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(Unnnrrltrut HaUg dantjms Serving Storrs Since 1896

VOL. LXXVII NO. 105 STORRS. CONNECTICUT APRIL 15, 1969 Quaker Action Group To Stage ROTC 'Death Watch9

By G. CLAUDE ALBERT ( .tmpus Staff Writer the University would stand to lose con- siderable funds granted under the Mor- ril Act ( which requires land grant col- Three UConn co-eds take advantage The 'Quaker Action Group', a non- leges to provide military studies) if The Birds are sectarian body of UConn Students and of the warmth of Spring on the steps military courses were done away with faculty, will hold a 'death watch' today entirely. of the Student Union Building. Days at the ROTC hanger, to 'await the de- Based on these considerations the On the Wing of coats (and in sorrre cases shoes) mise of ROTC on this campus' and group proposed three major changes in are drawing to an end. draw attention toa three-pointplan which the military science program offered the group has submitted to the Univer- here. sity's subcommittee on ROTC. First, the ROTC program at the U- B.U. Students Demonstrate The group's proposal for an altern- nlverslty must be discontinued, the group ative to ROTC here terms the present said. Against Military Recruitment program objectionable for three reasons. Secondly, whichever courses can The group claims that ROTC does be transferred to other relevant de- By the Associated Press not serve the educational purposes of partments (Military history, military the University, 'but exists merely to STUDENT ROUNDUP - Rebellious law, map reading, etc.) should be taught sions office about nine a.m. and refus- supply the army with a corps of off- students at Boston University held a ill these departments by civilian faculty ed to leave. The offices occupy part of icers.' university dean's office Monday for a- Hamilton Hall on the university quad- members. The content of certain ROTCcourses Thirdly, the group contends that 'any bout three hours, but then departed rangle. was also termed 'repugnant to many' leaving behind a sin ill tDkon group. Early Monday afternoon, about 50 drill, instruction in arms or Other non- by the Quaker Action Group. academic military subjects should be T.nere was no violence and no threat other Black students began a rally at the The text of the group's proposal of police action. The students were pro- sundial near Hamilton Hall. considered the responsibility of Hie Arm- also alleges that ROTC courses 'are ed Forces, testing military recruitment on campus In , students continued to conducted in a manner contrary to the and the Reserve Officers Training Corps occupy an electronics laboratory Mon- Study and training in these are.is atmosphere of academic freedom proper can be achieved through .summer camps, In Cambridge, Massachusetts, Har- . day at Stanford University, but all was at a University. vard President Dr. Nathan Pusey met reported quiet. post-graduate camps, extra-curricula!- The statement said , however, that student activities or whatever other Monday with a 68-member committee HARTFORD — The controversial the study of military science and mil- of faculty and students. They were map- means the Armed Forces deem feasi- question of when the taking of an un- itary history should be maintained at ble.' ping out university strategy in the event born baby's life may be legally allowed the University since 'the impact of the The 'death march' will take place dissident students seize another Harvard was argued Monday at a long, crowded military on our society today is so great, building. today from 12:30 to 2 pm at the ROTC hearing before the State Legislature's that any University which ignores this hanger. The session lasted two hours and Judiciary Committee. force cannot be truly relevant to to- Brian Cross, chairman of the Quaker Pusey left without commenting to news- Those favoring the liberalizing of day's world. men. • Connecticut's century-old law spoke of Action Group, urged that all interested The group's statement also noted that individuals Join in the vigil. Later, about 60 Black students mar- the rights of women, of families, and ol ched on University Hall to present ano- society. ther list of demands to the administra- Those opposed to reform said the tion. They said they wanted an official question boiled down to the taking of a hu- response within 24 hours, but did not man life. They maintained the embryo, Indicate what action might be taken if or fetus, in a woman's womb is a human the deadline is not met. person with as much right to live as About 20 Black students nitftd asit- anyone else. ln in the admission office at Columbia The law now permits abortions only University in Monday. A un- if a woman's life is endangered by con- iversity spokesman said the Blacks de- tinued pregnancy. Proposals heard today manded greater Black enrollment at the would allow abortions to preserve a wo- Duke Ellington university and a special Black admis- man's sanity, to end pregnancy caused sions board. by rape or incest, or to prevent birth of The students entered the admis- a deformed baby. To Revive Big NAACP's Jones Promises Band Era Here Action Against 'Slumlords9 BRIDGEPORT - Choked with sorrow were 32 recorded violations on the and anger, NAACP state executive dir- ector William C. Jones last week sur- burned building alone since February veyed the gutted ruins of the Arctic of this year. Jones also claimed that DUKE ELLINGTON Street tenement that was the flaming his last fine was $2,000 and that Katz bier for eleven who died there on Easter owns 1000 sub-standard dwellings for Sunday morning. which the NAACP has unsuccessfully Jones had been requested to give his taken him to task for over eight years Duke Ellington and his orchestra will appear at UConn next Satur- observations to an overflow audience 'We've been bloodied in our battles day for a one-night-stand reminiscent of the "good old days" of the at the Bridgeport-Stratford NAACP and we'll continue to lose human lives "big bands" and the 1930s dance-concerts. branch meeting not far from the scene so long as public sentiment and the Under the auspices of the Student Union Board of Governors and of the holocaust administration permits this man to thumb the jorgenspn Auditorium Management, Ellington will hrlng'.wck some He joined Rev. James D. Peters, Jr., his nose at the concerned people of a. the best of the dancing and listening music of the '30s. state NAACP president from Bridgeport Connecticut. His own "Mood Ind.go," "Sophisticated Lady." "Take the A in condemning Abraham Katz, a large We've picketed Bridgeport city hall Tram," and "Don't Get Around Anymore" will be coupled with some low-income multi-family realtor, as a in the past -- to no avail. The NAACP Of his extended works, such as "Black and Tan Fantasy," "C Jam self-styled 'King of the Slumlords.' has had petitions, and we've begged Blues "and "Harlem " Jones labeled Katz as a 'profiteering for help on the problems of the poor The Ellington appearance is scheduled for the AJberl M. Jorgeii. dealer in human misery and Just short from a largely uncaring populace. Now sen Auditorium from 9 p.m. to midnight, with a special concert at of an actual murderer who feels him- we are demanding that a situation be 10 p.m. self above the law'. corrected that transcends all racial Some of the seats In the auditorium, which normally holds 3,600 He noted that Abraham Katz has been grounds. persons, will be removed to make room 'or dancing. arrested six times by Housing Code Jones requested that the branch lead- The Ellington dance-concert is part of the University's "Semes- Enforcement officers and that there ership ascetain through legal services ter of the '30s," which is intended to bring to life the depression de- whether Katz can lie charged with cad.' ror the students of today. Weather Outlook criminal negligence. 'If (tie power struc- Not only will the music revert to the 30s, but the ticket prices will tures cannot and will not atop him, lie rolled back to thai era at SI per person. f AP) Cloudy and cool today with Hit perhaps we can.' He vowed to give the No mail or telephone orders will he accepted. Ti ket;, which ma. full facilities of the NAACP state office be obtained at the Jorgensen Box Office, will be limited to four per per-K high in the 50s. Probability of pre- in Hartford and its 19 branches in a son. cipitation twenty percent. Winds will battle to the finish and called upon be south to southeast 10 to 20 miles Jewish state community leaders to rise per hour today. up and speak out and condemn Katz. (HtmntttitvA Batlg Glampufi Serving Storrs Since 1896

TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1969

Civilian Control ecently approximately 60 seniors, mem- bers of the University's I rmy ROTC outfit received notice of their assignments after commissioning. Some received them with plea- sure, others with a sign of relief. For about eighteen cadets, however, there were no feel- ings of either pleasure or relief. They had been assigned to the infantry, a branch neither desired nor requested. .will these students question their assign- ments? ..ill they register a protest? I.Ill they say that they have not been educated for four years only to serve in the infantry and stand a chance of dying in Vietnam, their education wasted; their lives lost? Kot likely. "II will accept their fate, most out of a sense of duty; some out of fear of a bad mark on their permanent record. For such is the authoritarian nature of the military. .e consider such a situation tragic. ..8 do not feel that the old cliche about "not al- ways getting what we want" applies since we are not dealing here with property but with human lives. 3ut to the military this seems to matter little. They put you where they need you, no questions asked. Opinion No questions asked. So it must be if the military is to be effec- My Kind of Town, Chicago Is! tive. So is must be in order that commands by DICK GREGORY be carried out with the swiftness that is im- report on syndicate 1 crime, es- Chicago group (the Cosa Nostra) perative to their success. So it must be since pecially the relationship between to operate free of significant crime, poetics, and the judiciary, punishment. the military is a fact of life in our nation. the Commission engaged the ser- "A program involving the But does this mean that because the mili- vices of Prof. G. Robert Blakey, Federa 1 Bureau of Investigation a leading criminologist from. and the Chicago police, initiated tary exists, the University must grant it its Notre Dame University. Blakely in 1963, to Intensify gambling now teaches criminal and real arrests in Cook County, has net- cloak of academic respectability? Surely the property law at Notre Dame and ted in the courts few if any con- University cannot ignore the existence of the conducts seminars in criminal victions. Analyzing the 11,158 law. gambling arrests made in 1963, military but does this mean it must foster and Blakely submitted a 63 page for example, shows the pattern: encourage it? i.e think not. report to the Commission, using 8,607 or approximately 76% Chicago as an example, which dismissed or nolle prossed. ..e believe that the University should accept dealt specifically with links be- 1,860 received fines, of these the military -- but only on its own terms and tween public officials and the 983 fined less than $100. crime syndicate (see LIFE,Sept. Only 17 jail term s were not theirs. This means incorporating liberal 8, 1967, page 103). When the of- imposed, of these only four were ficial Commission report was for more than 30 days, and of the arts courses taught by civilians into ROTC. Issued in February, 1967, the four, 2 received suspended Blakey findings had been relega- sentences." This means requiring a military instructor Dick Gregory ted to four very watered down to fulfill the same requirements for full pro- footnotes. Extreme pressure President Nixon's concern fessorship as his civilian colleague. Chicago has an uncanny poli- from Chicago public officials has with crime In the streets, as well tical relationship to Richard Ni- kept the Blakey report suppres- as demonstrations on campuses In short this means the University must xon. The events surrounding the sed ever since. and elsewhere, must be matched August Democratic convention In On March 4, 1968, Sen. Ar- with at least equal obsession exert its own forn of civilian control more Chicago undeniably helped to give thur R. GottscalkCR-Flossmoor) with crime in the courts. The fully than it has in the past. Richard Nixon the access to the introduced a resolution before Blakey report gives much-need- White House he had been seeking the Illinois State Senate urging ed specific documented evidence So it must be if the military is to stay on so long. It now appears Chicago President Johnson to make pub- of the deplorable collaboration this campus. So it mutt be if this institution could provide the new President lic the findings of the Blakey between the crime syndicate and with the key to attacking organi- report. The resolution passed the Chicago bench. President is to remain a University. zed crime - a professed Inten- by a unanimous voice vote, Nixon has only to release the in- tion of the Nixon administration. though the Democratic bloc re- formation for public reaction. The Democratic convention mained conspicuously silent. In (Eimiif rtirut flatlg (ftampiia aftermath should figure promin- Introducing the resolution, Gott- I have been convicted of a ently in an all-out crime syndi- schalk, then a Republican candi- 1965 Chicago arrest, and given Serving Storrs Since 1896 cate probe; that is, If President date for Governor, said the sup- a 5-month sentence, for alle- MANAGING EDITOR Editor-in-Chief BUSINESSMANAGER Nixon is willing to recognize and pressed report 1 s alleged to be gedly kicking and biting a cop - make public existing govern- "the lowdown on mob influence a curious allegation to be Impos- Morllyn Mog«r Albert F. May, Jr. John Fosnot mental information. in politics and the judiciary in ed on a vegetarian like myself. NEWS EDITOR FEATURES EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR Chicago federal judges are Illinois, particularly in Cook I am not only a vegetarian but now making ready to hear the county". Yet the Blakey report also a veteran of extended fasts. Michael Whalen Stephen Fogin Harold Levy cases of convention protesters remains securely entombed