Winner escapes professors B> JOHN HILL III it, no one is willing to. What could almost shocks, me is that it appears the J. Garry Clifford, associate professor This Tuesday's presidential election happen is we may see 1876 all over public has just about forgotten Water- of political science: "I just don't know, has confounded everybody. George again, where one person will win the gate. all I know is what I read in the Gallup, Lou Harris, the New York popular vote and another will win in the "It has become a thing of the past. It newspapers. Carter is going to win if Times and CBS News — everybody is Electoral College. I've never seen wouldn't surprise me if one man won his people can get out the vote. The saying the Ford-Carter race is too close anything like it and I've been watching the popular vote and the other the fact that Ford has been coming on to call, and the UConn Political Science elections for longer that I want to admit. Electoral College. If that happens this might scare some people, but I really Department is no exception. I never bet on anything, especially year I think we will see a change to don't know." Most of the professors polled by the elections, and I wouldn't bet on this one popular election of presidents." George F. Cole, associate professor of Daily Campus Sunday said this year's for anything." Curt F. Beck, professor of political political science: "Carter — This is election is so close that they won't even Max Thatcher, professor of political science: ** Carter — he has be far the assuming he takes the South and the hazard a guess, and the few that did science: "Somebody's going to win, larger number of votes in the states southern border states. Massachusetts fovored Carter to win. Many preferred that's about all you can say. It's a dead with large numbers of electoral votes. •and the key industrial states. There's Carter but wouldn't pick him to win. heat, I don't know when I've seen it It should be about 300 to 230 votes in no way of knowing the popular vote, it Alvin Dozeman, lecturer in political closer and I've been watching elections the Electoral College, that is not depends on the turnout." science: "It's so close I couldn't predict since World War II. What surprises. assuming he carries California." | Continued on Page 3] dbmttttttntt iatlg Gkmtms Serving Storrs Since 1896

VOL. LXXX NO. 40 STORRS. CONNECTICUT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1976 Ford firms up lead in final Campus poll

