Wnt Satlg (Eattuma Serving the Storrs Community Since 1896 VoL LXXXVIIINo. 104 The University of Connecticut Tuesday, April 9. 1985

For failings of UConn:

By Derek Gray Lack of initiative blamed Staff Writer By Susan Childs problem solving session, but Norman Klein, professor of instead they tend to tell stu- animal genetics, added to this High pH levels were discovered in the water systems ol Campus Correspondent some dorms on campus between 10:30 pm and 8 am, UConn is failing due to lack dents what they think students theme saying "Professors should know in order to get now consider their yachts and Frktay. of initiative on the part of From the area of Buckley Hall in East Campus to New Lon- students, administration and along in society. Professors families more than their teach- lecture rather than help stu- ing" He said it is the pro- don Hall in North Campus, students complained of a "slip- especially faculty in creating pery" feel to the water and a "funny" taste Three students an intellectual environment, a dents to apply knowledge he fessor's responsibility to do said Sazama said that pro- more than reflect, that they were treated for minor bums and irritations from the water at panel discussion of faculty the infirmary. members and students has fessors should promote crea- should "point out and change" tive thinking by encouraging the problems facing UConn's University officials said the water is now safe for drinking concluded anu cashing, Members of the panel spoke discussion in and outside of students. "Faculty are the the classroom The faculty long term people here,—they "The pH of the water went up to8.8," said Robert Clawson, to a group of about 15 Mon- director of facilities management He said that the normal pH day night in the Bishop Cen- isolates itself in an "ivory have the responsibility to tower" without thinking about change things" levels should be at 6.9. ter. The problem was caused by too much sodium hydroxide in Jerry Sazama, economics where the students are com- Gary Bent, assistant de- ing from "We shouldn't ex- partment head of physics, the water system, according to Walter McGowan, director of professor, started the discus- the office of public information sion by saying that professors pect the students to always brought up the problem of provide the environment" McGowan said that sodium hydroxide is a neutralizing should treat education as a See page 3 agent that is automatically fed into the system to keep the water at the proper pH level "Too much went in," Mc« Gowansaid DiBiaggio comments on racism See page 4

By Colin Poitras McMahon Hall and a protest last week by a cam- News Editor pus political action group over the hiring prac- Administration rejects Saying that he found the" great majority of the tices of the university's Co-op bookstore have criticism fair". President John DiBiaggio made been "very thoroughly addressed" DiBiaggio his first public statements on recent charges of said Soviet arms proposal racism at UConn during a meeting of the Univer- While the number of people involved in the racism charges was not large he said "the sity Senate Monday. WASHINGTON (AP)-The Soviet nuclear missiles aimed DiBiaggio said that the university has not suc- importance of the issue is so huge and the impact upon the integrity of this special com- Reagan administration has at Western Europe, U.S. offi- ceeded in efforts of minority employment and in notified the Soviet Union that cials said Monday. Robert C. the recruitment and retention of minority stu- munity is so wide-ranging" that it initiated comment it rejects as "one-sided' a pro- McFarlane, the White House dents "to a degree with which we (UConn) The president said that UConn's problem of posal by Mikhail S. Gorbachev national security adviser, said ought to claim satisfaction" to halt the deployment of the administration had told A recent report of alleged racist graffiti in See page 3 Moscow "this is no basis for a balanced outcome" The presidential adviser told NBC News that in res- ponding to the Soviet leader's announced moratorium "we have pointed out the pro- blems that we find with this kind of one-sided proposal." Specifically, McFarlane said the Soviet Union has 1.200 nuclear warheads already installed on intermediate- range SS-20 missiles, an ad- vantage of more than 8-to-l over the NATO allies. As a result he said "we're trying to point out that this is no basis for a balanced out- come" McFarlane and other administration officials dis- missed the moratorium as a propaganda ploy aimed at Western Europe The State Department called it a "dis- credited proposal" and noted it was raised initially by the Soviets three years ago. At the same time though, the administration took a mor • oositive stance than it had on Sunday to Gor- bachev's statement that he was prepared to hold a sum- THREE'S A CROWD— Yvonne Hens. John Gagas and Stan from Towers (Andy Shaffer photo). mit meeting with President Smith enjoy the cool spring weather while walking to class Reagan. Inside Today: Weather Forecast: • The World Nationalist Association at UConn dissolves Cold, with variable amounts of clouds itself after NYC trip. See page 3. 'oday. highs between 35-40. Same • Life on the farm is hard work See page 5. tonight Mostly sunny Wednesday. ■l■^^^!■!■!^"^!■^■■.l.|.'■l■l■■■■■■■■'■|.|.■.■.■.■.■■']'■:^:::;::j

> Morning Comment News Digest Sexuality courses approved Leave the memories HARTFORD (AP)-The Gen- commendations of the state's eral Assembly s Education Com- Task Force on Education to Pre- mittee overwhelmingly approved vent Adolescent Pregnancy. to Kodak DWI testing a bill Monday that would require Its chief sponsor, Rep. Mary M. Because so many of the major victories of World War II came 40 sex education or "family life" Mushinsky, D-Wallingford called years ago, this is a big year for anniversaries. The emphasis on the courses for all grades in public the committee's action "coura- 40th makes me a little nervous. I suspect they're celebrating it bill heard schools geous" because they don't Ihink many of us who were there will make it to Parents who don't want their "They recognized the high rate the 50th in 1995. * children to take the course could of teen-age pregnancy and the My interest in anniversaries is limited By the time you get to be 60, HARTFORD (AP)—A bill that have them excused need to go beyond voluntary pro- you've accumulated enough memories, good and bad to last a would allow the state to convict a The course would include in- grams," she said lifetime The way lifetimes are going these days, you still have quite a drunken driver using only a blood struction on human sexuality, "The bill protects both the long way to go, though and it's my feeling that those of us who have breath or urine test received the family planning, parenting and majority who want the course reached that age pught to push on to acquire new memories instead support of numerous witnesses nutrition and the minority who don't," said of sitting back to consider the old ones. No one should spend too who testified Monday at a legisla- The bill, approved 21 -5 by the Rep. Jonathan Pelto, D-Mansfield much time on memories. Some people start doing that when they re tive public hearing committee, was one of the re- 20 and never get over living in the past The most interesting people I A conviction under the "per know don't spend much time reminiscing People who were in WWII se" driving legislation would be and talk about it all the time are a pain in the neck. based on tests given at the time a Pie case uncovers affair The trouble with most memories is that too many of them are sad driver is stopped by police They involve friends or events that are gone. The bill's goal is to reduce plea BRIDGEPORT (AP)—A busi- Fuller's story that a Fairfield cou- Someone asked the other day what year my father died and I bargains and the need for jury ness partner testified Monday ple theatened him and offered couldn't remember. The date never seemed like one to commit to trials. that he is also the lover of a man him a bribe to keep secret their memory and I don't think of him any less often for having put it out of "If so many entities are con- who dressed as a clown and involvement in the pie-throwing smashed a pie in a school official's my mind firming its per se legislation's pro- incident It's easy to overdo the celebration of anniversaries and birthdays. priety and realizing its benefits I face last year. Bello and Fuller own the Fun If Td had my last birthday party when my mother invited six see absolutely no justification or But the partner, Donald Bello, Factory, a Fairfield novelty store neighborhood kids in for cake and ice cream when I was9, it would be defense, in denying its adoption said his close relationship with that sells greeting cards and OK with me. I am no longer pleased to be reminded that I'm a year in 1985," said R.L Pfann presi- Robert B. Fuller had nothing to do balloons and offers services older. I like someone having a birthday party for me about as much as dent of the Connecticut chapter with his earlier testimony. Bello ranging from pies-in-the-face to I like champagne—which is not at all If I never had either again I'd be of Remove Intoxicated Drivers. had previously corroborated flashers. pleased and I'd certainly sleep that night I've returned to a couple of class reunions at both my high school Across the and college. I enjoyed them but there's a limit to how much reunion- ing there's time for. You have to face the fact that the number of peo- India to sue Union Carbide ple you liked in school was no greater, by percentage than the Nation people you've met and liked anywhere else. Most of us make more NEW YORK (AP)—The gov- damages. A number ot American good friends in a lifetime than we have time to remain friends ernment of India filed suit Mon- lawyers however, have filed sep- with. day against the Union Carbide arate suits seeking an estimated The memories invoked at a reunion, whether it's a war reunion, a Corp. seeking unspecified dam- $15 billion in damages for Bho- class reunion or a family reunion, are not usually as satisfactory as ages for the December chemical pal victims. 29 rejected the ones you can call up by yourself when you're alone. The trouble leak which killed more than 2,000 The suit asks the U.S. court to with reunion memories is that they have edited out so much of what people and injured tens of thou- award punitive damages "in an happened and forgotten so many details that the crowd is usually left sands of others in the city of amount sufficient to deter Union for jury duty with a few broad basic stories that are repeated year after year. The BhopaL Carbide or any other mul- memories get to be of the last reunion The suit in U.S District court in tinational corporation from the Even when I'm really carried away by my memory and become Manhattan said that "because of willful, malicious and wanton dis- PROVIDENCE (AP)-Twenty- engrossed in reenacting, in my mind some pleasurable event from the enormity of the Bhopal disas- regard of the rights and safety of nine people were dismissed Mon- the past, I am almost always brought up sharply by the desperately ter, plaintiff is not currently aWe'v the citizens of those countries in day as jury selection began for unhappy thought that the moment is gone forever and no amount of to specify a dollar amount on the which they do business" Claus von Blow's retrial on wanting will bring it back. That's more than I can take. charges of twice trying to kill his Fortunately, memory is controllable Yob can turn memory off and wife, and only five of those left in on An editor once asked Clifton Fadiman to write about his Bush pushes Reagan budget the jury pool indicated they were memories of England At first Fadiman said he couldn't do it because not familiar with the widely pub- he'd never been to England but then he realized this was a weak licized case excuse and he proceeded to write Providence County Superior WASHINGTON (AP)-Vice week to promote the plan while Court Judge Corinne P. Grande At its worst, memory is a sad reminder of what's all over. At its best, President George Bush and other Reagan vacations at his California it's a guideline for a better future. But remembering how old I am on dismissed the potential jurors administration officials met with ranch. after determining that the expec- my next birthday isn't going to make the future better for me or any- business leaders today to build one else Bush, budget director David A ted 10-week trial would be too momentum for the deficit-reduction Stockman and other White House much of a hardship on them. plan President Rea.gan and senior officials met with representatives She asked if any in the Republican senators agreed to of 10 business groups to outline last week. group had made up their minds the plan for $52 billion in spend- that von Bulow was either guilty ing cuts to reduce next year's or innocent of two counts of Husky Talk It was the first of a series of projected budget deficit to $175 attempted murder, and 18 people */ By Laura Ullasz meetings Bush was chairing this billion raised their hands. Life/Style Editor Photos by Andy Schaffer Around the What do you think of the' recent Thousands march for freeze racism protests on campus? World LONDON(AP)—Europe'santi- linked to the anti-nuclear rallies. nuclear protestors, marching by British Prime Minister Margaret W% 1^ 1 the tens of thousands in traditional Thatcher rejected the call made "I definitely think the whole OOtllUH CiamageKasu-rtimt' peace rallies called by Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gor- university has to be made on Washington Monday to match bachev on Sunday for a freeze on more aware of the problem I Moscow's freeze on deploying deployment of new U.S. cruise ' think a lot of it is covered up NATO pipeline medium-range missiles and Pershing 2 missiles in Europe and it should be more pub- Arrests of trespassers and Mrs. Thatcher said to end licized so we could remedy demonstrators were reported NATO deployments now would the problem " STUTTGART, West Germany outside U.S missile bases in Bri- "freeze in" an enormous Soviet (AP)—Bombs today damaged a tain Italy and West Germany, but advantage, estimated by the NATO pipeline in southern West police reported no major incidents White House at 10 tol. Dora Iantorno Germany and the offices of a Sophomore military equipment company in Pre-Business Major Hamburg, police reported There Soviets say U.S. ignores peace were no injuries MOSCOW (AP)—The Soviet latest proposal on arms controL Police also evacuated 60 resi- Union said Monday that the Gorbachev on Sunday an- dents and then defused a bomb in Reagan administration had dis- nounced a moratorium on de- another Hamburg building In a missed its "major new peace ploying medium-range missiles in third incident in Hamburg, experts initiative" in an effort to diminish Europe until November and re- 7 think the problem is that searched a West Germany army the plan's effect on world public newed the Kremlin's call for a ban people are racist, not the cam- compound after an anonymous opinion on testing space weapons during pus in general" threat but found no bomb Visiting American con- the US-Soviet arms talks in gressmen welcomed Mikhail S Geneva John Voss The attacks came on the fourth Gorbachev's announced readi- The United States contends day of massive anti-nuclear de- ness for a summit with President the Soviets have a great advan- Freshman monstrations across West Ger- Reagan but the official news tage in medium-range missiles Pre-Business Major many. There was no indication media gave the summit short already installed and has said its the bombings were linked to the shrift and concentrated instead space-defense research program protests .... - — on-trumpeting the Soviet leader's isTfotnegotiaWe.--". v •••.•••.•-•.•.•.• Campus News The Daily Campus. Tuesday, April 9. 1985 Page 3 Nationalist club disbands after recent controversy

