Lite Ft ' Students Smoking Marijuana
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0.^ fflfltmwttntt Daily fflampua Serving Storrs Since 1896 VOL.LXXVIH NO. 113 /TJJUI \ 0 STORRS, CONNECTICUT ICTICUT 5 CENTS OFF CAMPUS Status of yearbook remains uncertain B^T^I ^^^1 B By DONALD M. MOSLEY The pages were brought to the Associate Editor attention of ISSO Chairman Robert Tiii" status of the first edition of the Woodard last Friday by a representative 1975 Nutmeg yearbook remained in doubt Wednesday as the book's editor of the book's printer. Western Publishers said he would fight any deletions in its of Cambridge, Md., who asked FSSO lo contents by a student government sign a writ of disclaimer relieving the review committee, if the group could company of any responsibility for the ^w — J m BW not convincingly show that the deletions book's content. were libelous. Woodard refused to sign the writ Nutmeg Editor Ronald Pape said "I which would ' have guaranteed am willing to let the committee review acceptance of the yearbook by the the yearbook to determine if its FSSO which signed the contract for its contents are libelous, but I will light printing. i them if they try t > censor anything that Woodard said Wednesday a can't clearly be determined as libel." committee to review the yearbook, ^B ^BB "at v^ The committee, sel up by the made up of ISSO officials, UConn administrators, and yearbook stall Federation of Students and Service ^B Organizations (ISSO), plans to review representatives is now being formed to the yearbook before it is distributed to determine if the eight pages are libelous. students. "Our only intent is to protect Controversy has recently arisen over ourselves legally," Woodard said. "At no eight pages of the book which contain. lime will I offer any personal opinions among other things, a photograph of about its contents except in terms of lour naked men, <\ni\ also pictures ol legality." lite ft ' students smoking marijuana. Woodard hits ordered a freeze on distribution of the book which is scheduled to be delivered lo the Student \&^B*BI Union building loday at 2:00 p.m. /as" ^^^T^^^n^nnn^^^^ Board grants "The book will be locked up in a room of the Student Union until the eommiltee has a chance to review its radiation license contents." Woodard said. ■V ill BBBS* ^fl By MARK DUPl'IS ISSO is planning to ask UConn ^sv ^^^^^ L ^k News Editor attournev .John G. Hill, to sit on the A broad license lo use radioactive commit tec and help determine the materials has been granted lo the legality of the book's contents, Woodard University by the Nuclear Regulatory said. ON THE AIR President .Ferguson acts as a VVIIUS disc jockey Wednesday Commission (\RC). according to Stuart Hill. contacted at his home night during the last few hours of the station's 81-hour marathon which earned Wilson, director of research services in Wednesday night, was unaware ol S7.31 I for the Campus Community Carnival. Nelson Chcckoway the station the Graduate School. Continued on Page 4 manager looks on. (Photo by Buz/ Ranter.) The broad license was sought last summer after a check I. the commission showed more than Z\*>', violations of federal radiation safety regulations. A follow-up inspection in Group seeks break up of school OctOVCr showed the violations had not l>ccn corrected and UConn was publicly By TERRI MANGINI and 27 member faculty, will be in< orporation idea. cited for failure lo comply. News Editor absorbed by the College of Agriculture Helen C. Chambers, current dean President lerguson attributed the A recommendation to dissolve the as a separate department. will resign at the end of this year. A violations, in part, lo the many licenses School of Home Economics and search was begun for someone to fill the held by UConn and said the broad incorporate il as a department of the The committee, according lo Kenneth Wilson vice president for position last semester. license would allow consolidation ol all College of Agriculture and Natural Chambers said Wednesday night she the use of radioactive materials. Resources .has been made by an academic affairs is awaiting feedback from the faculty of both schools before is optimistic that Icrugson will consider Wilson said Wednesday UConn has administrative review committee. all aspects of the change and decide corrected all of the violations and the The program review committee, il forwards its recommendations to President lerguson and the Trustees. against il. NRC has notified UConn that created in F cbruary by the Board ol The school, which has over 600 Also included in the committee's laboratories are now in compliance with Trustees presented the plan earlier this undergraduate and alx>ut I £0 graduate five part proposal was a suggestion that the regulations. Three problems found week, which