By MARK A. DUPUIS A day before Americans go to the polls to elect the nation's next President, President Ford ap- Flu vaccinations pears to have firmed up a solid advantage among UConn stu- dents over his Democratic chal- lenger, Jimmy Carter. to begin today In a straw poll of 200 students conducted Sunday by the Daily By BARBARA ADLER turnout, based on the results of Campus, Ford rolled up a 12 point Swine flu vaccinations will be a statewide inoculation pro- lead, topping Carter by a 48-36.5 dispensed in the ROTC Hangar gram, are 7.1000 to 8.000. per cent margin. Carter had lead today, Tuesday and Wednesday A questionairc will be handed in earlier polls, commanding a from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., the out to students and faculty after 12-point lead in a poll taken in director of University Health the vaccination to determine early September, however, that Service said Sunday. whethere those inoculated lead withered in subsequent Robert Troiano. director of were "satisfied with the ser- polls. University Health Services, said vice." Troiano said. In Sunday's tally, two days that because infirmary staff will Troiano said there is no risk before Tuesday's election, most be on duty at the ROTC Hangar, involved in the vaccination. He students apparently have made the Nurse Practioncr clinic will said that out of a random up their minds as to which be closed, and the Women's population survey of 5,200 to candidate they will vote for. with Clinic and Physician's Clinic- 6.000 people who had been 3 per cent of the 200 persons staff will be reduced. inoculated , only one. who was polled saying they still are un- Troiano asked that persons allergic to eggs, had a reaction Trick or treat decided. In a similar poll several with all but emergency cases to the vaccine. One of the many "trick or treaters" around the country makes a weeks ago, more than 40 per cent wait until Thursday to go to the Troiano said that only those plea for herself - and for the world's hungry [Staff Photo by Buzz of the student questioned were infirmary. who arc allergic to eggs, poultry Kanter]. undecided. The swine flu inoculations and feathers, have had another The students questioned Sunday will be dispenseG from 8 a.m. inoculation within the past two said they think For will win until noon to retirees today. weeks, or those running a fever, Tuesday's election and a full term Students whose last names should not be vaccinated. in the White House. Of the 200 begin with the letters A-F also Because of the large number Faculty bargainers persons polled, 53 per cent said of persons to be served during will be vaccinated on Monday. they think Ford will be the victor Those with last names begining the three-day vaccination pro- Tuesday, while 35 per cent said with the letters G-M may re- gram, special vaccine- they think Carter will win. Six per ceive the inoculations on Tues- dispensing "guns" on loan eye 30% pay hike cent said they think the race is too day, and those with last names from the State Health Depart- close to call. starting with the letters N-Z will ment will be used. The guns By TONY CRONIN recommendations on faculty The totals in Sunday's poll for be vaccinated on Wednesday. are capable of administering Contract negotiations starting salary hikes, will be oensidered president were: Ford. 48 per cent Troiano said the infirmary is shots to as many as 600 persons this month may see a faculty by the AAUP's Collective Bar- (96); Carter. 36.5 per cent (73); prepared to inoculate 15.000- per hour, according to health bargaining team ask the Univer- gaining Council which meets with Other Candidates. 6.5 per cent 17,000 students. Estimates for officials. sity for as much as a 30 per cent University administrators this [Continued on Page 4] hike in faculty salaries to com- month to hammer out a contract pensate for the lack of adequate for faculty. cost of living increases in faculty This is the first year that a salaries over the past five years. faculty contract will be negotiated While members of the UConn by collective bargaining. A law Nominees trade last swipes chapter of the American Associa- passed last year allows for a tion of University Professors bargaining team to represent the (AAUP), the bargaining unit rep- faculty in negotiations with the By STEVE GERSTEL apathy in the 1976 bicentennial election might not resenting faculty, would not con- administration. United Press International materialize. firm a reported 30 per cent figure, Anthony T. DiBenedetto, pres- Georgia's Jimmy Carter and President Ford, Cheered by polls that showed him coming from they agreed the teamwill ask for a ident of the UConn chapter of the locked in an increasingly tight race for the White 33 percentage points behind to near dead-even hike in faculty salaries to catch up AAUP. professor of chemical House, fired last-minute volleys Sunday as they with Carter nationally. Ford spent the entire day- with other state workers who have engineering and head of the campaigned in pivotal swing states. Both stumping New York state and its rich harvest of 41 received salary hikes, the department, said Sunday a 32 per cautiously predicted victory. electoral votes. He concentrated on upstate areas AAUP's president said. cent faculty hike would bring the With two days left, polls pointed to a dead-heat of Buffalo and Rochester and heavily-populated A figure as high as 32 per cent faculty's salary to a par with most election with the outcome in many states, Long Island. has been proposed for salaries for workers in the private sector. including some of the biggest, stillnot nailed down But the latest New York Daily News straw poll, the 1977-78 academic year by an The 32 per cent figure "shows by either of the candidates. while indicating that Ford has gained, says in its AAUP task force studying faculty us how much the faculty has As the deadline neared, crowds gathering to see Monday editions Carter will score a narrow win in salaries. fallen behind" in earning power Ford and Carter grew and their enthusiasm the Empire state. The survey gives Carter 51 That figure, along with other [Continued on Page 3] swelled, a possible indicator that the expected [Continued on Page 5] • • focus The candidates: Mondale:The better choice Where they stand The vice-presidency of the United less-than-cheerful prospect for presi- By MATTHEW LIGHT gress, so this assertion has the dent, if the need ever arises. President Ford's Eastern Eur- status of a campaign promise, as States is often labelled a do nothing job opean gaffe, Jimmy Carter's does Carter's statement. which holds little power or prestige. His 16 years in the U.S. Congress 'ethnic purity' gaffe -- which were 2) Carter-'We should expend Recent U.S. presidents have per- leave Dole little to boast of in both nothing more than bad whatever funds are necessary to petuated this image by almost uni- successful and constructive legislation. phrasing -- were minor blunders, achieve a progressively more formly excluding the vice-president He is probably best known around and no-one should vote on their realistic balance between oil and Capitol Hill for a cutting tongue basis. It is unreasonable to think alternative energy forms such as from White House inner power circles. that Carter's willingness to be solar and geothermal power. directed against the Democratic party. Occasionally, Americans are jolted interviewed by a prominent na- Nuclear power should be avoided Last week, while Dole was busily tional magazine is somehow in- at present because of its danger- into scrutinizing the inhabitant of the trying to explain to the press why he decent, or that Ford is respon- ous waste products," said Von- vice-president's office. Unfortunately, labelled the last four U.S. wars as sible for what Earl Butz says. tell. the occasion often is not election day. Democratic and not national endea- There are real differences bet- Mike Lawlor, head of Glori Schaffer's Senatorial Campaign but the death of an incumbent presi- vors, Democratic vice-presidential ween the parties' positions and dent, or in President Ford's case, a the presidential candidates. Yes, of UCorin, explained the reason- candidate Senator Walter Mondale of Ford does understand the posi- ing behind two of the planks in resignation. Three of the last six Minnesota was discussing unemploy- tions he espouses (he is, after all, Carter's Democratic platform, the presidents. Truman, Johnson and ment and health care. A glance at not a parrot, he was once the first of which says: "We support Ford. First held the vice-presidency; Mondale's Congressional record re- House minority leader in fact); effective restrictions on the right the holder of that office usually and no, ever since Morris Udall's of major companies to own all veals a legislator actively working on barbs in the primaries, Carter phases of the oil industry." receives deference as a possible future human problems ranging from racial presidential candidate and political hasn't been "waffling" on the This would reduce oil prices, discrimination to child welfare. He has issues. Lawlor claims, because "it would party head. authored several bills, including one Answer the questions below, promote competition. If oil on child abuse. compare them with the condi- companies were to be broken The vice presidential pick of the dates' stands on the issues given Mondale is a man who can be trusted up -- if they were no longer to candidates can also be considered afterward (drawn from interviews control individual gas stations, for indicative of the quality of future with the persuasive capability of the with prominent UConn partisans instance -then many independent presidential staff. President Ford's vice - presidency and the potential and campaign literature) and retailers would be buying oil from choice. Senator Robert Dole of Kansas, power of the presidency. He is one perhaps you will discover a real, refineries where prices were low- persuasive reason for a Democratic positive reason to vote Tuesday. er," he said. maybe indicative of a mediocre White Today only two questions are House staff and cabinet, and also a presidential choice. As for the Democratic plank examined, but read tomorrow's advocating "legal prohibition paper for examinations of the against corporate ownership of education, unemployment, infla- competing types of energy, such tion and defense issues. as oil and coal," Lawlor said: 1) Is there really a need for "Just as it was in General mandatory, national health insur- Motors' self-interest to buy up a ance because of the cost of patented design for steam cars a medical treatment? few years ago so that none would 2) To what extent should the be made, it is in the oil companies development of alternative ener- self-interest not to market alter- gy sources by pursued by the native energy systems. What, Federal government (how much you expect them to make their money should be spent); will own equipment obsolete?" disbursement of the oil com- panies by modifying their "self- Ford-The approach to the ener- interest," encourage private sec- gy problem, according to the tor progress in this development, Republican platform, "must in- or inhibit it by dispersing capital? volve both expansion of the Interviews with Bob Vontell, energy supply and improvement co-chairman of the Students for of energy efficiency. ... It must Carter-Mondale committee at also provide incentives for the UConn, with Don Harrington, exploration and development of chairman of the UConn College domestic gas, oil, coal and uran- Republicans, and the study of ium, and for expanded explora- literature from the political par- tion and development of domestic ties and from non-partisan gas, oil, coal and uranium, and •^0Y(XJtr? WHY,NONSN&MP.HlfflPfc- XW WH8W&M9ST groups, have revealed the candi- for expanded research and devel- fmw>%m JEWISH..." dates positions on these promi- opment in the use of alternative nent issues. Compare their energy forms. answers with your own. The incentives would presum- 1) Carter-yes. "We have the ably take the form of tax breaks to facilities to control health prob- energy companies rather than lems, but we're only No. 11 in the Federal grants, since a Ford Halloween birds and bees world in the health care available campaing leaflet says: "For to the average man," said Von- every dollar saved in cutting the tell. "The Declaration of Indep- growth of the Federal budget we She was dressed up as a endence says we all have a right can have an added dollar of bumblebee, complete with a Excuse Me to life." Federal tax reduction". Ford flashing yellow tail that blinked Ford-No. The Republican plat- proposes in the same leaflet that strategically. form says: "We should utilize "effective July 1, 1976, we give He was dressed like a sparrow, Tony Cronin our private health insurance sys- our taxpayers a tax cut of approx- and would spread his wings and tem to assure adequate health imately $10 billion more than flash at anyone who looked his protection." The word "utilize" Congress agreed to in way. presumably means "aid December." When he saw her flashing tail, toward her with broomsticks. Her financially." Ford has hand no Federal grants represent an and she saw his spreading wings, The early evening highlight such proposal advanced in Con- increase in the federal budget. they decided to spend the rest of occurred when six girls came to evening ended early anyway after the night acting out the scene the party dressed as vestal vir- she walked off the porch into a their parents used on them years gins. nearby stream. ago when they tried to explain But they weren't allowed in Th? bobbing for apples routine (Emmrrttrut Sathj (Eampua where they came from. because the hosts had decided to was scratched about midnight, It was a typically decadent exclude all women from Shippee due to a costumed individual who Serving Storrs Since 1896 Friday night Halloween party. Hall. was portraying President Ford. Another partygoer, who was at Some came in costumes which Apparently he forgot to lift up his Susan A. Okula least four feet tall when he was could be better used by staying on head from the water after he Editor-in Chief excited, dressed up like Napoleon the racks of the local costume snatched an apple. and spent the rest of the night shop. He was brought to the infirmary Mark A Dupuis Robert S. Kravchuk where his costumed press secre- trying to conquer a french girl in One person dressed up like a Managing Editor Tony Cronin Business Manager giant redwood tree. Its bad tary taught him how to breathe the upstairs bedroom. Steven D. Hull enough the bozo picked such a again. He told her the French island of Senior Editors Corsica would be hers in the boring costume, but he had to A costumed person came as morning if she would consent. contend with two dogs with loose Jimmy Carter, the peanut farmer John HilMII News Editor It was the best Halloween party bladders following him around all turned vague-politician. John J. Kwolek News Editor anyone had been to since the days night. His costume included large eyes Mark Gould Sports Editor of high school parties when the One bad costume led to another which lusted after every female Maria Romash Sports Editor parents went away for the week- as one girl entered dressed as a and a heart which encouraged Kathe Rogers Features Editor end and their children's morals tootsieroll. She wore white pants him to ask every female to James Schembari Features Editoi went with them. and white shirt and had a black commit adultery. In addition, he Buz Sherman Magazine Editor There was one partygoer who paper machc ball completely en- granted interviews to anyone who Buzz Kanter Photography Editor spent all night walking around gulf her head. asked fuzzy questions. Subscription rales: $10 per year Second-class postage paid at Storrs, with the letters X and Y painted She was inviting trouble. Tony Cronin is a Senior Editor at Ct. 06268. Published Monday through Friday during the regular school on the back of his sweatshirt. He Two drunken partygoers thought the Daily Campus who is still year, except during Thanksgiving, Christmas and spring breaks, and two weeks before the end of each semester. Accepted for national advertising also had a white streamer flowing she was one of those Spanish angry that the six vestal virgins by the National Advertising Service. Subscriber: United Press from his pants and told everyone balls you bust open and candy there were not allowed into the International Return notification of unclaimed deliveries to: Connecticut he was imitating the better half of flows out of. Someone got to Halloween party. He imperson- Daily Campus, 121 North Eagleville Road. Box U-8, University of procreation. them just as they were running ated Don Mosley at the party. Connecticut. Storr? Ct 062f° Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campos Page 3 Gay troupe stings male ego By VIVIAN B. MARTIN some of the performers couldn't lip sing or gesture "What makes a man a man?" without looking like they were yawning is a telling It was a question that was sung rather woefully sign of why the group isn't on 42nd street with Sunday night, and many wondered as they other acts of its kind. watched members of a homosexual troupe take to Because of the performers' empathy with the the stage as Bette Midler, Barbara Streisand and majority of the audience, there was a lot of Delia Reese. audience participation. Performing before an audience of predominatly In joking with a "straight" in the audience. Ivan admitted gay people, Ivan Valentin, a female answered the unasked question about his and impersonator and director of "Ivan the Terrible other homosexuals "alleged unmaniless" by and the Leading Ladies of New York" began the saying to the spectator "I'm more of a man than burlesque-type revue with a rendition of Cabaret a you and more of a woman than you'll ever get." la Liza Minelli. "I accept myself." Ivan said yet admits it hasn't To anyone that isn't acquainted with the gay been easy. community, the first view of the performers may He finished the act by changing from women's be a bit of a shock. The men, or rather performers, clothes to men's right before the audience, while make-up and carriage as women are convincing. singing a song telling what it's like to be gay. However, the seemingly quick change of genre As he wiped off the mascara and took off his wig, was the only outstanding quality of the show. Ivan began to look like any other male on the As impersonators, the performers apparently street. Yet, as he sings of his troubles, it's easy to need practice. Although the men were dressed see how unhappy he is despite the jokes. and looked like Midler, Streisand, and Reese, the Unlaughing now, the audience starts to question only other resemblance to the entertainers were themselves and it's felt when he asks, "What actual recordings. That, coupled with the fact that makes a man a man?" Keeping in slep Mix-up may cause admission delays By DAVID E.DeCAPRIO another trucking service may tance into UConn's MBA pro- The admission of almost 200 have delivered the boxes to the gram is determined by the Amer- area students to graudate schools warehouse, instead of to him. He ican Assembly of Collegiate of business may be delayed also said the exams might still be Schools of Business, which is the because the Graduate Manage- in transit. national accrediting agency. ment Admissions Test (GMAT) Owen said he thought most of "In the event that the GMAT scheduled to be given Saturday at the 180 students scheduled to scores are not received, we would UConn was cancelled because of a take the exam were from UConn. advise the applicant to take the mix-up. The probable alternatives for exam at the next possible date, The exam is vital to students those students involved are. "a therefore delaying the processing planning to begin graduate refund, attendance at the next of the application." Patten said. studies in business next year test session scheduled for Jan. because applications are gen- Pam Fishman, a seventh se- 29, or a special test session," mester business student said. "I erally accepted on a rolling ad- according to Owen. missions basis from October to knew I was going to take these June. Most schools recommend "The School of Business is not exams since the summer, and that the exam be taken by involved with the administration everything has been planned October because they start look- of the exam, and we'll have to get around it." ing at applications in December. in touch with ETS." said Ronald "It's an emotional setback. I've Jane D. Wirsig, corporate J. Patten, dean of the School of been preparing for the past week executive for the Educational Business Administration. it can't help, it can only hurt," Testing Service (ETS) said she Patten explained that accep- she said. was "unaware" that the problem existed saying, "there is an emergency service line at ETS that handles such calls." Presidential victor What a drag "The exam will be rescheduled Ivan Valentin, a female impersonator, brings his show to I Conn before Jan. 29, the second test Sunday night, asking the musical question, "What makes a man a date, and possibly within two man?" Above, he and three members of his troupe add picqnancy to weeks," she said. escapes professors the question (Staff Photos by Buzz Kantor]. "The program director at UConn will be contacted this morning to arrange another I Continued from Page 1] that gives him and advantage. testing," Wirsig said. John N. Plank, professor of I'm still making use of the time Negotiators eye hike "The exam which was political science: "It all depends between now and Tuesday to scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. on the turnout. If it is a 55 to 60 make up my mind who I'll vote was cancelled, because copies of per cent then Carter should win, for." in faculty salary the Scholastic Aptitude Test other wise Ford will win because Henry Krisch, associate profes- [Continued from Page 1] for such things as income tax (SAT) were received instead," the Republicans are more likely to sor or political science: "I due to inflation and other econ- increases or Social Security pay- said Steve Owen, associate direc- get their vote out. The larger haven't the slightest idea, it's not omic pressures, he said. ments. tor of the educational research turnout will give Carter a better my specialty. All I know is what 1 DiBenedetto said the figure was DiBenedetto said over the past center, and exam supervisor. chance because a greater number read in the New York Times." one of many bing considered by five years the country's cost of "When I arrived at my office 8 of registered voters are Demo- Norman Kogan, professor of the bargaining team and refused living has increased by about 40 a.m. Saturday, I found the box of crats. political science: "I think Carter to endorse that figure as the per cent. tests with a note from my will slip through. It depends on official hike that will be asked for secretary saying there were 180 David E. RePass, associate pro- the undecideds. when undecideds by the AAUP. The average per capita income copies of the exam," he said. "I fessor of political science: "I'll decide they usually stay with The 32 per cent figure being for a worker in the private sector looked at the supervisor's manual stay with Carter, I've been pick- traditional behavior. There are considered breaks down to 16 per has met the rise in living costs, he and realized we had been sent the ing him right along. Carter will more Democrats than Republi- cent to bring the faculty salaries said. However, faculty members, wrong test," he added. win. it's going to be close." cans and when they get in the up to par from 1971 to 1975, a 12 who are state employes, average Owen said that ETS ships the Howard L. Reiter, assistant pro- polling booth they will pull Ihe per cent hike would take care of per capita income rose by about exams by United Parcel Service, fessor of political science: "I Democratic lever." inflation up to 1978 and about 4 20 per cent during that same which has been on strike for the have a slight feeling Ford will Lowell Field, professor of politi- per cent would be used to adjust period, DiBenedetto said. past 45 days. He said that win. He has the advantages of cal science: "Carter, but with no the incumbency. Whoever is great strong confidence. It's going to win it will not be a going to be close but he has the landslide." support that is available, it's Richard A. Loverd: "It's a going to be very close." Forum to resume publication choice between a series of pro- mises or a list of past perfor- Tofhiv's H eaiher By ELLEN GRAY mances. How you read the list of clause in the FSSO Forum'ss contract with the Today will be partly cloudy The student government newsletter will be Ford's past performances is what Daily Campus calls for the Forum to pay the full and windy with the high near published next week, despite a controversy which will count, but it's too close to amount for contracted services whether it is SO. Fair tonight and a bit arose over charges by the Women's Center that call." published or not. cooler, with lows in the upper the first issue contained sexist and demeaning W. Wayne Shannon, associate material which resulted in the cancellation of this FSSO's Central Committee Thursday apologized 20's and mid 30's. The outlook professore of political science: for Tuesday calls for partly week's issue, the student government chairman to the Women's Center for a front-page picture of a "It's too close, an absolute sunny skies, with the high said Sunday. breast and three hands with a headline that read, "Self Breast Examination: Use it or Lose it," and a guessing game at this point. again near SO. Probability of "We're probably going to bring it out next Carter was impressive looking precipitation is 20 per cent Monday," said William Finch, chairman of the second-page picture of a man looking up a woman's skirt. three weeks ago but now even the today and tonight. Winds will Federation of Students and Service Organizations people with data, the pollsters are (FSSO). be northwesterly at 25 to 30 The Women's Center charged that the pictures just taking guesses." m.p.h. today, diminishing to- "I wouldn't know how much cancellation of and headlines were "offensive to the women on William Slysz: "Ford by a slight night. publication is going to cost us," Finch said. A campus." margin. He is the President and Page 4 Connecticut Dally Campus Monday, November 1, 1976 Weicker forecasts GOP victory By JOHN J. K WO IKK 30.000 votes. the country," Weicker said. for the next four years. products store in Norwalk by and Weicker also said he would "How Ford does in Connecticut Weicker was warmly received former New York Jets football ROBERT S.KRAVCHUK defeat his Democratic challenger. will be a reflection of how he does during his six and one half hour player Randy Beverly. Predicting a Republican victory Secretary of the State Gloria in the rest of the nation. tour of ten towns. The campaign- Weicker took numerous oppor- in Tuesday's election, U.S. Sen. Schaffer, although he refused to '' If Ford wins here by 53 to 47 ers often stopped in small shops, tunities to introduce Beverly, who Lowell P. Weicker Jr. stumped predict the margin of triumph per cent it will be a positive purchasing food and newspapers pledged strong support to through the Republican bastions over his challenger. indication of his strength in the and thanking area residents for Weicker's campaign. of Fairfield County Saturday in a "I think its going to be a good East," he said. what he called their "strong Beverly also joined Weicker in a street-corner , whistle-stop-like Republican win Tuesday," A Harris poll released Saturday support" for his re-election bid. hand shaking trip through the campaign through stores and Weicker said. showed Carter with a one per cent Most of his stops were in the Trumbull Park Plaza, one of the shopping centers. He said a win for the president lead over Ford, with the former predominantly Republican Fourth largest shopping complexes in the He forecasted victory for him- here would reflect an indication Georgia governor drawing 45 per Congressional District, which area. self and President Ford during a which he said would point to a cent of the vote and Ford 44 per first sent Weicker to Congress in He reinterated his criticism of stop in the Georgetown section national victory by Ford over cent. Many pollsters, including 1968. the presidential campaign, saying Redding, saying he feels Ford Jimmy Carter. Harris, say the result in the East He was joined on his 25-minute neither candidate is addressing would in in Connecticut by about "Connecticut is a microcosm of should determine who will rule tour of Stew Leonard's dairy himself to what Weicker con- siders issues of national impor- tance. "There is the folly of talking about Playboy, golf trips, and Senator ends 'easy-speaking'stump Billy Graham's ministry. We have high unemployment and inflation, decaying cities and a By ROBERT S. KRAVCHUK asked toexpound. "I like relating Weicker said he felt Connect- Leonard's Clover Farms Dairy need for new housing. I wish TRUMBULL — Casually stroll- to people and that's hard to do icut's population and income Weicker was joined by Randy they'd talk about those prob- ing sidewalks, shaking hands and when you're running a national characteristics made it a mic- Beverly, formerly of the New lems," he said. chatting with reporters, U.S. Sen. campaign. Then it only becomes rocosm of the whole of the United York Jets. Here he told the crowd Weicker expressed pleasure Lowell P. Weickcr's style is a numbers game." States" and reflecting national that gathered around him that, with what he called the "hearty reminiscent of the easy-speakin' In Ridgefield . Weicker walked trends and sentiment. "Neither party is addressing the reception" he received during his style of Harry S. Truman. through a Stop and Shop Super- When asked if he felt his issues in this election." He said tour. On several occasions local In a sporting goods store in New market, shaking hands and pick- popularity in Connecticut was a that the most pressing issues merchants, some of whom he Cannan Saturday, Weicker; was ing up a few groceries. reflection of his popularity across were being ignored, and that knew personally, invited him into asked when he would be making A woman there was distributing the nation, Weicker replied, "I've these were: unemployment, en- their shops, while pedistrians and his bid for the Presidency. discount coupons for a diet soft never really given that question ergy, housing, and the cities. motorists shouted their support. "You've gotta be a little strange drink. Weicker told her that more much thought. But let me say "We must recognize that we In New Canaan, Weicker jump- to run for that office." he replied. Americans should drink diet soft that whenever I have traveled have unresolved problems," ed onto the hood of a friend's van "Seriously, though, the race for drinks, thereby possibly becom- outside the state, I have been Weicker said. He vowed to as it sat at a red light, joking with the Presidency takes all the fun ing the first U.S. Senator from received warmly." He added he address himself to those prob- the driver and attracting laughter out of politics." Connecticut to endorse "Pepsi felt this was due to the national lems, if elected. from the surprised onlookers. "Connecticut is a small state Lite." media coverage he received dur- Throughout his tour, the senator Just before that he purchased and it's still fun to be a politician Outside a supermarket in the ing the Watergate hearings. was greeted warmly and court- cookies from a group of area girl here." the senator said when Georgetown section of Redding, Stopping in Norwalk at Stew eously, "i find that the length of scouts after one of them told him, time a smile lasts on an indivi- "we've been saving some cookies dual's face is a good indicator of just for you." how I'm doing, and I watch for He said he has no intentions of Ford firms up lead in poll that," Weicker said. He added seeking the Republican presi- the intent of his campaign was to dential or vice presidential no- reach the people. "If you spend mination in 1980, although he | Continued from Page 1J Weicker has lead Schaffer in all The toals in the presidential race time on the campaign trail, you noted he has had "good recep- Daily Campus polls this fall, represent a turnabout from a don't need opinion polls to tell tions" in recent out-of-state ap- (13); Won't Vote. 6 per cent (12); although the Democratic chal- Sept. 16 Daily Campus poll in you how you're doing." perances. He said he attributes and Undecided. 3 per cent (6). lenger had cut the lead in one which Carter had a 12-point lead On this Saturday past, the junior this to favorable publicity he In the race for the U.S. Senate poll. over Ford. Ford was the choice of senator from Connecticut was out received as a member of the scat from Connecticut, incumbent 34 per cent of thoses students "reaching the people," — If the Senate Watergate committee. U.S. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., The totals.in the senate race polled, while 46 per cent favored lenght of time the smiles were Watergate cropped up several K Conn., held his strong lead and were: Weicker, 55.5 per cent the former Georgia governor. lasting on the faces of thoses he times Saturday, as voter thanked expected swamp of his Demo- (111); Schaffer. 28 per cent (56); In the Sept. 16 poll, Weicher greeted are any indication, him,as in the case of one West- cratic opponent. Secretary of the Won't Vote, 9 per cent (18); and held a 41-point lead over Weicker was indeed doing well in port woman, "for all the good you State Gloria Schaffer. Undecided, 7.5 per cent (15). Schaffer. his bid for re-election. did in Watergate."