By Dave Clark ctivities, from tne beginning that their actions were l)oth Staff Writer was to be a trip to the modei legal and ethical I I.N.." Jee said. /he World Nationalist A.» The money for one week ■ s.^iation, the group that Un- laryonski claimed that neither he nor any of th«-< t f »• •• lodging at the '-and Hvatl dergraduate Student Govern- came trom USG's confer-in e i lent President Marcia Knous executive board members were notified of any WNA fund a fund set aside for I bli and USG members John Jee representatives to attend and Art Strassle represented meetings since the group's founding in February. conferences which benefit the at the model United Nations student government The conference in New York City 'We never had meetings. delegate fees, $50 per dele- last week was officially dis- Targonski said "WNA wa*> gate, were paid for by WNA banded at a meeting Mon- founded only so some people with money obtained from day night could go to the model UN. USG's Budget and Finance Three of the five WNA ex- and stay at the Grand Committee, due to WNAs Professor Donald Kinsman addresses members of the ecutive board members sign- Hyatt" status as a registered stu- ed a "statement of dissolu- university Senate during a meeting Monday afternoon dent organization tion", which said in p.»rt Jee and Knous mainly , Maria De/ ngelis photo). "WNA has deviated from its prescibed role as an educa- tional forum., becoming a front for personal adventur- I self/expresshuns I ing and intrigue" The signa- I The Ultimate in Hair & Skin Care tors were David Lindquist Tonight In great Response to our David Targonski. and Laura From 10 - 11 pm Kay Wilsoa | March Ad, we are now The WNA members who $2.50 Pitchers i offering 20% OFF on all v »ted to disband believe that Choice of Bud, Coors &. Lite European Facials now till 11 e only reason Jee set up the < • ganization was so that he at | April 27fh. a id the other USG members I A Full Service Salon < ould attend the model U.N Specializing in Hair Design, The statement of dissolu- Oscar's Body Waving, Manicures 'on was signed at the meeting 'hich began at 7 p.m. At 7:07 Pizza, Restaurant & Lounge v and Lash Tints. p.m., after the statement had Route44 Storrs(Next to A&.P) Located in Rear of 7-Eleven Store Holiday Mall, Rt. 195 l>een signed Jee and Knous For Delivery Call 429-8854 arrived at the meeting room f Tel. 429-4970 Jee defended his actions. "The highlight of WNAs U. S. Department of Transportation SCIENCE MAJORS Freshman Interested In: student racasiss^iaca OTS^n©@k @®cgssss? "WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1985 At 12:00 noon in CEW 131 dies brown bag lunch with the seminar A UConn undergraduate speaker for the day •- Dr. Interrante (RPI) died at 12:15 p.m. Friday dur- ing emergency surgery at Beverages and snacks will be provided Hartford Hospital Clayton R Nowell, 19, of 385 "FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 Indigo Street, Mystic, was a DRINKING AND DRIVING Tour of the Research Facilities at the resident of Wright A and a UCONN HEALTH CENTER second semester liberal arts CAN KILL A FRIENDSHIP Contact Dr. Dimock, Chemistry Department major. Nowell was brought to the UConn infirmary Thursday BACCHUS, and evening with an apparent nosebleed after having been SIGMA PHI EPSILON treated there earlier in the say day. From the infirmary he Be A Good Friend was taken to Windham Com- munity Memorial Hospital, DUMP DRUNK DRIVING' then to Hartford Hospital Check it out at the Student Union where he died this week Hospital officials would not Call 486-3430 or 482-5196 disclose the cause of death. for more information

SPECIAL! SOFT CONTACT LENSES $99. Monday through Thursday Complete visual analysis 35. Contact lens fitting fee and 3 follow-up visits... 55. Rent two movies at the regular price Sterlllizer and Care Kit 30. and get a third to watch for free. Your cost, $7.00 Contact lenses normally fit dispensed SAME DAY | OR Extended wear and tinted lenses Rent a Video Player for one day and available at additional cost. pick a movie to watch for free. DR. A.M. GOLDSTEIN, OPTOMETRIST Your cost, $9.95 Mansfield Shopping Plaza, Rt. 44, Storrs (next to the A4P) Walking distance to UConn campus B 429-6111 <3S Weekdays, Saturdays and Evenings by Appointment SOFlfNS' Please call. Your questions will be cheerfully answered. ]p(fglffg][fglf^lffg][fg]fi^[fl][E3[fg]frg Tage 4 The Daily Campus Tuesday. April 9. 1985 .Campus News ...DiBiaggio speaks on racism

ted to this university, minority From page 1 sity in June of tliis year. s and majority, Ls deliberately and .-.Hi.i. ii" iiiunwities Altlx>ugh the number of mi- Ixrin i> "on*- di i ,i nority students admitted at measurably higher than in pnv areas of my highest pn . > UConn has declined both liere vious years," he s;iid during t'je last weeks of my and at institutions throughout tern" PfTJMfrT plans to leave the country one fact that has Because the program Ls only UConn and become the presi- been omitted in reports is that two-years old there are no dent of Michigan State Univer- "the quality of students ;tdmit- graduation rates to test the ef- fectiveness of these efforts ac- cording to DiBiaggio ... Water problem "This represents a conscious and well considered change in our approach," DiBiaggio said Clawson Ls not sure what blem in the dorms. "which we believe will have a went wrong with the auto- long-term and positive effect matic feeder but said that the Steve Gamble a resident ...our response to this issue is manufacturer has been called assistant in Ellsworth Hall and has been anything but pas- to investigate it A representa- said "Because the problem sive" tive will inspect the system happened so late at night a lot later this week. of people didn' t know about it "We shut down the treat- It wsa not until after everyone Economic professor Jerry Sazama takes part in a panel ment and flushed in about drank the water and got ...Is UConn discussion on "Why UConn is failing?" - a look at intellec- 600,000«gallons of water to get washed in the morning that tual life here last night at the Bishop Center (Maria De- it out," Clawson said they saw the note on the Angelis photo). Cheryl Tynan of New Lon- bathroom door about the failing? don Hall was the first to report water. Then everyone com- the problem "My roommate plained about stomach- From page 1 said her lips were burning," aches—but I think it was Tynan said "She said it (the really psychosomatic. Any- teaching students a social Ace Printery of Willimantic, Inc. water) tasted like soap." " I way, it was different and it conscience "You should teach gave us something to talk students to be good citizens," iffl'85 Bridge Streft • Willimantic, Connecticut 0622t* had burns on my stomach and chest" Tynan said about" he said. Scientists should be 'Compltf Commtrclml « Social Printing S«rWc»«" 0 " It tasted like it was from a One student a sophomore required to learn ethics so LETTERHEADS •INVITATIONS 'TAGS • reservoir," Kerry Miller of business major from Fairfield they can make moral decLsions ^ENVELOPES •RESUMES .RUBBER STAMPS • Hartford Hall said "We Hall, said "My R.A put up a about the research they will INVOICES .PAMPHLETS .LABELS • couldn't use the showers until sign about not using the water be doing as scientists and pro- •NCR FORMS •NEWSLETTERS .LAMINATING • fessors should use examples •BUSINESS CARDS -FLYERS -SPIRAL BINDING « after eight the next day." because of the pH leveL I Many students were incon- rouldn't take a shower and I from real issues, such as the nuclear arms race rather • venienced because of the pro- couldn't brush my teeth. • CALL 423-0014 than the usual "ball drops * • from building" problems, ac- cording to Bent The problem is not entirely NEED PART-TIME WORK NOW? with the faculty, however. M> Students must realize that * their education is their own WANT TO EARN EXTRA $$? responsibility, said Klein. Stu- Check out these PART-TIME JOBS recently posted «i dents cannot blame their «& * academic problems on poor ft with Cooperative Education and professors. "Even the worst professor can point the way to Off-Campus Employment the library," said Klein, who €* "didn't think there were stu- MARKETING JOB fft dents left who really cared." (help launch new magazine) * Administration is also at RESTAURANT WORK fault, the panel said. Klein said * that not enough incentive is |5 (fountain and grill workers, * custodians, waiters/ waitresses) provided for professors who teach welL "Administrators DISHWASHING «l make the most money, good (flexible scheduling available) teachers make the least" He fl m HEALTH CARE POSITIONS also said that too much of (for the elderly) UConn's funding comes from * big business, which changes m (for the developmental^/ disabled) •A the emphasis from teaching SERVICE STATION ATTENDING to research for corporate ft INTERIOR LANDSCAPING concerns. a* The panel was sponsored ft ft ft by the Center for Educational ft ACT NOW! Innovation and encouraged Stop by our office m students and faculty mem- 3rd Floor Wilbur Cross bers to attend future meetings to discuss the issue further. The Daily Campus. Tuesday. April 9. 1985 Life/Style page5 Farmer's kids learn the value of hard work

By Sue Baldwin who will not let their children minute and unload four serious injuries are such acts is worth the time. He is quick Campus Correspondent have the benefits of farm liv- wagons of hay straight as stepping on a nail with bare to realize his own foolishness ing should not marry a farmer, Indeed he does get tired but feet (actually . this is a rare allowed his foot to get When I was growing up, I for these liberties are what Heaven help the farmer's kid occurrence for the kid learns stepped on, and next time he lived on a dairy farm in New make farm kids strong in body who admits he is tired to step lightly with bare feet had better look sharp as to York. With the exception of and mind Hand in hand with strength especially after years of prac- where he places his foot my brothers and sister, I was Physical strength is the first is the relative intolerance to tice), sticking a pitchfork Developing a sense of bal- the only kid in school that thing a farmer's kid develops; pain. This doesn't mean the through his toe, or maybe ance cuts down on the num- came from a farm and I used he has an inborn desire to farmer's kid is a thick-skulled grazing his knee with an axe ber of falls and allows the to be teased about being a far- keep up with Daddy, and nitwit. He realizes there are while chopping wood Many farmer's kid to climb places mer's daughter, but it was all Daddy knows he has a valu- two basic kinds of injuries: of these latter injuries even- sane people wouldn't dream good-natured ribbing I have able asset following close at those that are not worth tually become bumps and of scaling like the cupola on no idea if our schoolmates his heels. He is quick to teach noticing and those which bruises that are minor and the barn roof; and running envied us for living on a farm his offspring the fine art of maybe Mom or Dad might be just not worth the time to across the beams in haymow but I rather suspect not. I do cleaning boxstalls a foot deep interested in knowing about. even recognize They are par that are a foot wide and fifteen know, however, that to grow in manure pack, throwing The first type includes get- for the course and are taken in feet above the floor or gallop- up on a farm is one of the bales onto the hay elevator, ting stepped on by a 1500 stride by the farmer's kid ing bareback across the pas- greatest gifts parents can give stacking the bales in the hay- pound cow, followed closely Admit to pain? Never. ture on a horse with no bridle their children. mow, milking cows, and han- with getting smushed against One way to cut down on the or halter are generally not Farmer's kids have it made dling a wheelbarrow full of the wall as the cow breezes by number and severity of deemed enjoyable for anyone They run barefoot from April grain for the cows. to fight the next cow out of her bumps is to become agile and but the farmer's kid to October, wear the most By the age of ten, the far- stall, hitting his shin with a adept at avoiding or at least Learning to climb through comfortable old and torn mer's kid can halterbreak a sledge hammer, or getting lessening the impact of get- barbed wire fences without clothes, and enjoy a large five month old heifer, herd clawed by a cat ting hurt This requires a fine getting scratched or caught is amount of freedom Women cattle, climb the silo in a The other, slightly more honing of skills, but the effort See page 6

escort service 4864809 1$

YOURw CAMPUS RECORD SHOP As the semester comes to a close, are you prepared to enter the job market? Have you thought about your future after your last college textbook is closed? Do you have any doubts about your interviewing skills? Are you seriously concerned about not liaving a I.PHIL COLLINS NO JACKET $6 99 professional job after graduation? 2. MADONNA If any of these questions have crossed your mind, it will LIKE A VIRGIN $6 49 be worth your time to contact us. We will help you to be 3. WHAM totally prepared for the job market. MAKE IT BIG $649 4.JOHN FOGERTY The Cambridge Company is offering a pilot training CENTERFIELD $6.49 program for the job seeking student. . . We will teach you how to interview in a very competitive market 5. MICK JAGGER place. SHE'S THE BOSS $6.49 |6. CHIGAGO Our experts are educated in the most prestigious man- 17 $6.49 ner to give you the best methods of enhancing your 7. DON HENLY career potential. PERFECT BEAST $6.49 Because our program stresses individual attention, only l&POWER STATION forty students will be selected (on a first come basis.) Our POWER STATION j6 49 proven track record will give you the edge you have 9.ALLISON MOYET been looking for ... At the same time you will he able ALF $6.49 to increase your earnings potential. 10. BRUCE Don't hesitate . . . For one day of your lime, we can put SPRINGSTEEN you on the road to success. BORN IN THE USA $6.49 lb sign up and obtain more information go to The Department of Career Services, U-51 Hall Dorm, The LATEST DANCE TRAX University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06268. COMPACT DISCi Applications must be completed by April H, 1985. The session will he held the week of April 23, 1985. IMPORTS • BLANK TAPES POSTERS the CAMPUS CAMBRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER 429-0443 company MON-FRI 10-8:00 SAT 10-5:30 1 ny r I— -■!.. — ... I Page 6 The Dally Campus, Tuesday, April 9. 1985 Life/Style Overwork may be hazardous ...Farmer's children