In Therefore, I am serving notice ADVERTISING COPY EDITOR PHOTO EDITOR chargad with "inciting to riot". governmental archives. now to both my jailers and my MANAGER Government files already contain A quick glance at sample pa- President that during my Incar- Denn|» ManiD'on Mlchelt Hampton Howard Goldbaum highly suppressed information ges of the Blakey report gives ceration I will fast - taking only indicating that some of these Chi- clear indication why Chicago pub- distilled water « until the Bla- Published daily while the University is in session, except Saturdays cago Judges are Mafia, or Cosa lic officials would go to any key report in its original form and Sundays. Second class postage paid at Storrs, Connecticut. Nostra, controlled and are deep- lengths to keep the information is made public. Member of The Associated Collegiate Press. Accepted for national ly involved in the successful suppressed. For example: They say that Justice is blind. advertising by The National Advertising Service. Editorial and workings of organized crime. "The ambivalent procedures That does not mean that judges Business Offices located in the Student Union Building, University On July 23, 1965, by execu- of certain day sheriff's person- should be blind to certain crim- o' Connecticut atStorrs. SUBSCRIBER: Associated Press News tive order, LBJ established the nel in Cook County, having been inal acts. It means rather that Service. Subscription Rates: $3.50 per semester; $5.50 per year. President's Commission on Law the custom for several generat- even a federal judge has no spe- Return Notification of unclaimed deliveries to Connecticut Daily Enforcement and .A,°.mlmstWlQn ions, not only hqbbteeffectiye cial priority which exempts him Campus, University of Connecticut, Storrs. Connecticut 06268. of Justice. To prepare a special law enforcement' but 'assist' the from equality' before' th e law. Mime in Review: CONN ECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1969 i Players Jab with Political Humor Journalism Students to Publish By JOSEPH TIERNAN 9 The San Francisco Mime Troup^ committed bookstore?" Special 'Thomaston Express to "making the theater in content and iji style a The play "The Farce of Patelin" was presen- living radical force" performed Sunday afternoon ted. Written i n France in the lfith century, it About 30 undergraduates enrolled in the Department if Jourialism and evening at UConn. was adapted by R.G. Davis and Joel Weisman. classes here will "tak» over" the "Thorn as ton Express" in western The afternoon performance was held in the The program for the Mime Troupe said, "The Connectlcu" April 18-2C, while continuing their on»campu.s studies. Mall behind the Student Union. The Guerilla Mar- approaching summer season finds us departing Under the direction of Professor Kvan Hill, head of the Journalism ching Band led over 100 students in a parade from the commedia style and pushing our new department, the students will gather news, write stories and headlines, from the Student Union around the fraternities and play through the Chinese opera style which, by produce their own news and feature photographs, write captions and North Campus and back past the library to the the way, was an outdoors forum. The new or guer- work up the layoufof the special edition. Mall in an attempt to pick up more students, but illa theater "as opposed to the "New Theater" What's more, pointed out Professor Hill, the young Journalists also few joined. of neo-absurdist destinationless trips, accepts will handle advertising for the special edition. Students will be requi- At the Mall over 200 people enjoyed satirical the responsibility of saying something to an au- red to solicit enougli :'■'■.' TttSlng to cover the publisher's expenses skits on the absurdity of parking meters, the dience conscious of crisis." for a 24-page edition. comparison of 1-A draft students with A-l prime The troupe will be moving toward Boston Professor Hill and Assistant Professor John Bieen will serve as beef, and Black Panthers vs. the "White Fuzz". soon, where they will play at Harvard, the Mas- "managing editors" for the edition, reading proof on final copy and A portable stage was set up for the evening sachusetts Institute of Technology, and other col- overs, eing assignments. performance in the Ballroom and by 8:30 about lege campuses. "It will provide Students with a chance to get out into real life si- 600 persons packed the room. Davis is founder, director, and moderator of tuations to see how a newspaper is published from start to finish," The actors were able to project political hu- the Mime Troupe, whose motto is, "This is our Bri -^n said. mor "without being political," which appealed to society. If we don't like it, it is our job to change The students will set up a "city room" In a vacant house. They more than just the "Students for a Democratic it; if we can't change it, it's our job to destroy will be divided into three departments: Editorial, advertising and pho- Society" crowd. Their humor consisted of speci- it." tography. fic jabs at various people or institutions relevent Philosophy Professor Leonard Kremerman Cooperating with Professor Hill in the venture is C.J. Delvaglio, to the campus. An example of the dialogue went: sponsored the troupe. publisher of the "Thomaston Kxpress," a weekly offset tabliod. If iust one more person on this cam- Professor Hill said that while on the Boston University faculty, he "So this is Conn U?" had taken students on similar field trips and found them to be "an ex- 'It's called UConn." pus has started to think because of their perfor- mances it • •> worth it. cellent method of instruction." "No, it's Conn. U. Haven't you ever been to the In 1952 his students produced an "Kxpress" edition based on the theme "Thomaston: 140 Years of