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Dear Father DeSiano: Ptease send me more informal ion on (he work 4 Vi • * of the Paulists and the Paulist Priesthood. Rev Frank DeSiano. < sp ucce,. Director of Vocations NAMF PAULIST FATHERS ( Dept. B 114 STRttI ADDKISS. 3O/?^^/^ ^i.(^0: i&&Aaji6*z. 415 West 59th Street CITY. SIAII ZIP. New York. NY 10019 COUIGF ATTENDING. For a free booklet on mixology write:GIROUX, P.O. Box 2186G, Astoria Station,New York. N.Y. 11102. CLASS OF. Giroux is a product of A-W BRANDS. INC. a subsidiary of IROQUOIS BRANDS LTD. Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campna Page 5 Winner uncertain Weicker's victory almost assured By PETER A. BROWN energy and tax reform and HARTFORD (UPI) — U.S. charging he has the worst in presidential race Sen. Lowell P. Weicker. R- attendance record of any New Conn.. appears headed for a England senator. substantial victory over his Weicker's support appears to Democratic opponent. Gloria |Continued bom Page 1] Carter's lead was cut to about a third of what it was be mostly related to his role as Schaffer. as the campaign percentage points. Ford 46, and Eugene Mc ■ around Labor Day and about half what it was at the an adversary of the Nixon beginning of November. enters its final day. White House during the Carthy, ruled off the ballot, 3. Weicker. who has empha- A poll taken by the Detroit News, however, Watergate affair, which made After 22 months on the road, Carter launched a sized his independence from him a popular figure among next-to-last day blitz through Texas and California, showed Ford losing ground in Michigan. It said the President, once comfortably ahead by eight the Republican party while Democrats and independents. cheered by ever-growing crowds and convinced focusing his appeal on Demo- points, now holds only a 42-40 lead in his home Mrs. Schaffer is banking on that his slide in the polls has bottomed out short of cratic and unaffiliated voters, defeat. state. the 197.000-voter margin is also being contested by Ford and Carter both plan to end their personal Democrats have over Republ- Carter, who campaigned in Fort Worth and George Wallace Party condi- campaigning in Michigan Monday night while they icans in registration, but a Dallas before flying aboard "Peanut One" to date Robert Barnabei. block of unaffiliated voters California - where an independent poll showed him saturate the networks nationwide with half-hour Although publicly saying - programs on election-eve. almost as large as the Demo- six points behind - predicted a close battle but said they see a victory on the Rain-drenched and still suffering slightly from crats is the key to Weicker's "We have a good chance for a large victory." horizon, Democratic leaders strategy. the hoarseness that plagued him most of Saturday. And, in some of the toughest language he has privately say they recognize Ford went to rallies in upstate Buffalo and Polls have shown him far used. Carter said Ford "hasn't done a thing but let Mrs. Schaffer's chances are Rochester before flying into the New York City ahead throughout the cam- our country drift and come divided" and called on virtually nonexistent. area for rallies and tapes of TV shows. paign, taking large portions of the voters to "fire" Ford Tuesday. "1 can't conceive of how she the independent vote and a Ford attacked Carter with some of the bluntest can beat him." said one After braving drenching rains upstate, Ford flew language of the campaign, saying: "You can't tell sizeable number of influential party leader. to Suffolk County and at a rally told some what his position will be in the next two days." Democrats. Mrs. Schaffer has centered 9.000-10,000 supporters "We were way, way "You know where I stand. I am not all things to Weicker was elected to the her campaign on Weicker's behind in the first quarter but we got together and all people," Ford Said. "I stand for the same thing Senate in 1970 with a plurality the Republican party got unified and the net result to all people." record, attacking his stands on of the vote bacause of a split. is we got momentum." Ford also won a thinly-veiled endorsement from Vice presidential candidates Walter Mondale and Edward Head, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Robert Dole were also on the campaign trail - Buffalo, when the President attended services, State voters to decide Mondale predicting Carter would win and Dole sitting in a front pew, at the 103-year old St. claiming that Ford would sweep every state and Stanislaus Polish American Roman Catholic cede only the District of Columbia to the church. / Democrats. In a letter read from the pulpit, Head said the judicial, legislative powers Pollster Louis Harris, interviewed on ABC-TV's Roman Catholics believe abortion is wrong and HARTFORD (UPI) — can remove a judge, by impeach- "Issues and Answers," said the election is "up for added that Catholics must carry their convictions Connecticut voters face four ref- ment and trial or by two-thrids grabs" and added "it looks very much like 1960 to the ballot box. erendum questions Tuesday in petition of each house. and 1968 all over again." Ford said he backs a constitutional amendment addition to the presidential, sen- House Minority Leader Gerald Harris, whose latest poll gave Carter a one-point allowing states to ban abortions. Carter, although atorial, congressional and state Stevens. R-Milford. has backed edge, said the prime-time appearance of Ford and personally opposed to abortions, does not favor the legislative races. But only one the measure and says creation of Carter on all three networks "probably will make amendment. question has created any major the council would be a priority the difference." Carter and his family attended services at the controversy. item in the new legislature. The New York Times-CBS poll, published University Baptist Church - a pause between big Question 3 would let the nest The Connecticut Civil Liberties Sunday, said Carter still had a lead but called his and well-attended rallies in Dallas and Fort Worth. state legislature create a Judicial Union has said the change would edge so slim that it could fall within the range of The Georgian hit hard at Ford's failure to offer Review Council and allow the be a "serious danger" to the error possible in a survey of that size. major legislation as a congressman and his state Supreme Court to suspend a ndependence of the judiciary and As have other polls, The New York Time-CBS inability to deal with economic problems as judge for as much as a year. would give the legislature too survey showed a sharp upsurge in Ford's support. president. Presently, only the legislature much leeway. AIR FORCE SNORKEL PARKAS $44.95 CiyjUANCOPYOFSAME__ $29J» Interested in the Arts? NAVY PEA COATS $29.95 The Daily Campus arts and features department NAVY DECK JACKETS $24.95 is looking for a person with a flair or at least an ARMY FIELD JACKETS $24.95 interest in music, art drama and dance and graphics for some review writing and perhaps USED COVERALLS $4.95 gain some lay-out experience. ARMY SLEEPING BAGS $30.00 Call4299384 to ask for details Also Available—Position as Assistant Arts & Features Editor ONLYAT SURPLUS CENTER SEND A MESSAGE TO HARTFORD DOWNTOWN WILLIMANTIC ! ELECT BOB FISK " WHERE ITS ALL AT" [ MANSFIELD STATE REPRESENTATIVE Rep. Goodwin says: "There is no fundamental Rep. Goodwin Says: philosophical difference be- "I cannot guarantee that come tween Ella and myself, but hell or high water I will oppose B & G CLEANERS Jrls Rts. 44A 8. 31 N Coventry we differ on certain details." * another tuition increase." * Bob Fisk says: "There is a very fundamental Where "Professional Care Means Longer Wear philosophical difference be- Bob Fisk says: -\ guarantee that I will tween Ella Grasso and my- can oppose another tuition in- OPEN 7AM 6 PM self. Grasso's priorities are crease. And I will work vigor- wrong. State employes and ously to repeal the tuition in- FOR A WHALE OF A BARGAIN state services in the fields of crease that the Grasso legis- ^ — 742-9607 mental retardation and high- lature, including Rep. Good- er education are my highest win, just imposed." priorities. These are just two SAME DAY SERVICE examples not very high on ♦Willimantic Chronicle, 10/19/76 p. I Grasso's list. And I consider this difference to be a matter of more that just 'certain UCONN students - details'." •Willimantic Chronicle, 10/22/76 p.3 Faculty & Employees [SEND GRASSO A MESSAGE, NOT A VOTE OF CONFIDENCE!) 20% OFF A vote for the incumbent is a vote for more Grasso maladministration. To return the same legislator to Hartford is to assure Governor Grasso that her policies are well received in Mansfield. Send a message to Hartford that they are not! ELECT On all dry cleaning BOB FISK StateRepresentative from Mansfield. (Just present your ID card) *• Page 6 Connecticut Daily Campus Monday, November 1, 1976 Gypsies roam New England region