By the Associated Press Roudsepp, author of a of importance From page 5 America's best resources, the Workaholics are people so magazine questionnaire for One big job weakness of another particularly useful farm grown kid. He may not obsessed with their jobs that potential workaholics, said workaholics is that they make skill in times of emergency, appreciate this bit of wisdom their lives become ill-ba- chi oiic overworkers are peo- poor delegators of work and such as when the cows are as he gets kicked again by a lanced—and often the harder ple -vho are unhappy with responsibility. They feel the loose and the fastest way to job won't be done properly if they work, the more likely vacation or unexpected free head them off is through two wench of a cow that defies all they are to faiL time, and who seem to feel they don't do it themselves; fields and three fences. '.hat they can do everything attempts of putting a milking The truly successful ke»»p that to slow down is to The farmer's kid even machine on her, or as he their jobs in perspective ac- admit failure better and faster than co- acquires a willingness to spends an hour trying to pull a cording to an article in the vorkers. work; whether he realizes this six day overdue bull calf from March issue of Harper's Ba- "For some adults," he said "Some women managers" or not his future employers a first-calf heifer. But he gets a zacr. and they know how to "working compulsively can be Roudsepp said "especially wilL He grows up working on glimpse of the validity of that forget about work and enjoy a a way of concealing or com- those recently promoted or his parent's farm and thinks wisdom when the calf finally private life pensating for imagined short- hired or uneasy in their new that work is what the world is Eugene Roudsepp, PhD., comings. Others reason that if power roles, believe that all about He does gradually pops out on the ground and who conducts seminars, re- they let up on their standards sharing work may be viewed learn that there is more to life starts to breathe It's quite a search and career counseling as an attempt to avoid res- at the office they, or others, than a fifteen hour day in the feeling to watch that calf at Princeton Creative coun- might find they're not indis- ponsibility, or as a sign of stand and nurse and to know seling at Princeton Creative dependence and imcompe- barn and in the fields, but the pensable damage is done--he has learn- that calf might have died if he Research Inc, has this warn- tence" hadn't been there ing for overworkers: "Still others reach for Failure to delegate also de- ed not to fear or shun hard work How Dad loves the "By investing so much time higher achievements even rives from fear of competition though they've barely en- from subordinates and of rick cheap labor in the summer, This is the life I knew when I at the desk, they may be and how he misses it when •judged inefficient and one- joyed those already won; for taking was a kid, and 1 wouldn' t trade such people, constant activity school starts! my childhood for any other. I 'track-^ninded—not suited for "Whatever the reasons for the top executive spot and even more pressured His kids may gripe about grew up amidst bare feet, schedules are the real turn- job obsession," Roudsepp having to work all the time blood, an occasional dead i"And by being so obsessed wrote in Harper's Bazaar, "it with their own routines, they ons." but take the farmer's kid off cow, frustrating tractor driv- can lead to an ill-balanced life the farm and plant him the city ing lessons, freezing mornings come across as aloof and self- with too few interests unre- centered hardly promising He said they need their jobs before he has grown up, and milking cows, pigs, horses, an team players." to reaffirm their own sense lated to work. you will be wasting one of occasional trip to the show ring snowmobiling loose cows dozens of kittens, grease maple sugaring sum- mer sweat and frozen water- bowls, and I wouldn't have missed any of it for the world

The barns where I spent my SALES AND MARKETING childhood have since burned down, but that was after we had grown up and moved away. What burned was the CAREER OPPORTUNITIES!! symbol of my youth, but what remains are the memories I have and those as well as the values I learned while growing up, will never die

mat is the greatest gift parents can give to their Openings are available in our Hartford division for sales and finan- children, and the farmer's kid cial counseling positions. As a major national company, we offer a knows this, and never for- 3 year training program leading to financial accreditations and gets. professional degrees. Guaranteed starting salaries from $ 17,000 to $20,000 including available bonus up to $32,000. Full fringe employee benefit program available Candidates must have a college degree with preferred experience in economics, market- ing or accounting; or have the demonstrated ability for sales and communication skills in the professional marketplace Please send resumes to the Marketing Division:

The American Group 999 Asylum Ave Suite 420 Hartford, Conn. 06105 525-3500

gffll • » - '.• >* < Arts The Daily Campus, Tuesday. April 9. 1985 Page 7 Pilobolus is next for Jorgensen entertainment

Pilobolus, a unique and Tuesday evening, April 9th. guises and intrigues, the Count major metropolitan areas. SJ.UU and $7.00 for the general zany dance company that performance are $10.00, 8.0(1 and his accomplice Figaro, public Discounts are avail- combines dance and skilled and 6.00 for the general accomplish their goal, and Tickets for the Friday even- able for UConn students and acrobatics, will return to Jor- public. Discounts are avail- Almaviva marries Rosina ing, April 19, performance of senior citizens. Tickets are on gensen Auditorium Toni- able to students and senior Rossini composed the opera Texas Opera Theater's, The sale now at the Jorgensen ght, April 9th at 8:00 p.m. for citizens. in 1816. It is based on three Barber of Seville are $10,00, box office an evening of original and comedies by the 18th century delightful dance. playwright Beaumarchais. As the curtain rises, the The Texas Opera Theater's The three plays— Le Barbier audience will be greeted with livery production of Gioacchinc de Seville, Le Mariage de dancers bent at the waist Rossini's The Barber of Seville Figaro, and La Mere Coup- backs flat, two dancers stacked will be performed in English at able—are known as the "Figaro atop two others, like a table Jorgensen Auditorium on Fri- Trilogy." Each play features upon a table a fantasy figure day, April 19, at 8:00 pm, the hero Figaro, a barber and Suddenly there's movement, The Barber of Seville is a jack-of-all-trades in Seville and a Pilobolus Dance perfor- lively, high-spirted comedy Figaro was so memorable that mance is under way. that centers around Count Mozart used him in his mas- The Pilobolus Dance The- Almaviva's efforts to gain the terpiece "The Marriage of atre was founded in 1971 by love of the beautiful Rosina Figaro." two young innovative dan- under the watchful eye of her The Texas Opera Theater, cers—Moses Pendleton and guardian, Dr. Bartolo, who was formed on the premise Jonathan Wolken, who had himself intends to marry his that opera should be available met in a dance class as un- ward Through a series of dis- to people living outside ol dergraduates. They were soon joined by other dancers, and they were on their way. The 1984/85 season marks the thirteenth anniversary of Test yourself. Pilobolus. During these years, Pilobolus has evolved into one of the most original and Which early pregnancy test is as dynamic dance troupes in the easy to read as red, no-white, yes? United States today. They have appeared on television, Which is a simple one-step test? lafalimM and have been acclaimed M.T 945am; W.Thl 45 prt; nationwide as an extraor- Careers F 11:45am dinary troupe Newsweek Which has a dramatic color change hailed them "as clever as to make the results unmistakable? Houdini." Their performance company you work lor. 15 mm at Jorgensen follows closely Which is 98% accurate, as accurate their extended engagement at New York's Joyce Theatre as many hospital and lab tests? M.T 10:00 am: W.Th 2:00 and will feature several recent pm. F 1200pm AM works, as well as their signa- Which is portable for convenience ture pieces. Tickets for the and privacy? The Birth of TV Toons CaH*oon9 A special surprise packaae of cartoons from the early years of television 30 USPSI2958000 You're right. min Second Class Postage paid at Storrs, Cona 06268. Published You get a Plus! ^Jk by the Connecticut Daily Cam- M.T 10:30 am, W,lh 2:30 pus, Box U 189, Monday pm. F 1230pm The through Friday 9/2-12/9. I /26- 5/5. Telephone 429-9384. Fabulous 1961 (Parti) Jjxf Postmaster: send form 3579 to Connecticut Daily Campus, 11 Kennedy elected. Taylor/Burton ro- Dog Lane Storrs, Conn 06268. mance^ Russian in space. Kennedy The Connecticut Daily Campus Is meets Kruschev. 30 min an associate member of the Associated Press which is exclu- sively entitled to reprint material M,T 11:00 am; W.Th 3 00 published herein pm F 1:00 pm Host Meg Griffin delivers the best in new music videos. Includes #1 club video, top ten countdown special guests and more. 60 min Dr. Leonard P.Sawisch M.T 12 00pm. W.Th 400 pm F 2 00 pm JEW * Motivational Humanist* Jump Start and Varteze llHHfUSf "Jump Start" from Tim Roper oTuniv exffi Aus,ln College,?l 'nPa, "Vgrieze". and from 30 mlrTPomts PaJk "Inspirational talk on overcoming life's obstacles" featured, Detroit PM Magazine for advocacy work. M.T 12:30 pm. W.Th 4.30 r Special guest 1982 New York film festival pm F 2 30 pm I Nick Mazzuco: Biography TO for role in award winning " Little People" documentary. of an Atomic Vet A former soldier's experience as a par- ticipant in the U.S. open air atom bomb Monday April 15 Free Admission test. 30 mm SUB 7:00PM Refreshments Served Student Union Lobby & Afro American Cultural Center Sponsored by BOG Lecture Committee w SIP for Handicapped Awareness Month * — w cV. !■!■;.! i! i! ■! i! ■; ■! i! J-^I. £ SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT UNION ^|

£.u:JM.99AWPFtW)^W9Ki>iJti>r{9j! tEhe lailij Gkmptus mum Paged Our 89th Year April 9, 1985

John Paradls, Editor-in-chief Brian Dion, Managing Editor YORKWKH THOSE Lynne Kerrigan, Business Manager OWN IWIBUCANS. Government in their pockets

When not extracting wage concessions from union members or tax breaks from city mayors America's corporate chieftains are always wrapped up in their favorite hobby, government policy. The Business Council, Conference Board, Cham- ber of Commerce and Business-Industry PAC, not to mention American Enterprise Institute and Her- itage Foundation, are just several examples of in- fluential institutions donated or supported by the