Progress." Some of the participating students will be housed in private homes at Thomaston, while others will commute from the Storrs campus. Week-long Tribute to Honor Steinbeck Br?en also noted that special "press cards" will be provided for IhC students during their stay in Thomaston. Students and faculty at UConn books, once taught at the New ion to honor the great American Journalism students who will participate Include: Ian Compton, wil 1 help mark the 30th anniver- School in , was an novelist. Louise Hinkel, David Nevln, Henry Pearson, Laurie Hummel, Karen sary of one of America's great editor for the New Masses maga- Following opening remarks by Stecko, Albert F. May, Jr., Donna Strout, and Carol Bakinowski. novels and honor Its author April zine in the Thirties, has been President Homer D. Babhidge Also, Jan Keller, Linda K inborn, Steven Friedman, Michael 29 to May 3 during a week-long consultant to New Leader maga- Jr., John Reed of Wayne State Mcllose, William McGee, Garv Woods, Richard Dlugos, and Cathleen tribute to John Steinbeck. zine, and contributes lead re- University, will discuss " 'The Connor. The paean to the Nobel-prize views to the Saturday Review. Grapes of Wrath' and the Esthe- Also Jacqueline Ledermann, Linda Nigro, Stephen Fagin, Jared winning creator of "Grapc-s of Carey McWilliams, editor of tics of Indigence." Harrison, James Hunyadi, Andrew Spies, Martin Axelrod, Dena Win- Wrath" has been arranged as an the Nation, social critic and au- He will be followed by Pascal okur, and Richard Cohen. integral part of the University's thor of a dozen books, will appear Covici Jr., a Southern Methodist unusual Semester of the '30s at 4 p.m. In the UN Room to dis- University scholar, at 11:15 a.m., experiment. cuss "California in the Thir- who will explore "Work and the Catholics Purge 'Anti-semitism' John Steinbeck, who died last ties." Texture of 'The Grapes of year, is credited with fathering Malcolm Cowley, editor- Wrath.' " (AP) A group of Roman the . one of the great social novels of translator-literary critic, will Luncheon speaker will be Catholic experts has discussed Meanwhile in Houston, all time. talk on "The Grapes of Wra'h," Hyatt Waggoner, president of ways of purglng"anti-semetism' Texas, an unofficial report defen- Architects of the '30s exper- May 1 at 4 p.m. at the Student the New England ASA from from Church preaching. ding theologians who oppose Pope iment feel the novel sums up the Union. Cowley once served as Brown University. After lunch, This word comes from Paul's birth control rulings looms mood of the era — poverty, so- associate editor of "The New James M. Cox a Dartmouth Col- the Vatican Secretariat for large at a meeting of U.S. cial unrest, and the stubborn, Republic" and has been literary lege scholar will offer his views Christian unity, the Reverend Roman Catholic bishops. More heroic effort of a people to sur- adviser to the Viking Press. on "The Meaning of Indignation Cornelius Rijk. He said a meet- than 200 of the 290 bishops in vive. He also has taught at Stan- in 'The Grapes of Wrath' and the ing in the Vatican last week the United States are gathering To help celebrate the event, ford and Cornell Universities, Wine Press of Criticism." was attended by 21 experts from for a three-day meeting opening the University has invited a num- and the Universities of Michi- Warren French, a teacher at 14 nations, including Israel and tomorrow. ber of great literary figures of gan, Washington and California. the University of Missouri, Kan- that era and this. The author of several books, he sas City, will conclude the con- Granville Hicks, author-tea- was president of the National ference lecture program with a cher-editor, will open the lecture Institute of Arts and Letters for talk on "The Permanence of'The program April 29 with a 4 p.m. two terms. Grapes of Wrath.' " Dresses talk on "Writers of the Thir- On May 3 a conference of The conference program of ties," in the Student Union build- scholars co-eponsored by UConn speakers and special events, in- ing. and the New England American cluding the film, "The Grapes of Hicks, author of more than 14 Studies Association will convene Wrath," was made possible Dr. Mead at 10:30 a.m. in the Student Un- through a Ford Foundation grant. Advocates Are you interested in: Student Salaries • public issues? TsR* NEW YORK -- Dr. Margaret • people? V* Mead charged today that our con- ception of the teacher-pupil re- • self-expression? C lationship at the college and uni- V versity level is "medieval" and • getting in on the action? Q6 recommended "salaries" for so. students to make them economi- Consider a career in newspaper reporting and editing. We are cally independent and give them interested in young men and women with liberal arts degrees, a dignity. proficiency in the language and a thirst for finding out, reporting and interpreting complex issues in simple English for demanding Writing In the current issue of readers seeking not merely facts but comprehension. A and R Redbook magazine, she said, Candidates should be curious, intelligent, and willing to dig "The rebellion of today's stu- hard for news and write it accurately, fully and fairly even under dent's forces us to realize" that pressure from the clock. Trainees selected for our program will Greer they are no longer content to ac- work under experienced reporters on-the-job in one of New Eng- Nancy cept the traditional student role land's top newspaper organizations. Write or phone John P. Widdi- of "submissive and dependent son, Telegram and Gazette, 20 Franklin St., Worcester, Mass. members of the academic com- 01601. Telephone Area Code (617) 755-4321. munity." Se'bi, One weekend Major Smith, Lieutenant Schaffer, \,; and a beautiful blonde iMfR. m tf& named Mary A> decide to win h <*«« World War II. t>» IP

Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents a picture starring Clint Eastwood Mary Ure °relI "" sto»> a<»d scfwpUv by d » Patrick Wymark • Michael Hordern Alist.nr MdcLean ■ Brian G Hutton. Elliott Kastner I WyWr-'i... MftlUM • Panavision and Metrocolor © *JM#UU{/% Watch for them. They start spying on your campus soon! Downtown U illiniunli. If TUESDAY, APRIL 15, T969 COW ECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS On The Mall Chi Delphia Crowns Queen; A Roundup of Campus News Kathy Long Chosen from 24 Ph.D. Canidate Receives utilized college students working He is a Fellow of the Ameri- Kathv Long, a 4th semester Mollovm of Delta Zeta, and Viki Research Fellowship Award with chronically 111 patients as can College of Sports Medicine Music major from Crawford A Whitcomb of Hollister a - Karl A. Herzog, a Ph.D. can- well as attitudes of the students and has served on a number of was crowned Chi Delphia Queen The queen contest pageant, didate at UConn has just been toward such work. posts with the AAHPER. for 1069 at a banquet last Wed- sponsored by the brothers of awarded a research fellowship Dr. Chinsky and Rappaport AAHPER is a national organ- nesday. Delta Chi, is designed to stress from the National Institute of supervised a group of 30 UofR ization of teachers, coaches, ad- the attributes of scholarship and General Me'lical Sciences. students who participated in a ministrators, researchers, com- The coronation marked the personality as well as beauty Herzog, a native of Ad.in, Pa., community mental health course munity leaders, health officials that sent them into the area's sixth year of the Chi Delphia and charm. was awarded the fellowship on and physical education students. contest. Chi Delphia contestants must mental health facilities for on- Miss Long was chosen from the basis of his showing in a na- the-scene experience. 'Image 69' : have minlmun scholastic average tional competition following a ra- a group of 24 girls from res- of 3.0 and participate in campus Prof. Emory Cowen, UofR Pfiofo Exhibit pective dormitories. view by two groups of consul- director of clinical training, said And Screenings activities. tants. Kathy, who came to UConn Miss Long received a person- the Chinsky-Rappaport study 'de- Some of the nation's leading from Lancaster, Pa., has main- His principal area of research monstrated that this type of ac- al trophy and a scholarship. Her is "Drug Transport Across Thin motion picture and still photo- tained a 3.". overall Q.P.R. dorm will take posession of the tivity has potentially positive im- graphers will participate In an Mode' Membranes." pact on the patients.' l-dur other finalists include Chi Delphia rotating trophy. The unusual symposium here this Pam Barnlngham of Alsop B, Herzog received his bachelor Dr. Chinsky, who joined the four members of the queen's of science l.-gree from the Phil- week. Merle Frazier of AKPhi, Susan court also received trophies. UConn staff last September, re- adelphia College of Pharmacy and ceived his bachelor's degree Titled 'Image 69,' a four-day a bachelor of arts degr?e from from Rutgers University and his symposium, which begins Thurs- Mother Grows Grass for Sons Gotiysburg College. doctor's degree from the UofR day, will bring to UConn such Currently associated wi;h the in January. He is a native of outstanding photographers as Departmenl of Drug Dynamics, he Newark, N.J. Danny Lyon, Stan Vanderbeek, 8AYVILLE, N.Y. (AP) - A brother, John, 16, were arraign- formerly served as a special re- and Nathan Lyons, and critic Long Island mother who thought ed Thursday o n charges of po- sparch assistant in the ScM:>ol of Fait Receives 'Honor Award' Paul Caponigro and Dave Heath. she was helping her teen-aged ssession o f a dangerous dru». Pharmacy. sons with a high school science Police said they found 11 pa- Herzog is one of 2,300 fellow- A UConn professor of phys- Students' work will be rep- project has been informed by po- per cups containing marijuana ship holders supported by the ical ecucation received an 'honor ' resented in exhibitions and scre- lice that she helped the boys plants on a table in a playroom NIGMS which is one of the 10 award' from the American As- enings Friday and Saturday under grow a crop of marijuana instead. and nine large plants In a flow- National Institutes of H eilth. sociation for Health, Physical Caponigro and Heath. Their work Jesse Mentzel Jr., 17, and his er bed behind the Mentzel homo. Education and Recreation last has been exhibited at various galleries and museums, including Chinsky, UConn Psychologist, Friday. Dr. Hollis F. Fait was anong the George Eastman House. Receives National Award six AAHPER members from thr- Lyon, many of whose doc- WATCH FOR A UConn psychologist has oughout the nation cited at the umentary photographs of the ci- been awarded a national prize organization's annual convention for 'the most fruitful completed vil rights movement are inclu- here for outstanding contribu- ded in the book, "The Movement' research' In the area of mental tions to the field of physical DELTA health. will deliver a lecture Friday education. at 3pm in Von der Mehden Hall. Dr. Jack M. Chinsky, assis- Fait, who joined the UConn SIGMA tant professor of psychology, and Vanderbeek, a former mem- staff in 1954, was the first phys- ber of the faculties of Columbia a colleague from the University ical educator to receive a grant of Illinois, were named runners- and New York State Universit- PI from the Joseph P. Kennedy ies, will speak Saturday at 8:30 up in the third annual Cattell Foundation. pin in VDM. Fund Award competition of the He used the grant to develop American Psychological Assn. Lyons, associate director and a practical test to judge the curator of phorography at East- LARGEST PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS Dr. Chinsky and Dr. Julian physical fitness of the mentally Rappaport, will share the prize man House, is scheduled to speak FRATERNITY IN THE NATION retarded. at VDM at 8:30 pm Friday. for their dissertation on the Fait is the author of a num- Another feature of the sym- use of non-protessionals In men- ber of basic texts in the field posium will be the film 'Me C0M.NG SOON TO UCONN tal hospitals. of physical education. and My Brother,'by Robert Frank The two Dsvchologists, while A native of Dubois, Idaho, and Sam Sheppard at VDM Thurs- working for their PH.D. degrees Fait received the professional day at 8:30 pm. DETAILS: 429-2529 - Poul at the University of Rochester, honor award of the Connecticut A coupon for persons who can CALL 429-4727 - Phil studied the effectiveness of a Association of Health, Physical mental health program that u- house visitors to Image 69 is Education and Recreation in 1966. printed on page five. BRAHMS REQUIEM THE HIP HOP