By LAURIE HORN involved teams of two or three sitting there, the other goes They come from parts of Middle clans of gypsies so it's hard to pin United Press International women who allegedly wormed around and steals." Europe. They speak Romany, a them down. They just keep People described as "gypsies" their way into an elderly person's Authorities estimate there are Mediterranean language which traveling from place to place in have been popping up all over home on the pretense of making a 20,000 to 50,000 so-called gypsies had its origins in India. caravans of campers, Cadillacs, New England recently, often as phone call or getting a drink of in the United States. The Immigration officials have you name it." suspects in an age-old con game water, police said. The women numbers are shaky because many trouble separating foreign-born Police in Pawtucket, R.I. still that preys on elderly who live were believed to have a home do not stay in one place. gypsies from U.S. citizens be- have not identified three women alone. base in Newark, N.J. Legend says the gypsies were cause even gypsy children born in arrested last week on robbery The gypsies - usually women - "Often they go up to an older allowed to roam the earth because America are kept within the charges. have been arrested on robbery woman and ask if they can have a one of their number hid a nail to insular gypsy culture. The women, who spoke only charges in recent months in drink," said Lt. John Manghisi of be used in Christ's crucifixion. "You know, this is going on all broken English and remained Connecticut, Rhode Island and the fraud division of the Newark Another tale says the gypsies around the country," said Lt. mute most of the time, made southern Masachusetts. police department. "They're were condemed to wander be- Anthony Duffy of the West Hart- telephone calls to men in Newark Recent arrests in Pawtucket, really sociable. They bulldoze cause they provided a crucifixion ford police deaprtment. "There for bail money, Capt. Roger A. R.I. and West Hartford, Conn., their way in. While the victim is nail. are many different families ot Lanoue said. The Nation In Brief Ship smolders on Boston dock BOSTON (UPI)— The forward hold of the Italian cargo ship Pia Carter's home church Costa smoldered in a drizzly rain Sunday, a day after a smoky three-alarm blaze caused an estimated $200,000 damage. The fire which broke out in bales of rags aboard the 500-foot, 10.000 ton ship was eventually contained after hours of hosing down from dockside and from fireboats in Boston Harbor. closes door to blacks Chief concern was the adjacent hold filled with highly flammable tollow, a substance derived from animal fats used to make soap, candles and lubricants. PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) — The the Afro-American ticket, ran the incident: "I don't know who's Fire officials said the ship which was to have sailed for New deacons of Jimmy Carter's home- again for president in 1972 as an behind it but someone is trying to York Saturday morning, would remain in port until necessary town Baptist church canceled independent, managed a 1970 make it a political football, and repairs arc made. services Sunday and locked the gubernatorial campaign by his we're sick of it." brother against Jimmy Carter and doors rather than admit four In Texas, where he attended a former Gov. Carl Sanders, and blacks, one of whom planned to Baptist service in Fort Worth Abolitionists seek jury changes quit his brother's campaign staff challenge the church's white-only Sunday, Carter told reporters: WASHINGTON (UPI)— Abolitionists who lost their main battle membership policy. to run for governer himself as when the Supreme Court upheld the death penalty are asking the Carter, campaigning in Texas, Republican. "The only thing I know is that our justices to decide again whether persons conscientiously opposed said he hopes the church will Edwards suggested the timing church for many years ha^s ac- to capital punishment can be excluded from juries. reverse its stand. His mother told of the membership rule challenge cepted any worshippers who When the high court upheld the death penalty last July, a major UPI in Washington she will quit 48 hours before election day was came there and my own deep factor was allowing some jury discretion, which the plurality the church if it persists in barring "Republican politics" and "an belief is that anyone who lives in called "a link between contemporary community values and the all blacks, but she labled Sun- attempt- by the enemies of Gov. our cummunity and who wants to penal system." day's incident a political effort to Carter to sabotage his be a member of our church, Opponents of the death penalty now arc asking the justices embarrass her son. campaign." regardless of race, ought to be whether the link to community values is broken when those who The church minister, the Rev. Deacon Frank Williams said of admitted. object to capital punishment arc excluded from the jury. Bruce Edwards, said he opposed the deacons' action. He touched off an argument with other church Attempts to contact Indians release state facility members by quoting the rule on TOCOMA, Wash. (UPI)— Puyallup Indians who carried out a which the action was based as week-long armed occupation of a state juvenile facility have barring "all niggers and civil Houdini fail again smokkc the peace pipe with the government and left after getting rights agitators." a promise the 3.Vacrc facility would be turned over to the tribe. Later state Sen. Hugh Carter, NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (UPI)— It stayed that way. Tribal leader Komona Bennett signed the agreement minutes clerk of the church and Carter's Attmepts to make contact with The participants chatted for 35 before a court-ordered deadline Saturday for removal of the cousin, said official minutes of an Harry Houdini, the famed escape minutes in the brightly lit room Indians. Aug. 15, 1965, deacons' meeting artist who dies exactly a half- but in the end nothing had When the settlement was announced, several Indian men recorded the rule as stating "The century ago - on Oct. 31, 1926, happened - no sign or manifesta- circled a large drum set up on the front porch of the main ushers refuse to admit any Ne- have failed again. tion of any kind from the master building, raised clenched fists to the sky and sang tribal songs. groes or other civil rights agi- Halloween eve has become the of escape. tators to all worship services in established time to try to contact this church." Houdini in the great beyond and Before his death, Houdini States zero in on tmttleggers' Edwards, who hasbeenin his pos the latest attempt was held worked out a system with his friend, Joseph Dunninger, the WASHINGTON (UPI)— Seven states are counterattacking for just two years, said he was Saturday at the museum bearing famous mentalist entertainer, to organized cigarette "buttlegging" that is causing millions of told the rule read "niggers." his name in this famed resort city. insure against fakery in attempts dollars of tobacco tax losses, a government financed research Standing before the locked doors Attending were luminaries from to communicate with him after his center said Sunday. of the Palins Baptist Church, the world of magic and others, death. Houdini left a coded "Buttlegging" is underworld slang for an emerging big-time Edwards said he had urged the surrounded by genuine Houdini message with Dunninger, saying racket of buying truckloads of cigarettes in low-tax states and deacons to let the Rev. Clennon artifacts. that after he died he would try to slipping them into a state where they can be sold for huge profits King of Albany, Ga., and three Joanna Honsberger, a local communicate in code. by evading high taxes. other blacks attend Sunday ser- medium who bills herself as the The Interstate Revenue Research Center said its intelligence vices where King planned to try White Witch of Niagara, sat down The message, preserved in the reports on the buttleggers are enabling states to intercept and to join the church. with 11 guests. A 13th chair was museum after Dunninger's death confiscate trucks and cigarette cargoes and alos get convictions King ran for president in 1960 on left vacant for Houdini. last year, was on the seance table. and collect fines. flMV- LECTURE tarn

The staff of the NATIONAL LAMPOON wishes to R.Dixon Smith AND thank the Academy for its very kind words on behalf of their monumental special edition, THE NAKED AND THE NUDE The Golden Age of the • HOLLYWOOD AND BEYOND The history of films as it has never been presented before, and hopefully, never will be presented again MOVIES In brilliant multicolor and no-sound Available at newsstands and bookstores everywhere at Monday, Nov. 1 a mere $2.50; a piddling amount when one considers the magnitude of the subject and scope of the CLT/HK1A presentation. If for some reason your local dealer does not have this The greatest documentary film of all time! Leni RiefenstahFs 1936 tribute to the world of glitter and gold, send a check or Berlin Olympics doeumentary. Leeturer has personal acquaintance money order for $2.50 to: NATIONAL LAMPOON, with Hitlerian Film Director Leni Riefenstahl 635 Madison Avenue, New York, NY. 10022. sponsored by th Att: Hollywood Dept. board of governors! film committee upcominG mm/ monoflv RIGHT/ $) admission Nov.8 SEVEN CHANCES THRU DECEmBER 6 Nov. 15 METROPOLIS Nov.22 THE IRON MASK LIFE /(IEfKE-154 8:00 p.m. Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campos Page 7 Submarine recovers Phoenix missile LONDON (UP1) — A nuclear- salvage the missile's mother as many as 24 targets at the same The NR1 seized the missile with the plane broke, in one case powered research submarine has plane, a Tomcat F14, which time and to fire up to six missiles a grappling arm and hauled it to withing a few hundred feet of the recovered a Phoenix missile in toppled off the aircraft carrier withing seconds. the surface where divers from the surface. 1,900 feet of water 100 miles John F. Kennedy Sept. 14 In tests the missile was highly submarine support vessel Sun- The plane is resting in about north of Scotland's Orkney Is- during NATO exercises. accurate, scoring kills on targets bird placed straps around it and 1,500 of water. Currents have lands, where the top-secret wea- The plane was found earlier, but up to 110 miles from its launch pulled it aboard. shifted the aircraft about three pon was lost in the crash of a two recovery efforts have failed. point. A Navy spokesman said the miles from where it originally Navy jet last month, the Navy Soviet spy vessels witnessed the Although the F14 can carry up to recovery task force, which is sank, complicating recovery ef- announced Sunday. original accident and it was six missiles, there was only one working in an area about 75 miles forts. The missile recovery put an end feared Soviet vessels would at- on the Tomcat that crashed. northwest of the Scottish coast, to fears that the Phoenix, one of tempt to recover the $371,000 The nuclear-powered research The jet rolled over the side of the the most sophisticated and deadly missile if U.S. salvage teams submarine NR1 found the sunken was still trying to figure a way to Kennedy during a pre-takeoff mobile weapons systems in the were not able to locate it. missile resting on the ocean bed recover the lost plane. Tow accident in which the plane's world, might fall into the hands of The Phoenix system, considered in 1,900 feet of water near the attempts have been made to bring throttle jammed and the crew lost the Soviet Union. far superior to any other.missile area where the plane had been it to the surface. Both failed, control. Both crew members Efforts still are underway to system, enables the F14 to track found, according to the Navy. however, when ropes attached to escaped unhurt. The World In Brief Rhodesian guerrillas attack Soviets deny visa to U.S. lecturer MOSCOW (UP1)— An American expert on presidential politics who had planned to give a series of lectures on the U.S. elections has been denied a visa to visit the Soviet Union, U.S. embassy officials said Sunday. tourists in resort motel The officials said Dr. Jeanne Kirkpatrick of Georgetown University had been issued a visa, but Soviet authorities then called and withdrew it. No reason was given for the refusal. By JACQUES CLAFIN The communique also reported three whites died Dr. Kirkpatrick, a professor of political science, had been VICTORIA FALLS, Rhodesia (UP1>— Rhodesian in southwestern Rhodesia, but there were no scheduled to be the guest speaker at the U.S. Embassy luncheon security forces Sunday reported a guerrilla attack details. Wednesday to explain the results of the U.S. presidential election on a tourist motel in this town on the Zambian The motel attack was one of the boldest of the to a selected group of Soviet officials and journalists. border in one of the most daring insurgent war and the first time guerrillas had struck so close Under the terms of a U.S. government grant, she also was operations of the Rhodesian war. to the center of a town. The motel is about a mile scheduled to have given lectures at Moscoe State University and A government communique said one white from the center of Victoria Falls. the Institute of the USA and Canada, the top Soviet "think tank" Rhodesian immigration official was killed and two Military sources said the attackers probably on North American affiars. other persons were wounded. come from Zambia and crossed the Zambezi River An embassy official said the U.S. government planned to The guerrillas threw grenades, opened fire with a at a shallow point upstream from Victoria Falls, "indicate regret and disappointment'" to the Soviets over the mortar and fired about 300 rounds of automatic one of the world's most spectacular cataracts and cancellation of the trip. weapons fire in the Saturday night attack on the among Africa's major tourist attractions. The Peters Motel. Zambezi River, which forms the border between A communique in Salisbury reported a Rhodes- Zambia and Rhodesia, hurtles 355 feet into a Weather hampers rescue efforts ian army "hot pursuit" operation against guerrilla gorge, propelling upward a perpetual spray that bases inside Mozambique on Rhodesia's eastern forms rain forests for miles. JAKARTA, Indonesia (UP1)— Bad weather hampered efforts border. Troops killed 12 guerrillas and two blacks Motel manager Freddie Pacella said the attack Sunday to bring disaster relief to the primitive mountain who broke a curfew, the report said, and the began at 9:45 p.m. and lasted eight minutes. tribesmen of West Irian, rocked by the second major earthquake guerrillas killed a black Rhodesian official. "The guests hit the floor and the bullets went all in four months. Residents of the Mozambique border twon of over," Pacella said. Missionary workers, who are among the few outsiders in touch Umtali were warned to be ready to leave their Most of the motel's windows were either with the tribes in the remote area 3.000 miles west of Indonesia's homes in case of an attack by Mozambican troops punctured or shattered and the walls pock-marked. main island of Java, said at least 50 persons died in Friday's in retaliation for the Rhodesian "hot pursuit" The guerrilla war has been mostly along quake. attack inside Mozambique. Rhodesia's eastern border, but several shops, They said rescuers feared the death toll may reach 100 when "Umtali could well be bombarded with rocket farms and travelers have come under attack in the rubble is cleared from the primitive settlements of Bime and and mortar fire...tonight," an army spokesman west and southwest since June. Security forces Eipomek, the most severely damaged area in the mountains of said. have banned night driving around Victoria Falls West Irian, which forms the western part of New Guinea. Reporters at the Forbes border post, three miles and nearby Wankie game reserve. The Eipomek hamlet suffered heavy damage June 25 in the first from Umtali, said the Mozambique soldiers had set A communique issued in Salisbury said the "hot earthquake, in which 433 persons were killed and 3,000 missing. up nine new mortar positions 300 yards from the pursuit" operation into Mozambique was carried The latest quake, which registered 7 on the open-ended Richter post Sunday and army officers reported a "steady out "in order to safeguard the interests of the scale, completed the destruction of the hamlet but was believed to flow" of troops into the area. country." have caused comparatively fewer deaths there. "~"""1 r^fa r^n r^Vi fl?a*1 rt?frl rlfrl fYVl fWl fVi'+ i U&A What would Ifffffffff Freud have done ? U^UUIJvi^l'dv^W So vote For The VILLA By Calling us For FREE DELIVERY Today! He would have made a Long Distance call to his parents, of course. Without hesitation. Without pangs of guilt. Without ego problems. sp,R,T He would have called his parents Long Distance at least once a week (you know Freud). He would have called after 5 P.M. or on weekends because of the lower rates. SHOPPE He would have dialed direct, of course. Because that's the way nn □mMA. 3V9T OVBZTHF HILL R?0rV ?,:: ",P you really save. That's what Freud would have done. Why don't you learn something from the master? Put less distance between you and the people you most want to talk to. Call Long Distance. Long Distance is the Answer wWWWWWw Page 8 Connecticut Dally Campus Monday, November 1, 1976 Arts & Features

Halloween hoopla The weekend-long festivities of All Saints' Day began in Storrs on Friday night with an early turnout of celebrants. The creative impulse sparked by a desire for originality produced costumes that spanned the en- tire range between elegance and improvisation. The well- armed three muskateers posing at left could certainly have stormed Cemetery Hill, but the night air might have been a bit chilly for the sparsely attired partygoers above right. The least complicated and the most traditional of costumes was sported by the glowing and grinning jack o'lantern at right (Staff Photo by George tie- rACES LOUNGE Wednesday Is Ladies Night All Ladies Drinks 50' and up ROUTE 195 • TOLLAND 875-9082 coming week of Nov. 15 "Too Much Too Soon''

THE. FIRST ^® PEOPLE: WHO FIND THE CORRECT ROUTE •THROUGH THE MAZ£- TO THE BLUE LEAVES WILL EACH WlKJ ONE FREE TlCKfcT TO SE<= THE HOUSE: QP SLUEL LEAVfrg . tfr^NO COnPLeTED MAZES To THE H/\RRAET ITOR-GEMSEN &0*OPFlCfc. DEADLINE FOR.E_NTRIES 15 2>-30 TUESDAY NOV 2..