highest paid men (and women) in America Though !-v... their power has survived changes in adminis- trations it has undoubtedly reached new highs TIPO'Neili AKRIVfcS IN MOSCOW under Ronald Reagan, a fan of corporate-backed advisory groups. I MMHHMM Most of these groups have devoted their resour- Letters ces to business issues but their interests have tran- "would like to find out how much money was donated by the su- scended the strictly bottom line Ostensibly for the Work together perstars," as if their time wasn't New symbol? sake of free enterprise America's corporate elite enough. It is estimated that over To the Editor To the Editor have led the fight to reduce federal spending and In regard to the protest which $2 million in time and services took place in front of the Co-op was donated to the USA for Africa regulations. But at whose expense? Largely that of organization. Almost every artist I read with ambivalence Patti on April 3, 1985 I would like to Gearing's letter to the editor the poor and average wage earners who benefit who was involved in the project express my view. Part of the dis- (April3,1985, The Daily Campus) most from poverty-relief programs and health-and- crimination problem is due to has personally contributed thou- sands of dollars in donations. and in fact all this news about white i.sople initiating their pre- racial discriminatioa I, too, safety standards In addition to the single, "We Most chief executives might believe that their judiced feelings against black peo- believe that the members of ple However, this problem is also Are the World" many of the musicians, like Bruce Springs- INCAR chose a particularly hefty pay is a reward for a job well-done But in their due to other important factors wobbly soapbox upon which to teen, Huey Lewis and the News, well-publicized greed, they could lose public trust in here at UConn, which have stand and make themselves vis- Steve Perry, The Pointer Sisters, their ability to lead the seat of the nation that doesn' t been overlooked. ible in order to renew their Blacks here at UConn do not Prince and many others, have assault on "racism". But though it take kindly to talk of austerity from self-indulgent make an effort to integrate contributed considerable time and money on personal endeav- is true to some extent that "you fat cats socially. They remain in cliques can always find evidence to sup- ors. Bruce Springsteen, for exam- which maintain their minority port your theory," should L being ple has taken a considerable status. Of course not all blacks neither black nor white nor his- Deceiving statistics are like this, but it seems to be amount of time out of his ex- tremely busy schedule to help panie who flinched upon seeing the trend the three fists INCAR has chosen Another point is that the pro- promote money to help the needy in our country as well as as a symbol to represent the testors last week seemed to think "underrepresented'--one black, E,/ery month, the official unemployment rate they are special because of their abroad I would hope that Mr. Perry doesn't consider any of one white one brown-pass it off is released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics The heritage Every American has his as a condition that is merely this exploitatioa figure however, seriously understates both the or her own unique cultural skin deep? heritage, but this should not I think that it is very admirable nature and extent of joblessness in the United that Mr. Perry's dorm is sponsor- The omission of a yellow fist- affect social relationships. We not to mention a red one-1 find ing a Brazilian child but I don't States know we all must keep our beliefs glaring especially in view of the The unemployment rate has been conveniently ii it.ui. but we should also try to see how he can possibly believe fact that only one generation that their contribution is greater work together as Americana back, the violation of the civil used to give the false impression that the U.S. than USA for Africa's feeding five This will not solve the dis- rights of Japanese-Americans- economy is generating enough jobs That miscon- crimination problem, but it is percent of the starving African that is, Japanese who were ception undermines public support for programs another aspect of it that should population for an entire year, American citizens-was "val- which should be developed to help workers cope be taken into consideratioa To which is what the seventy million idated' by the Supreme Court make racial discrimination a dollars will do. In the future, I sug- Japanese Americans were just with changes in the economy. gest that Mr. Perry look more memory, all people will have to too visible a minority. deeply into a subject before he The Bureau of Labor Statistics uses a very broad work together. 3J ^ These stark, if uncomprehens- definition of "employed." You are counted as tries to bring down such a fine ible facts make me acknowledge organization as USA for Africa employed, for example if you earned any income at grudgingly even the nost Bruce really cares Kevin Burns seemingly absurd .'fforts- to all during a survey week expose that brand of ignorance In January, over 8 million Americans were out of called racism-even when the work The official unemployment rate was 7.4 per- To the Editor Suggestions only efforts themselves are racist-for I am writing ui regard to the let- cent But what was not captured in that unemploy- I am not blind I know what I am. ter by Brian Perry," USA for Africa To the Editor. But I also know that the color of ment figure was an additional 8 million workers or Themselves?" {The Daily There is a difference between a my skin is an accident of birth- who, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, were Campus, April 3, 1985). Is Mr. newspaper's endorsement of a one which. I must say, suits me Perry serious? How can he say either underemployed or working but poor. Thus to presidential candidate and a Yet it is not wholly me And I that what these45 musical greats government's stance on an notice with deep regret that get a more accurate picture there are really over 16 did was anything but" a grand act important issue when I address the issue of racial million Americans in distress or about 14 percent of of hiiiiiiii)it.iri.mism" through and An endorsement of a presiden- discriminatioa I find myself through? tial candidate is an opinioa It thinking and talking too much the labor force USA for Africa plans to make When one out of every seven workers is frozen allows the newspaper to give about color, and not enough almost seventy million dollars reasons why a candidate is about souL out of the economic recovery— and when even the that will go directly to aid the worthy of electioa The main goal official unemployment rate has not improved for six starving in Africa This mon- of an endorsement is to per- Debi Rang Dean months—it should be clear that more help is umental amount will equal what suade all the other groups in the United A government on the other needed. States, put together, plan to send hand is designed to reflect the Millions of distressed workers need skills training to Africa opinion of those it serves. Unless Buffet ok for USA remedial education, job-placement aid, and public- Mr. Perry need not worry him- it obtains information unknown self about this enormous dinner to all that would change its deci- service jobs improving neglected community fa- that the artists had True a buffet sion to the contrary, a govern- To the Editor cilities such as roads bridges and parks table with $10,000 worth of food ment is limited to the opinions of The Reagan Administration perhaps should tell was serve to the musicians and the people Even if the 49 stars who par- the others involved in the project ticipated in the USA for Africa the nation the true figures on the number of un- The Daily Campus felt that but this is not such an extrava- UConn had not had a chance to record were served a very expen- employed— and then do something about it gance when you consider that put input into the decision to sup- sive buffet, it is common for stars there were almost 500 people port Nicaraguan rebels. The issue as well-known as they are to be nyms and initials will not be used. working on the project Use of a could have been a great source of treated in this way and the values The Daily Campus welcomes all of their record would not be letters expressing all viewpoints. The address and phone number simple pocket calculator shows debate and educatioa Instead Letters should be as brief as are for our verification only and that this is only $20 a persoa an opinion was thrust upon us marred possible and are subject to con- will not be published. Letters are Aren't "millionaire musicians" without a chance for the campus Without mentioning the go»>d densation, grammar, good taste printed only with names, but a allowed a twenty dollar dinner to have some input that the profits from the records and the deletion of libel Letters name may be wtthheld on re- from time to time? I don't like someone telling me sale will do for Africans, the song must be typed and double space quest Send to Letters to the Perry also said that he was and its meaning art great steps Editor, the Connecticut Daily what to think. The Daily Campus and should include signature concerned that "the singers were suggests what to do. USG, on the for brotherhood valid mailing address and tele- Campus, 11 Dog Lane Storrs. exploiting the generosity, of the phone number, If any. Pseudo- CT 06268 other hand demands general public," and that he Andrea Picone Kim Nucolo Page 9 The Daily Campus, Tuesday. April 9, 1985 Opinion Erskine Carter A nuclear passion play on the stage of Electric Boat

The police arrive first spars nailed in a ♦" One street in a vigil until the police reenactment of Christ" s con- and police toward Electric Next the press Mirrored group bears another, smaller carry them away and charge demnation. A meditation is Boat the giant green mill that sunglasses, walkie talkies, and red and a banner pro- them with trespassing made the Lords Prayer re- defines and obliterates Gro- video cameras searching a claiming TRIDENT SAC- Harvard professor of Di- cited and the procession, ton. a town whose blood six o'clock story in the sha- RIFICES HUMANITY. Later in vinity Henri Nouwen begins somber yet not joyless winds depends on the manufacture dow of General Dynamics the day, they will sit on the the service with a symbolic through a gauntlet of press of weapons Those they await ate less The crowd chants "Cru- organized. They straggle in cem Tuam" between each as people do, embracing station; on another day, one shaking hands agreeing on might seek parallels in the the beautiful weather. No poetry of William Blake groups stand out except the But on another day these young the old and the in bet- streets would be filled with ween. Tourists walk the deck people. Today, participants of the Croaker Memorial aside these streets are as moored just offshore A sub lifeless as a neutron- bombed knifes through the Thames vision A few curious on- like a large black whale with lookers peer from res- men pinned to its back taurants and bars Three el- "Will there be any acts of derly women in curlers lean civil disobedience?" a televi- out of a beauty salon door- sion reporter inquires way. They seem disturbed "This is a religious service," Their sharp eyes say they a spokesman explains He have witnessed these pro- understands however, that cessions before, but that some groups plan a political doesn" t render them any less act following the interfaith disquieting observations at the Stations There exists no middle of the Cross ground The world it seems The reporter moves off, is here and now. No matter apparently satisfied. The cross who you are this symbolic arrives two thick wooden (Photo courtesy of Erskine Carter). See page 10

DON'T BE "MAILED" Interested in a Career in THIS SPRING Busir iss? GINGRAS SHOES Have you considered the DOWNTOWN WILLIMANTIC Master of Business Administration Has a huge assortment of footwear on TWO LEVELS. THE FIRST FLOOR Is stocked full Come and find out about the MBA of name brands by program and the opportunities it might open up for you. Rockport _ 4:00 p.m. 6 Timberiaii April 9, 1985 ujwmzees ^a&y Just to name a few. School of Business Administration, THE BARGAIN BASEMENT Room 122 Where everything is on SALE, All Business and Non-Business Majors is full of bargains for Spring. Welcome ™T GINGRAS SHOES ^ *"■■ 750 Main Street Wfc BEAUTIFUL DOWNTOWN WILLIMAN1IC

r Distinguished Professor Elections Sponsored by HPCC VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE PROFESSORS A/teucAii art Drop Ballots at: Student Union during the day Experience Library in the evening Do you have Farmington's Newest Vote on April 8, 9, or 10 a manuscript under the mattress i and Most Unique Cafe Poetry in Nominate up to 3 professors the closet? Featuring Professor Dept. Professor Dept.. Submit Gourmet Pizzas, Huge Salads Professor Dept. prose, poetry, and Fresh Pastas. creative essays. Now Serving Lunch and Dinner. photos and Drop in the ballot box at artwork to Student Union or Library PACE Farmington Rocky Hill Rt. 6 off 1-84 Rt. 91 & Silas Deane Highway Name, magazine! (203)677-9759 (203)721-1116 J OFFICIAL BALLOT ■".'.■. Page 10 The Daily Campus, Tuesday, April 9, 1985 Opinion All the world's a stage, all men and women mere players From page 9 doning off or segregation The i^olice look apprehen- after them and almost mis- sion course of the modern ritual is extremely real and can divorce the reality of sive Somehow, their num- ses five or six men and age? Why such passiveness that makes It either comfort- grim Electric Boat and the bers have swelled In the past women arrested and hauled when it's so obvious what is ing or threatening stark passion of this symbolic 10 minutes and they now onto a police bus for entering moral and right? Why weren't The silence is broken only protest By three o'clock, at have large leashed Alsatians a General Dynamics yard more people present? Why by chanting invocation, and the fourteenth and last sta- They ring the crowd like The final vigil begins Three doesn't anyone else really the occasional whirr of ma- tion, even the sun seems green pall bearers, their hundred people line the seem to care now Mat this chinery from the bowels of drained by the moment its mirrored eyes revealing street softly singing We Shall moment is over? Electric Boat By their very power pulled into the play- nothing except those they Overcome until finally, the Failed expectations fuel repetition, the Stations of the '»»; i-i?ffl*ii''i—z anger and resentments The Cross are intoxicatingfy hyp- You've got to suffer and question for a while drive home is depressing; notic conversation limited. Feelings Even the police assume a before you can think about hope, rebirth, and atonement pulsate like open wounds role— not, as one might ex- best unseen but impossible pect of Roman soldiers or ers, the sky dark and preg- are watching On the whole red cross and the seven at- to ignore green shirted bullies, but tired nant with rain clouds that they would probably rather tached to it are peaceably, The radio announces that actors whose energy is won't break open The si- be home Unlike the passively, carried away. USA, for Africa's We Are The drained by the simple un- lence by its very weight is marchers, however, they It is finished World played round the folding drama A young deafening have no freedom of choice at planet this morning Did they policeman's lips begin to Some approach the cross Initially, despite the peace this particular moment signs and shouts of encour- hear it in Ethiopia? In the move automatically under and kiss it in a commitment bowels of Electric Boat? The the mirrored sunglasses: to Christ and peace A young The cross receives its last agement hopelessness and kiss and the service ends The White House or Kremlin? Hallowed he thy name... They girl lays a daffodil at its foot failure seem to color the group with the red cross once beautiful day. Why Who did it make feel better? stop, reclench, a tongue and returns to her friends The artists? Their listeners? nipped by watchful teeth who are singing Were you proceeds to an administra- doesn't someone jump up tion building and sits on the and eloquently lambast nu- Why wasn't this supposed Being uninvorved is im- There When They Crucified vision of hope and joy shared sidewalk The press scurries clear weapons and the colli- possible No amount of cor- my Lord? on the streets of Groton? Or why didn't everyone march off at vigil's end to Onward Christian Soldiers or Campus; something equally rousing? Because that wasn't the point, the uncomfortable poignant realization begins florist to sink in Good Friday is a SEMI-FORMAL symbolic day of mourning for worlds past, worlds to CORSAGES come and especially worlds now. Yes, we are part of the ORDER MOW world, but you've got to suf- Downtown Storrs 487-1 193 fer and question for a while before you can think about ROUTE 195 • STOKES hope rebirth and atone- ment Electric Boat still manufac- CONNECTICUT tures weapons, people go Complete Foreign on starving and the ques- & tions are repeated Is it really worth it? Does anyone care? Tony s Domestic C ar Service What can I do? COmPUTER •4 Nothing and everything Of '95 As Henri Nouwen implied, 1 ncy.03. • try to find yourself in all that JCcnn surrounds you To paraphrase a Hebrew prophet Front End Alignment, Tires SHDkU rm not out to change the Batteries, & Accessories world; rm just making sure ROAD & WRECKER SERVICE the world doesn't change me. Thursday - April 11 Noon - 5:00 pm Friday - April 12 10:00 am - 5:00 pm 429-0001 Erskine Carter is a Daily Cam- Flat Bed Towing pus columnist Saturday - April 13 10:00 am - 5:00 pm iv; X A^wwwYsffSfBwervlAft&CvwJ^w^

