Garden of 76 brings back heritage By KEN ANDERSON The chorus went: When Ann Hickey dug the turf and hauled "I won't pick rocks any more, out stones from the vegetable and flower beds I have picked for years on my father's farm at the College of Agriculture and Natural and I won't pick rocks any more." Resources' bicentennial gardens she was reliving the oldest tradition of the University. The poem of protest echoed a student Hickey, a seventh semester animal industries sentiment which led to the end of forced labor major, is one of the may students, faculty on the lands here. members and state farm hands who helped to Nearly a century later Hickey and others went build the gardens and commons which will be about their work more cheerfully than their dedicated by the college Sunday at 3 p.m. student predecessors and with good reason. In May of 1899 the student publication. The The daily routine for students at the Storrs Lookout, published a poem entitled "The Most Popular Song of the Day." , Continued on Page 7 (Etmttprttntt latlg (Bamjma Serving Storrs Since 1896

VOL. LXXX NO. 24 STORRS, CONNECTICUT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1976 Naus defends Board to consider BOG reply Commons, vendor By JOHN J. KWOLEK The Student Union Board of Governors president says the recommendations board has issued its final state- ment on its budgeting and pro- By JOHN HILL ID night that the Commons dining gramming policies and will work A timetable for the conversion hall would be transformed into a to prevent student-Trustee Ro- of the Commons Dining Hall from "primarily fast-food service." bert E. Wiggins to make the issue a budgetary parasite to a viable The committee's report also a "political football." and profit-making operations will suggested the Commons combine "The letter we sent to Wiggins be presented to the University's with Anonymous Pub. and the represents the feeling of the Board of Trustees today at the Housatonic Room will be convert- board. This is my last statement Torrington branch, the vice presi- ed into a sit-down type restau- on the issue," BOG President dent for student affairs and rant. Jeffery Naus said Wednesday. services, said Thursday. The report recommends the "All his accusations are war- "We will be presenting recom- Anonymous Pub be expanded to rantless," he said. "We're not mendations and a time table include more food services and going to give him a battle on along with an estimate of what we the Commons facility be used to that," he said. hope to save this year," said fulfill the purposes now done by Wiggins sent a letter to the Frederick G. Adams, vice presi- the Pub. board Sept. 10 criticizing what he dent for student affairs and "Due to the long lines at the called the board's failure to services. "We hope to be able to Pub." the report says, "the allocate sufficient funds to the go forth and be utilizing the Commons dining Hall could be Interciiltural Committee. facility by mid-May." used as an alternate facility to The board held a special The recommendations are from present its (the Pub's) programs meeting to draft a reply to a report drawn up last year by an popular with students so more Wiggin's charges. Naus wrote ad hoc committee composed of students could attend." the letter and sent it to Wiggins student representatives and ad- The report also recommends Tuesday. ministration officials and chaired that the number of campus food Wiggins said that because the Swinging Away by Student Activities Coordinator vendors be reduced or elimi- student union fee, which goes nated, in order to give the A campus visitor tries to avoid "getting his feet wet" during the Donald McCullough. directly to the board, was doubled Robert Desnoyers, assistant to Commons a more favorable busi- this year, and hence the Inter- Student Union Board of Governors' Contest Week [Staff Photo by ness position. Adams said a Buzz Kanter I- the student activities coordinator, Contlnued on Page 3 told the Hilltop Council Tuesday Continued on Page 4 Ford modifies debate position By DAVID NAGY saying he will never "concede" of Eastern Europe and there opean nations expressed aston- for the aspirations for indepen- United Press International that domination. never will be under the Ford ishment and outrage. Ford react- dence of the nations of Eastern Apparently stung by furious With early surveys indicating administration." ed by reinterpreting what he had Europe." he told a rally of 15.000 public reaction. President Ford Jimmy Carter won the debate on American voters of East Eur- meant to say without acknowledg- persons at the University of Thursday modified his Wednes- foreign policy, most reaction fo- opean background, academic ing what he did say. Southern California in Los An- day debate statement on Soviet cused on Ford's statement that specialists in Soviet affairs, and "Last night in the debate, I geles. domination of Eastern Europe by "there is no Soviet domination news commentaries in West Eur- spoke of America's firm support "The United States has never conceded and never will concede their domination by the Soviet Union." Acknowledging, in effect, that the Soviets do dominate the area, Style captures professors'attention the President said: "I admire the courage of the Polish people and have always supported the hopes By CHARLES A. MOORE emphasize the difference in style with Europe was somewhat overplayed. "It only of Polish Americans for their The main differences between Jimmy which he would conduct foreign affairs shows that he can't think fast enough on his ancestral homeland. Carter and Gerald Ford in Wednesday's because he did not totally disagree with the feet. He got carried away with rhetoric. I "It is our policy to use every debates involved style rather than substan- Ford Administration's positions on foreign can't believe he really thinks that." Krisch peaceful means to assist countries tive issues, two UConn professors said policy. Carter's main style emphasis would said. in Eastern Europe in their efforts Thursday night. be to conduct foreign affairs with less Gerson said. "He certainly did not mean to become less dependent on the Henry Krisch, associate professor of secrecy, according to Gerson. what he said. I think he will try to correct Soviet Union and to establish political science, and Louis Gerson. profes- Krisch said "both candidates were it." closer ties with the West." sor of political science, agreed that there unnecessarily and narrowly partisan." Both The two professors disagreed as to who His remarks drew a scattering were few differences between the two professors said they thought, however, that had the advantage going into the debate. of boos from the crowd. candidates on actual policy, but both Carter had the edge in the second debate, if Krisch said. "Ford should have had an Morning-after polls aside, what professors said there were definite differ- only because of style and presentation. advantage, due to his incumbency, but he Ford might have to fear most ences in style. Both professors said that Ford's state- didn't show he knew any more about from Wednesday night's second According to Krisch. Carter was forced to ment about Russian domination in Eastern Continued on Page 4 Continued on Page 4 focus Glenn, about that job...

To: Glenn Ferguson cold nights here in the capital, who will UConn President , pay for the cable TV, and who will pay for the new furniture. From: An anonymous former Cabinet So, Glenn, how about it. How about member a nice job somewhere in that agricul- ture department of yours. I do have Dear Glenn, the experience. Maybe I could work for your public relations. You know I suppose you've heard that I've how I am with words. made a few off-the-cuff remarks lately And if you need some spare cows or that had President Ford quite upset at extra wheat for feed, let me tell you, I me. As a matter of fact, he fired me. know where to get it. But I've always remained optimistic. I am not trying to bribe you, Glenn, I That's why I made so many wheat know you have integrity. deals with the Ruskies. I assumed Just give me a job. enough midwest wheat in their bellies Right now, Glenn, I'm worried about would get them to come around to this winter. The times will be tough democracy sooner or later. and to get right to the point, I'm But now, Glenn, let me explain those worried this winter I won't even have a remarks in full. warm place to...well, you know what I I didn't mean them. mean. Anyway, Glenn, here is the point. Winter is coming and I don't have a Sincerely, job. Who will pay for the heat on those A former Cabinet member Check those labels Staff Photo/Steve McGuff "dough conditioners," "color- The FDA is understaffed. How- By Joan Delman ing," or some other equally ever, this cannot be used as an and esoteric term. excuse to allow manufacturers to Speakeasy Mary Alexander A consumer has no way of inject inadequately tested chem- In 1938, Congress passed the knowing if the list of ingredients icals into our food or to add some Federal Food. Drug, and Cos- on a label really shows everything ingredients to a product without Kudos for Weicker metic Act which replaced the old contained in a product. putting them on the label. There 1906 measure. The Act prohibited The FDA is also responsible for should be a mandatory labeling To the Editor: Weicker is not for big business adulteration of products and false regulating the additives that can of all ingredients and a listing of Reading the recently published exploiting the consumer. He has or misleading labeling, and also be put in your food. Apparently, nutritional value of every product. article by Gloria Schaffer's cam- sponsored legislation to prevent established the Federal Food and the FDA established the Gener- Testing of additives must be paign campus chairman, I was this from happening in many Drug Administration (FDA). ally Recognized As Safe (GRAS) carried out independently by the surprised that much of it came out ways. Two most prominent cases The FDA is supposed to regulate list for this purpose. The list, FDA. and all FDA files must be other official campaign brochure. include his introduction of a bill to labeling of foods and of both however, is composed of addi- opened to anyone who wants to It. as much of Schaffer's cam- increase anti-trust enforcement prescription and over-the-counter tives which were in use at the see them. drugs; regulate the advertising of paign has been, is based not on and he has led a fight against a time GRAS was established. The More scientists and inspectors the qualities of the secretary of government bail-out «f Lockheed. prescription drugs; develop additives have been"tested by will be needed to do testing and the state, but as an attempt to Weicker is not trying to "de- standards of identity for certain the companies that manufacture to uncover violations of the law. discredit the fine record of U.S. emphasize the issues" as Lawlor foods; control the types and them, and not by the FDA.The The FDA is susceptible to big Sen. Lowell Weicker. charges. His agreement to debate amounts of food additives; and results of these "tests are not business lobbying at times. The Weicker is. and always has Schaffer four times is proof of review petitions for new drugs available to the public." regulator can no longer by in been, deeply concerned for the that. It is Schaffer who has and additives. Additives which were formerly service to the regulated. welfare of the people of Con- cancelled one debate, not In addition, a Pesticides Chem- on the GRAS list include sodium A larger allocation of federal necticut. It is for them and all Weicker. ical Amendment, a Food Addi- and calcium cyclamate and red money for the FDA seems like Americans that he casts his votes Weicker has had the interest of tives Amendment, a Color Addi- dye number 2. Additives still on a small price to pay to be sure that in the Senate. the people of Connecticut at the tive Amendment, and the Kef- the list include monosodiom glut- our food is properly labeled and Weicker has co-sponsored a bill top of his mind since his 1962 auvcr-Harris Drug Amendment amate. saccharine, and many safe. have been added to the Act. to guard against the financial plunge into electoral politics. others whose safety has recently Mike Lawlor is right in one Let's examine how well the FDA been questioned by consumer drain of a catastrophic illness. Joan Delman and Mary Alex- instance: "The race for Senate is is doing some of these jobs. The groups and individuals such as This is the first step toward a ander are members of the UConn far from over." It won't be until agency is supposed to regulate Beatrice Trum Hunter. national health insurance, which food labeling so that it is not false chapter of the Connecticut Public he supports. all ballots are counted on Nov. 2. or misleading. Yet, if the manu- Interest Research Group. He has drafted legislation pro- The Connecticut electorate al- facturers follow what the FDA viding additional funds for state ready realizes the devotion Lowell calls a "standard of identity," Aperture housing authorities, reaffirming Weicker has for them. He has they do not have to list certain the goal to rehabilitate 40.000 voted for them in the past and he ingredients. Speak up! Connecticut homes. will vote for what is best for all of The "standard of identity" for Readers arc invited to submit He has introduced legislation to them in the future. "Pasteurized Process Cheese," photographs for the editorial fca- The Daily Campus invites all assure equal educational oppor- according to The Supermarket lurc A perl arc. readers to submit letters for tunity and voted for increased Edward D. Dadakis Handbook by Nikki and David publication to the Speakeasy student loan funding. McMahon Hall Prints should be 5x7 or 8x10 Goldbcck, includes "emulsifier," column. Connecticut Daily Cam- and of good technical quality. which may be any combination of pus Box U-8. UConn. I here is no limit on subject thirteen different chemicals not All letters must be typed, matter. Photographers will be appearing on the label." double-spaced, and no longer paid (or each photo used. Butter, cheese, and ice cream than 300 words. Signatures must (Eonnerttcut laila (ftatnpUH may contain artificial coloring Submit photographs for consid- be accompanied by addresses and without listing it on the label. eration to Aperture. Connecticut telephone numbers. Unsigned Serving Storrs Since 1896 letters will not be published, but Additives in bread do not have to Daily Campus. Box U—-8. UConn. Susan A. Oku la be listed specifically, but can signatures can be withheld on simply be labeled "emulsifiers." request. Mark A. Dupuis Editor-in-Chief Robert s Kravchuk 1* Managing Editor Business Manager MM & Tony Cronin m Steven D. Hull Senior Editors John Hill III News Editor John J. Kwolck News Editor Mark Gould Sports Editor Maria Romash Sports Editor Kathc Rogers Features Editor James Schcmbari Features Editor Buz Sherman Magazine Editor Bu// Kanter Photography Editor Jo Ann Niland Assistant News Editor Ellen Gray Assistant News Editor Richard DePreta • Assistant Sports Editor Darryl Campagna Assistant Features Editor Subscription rates: $10 per year. Second-class pottage paid at Storrs. Ct. 06268. Published Monday through Friday during the regular school year, except during Thanksgiving, Christmas and spring breaks, and two weeks before the end of each semester. Accepted for national advertising by the National Advertising Service. Subscriber: United

