" by the clubs." that do not meet the criterion organizations under its wing, after the Amateur Radio Club- was told to Committee, eight are integral units of of a "service organization." having . consulted with the FSSO give back $550. the student government's central Although some ot these groups Central Committee. Although radio station WHUS did body. might possibly be eligible for "one- In what one membei" of the not have any funds recinded. it too The decision is subject to approval shot" grants, in the future the committee called a "radical re- by the Central Committee. was cited for possible cuts. Promising further scrutiny, committee chairman student government will not finance evaluation of the purpose of FSSO.!' The six non-FSSO organization limited interest groups. the Finance committee recalled accounts not completely terminated Stan Hawthorne ordered WHUS Sta-
FEDERATION OF STUDENT AND SERVICES ORGANIZATION
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164 INTER-AREA RESIDENTS COUNCIL
BOARD OF GOVERNORS 165 In April, the F.S.S.O. Forum received the 1978 medalist, the highest award given to a student publication by the Columbia Scholastic Press. The Forum also won first prize for its layout and design. Pictured above are Stan Hawthorne, the spring 78 editor, and Linda Chapley, the fall 78 editor.
166 SPORTS
MIN SEC VISITORS i ' TO PLAY CONN* DOWN YARDS TO GO
167 FOOT
UCQNN OPP 21 Northeastern (H) 19 3 William & Mary (H) 27 0 Navy (H) 30 7 Yale (A) 21 17 New Hampshire (A) 25 0 Rutgers (A) 10 49 Maine (H) 7 10 Massachusetts (A) 17 27 Boston University (H) 20 31 Rhode Island (H) 6 16 Holy Cross (A) 20
TEAM RECORD: 4-7 RECOGNITIONS: Yankee Conference Tied 2nd place
168 BALL
169 PHBI ^*^'ii^' ^"feaP-iSp "wm^.
!^ %9 1% .1 #-^irR» «! ^>S^ f':'-:.. f//^^ m^^y^T^S
170 "PROBATION?"
171 MEN'S SOCCER
UCONN OPP UCONN OPP 4 Howard 1 6 Maine 0 2 Indiana 4 0 Brown 1 1 Bridgeport 0 2 Massachusetts 1 0 Clemson 2 3 Springfield 0 5 Adelphi 1 2 Florida Tech 0 2 Boston University 0 0 Rollins o/t 1 5 Amherst 0 4 Williams 3 3 Harvard 0 2 Vermont o/t 1 2 Yale 0 4 * Dartmouth 0 3 New Hampshire o/t 2 3 Rhode Island 0 2 Dartmouth 3 3 * Brown 1 2 Boston College 1 0 *Philadelphia Textile 3 5 Wesleyan 1 *NCAA Tournament Game
TEAM RECORD: 19-6
RECOGNITIONS: YANKEE CONFERENCE 1 St Place
172 T73 174 U?*^ -.,*-.I^Vl^
175 MEN'S BASKETBALL
UCONN 1 OPP UCONNI OPP 84 "L.I.U. 69 77 Boston College 78 81 Davidson 84 77 Manhattan 64 78 Yale 94 81 New Hampshire 64 68 Fairfield 67 84 Harvard 70 92 Boston University 84 93 Ford ham 80 65 IVIassacliusetts 62 79 Massachusetts 59 97 Maine 79 71 Rhode Island 84 89 Tuisa 68 79 Vermont 62 80 East Carolina 68 80 St. Peter's 70 72 New Hampshire 67 80 Rhode Island 69 Rutgers* 67 at New Haven* 75 63 Boston University* 62 91 Boston College 74 60 Syracuse 74 ECAC Tournament 80 Boston College 90 58 Rhode Island ECAC 50 63 Providence 64 New England Champi onship 109 Holy Cross* 102 81 Syracuse (NCAA) 89 * Indicates Overtime Game