ROTC BUILDING

HARDWARE, SOFTWARE AND The Department of Career Services RELATED EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS invitee you to

On display and lor purchase AN EVENING WITH GENERAL ELECTRIC Free Admission. Door Prizes. Special Events. INVITED VENDORS INCLUDE Alpha Computer Systems "A Preview of Your Professional Future" AT&T Information Systems • General Electric looks toward the future WANG Computer Training Institute • Entry Level Opportunities Victor Electronics Corp. • Preparing for the Interview Honeywell Information Systems Digital Equipment Corp. IBM Instruments, Inc. This Informative meeting is very important to junior technical IBM Corporation • tudenta getting ready to search for careere and to aenior» Radio Shack Corporation Computer City Computerland Tektronix, Inc. TUESDAY - APRIL 9th Computerease Computer Know How 7:00 p.m. • Phymicm Bldg. • Room 36 Northeast Computer Institute Agnet Eduware To b« conducted by member, of the G.E. Interviewing Team. UCONN CO-OP Hammett Microcomputer Division Computer Learning Unlimited Telex Computer Corporation GENERAL^ ELECTRIC Sperry Computer Systems ■ I ' Arts The Daily Campus, Tuesday. April 9. 1985 Page 11 Maybe Waiting for Godot wasn't so bad after all