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ENDS TONITE! "WEEKEND" 2:00, 6:30, 9:00 STORRS , rCUEGE 429-6062 BE A CLOWN! ( Rl I PARKING STARTS TOMORROW THRU SATURDAY cLuis cBunuels (^Masterpiece oflLrotica! Sign up for the B.O.G. C.C.C. Clown Contest

call 429-3311 ext. 227 or hH « m '■•—i w« h Ml" KSSi . ". '**• ILWI leave contestant's name cittwt NCI i JIU SMI ■ ftWuwi h "OH" M iinwe nun ■ ft.mw «■ 1UIS BUKUIt in BOG office Commons 314 UWIKO. wi ftxiK IOWS wui M JIU awn umiin - ftSTMMKOtOft •■«■< nmoutisis ■>•• now thru April 14 ADDED FEATURETTE! "CHILD AND HIS COUNTRY' DAILY 2.00, 6:30, 9:00 SAT. 2:00, 4:15, 6:30, 9:00 UConn Talent "Weekend" in Review : COrNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 196 9 ToPerjorm Godard's Observations Drag On 'Requiem' By RONALD TUCH The UConn Symphony Orehes- Campus Movie Reviewer ra and Choral Society will com- "Weekend" takes Sartre 's mie their talents Thursday to There is much in a Jean- philosophical proposition that resent Johannes Brahms 'Ger- Luc Godard movie that many "Hell is other people" and ap- nan Requiem,' Opus 45, at the moviegoers detest. They feel his plies it to politics, presenting liber* N. Jorgensen Auditorium films are unnecessarily confu- an absurd world of mangled bo- Under the baton of Jerome sing, excessively tiresome, much dies and burning cars, human Laszloffy, UConn music director too long, and that what he fin- irrationality and apathy. nd couductor, the 170-member ally has to say is insignificant. A couple is portrayed wan- nsemble will be joined by so- The audience reaction to dering through this mad world, Lrano Mary Collier and baritone "Weekend" included occasional experiencing on their way car Cenneth Holton in the Univer- confused mutterings: "I don't get accidents, and confronting a cha- iity's production of the dem anti- it. I don't understand." There racter who believes he is the ng Brahms work. were yawns and uncomfortable product of God and Alexander The 'Requiem' will be sung attempts to stretch one's limbs. Dumas, an .Emily Bronte n German 'to preserve the au- Film critic Stanley Kauffman type girl whom they set on fire, henticity and dramatic effect' notes, "Godard is a magician garbage collectors, and canni- fcf the work, Professor Las/- who makes elaborate uninspired bals. offy said. gestures and then pulls out of the Godard is not concerned with Under the sponsorship of the hat precisely nothing." Critic cohesion, with thematic unity, Department of Music, the Stu- John Simon considers Godard with character motivation, or lent Union Board of Governors "cynical, pretentious, and dis- plot. When he bores you he seems and the Student Senate, the Sy- affected," and that behind his to know it but does not seem to nphony Orchestra and the Chor- filmic devices, which he drives care. When he is pretentious he al Society also will present the into the ground, there is nothing. seems to be aware of his arti- Mireille Dare tells her movie Brahms work at the University ness and mocks us for wanting Several sequences in "Week- husband, Jean Yanne, about uf Rhode Island and at Ledyard end" seemed to many people arty artistry. Godard seems to be lliph School later this spring. and tedious. After a very long conscious of the role of art In a Then He Got the minor orgy she has just Miss Collier is a UConn lec- scene in which a woman des- world that is burning. enjoyed in the opening sequ- turer and has given a number cribed a sexual experience her "Are you real or in a mo- An Egg... ence of Jean-Luc Godard's o! recitals in this country and male listener asked, "Is all this vie?" someone asks the contem- ''Weekend" now at the Col- ib road. real or a dream?" The woman ptible hero of "Weekend". This lege Theater. Holton is a member of the replied "I don't know," and the hero says at one point: "What E.O. Smith, University High Sch- camera faded out. kind of a movie is this? All you ool faculty. In filming a traffic jam, Go- meet is sick people." If the Simon's accusations that Godard stray, helping no one, feeding no All seats for the 8:15 pm per- dard panned the entire lineup of characters are actors, the equ- is "vacuous", I felt "Week- one, curing no one's wounds. All formance will be reserved. Stu- cars, from beginning to end. On ally contemptible heroine wants end" was one of those rare films it does is crystallEA our petty dents will be admitted without other occassions he focused on to know how they can feel pain. that alters one's perceptions of visions of politics, art, life, and charge, but non-student tickets, minor characters and for leng- Godard seems to be saying, the streets, the cars, and the an- death. at $1.50, may be obtained from thy periods plays political trea- those who ask for artistic cohe- imals we call people. It is a film the Albert N, Jorgensen Audi- tises on the soundtrack. Simon sion are demanding the wrong that gains dimension and strength torium Box Office. called this Godardian device things. The world is a burning from the reality lying outside Gunman Professor Laszloffy said the "pseudopoetic and pseudopro- horror - why does an audience the theater. orchestra and chorus will appear found." demand artistic cohesion? There Even if one does not like the Slays Cops at URI April 20. are greater things to be deman- Godardian technique one cannot (AP) A gunman who barri- ded. dismiss him easily. His films caded himself in a Chicago apar- "To overcome the horrors of linger like after-images, stran- tment building and held <>fl po- Image '69 Coupon the bourgeoisie there will have gely tantalizing, odd poetic vi- lice for six hours with bombs to be more horror." Godard uses sions of our little realities. Kven and rifle fire has been captured this statement, along with many Total number if persons who could he houspd the static overdrawn sequences alive. A Deputy Police Commis- Do you have bed space? If so, for how many?_ other political aphorisms, with- seemed to have a certain cere- sioner, James Rochford, says out regard for thematic purpose. bral excitement. Do you have floor space? For how many": two policemen were killed in the Can you house people for the whole weekend (April 17-20)?- It is just there. There is always the feeling attempt to get 34-year-old Frank The most Significant paint to If otherwise, please specify: that Godard is not to lie taken Kulak out of the South Chicago consider is whether "Weekend" seriously, that he reflects the structure. with all its artistic demerits philosophical proposition that art In the six-hour soige, Kulak Students, faculty, or both can be housed? and long sequences, is a valid, had fired a rifle, hurled home- Room .'or males, females or both? is inadequate. profound experience. He might consider "Week- made bombs, and launched gre- Same: Contrary to Kauffmann's and end" an insignificant tale gone a- nades. Address: ■ ■ Phone number:

PLF.ASF. RETURN THIS FORM TO THE ART DEPARTMENT AS SOON AS POSSIBLE' (SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS U-99 429-3311 ex.516) JUNE GRADS WE CAN BROADEN YOUR CAREER SEARCH "Francis Albert Sinatra EXTENSIVELY BECAUSE WE REPRESENT MANY COMPANIES EITHER TOO SMALL OR TOO BUSY TO DO EXTENSIVE CAMPUS RECRUITING. Lady Does His Thing" EDP Dun Ml I, Ihmltill FINANCE 278-6560 EDP 525-5616 MANAGEMENT (One more time!) FINANCE fcXUCUTIVE MANAGEMENT PROFESSIONAL TRAINEES ENGINEERING ADMINISTRATION SCIENTIFIC SECRETARIAL SALES ENGINEERING RESEARCH SALES Free job counseling No fees are charged - No contracts to sign. Our company clients pay all our fees. 100 Constitution Plaza, Hartford - 15th floor

An Equal Opportunity Employer If you missed Frank's ■* 1)1 VII \ \ \ CARROLL and SENIORS show last Fall, take THE FIFTH DIMENSION! heart! We're bring- STATE OF CONNECTICUT And of course, same great sponsor. ing the whole Thing (But you know that.) CAEERS back for an encore ... same great Sinatra MONDAY, APRIL 21 The Department of Correction is expanding their CBS-TV 9-10 p.m. EST Correctional Counseling program within the jails ... same great guests: (but check your local listing just to be sure, i and prison. Become a productive member of the co- rrectional team helping to rehabilitate inmates thr- ough guidance counseling and group work. Many im- mediate openings upon graduation: Recruiters will be on campus on April 17, 1969 Budweiser is the King of Beers. DATE: APRIL 17, 1969 (Bui you know thai.) GROUP DISCUSSION: 2:30 P.M.

CIVIL SEVICE TEST: 3:30 P.M. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTON • COLUMBUS Your Placement Office has additional information and Descriptive Material TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1969 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Campus Classifieds