The scope and areas of concen- There are three standing com- grams will be cut. The adminis- UConn Board of Trustees for an tions for a "profile" of the tration for the initial steps in mittees involved in the drawing tration has said the correspon- interim report. student body, including graphs, preparing the "master plan" of up of the master plan: the dences are internal advisory Ferguson said he asked Brand tables and other projections UConn's academic future were Planning and Coordinating Com- memos and, as such, are exempt to assume full responsibility for covering undergraduates and announced in a progress report mittee, the Change and Innova- from the Freedom of Information the initial draft because "we want graduates, admission policies and made by the plan's coordinator tion Committee, and the Program Act. the communities of the University transfer policies. earlier this week. Review Committee. UConn President Glenn W. to be involved deeply in the Working with him in this area Ronald S. Brand, director of The latter committee is at the Ferguson noted that the Univer- planning process, but they must will be Lois Torrence. director of academic planning, issued an center of a dispute between the sity now is in the third year of a have something to which they can the UConn Office of Institutional interim report on the progress of UConn administration and the five-year approach to planning react." Research. the master plan for UConn, which student government. Student which, when completed, would He said UConn. as a single The interim report outline also will include studies of such areas government chairman William include a physical development entity, cannot write a draft, and a will cover such areas as educa- as enrollment, history and projec- Finch has filed a complaint with plan, a capital development plan, committee cannot produce a draft tional programs, the numbers of tions of the main Storrs campus Freedom of Information Commis- a series of proposals to raise document. undergraduate majors, degrees and the five branches as well as sion seeking* to force the release funds from potential donor Brand currently is preparing an awarded, and special limitations the various divisions within of memos sent to Vice President groups and specific means of outline which will include sugges- on enrollment in certain fields. UConn. for Academic Affairs Kenneth G. implementing policies or objec- "It will be an academic plan of Wilson and the departments in- tives. what's happening to programs at volved. Ferguson said the Brand Re- the University and what we think Finch has claimed the memos port is needed prior to completion should happen to them in the very are part of the decisions as to of the long-term plan in accor- short-run future," Brand said. what parts of the UConn pro- dance with a request from the FSSO taps lawyer for memo hearing

By ELLEN GRAY and Organizations (FSSO) to ap- ting a letter to the Attorney The same attorney who has propriate money to hire a lawyer, General's office, stating why the represented the student govern- Dwight 0. Schweitzer of Hartford group feels it needs a lawyer. The ment in its two-year battle to hire will not be paid, FSSO Chairman letter would be reviewed and. if it their own lawyer will represent William Finch said. is deemed necessary, the attorney them again next week in their "We won't be able to pay him, general will appoint a lawyer to hearing before the Freedom of unless we do it out of our own represent FSSO, Hill said. Information Commission, the stu- pockets. That is what we feel is "We're not going to go that dent government chairman said inequitable," Finch said. route," Finch said. "We're chal- Thursday. Finch said FSSO met with lenging the state. It's not ade- Because a verbal ruling deli- Schweitzer Thursday to discuss quate," he said. Finch compared vered Wednesday by Assistant plans for the hearing. the appointing of an attorney by Attorney General Sidney Giber UConn General Counsel John the state in action against the quashed the latest effort of the G. Hill Jr. said Wednesday that state to the choosing of a plaintiff Federation of Student Services FSSO had the option of submit- in a lawsuit's attorney by the defendant. '•*>.. Finch said he contacted Hill and told him, "Thank you any- jm t J

way, but we're going elsewhere." «-t - *** State guarantees Giber's ruling was delivered after FSSO last week appro- ,.'• X, priated $100 to hire a lawyer. In a similar ruling last year, the state * * * radioactivity fails attorney general's office said ••' ■•■•■,-*'- :*" FSSO was a state agency and, as such, could not appropriate Taking A Break money to hire their own lawyer, A worker at the Nathan Hale Library construction site takes a break to poison milk although they did have access to Thursday as he relaxes outside Hawley Armory [Staff Photo by Buzz UConn's attorney. Kanter]. By PETER A. BROWN duced by cows that ate the HARTFORD (UPI) — State affected grass. officials assured consumers The highest level, he said, was Thursday that milk being sold in 276 picocures, found on "four of Connecticut is safe to drink and in five" farms in the New London- Test results still awaited no way affected . by radioactive Waterford area. He said only fallout from a nuclear test blast in when the level is consistently By VIVIAN MARTIN an investigation after residents of scheduled for several South Cam- China last month. higher than 1,000 picocures was Results from tests taken to Batterson Hall complained that pus dormitories, should be done. But dairy farmers were urged action contemplated. determine whether dormitory tar- the smell caused by the tarring Tarring is scheduled to begin at to keep their herds away from Even if a person in one day ring at a Northwest campus was unhealthy and inconventient. Terry Hall Monday, aftci which grass that might contain relative drank 20-60 quarts of milk pro- dormitory is hazardous to the "The tests were only about two work will be done on the South ly high levels of radioactivity. duced by cows from those farms, residents' health have not been weeks ago. so it's still early." Campus sites, if the ConnOSHA "We're dealing with very, very it would have the same effect as sent to the University, the Physi- Laudieri said. "ConnOSHA is report shows no health problems, small quantities of radiation. undergoing a test involving radio- cal Plant director said Thursday. usually very prompt with the lab he said. We're trying to be cautious active iodine typically used to Frank Laudieri said he still has tests and analysis, but this time here," said State Health Commis- The South Campus Council is diagnose a thyroid condition. not received the report from the our requests came at a time when sioner Douglas Lloyd. "But the currently circulating petitions "I don't think we have enough Connecticut Occupational Safety they had many similar ones." less radioactive substances we among South Campus residents. evidence to recommend that any- and Health Administration The tests are expected to show put in our body, the better." Les Slater, co-chairman of the one decrease their consumption (ConnOSHA). The administration whether there is a health hazard council, said recently. He said the Preliminary test results showed of milk." Lloyd said. requested ConnOSHA to conduct and whether further larring. high levels of radioactive iodine in petitions, which will be sent to the Connecticut because of a nuclear Inter-Area Residents Council and test blast in China last month. the state Public Works Depart- Because of the high readings, ment, arc asking that no tarring officials asked farmers to keep be done on any South Campus their cows inside and urged Naus defends BOG reply dormitory because of the poten- consumers to wash vegetables tial health and living problems. before eating them. Continued from Page 1 "Either he's trying to make this board created two new commit- "They will have to present an "There is no health hazard cultural Committee also should an issue, or he just doesn't have tees this year. overwhelming amoung of facts to whatsoever to the milk that is on have been doubled. any suggestions," he said. the state's commission if they the market today," Agriculture The committee's budget was "We need more input from expect anything." Laudieri said. Secretary George Wilbur said. jumped from $11,000 last year to Naus said he feels Wiggins' minority students. There are The crews are ready to begin Lloyd emphasized that despite $12,500 this year. complaints raise the question of minority students on the board, tarring Terry Hall. Laudieri said. higher radioactive iodine levels Naus' responding letter stated whether the board is "presenting but that's only so many voices." Chris Bonner. resident assistant than detected in the 1960s when that the board will incur larger programs for minority students," Naus said. for Terry B. said he has told the Russia and the U.S. were conduc- deficits this year and its actual not the structure of the board or "If students find things lacking, dormitory residents to cooperate ting extensive nuclear testing budget increase will only be about its budget. they should tell us. The board is with the crews. there was no need for worry. 51 per cent over last year. always open to suggestions," he "I figure if everybody cooper- He said even the highest levels "Things would work out better Wiggins has Centered his said. The more input we have, ates and tries to make things found were only a quarter of the if Wiggins did things different- criticisms of the board around the better we can serve." easier, the workmen will be able minimum at which federal offic- ly," Naus said. "We have yet to what he has called the board's "We hope to relieve Wiggins' to do their jobs that much ials recommend action such as hear anything from him except inadequate budgeting procedures concern and what he called the quicker, and get out of here." he taking off the market milk pro- his letter. and its committee structure, the 'commonality' problem," he said. said. Page 4 Connecticut Dally Campus Friday, October 8, 1976