TEAM RECORDS: 21-8 RECOGNITIONS: ECAC Championship NCAA 1 St Round
176 t' *>^' 3 '"\ . m.^ ai^•^^^ ^Wi i / \UIWLV
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178 179 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
UCONN OPP UCONN OPP 73 EASTERN 63 SPRINGFIELD 77 CONNECTICUT 72 86 Vermont 66 68 Bentley 61 75 HARVARD 76 55 Yale 69 63 Fordham 85 81 FAIRFIELD 67 69 Rhode Island 83 60 BOSTON UNIVERSITY 75 78 MASSACHUSETTS 102 73 BROWN 23 75 Maine 88 61 SETON HALL 75 81 Northeastern 64 49 SOUTHERN 66 NEW HAMPSHIRE 58 CONNECTICUT 83 79 RHODE ISLAND 89 60 Central Connecticut 78 65 PROVIDENCE 72 70 Bridgewater 63 TEAM RECORD :8-12
180 181 MEN'S ICE HOCKEY
UCONN OPP UCON N OPP. 4 MAINE 10 1 AMERICAN 4 Wesleyan 1 INTERNATIONAL 2 8 Amherst 3 2 WILLIAMS 5 8 Amherst 7 1 Bridgewater State 5 0 BOWDOIN 3 4 BRYANT* 5 1 New Haven 4 5 NORTH ADAMS 6 5 Army* 4 6 HAMILTON 1 4 WESTFIELD STATE 5 6 TRINITY 5 2 NEW ENGLAND 8 77 Boston College 78 6 FAIRFIELD 1 9 AMHERST 0 1 Babson 4 6 NEW HAVEN 4 3 Salem State 9 3 Bryant 8 5 St. Anselm's 8 3 BABSON 2
TEAM RECORD: 11-14
182 183 WOMEN'S ICE HOCKEY
184 185 MEN'S WRESTLING
UCONN OPP ucor m OPP 29 HARTFORD 10 19 Pennsylvania 22 15 at Coast Guard Invitational 33 Wesleyan 5 0 Rhode Island 60 33 W.P.I. 18 12 C.W. Post 31 38 M.I.T. 9 22 F.D.U. 28 28 HARVARD 20 9 Kings Point 27 15 SPRINGFIELD 29 11 Southern Connecticut 38 13 Boston University 27 21 COAST GUARD 22 33 Brown 14 22 CENTRAL 16 Massachusetts 28 CONNECTICUT . 23 3rd NewEnglands 23 New Hampshire 21 at Kingston 45y4 pts.
186 TEAM RECORD: 7-11 RECOGNITIONS: New Englands 3rd Place
187 188 189 WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY
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UCONN OPP. UCONN OPP. 1 West Chester 2 2 Massachusetts 1 0 Delaware 1 2 Rutgers 1 1 Rhode Island 0 3 *Hartwick 0 4 Yale 1 2 *Southern Conn. 0 1 New Hampshire 2 0 *Springfield 2 5 Southern Conn. 1 2 *Massachusetts 1 3 Bridgewater 2 4 *Davis&Elkins 1 6 Brown 0 0 * Delaware 1 2 Cortland 2 0 *Oregon o/t 1 2 Penn State 2 43 22 1 Springfield 0 •Tournament Games 2 Mt. Holyoke 1
TEAM RECORD: 11-3-2 RECOGNITIONS: EAIAW Regional Finals 3rd Place AIAW Nationals 9th Place
190 191 MEN'S BASEBALL
UCONN OPP. UCONN OPP. 4 at East Carolina 3 5 Brown (6) 3 0 at East Carolina 4 8 at Providence 4 0 at East Carolina 5 6 Vermont 5 0 at East Carolina 6 6 Vermont 3 1 at N. Carolina St. 0 6 Northeastern 5 17 at N. Carolina 8 6 at Massachusetts 1 3 at N. Carolina 9 1 at Holy Cross 0 2 at Baltimore 3 0 at Maine 7 10 at St. John's 3 1 at Maine 5 26 at lona 1 8 at Fairfield 7 0 New Hampshire 3 1 Fairfield at ECAC 2 11 New Hampshire 5 4 Maine at ECAC 0 1 Dartmouth 0 12 Fairfield at ECAC 2 3 at Rhode Island (8) 0 14 Mass. at ECAC 10 9 at Rhode Island 1 8 Mass. at ECAC 1 9 at Providence 1 5 Navy at NCAA 4 4 at Northeastern (11) 2 3 St. John's at NCAA 6 3 Massachusetts (8) 2 15 Nebraska at NCAA 0 0 Massachusetts 3 14 St. John's at NCAA 4 5 Fairfield(IO) 4 4 St. John's at NCAA 0 18 at Boston College 9 5 Texas at CWS 11 12 Brown 5 3 Fullerton St. at CWS 8