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ISA Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campos Page 9 Yale theatre revives a Russian masterpiece

Rehearsals for Chekhov's masterpieces. He can neither respond to the regains his old fire in an exciting with the world premiere produc- "Ivanov" -- the third presenta- Set in provincial Russia during entreaties of old love nor the climax. tion of Sam Shepard's "Suicide in the 1880's, "Ivanov" reflects the romantic dreams of young love. tion of the Yale Repertory Scenery for this production is B flat (A Mysterious Overture)", Theatre's 1976/77 season -- have dramatic historical events that through Dec. 18. Subscriptions to had occurred in Russia during the Also woven into the fabric of the designed by Michael Yeargan; begun. The production, which play is the role of the "new costumes and lighting are by the entire season of seven plays opens Friday, Nov. 19 at 8 p.m. preceding 20 years and the dis- money" that was beginning to be Jeanne Button and William are still available for a few more (preview Thrusday, November illusionment that followed this weeks, until Nov. 13. when period of massive liberal reform. a part of Russion life. Ivanov, Warfel, respectively. All three 18), is directed by Ron Daniels, heavily in debt to representatives "Julius Caesar" closes. For the noted English director who Bright, eager and full of idealism are resident designers at the of this new mercantile calss, is YRT. single tickets or subscription in- staged the YRT's Obie award- in his youth, Ivanov has now lost unable to disentangle his love for formation, call the YRT Box winning production of Edward his energy, suffering from a kind "Ivanov" will play in repertory Office at 436-1600. Bond's "Bingo: Scenes of Money of moral attrition which mirrors these two women from his mer- and Death" last spring. the decsy of his social order, the cenary considerations. Finally, Before returning to Yale, Dan- gentry and aristocracy. Although surrounded by insipid medioc- Mansfield schools iels recently finished a production he recognizes his spiritual mal- rities, plagued by his own emo- for the Royal Shekespeare Com- aise, he is helpless to cure it, and tional instability, and denounced pany entitled "Destiny," a study remains an enigma to himself. as a rascal and scoundrel, Ivanov of fascism in Britain today. His call for volunteers other work with the RSC includes Volunteer help is much needed reading and math. Work is a production of David Rudkin's Women's Studies plans talk in the Mansfield schools, accord- planned and carried out under a "Afore Night Come." He sub- ing to Holley Alexander, com- teacher's direction. Library and sequently directed the West End munity education coordinator. clerical volunteers also arc need- production of that play. He has on timing of motherhood "Twenty-eight teachers have ed at sonic schools. Previous training or experience also directed at the National Harriet B. Presser, a researcher City who had their first babies identified 52 different areas in Theatre, the National Youth are not necessary to ameka on women's role in fertility and between 1970 and 1972. She which volunteers are needed Theatre, as well as several pro- significant contribution." Alex- population policy, will discuss followed up a representative now" she said. "Because one ductions for the Fringe, London's ander said. "The volunteer's "The Timing of Motherhood: sample of these women for three need ofter requires two or three equivalent of off-Broadway, and volunteers, we probably need as interest and the extra individual Does it Matter?" today at the and a half years afterwards. attention arc the most importatn BBC television. University. many as 75 people. Right now, "Ivanov," written and produced Currently a professor of be- factors for success." havioral and social sciences at the with about 15 volunteers we are in the late 1880's, was Chekhov's Her talk, which will gegin at 4 Ideally, she said, most volun- University of Maryland. Presser only a fifth of the way to that first produced full-length play p.m. in Room 200 of the Graduate teers will work at least an hour or previously taught at Columbia goal." and remains one of his strangely Center, is sponsored by the two from one to three days per University for seven years. Needs range from playing the neglected masterpieces. The play Women's Sutdies Program, the week. Most volunteers make a She worked for the Population piano for kindergarteners to sing, is entertaining and moving, funny Department of Human Develop- commitment for a semester or a Council on international aspects introducing ethnic cooking to and sad, ironical and compas- ment and Family Relations, and school year, but some needs are a of population and did a study of middle schoolers, and helping sionate--a subtle combination that the Department of Sociology. It is shorter time. sterilization in the United States a blind student participate in characterizes all Chekhov's works open free to the public. Volunteers choose assignments, for the U.S. ..Commission on physical education through a --and represents a transition bet- Presser will present results of times, and placements at South- Population and the American variety of duties helping Indivi- ween his earlier farces and later her survey of women in New York east, Northwest. Vinton. or the Future. dual children in such areas as Middle School. Training for classroom volunteers in reading and math is provided by the Community Fducation program; all volunteers receive on-the-job JORGENSEN /1UDITORIUM training for their assignments. A list of all needs for volunteers is available at the Rccrcation- Community Education office. 557 Storrs Rd.. Mansfield Center. Distinguished Recital Series The staff will be glad to talk with anyone interested in the program. Training for volunteers who will 3 MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL EVENTS work in math and reading will be given by school staff Wednesday and Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. in Room 201 at the Middle School. Tuesday. FEBRUARY 1 Monday, FEBRUARY 21 Monday, APRIL 4 205 Spring Hill Rd. ! [COLLEGE Rudolf Isaac Mstislav NOW THRU TUESDAY Serkin Stern Rostropovichl 2:00 6:30 4:00 "He is by unanimous con- "...the complete vio- sent the outstanding linist- one who has "The super-human living exponent of the tone, technique, mu- quality of Rostropo- German Romantic piano sicianship. ..Stern vich's music making tradition." has them all." is infectious." -NEW YORK TIMES -HAROLD SCH0NBERG -WASHINGTON STAR NEW YORK TIMES

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U Box Number._ #2"Matter Of Time"PG Home Phone Campus Phone Jorgensen Auditorium, Box U 104 rW-'The Ritz" R The University of Connecticut tickets at $ total $ EVERY TUESDAY EVE Storrs, Connecticut 06268~ DINNER-MOVIE SPECIAL 3.95 COMPLETE DINNER AND MOVIE FOR INFO CALL 647-9995 Page 10 Connecticut Daily Campos Monday, November 1, 1976 Libertarians: Airing their message Editor's note: The Libertar- "It needs pressure. That's what ian Pary may be on the ballot we can do." in as many as 32 states, which Rethinking national political system "Marx said the state would likely will make it the most some day wither away under the conspicuous of the minor part- Communists," he said. "But ies in this presidential year. MacBride said it is difficult to But in 1968. 10 years after merriest anarchist," is a 48-year- that's absurd. The only way the Here is a look at the party and classify his party, which has a starting the service, he split old economics professor at the state will wither away is if the three of its leaders. mailing list of 20,000 activer bitterly with his mentor and Polytechnic Institute of New York politicians start withering it." and author of at least a dozen supporters, as left-wing or right- moved to Califronia. He es- Rothbard said gold, and not books on economics and Am- wing. tablished a private practice and paper money, should be used as By RICHARD NEWCOMBE erican history. He is short, "We've risen above those old set up "The Biocentric Institute," currency in America to guard WASHINGTON (UPI) — Roger labels." he said. "We're against where he teaches psychiatrists portly, bespectacled and nearly MacBride, Dr. Nathaniel Branden and psychologists his techniques always wears a bow tie. against inflation. He also favors government and for freedom. cutting all taxes and financing and Dr. Murray Rothbard might The liberals and conservatives of therapy. He is our intellectual fountain- be called political eccentrics — Many Libertarians say they head," said the Libertarian Party government activites through will have to study our platform private, competing businesses. one of their shared beliefs is that and determine whether our corn- were influenced by the unyielding member who introduced the best thing that could happen On civil liberty issues, Roth- to government is for it to bard supports legalizing gam- disappear. 66 bling, drugs, prostitution, homo- The three, among the founders one of their shared beliefs is that the best thing sexuality and any other activity of the Libertarian Party, are that involves consenting adults. deadly serious and have helped On foreign policy, he said the get their fledgling party on the federal government should not presidential ballot in 32 states. that could happen to government send troops or advisers to foreign Libertarians see MacBride's wars or international conflicts bid for the White House as a under any circumstances. wistful longshot, but hope they "In the name of fighting com- will stir apathetic voters into is for it to disappear." munism, the government keeps rethinking the nation's system of growing," he said. politics. "We will transform America," Rothbard said as the convention At its recent convention here, mitment to freedom is what tough talk in favor of capitalism in Rothbard before the convention's delegates, mostly young men and not a single professional politician they're looking for." Rand's novels, but the delegates final address. was to be seen. There were no at the convention stood and Rothbard distrusts all govern- women, burst into deafening straw hats, no horns, no balloons, Dr. Nathaniel Branden cheered when Branden said he ment. applause. "We have the party of no confetti, no stemwinding has changed completely from his "The state is not going to youth and hope. We are the party speeches, no Dixieland bands. Dr. Nathaniel Branden, a Los dogmatic days. disappear out of shame," he said. of the future." It was a meeting of mostly Angeles psychologist whose four "If you begin a political discus- young intellectuals who believe books have sold a total of 1 million sion on the premise that 'I am the the best solution is no solution — copies, says there tends to be a bearer of the holy truth, and I stay out of foreign entangle- relationship between a person's give you one chance,' you one ments; let individuals decide such psychology and his political chance,' you won't persuade things as sex and drugs; get the preferences. many people," he said. SUNDOWH m government out, period. "People who are generally Branden says he is amazed by Their political outlook is an dependent or authoritarian tend the growth of the Libertarian TONITE: extension of Thomas Jefferson's to look for a government ap- Party in four years. theory that the government is appropriate to those needs," he "I feel like this is something On the Road Again best that governs least. And, said. "That most lokely would be close to a historical miracle." rather than letting the state a government that is either wither away inevitably as pre- nurturing or authoritarian." Dr. Murray Rothbard TUES: dicted by Karl Marx, they think it Branden. 46. tall, good-looking Howard Jefferys ought to be pushed along a bit — and fashionably long-haired, Dr. Murray Rothbard, who has been described as "the world's to oblivion. comes across as quick-witted Here is a look at the three: intelligent. He argues in his best-selling Roger MacBride, the 1976 book. "The Psychology of Self- Beer presidential candidate, was de- Esteem," that an individual's scribed at the convention as a self-appraisal is the determining "true Renaissance man" because factor in his happiness or misery. of his accomplishments as an The book, published in 1969, is in attorney, author, cattle rancher, its eighth edition in paperback. former state legislator and co- Branden began his career by creator of the television series starting a national lecture service "Little House on the Prairie." on the individualist philosophy of MacBride. of Chrlottesville. novelist Ayn Rand. The lectures Va.. was nominated at the party's were offered through tapes in 1975 convention and has visited more than 80 cities. 400 cities in 40 states and traveled ptK=3ttC atw me more than 100.000 miles. ii MacBride. 47, a graduate of Harvard Law School and a Ful- 1* bright Scholar in constitutional GENNY CREAM law. said his candidacy is more to 0i5c educate than to win. Your Campus It's something different "We arc becoming a majoi aBOBBPPBPaBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBMBBBWBBBBBBBBBBBj third-party force." he said. "I Record Shop 1 really don't expect to be sitting in ' A M.M. J '¥ I T?±4.^ L? *~» .. ^„ 1m. »^» I the White House next year, but TOP 10 LPi Attend The Fitz Symposium we have been very successful in getting our message across, and Special Price $3.99 that's where you have to start. at the Brooklyn Tennis Club In 1972, the Libertarian's first 1. BOSTON presidential candidate. Dr. John 2. JIMMIE SPEERIS RFD Church St., Brooklyn, Ct. 06234 Hospers, a philosphy professor at I Ports Of The Heart Tel. 774-5937 Nov.7,1976 the University of Southern Calif- 3. EARTH WIND & FIRE ornia, received one electoral col- Spirit LEADER lege vote — cast by MacBride, a 4. BILLY COBHAM/ Virginia Republican who was an GEORGE DUKE Dr. Garland M. Fitzpatrick elector for Richard Nixon. Live On Tour In Europe MacBride. heavy set with thick 5. AZTEC TWO STEP Consultant glasses, wears conservative Two's Company clothes and looks more like the 6. STEVE MILLER Connecticut State Dept. of Education Wall Street lawyer he used to be Fly Like An Eagle than the third-party candiate 7. FLEETWOOD MAC Lecture Topics whose theme is "government is I 8. STILLS/YOUNG BAND THE CAVE MAN THEORY OF THE SEX DRIVE humbug." THE GENITAL STRATEGY IN THE VIETNAM WAR He served as a state legislator Long May You Run in Vermont, ran unsuccessfully as 9. PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE THE UPWARD NEUROTIC DRIVE a conservative candidate for gov- Dance TENNIS STRATEGY LEVINE FITZPATRICK STYLE ernor in the mid-1960's, and has 10. HARRY CHAPIN Program 9:00-12:00 Tennis Singles 5:00-6:00 Libation 12:00-1:00 Lunch written three books, including "A On The Road To 6:00-8:00 Cookout 1:00-5:00 Tennis Doubles 8:00-9:00 Lecture New Dawn for America," which I Kingdom Come Topics by Fitz summarizes the Libertarian philo- 9:00-12:00 Individual rapping on the southern cowboys and their i sophy. control of the hidden United States government. "The liberals want to spend more ! money on welfare programs while Send application with check to 'Big Time' Pasky, owner, operator and the conservatives want to spend Behind the Post Office 10:00.8:00 Mon. thru Fri. COST: *5 organizer of this event at his four clay court complex. Pasky is also more money on the military and known as the Pollution Fighter and his fifth court will be an ecology 10:00-5:30 Sat ! police. The Libertarians want to tennis indoor court. John Paskavitch U-Conn MS. 54 spend less taxpayer money all the Storrs - 429-0443 per person way around." . j iI tBMMJBBJBBIBMBBWBMMBBj BMPMMBBBBBJM Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campus Page 11 Other Georgian faces tougher battle