Beginning of The Mids Whether its studying up to the last possible minute or at zero hoar In the classroom, mid-terms have come to UConn as the student above makes himself comfortable while catching some last-minute cramming, and the one on the right Is already there [ Staff Photos by Buzz Kanter|. Carter unit plans canvass

prohibiting residence hall re- like this, but we'll certainly By MATTHEW LIGHT search without "written con- contact Student Affairs and The Student for Carter-Mon- sent of the Department of I ARC for details about the dale committee made plans Student Affairs," and political regulations." Wednesday night to canvass in canvassing without securing Canvassing of "activities dormitories and to conduct "explicit authorization from which many students attend, their own polls, laying the the student government of the such as homecoming, should groundwork for a campus cam- residence hall," Bob Votel, be one of our programs, as paign. co-chairman of Students for well as the creation of a table Questioned about a regula- Carter, said, "I've heard that in the Student Union," said tion in the UConn Almanac they don't prevent activities Votel. Candidates' style Board to review report captures attention restocking the dining hall with the Adams said the money for the Continued from Page 1 Continued from Page 1 Both thought Carter did a good proposal to charge vendors on new types of supplies the new changes would come from the foreign policy than an ex-gover- job of dispelling the fears of many campus a license fee would be put format would require. saving made from the elimination "The actual cost of changing of obsolete and inefficient aspects nor of Georgia." Americans that he was weak in before the Board today also. The Gerson took the opposite stand, Trustees approved the idea of the facility will be about $186,000, of the Commons operation. knowledge of foreign affairs. saying, "It is much easier to Krisch said. "He (Ford) knows charging a fee but did not vote on this is not including the cost of "We hope one day it will do criticize." more details than anyone else the specifics of the proposal. new staples which would bring more than sustain itself," Adams Adams said "the questions that the total cost to about $218,000." said. because he is President, but were raised have been an- Carter has an excellent staff and therefore has a lot of talent to swered." He said considerations would be draw on." made for student-operated co- State won't press blue laws "Carter was very effective in operatives who ran food trailers his attack on Ford's political on campus, and that they possibly juggling of the defense budget," could be released from the re- WOODBR1DGE (UPI)— Connecticut officals will appellate court decision. Krisch said. He also said he quirement if "they can prove they be advised not to prosecute under the state's blue "We feel it is now impossible and perhaps thought Carter showed new in- arc a bona-fide cooperative." laws, the Chief State's Attorney's office said improper to successfully prosecute blue law sight on the arms race. Gerson Adams would not predict what Thursday. violations," Mulcahy said. thought Ford was strong on the action the Trustees would take on The decision came after Common Pleas Judge "We will advise our prosecutors that we do not Mideast. He also thought that the the proposed fee for the vendors. Alvin G. Rottman Tuesday voided the laws, saying recommend initiation of prosecution under this law African situation, as it stands so "1 don't think for the Board." they not longer serve their religiously inspired which has now judicially been declared unconstitu- far. will be a help to Ford. The combined Commons facility intent. tional," he said. Gerson said that Wednesday's also would use more student labor He left Connecticut without Sunday sale Mulcahy said a copy of Rottman's decision will debate was not of great impor- be sent to each prosecutor, along with the as a method of cutting down restrictions for the first time in more than two tance. "Domestic affairs and the employee costs, the report said. centuries. advisory. economy are more important," he Adams estimated the cost of the John F. Mulcahy, Jr.. the deputy chief state's Rottman's findings in New Britain Court of said. "They basically agree on conversion of the Commons fa- attorney, said Thursday the advisory not to Common Pleas dismissed charges of illegal Sunday the main thrusts of foreign sales against Edward Granber, manager of the cility would cost approximately prosecute was issued even though Rottman's policy." $218,000, including the cost of ruling does not necessarily have the stature of an Two Guys Department Store in Newington.

THE SHELL CHATEAU FOREIGN SERVICE of the RESTAURANT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA is looking for men and women to be: — Friday and Saturday Special - political labor officers economic commercial officers Soup de Jour • Fresh Fruit Cocktail administrative officers consular officers Prime Rib • Baked Potato

.inH (or IhA II.S Information Agency information cultural officers Vegetable • Salad Bar Work-and serve-in Washington and overseas. You must be an American Dessert (Ice-Cream or Jello) citizen and 21 years old in order to lake the written examination which will be given this year on December $8.95 COMPLETE 4. Entering pay levels are between $11,046 and $15,479. Applications .. .when for the December examination must be submitted by October 24. For accompanied additional information and applica- tions write to: CALL for RESERVATIONS

Board of Examiners Have your own rocks concert: Room 7000- 423-1713 just pour Southern Comfort Department of State over ice and turn on the music. Washington. D.C. 20520 Neat! Super with cola. 7UP. FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE tonic, orange juice or milk! There's nothing more delicious than Southern Comfort* on-the-rocks! JOHN CARPENTER AT THE PIANO