192 TEAM RECORD: 31-13 RECOGNITIONS: Yankee Conference 2nd Place
19o WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
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UCONN OPP. UCON IN OPP. 3 Bridgeport 0 2 Salisbury State 0 3 Barrington 0 2 Williams 1 0 Keene State 3 1 Maine 2 3 Smith 0 2 Massachusetts 0 2 Hofstra 0 2 Connecticut College 0 2 Queens 0 2 Eastern Connecticut 0 2 C.W. Post 0 3 Brown 1 1 Southern Conn. 2 2 New Hampshire 0 2 Oneonta 1 0 Rhode Island 2 3 Central Conn. 2 2 Southern Connecticut 3 3 Bridgewater 1 12th at Providence 2 Northeastern 0 1 Central Connecticut 2 0 Rutgers 2 2 Princeton 1 7th Cortiand Invit. 0 Springfield 2 0 Endinboro 2 2 Vermont 0 1 E. Stroudsburg 2 0 Brockport 2 1 Ithaca 2
TEAM RECORD 14-8
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195 WOMEN'S SOFTBALL
UCONN OPP UCONN 1 OPP 7 at Eastern Conn. 1 9 BARRINGTON 0 7 at Eastern Conn. 0 1 at Southern Conn. 2 3 at Providence 2 10 at Southern Conn. 1 7 at Providence 1 1 RHODE ISLAND 5 15 NEW HAMPSHIRE 0 2 MASSACHUSETTS (14) 2 2 NEW HAMPSHIRE 1 0 at Rutgers 1 15 at Yale 3 1 SPRINGFIELD 2 10 at Yale 0 4 SPRINGFIELD 2 14 at Brown 0 EAIAW 1-OWm. Paterson 3 at Central Conn. 0 3-1 So. Conn. 5 at Central Conn. 4 1-6 Temple 4 BARRINGTON 0 3-4 Temple — 2nd place
TEAM RECORD : 15-4-1 RECOGNITION: EAIAW 6th Place
196 MEN'S TRACK
TEAM RECORD: No Scores Kept RECOGNITIONS: Yankee Conference 2nd Place NewEnglands 4th Place
197 198 WOMEN'S TRACK
CONNECTICUT
UCONN TEAM RECORD: 7-1 199 MEN'S TENNIS UCONN OPP 0 at MIT 9 3 at Trinity 6 5 at Central Conn. 4 9 HOLY CROSS 0 5 HARTFORD 4 3 SPRINGFIELD 6 5 CONN COLLEGE 4 4 PROVIDENCE 5 4 Southern Conn. 5 TEAM RECORD: 4-5 200 WOMEN'S TENNIS UCONN OPP UCONN OPP 9 Central Conn. 0 8 Southern Connecticut 1 9 Rhode Island 0 9 Providence 0 4 Boston College 5 4 Massachusetts 5 3 Boston University 4 6th in NewEnglands 4 New Hampshire 5 8 Springfield 1 8 Connecticut Coll. 1 4 Mt. Holyoke 5 5 Brown 3 TEAM RECORD: 7-5 201 LOVE? 202 MEN'S SWIMMING UCONN OPP 43 St. John's 69 56 Williams 57 63 Coast Guard 50 52 Rhode Island 61 32 Brown 81 75 Vermont 56 68 Springfield 45 28 Maine 85 38 Bowdoin 75 65 Massachusetts 47 65 Babson 43 70 Southern Connecticut 43 63 Boston University 41 56 New Hampshire 46 TEAM RECORD: 8-6 RECOGNITIONS: 4th Place 203 204 WOMEN'S SWIMMING UCONN1 OPP 821/2 MASSACHUSETTS 491/2 82 CENTRAL CONNECTICUT 49 59 ST. JOHN'S 72 76 SMITH 53 78 Mt. Holyoke 53 44 YALE 87 75 Vermont 56 74 Harvard 55 86 SPRINGFIELD 45 59 BOSTON UNIVERSITY 72 61 Boston College 70 67 SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT 64 25 Manhattanviile 106 7th New Englands 77 Bridgewater 51 TEAM RECORD: 9-5 RECOGNITIONS: New Englands 7th Place 205 MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY uc OPP 28 Holy Cross 42 28 New Hampshire 60 36 Brandeis 26 36 Central Connecticut 67 15 Rhode Island 50 33 Providence 22 24 Yale 48 24 Brown 68 27 Manhattan 28 15 Syracuse 45 22 Dartmouth 35 TEAM RECORD: 9-2 RECOGNITIONS: Yankee Conference 2nd place New England 's 4th place NCAA District Qualifier 5th place 206 WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY 207 MEN'S GOLF UCONN OPP 275 HOLY CROSS 295 394 at Hartford 415 396 BOSTON COLLEGE 407 408 ARMY 396 390 COAST GUARD 384 426 at Central Conn. 388 426 w/Providence 415 408 at Springfield 407 408 w/Eastern Conn. 438 397 at Fairfield 404 4th at Conn. Invit. 