Editor's note: Atlanta UPI Carter campaigns. Maddox U.S.A." lettered in red. white U.S.Supreme Court doctrines on motorcades. Whole expressways reporter William Cotterell has barnstorms. and blue. public accomodation backed him are closed for him. traveled with Jimmy Carter Carter started saying "I don't Carter has remodeled the front up. Maddox was accompanied much of the past three months intend to lose," when everyone of one of this two chartered An occasional interviewer asks westward by a volunteer aide who Last week, he was assigned to expected him to wash out in the Boeing 727 jets as an airborne Maddox if he belongs to the Ku slipped a gun out of his luggage sample the stump style of early primaries. He still says it. living room. Maddox flies first Klux Klan. and tucked it in the back of his another former Georgia gover- Maddox concedes he is not on class, but takes cut-rate economy "No." he replies. "Do you?" belt when he landed, explaining nor — Lester Maddox — as the ballot in states with enough flights in the wee hours. Carter has an appointments sheepishly. "They said I could the American Independent electoral votes to top the required When Carter attacks President office in Atlanta that lines up bring it on board, but I didn't nomine made a western swing. 270 — even if he carried all those Ford, he cites figures provided by interviews, turning down most. want to." states — but doggedly insits that the Democratic Party, focusing on In news conferences, the Two southern California AIP "you never know what can jobs and inflation. Maddox relies questioning can be heated, but volunteers brought a station wag- By WILLIAM COTTERELL happen." largely on defense arguments always polite and Carter is always on to meet him. and two Los United Press International When Carter leaves his tree- that failed to win Ronald Reagan taken seriously. Angeles policemen followed him Two former Georgia governors listlessly through his day. The left home before dawn recently, two-vehicle motorcade was not running for president — each distinguishable from other free- carrying his own bags, sitting up way traffic. front in the first class sections of "Carter campaigns. Maddox missed his 8:15 a.m. planes and hurrying home for flight to San Francisco the next church on Sunday. day. complaining two aides had There ended the similarity overslept and scolding them: "I'd between Jimmy Carter and Lester dock y'all if you were on the Maddow. payroll." By the time time 7 a.m. Maddox barnstorms." Democratic governors. U.S. baggage call was held for about senators, congressmen and cand- 150 reporters and Carter staff dates for such jobs flock to members, and the press "pool" Carter's side, grinning, at break- of five journalists set forth to fasts and rallies carefully arrang- record Carter's uneventful trip shaded home in south Georgia, he the GOP nomination, claiming Maddox schedules a news con- ed weeks in advance. from Plains to Albany for a flight is whisked to the airport in a Ford has let America slip to "No. ference at each stop, hanging No labor leaders of local offi- to New York, Maddox already caramel-colored Chrysler with 2" in military might. around afterward for anyone cials turned out to bask in the was somewhere over the Missis- Secret Service agents by his side. Carter is mobbed everywhere whose newspaper or station reflected glory of the American sippi on his way to California with Maddox drives himself in a he goes, his steps dogged by a wants an "exclusive" interview. Independent Party nominee, al- one aide and one reporter. white van, with "Lester Maddox planeload of reporters from all In Los Angeles, he added an though one young candidate for over the world. Crowds are unscheduled half-hour stop at a the California1 assembly asked to arranged by professional advance local television station that was • have his picture taken with Mad- men and local party workers at curious and needed a talk-show dox "for my campaign literature." each stop, sometimes waiting in guest. ' Carter always is introduced as light rain or chilling winds for a Deviations from Carter's set "the next President of the United glimpse of a man they had never schedule are virtually impossible. States." Maddox often introduces heard of six months ago. While Carter still draws some himself, usually with an explana- Maddox, known nationally antiaboration pickets, no one tion of what he is doing and an since the afternoon he chased protests Maddox' appearances assrancc that "I've never been blacks from his fried chicken any more. He recalled, almost more serious about anything in restaurant with a gun more than wistfully how. when he was my life." 10 years ago, goes where the Georgia's segregationist gov- Not so surprisingly, one of the- crowds are — the Farmer's ernor, some Black Panthers major differences between the Market in Los Angeles, a lunch filled the front two rows of a Los Carter and Maddox campaign hour rush on San fancisco's Post Angeles theater where ultimately styles is illustrated in their at- Street, an aircraft plant shift walked out of an antagonistic tudes toward each other. change in El Segundo. interview. At every stop. Maddox is asked Even so, he is often not Maddox sighed, remember- about the suddenly famous Carter recognized by the puzzled pe- ing how one of his aides had and responds by calling him destrians who accept an AIP offered to shoot "the first two or "radical." "Communist." " Soc- leaflet and "pumphandle hand- three" if the black militants tried ialist." "a liar." and. because of shake" from the 61-year-old man. to harm him. Carter's controversial Playboy in- At news conferences, Maddox Carter is surrounded by armed terview, accusing him of "pro- said, the question he most often is guards .on the ground and in moting pornography." asked is about the "pickhandle flight. Secret Service agents halt Carter is not often asked, but incident" at his old restaurant. reporters who wander too far up when he is. he usually smiles and He contends he was defending in the aisle toward the can- says he decided long ago not to private property rights and that didate's suite, and helicopters borther responding to Lester — at the time — the law and clatter overhead when he rides in Maddox. HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIHM£ AUied Health dance to The Return of Students (§n$x I SLAC Putnam Refectory Post Office Plaza "MILTON fGeneral Meeting! Christina* Shopper*. ■ Sat. night, = X Sneak Preview THE MAGICIAN" Mon. Nov. 1 Nov. 6 Super Speeials Large Tropical Plants Tonight 10 PM 17:00 S.U.B. 101 a semi formal affair i .V 4." 5." v. 6) 5'Ate 3

For Sale- Getzen slide trombone, good 1971 Rlppledorff with light green NEED 3 CREDITS? Interested in 1974 DKW 125 Enduro 500 original Wanted someone to share Carriage condition. $75. Call 429-0938 interior. Collectors item, left Mill- doing volunteer work on a topic of miles, extras $525. 1967 Ford Galaxie House apartment immediately. Rea- shank slighitly broken but repairable Interest to you? Come to ConnPirg's 500 $925 or best offer. 455-9976. sonable rent. Phone 429-8707 Before next general meeting Wed.Nov. 3 PHOTO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE: $750 or best offer or will trade for 9:15 a.m. or after 5 p.m. keep trying. Hassleblad camera, 500c with 80mm recent model knishplatt 64 mm or 6:30 p.m. Rm. 119 JHA. Interested in recycling paper? The and 2 backs. $750 Black Leica M-5 larger. Send details to Box 188 Storrs. Daily Campus can help with old For Rent- Large Room in colonial cape body $500, lenses extra. Crown Serious offers only. FOR SALE: Bang and 6'lufson SP 12 newspapers. Contact David Thorgal- male- off 44-a Coventry. 7 miles Graphic 4X5, polaroid etc. $325 Zeiss Cartridge with new stylus. Retail sen at 429-9384. UConn. Privileges. $85/month. 742- price $85 but I'll sell it for $45. Call 7155 before noon. Contax Ilia, case and 50mm Fl. i For Sale- 1971 AMC Hornet. Good ROOMMATE needed for Spring: 3 $125. All guaranteed and mint. Buzi condition. 46,000 miles. Owner must David at 429-9659. bedrooms, shower, w/w carpeting, 8 429-9508 or Box 188 Storrs. sell. Call Holly 429-9508. mi. from UConn. 456-2550. Roommate needed immediately- 6 miles from campus- $97.59 including Motorcycles for Sale: 1968 Ducati responsible Graduate aiuuont couplt URGENT: 2 female roommates want- heat and hot water. Call Debbi COLLOQUIUM: Monday, November 250cc or Honda 350cc road bikes-both ing to sublet 2 bedroom apt. by Jan. 1, 423-2681 seeking place to rent or sublet Jan. 1. 1, 4:00 pm. Grad Center, Room 200. in excellent condition. $400 for each. 2nd semester. 429-4483. Call Matthew or Suzanne. 742-8404 Harriet B. Presser, Professor of 1971 Honda 750 cafe-racer, fastest Behavioral and Social Science, Uni- Found a young, mostly grey angora For Rent: 2 bedroom apt. 3 miles from bike in the area. $1750 BUZZ versity of Maryland on "The Timing cat w/wounded tail in Storrs. campus available on Jan. 1st. Call Kathy-John's in Storrs is now taking 429-9508. Box 188 Storrs. 487-0795. applications for part time evening of Motherhood: Does it Matter?" 429-1500. co-sponsored by Women's Studies, waitering work. Please apply in SOCCER FANS! Bus to Hartwick to HDFR, Sociology. Coffee at 3:30 For Sale: Handmade Spanish Classi- person. Save money on your Nexi New Car. see UConn become #1 team in nation. cal Alhambra Guitar, asking $100, call Only $12, includes round trip and Let a New Car Broker make your Linda 429-6441 South Fifth floor, after For Rent: 4-room trailer, wooded Lost - pair of gold rimmed glasses. purchase for you. Free details. food. Don't get shutout, call early. 429-3872 or 429-8116. 7 p.m. private lot. half mile from campus. No Between Knollwooa and Arjona. Ple- Michael R. Larkins. New Auto children or pets. $150/mo. Includes ase call 429-7574 - voluntary Brokerage. 429-6622. Sublet spring semester: 1 bedroom Bulk Honey .85/lb,' Safflower OH heat. 429-0808 (days) 429-1444 apt. available Jan 1 - May, $170/mo. reward. 1.68/qt, Tamari 2.09/qt, Rolled Oats (nights) includes heat, hot water. Call Mansfield - Furnished 5-room house, 429-3737 after 8pm. 25/lb, Raisins 99/lb. Tahini 1 12/lb. ART NOW GALLERY: IMAGE AND Bunks Built- Simple, sturdy, and suitable for 3 adults. $225 plus Deaf Smith Peanut Butter 1.00/lb, IDEA Ceremonial opening; Thurs utilities. Lease, security deposit re- dependable $18.00 Call 429-7085 LOST: Badly needed tools and tool Baboburger 1.11 /pkg, CHAM PL IONS Nov. 4, 8 p.m Mon-Sat 8-4. Next to quired. No pets. Call 423-2770 after box In College Theatre parking lot on GENERAL STORE EAGLEVILLE Rt. after 5 p.m Post Office 8:30pm. Frl. afternoon. Jim 456-1166. Reward. 275. Looking for a Stereo? Name brand stereo components available at Dis- count Prices Call Nirvana Sound Today 429-1570. (Hmmrrtirtrt Battg (Hatttpus OVERSEAS JOBS Summer/year-ro- und Europe. S America, Australia, Asia, etc All fields, $500-1200 mon- thly Expenses paid, sightseeing Free information Write: Inter na- tional Job Center. Dept Ct, Box 4490. ELECTION RETURNS Berkely. CA 94704

Married couple and pets urgently need apartment or house near UConn References Call 1-546-6344. Keep trying. Calls for election returns will be taken at FOR SALE: B&O SP 12 cartridge with new stylus Retail price $85.00. Asking $45.00. Call David 429-9859 $

FOR RENT JAN. 1-4'/? room apartment, 2 bedroom, balcony, 429-9386 quiet, beautiful seeting, pets o.k. 487-0517 after 6pm

For Sale: Volkswagon Beetle 1973 26,000 miles, like new. $2000.00 Mike ONLY 249-2633

Car For Sale: 1972 Vega, good condition recently tuned 49,000 Our other lines will not be taking calls for results miles, automatic. $750 or best offer. Call 486-4408 CHINESE TAKE OUT FREE Delivery to U.Conn Campus 10:00 PM-11:00 PM (Minimum order-$5.°°)