s-*Krtr-,*tcvO*** swim*CO*HO*I cam* layoot LOutum s'i Ot"Z MO SJIV

T* Ii;!l!'d'! i |->M •»•:• • !•• II •»> M-oM ««<:it iai It •!> ?t: rti U.< . JJ ; • t \ : i; JJ ;, »i«.IT; Friday, October 8, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campus Page 5 Ford orders boycott data released By RICHARD LERNER during Wednesday's debate with Secretary Elliot Richardson to impact of the Arab boycott on against nations friendly to us." LOS ANGELES (UPI)— Presi- Jimmy Carter. arrange for "public inspection American business. A White House "fact sheet" dent Ford Thursday ordered the As the President acted to carry and copying of boycott-related "Disclosures of boycott-relat- said the disclosure policy would Commerce Department to make out his debate pledge on the reports to be filed in the future ed reports will enable the Amer- take effect immediately, but public the reports filed from now boycott issue, angry senators and with the Department of Com- ican public to assess for itself the Ford's memo made clear it would on by U.S. companies involved in congressmen accused him of merce." nature and impact of the Arab apply only to boycott-reports filed the Arab economic boycott of lying about his role in congres- He said only Richardson should boycott and to monitor the con- henceforth under laws that re- Israel. sional efforts to make boycott withold only "proprietary busi- duct of American companies." quire U.S. firms to report when Ford's disclosure order would compliance illegal. They said ness information" whose release He said he had determined that they become emmeshed in the cover only future reports and Ford's lobbyists killed that legis- could damage the firms com- the disclosure requirement would Arab policy. would not identify those firms lation. mercially. not damage "our vital interests in Arab states refuse to do that have complied with the In a memorandum issued in Los "During the past year," Ford the Middle East" and would business with firms that deal with boycott in the past, as Ford Angeles, where he was cam- said, "there has been a growing reaffirm "our national policy of Israel or are owned by Jewish seemed to suggest it would paigning! Ford told Commerce interest in and awareness of the opposition to boycott action interests. The Nation In Brief 255 arrested in heroin sweep Medicaid program ills said WASHINGTON (UPI)— Federal agents Thursday arrested 255 suspects in a crackdown on major distributors of Mexican brown heroin in more than 35 U.S. cities, the Drug Enforcement crippling, killing youths Administration announced. DEA administrator Peter B. Bensinger announced the sweep at By CRAIG A. PALMER need treatment for a perceptual deficiency such as noon when 230 had been arrested. By late afternoon a spokesman WASHINGTON (UPI)— Mismanagement in the a significant hearing defect; 650,000 would need said arrests totaled 255 and were spreading beyond an initial list Medicaid program allows the crippling, retarda- treatment for eye defects; 770,000 would have of 35 cities. tion and death of thousands of poor children some kind of learning disability, and 435.000 entitled to help, a House subcommittee reported would need treatment for iron deficiency anemia. Wholesale prices mark gain Thursday. Nearly 5 million eligible children who were not The report, approved by the subcommittee on a examined would have been found to need medical WASHINGTON (UPI)— Wholesale prices rose by nearly a full 10-1 vote with only Rep. James M. Collins, R-Tex., treatment, the report said. percentage point in September to the highest level in almost a dissenting, was the second congressional attack on Moss said HEW has failed to put the program year, the government reported Thursday. Medicaid practices in recent weeks. into effect adequately "or provide care for children The 0.9 per cent surge in wholesale prices carried the strong Subcommittee chairman John Moss, D-Calif., in most in need of health services." threat of further inflation at the consumer level between now and a letter transmitting the report to the parent House The report blames HEW "maladministration," the Nov. 2 presidential election. Commerce Committee said: including laxity in issuing program regulations, September's rise in wholesale prices reflected an annual rate of "The subcommittee finds that mismanagement fragmented services and cumbersome procedures 10.8 per cent, which eventually will be passed along to consumers by HEW of this program has caused unnecessary for penalizing laggard states. in the prices of retail goods. Not since October 1975, have these crippling, retardation, or even death of thousands It said only nine states were able to report to the prices risen so sharply. of children." subcommittee the number of children treated as a The report itself, titled "Shortchanging Child- result of routine health examinations: Colorado, ren," said about 12.9 million persons under the Delaware, Hawaii. Idaho, North Carolina. Penn- Humphrey surgery successful age of 21 were eligible for medical examinations sylvania. South Carolina. Vermont and Virginia. and treatment in 1975 under a law that was to have Last week, a Senate investigations subcommittee NEW YORK (UPI)— Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey underwent an take effect in 1969. heard testimony from private consulting firms that apparently successful operation for bladder cancer Thursday, his But 10.9 million of the eligible children were left they wined and dined and provided personal doctors said. unexamined and untreated, the report said. services and payments valued at more than $9,000 Edgar Berman, Humphrey's personal physician, told a news Based on testimony at subcommittee hearings, to Charles Cubbler, a Medicaid management conference at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, where the panel's staff estimated that about 1 million of specialist for the Department of Health, Education the surgery was performed, "I'm tremendously relieved that the the unscreened children would have been found to and Welfare. senator...has come through this procedure extremely well." "It actually went off without a hitch," Berman said, "and I just hope the convalescence comes out as well." In King, Kennedy deaths New York police talks resume Counsel predicts long probe NEW YORK (UPI)— Mayor Abraham Beanie's administration renewed contract talks Thursday with the union representing WASHINGTON (UPI)— The director of the House Select will not hesitate to use subpoenas police officers following an angry all-night demonstration by chief counsel for a House com- Committee on Assassinations. or to travel anywhere-including off-duty cops. mittee which will reinvestigate '' You cannot do it by deadline,'' Cuba- in search of evidence. Four off-duty policement were arrested by brother officers the assassinations of John Ken- said Sprague. "A homicide Sprague said investigators Wednesday night, the first taken into custody since the nedy and Martin Luther King said investigation is an intensive job... would talk to former members of Patrolmen's Benevolent Association took to the streets Sept. 24 to Thursday the inquiry may require It has to be recognized by the Warren Commission which publicize its members' anger with a new work schedule and everyone that work of this nature investigated the Kennedy assas- refusal of the city to provide a retroactive 6 per cent pay raise in a a matter of years. Richard Sprague, who helped should be thought of in term of sination, including President new pact. with the successful murder pro- years." Ford who was a member of the Hours after a raucous demonstration broke up, First Deputy secution of former United Mine He said the investigations will House at the time. Mayor John Zuccotti agreed to meet with PBA President Douglas Workers president W.A. Boyle, be conducted separately but sim- But committee chairman Weaving for "preliminary talks" on the union's demands. gave the assessment as he was ultaneously, with a different staff Thomas Downing. D-Va.. said, sworn in as acting council and for each. For his part, he said, he without elaborating: "There may be a time the committee will have K *K «KW ^ >*■■■ >m*mKjm':m*tM»*M^m^^^ to say. 'Stop, Mr. Sprague. you've gone too far." Sprague. a lawyer from Phila- Fri.&Sdt. delphia, was special assistant to the U.S. Attorney General for the prosecution of Boyle. 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. Committee member Henry Gon- zalez. D-Tex.. said one reason for the reopened investigations is to a II determine the impact of assas- sinations on the political process. ROADS "Are we going to have our national destiny shaped by bullet HAPPY HOUR $1.75-PITCHER rather than ballot?" he said. 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Rt. 32 next to Sundown with "Milton the Magician" Special eggplant grinders $1.50 first week only .m<.*m>im\ iwfci Page 6 Connecticut Dally Campos Friday, October 8, 1976 Mansfield to hold art show By PAT RYAN show to open a permanent center Ermgard Rees learned macra- A six-foot-long fire-engine-red where area artists can work me, embroidery, and knitting as a free-form hanging sculpture call- together for mutual enrichment. child in Germany and studied ed Fire Spirit. President of the Mansfield Art under Norma Minkowitz in New A ladies' Shaker's-style walnut Center, Betty Heiss, emphasizes York, who incorporated all three desk that a professor of education Saturday's displays are serious skills into a new art form called built. works created by serious artists. Soft Sculpture. A silk screen called Expanding "These people are not Sunday Night and day contrasts, yet Aliveness, whose five colors are painters, but people who feel art these people encouraged the cen- described as "halfway between should be an important part of ter, and spokeof its merits. primers and pastels." any community." "Working alone is like working The artists are indeed serious, A ceramic casserole that took 10 in a vacuum," potter Stephanie donating 20 per cent of the Kaplowitz said. hours to make, and is so good the proceeds to the treasury of the family doesn't want it sold. "There's a vital exchange of center; to fund their programs resources," printmaker Maryann These are a few items that will aimed at stimulating local artistic be on display Saturday at the Chinsky said. "I learn from the involvement. others about new materials, Mansfield Art Center's first In- An onlooker might ask how vitational show. Twenty-two area where to buy them at good prices, artists of such different training and I wanted to be a part of artists and craftsmen will gather and backgrounds might ever get their works at the Storrs Gram- bringing art to the area." together.... mar School on Rt. 195 from 11 am "There's been a feeling for the to 5 pm, presenting a smorgas- Robert Norris nailed his first past twenty years that some kind two boards together 51 years ago, bord of works, ranging from of art center was needed at and has slowly refined his wood- lithography and macrame, to Storrs," Heiss said. painting and pottery. working technique ever since by "With this group we can practice, "and hanging around a organize displays, plan work- The Mansfield Art Center is a lot of industrial arts courses at shops and sales. Our organiza- non-profit, incorporated organiza- UConn." tion includes dance, puppetry, tion composed of 35 members, Stephanie Kaplowitt shaped her writing, pottery, jewelers, poets, interested in promoting public first piece of clay in high school. lithographers, and painters-the involvement in the arts, as well as "The things 1 made were arts." giving area artists the chance to hideously ugly, but I loved the At the Storrs Grammar School work together. medium." this Saturday, art will have ar- The group has sponsored class- Kaplowitt resumed her art rived. The public is invited to es in drawing and painting, education when her daughter browse and buy items priced from pottery, and weaving for school- went to school, and now makes a few dollars to a few hundred, age children, and hopes through ceramics that even her family every cent an investment in the Stephanie Kaplowitz working on her potter's wheel in preparation efforts similar to this Saturday's becomes attached to. community. for this weekend's snow [Staff Photo by Steve McGnff ]. More crafts slated for Enfield art show By FRANK J. POIROT week he was in Portland. Maine for five years and describes it as onite. He incorporates existing Enfield, gives his silhouetted ENFIEID-Bamboo flutes, bread and two weeks from now he will and "old folk art," with only sun light and shadows in much figures an innovative twist with a dough wall plaques, and birds of be in New Orleans. three or four people practicing it the same way Andrew Wyeth did spectrum of one color for a coconut palm arc only a few of the Commenting on art shows and in New England. in his old farm building and horizon. His subject matter for creative vents for the artists and his work he said his less serious The young daughter of Gary appropriately frames the finished this series of painting are animals crafts men participating in the and least expensive efforts sell Barsumian describes her dad's work in weathered barn planks. with a few human subjects. Their second annual Professional Arts best of all. However, he enjoys occupation as "a barn painter." Caricatures and serious portraits composition is simplistic yet tell a and Crafts Show at the Enfield carving portraits from photo- In the technical sense barns are are offered while-you-sit in fifteen story of human of animal nature Mall. graphs and prides himself in his major subject, however, he minutes. Walt Semagin is the within their frames. The show, which started Wed- being one of the few who do. does not handle them with a three artist and does his less than There are about 50 artists each nesday and will run to Saturday Other unique crafts include inch wide brush. flattering renditions with felt tip occupying a twelve-foot long area night, is drawing shoppers and hand-crafted bread-dough figures He depicts them with careful pens while charcoal portraits are in the mall. After a one hour curious lookers with good repres- and wall plaques. Pat Dolan has detail, warm colors, and a fine done further down the walk way. shuffle through that area the entation from the arts and crafts been working with this medium tipped horse hair brush on mas- Jim Sacheli, a painter from space seems well-utilized. Held. George, a wood carver for 28 i WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS' years, came from Bakersficld. J -t California to show his craft. SUNDAE SALE ! METRO-GOLDVVYN-MAYER PRESENTS ~ " ~ Actually he is constantly on the ACARLOPONTIPROOUCTON road from show to show. Last ISunday (when else?) October 10 6-11pm DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS \/L Chocolate Strawberry presented by MCMAHON i Vanilla Butterscotch STOWE-C DOCTOR Ice cream & Assorted toppings to delight your "the pearl of zm\\(;o DISCO IN PANAVISION* AND METR0C0L0R . palate! south campus" "White Ice" SAT. OCT.9 S.U.B. TWO SHOWINGS &00-S1.50