By James Gallant their physical, mime-like act- Beckett's bleak vision of inseparable unit demonstrat- shadow the entire play. Staff Writer ing style gives the characters life's meaninglessness is bal- ing Beckett's sense of the Beckett's plays need, it My initial reaction to Wait- great vitality. For instance anced by a strong sense of pleasure and pain involved in seems to be played broadly in ing for Godot at UConn was when the two discuss the fate human bonding order for us to catch the sub- that I had become one of the of the "Thief who is saved" by tleties and nuances of his characters in the play. After Christ Fishman and Emerson vision When well performed, making arrangements for my use their fingers to under- his plays stay with us, making English 109 students to attend, score the point a device used Arts Likewise, Becket's horror at us leave the theatre with a I somehow ended up without quite movingly at the play's the false bonds which enslave head filled with questions Is a ticket Thus, I found myself end. They also found numer- man is expressed by the time real? Who is Godot? Why last Thursday evening stand- ous comic variations of the Commentary characters of Lucky and bother waiting? The possibil- ing in a long line" for SRQ seat's lines: Pozzo. As Pozzo, the tyranni- ities are endless. The effec- (translation: floor space). cal master, Kenneth O'Neil is tiveness of the UConn prod- "Let's go/ both comic and frightening uction was confirmed to me After three cigarettes and We can't/ mans need for com- James Silas (as Lucky) is a as 1 left the theatre and heard several conversations with Why not? panionship to survive Fish- haunting figure of death, at least three different inter- disgruntled students (whose We're waiting for Godot" man and Emerson become an whose image seems to over- pretations. professors had required them to see the show but made no arrangements), I was ushered, along with half a dozen other " lucky" ones, to my seat in the PAROUSIA PRESS BLACK STUDENTS ASSOCIATION aisle WORD PROCESSING CENTER ELECTIONS 1985 1986 By the time the play began, I • Offset Printing Monday April 8th at 4:30pm - Last day to sign already felt a oneness with up for BSA membership. • Copying Godot's main characters Tuesday April 9th - Letters of intent for officers Vladimir and Estragon, and a • Typing due before I 1:00am. sympathy for their futile • Word Processing Wednesday April 10th - BSA debates 3:00-4:30pm attempts to relieve the bore- dom of "passing the time " 4 9 W7 Thursday April 1 I th - BSA Ejections 8:30am-400pm JNIVERSITY PLAZA * " * ooe „T Ae„ Sunday April 21 St - Mandatory workshop for new What happened on stage ll 232 STORRS ROAD STORRS. CT 0626 officers at the AACC 6:00-9:00pm was indeed worth the wait Waiting for Godot was perhaps the most consistent engaging and faithful presentation of serious modern theatre I have witnessed at UConn Both the pjay and the production are deserving of more respect than that shown by angry students forced to be there (or locked out) or by the casual dismissal of the pro- duction in Karl Henzy*s flip- pant review for the Daily Campus (despite his belated retraction). Beckett's plays are not easily carried oft even in pro- fessional productions Godot assaults traditional dramatic expectations stripped of linear action, it is a two-act play in which literally "noth- ing happens, twice" To apprec- iate Beckett's vision, the theatregoer must adjust his perception of reality to Bec- kett's Director Robert Mac- Donald, in the programme notes, advised the audience to "temporarily set aside... some of our habitual ways of looking at time space and movement in order to permit the fuller response or the freer play, of another side of our nature" The UConn production used somber lighting, disso- nant haunting music, and a stark but intriguing setting to draw us into Beckett's world But the " life" of the play, its action, is centered in two tramps Vladimir and Estragon, Every TI calculator comes with who spend their time quarrel- ing, philosophizing and wait- one extra number. ing for Mr. Godot who never appears Jonathan Fishman (Estragon) and Skip Emerson (Vladimir) capitalize on the 1-800-TI-CARES comic. Laurel and Hardy When you buy a Texas operations, or service questions, quality of their exchanges; Of course, there's just one Instruments calculator you call us Monday thru Friday catch. It has to be a Texas don't just buy a calculator, you between 9 am and 4 pm CST, Instruments calculator. But buy Texas Instruments' com- and we'll be glad to help. then, if you're as smart as we mitment to quality. If your calculator needs think you are, why wouldn't Write It's a commitment backed repairing, we'll direct you to it be? by a fully developed service one of our 46 conveniently network that includes the located service centers for an above toll-free number you ctin immediate exchange. Under , TEXAS ^ Arts call from anyplace in the warranty, it's free. If there's no INSTRUMENTS United States. center near you, we'll do it all Creating useful products call Toby If you have any applications. by mail. and services for you. 429-9384 ; •. • ! i ' ' ' !>.'.• ' • .♦.».» .».* .1 t.4.i.4.i . . 4 .4 i l.*.i l '^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >'■*■'■'■'■>■>•'i-'■>■'■>■■> -*> * ■ ■ '•'■■ •* •• '•• ■ UAUA'JJJJ iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin .' ' ■ ...... •....•<* ■ . . • • i Tage 12 The Daily Campus. Tuesday. April 9. 1985 Marketplace STAYING IN STORRS THIS SUM- College Graduates of 1985 Donna (Pebbles) - Ellsworth 5th - For Sale MER? Sublet a two bedroom Wanted interested in teaching learning and Have a fantastic 19th birthday! WORD PROCESSING Services townhouse with a large kitchen Love Shari(Rickie) and Paula(Your IBM PC WANTED CASH PAID study skills travel to schools and Have your paper typed pro- and Irving room appliances and colleges throughout the US favorite upperclassman) furnishings Five minutes from CALL 429-6888 LEAVE MESSAGE fessionally at an affordable price... W4/I0 Strong Liberal Arts background it pays Call 429-01 33 - The Final campus Fall optiion is available creative independent car To the cute Belden girl I saw Wed- WordFS4/29 Call |ohn at 429-9384. FR4/12 needectstart mid-August Training nesday night at Talk of the Town AVOID ROOMDRAW: Bodyswap (short dark hair and nice brown to Wheeeler C from Beard Cran- with salary, send resume to P.O. SUMMER SUBLET Knolrwood eyes- Vicky?) Td realty like to meet CHEVY CHEVETTL 1977, 2-Door. dall Alumni or other Wheelers If Box 439, Greenwich CT 06830 Good Condition. Good Tires Acres 3/4 mile from Campus HW4/9 soon and talk - The guy in the completely furnished Interested Call Carol 487-6143 or pink shirt $495 or Best Offer. Call 486-3007 Sharon 487-6553. W4/10 Before Noon or After 8 pmFS4/ $250/month Call 429-9258 from 4-8. lets talk Fr4/15 LOST AT STATE CAPITOL one 9 Wanted Pair of exp. persons to roommate 5 ft tall short brown Ride Board build 7 ft morarless stone wall Triumph 500cc motorcycle $600. light digging wheelbarrowing et hair, funky sunglasses Dana in tow. KORG electric piano $300. Guitar Apartment for Summer Sublet Ride needed to or Univer- in yard $5/hr. each One day's Answers to Faitrv Papie Wa-Wa or Pedal MXR Phase 100 $35. CaH with Fall Option 2 Bedrooms sity of New Hampshire Leaving work 3 miles from campus Need Sweets If found, please return to the West triple Denise 486-2375 or After 5.456- Woodhaven Apartments Rent Friday 4/12 Refurnish Sunday 4/ own transportation. Call 3043 FS4/12 $335 per month plus utilities Hot 14 will share expenses Please call 486-3955. 429-08098 or 318 Happy B- day to our Gamma Alpha Water included Available June I st Diane at 487-5746. RB4 10 Monterta HW4/1 I FINAL NOTKFJI Let Carors Call |udy or Tine 429 441 3 FR4/ Delta Buddy! You ore the greatest May your b- day wishes come true! Creations put your favorite Logo 15 Personals 31 1Q Love LA LA on hat for Spring Weekend - Don't Help Wanted Delay Call Today - call 872-9662 Summer Sublet 2BR in Carriage Not all the good- looking, exciting No Later Than April 9th FS4/9 |BH Happy 21st B-day Woman! House Apts Available Mid-May. AIRLINES HIRING. $14-39,000! men are taken This one would One mile from campus Call 487- love to meet one of the cute excit- Here's to Lauderdale wet willies Stewardesses ReservationisrJ up to the elbow. Woody &. Thor 1973 MAVERICK. 8 CYL-302. PS 0425 after 6:00. Keep Trying FR4/ ing womea Richie AL ALL REDONE! New Brakes Worldwide! Call for Guide Direc- live, mmmm, skin peeling the But- 15 tory, Newsletter. 1-916-944- Suspension, Exhaust Etc.. MUST Kimbra Happy Birthday toa Syracuse and closets and all 4444 X UCONNAIR. HW5/2 the good times to come! 13 crazy SACRIFICE BEST OFFER SUBLET IMMEDIATELY! old-timer! Hope it's the best! Love 429-2201 Paul FS4/II Woodhaven Apartments Only months until graduationa nd jobs CRUISESHIPS HIRING $16- |an (remember me?) $85 per month plus utilities Avail- at Mass General! We love yal Cath 30.000! Caribbeaa Hawaii World. 1972 VALIANT Slant-6-Engine 3- able now through August Fall and B s PS SUYT! Call for Guide Directory. Newslet- WANTED to let you know that I speed manual 2-door. AM/FM Option. Call 487-8264 or 847- study in the Ubrary 4 South against Radio. Runs great, dependable ter. 1-916-944-4444 X To worshippers of the ALMIGHTY 6629. FR4/II UCONNCRUISE HW5/2 the East Wall and I will be there $550 or best offer Call 429-5253 Tuesday night BRYAN (in Allen House): the evenings FS4/23 You Look Maarvelous and so does worshipper of KWNI know is KEN! SPRING is coming)! Part time PS. why so defensive? our apartment! Available May- positions available selling flowers ELLEN AND FATIMA Here's your 1972 GREMLIN Good. Reliable August 3 Bedrooms SPACIOUS Personal Can't think of anyone To my roommate of 4yrs We Transportation HIGH MILEAGE. Work outdoors Fridays Saturdays belong in the Guiness Book of Sunny and full furnished. Close to or Sundays It is possible to do else Td rather be LOGGIN with Asking $450. Parts Car Included. World Records! They all said it campus and VERY affordable 429- your homework while selling Have a good week! Love Gina Call Eves. 822-6760. FS4/9 couldn't be done - we proved 8748. FR4/II flowers Car needed No invest- them wrong)! (once again) HAPPY ment on your part Full days only. To the "other" hypnotic subject SUMMER SUBLET. Newly the trance has affected much of BIRTHDAY MARY BETH! Love Call SDR. Enterprises742-9965. Roberta renovated completely furnished 3 HW4/25 my memory. Ask my boyfriend for Bedroom apt large kitchen and BONZO. To my best pal whether For Rent START YOUR CAREER NOW "the Last digit" thanks for offering spacious living room 5 minute but NO. in Newington or in Storrs Well 10 walk to campus $ 125 per month Earn money and work on Fortune days have passed and now it's Excellent Apartment For Rent plus electricity. Call 487-6026. 500 Cor panies Marketing pro- Trish HAPPY BIRTHDAY Hope You your turn to celebrate Hope you Within Walking Distance To FR4/I5 grams on campus Part- time (flex- had a great day. One you always have the best 19th birthday ever. UCona Available Immediately, ible) hours each week We give remember. You can be optimistic Love GONZO PS MINNER1! Apartment Is furnished. Call 487- references Call I -800-243-6679 now. Europe here we come With To the friends of Bart in Holister. 0716 or 1-482-5225. Rent Now. HW4/17 Room for rent full privileges sum- Love John Bart was good, but Mickey was Excellent Location. Call Today. mer and/or fall female preferred Summer work in homes of elderly RentFR4/l8 b It was a wonderful night close to campus Call 423-6897 and disabled in Storrs area Must PATITA CONGRADS ON GRAD I 00 it again. If interested.. for details FR4/I5 be trained as nurses aide or will SCHOOL TM GLAD YOULL BE 4-5 room apartment wanted by f:. thday boy, in Terry A train May 13 - 24. $4.33/hr plus HERE NEXT YEAR, LETS GO WILD professional staff member. Per- ■vegan the screamer of Shippee 5 B SUMMER SUBLET. Fall Optloa mileage Apply in person Home- AND FINISH THIS SPRING SEMES- manent tenant Excellent referen- Accept our birthday wishes and Two bedroom apartment maker Service 948 Main St TER JUMP A LITTLE HIGHER - our questions Why so weird? why ces Call 429-9384 (days) or Woodhaven Park $340/month. Willlmantlc HW4/I9 CAROLITA 429-7755.FR4/30 includes hot water. Balcony and so loud?shats with bunny? All Chefs Helper Girts Camp on Cape peons hail you Queen Tetley See pool rights Call429-9795 Chris or Hey Lee Ann Here's the personal SUBLET FOR SUMMER. 2 bed- Cod $ 150 per week with Room you on the dark side of the mooa Heather. FR4/I5 you wanted to see HAVE A room apartment at Woodhaven and Board 5 III Days wk Apply Pinky. Assilemasil Anitsirhcadnil GREAT DAY! A Friend Park(2 miles from campus). $340/ Sublet For Summer with Fall Chef Stowe-C HW4/10 Aserehtyramida mo. includes hot water. Partly fur- Charlie- Great picture in the CDC - Optloa Walden Apt Patio over- Students needed to work with Crisl Happy 21 st! Hope you don't nished has balcony and pool Are we going dancing again soon? looking pool Partially furnished young children at the Child think we forgot you! You're more rights Call Usa at 487-0359. FR4/ Two Bedrooms Two Baths Call Development Labs Experience than a fool and we love you! Can't We'd like you to teach us some of 9 your moves- the two girls from the Soon429-1981. FR4/II working with children required wait til Wednesday! HaHa Love Tacky Club Party. »_j , _ Call 486-2865. HW4/10 Donna and Kim Woodhaven Apartment to sublet See page 13 mid-May - August For one or two females Only $92.50 month plus Roommates/ electricity. Call Patty After 6 pm OUT BY HICK SUTT0N 487-0699. FR4/I0 Housemates >fes IT'S SCHEDULE TIME Summer sublet - one bedroom You'Kt 63 CREWS M) You& ow DCtttt ONCfc A^IN, AND UKZ apartment 374 mile from campus FWIND M MT OF S!CR£T ACAPtMIC 429-5391 after 11 pm FRA/10 ROOMMATES WANTED Two EVERYONE USE, GUT females to share spacious 2 bed- WAS TO MEET WITH «'S TOUR CLASS, Youte PROBATION MHK HAIt| room apt for summer. Walking Summer Sublet Fall Optloa ADVISOR... p ONLY TAKEN r; distance to campus $125 per YOi 60T rf Woodhaven Apts Two Bedroom 'GUT-YoOR RECCW) SHOWS CM 200-/f 4 305/mo. plus utilities includes month plus utilities No smokers or TO W \, pet owners please 429-5034. YoURfc ONLY KEWSTfcKet^ LEVtL < FOR ;ft Hot water, partially furnished, pool FOR TWO r rlghs fully equipped electric RH4/I0 rr\ CLASPS... COURSE... kitchen, and more Call 487-1 166. FR4/II ROOMMATES WANTED Two i females to share spacious 2 bed- J House to sublet June through room apt for summer. Walking dis- August Four to five bedrooms tance to campus $ 125 each month plus utilities No smokers or available at $140.00 per month including utilities Large porch and pet owners please 429-5034. RH4/I0 yard 487-6263 or 487-4655 or 487-0622. FR4/I1 Shapely. Deena Shu ford I or 2 ROOMMATES FOR SUM HI rtflXl£E, HOW VJHS HIBflM... WHAT AKE SHE GAVE OP Summer Sublet WAIden Play MER APARTMENT. POOL. I 1/2 YOU* EflSTE*? You D0i/v&>[ CHOCOLATE F0A iE/vr. water polo this summer in a lux- BATHS LARGE ROOM PORCH. / urious pool Bask in the sun on the WALKJN CLOSET. FULLY FUR- NISHED! CALL 487-1966 AFTER6. patio while barbecuing outside spacious yard dishwasher. 2 BR, 2 Waldea RH4/I5 Bath Last two weeks May free Housemate Male or Female $360/mo. Call evenings 429- Kitchen Laundry All Utilities 2019. FR4/I0 included Mansfield Center Call Evenings $45 week 487-0593. Summer Sublet - Carriage House - RH4/I5 2 Bedrooms Nicely furnished May 14 - Labor Day. $315 plus utilities 1/2 mile from Campus 429-7917 Ask for Sarah or Steph Female Roomate Needed to share w 8 FR4/II an apartment for the fall semester with 2 other people Call Apt For Rent- Knowlfwood Acres 487-5464. RH4/I2 TheShoeTalks By Dominique Wasselin Beginning May 20. Close To Cam- pus Best Offer 487-0180. FR4/ Female Grad or Professional to II share 2 bdrm apt 2 1/2 miles fro campus $ 170. included hot water. SUMMER SUBLET with fall option. Available |une I. Call FJyse 429- Large two bedroom apartment 7217 after 5 pm RH4/I5 semi-furnished and CLEAN. Rent negotiable Only 3 miles from Womaa student seeks room fur- Campus CALL NOW 429-7893 nished or unfurnished, within bik- FR4/II ing distance of campus Kitchen privileges not necessary but SUMMER SUBLET FULLY FUR- appreciated. Willing to pay extra if NISHED 2 BR DUPLEX APART- a piano is available for abbreviated MENT LAUNDRY. TENNIS practicing Needed Aug I or soon COURTS MID MAY THRU thereafter. Please call I -974-0601 AUGUST 487-0056. FR4/I I after 6 PM RH4/I5 Market pi The Daily Campus. Tuesday. April 9, 1985 Page 13 From page 12 CALL SANDY. THE POOR BICYCLISTS•••BICYCLISTS••• Vote for distinguished professors Miscellaneous STUDENTS TYPIST. AT 423-6374 BICYCLISTS•••TRIATHLETES••• today at Student Union tonight at April(Shippee), BEFORE YOUR DEADLINES TRIATHLETS*" Learn how to ride Livrary. E4/I0 HAPPY BIRTHDAY? Want to celel> (NO HOME PHONE). PLEASE more efficiently - easier, longer, Unbeatable prices for the best D| faster! Find out about bike set-up rate with a pizza? Don't forget ya LEAVE MESSAGE DISCOUNT BICYCLISTS'"BICYCLISTS"* sound systems on campus. Earl equipment clothing diet training have a single and they do make RATES: 75< DOUBLE NEGOTI- BICYCLISTS'^TRJATHLETES*" Russ Earrs Traveling Disc All for fitness and competition Come maternity wedding gowns? Have request dancing music Over a ABLE FREE EDITING. AT YOUR TR1ATHLETES'" Learn how to ride a great day, and watch where your to the •"BICYCLING CLINIC" decade in service. Now there is no SERVICE ON SELECTRIC. INTER- more efficiently - easier, longer, driving (106?) Love. S|S NATIONALS INVITED. M4/9 Sponsored by the UCONN faster! Find out about bike set-up reason to go anyplace else BICYCLING CLUB and USG equipment clothing diet training Umited time only. S85.00 on Tonight at 7pm Commons 217. SONDRA Happy 20th! You re for fitness and competition. Come sound system 423-1508 M5/ 3 No matter what your level of cycl- finally legal, but for how long? We' II Events to the —BICYCLING CLINIC" have a great time partying tonight! ing experience - You'll learn a lot of Looking for Auto Insurance? Our GAY-STRAIGHT RAP: drop-indis- sponsored by the UCONN Love your future roomie who cycling tips that WILL IMPROVE one stop protection is all you cussion group on gay issues Wed- BICYCLING CLUB AND USG needs someone's LD! YOUR CYCLING ABILITY. New need. Find out from Tom Lobo nesdays 7:00 pm. Basement Tonight at 7 pm Commons 21 7. members always welcome 423-6374. American Mutual Conference Room Health Ser- No matter what your level of cycl- ANOTHER USG-FUNDED EVENT Sharon - Maytag employs more Insurance Companies Life/Auto/ vices (Ring bell - West door) Info ing experience - You' II learn a lot of than one repair man. How about a E4/9 Home/Health. M5/3 486-4707 E4/20 cycling tips that WILL IMPROVE date? -Straight Forward YOUR CYCLING ABILITY. New DISC IOCKEY. SPIRO the MO| FUN RUN SAT. APRIL 27th PRO- RUGBY SHIRTS BAGS |EWERLY members always welcome Slanderous deceptive lies! Rumors (master of jam), offering TOP Big CEEDS FOR CYSTIC FIBROSIS ON SALE TUESDAY APRIL 9th 10 ANOTHER USG-FUNDED EVENT. of my death have been greatly Sound. Equipment and ligting FANTASTIC PRIZES REGISTER AM - 4 PM STUDENT UNION E4/9 exaggerated! MCB Inquisitive and Plenty of references. Over 1000 AREA COORDINATORS OFFICE LOBBY GOOD PRICES. SPON- innovative too! You doubt too records. Call 429-1 109 for RUSSELL A MORE INFO CALL SORED BY WOMEN'S RUGBY BACCHUS and Sigma Phi easily. appointment M4/10. 486-2053 SPONSORED BY FRATS SUPPORT THE HOME TEAM! E4 Epsilon say "Be a good friend. STAFF. E4/24 9 DUMP DRUNK DRIVING". Check it AN-DE-ROO out at the Student Union this week Good luck on your exam Boston Call 486-3430 or 486-5196 for on Saturday. YEAH! The |OIN THE UCONN SAILING CLUB. BOSTON on 4/1 3/85. Tickets in D.L SERVICE -SOUND ON TAP more information. E4/11 MUNCHKIN OF WADE MEETING TUESDAY 7:00 PM SU. French A Lounge M-W: 2-7. Wed Large System available for Quad 218A BOATS ARE IN THE WATER is last day to buy Parties. Call us for your dorms next ALL WOMEN OF UCONN ARE Dear Mr. and Mrs. C Glad to see RECREATIONAL SAILS AND ONLY $9.00! Gather all your party or semi-formal 487-8095 DORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND you've solved your domestic RACES EVERY WEEKEND. FREE T- friends and Get away! E4/10 (leave message)M5/2 ' WOMEN AND ALCOHOL". A quarrels the thought of having a SHIRTS WITH DUES E4/9 WORKSHOP SPONSORED BY single parent was simply heart Riding Clinic! Tonight Tuesday BACCHUS AND PAN- TYPING FAST. PROFESSIONAL April 9, 7:00 in Commons 217 breaking Be careful where you Student Affiliates American HELLENIC COUNCIL Wednesday. FIRST REWRITE "FREE". ALL WORK Learn to ride more efficiently and throw the chocolate mousse Sin- Chemical Society Invites Science April 10. at6 PM in 310 Commons GUARANTEED PERFECT. CALL less painfully New members cerely Splish Splash, Sir Majors Lunch with Dr. Interrante - E4/I0 UNDA EVANS 423-9591 (leave always welcome Sponsored by message). M4/12 RPI inorganic professor, seminar MT. KILAMAN|ARO You had four speaker; Tour UConn Health Cen- the Bicycling Club E4/9 COLOR GUARD - co-ed rifles and months and the spring thaw never ter. Contact Dr. DimockChemistry flags - TRYOUTS Agriculture occured We believe if s inevitable Ace Body Movers D|s: Now book- Toxic Waste what is industry ing for semi-formals Good dates Department A4/10 Auditorium Practice Wednesday. you' re destined to become a frien- doing to the environment come Tryouts Thursday, 6:00-8:00 dless political figure But then still available Always playing the hear Mark Osten from Green best music because we play what Open to anyone interested See again thafs exactly what you've THE FLUTE OF GOD contains the Peace Discuss Solving this pro- yOU there! E4/9 wanted for the past year. Good you want Call Alan 487-8500 most advanced knowledge in the blem Wednesday 7:30 SU. 306 luck in the future and If you ever M5/2 world today on the nature of man's L4/I0 Lost and Found begin that long awaited thawing thoughts and feelings and how CHECK OUT THE SOUND! process be sure and let us know. they shape his reality. New discus The Undergraduate Economics LOST tan glasses and case bet- Vague Wanderer and Neighbor S-AUDIOS New Quadbuster' sion class on ECKANKAR. the Club presents William Baumol "A Soundsystem 2300 Watts to ween GoodyearB. MSB, and ancient science of soul travel Century of Productivity Growth: engineering 3 around4:00 Wed If make your last party go out with a To the Students of Beard Hall It is starts Wed. April 10. at 7:30 pm in What the Long Run Data Show. Found Please call Mario 487 difficult to describe the surprise BANG Call Matt 429-7784. M4/ Arjona345. Everyone is welcome Thursday. April llth SU. 101 &. 22 -7/73. Need badly! LF4/10 and gratitude I felt last Friday night E4/|0 102 8 p.m. E4/I I See page 14 March 29th. I still don't know how you kept it all such a secret It has been my pleasure working as the chef of Beard all these years, and nothing has made it so pleasurable as the students I have served. All of you this year have made it especially enjoyable for me I want to extend a heartfelt thanks for your thoughtfulness Sincerely, Bruce PS Does this mean I don't get a raise next year?