WANTED: Girl to share apartment FOR SALE: 4 room, trailer 8 X for jummer. Coll 429=7266. 45, n.wly furnished, ond in excel- lent condition. 5 minute walk to WILLI TUTORIAL: Bus leaves of 3 ISA LECTURE SERIES "The Univ. OAAS presents "Soul on a Spring WANTED: Potwash.r in Lafay.tt. campus. $1800.00 429-3588. from SU. Next session April 8. ersity Art Museum" by Morvin Sodik, Night". Semi formal at Hawley Ar- Meols, Rick ot 429-6979. mory featuring the "Au Naturels" 8- AWS social chairman* council meets director Wednesday. April 16 8pm 12. Tiurs of 4, Commons 310. Mandatory Museum of Art. FOR SALE: '62 MG Midget, block nnan or lose position. ACCOUNTING SOCIETY: Film on convertible $500, voll 429-6665. INTERNATIONAL FAIR WORKSHOP audit tape. Guest from Hoskins-Sells. CS> DOLPHINETTES tryouts Mon. 4 14 Tuesday, April 15 8-10pm Internotion. Wed. ot7:30, SU 103. FOR SALE: 1966 Volvo 2 door.outo- and 2\ in Howley Armory pool at 7. motic tron. Exc. cond. Call after 7pm No exp. nee. all women students ore al House all students welcome. BRIDGE TOURNAMENT for CCC in 456-0308. invited. Hamilton House Wed. 8-11, $2.50 per teom, Reg. by 3. 429-4653-4302. SOPHOMORE CLASS COUNCIL FOR RENT: Furnished 3V, apart, for FILM MAKERS CLUB meets Thurs. MEETINC April 17 Thursday at 7e>m 2, 2 miles from campus. Summer oco. PRE-LAW CLUB meets Thurs. ot Coll 429-7275 after 6. at 7 in lib. screen room. in Student Union 201 Big Brother 7:30 SU 209. New members welcome. Program, Froshmore Olympics, and FOR SALE: Bob Whit., wove riding GRAD. BIBLE GROUP: Meets ev- Course Critique will be discussed. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA pledge & vernc . 7 2" model .1, 101b. will ery Tues. in basement of Whitney All representatives please attend. sister meeting SU 208 ot 7:30. folk ,75lb 2 w ,,, olJ Hall at 7:30. Topics this week: on Peru. Elections of officers. S150,JfSi org. $180.- "429-3754. . ">"»< »»M "The Holy Spirit". AMERICAN SOCIETY of MECHANI- AMP WHAT A BEAlTriFUl FARM! UCONN STUDENT AGENCIES mov- CAL ENGINEERS will hold it. mon- LOST: P.ych 240 notebook bet- PHOTOPOOL meets heelers & mem- ed to Comm, us 316. New numbers OJHITE FENCES.. POLLED H£REfORK thly meeting on Wednesday, April 16, ween Home Ee ond SS Thurs. bef. bers 7 in 207 SU. All required to ot 7pm in the lobby of Engineering I. 429-76963311 ext. 1505 and is op- vacotion. 429-6946, Karen. PUCK'S, HORSES, A P0NV, attend. Elections of next years officers will en doily 9-2. <-3 be held along with other important LOST: Large round tort, shell glas- STUDENTS: 20 students preferably THEATER DEPT. tryouts for 8 one ses bet. South Campus & lib. Coll.. froth ond soph needed for part-time business. All members are strongly act ploys Thurs. and Fri. in 128 urged to attend. Borbora 429-5001. (ob ond practical exper. for acade- Theoter Bid. bet. 4 ond 6. mic year 69-70. Must be fluent in LOST: Black wallet, imp. papers. Soon, snd like children. Dr. Chinsky Bern re Leskov, 429-7446. SS 4th floor, U-20 with name and ph- one or call ext. 685. WANTED: Tutor for Stot 211, will pay. Jessie, 429-9703. OUTING CLUB: From ih. d.pths Hamilton Bridge Tourney of the earth to the tops of mountains LOST: Pink paisley oblong scarf. If from squaredancing to wh i to water I (J0MDER IF MV MOM found 429-5940/9700, Janet-reward. canoeing, we've got what you want. LIVES HERE ...dXWLPN'T IT BE Mttets ever, We d . ot 7:30,SU 101. Planned To Benefit CCC W ANTED: Two girls to share apt. SOMETHING IF I SAW HER, AND... All welcome. °' Carriage House for Summer. 429- SLAVE Auction for CCC in front of A bridge tournament will be A "substantialpercentage" of Brock, Wed. Apr. 16,. 5:30-7:00 held Wednesday at 8 P.M. in the profits will be donated to the LOST: Men's blue univ. bicycle *5. Hamilton House. The tournament Fri. 1-5PS bid. M.I otext. 1443.... p.m. All invited. In case of roin CCC in the names of the top Reword. April 17. will benefit the annual Campus three houses. The remaining pro- Community Carnival (CCC), ceeds will be donated in the name FOR RENT: Trailer,, furn. 3 min. SCUBA DIVING CLUB - meeting Any nous e may enter as ma- of Hamilton Hall. walk to campus. Av. comm.ncing Wed Apr. 16 ol 7:30 SU 207. Making ny two-man teams as it wishes June first. 429-6862 oft.r 7. arrangements for a dive on Saturday Each team will compete with ±J£ April 19. New members and anyone by calling 429-4863 or 129.4302. three other teams in order to FOR SALE: On. acr. building lots nterested please attend. For inrfnr- A $2.50 fee will be charged for accumulate points toward fha on Dov.s Rood (off Maple, on. mil. from campus) 429-5559/6862. mation coll 429-7806. each team. winning total. WANTED: Used motorcycle helmet from person with head. Doug at 429-

FOR SALE: One used (but good con) Tickets Available For pair of Head Standard Ski is. Si z. 6 3 About $40. Janet 429-2965.

FOR SALE: 1966 Moto Guni 125cc BOG Stratford Bus Trips Low mileage. Coll Charley oft.r6:30 429-6061. Bast off.r occ.pted. Vl

M°y 3 Henry V2:30 performance April 26 Much Ado About Nothing H:30 performance CAREERS IN TEACHING $2.50 per person - includes bus and tickets on sale in SU lobby starting April 14 Qualified college graduates interested in elementary school teaching are invited to apply for a special eight week summer program at Eastern Connecticut State College. Persons successfully completing the program will be eligible to teach in the public schoo- How to take a course in anatomy ls of Connecticut in the fall. For further information contact: Dr. Edgar P. Martin, Intensive Program for and stay awake in physics. College Graduates, Eastern Connectucut State Col- lege. If you don't want to give up prescription has a stronger stimulant. everything physical for physics, And NoDoz is not habit forming. we have something for you. So after a course in anatomy has done NoDoz.* The stimulating pill for something for your ego, the unstimulating morning after. take two NoDoz and do * ^>t?^. Nothing you can buy without a something for your grades. ^M*-fBf£$^

%u keep Flunking your best subject?