Sot. JFCT OOMSSrr+Ac- ^ Wed.Oct.6 TrtC CH**M *M> Thurs. Oct.7 W«*y HOMO* or l Oct. 5 THIS OUTSTAWW*' Fri. Oct. 8 $.50 MUSICIAN; FtrtRALSoP S.U.B. 8-11RM. Free!!! BYOB I.D. Required$32. i free refreshments or BYQB. CRANDALL C is having a PANCAKE BREAKFAST Tonight 8pm- 2am Saturday PETER ALSOP Khun-2 pm All You Can Eat $1.25 . Friday, October 8, 1976 Connecticut Daily Campus Page 7 Arts & Features UConn agricultural history to be on display Continued from page 1 Breakfast 7 a.m. The swamp was drained. Wood at 2 p.m. Sunday when a emeritus: W.B. Young, agri- Prayers immediately following was gathered, cut and stacked, procession of about thirty antique cultural dean emeritus; Edwin J. I won't pick rocks any more." breakfast and an ice house was built, horse-drawn carriages parade Kersting. dean. College of Agri- The poem of protest echoed a Lectures and recitations 8:00 to according to Walter Stemmon's through the UConn campus. The culture and Natural Resources: student sentiment which led to noon "A History of the Connecticut Ellington Train Fife and Drum and Glenn W. Ferguson. UConn the end of forced labor on the Dinner 12:15 p.m. Argicultural College." Corps and Colonial Troops will president. lands here. Work 2 to 5 p.m. (from just after While the work at the garden march with the carriage proces- "Sunday will be a day of great Nearly a century later Hickey dinner until dark) site this week was not quite that sion Kinsman said. pride for all of us at the College of and others went about their work Supper 6 rj.m. rigorous, it was reminiscent of The carriages and marchers will Agriculture and Natural Re- more cheerfully than their stu- Study hours 7 to 9 p.m. those early days at Storrs. wind their way through the sources." Favretti said. dent predecessors and with good In the work outdoors, students Fredrick Schaffer and the ten- campus streets to arrive at the "It is a day to reflect on the reason. The daily routine for harvested crops of buckwheat, man university farm crew had garden'ssite at 3 p.m., he said. history and heritage of this col- students at the Storrs Agri- potatoes, corn, cabbages, beets fashioned the fences from honey Speaking at the dedication will lege and a day to dedicate cultural School in 1881 went like and apples. Stones were dug, locust and oak trees cut from the be Albert E. Waugh, provost and ourselves to the future of Con- this: hauled from the fields and laid on ravine behind the piggeries. academic vice president necticut agriculture," he said. Rising Bell - 6:30 a.m. the bordering walls. The paddle-rail fences were made exactly as they were during the colonial period. The locust is used as the fence posts. The oak timber was sawed into boards to span the posts. Animal industries majors stained the freshly-cut wood. The farm crew dismantled stone ^Sv /-^v fences at the Spring Manor Farm in Mansfield and hauled the field stone to the garden site next to MS C7~ the dairy barn on the east side of route 195. The men built the THE FILM SOCIETY six-foot-high by 20 foot-square town pound next to the common. "A true.animal pound from the Friday days of the revolution should be horse-high, bull strong and hog College Theatre "Silent Movie." starring Mel Brooks and Marty j tight," Schaffer said. Feldman. Showings are at 6:30 and 9:30. , "That's an old Yankee expres- Mansfield Drive-in '." starring Tom Laughlin. plus, sion I've heard all my life," he "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid." starring James Coburn. Kris said. Kristofferson. and Bob Dylan. The stone fortress was used as Sit'n Bull Cafe Peter Alsop. in the Student Union Ballroom 8 to 11 an arena to impound cattle, p.m.. Admission is free, with free refreshments or BYOB. sheep, and lambs that strayed from their owners in the early days of the republic, said Schaf- Saturday fer. Walking paths and gardens of Bushnell Memorial Hall Arlo Guthrie with Shenandoah at 8 p.m.) herbs, flowers and vegetables lie Tickets are $6.50, $5.50. and $4.50. and are available at the boxj next to the common. The plants, office or at Ticketron outlets. The address is 166 Capital Avenue, benches, liberty pole and fencing . in Hartford and the box office number is 246-6807. are all of colonial vintage, accord- Disco Blue Max Cafe ing to Schaffer. I Faces Featuring Oreo "The historic hoopla will begin 'Jury's Tavern Featuring Pilgrim (ShubiM) Featuring Papa John Creach. \cMai]sfiehl^Duve in i Sundown Featuring Foxfire. Sat. Oct. 9 at 8 PM in VDM (one show only): IH Ml N HOI I MAN FRI. SAT. SUN. Ph. 423-4441 BILLY JACK STORRS LITTLE BIG MAN Starring Tom Laughlin COLLEGE 479- e>ObJ WAS EITHER THE MOST NEGLECTED HERO IN Plus NOW THRU TUESDAY BISTORT OR A LIAR OF INSANE PROPORTION! Daily 2:00 6:30 9:00 Sat.-Sun. 2:00 4:15 6:30 9:00 PATGARRETT MEL BROOKS and MARTY FELDMAN AND R BIUYTHEKID Starring James Coburn Kris Kristofferson & Bob Dylan Bring this ad to out box office. Admission $1 or by membership card. Driver will enter FREE Appearing At Bushnell Memorial Hall ARLO GUTHRIE With Shenandoah Saturday, Oct 9, 1976 Show Time 8 P.M. Bushnell Memorial Hall 166 Capital Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Box Office — 246-6807 Tickets: '6.50, '5.50, '4.50 Tickets Available at Box Office and all TICKETRON Outlets Page 8 Connecticut Dally Campus Friday, October 8, 1976 The World In Brief- French protest austerity plan PARIS (UPI)— An estimated 500,000 workers marched against Social disorder, crime hike the government's austerity program Thursday in the largest demonstration since the student-worker rebellion of 1968 which led to the resignation of President Charles de Gaulle. The marches climaxed a 24-hour general strike call against a reported after Mao's death government program to battle France's 13 per cent inflation through price and wage restraints. By CHARLES R. SMITH in their opposition against the the youths referred to were those In the only reported incident, several marchers charged four UPI Senior Editor revolutionary cause." who returned home from the non-striking bus drivers who had stopped to let the parade go by. HONG KONG (UPI) — State The Red Flag warning ap- countryside without permission. March marshals headed off the would-be attackers and cajoled radio broadcasts have reported peared to be putting the blame for A broadcast from Kweichow them back into the line of march. increased social disorder and criminal activities and political Province in southwest China ap- street crime in at least six unrest on Teng's supporters. peared to be referring to runaway Chinese provinces since the death Some of the trouble in at least youths from people's communes Rhodesian unrest continues last month of Communist Party two areas apparently is being when it called for efforts to "get SALISBURY. Rhodesia (UPI)— Black nationalist guerrillas blew Chairman Mao Tse-tung. caused by runaway youths from back certain laborers" who had up a concrete-and-steel railroad bridge as an ore train rumbled The provincial broadcasts mon- the "down-to-the-countryside" left rural areas. across the Matetsi River, Rhodesian security forces said itored in Hong Kong have given movement launched by Mao. Other provinces reporting civil Thursday. no indication of how widespread In Nanking, capital of Kiang-su disorder so far include Tsinghai in Eleven freight cars plunged into the river gorge and a 70-foot or serious the trouble may be, but Province, reports referred to the northwest, Shantung in the section of the bridge was destroyed, but two engineers aboard the the reports attributed much of the "bad elements" who "incited north, Chekiang on the east coast train escaped injury. violence to youths and cited many youngsters to commit crimes." and Kiangsi in the east central Their locomotive had passed beyond the spot where the bomb specific "crimes" that clearly Travelers recently in the city said region. was planted, railway officials said. The engine was derailed but were not political, such as "rob- kept its perch on the high bridge. bing, smashing, looting." The trouble in the provinces was followed by calls for "unity" c Thais depose prime minister by the central leadership in COLLCGC RIMG dL€ BANGKOK. Thailand (UPI)— Thailand's new military rulers Peking and warnings that "reso- released deposed Prime Minister Seni Pramoj Thursday and lute action" would be taken to florrceReD BY ended the midnight-to-dawn curfew. They told newspapers they suppress the disorders. may be allowed to reopen in three days if they pledge a firm Since a power struggle among anti-Communist line. potential successors to Mao erup- ALPHA PHI OMGGd The rector of Thammasat University, scene of bloody battles ted early this year, there have that killed at least 27 persons and wounded 180 others before the been numerous official Chinese Wednesday coup, was released from custody and left the country reports of "sabotage activities" for London. It was not clear if he was expelled. by "class enemies." MOND/W & TUGflVIV Most of these reports have related such activities to the Police recover stolen paintings struggle against Teng Hsiao- OCTOBGR 11 & 12 MARSEILLE, France (UPI)— French police said Thursday they ping, who was purged as vice had recovered 118 stolen drawings and watercolors by the late premier and vice party chairman 10-4 Pablo Picasso and arrested seven suspected art thieves. by Mao in April. After the One of the suspects died of a heart attack in his cell and another chairman's death Sept. 9, Chi- tried to commit suicide, the police in this southern French city nese leaders called for intensifica- said. tion of the campaign against 9.U. LOBBY They said police posing as art smugglers lured the seven to a Teng. prearranged spot and found the Picassos in a small truck parked The party's theoretical journal, in front of the Marseille art gallery. All were in good condition. Red Flag Magazine, said that — 11 One of the arrested men, a 20-year-old Belgian, was later found Teng's supporters are powerful and warned, "to practice revis- SOCCER dead in his cell and another man - who refused to identify himself Graduate Students OET 6EHMD -tried to commit suicide by slashing his wrists, police said. ionism is the most intrinsic char- acteristic of all capitalist roaders The UCONN SOCCER TEAM COME SEE THE CAME SUPPORT THE TEAM UOLUNTEERS and warm up with CHADS ARE NEEDED THIS FRIDAY OCTOBER 8 to work with the mentally! retarded at the Mansfield 3:30pm Training School. TOUR UCONN US.AMLPHI Come join the GRADUATE Mansfield Tuesday. Wednesday STUDENTS RALLY and Warmup and Thursday. October 12,13 & at the SKATING LODGE (near 14th. Bus leaves Student Union at the Iceskating rink) 2:30 P.M. sharp and returns to the Union at 4:15 P.M. FREE Refreshments FREE Beer FREE For additional information call FREE Oder FREE Wine FREE 429 6451 Ext. 506 Sponsored by Graduate Student Council