To the girl( correct gender I assume) who on 4/4 questioned the location and quantity of attrac- tive stimulating and available mea I have considered your FIRST THiNGiN dllema and am offering 3 possible THE NiORNiN6 explanations

A) If intelligence and good looks are inherited traits and conform to a Boltzmann distribution, then the quantity of those individuals (male 4-9 ■ 1985 Un.verMl Pr»»l Synflicile "T»«« t^liv&U> or female'jthatsociier/deenv colje "in;elligent ano good looking" will be limited and the probability of randomly meeting such an individual will be highly unlikely. BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed

B) It has been my exper ience that MY FOCUS MS CHMOBP... IN SHORT, TH6 PANP6L10N5 the less exciting and/or attractive 5iR..ae BECOME MYPRIORITIES SHIFTBP... OF W LIFE HME B€BN TUB MNPEUONS but intelligent individuals are fre MOLVBP WITH ft MY 0RP6RLY WORLP WFLIP PYLOVe.ftNP r CAN YOU quentry shuntv d by society and WMN. THUS I... I HAS JOYOUSLY BEEN STftW NAKBP, YBT JUBILANT, xeep MY are often forced to congregate MUST RBSI6N TURNEP ON ITS HEAP.. ^FACINb (\ JOB 0P6N and fester unobtrusively in the \ m IN case MSB and the basements of small T P05ITKM. WINGS PONT dormitories. *™ mm." WORK our * C) My final and most important explanation follows an age old adage that " Birds of a feather floe k together." Therefore you should ask yourself "Am I sufficiently s intelligent stimulating and visually appealing to attract a male with comparable qualities?" In other ^Kf words, instead of asking yourself Are Grape Nuts right for Me?" you should ask "Am I right for Grape Nuts?" Please respond. Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU Mike. 2nd floor Terry A - I don't know what Til do after May. LISTEN, UNCLE PUKE, YOU MAY TMmMN6Y0U,IFY0U Doesn't the US. RDA include THINK THERE'S NO HARM INSMLG- BOgncf. SETUPSOMBSiEAZOtP ANY OFFHAND? breakfast antagonism along with 6UN6 IN BOOTLEG RECORDS, BUT efr/xne? OPERATION ON OUR CAM- SU66BSTI0N$z PIANO vitamins? From the oneyou love to I TRY TEUJN6 THAT ID THE FAMILIES ^T PUS, MeOW STRAIGHT MRS. hate -0FZ.Z.WP' o I MOW POLICE! /

TO THE GUY I SEE WALKING INTO ROOM 430 ARJONA MWF YOU CAUGHT MY EYE I DON'T KNOW WHY, BUT YOU MADE ME SIGH. S-A

DAYTRJPPERS Sturbridge and the Cape Beckoa The Ghost Machine is revved up and ready to mobilize. Get stoked for ROADTRJP2. Com- ing Soon to a weekend near you P*.?e 14 The Dally Campus, Tuesday. Aorll 9, 1985 Sports Long ball leads Sox past Yankees Cyclist to lecture attack against New York star- four in seven innings, wiile BOSTON (AP)— Sklggn* ter Phil Niekro and relievers The UConn Cycling Club is t •utfielder Tony Armas, Dv itfht Niekro, who walked home \ i his clinics and is regarded as Bob Shirley and Joe Cowley. runs in the third, saw his sponsoring a riding clinic to- one of the top cycling clini- c!vans and Jim Rice accour .ed iioston right-hander Dennis night at 7 p.m. in room 217 of for six runs with homers M. >n opening-day record drop I < >« >- cians in the area ' Oil Can" Boyd earned th< 7. the Commons Building. The Among the topics that will day, powering the Boston Red victory with help from Bob clinic features veteran racer Sox to a 9-2 victory over the Niekro, who turned 46 on be discussed at the clinic are Stanley. and coach George Orr as the New York Yankees in the 1985 April 1, failed in a bid for his setting up your bike to fit your Boyd allowed just five hits 285 major league victory, guest speaker. season-opener for both teai. ,.•* body, efficient cycling techni- "Tuck out five and walke< gave up five hits Orr has been active in cyri- Backed by a lusty 1C-I • ■ ques, equipment main- ing for the last 35 years. He is tenance training for fitness or currently the coach of one u' competition (triathalons) as Rose leads Reds past Expos, 4-1 New EngancTs national cham- well as diet and clothing The pion teams and has raced for clinic is for non-cyclists as Montreal last August, was 2- 13 years in Europe as a pro- CINCINNATI (AP)—Play .- League opening day victor, well as cyclists. over the Montreal Expos. for-3 with a walk, leaving him fessional He is well iiiown for manager Pete Rose resum I 93 hits away from breaking Men's cinii.- '. 'i-U; Eric Uthgennart (UC," his chase of Ty Cobb's aH-tiiiii- Rose knocked in the first .so runs of the game with a Cobb's all-time mark of 4,191. Brand'is6. IJConn3. ffc't Evan Crain (BU) 6-1,6-1 hit mark Monday, driving in Mario Soto of Cincinatti and three runs with a double an I i fifth-inning double He add< J Individual Results—Singles- Doubles—Bernstein-Fisher a i RBI single in the seventh Montreal's Steve Rogers tra- Bob Bernstein (BU) del David (BU) del Shinn-Sinatro (L'C) single to lead the Cincinn i ded shutout innings until the Reds to a snowy 4-1 Natioi' Rose, who returned from Shinn (UQ 6-1, 6-2; Marshall 6-7,6-2,6-1; Sluteski-Feldman fifth Fisher (BU > del David Cam- (BU) del Ehrenpreis-Uthgen- Big Last blaiiuiiig IX i igue Overall League Overall eron ( UQ 6-3,6-1; Jon Gibson nart 6-4, 6-1; Cameron-Gibson Northern Division W-l W-L/T Southern Division W-L W-L-T (UQ del Stewart Skfleflki (UQ del Bilgrei-Crain(UC) 6- UConn i-1 8-10-1 Seton H.iil 6-0 19-9-1 (BU) 6-2, 6-1; Dave Bilgrei 4,6-4. Boston College 3-3 4-9-0 Vlllanov i 2-4 1*14-0 (BU) del Steven Ehrenpreis St John's 2-3 9-8-0 Georget .>■• 1-2 12-9-0 (UQ 6-1, 7-5; Adam Feldman Team Records—UConn 0-1, Providence n.< Pittsbur • 0-3 3-6-0 (BU) del MarkSinatro(UQ 6- Brandeis 5-0.

**•*•••••••••••••• ** From page 13 gruds* grads * grads * grads * grads* LOST Pair of glasses In red carry- TAKE A TUP TO * SAVE 3 LIVES.. ing case I f found please call Don at 487-6563. LF4/9 * IMPORTANT LOST SET OF KEYS IN ....GIVE BLOOD A FLOWERED CASE ALONG THE * * SIDEWALK FROM BUCKLEYTO AS 55. COULD HAVE LOST IN AS 55. * PLEASE. CALL 487-5471 IF TODAY FOUND. LF4/9 «£CQ*fr^ff*^ * Buckley & McMahon * LOST: A pair of brown leather gloves in DRM 239 on Tuesday. SAT. April 20th TICKETS $6.00 * 11 am.-4 p.m. April 2. Sentimental Value. Please Bus leaves Student Go on sale Apr. 8th Mon.- Frl.io-2 Call Monique at 487-6377. No questions asked. LF4/9 Union at 8 a.m. Sold In Room 3 18 Qrad. Center Returns at 7:30 p.m. with Qrad. ID LOST: A Black Cross ballpoint Pen * WALK-INS WELCOME * with "Mike C" engraved In side * * Tremendous sentimental value It For more Info. Call 486-GRAD was a graduation gift from a friend If found see Mike Rm 418 Buckley illlUL^Jf 21*1** * * * ** South tower. Six- pack eis a reward £^ Thanks LF4/10 A1Q-AaiU\ PROFESSIONAL HAI ATTENTION LOST I4K V-Shaped herringbone ,„ *«»-«O0U STYLES FOR MEN AN CAPTAINS necklace with Diamond LOST 1 AROUND 3/27/85. REWARD. — ^ WOMEN OF SENTIMENTAL VALUE CALL SUE Shoppers Ptaza tt. 100 AT 487-8393 or Call 486-9035 ^ •*. :,« i»,:.:::n'.;.;;*•■!. AND LEAVE MESSAGE LF4/12 *«oro»Slort24Bulldlno Storrs Tr FOUND SET OF KEYS IN BLACK MANDATORY MEETING FOR LEATHERCASE ON 195. Just south of K-fs. Found Thursday Morning ALL TEAM CAPTAINS* ON April 4th (CALL PATTY 487-0699. TUESDA Y, APRIL 9 AT4:30 LF4/II IN STUDENT UNION ROOM 101 Activities