1 St at New Englands (Portland, ME) May 23-25 at NCAA (Wake Forest, NC) TEAM RECORD: 5-5 RECOGNITIONS: Connecticut Open 4th Place New England Division 11st Place NCAA 28th Place 208 2C? MEN'S LACROSSE UCONN OPP UCONNI OPP 6 at Yale 14 14 at Vermont 12 10 at Massachusetts 16 17 Springfield 11 10 at New Haven 9 16 Air Force 13 14 at New Hampshire 15 13 Boston College 10 13 at Williams 11 4 Army 14 19 atWesleyan 10 7 Brown 25 6 Harvard 17 TEAM RECORD: 7-6 210 c H E E R S I 211 fW^m ff illiii - . -=. . ,.r.r^- : ^ -.mmm \ .J2 A Iv '" v^ :\v ^. ^^^ V Wi ^ ^ :^ ^:^ vlB^J* •% #^ -^•, 1 ^ r < 1 >• . • fs^ IJ^ » • A p. ^ .^^^^^^^^^H \ - AND MORE 212 CHEERS 213 MEN'S RUGBY ^^' ^--•i£S: I .••If!'' "•• ""^ • •'i'^./"'^ ••HPWM •''' •''^ Has One hour of life, crowded to the full with glorious action, and filled with noble risks, is worth whole years of those mean observances of paltry decorum. Sir Walter Scott 214 215 POLO fMCUB (Hfi 19 i 216 ^14^ act 217 ULTIMATE FRISBEE 218 •.^,w-.,C-^. M 219 WATER POLO -i^mmfiioM--; .*i -Sl'-^..''^'' 220 INTRAMURALS 221 tf'. ^H ilkliaUtt'i'.'^Maib^.aM fi ItaMHitaBMiiiiiaiBS 222 FACES & PLACES 223 224 2^j 226 227 •" '< A T LEANIN61 ACAIMST THE WRXMt^ WALL fm^kNS 66T '»•»»"« pRV 4S ?: ^tf' m \ 1 fJiV^^ \>..^U^'^^ i^ [ Vi«t cionttii "•-"wc 11. «»• >t'; T.b.e'"****'""* l^"* TVil. t.. * k< *-J-<.*<-« ^ftis ^,v V* , aboin !•»> Ill 228 229 Ice Cream in February??? You've gotta be kidding! 230 231 .;:^' "'K m • . /•^t: %^'~ *• • 1 "^L J; / ; 1 < % 4 W, ,^' ^"' ' 1 c^^^ 1 ~~. ,,,j- ' m *" __^^^^SHBS^^ ^ ^ »'_ 4 S= % Wm 232 ,k, '•'7^' -"*^^ m Somehow... we made class on time. 233 BEERFEST Oct.; ^^^Tf/qve Lie" L UCONNBEATS V^^^ nv\^ BEER c/^ Hveflr 234 235 PERVERT E D i /' m f§c^%\n^xuk"^ O' f o<^*' nm SEGtuiiEo d-st^tNts KITH eu« SAUM S^$H£^, IftimH 6VtRHf/^/f A UHftE /"JkfTRt^S WITH 5fMNCi^ tH^tt ARt A |EW OF My FMO(l|Te tHlN€iS j COACH^HWS £ 1HUH6SCREWS k IhZtA SHAUP CLCAT5, t e^mtHC, ?UVIN0 tH€ LORD ti»Jt*ttN|M€, 9AI|«ttS WITH MY %m\AU\ Swo THfcSe ARE Mf FAVO^lTK OF FAVoRiTE fHlNCS I JIIHEk THE 064 8»TfS . . #HtN -mc Bee ?.TVM6S . . . I LOVE \l\ (^^^/i tuuxiudsi- 236 t. •^-.jji(«' "'^*; 238 239 240 241 2421 24 •> 244 245 '•%^.>~.-^ mm m •__^_gi i ^^HMiL^ I^SP ^'•p^v. i^^. «v* .^^^.i L ••• .^Tr— *^ "C^^^KB^^^^^^I^H j^S , V^|"*»F^I»#3*' F i -.:*-»i'i^ ' -v-. "'•- Hr :V-.5^t. ^H * • • • • ': ', j^- 246 T"ROL\\S TIIOIAK-ENZ mmmmxmfM •'iCii\ 'K -v« I K^ULMAIN-fclMZ U-8RU AH t> ;y^/ -«Vii»?«tiy; TRQJ/XN •EhWZ TKOIAN-ENZ TROIANS %i^ M o^/o !i ..-!#*'• nai 248 249 . *"•"•. 250 251 %^^ ft 252 253 and we dreamed of a tomorrow that MUST 254 include all the good of yesterday. t 255 THE END 256