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S'f )nur \mnr In I'inil LIGHT SHOW IN THE AREA. ROUTE 195 • 875-9082 • TOLLAND Friday, October 8, 1976 Connecticut Daily Campus Page 9 Ford modifies debate statement Carter called confrontation winner Continued from Page 1 Los Angeles, he said Carter's tion forever." per cent thought Carter won, 30 gave Carter the nod this time. campaign debate is the rage of defense policy "is to speak loudly Rousselot predicted Ford would per cent favored Ford and 30 per In Lexington. Ky., Carter won Polish-American voters like en- and carry a fly swatter." explain himself "completely" in cent called it even. an 8-1 verdict among debate gineer Stanley Michalak of Chi- Republican Rep. John Rousse- campaign stops. The 90-minute After the first campaign debate coaches attending a debating cago. lot of California, who met Ford at debate ranged over many other on domestic issues. Roper called tournament. "The man's a fool If bethinks I os Angeles airport, said the issues, including Middle East and Ford the winner by 39 to 31 per The two debate for the last time Poland's free of Russian control," President told him that what he African policies, morality in for- cent. Oct. 22 in Williamsburg. Va., and Michalak said. "He's a liar or an meant by his Soviet domination eign policy and nuclear arms Scattered newspaper surveys of the format allows questioning on idiot." remarks was that "he does not control negotiations. local readership, including those any topic. It seemed certain the Carter, who claimed victory in concede those countries will re- An Elmo Roper poll of 300 of the Washington Star and the panelists will bring up the Soviet- the second campaign debate, main under Communist domina- viewers nationwide showed 40 San Francisco Examiner, also East Europe issue. caught the drift of reaction fast and made it a campaign issue Thursday. "I think Mr. Ford showed a confusion about....the aspirations of human beings, about human Allies admit Ford's TDOo-boo' rights, about liberty and about By WILBORN HAMPTON plain what Ford "meant to say." official said. "He made a real bad leader of the Polish Free Veterans simple justice," he told labor United Press International "We think he made a boo- one." Association, said Ford's state- leaders in San Francisco. America's allies agreed Thurs- boo," one NATO official said. ment "will cause an uproar "Yugoslavia has not been in "For anyone to state that the day that President Ford "made a "The impression is that he didn't everywhere." people in Hungary, Czechoslo- big boo-boo'' in his foreign policy the Soviet orbit for 30 years," the express himself very well, that "It's so evident that the whole vakia and Romania and East debate with Jimmy Carter by official said. "Romania gets away what he said was not exactly what of Eastern Europe is under Soviet Germany are free of Soviet domi- saying Eastern Europe was not with an independent foreign pol- he was trying to say." domination." Czarnecki said. nation is ridiculous." dominated by the Soviet Union. icy, although internally it's vir- In the debate, the second "Everybody in and Ford, who rated his own debate One British newspaper said Ford tually Stalinist." between the presidential candi- Eastern Europe, not only the performance "all right," made no was "dumb." dates and covering foreign and "But Poland is completely sub- Polish people, is of the same comment on the Soviet flap early Although no one wanted to be defense policies, Ford responded ject to the Soviet Union, both opinion." Thursday and instead attacked named on record criticizing the to a question on allegations that economically through Comecon. Carter on another debate issue, President, both NATO officials The London Evening News the United States had given the the Communist bloc's Common national defense. and diplomats privately ex- carried a story of the debate Soviets concessions saying, Market, and militarily through Climbing into the cockpit of a pressed dismay at Ford's re- under a headline: "Dumb Ford "There is no Soviet domination of the Warsaw Pact. It also has Bl bomber mockup at a plant in marks. Supporters tried to ex- drops a clanger on Russia." Eastern Europe." Soviet troops stationed on its soil. "President Ford astounded The president cited Yugoslavia, "This is the situation in all the millions of TV viewers last Romania and Poland as examples other East European countries night." the newspaper's article of "independent, autonomous" and we don't see any improve- said in reference to the remark. countries. ment in that situation," the The story quoted Rep. Edward "Ford is going to have a lot of NATO official said. Koch. D-N.Y.. as saying, "I have explaining to do," another NATO In Paris, Maryan Czarnecki, never heard anything so dumb." ACTIVITIES

KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA is rushing UConn Greek Club will meet Mon., Amateur Radio Club meeting and NOW. for info call 429-4891 Oct. 11 In SU 218 at 8:00. All license classes October 11, 7:00, welcome. Putnam Refectory, room 114. Student Television (Vidiconn) meet- ing in studio at Jorgenson Aud. Mon. Board of Governors meeting Monday CR-Meeting Mon. 11 Oct. 6:30 pm SU and Wed. 1:00-2:30. All interested night 7:00 SU room 207. 103. Meet State Chairman D'Onofrio. please attend. UCONN STUDENTS FOR GLORIA LOST: 10/6 silver identification brace- SCHAFFER will meet Tuesday, Oct Students for Carter-Mondale meeting let with the name Kris- Please call 12 at 7 p.m. in SU 209. Stop by if you at 7 p.m. SU room 104, Wed. Oct. 13. Kris 429-9345 Rm. 519. can. All welcome. FRISBEE GOLF CONTEST open to Rape Crisis Counselor Training Oct. French club Crepes, cider and dance all! Men's - Women's categories. 4- Nov. 29 at 7:30 pm on Mon. nights. party Tues. Oct. 12 7:30 p.m. Inter- Frisbees as prizes. Saturday Oct. 9, Call the Women's Center for more national House. 10am. Student Union Mall- free. information 486-4738

Come to the Libertarian Caucus BALLROOM DANCING CLUB: Graduate Student Gathering Friday, information table in the Studt.nt Meeting every Monday night in Oct. 8, 3:30 pm, Warming Hut by Ice Union, Friday 2-5.$ SUBBeginners 7 p.m. -9 p.m. Ad- Rink. Free refreshments Graduate vanced 9 p.m.- 10 p.m. All welcome. Student Council Event. Amateur Radio License instruction Men in Sexist Society, conference tor couse every Monday at Putnam near MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY STU- men, Sat. Oct. 16, Htfd. YWCA room 114. 7:00 p.m. or later. Antenas DENTS: Organizational meeting for a are finally up. Film:'"Men's Lives", 12 workshops. 429-1793 or 525-1163 ext. 266 Medical Technology Club, Wed., Oct. ALCOHOL PROBLEM IN YOUR 13, 6:30. Room 301 Koons. All FAMILY? Your University Health ATTENTION PRE VETS: Meeting students welcome. Service offers counseling. Info. Call Wed. Oct. 13, 7:30, Col. of Ag. 327 486-4705. Dean Kersting will speak. STUDENT ARTISTS: Exhibit your art m the SU. Contact Judith Carr 487-3904 or at BOG 31§ Commons by Oct. 13th. dlurn B ®auern SAILING CLUB: Racing Team Wed. 3-6. Party 9:30. Chair set-up Fri. 5:00, Recreational Sailing Sun.is cancelled. Info call-429-6369.

ATHUN'y 'Women's Center! RESTAURANT Self Breast AND LOUNGE Weekend Line-up Examination Rl. 32 EAGLEVILLE Learn to examine I'^rrnk-stTomUGMin Fri. - TRIAD your own breasts Call 429-6427 For Take Out Orders All New Facilities Open ALL DAY Mon -Sal. 11 a.m.-l p.m.-Sun -Noon 1 I p.m Sat. - PILGRIM Full Menu-Full Liquor License SATURDAY Specializing in J/OeL 9 10-4:30 pm DELICIOUS Sun. - PETE FREE!! PIZZA GRINDERS SANDWICHES 27 Whitney Rd., SEAFOOD DINNERS HASELBACKER Storrs 486-4738 DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS INCLUDE DRAFT BEER 43« GREEK- ITALIAN Route 32 STORRS AMERICAN JR LIQUOR

HAPPY HOUR-EVERYDAY 4-6 p.m I Most mixed drinks 50c -Draft beer 45c ^.^^^ Closer To serve you better Page 10 Connecticut Dally Campus Friday, October 8, 1976 CLASSIFIEDS RIDES