is designed to economize students, now offers four separate the search for a Dean ol Ihe School of during the last inspection in February on faculty of both of the schools. majors. The change would mean the Home Economics be discontinued until have been resolved and accepted by the Under the pro|>osal, the Home department could offer only an overall a decision is reached on the Continued on Page 4 Economics schools' present programs major in home economics. Chambers said. Wilson, who is also a member of the seven person commit te. said the recommendations were designed lo "free resources" to be moved to other areas of UConn where they arc needed. Nixon descends from royal blood Wilson called the changes an 'administrative shuffle" which he said LONDON (UPI) "Similar claims can be made by their descendants. An appendix of simplified should be expected to occur throughout Former President Richard M. Nixon thousands of others," said Hugh UConn. has royal blood. He is a direct Montgomery-Massingbcrd, editor of presidential family trees stretching far into the past shows the White Wilson said the shuffle is an effort to descendant of King Edward HI of "Burke's Presidential Families of the economize manpower where possible United States of America," a House awash in royal forcbearcrs. England, is related to Queen and use it where il is needed. 676-page reference book being Thomas Jefferson, William Elizabeth, to Sir Winston Churchill Wilson said the committee has asked and to George Washington. published next week. Howard Taft and Ulysses S. Grant all ihe faculties to respond by April 21. The experts of Burkc's Peerage, Another is David Williamson, descended from David 1 of Scotland, Robert Iougcc, professor of history the 150-year-old reference work on who worked for seven years to who died in 1153. James Garfield compile the new book's presidential had the earliest royal ancestor traced and chairman of the committee said the England's nobility, made these claims committee is most concerned with Wednesday in a new book which genealogies. King Henri I of France, who died Williamson discovered he, in 1060. economizing without damaging the level traces royal blood in the veins of 13 of education. American Presidents. himself, and Nixon arc 13th cousings Presidents Lincoln, Washington, once removed. Nixon's relationships Monroe and John Quincy Adams all "The University is in a tough Burke says Washington was economic position," Lougee said. with Queen Elizabeth, Churchill and numbered the same king among their descended from four kings, and The committee's proposal cited Washington are even more tenuous Abraham Lincoln from one - mere forebcarers Edward I of England, overlappings in curricula offered by commoners compared with President than that one, he said. who died in 1307. both sehools and said the consolidation The $39 book is largely a serious James Monroe with nine kings in his "But Washington's lineage is the could eliminate duplication. study of the 37 American Presidents family tree. Kirvin Knox. professor of nutrition and their families. It lists every most spectacular of all the Nixon is 20th in line of descent who teaches classes for both colleges descendant of all presidents and each presidents,'' from Edward HI. who died in 1377, said he did not think there was that president's brothers and sisters and Montgomery Massingberd said. the book said. much duplication to eliminate. v r-r- Thursday. April 10, 1975 (Emnfftimt laiig 0»n» Behavior clue to future Steven D. Hull By F.M. PARDOdeZELA formula, that they outgrew it. United States economists arc (Ed. note: This is the lust This is most evident in the Kditor-in-CliicI asked for their expert opinion. If in a three-part scries exploring Soviet Union where they arc farmers in Guatemala refuse to WOfM news and its immediate hopelessly mired in the slough of plant with new hybrid seeds, an Jon I.. Saifltl)erg Donald M. Moslcy William Sherman and future consequences.) archaic thinking. anthropologist is called in to In the less developed Managing Editor Associate Kdilor Business Manager In the future, "world news'* find out why. When a candidate countries ideologies imported will focus more closely on why for the presidency in Venezuela from Europe were briefly in seeks advice on his campaign he people choOM to behave in vogue. Soon they were deemed hires American political certain ways vis-a-vis the quite out of place. Leaders of scientists. In Denmark n.il ion-state. In the past these countries arrived at their pornography is no longer an forecasts could he made by own partie ular methods for issue because a pane! of studying the ideologies of Dangerous precedent realizing the pcrfectability of sociologies determine it is not leaders. They gave clues on man. These methods were more harmful.