SPONSORED BY: "April 14th through April 20th is STUDENT-ALUMNI ADVISORY BOARD GREEK WEEK-AII Campus Greeks are encouraged to participate in DEPARTMENT OF INTRAMURALS this celebration of our Greek Heritage" signed Zeus A4/20 HUSKIES TONYS PIZZA NASSIFFS SU8WA Y OSCAR'S UNIVERSITY PIZZA Total Concern Wants You to DO IT IN A CHAIR! Sat April I 3th Regis- y<>W OWJV CLOSET Cf PHIL'S INC. ter to represent your group or yourself in the awareness com- *TEAM MUST BE REPRESENTED petitions A4/10 SUMMER JOBS j\ FASHION SHOW The 'KellyGirf People SERVICES ^T THE SrVDENT Clerks CRT/Data Entry Word Processors Typists Light Industrial Accounting Clerks If you want to work \%- Z. .00 in the Greater Hartford area this summer, come register with us ort SPOUSORZO By : Tuesday, April 9th 9:30-2:30 Student Commons Room 31 5 7H»To JboL . _ For more info and sign up contact the Co-op Education^. Off Campus Employment office, 3rd Floor-Wilbur Cross Bldg EOE/M-F-H Not an agency. Never a Fee Sports The Daily Campus, Tuesday. April 9. 1985 Page 15 ...Shavers face judge ,..Chicago looks like best in West From back page From back page has improved noticeably, so meant Point shaving means trict Attorney Harry Connick. And Hemond didn't stop winning by a smaller margin he turned in six sharp innings look for the White Sox despite Two players, seniors Clyde marred only by Guillen's er- there He may have solved than the established betting a suspect bullpen to walk Eads and Jon Johnson, tes- ror, which let in a run on a sure Chicago's third base problem line or losing by a bigger away with the West as steady tified against their teammates double-play ball He keeps hit- with the "throw-in" in the deal Harold Baines, powerful Ron margin in a grand jury investigation ters off-balance with a sharp - Luis Salazar • a versatile five The case was allotted on Kittle a healthy Carlton Fisk that produced the eight in- curve and off-speed stuff, but position player with a strong, Monday to State District and potential superstar Greg dictments. his fastball is as lively as ever. accurate arm excellent speed Judge Alvin Oser, who told Walker score some runs for Accused with the three If he and Britt Burns, who was and at 28, the potential to the pitching staff. (Also, keep lawyers for the players and players are Roland Ruiz, 48, a nearly untouchable against become a fixture at third if he five others indicted in the case an eye on Mexican League convicted local bookmaker, the Mets over six innings, hits as well as in his first two that he would hold a bond refugee Nelson Barrerra and Craig Bourgeois of New Or- return to the form expected of seasons. The Sox took a good speedster outfielder Darryl hearing and arraignment leans, 23; and three Tulane them, the Sox will have pos- look at him and waived two Boston along with a vastly next Monday. students: Gary Kranz of New sibly the best five-man rota- other third basemen, includ- The comments by Green improved Marc Hill behind Rochelle, N.Y., 21; Pavid tion in baseball (Tom Seaver, ing ex-Giant Tom O'Malley. and Castaing were the first by the plate to contribute Rothenberg of Wilton Conn, Richard Potson and Floyd No one else in the division any of those defending them- heavily.) 22, and Mark Olensky of Fair Bannister are the other selves against allegations Lawn, N.J., 21. made two weeks ago by Pis- three). o Intramural track meet to be held Discover 0M0. type Copy & Wont Procassing, Inc. The Recreation Office is No individual shall compete awarded one point for each holding its annual UConn In- in more than one field event participant who competes. OKN UConn Bualneea Block tramural Track Meet today *OM-FW»JO m 487-1794 Rt. 195 4 Dog Lane and two running events or The winning team in each SAT *m ■ **» and Wednesday at the field two field and one running house Registration for both league will earn 50 points, 2nd COPY SERVICE TYPING & WORD event (including relays). Please place 45, 3rd 40, etc As an day's events will be held from note: If this happens, the in- • 1 to 1000 Super Quality Copies PROCESSING incentive to encourage indi- "while you wait" 5:15 to6 p.m. There is no cost dividual will be disqualified • Resumes for participating in this event vidual participation, one point • 2-Sided Copies from all events he has en- for each participant who com- • Reductions • Ropetltive Letters All starting times are ap- tered • Collating & Stapling • Manuscript Preparation proximate and participants petes will be awarded in addi- • 1V x 17" Copying • Maintenance of client/ There are unlimited entries tion to all-sports points. • Large Selection of Paper membersnio lists, directories should be ready to compete per house Houses will be am: mass mailing,. as early as before I BINDING SERVICE ___ scheduled times. Events will run consecutively without delay. Husky Sport Spot All field events will be held Campus today (Tuesday) beginning at This Week in Sports: April 8-14 6 p.m. Trials and finals for the 60 yard dash and the low hur- INTRAMURAL Florist dles will also be held today. DAFFODILS $2.99 BUNCH All other events are sched- uled for tomorrow (Wednes- COKSAGES FOR April 8 - Rosters Due for 4th Annual day). The schedule of events SEMI FORMALS is as follows: Soccer Shoot-Out Today: Downtown Storrs 487-1 193 5:15-6 p. m—registration April 9 &. 10- 6 p.m.—high and low jump, Intramural Track Meet P shot put SBEClAi PATB* F0 7:15—Trials, low hurdles STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS 7:45—Finals, 1/2 mile run INTERCOLLEGIATE -FALL FILM LOTTERY 8:15—Finals, Low hurdles (if necessary) TUESDAY,APRIL 16 (310 COMMONS) April 9 - jV Baseball vs Eastern Conn Wednesday: -FIRST DAY TO RESERVE MAJOR FACILITIES 5:15-5 p. m—registration 3:15 PM FOR THE FALL 6 p. m—mile run 2-3 heats, on April 10 - jV Baseball vs Suffield Academy time 3:15PM WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17 (214 COMMONS) 630—200 yd run-heats, on April I 1 - Varsity Baseball vs Hartford time -STUDENT LEADERS RECEPTION 7 p.m.—4x200 yd relay; heats 3:00 PM of 3, on time April 12 - JV Baseball vs Southeastern STUDENT UNION BALLROOM 730—600 yd run; heats of 6. 12:00 UCONN WEDNESDAY MAY 1 on time co-rec relay-4x200 relay-2 men arid 2 women -LAST DAY TO REGISTER FOR THE (points will be awarded). ACTIVITIES FAIR MONDAY, MAY 13 (STUDENT UNION 201) BOG Travel invites you to -FIRST DAY OF FALL CLASSES Spend the Day by the Sea in WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4

NEWPORT, Rl -ACTIVITIES FAIR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 - R0TC

-MCCULL0UGH LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE SATURDAY APRIL 1 3, 1985 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 BUSES LEAVE SU AT 8 AM AND LEAVE NEWPORT AT 6 PM -PARENTS DAY SATURDAY. OCTOBER 5

Tickets $8.00/person -HOMECOMING Available in Commons 214 OCTOBER 30 - NOVEMBER 3 THE STUDENT LEADERSHIP & First come, First serve. PROGRAM OFFICE STAFF WILL ASSIST YOU IN PLANNING YOUR FALL ACTIVITIES THROUGH LEADERSHIP WORKSHOPS AND INDIVDUAL ADVISING SESSIONS.

Contact 486-3432, Commons 214 <«BV For More Information American League Predictions After strong spring, Sox looking good in West Chicago General Manager Roland risk he may surprise a lot of people with his By Peter lllsey Guillen is an acrobat afield already ability to get on base He will not steal a Special to The Daily Campus Hemond took a quick look at this dichotomy and did the only thing a drawing comparisons to the other lot of bases, but he has good speed and Editor's Note After spending spring shrewd GM can da he robbed the Pad- Ozzie - Smith of St Louis (and pre- runs the bases very well A left-handed training watching the major league's res blind acquiring three potential viously, San Diego). The White Sox are hitter, he's very quick out of the box Grapefruit League preseason games regulars in exchange for former Cy hyping him as a new Luis Aparicio, and and will get more than a few leg-hits in Florida, Hisey compiled the follow- Young winner Lamar Hoyt the odds are that this is more than If he hits Ozzie has an inside track ing American League predictions for Hoyt Yankee castoff, has won a lot wishful thinking Guillen has great on the Rookie-of-the-Year award And the coming season This is the first of of flames over the past four years, but range making sparkling stops deep in he gives the White Sox their first three installments to appear this last year, his loss total (18) and ERA the hole He doesn't move to his left as legitimate shortstop since Aparicio week (4.47) ballooned to match his wais- well, and he's prone to rookie mis- took his Hall of Fame act to Balti- Perhaps the two greatest mysteries tline He still retained his pinpoint con- takes but from what I saw in two more of the 1984 baseball season were San trol, but his repertoire of assorted junk games, he is more than ready to play in But Hemond wasn't content just to Diego's presence in the league cham- wasn't fooling anyone He may be ef- the big leagues at the tender age of snatch Guillen away. He also acquired pionship series and World Series and fective in the National League but the 21. big Tim Lollar, another Yankee castoff the Chicago White Sox" total drop from track record of slop artists in the What isn't generally known about who has licked arm problems that contention for the weak American senior circuit isn't encouraging Guillen is that for a 150 pound light- have plagued him over the past two League West title The Sox" main goal in the trade was weight, he has surprising pop in his bat years Lollar will step into Hoyfs place The Padres just weren't that good the brilliant minor league shortstop, In four minor league seasons, he com- in the rotation and probably add (as Detroit demonstrated in the Ozzie Guillen (pronounced geeh-JEN), piled a lifetime .308 batting average punch as a left-handed pinch hitter. Series) and the White Sox just weren't and Hoyt for Guillen even-up would and hit .296 last year in Triple A He's In a spring start against , that had have been, at worst, an interesting not likely to hit that well for the Sox hi it See page 15 The Daily Campus, Tuesday, April 9, 1985 SPORTS Meet New Hampshire today: Drug addicts Wave stveeps UConn through Big East testify in By Jim Acton The wave began this past (8-10-1) a 5-1 in the league up to its capabilities. The lead- Sports Editor weekend in the form of a The doubleheader sweep ing hitters for the Huskies are point shaving Just as The Wave swept three-game sweep of Big East was due in large part to first Ford (.338), Scott Cormier through college basketball foe St John's UConn took baseman Dave Ford who con- (.317), and Jon Gery (.305), NEW ORLEANS (AP)—The arenas last season, a wave has both games of a Saturday tinued his tremendous hitting and all three contributed to point shaving case against swept up the baseball team doubleheader, 7-6 and 2-1, tear through the past few the three wins Tulane center John " Hot Rod' and is carrying the Huskies and a single game last Thurs- games Ford had the game- The pitching is also improv- Williams is a falsification into this week's action. day, 2-0, to give the Huskies winning hit in each of Satur- ing and this was highlighted in based on testimony by "drug days games, going 4-7, in- the series Freshman John addicts," the lawyer rep- cluding two homeruns and Shea threw an outstanding resenting the 6-foot-10 star four RBI. He won the first game Thursday against the said Monday. game with a seventh inning Redmen, pitching a three- Mike Green of Chicago, who homer and the second with an hitter for his fourth win against joined Williams' defense team RBI single in the eighth Re- no losses The Saturday pit- on Monday, said his client will liever Kevin Hickey picked up chers were also strong Scott plead innocent "There's the wins in both games Ryan (1-2) went six 1/3 in- nothing to plead guilty to," "Solid defense, great hit- nings, allowing six runs on 11 he said ting good pitching thafs hits Dave Lanese relieved Williams, an all-Metro Con- what got us the sweep," coach Ryan and Hickey (2-1)'even- ference selection deemed a Andy Baylock said "It was an tually finished the Redmen off cinch first-round pick by the all-around good effort in all to pick up the win. National Basketball Associa- three games I know the fans Mark Thalmann (0-2) star- tion, is one of three players appreciated it because I got a ted the second game but was accused of controlling the few calls this morning from forced to leave in the fourth outcome of home games a- people saying that they never because of sand in his right gainst Southern Mississippi saw games with more hustle eye Mike Mane in i (1-2) re- and Memphis State in Feb- and good play." lieved Thalmann and pitched ruary. The second win on Satur- 3 1/3 strong innings before The other two are sopho- day was also a milestone in more swingman David Domi- 1 giving way to Hickey. "Old Baylock s coaching career. It Ironsides" once again finished nique and senior point guard was the fifth year coach's the job off for the starters and Bobby Thompson 100th win since taking over went home with his second The indictment also men- the head coach job in 1980. win of the day. He threw a tions a conspiracy to shave His overall record stands at total of 13 pitches to earn the points in the game at Virginia 100-106-4 in five-plus seasons two wins Tech on Feb. 16, although no "Winning 100 games doesn't HUSKY NOTES...the Hus- specifics were included excite me" Baylock said "It's kies will try and keep their Dominique's lawyer, Ed- just something that gives fuel intensity 'evel high today ward Castaing Jr., said Mon- to the ego. What is really when they travel to New day that his client also will important is that the guys Hampshire for a 3 p.m. con- plead innocent at arraign- swept St John's and nobody test Shea and Mancini will ment next week sweeps St John's" split duty in the game..UConn Green said the state's case Another promising point visits Fairfield on Wednesday is based on testimony from that Baylock sees coming from before returning home for a 3 three people who admitted Baseball coach Andy Bay lock picked up the 100th win of the sweep is that his team is p.m. home game with Hart- acquiring durgs from a fourth hit UConn career over the weekend (George Edwards now starting to gel and play ford on Thursday. person also involved in the photo). case "I have found in several of the cases I've tried that it's Softball team to put win streak on line hard to determine what drug addicts mean from time to The softbali team puts its Included among the weeks of Anderson (6-0, 0.58 ERA), offense with .545 batting time" he said "The only thing ten-game winning streak on top performances was junior junior Mary Linhares (3-0, average and 15 RBI. In six con- I've read about Williams is the line when it faces Spring- righthander Cherie Ander- 0.00 ERA) and sophomore tests last week Lovello was 6- 13 at the plate with one what drug addicts say about field Adelphi and Rutgers in son's UConn record-settting Denise Hannon (5-2, 1.01 him," he said action this week mark of 24 career victories ERA) has not allowed an double one triple and five RBI. He also said he was irritated UConn, 14-2, currently Anderson hurled a two-hit earned run over a stretch of Senior OF/DH Cindy Dysen- by leaks from the district at- ranks second in the NCAA shutout against the BC Eagles 48 innings in the Huskies' last chuk follows Lovello with a torney' s office and wou Id seek Division 1 Northeast region Wednesday to become the seven games Linhares has .448 average and 5 RBI. Lin- a gag order if such leaks con- behind Princeton, 11-1. The Huskies' leader in career vic- tossed three shutouts in each hares, who doubles as the tinued to be published Huskies extended their third- tories, topping the old mark of of her three starts while Han- UConn designated hitter * Earlier, a member of Wil- longest victory streak in 23 career wins held by Cheryl non has thrown four shutouts when not on the mound liams' defense team said they UConn softbali history by Hobart (1978-81). Anderson, while leading the Husky pulled her average to .318 were working without com- sweeping three doublehead- 6-0 on the season, has regis- mound crew with 43 strike- from .267 with a 5-10 week at pensatioa Green would not ers last week against Boston tered 24 victories against only outs in 48 2/3 innings pitch- the plate confirm that College (2-0, 2-0), St John's six defeats in two-plus sea- ed. In softbali action this week UConn hosts Springfield to- He said Williams didn' t even (5-0,2-1) and New Hampshire sons Junior catcher Vi Lovello know what "Doint shaving" (6-0,4-0). The UConn pitching corps continues to pace the UConn day for a 230 p.m. double- header • . Seepage 15