BUNKS BUILT, simple, sturdy and DISCO—ROCK-LIGHTSHOW with FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED: Car- HORSES BOARDED, SOLD AND Pat- Durham, NH (UNH) Fri. 8 am. dependable. $18 00 Call 429-7085 Dancing Machine 2500 watts RMS, rage House apartments. $50/month, TRADED at Tlnsletown Farms, Scot- 429-0921. after 5:00. strobes, mirrored balls, color organs, 2nd semester, For more Information land Conn. 11 miles from UCONN chasers, spots. Beerfests, nightclubs, call 487-1737. Ask for Hillary. Come and visit. Down the street from Nancy- New Jersey (mid) Fri. 10 am. Young Americans for Freedom Mem- parties. 429-1844. 429-0072. Wigwam Tack Shop. Gager Hill Rd. bership Table Friday Oct. 8. 2-5 pm STRAIGHT-GAY RAP: Open discus- Su. YAF is the group on campus that Linda Murray - please Call 429-6684 sion on .gay issues, alternate life- 456-0779. Jim- New Haven. Fri. 1:30 Russel B opposes increasingly powerful and re: summer sublet. styles. Wed. 7 p.m. Health Service 212 429-2000. centralized gov't. We uphold the right basement conference room. Info Save money on your Next New Car. LOST: 10/6 Silver Identification pf the individual to make his own Lou- New Haven Fri. 2:30 429-2000 Let a New Car Broker make your 486-4707. bracelet with the name Kris- please decisions as citizens. We oppose rm. 206 purchase for you. Free details. call Kris 429-9345 Rm. 519. totalitarianism In any form, com- Addressers wanted immediately! Michael R. Larklns. New Auto work at home-no experience neces- Jeff- Boston Fri. 1:00 429-2000 rm. munist, Fascist, or Socialist. In this Brokerage. 429-8622. time of moral and political crisis, It Is sary—excellent pay. Write American 212. FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED 6 your responsibility to affirm liberty. Lost: Timex Electric w/gold band. Service, 6950 Wayzata Blvd.. Suite Interested? Check us out. Great sentimental value. In area of 132, Minneapolis, MN. 55426. miles from campus in Wllllmantlc. Melinda- Northern New Jersey Frl. College of Ag. Reward. 429-3267 Own room $97.50 includes heat and 3:30 429-5816. Girls wanted: short, tall, fat, skinny, Kevin. ICE SKATING CLASSES: Mon.- hot water. Call Debbl 423-2681. big build, small build, an equal Wed. 11 am-12 noon starting Nov. 1, Blll-trumbull Frl. 2:oo 429-0538. opportunity employer to dance a Attention School of Business students Tues. Thurs. 11:15am 12:15 pm SEEN AN AUTOMOTIVE FM meet your Dean. Open House Frl. starting Nov. 2, 12 classes $9.00, go-go. Dyn-o-mite pay apply at Three Oct.8 1:00pm throughout afternoon TUNER with no on-off switch? Howie Boston Guys cafe rt. 44 Ashford next to Mobil SBA faculty lounge. Register by paying fee at the recrea- (maybe no tuning knob) Ripped off at leave Thurs. 4pm, ret. Sun. 429-3274 station. tion Office, Minimum 20, Maximum Walden Apartments October 1st. 30. Karen NYC E.E'tf Best offer for totalled 1969 Car For Sale: 1972 Vega, good REWARD!!! Clark 429-1418 Brooklyn leave Fri. 12:30 429-6474 Grants color TV. strip it for parts, condition recently tuned. 49,000 Unicycles needed- the Unlcycle Club Derby 211 take it off our hands! 429-1403 or miles, automatic. $750 or best offer. needs unicycles. If you have one we'll 1965 VW BUG for sale. New motor buy it from you. Chris, Sprague 201, Janet NYC Stowe C Call 486-4408. clutch and many extras. Body It. Frl. aft. /I56-O620 429-9345. GOOD. Asking $350 Call RADAR AT This Sat. Oct. 9 come see Dr. Zhivago. Bill Providence, Rl. Sigma Delta Pi initiation at the RENT A CAR- Rent my new 1977 487-0198 Two showings in the Student Union Friday 486-2703 International House Wed. Oct. 13, 7 Granade for business or pleasure. ballroom Matinee- 2:00-51.00, pm. For more info call Victor Available on daily or weekly basis Found: Beige, long-haired tiger cat. Ann Worchester, Mass Fri. noon evening- 8:00-51.50 About eight months old; near R lot, 486-3901 LOW RATES, 21 and over, Call Steve 429-3886 429-0459. behind Frats. Call 429-0231. AN EXCITING JOURNEY OF SELF- DISCOVERY Introducing into this For Sale: 73 Flat. 2-door sedan-38,000 miles. Very good condition. Good gas For sale: 1969 Ford Mustang 302 air For sale: BSR turntable, Panasonic Woodbury-Fri. 6:00pm - 487-0750 ext. area for the fi'Sl time an intensive mileage Radio and heater. Moving conditioned, tape deck, power steer- receiver w/tuner and 8-track, two 17 45. weekend worxshop in personal awak- overseas. 423-7960 ing, brakes. $550 or best offer. Call inch air-suspension speakers, $185. ening baseo on the methods devel- 684-4623. 12 Inch diagonal portable B&W t.v. Springfield-leave Frl. 1:00, return oped by Dr. Jean Huston. Oct. Lost: your phone no. Steve Ferrante. $55. Moving, must sell. 742-8727. Sunday 429-7422 29th-Oct. 31st. Tuition $35. For Please call me! Jack Wlren 429-1793. For sale: AKAI 4000 DS reel to reel further information call 974-0135. tape deck, 3 heads, sound on sound. 2 Hewlett Packard HP80 financial cal- 1971 MGB GT British Racing Green years old. Excellent condition. culator and accessories. New $450 Elaine New Haven Frl. 5:30 pm Sell $250 429-1298 FOOSBALL DEMONSTRATION by Michelin Tires Radio Very good 429-7392. 429-3438. tournament Soccer Promo-team condition $1800, evenings 429-3892 "CHICAGO" style band sought for $11,000 winners. Friday afternoon a Nancy Boston Sat. 6:30 am return Tons-of-Fun Amusements In Unlver For sale: Altec Lansing "Voice of the gig. Call 429-1298 ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS: Theater'' speakers, one pair, model Sun. pm 486-3208. slty Plaza, by C.B.T. Come play or Thousands on file. Send $1 for your Just watch I $100 prize to any team to A7-500-8, $500. Call Bill weekdays FOR SALE: CAMERAS & LENSES 192 page, mail order catalog. 11322 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., anytime 4x5 Crown Graphic & accessories, beat them in one game! Call 429-9687 PERSONALS - Rates are the same as Idaho Ave , #206 Los Angeles, Ca. weekends. 429-8167. Leica M5, 35mm, 50mm,90mm for time. 90025 (213) 477-8474. accessories, Contax MIA, 50mm case. classifieds but advertisers will be 500mm mirror lens for any SLR charged 75 cents per week for boxes Do you have special career interests? mount. Buzz 429-9508 Box 188 Storrs at the Daily CamDus. LOST pair of brown horn rimmec FORD- '66 Falcon Stationwagon. En- Design your own major! Inquire at the eyeglasses in dark brown leather case -g'ne runs good, body kkida funky, CEI, Room 306 Wood Hall or call w/gold on inside. Call Roy 487-0109. Lisa 429-1151 $125.00 486-3631. PERSONALS Wanted: people to look with us for For sale: Dodge Mailtruck, 1967, good 1969 Volkswagon Squareback, auto- home In country near Storrs, vegetar- engine and body, needs transmission. matic transmission, new paint, new Earl of U.-visit me in my Tower $200. 487-0566 ian, no cats, for Dec. or sooner. tires, rebuilt motor, clean interior, What happened to Pin Ball Lady from Saturday night- Maid Mary 1-879-0392. must sell. Best offer, Randy 429-0774. two weeks ago Sunday at 7. Want to 1966 Chevy Impala needs water pump share more games, please show Dear Honey, Congratulations! We're and rt. front fender. $100 or. Two 15 Friday, Sat. or Sun. at 7. one year old today. Could you ever Lost: SR calculator in F lot. Call inch factory Dodge Rally wheels $40$ 10-week Chinese language course 487-1068 believe it? Love and Kisses, The Little sponsored by USCPFA. Ref 1st rat ion JO. Girls wanted: To enter wet T-shirt call x-3840 George Chu or 643-4575 Crafts, room furnishings, tools, etc. contest $25 first prize and other prizes after six. bargains galore. Every Sunday for all girls that show up. Apply at (9am-4pm) Eastern Conn Flea Market Three Guys Cafe rt. 44 Ashford after 4 at Mansfield Dr-ln. Public free. p.m. next to Mobil station. Found: Ladles wrist watch near Dealer spaces $4 423-9890, 423-4441. Frats. Please Identify. Karen .... u.wi P°r sale: '66 CHECKER, Same car 429-5211 Scuba Lessons, space still available use(J companies. Good for information see Joe In Belden 55 J condition, UNBELIEVABLE W For Sale: Two tickets to Nell Diamond or call Bill or Sheldon at 429-0332 R0QM Askj $250 c 423.4493 murajD! immediately. concert In Providence Civic Center on October 16, 1976. Call 456-2058 after [THIS AD GOOD FOR FREE; Li,,le Lett: one brown furry moose puppet ^!™TED: red wagon. CHEAP 5:00. named "Truth". Needed immediate- ■"■•«■ wes. ! ADMISSION FRI. OR SAT.I ly. Please call 429-5634 Box stalls for rent-minutes from Never a charge at MOLLY MA- music by FREE kittens, 4-6 weeks old need l ONE'S PUBI $.35 draft beer every UConn. $40.00 without care, $75.00 good homes call 429-2803 ask for Les Monday, Tues. and Wed- Great with care. 423-3586 before 9:00 Rock n' Roll or Vinny. entertainment every night. am/after 5:30 pm/ Foxfire M TMi:<. SI'OYSORKI) RimuRvumm Buy - Sell - Trade PRICES BELOW WHOLESALE! fmsoft Oct. 1 1-15 ,* ^ V*** v* cMM-4:30 PM I fieAio* *o^« Beatles a LLLiLLrt - i 1 ii r 11 i tic or go Bin son Student Union Duke Ellington Be ii " • Goodnui n By Pinball Machines Simon \ Garfunkel Earth. Wind, and Eire TOP CASH PAID v Carli for your old records and your parents* old albums Friday, October 8, 1976 Connecticut Dally Campna Page 11 More Sports Booters face tough match Boston Bruin defenseman DALLAS SMITH has year...The New York Giants have added signed a one year contract with Bruin manage- ex-New York Jets' cornerback ROSCOE WORD ment after a four month holdout Heavy- to their 43-man roster. Word replaces corner- against top-ranked squad weight champion MUHAMMAD ALI is pre- back BOBBY BROOKS, who will be lost to the sently making a movie of his life in Miami. Giants for the remainder of the season because Continued from Page 12 their improved play, though it will Ali's retirement plans have been characterized of a knee injury suffered in last Sunday's loss to long they can go without definitely be a plus, but their as indefinite by his manager HERBERT the St. Louis Cardinals.... consistency. 5an Diego Padres pitching ace and Cy Young the minor injuries some of the MUHAMMAD players are suffering catch up UConn has faced highly skilled The absence of JULIUS ERVING from the Award candidate RANDY JONES underwent what was termed successful surgery to repair with them. teams in the past and have not let New York Net basketball squad besides hurting Adelphi is ranked eleventh down. Wesleyan's physical size the team's play is killing the Nets as the box damage he suffered to his pitching arm in his final start of the year against the Cincinnati nationally; UConn occupies the didn't intimidate the Huskies and office financially. The crowds at opponent's ninth slot. The Huskies will have neither should Adelphi's skill. arenas has been about half of what was Reds. Famous sports' surgeon ROBERT KERLAN performed the operation Minne- to be 100 per cent fit to win. Less said his team's two major originally expected sota Twin player-coach TONY OLTVA is in St. Though some of the players problems are overconfidence and The New York Yankees will open their playoff Paul Hospital recovering from a bleeding ulcer. may not be 100 per cent ready inconsistency. Overconfidence series with the Kansas City Royals with This could end the career of the 36-year-old physically, the Huskies as a team should not be a problem, though CATFISH HUNTER on the mound. It has been Oliva, who has won the American League title will be more than ready for inconsistency could hurt them discovered recently that Hunter missed a three times.... „...,,, Adelphi. against UConn. pitching turn in the rotation and pitched The New York Islanders traded center RALPH The Huskies' main advantage Yankee ingenuity and skill is on ineffectively in other starts due to a sore arm STEWART to the Vancouver Canucks for that against Adelphi shouldn't be the side of the home learn. not because of a pulled hamstring as was extremely mysterious commodity know as originally announced. Starting for the Royals is ' 'future considerations.'.'... ex-Yankee pitcher LARRY GURA who has been The ATLANTA BRAVES have been fined Football team seeks win; involved in a running feud with Yankee $10,000 by baseball commissioner BOWIE manager BILLY MARTIN since his trade to the KUHN for tampering. Former Brave general Royals earlier this season manager JOHN ALVEIZOS had conversations Rutgers hampers search with San Francisco Giants' outfielder GARY Continued from Page 12 The New York Mets have released coaches the Knights, leading the squad in Knights' leading tackier, and is KDDIE YOST and ROY MCMHJJAN from MATTHEWS during the season about playing described by Burns as "a legiti- for the Braves next year. Matthews is currently rushing with 276 yards in 55 their coaching staff and added TOM BURGESS. carries, good for a five-yard mate All-American candidate." who managed the Mets top farm team last playing out his option and is a free agent. The Physically, the Knights are in Braves are expected to announce Wednesday average per carry. season, to the team's braintrust. Two other While Rutgers has only scored relatively good condition, with Met coaches RUBE WALKER and JOE that HENRY AARON has been named vice an average of about 18 points per only defensive tackle John Alex- PIGNATANO have been retained for next president in charge of player development. game, its defense is its incredible ander. who has a leg problem, strong point. questionable for the game. Leading the Knights' defenders Barring unforeseen circum- is senior end Nate Toran, a 6'2". stances, Rutger should "come out 230-pound star who was ECAC okay" again this week, as the UConn tops Bridgewater player of the week in Rutgers' UConn team will be forced to face 21-14 win over Cornell last week, a Homecoming crowd at Me- Toran. who isn't challenged that morial Stadium next weekend Continued from Page 12 UConn co-captain Kathy Flem- 16-yard radius. much during games, is still the with a 0-5 record. It was the second half that ing opened the afternoon''s scor- A freshman on the UConn determined the outcome of the ing. BSC goalie Beth Bolton's squad, replacing the injured star- game. After 35 minutes of play, wide clear of UConn's Nancy ter Liz Childs, scored the deciding Frisbee team expecting Bridgewater had answered the Kondub's shot was picked up by goal with only six minutes gone in Huskies' first goal with a goal of Fleming. The UConn right wing the second half. Kim Longo, a its own, and the score stood at sent the ball into the center of the rookie from West Simsbury. truly ultimate weekend |.j BSC cage 16 minutes into the first picked up a pass from Fleming The UConn Ultimate Frisbee Science field, with a UConn- According to Wright, the BSC half. and one touched it into goal. team returns home to face both Brown contest to follow at 1 p.m. women dominated the first half of Less than 15 minutes later. Brown University and the na- The Frisbee Golf tournament, p| . BSC's Becky Welsh brought the _ , ay tion's number-two Ultimate Fris- in which anyone can participate "It was a physical game, on a game back to the beginning by KllggeTS lace central bee squad, Hampshire College, and is co-sponsored by the UConn bumpy field. We came away with tying the score with a hard shot -^ and hold a campus-wide Frisbee squad and the Student Union a lot of bruises." Wright said from the middle of the circle. A looking IOT IOUrtn Will Board of Governors (BOG), will after the game. circle in field hockey has a Golf tournament Saturday and Sunday here at Storrs. begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at the The UConn rugby team looks to Student Union Mall. increase their record to 4-2 Satur- UConn will play Hampshire at 8 Prizes will be awarded to the day afternoon at 2 p.m. when they p.m. Saturday behind the Field- top seven finishers in both the face Central Connecticut behind house in the first Frisbee night men's and women's categories. the Fieldhouse. As usual, beer game ever played on campus. Top prize will be seven frisbees. will dot the sidelines for the Brown will face Hampshire at 11 with the seventh prize one fris- traditional post-game celebration. a.m. Sunday on the Physical bee. Hoop tickets to go on sale