Call 429-6337 by 9:00 PM for evening delivery

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* • • t »#*TJ • * * ••**•«»•» | * • • i.f.l.1 ».| > • t i . (,i.V»AfJ ' A •- • WU4VI V.U Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campus Page 13 ACTIVITIES Lecture in French by Leon-Francois Accounting Society Meeting. Wed. "Escape to the Big City" Live, work, ALCOHOL PROBLEM IN YOUR Come and discuss key political issues Hoffman: "Le Negre Romantique" Nov. 3, 3 p.m. SU 208. Guest learn in Hartford through UConn's FAMILY? Your University Health with Dr. D'Antonio on Mon. night at 7 Nov. 3 at 4 p.m. in JHA 143. Speakers from Arthur Young and Co. Urban Semester Program. Check it Service offers counseling. Info, call Manchester Lounge. Sponsored by out. Rm. 303/306 Wood Hall or call 486-4705. Sociology Union. 486-3631 8:30-4:30 ARTISTS! Exhibit your art in Nov. In ATTENTION MORTAR BOARD the SU for BOG. Call Judith Carr MEMBERS. Important meeting Wed Are your academic interests out of the 1977-1978 RA positions- To obtain an ConnPirg's Oct. 27 meeting has been 486-3004. Nov. 3, 6:30 p.m. Check directory ordinary? Do you have special career application, students must attend one cancelled and rescheduled for Nov. 3. Student Union Lobby for room. Brine fioals? Design your own major! of two scheduled meetings Tues. Nov. CANTON OF FENBRYCG meets to- dues! nquire at the CEI, Room 306 Wood 2 or Wed Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. in Life Undergraduate Economics Club night Mon. Nov. 1 7 p.m. SU 104 All Hall or call 486-3631 Sciences 154. Applications are due by meeting. Ms. Slye to speak on construction and content of resume Welcome. ART NOW GALLERY LANDSCAPE: I 4:3'' on Thurs.Dec. 23. IMAGE AND IDEA Ceremonial open- Allied Health Students SLAC general writing. HRM 319, 7:00 Wed.. Nov. 3 meeting Monday Nov. 1, 7:00 SUB I0I. Woman & Woman - exploring ing: Thurs. Nov. 4, 8 p.m. Mon-Sat WOMEN'S ICE HOCKEY. Practice Speaker on job opportunities and relationships every Tues. 8 pm 12:00-4:00 next to post office. starts today. On the ice 2:15. Wear SLAC elections. Women's Center. For info call PERSONALS sweatpants if possible. Sticks will be 486-4738. at rink. THE SKI TEAM has begun fall Woody's Giant Grinders Restaurant: training. All interested men and UCONN Greek Club will meet Mon. Nov. 1 at 8:00 pm in SU 218. All Marketing Club meeting Nov. 3, 7:15 Delivery Service on campus 456- women report behind Hawley Armory Resume Writing - a session on welcome counseling. Info, call SU Ballroom. All members must 2786 preparing resumes by the Placement Mon-hurs. 3:30 p.m. or call Sandro 487-4705. attend. Office. Wed. Nov. 3, 7-8, room 312 429-1885. Save 10 per cent, Woody says "Don't Commons. ARMENIAN CLUB meeting Monday, play games with your grinder" Call in Introductory Lecture on the TM Goegraphy Club presents Robert Nov. 1st, 7:30 International House, your grinder order, pick it up and save program of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Weiner of Briar Cliff College Amateur Radio Club meeting Mon "Concepts and careers in Carto- wine and cheese All welcome. 10 per cent on each grinder. No need Nov. 1, 7 p.m., Putnam Refectory, Wed. Nov. 3. SU 217. 7:30 p.m. graphy" Nov. 3. 4pm Beech Hall 443 to wait until you've ordered 456-2786. room 114. New members welcome. There will be a meeting of the Italian Discussion on Birth Control and UCONN FLYING CLUB meeting Club on Monday November 1, at 7:00 Jean or Linda in 729. when is the next Meeting of undergrad majors in Venereal Disease. Wed. Nov. 10 at Tuesday, November 2, 7:30pm fashion show? The germ and I will be Commons 312. Films. Everyone pm in the International House. Speech/Pathology and Audiology. 7:30 p.m. Su rm. 103 Family Practi- watching We really enioyed the last Welcome. s Wed. Nov. 3 4 p.m. Rm. 55HRM. tioner Ken Dardick. The Christian Science College Organi- show CERCLE FRANCAIS Wine and Gay Women's Collective every Tues, Attention: Dr. Daniel's counselees. zation meets every Thurs. evening at Cheese party Alsop A Lounge- night 6:30-8. Women's Center to Sign up for spring pre-registration 7pm Free counseling from 5pm. Rm. HERMY! Who was the PSYCHIC Tuesday Nov. 2, 1976 7:30pm. discuss business and politics. NOW!! 209 SU. KILLER' SERVICE • PERFORMANCE • LEADERSHIP

Audrey Beck with constituents In WUllmantic. SENATOR AUDREY BECK'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS 1975 - 76: Convinced Governor to go ahead with UConn Library Construction Stood up for state employees when their working conditions were threatened.

Fought Regents proposal in Senate Enlarged UConn Board of Trustees and added students to Board PROGRAM 1977-78 Tuition waiver for graduate assistants Restoration of partial increment withheld from state employees in 1975 budgetorv crisis

Cost of living adjustment for state employees

University of Connecticut budget to insure UConn margin of excellence

Any reorganization of higher education would have to respect the principles contained in 1976 state Democratic platform: academic excellence; minimum of stale government interference with the educational process VOTE FOR AUDREY BECK YOUR STATE SENATOR SHE DESERVES YOUR SUPPORT VOTE DEMOCRATIC - TOP LINE NOVEMBER 2

Paid for by Audrey Beck campaign Committee. Eleanor Wolk, treasurer. Page 14 Connecticut Dally Campus Monday, November 1, 1976 ■More Sports- DR. RENNE RICHARDS, the transsexual who lost a legal battle Unbeaten streak reaches 15 in a bid to compete in the women't draw of the U.S. Open tennis championships, was sued in court Friday for alimony....California shortstop MIKE MILEY has signed a two-year contract with the team, and is ineligible for free agent status.... as Huskies trounce BU 4-0 NBC-TV's LEE LEONARD said Friday he thinks Baltimore (Continued from page 16] aided the Huskies bid for first effectiveness of the Huskies de- Orioles slugger REGGIE JACKSON has a "bright future" in challenged the Terrier goal 20 place in that division. fense. Defensive standouts for broadcasting Top-ranked MICHIGAN toppled MINNESOTA times and taken nine corner kicks. The score reflects the effective- the Huskies were Magno, Deck- 45-0 Saturday afternoon....Alos Saturday, unbeaten RUTGERS UConn's domination continued ness of the UConn offense, des- man, Jeff Parent, Tony Carvahlo, ran its major college leading winning streak to IS in a row with a into the second half. pite the absence of injured Bob Ed Murphy, and co-captain Paul 24-7 thrashing of MASSACHUSETTS The Huskies leading scorer, Derrico, but camoflages the equal Hunter. Tom Nevers increased his total Pitt running back TONY DORSETT. major college's leading score by one with 29:36 remaining rusher, will ride the lead elephant in a circus parade in the Steel in the second half. Nevers picked City this week....YALE and BROWN are currently tied for the Ivy up an Evans pass and sent a Harriers finish second League lead with 4-1 records bullet into the right corner of the Former Yankee infielder BOBBY RICHARDSON will find out Terriers goal. The goal also tomorrow if his bid for Congress is successful. Richardson, who is marked Roumelotis' last minutes 40. is running for the Fifth District seat in South Carolina in front of the nets as Mark in Yan Con tourney 4 Wasserman replaced the ailing NEW YORK JETS rookie quarterback RICHARD TODD started BU netminder. By RICH DEPRETA for the first time Sunday in the JETS 18-14-win over the This strategy proved deadly to the Tensions, which had been high The 1976 last three members of UConn's BUFFALO BULLS For the first time in many years, CBS-TV throughout the physical contest, Championships at Franklin Park top five runners. dropped the NEW YORK GIANTS* football game from its erupted midway through the sec- in Boston, Massachusetts Satur- schedule Sunday afternoon The Huskies' Bob Sloss, wno ond half when Murray and BU's day were a repeat of an old and finished ninth in 24:53, spent Heavyweight boxer 1)1 IANE BOBICK increased his unbeaten Vincente Carbona exchanged familiar script as once again the most of the afternoon chasing a streak to 38 fights Saturday night with a 10-round decision over punches. The confrontation University of Massachusetts be- group of four Massachusetts run- FRED HOUPE in Las Vegas Heisman trophy candidate RICKY brought the men on the field to came champions, topping its ma- ners while John Scott and Mark BELL failed to top 100 yards rushing for the second consecutive the scene where Murray received jor challenger, the UConn cross Conley, who wound up 14th and game Saturday, but USC toppled California for the Trojans' sixth the brunt of the blows. Minutes country squad, 22-44. 15th at 25:07 and 25:09 respec- straight win later another BU player, Tony UMass took seven of the top ten tively, were thwarted in their Clair, was ejected after tripping places in running away with the effort by a trio of harriers from COLORADO stopped OKLAHOMA Saturday 42-31 HOLY Tsantires. In total, 29 fouls were title with the Huskies sweeping the , which CROSS defeated Rhode Island Saturday for the Crusaders' 400th called against the Terriers, 24 the remaining three. finished third in the champion- overall football victory Cincinnati Reds catcher JOHNNY against the Huskies. UConn's Bruce Clark, who was ship with 75 points. BENCH has been awarded a 1977 Thunderbird by SPORT The Huskies lead gave Morrone defending Yankee Conference in- Also running good races for magazine in recognition of his performance in the Reds' recent the opportunity to clear his bench dividual champion, could not UConn were Fred Zimmerman, four game sweep of the New York Yankees in the World Series. with roughly 15 minutes left in repeat last year's feat as he was who took 18th position in 25:14, Bench batted .533, hit two home runs, and drove in six runs in the the game. Jon Krause, jjm overtaken in the final 400 yards and Jeff Geyer, who was 22nd classic Vassar, and Keith Murray all by UMass' Mike Quinn. Quinn with a time of 25:45. Yankee manager BILLY MARTIN said this weekend that if the participated in Saturday's victory. won the event with a time of 23:59 After the competition UConn "front office leaves me along, I'm a 20-year manager. If they Morrone also substituted sopho- over the mile course with Clark cross country coach Bob Kennedy interfere. I'm a one-year manager" more Tom Krug into the nets for six seconds back. commented "We ran about as Bob Ross the starter registered The Huskies' impressive fresh- fine a race as we could but UMass In NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE action Sunday, OAKLAND his eleventh shutout of the man Pat O'Neil wound up fourth is just a powerhouse squad." bumped DENVER 19-6; CINCINNATI rocked CLEVELAND 21-6; season. in the competition finishing at Unfortunately for the Huskies, DETROIT tripped GREEN BAY 27-6; KANSAS CITY edged Ross and Krug were called on to 24:34. O'Neil was edged out for things do not get any easier as in TAMPA BAY 28-l9r MIAMI stopped NEW ENGLAND 10-3; make only 4 saves to Roumelotis third place by Minuteman John next Monday's New England PHILADELPHIA vawned over the NEW YORK GIANTS 10-0; LOS and Wasserman's 11 saves. The McGrail. championships UConn will face, ANGELES destroyed SEATTLE 45-6; DALLAS flipped WASH- Huskies took 32 shots on goal to A familiar strategy of cross in addition to UMass, Providence INGTON 20-7: The NEW YORK JETS stunned BUFFALO 19-14; the Terriers 8 and 12 corner kicks country coaches is to have their College and Dartmouth College, ATLANTA tipped NEW ORLEANS 23-20; PITTSBURGH clobber- to BU's four. squads run together in packs both of which have defeated the ed SAN DIEGO 23 0; CHICAGO surprised MINNESOTA 14-13; Saturday's victory against BU, a which makes it extremely difficult Huskies during the regular and ST. LOUIS outlasted SAN FRANCISCO 23-20 in overtime Yankee Conference opponent, for opposing runners to pass. season. music BANKAMERICARD has more for less Uffcwnt mil A @ of A Sale All $6.98 Capitol* List LP's Capitol. Angel, Harvest, and Apple now $3.97 including these: SttAVED FIStt