Think it over, over coffee. fheThink Drink.

for ,Qur own Thtnli D'in» Mgf. lend ?&( and four n»r"* *«d add'*$v to: Thtn»Df.nfcMu|. 0#pt N. P O Bo. 5S9. N»a York. N v. 10046 Th* InltrnaLonalCoflM Organ AP Sports Whirl CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1969 Hogerty To Lead Wills Back to Los Angeles? Husky Nine This Year Manager' Gene Maucb of the their Portland, Oregon farm club. also will play in the P-G-A and Montreal expos has criticized the U-S open. BUI Hogerty, senior political T--. Los Angeles Dodgers (or what science major from Valley he calls the improper way they The new Masters Golf Champ- Stream, N.Y., has been elected have public' v mentioned lnfield- ion, George Archer, apparently captain of the University of Conn- er Maun Wills' name in trade will try for a 'grand slam' this American tennis players Pan- ecticut varsity baseball team. talks. year. After winning the Masters elm Gonzales of Los Angeles and The announcement was made Mauch says he doesn't think yesterday in a dramatic finish, Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Vir- last Monday by Coach Larry \ it's proper to make overtures to Archer said he will play In the ginia have scored easy victories Panclera who said the right- somebody else's players through British open, one of the four in the first round of the Monte handed pitcher 'will be an ex- the newspapers. major events that comprise the Carlo open tournament. Gonzales cellent leader. He has also dem- News of the Dodgers' interest grand slam. The others are the beat Ian Fletcher of Australia, onstrated outstanding ability as In re-acquiring Wills was dis- Masters, the P-G-A and the U-S 6-3, 6-3. And Ashe eliminated a player.' closed last week. Mauch says ooen. It is expected that Archer John Ward of Britain, 6-2, 6-2. Hogerty pitched 28 Innings as such a situation has an unset- a soohomore, compiling a 1.61 tling effect on the player and RA and a 2-0 won-lost record. his team. The Expos' manager Sports Calender Pitching for a team which was says the Dodgers didn't mention New England NCAA runner-up the players they were willing to and Yankee Conference champion trade because they didn't want to last spring he came out with create a disrupting effect on their a 2.77 ERA and a 2-2 record club. Today During the seven-game Flor- Mauch says he will do the ida trip, he emerged as the Hus- Dodgers a favor by not mention- Baseball vs Boston University kies' top hurler, with a 0.45 ing the players, either. ERA after 20 innings' work. Ha 3:00 PM played In three games and was BILL HOGERTY Three-time AU-American charged with the defeat in two Lew Alclndor of U-C-L-A says of them. Milwaukee Bucks coach Larry Tennis vs AIC In his last effort, against the Expos Edge Cords Costello will decide how he will University of Tampa, he allowed (AP) - The Montreal Expos be used In his first season in one unearned run and eight hits made a successful home debut the National Basketball Associ- 3:00 PM In eight innings, striking out ten by edging the National League ation. The towering center made and walking two. Connecticut lost Champion St. Louis Cardinals the comment today at his first the game In ten Innings, 1-0. 8 to 7 In the first big league V news conference In Milwaukee. Friday A graduate of Chamlnade High baseball game ever played out- Alclndor recently signed with the (1965), he lettered four years side the United States. Bucks for a reported one milli- Tennis vs Maine each In both football and baseball The Boston Red Sox and Chi- on, 400-thousand dollars. there. At Connecticut, he won cago Cubs won the other major two baseball letters and also league games played Monday 3:00 PM played frosh football. New York Jets quarterback afternoon. Joe Namath has been released in the custody of his attorney after the American Football lea- gue star was arrested on three traffic charges, including drunk driving, In Miami. Namath was booked at the Dade County jail on charges of careless driving, driving without a valid license and drunk dri- ving. He was released In less than one hour. Namath's attorney, Laurence Schroeder, said he thought the arrest was a misunderstanding. He said Joe may have had some words with the arresting officer. Schroeder thought an apology would straighten it out, but it didn't. The officer said he clock- ed Namath at 70 miles an hour. St. Louis University has named James Polk as head bask- etball coach. He coached the last four years at Trinity University in Texas. Prior to that, he coa- ched for 14 years at Vander- bllt. Polk succeeds Joe Brehmer, who resigned for health reasons. The New York Yankees have acquired veteran left-handed hit- ting outfielder Jlmtnie Hall from the Cleveland Indians. Hall cost the Yankees an undisclosed a- mount of cash and a minor league player to be named later. To replace Hall, the Indians recall- ed outfielder Cap Peterson from

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April 1969

Stick men Top Nichols To Even Record At 1—1

Someone once said persever- kies played a determined game ance always Hint, This axiom putting pressure throughout on certainly Meld true Saturday af- Nichols goalie T>m Usually. Dan- ternoon as the Varsity Lacrosse ahy was in fact most respons- team downed Nichols College 8-3. ible lor keeping the score as The (Sine .vis a complete low as it was. He turned away turnabout from last weeks '.7-! 23 of 31 shots on goal making irjbbinR at the hands of Brow.i a number of spectacular s.iv°.s University The H uskle%com)>lii- i i the process. ' ig some fine mid-field play and a stiff defense led by Capt- Scoring 5 goals in a per- ain Steve Pricey iimlted Nichols iod of 6 minutes of the 4th to only 15 shots on goal. quarter, the Huskies ran away The big difference In this with the game, outscoring Nichols game was the defense, as they 5-1. consistently picked up the Nich- Five different players scored ols attackmen In front of the goal. for the Husky Stlckmen In a bal- Catcher Rick Romaniello, backing up first base, picked up a As a result only one of the three anced attack. Harvie Rose with Back-up Man goals scored came on a centered two goals Iwth unassisted and an wide throw against UMass and turned it into an out at second pass, while the other two wer? assist was high man. Netting two base. The Huskies face BU here today. long shots that Santucci was tin- goals apiece were KenGliesmen, title to pick up. and Mike Haire. Bill Harper and The 'irst half of the contest Pete Lltwln tallied one apiece saw a steady ball control type with Tom Adragna picking up two game be'ng played by both teams. assists from his attack position. Neither team was; rsaKy dominant The Huskies will face Penn- with Connecticut notching the 1st sylvania next Saturday. Penn a two goals followed by Nichols recently User to Yale by a 8-5 with two, the H uskies tallied the score should provide Connecticut go-ahead goal with a little over with some stiff competition. 6 minutes lift in the half. Next home game is slated The second half was a dif- ferent story however as ihe Hus- for April 21st M.I.T.provides the competition.gametime Is 3 p.m SANDALS AND LEATHER GOODS HANDCRAFTED

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