The University of Connecticut season ticket for those five games University of Connecticut." has announced its price list for for $25; and the price for only the Single game tickets for Civic three season ticket plans for nine dates at Storrs is $31.50. Center games only will be re- basketball home games this win- leased for sale at both the UConn ter. John L. Toner, director of Requests for season tickets athletic ticket office and the Civic athletics, said the 14 home dates must be received by Nov. 1 to Center ticket window on Nov. 15. will be sold on a season ticket insure preferred seating for re- basis for $50. This includes five peat customers. All season ticket Single game orders for games games at the Hartford Civic orders should be addressed only at Storrs will be released at Center and nine at Storrs. to the UConn athletic ticket office. various times during the season Clark leads the UConn team during a recent Husky victory. Fans desiring tickets for the U-78. Storrs, 06268, and checks after the student sale of these Clark will lead UConn in a meet at New York's Van Cortland Park, Civic Center only may buy a should be made payable to "The tickets at the UConn campus. Saturday [Staff Photo by George Clemence]. FRI.&SAT.NICHT admission half price with any college 1.0,

Appearing upstairs SAT. NIGHT the disco with the music you request in THE SCENES INN LOUNGE "Country Swing" JIM SHARKLY and THE SHARPSHOOTERS Rt. 44A Bohon Casual dress required Page 12 Connecticut Dally Campus Friday, October 8, 1976

■ n « . u o rG«.fr UConn's Len Tsantlrea during the Huskies' 5-0 win over Wealeyan University. The UConn football team wUl travel to New Jersey to face Rutgers October 9 [Man UConn — ^ ^^ UnIverstty Mn ^nxxm at 3 p.m. [Staff Photo by Buzz Photo by Buzz Kanter). Kanter]. The Picks: Rutgers 24, UConn 7 UConn 2, Adelphi 1; OT

By MARIA ROM ASH By MARK GOULD receiver Reggie Eccleston — who is The trip to Storrs from Adelphi is When the University of Connecticut sidelined with strained shoulder liga- The roster of the Adelphi University roughly a three-hour drive, a trip too ments — will not accompany the team. football team leaves for Rutgers this soccer team reads like an attendance short to warrant an overnight stay by morning, it will be thinking down to a "We rushed Nick a little too much last sheet at the United Nations. They are a Connecticut standards. Not for Adelphi. man about its first victory of the season. week." Naviaux said. "His shoulder still fast, highly-skilled team whose past The New York team which, according When the University of Connecticut hurts him. It's unfair to play him until he history includes a 3-1 exhibition game to UConn head coach Joe Morrone, is one football team leaves Rutgers Saturday can go full speed." win against nationally-ranked Brown of the best in the state, arrived in Storrs night, it will still be thinking about its Replacing Giaquinto will be speedy University and a 1-1 tie against another Thursday night. They players themselves first victory, and most likely won't be Rick Mason, who had 110 yards in his nationally-ranked squad, Howard Univer- are covering all costs in order to be 100 any closer to it than when it starts the first starting assignment of the season sity, during regular season play. per cent ready for this afternoon's game. trip. last Satruday at New Hampshire. UConn If full names are included, the UConn Barbados may sound like a better place Obviously. UConn has a shot at will, however, need a lot more than soccer team has a trace of ethnicity in for a fisherman than a soccer player, but winning the game, but the odds are heroics from Mason to defeat the Scarlet Luigi Magno, Antonio Carvahlo, and Adelphi's offensive effort will be led by a stacked against thai possibility. Rutgers, Knights. Leonides Tsantires but, for the most part, Barbados native, freshman Anthony under the tutelage of Frank Burns, has "When we go fourth and one so many they are home-grown Connecticut na- Prescott. Prescott has tallied six goals in the number one defense in the country, in times and don't make it. it becomes tives. Adelphi's last five contests. addition to an II-game winning streak discouraging." Naviaux said in relation Natives who are as highly-skilled as A duo of Israelis aid Prescott on offense which is the longest in the country among to last week's game. their international opponents. Natives with a New Yorker (surprise!) rounding Division I schools. Unless UConn can break the tempo who should earn their sixth win of the out Adelphi's scoring unit. •'I hope that we*ll be motivated for the with an early score, something the season when they face Adelphi this Though the home towns of UConn's UConn game." Burns said earlier this Huskies have been unable to do all afternoon at 3 p.m. in Storrs. offensive unit are undeniably of Yankee week. "The Huskies arc always tough season, Naviaux's weekly optimism may For the past four games, the Huskies origin, they are no less effective. have outclassed, outplayed, and out- E.O. Smith is about as close to UConn for us." face a stern test in New Brunswick. hustled their opponents in consecutive as you can get. and no one will deny that. "They've had some real tough "We've got a strong defense with a shutout victories. Adelphi will not be as Tom Nevers. a former Smith graduate, games." he added. "They could be 4-0 potentially strong offense that makes a lot easy a victory. has been "on" during the Huskies' with any luck. I'm impressed with their of mistakes," Burns said of his team. "If Two years ago Adelphi was the recent games. personnel and I have a great deal of we can eliminate the offensive mistakes, Division II National Champions. Last year The only thing missing from the UConn respect for Larry Naviaux and his staff." we can be as good as anybody in the they almost earned the title again, losing offense will be co-captain Jim Evans. Naviaux and his staff, however, will be East." only in the semi-finals, a loss due to Though Evans is without a doubt an asset a distinct disadvantage in available Offensively, the Scarlet Knights are led overconfidence, according to Adelphi for the Huskies, the UConn bench has personnel for the game. Starting tailback by split end Mark Twitty, who is tied for head coach Mel Less. This year is already proved they can compensate for Nick Giaquinto still is beset with a the school record in touchdown recep- Adclphi's first year in Division I, and they his absence. nagging shoulder injury and will not tions. Sophomore fullback Glen Kehler, will be anything but overconfident when The big question facing UConn is how make the trip to New Jersey, in addition, while young, has done a good job for they take the field against the Huskies. a number of other regulars, including Continued on Page 11 Continued on Page 11 UConn women Husky netwomen earn fourth win top Conn. College, in away contest stay undefeated

After a temporary setback The University of Connecticut against Mt. Holyoke College, the women's tennis team kept their University of Connecticut undefeated record intact by de- women's field hockey team re- feating Connecticut College 7-2 turned to its winning ways by Thursday in New London. defeating Bridgewater State Col- The team swept all of the lege (BSC), in Bridgewater, afternoon's singles matches. Mass., Thursday. UConn's Meryl Davis, in the first The UConn women capitalized singles slot, and Laurie Filmer, in on almost all of their scoring the sixth position, both won opportunities, hitting two of their especially hard-fought matches. four shots during their 2-1 vic- Filmer's match ran for over two tory. hours before the victor emerged. UConn goalie Pat Hoskin pre- The Huskies' only two losses vented all but one of Bridge- came in the first two double water's 10 shots from reaching positions. Davis and UConn cap- the netting. According to UConn tain Delly Ozanne fell first, head coach Diane Wright. Hoskin followed by the UConn team of I ( onn's Louise Iked a pushes the ball past her "made some very timely saves, Meryl Davis illustrates the style of play that Mary King and Wenda Thielking. opponent. The Huskies defeated Bridgewater especially in the second half." brought her victory. The Huskies defeated King and Thielking suffered their State College Thursday afternoon [Staff Photo by Connecticut College Thursday [Staff Photo by first loss of the season during a Buzz Kanter]. Continued on Page 11 Dave Lee|. match hampered by darkness.