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HELEN REDDY S f GREATEST HITS NEW STORE HOURS 10:00-9:30 Mon.-Thurs. THE 10:00-10:00 Fri. 10:-9:30 Sat. now selling 12 noon-5:00 Sun Shaboo tickets Monday, November 1, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campos Page 15 Miami defense returns tops UConn 30-6 as Dolphins top Pats [Continued from Page 16] the ball in the air, moved in for STATISTICS MIAMI (UPI)— Bob Griese gan hit Marlin Briscoe for what Connecticut Dataware found Jim Mandich open in the appeared to be a 70-yard touch- fenders. the score. First Downt 10 16 Palmer's try for the two- Rushes-Yards 67-238 end zone for a 16-yard score and a down pass with 71 seconds to go "We didn't plan that play," Passing Yardage 14 point conversion to Bob Far- Return Yardage 29 rejuvenated Miami Dolphins de- in the game but the play was Delaware head coach Tubby Passes 8-25-3 fense stopped the explosive New called back because of an offsides Raymond said after the game. botko was incomplete. Punts 6-MO 8-34J 9 The summary: Fum oies-Lost 3-3 2-1 England Patriot attack Sunday for panalty. "It was a bad snap." Penalties-Yards 5-41 9-69 Connecticut 0 0* 0—4 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS a 10-3 victory. Miami had taken a 10-0 lead in "Sabol did a hell of a job Delaware 14 14 2 0-30 RUSHING Conn — Giaauinto 10-17 The Dolphins sprung the mild getting the first down," he Del — JeH Komlo 4 run (Allen Kick) EP'flTC '»" 't tn 3-14. pel - Carroll the second quarter on Mandich's Dei —Boo Saooi 24 run (Allen Kick) 19-98. Sabol 9-49, Sie.-ndalel-tt. Komlo upset by building a 10-3 halftime joked. Del —Oaig Carroll 2 run (Allen Kick) TD and a 46-yard Garo Yepre- Del --Jim Castellino 1 run (Allen Kick) RECEIVING Com - Belardlne'h lead and then handing the game mian field goal. New England Those two scores and the two Dei— Sa'eiv. Pa'mer lackied m end 2-40 Ecclesron 1-39. F«.-botko 3-36. Del over to an aggressive defense, others in the second quarter, rone -BdChkoskvl-14 scored with three seconds to go Conn — Bernie Palmer 2 run ipass PASSING Conn - Palmer 8-24-3, 130. which apparently got an emotion- including one engineered by failed) D.ppei 0 1-0,0. Del. - Komlo 1-3-i. 14. before intermission when John Attendance 9 956 Castellino 0-5-0.0 al lift when Miami rehired defen- Smith hit a 43-yard field goal. reserve quarterback Jim Cas- sive coach Bill Arnsparger after tellino who replaced the in- he was fired as head coach of the The Griese-to-Mandich TD jured Komlo, drove UConn New York Giants last week. The came at the end of a 73-yard drive deeply into a hole which it George Allen s son Dolphin defense, led by lineback- that started near the end of the never could recover from. ers Bob Matheson and Steve first quarter and ended 5 and one "They made us play catch-up Towle, had been rated statis- half minutes into the second football and you know how won 'tplay in NFL tically among the worst in the quarter. hard that is," UConn head By RICH DePRETA NFL going into the game. Malone started if off by thrash- coach said later While for the most part, it was the giants on the University of But the Patriots' high-scoring ing 16 yards around the right end in the post-game locker room. Delaware football team that sent UConn's less than stellar squad offense was forced to punt fre- to the Miami 43. During the Those two scores and the two reeling to its seventh loss, the smallest man on the Blue Hen team, quently and was held without a well-balanced march, Griese hit others in the second quarter, placekicker Greg Allen, was responsible for four of Delaware's 30 first down in the first minutes of 5-of-6 passes. including one engineered by points. This however, is not Allen's greatest claim to fame. The fact the third quarter. The next time the Dolphins got reserve quarterback Jim Cas- he is son of Washington Redskin football coach George Allen makes The Dolphin offense was led by the ball, they drove to the tellino who replaced the in- him slightly mre interesting than the next placekicker. Griese and Benny Malone, who Patriots' 37 and Yepremian kick- jured Komlo, drove UConn You might wonder why Allen, who looks like a locker room carried 21 times for 120 yards. ed his 47-yard field goal with 1:46 deeply into a hole which it attendant when standing next to most of his Delaware teammates, Patriot quarterback Steve Gro- to go in the half. never could recover from. would be at the instead of a truly big football As Castellino had some power like UCLA or Michigan. trouble moving the Blue Hens Allen described his decision this way. "I just wanted to go to a Southern's Kormann in the second half, or else had school close to home and Delaware was the best school available." orders from Raymond to take it In reality, however, it has been a less than checkered career for easy, UConn was able to cut George Allen's flesh and blood as for the past two seasons he has named top gymnast into the Delaware lead just a been on the losing end of a battle with Blue Hen field goal kicker bit in the third quarter. Hank Kline. In fact, the major reason Allen was on the field against NEW HAVEN (UPI) — first Olympic medal for a U.S. After the Blue Hens scored UConn was because Kline had missed six of his 13 extra point Olympic gymnastics medalist gymnast since 1934. on a safety (Palmer fell on an attempts this season. Peter Kormann of Southern Kormann, who with other errant snap in the Husky end When he was asked if there were any special problems he faced members of the U.S. Olympic Connecticut State College will zone), the Huskies mustered since he was George Allen's son. he replied. "It was a lot worse in gymnastics took a world tour be honored November 20 as high school, but (here's not pressure here at Delaware." following summer games, said its first serious threat of the Gymnast of the Year by the The big reason there's no pressure on Allen is that Dave Raymond, he and his Eastern champion afternoon, culminating in a United States Gymnastics two-yard scamper by Palmer son of Delaware head coach Tubby Raymond, is the team's punter Southern Connecticut team- Federation. and he receives much of the heat once reserved for Allen. mates have an eye on the for the score. "I'm very much pleased," The touchdown had been set Allen, who has no intention of playing in the National Football 1976-77 NCAA team title. said Kormann, 21, the Brain- up by a UConn recovery of a League, when asked what he and his father had in common, laughed tree, Mass., native who won "Right now our long range and said. "We both hate reporters." and with that he opened the training is for the NCAA Blue Hen fumble at the Dela- the bronze medal in the floor ware 47-yard line. From locker room door and left to join his victorious teammates for the first Championships which will be exercise event at the Montreal there, the Huskies, keeping leg of their trip back to Delaware. Games this summer — the held in March" he said. «fc***#*^#*************^ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ NOTICE ¥ ¥ ¥ GIANT 3 DAY OUTERWEAR ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ SALE ¥ ¥ ¥ Save 25%-45% off regular retail ¥ ¥ ■ ¥ on ¥ ¥ % ¥ Down Parkas and Vests ¥ ¥ ¥ Ski Jackets, Snorkel Coats t ¥ Warm-up Pants, Snowmobile Suits, ¥ ¥ and more fine fashions ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Tues. Nov. 2, Wed. Nov. 3, Thurs. Nov. 4 ¥ ¥ ¥ Student Union Rm. 103 11 AM ■ 8 PM ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Sponsored by UCONN SKI CLUB ¥ ¥ ¥ fr************^ Page 16 Connecticut Daily Campus Monday, November 1, 1976 Huskies top Terriers 'God's will' evokes defeat to remain undefeated forfrisbee team by MARLA ROM ASH sive effort didn't come until the By RICH DePRETA The University of Connecticut game was more than ten minutes The UConn Ultimate Frisbee soccer team trounced Boston old. The Terriers first corner kick I team had not lost to ten squads University 4-0 before an esti- didn't come until the final min- I made up of mortals. This led mated crowd of 2.400 in Storrs utes of the first half. By that time I them to the belief that it was Saturday. Magno, Murray, and Huckins had : time to play Ultimate Frisbee It was the teams eleventh shut- all hit BU's nets. against God. Unforunately, out, its thirteenth win in its Magno opened the scoring for I the Frisbee team, as the devil undefeated season. At times, the the Huskies with almost 20 min- did before it, found out you game was almost boring. utes left in the first half. Magno's can't beat God, as he and his The fourth ranked nationally head shot from the right side of I disciples, better known as Rob Huskies took control early, leav- the Terriers goal was deflected off I Evans and the Princeton Uni- ing the Terriers behind 3-0 at the a BU defenseman and out of the I versity Ultimate Frisbee squad end of the first half with scores by hands of Terrier goalie Anglelo defeated UConn 32-22 Friday Lou Magno, Rich Murray, and Roumelotis. afternoon on the Chemistry Peter Huckins. UConn's Tom Minutes later Murray added to Building field before a chilled Nevcrs provided the only tally of Roumelotis' woes. Murray pick- crowd of 150. the second half. ed up a header from UConn For 40 minutes of the While UConn demolished BU on co-captain Jim Evans in front of contest, the squad matched the scoreboard, the Terriers did the BU goal and sent the ball into Princeton, which came into the some destroying of its own with the Terriers nets. UConn's Len contest as the third ranked its physical style of play. Tsantires set up the play with a Ultimate Frisbee team in the •"UConn played a nice game. one touch pass to Evans. nation, score for score. Unfor- They foul European style and tunately, the match was 48 Huckins satiated goal-hungry don't get called. My team got minutes long and in those crowd chanting "We want more" eight minutes it was all Prince- A trio of Ultimate Frisbee players leap for the Frisbee as frustrated and retaliated with with 12 minutes left in the first dumb fouls that got called". BU ton. Princeton's Rob Evans known to many as God watches the action in period. Huckins collected a pass head soccer coach Ron Cervasio The Tigers, who arrived 40 the background [Staff Photo by Buzz Kanter). from Steve Miller and hit the minutes late for the game, said after the contest. right corner of the BU nets. BU's "dumb fouls" sent I jumped out to a 7-1 lead in the UConn had trouble switching of a severe leg cramp, and Bob UConn's Lance Deckman one- UConn'a Medrick Innocent off the I contest's first three minutes from offense to defense after a Olsen, who was the team's touched the ball to Miller who, field and into an ambulance late I and outscored the Huskies 7-2 misfired pass and this along leading scorer of the after- back into action after being in the second half after sustaining I in the game's final five with the fact that Princeton noon. sidelined for five games due to an I minutes. effectively bottled up UConn's As the official UConn Fris- an elbow injury, the seriousness injury, carried the ball down the of the injury will not be deter- There were two major rea- Dan Buckley and Steve Vac- bee flag rippled in the cold, left side and sent a centering pass mined until x-rays arc taken today I sons that Princeton, which caro, the two quarterbacks of biting wind, a tired God and to Huckins from the left post of said UConn head soccer coach Joe employed a perpetual motion, the team's explosive offense, his equally worn out disciples Morrone Sunday. the Terriers goal. I give and go passing attack that led to UConn's demise. climbed into their station BU was on defense for the At the half, a frustrated BU I had much of the crowd a- Starring for UConnin the wagon and drove off into the greater part of the game while the squad had only taken two shots on I mazed, jumped out to the early losing cause were Buckley. approaching dusk to perform Huskies effective one touch pass- goal and the same number of I lead from which UConn never Vaccaro, who left the contest last rites on yet another Ulti- corner kicks. The Huskies had I recovered. One was that with nine minutes left because mate Frisbee opponent. ing kept the ball in the Terriers !! defensive zone. BU's first offen- [Continued on Page 14) Firs t half explosion (Hanntttittxt Sattg dampua Serving Storrs Since 1896 topples UConn gridders By MARK GOULD through the second quarter and coasted to an —Sports— When a good football team plays poorly, it extremely easy 30-6 win over UConn. generally get excited the next week. When a good The win gives Delaware a 5-2-1 record on the football team plays poorly two weeks in a row, it season, while the loss is UConn's seventh in eight gets frenzied and violent the next time. games. UConn has not won a game at Memorial Netwomen finish fifth Three games ago, the Delaware University Stadium since the final home game of last season, football team let an almost insurmountable lead and have won only three home games in the past get away from it and wound up in a 24-24 tie with three seasons. in 46 team tourney Villanova. The following week, the Blue Hens The Blue Hens destroyed UConn's chances for dropped a 10-6 decision to Virginia Military victory in the very first series of the game, as By MARY KING courts at Amherst College. Davis Institute when an alert Keydct defenders took a talented sophomore quarterback The UConn Tennis Team com- and Ozanne played splendidly but fumble recovery 68 yards for a score. directed a touchdown drive which used up eight pleted its season last weekend by lost 6-0, 6-2 in a match which was Unfortunately for the University of Connecticut minutes on the game clock, took fifteen offensive playing the New England Wom- much closer than the score indi- football team, it was next on the schedule for the plays, and gave Delaware a lead it never lost. en's Intercollegiate Tennis cates. UConn faced Kate Purcell Blue Hens. Good football players don't enjoy After UConn failed to do anything offensively in Tournament and UConn placed and Robin Rich of Springfield in giving games away, and the wrath of Delaware was its first two series, the Blue Hens mounted another fifth. really fast and superbly played focused on UConn Saturday afternoon. drive for a score. Williams came out on top with match. Rich and Purcell are Utilizing a sticky, tough defense, the Blue Hens Following a punt, Komlo marched the team 44 Trinity second and Dartmouth considered to be the best doubles forced six Husky turnovers, including a pair of yards in eight plays before the Husky defense and Springfield tied for third. team in New England. interceptions by cornerback Bob Pietuszka, and forced a field goal attempt by Hank Kline. UConn took the fifth place well The number 2 team of King and allowed only 65 yards in total offense by UConn An attempt was all it was too as a bad snap from ahead of all the other staff Theilking played Thomasina in the first half. center forced Delaware holder Bob Sabol to take schools. Graves and Helen Lamson of By forcing UConn into numerous mistakes, plus off from the 31-yard line and scamper into the The three day tournament, held Keene State in their first match of executing the renowned Wing T offense to near endzone ahead of four or five astonished de- in Amherst, Mass. started Friday the season. UConn won that one and wound up Sunday evening. perfection. Delaware took a 28-0 lead midway | Continued on Page IS] 6-4, 7-6 but lost to Lois Dempsey The UConn highlight was Meryl and Jane Glass of Wesleyan in a Davis and Delly Ozanne fighting close match, 7-5, 6-4. their way to the finals of the Number one Margie Scrivan put Doubles Tournament. Davis and in a fine performance winning her Ozanne defeated Ann first round against Joanne Snow MacDiarmid and Rene Maclarney of Colby-Sawyer College 6-0, 6-2. of Bridgeport 6-1, 6-0, and went Mara Rogers of Brown Rallied to on to beat Paula Vent and beat Scrivan 6-3, 4-6, 7-5 in a very Vincentia Moore of Middlebury tight second round match. 6-4, 7-5. UConn advanced to the Freshman Joan Sawyer playing third round to play Cathy Sullivan number 2 singles for UConn lost and Henrietta Awiszus. of UMass her first round match to Judy and won 6-1, 6-0. Jacobs of Tufts 6-2, 6-0. Playing Davis and Ozanne played flaw- in the consolation. Joan scored lessly, the set match only lasted team point by beating Barbara about 45 minutes. Not having lost Hoffman of Amherst 6-2, 6-0 in a set, Davis and Ozanne met the first round, Karen Zeigler of Laurie Gallagher and Debbie Fairfield 6-4, 6-0 in the second Jospin of Tufts winning 6-3. 6-4. round before losing to Theresa This put UConn's top team into Partlow of Smith in the quarter the semi finals against Sue Harris finals of the consolation tourna- and Patty Larson of Dartmouth. ment. The Dartmouth women were UConn Coach Pat Babcock was tough but UConn showed their extremely happy with her team, strength in a three set thriller saying its the best team in UConn with UConn winning 6-4, 6-7, 7-6. history. Very pleased with the The finals of the three day fifth place finish. Coach Babcock Delaware halfback Cralg Carroll (number 30 with ball] finds the going a bit rough aa UConn's Ted tournament were held at 3 p.m. is anxiously awaiting the spring Walton makes the hit daring Saturday's action. UConn lost, 30-6 [Staff Photo by Buzz Kanter]. on Sunday afternoon at the indoor season.