
By JAY HAULER dence will win easily over that Providence has done this idence has the best balance of and Fairfield. but the UConn-Provi- season." anybody. MARK GOULD dence game will be very close TED LEITNER— Sportscaster ARNOLD DEAN— Sportscas- Campos Sports Staff with the Friars edging out the WCAU-TV. Philadelphia and ter, WTIC Radio, Hartford: Eighteen of twenty area sports Huskies by three points." formally of WFSB-TV. Hart- "Providence has the best ba- writers, sportscasters and JACK KRAFT— head basket- ford: "The Huskies will have no lance of any team here, and The Pick: coaches interviewed by the ball coach at Rhode Island: chance against the Friars in the they are tough under pres- Daily Campus chose the Provi- '' Providence over UConn in the finals." sure." dence Friars to win the ECAC championship game, as they TIM TOLOKAN— Sports Edi- GEORGE EHRLICH— Sports New England College Basket- just have too much depth for the tor, Norwich Bulletin: "Provi- caster, WINF-Radio, Manches- Providence ball Tournament being held in Huskies." dence is the class of the ter: " Providence is the pick, but Hartford tonight and Saturday. DICK GALLIETTE— Sports tourney. Their win over St. anything can happen." The results: caster WYNH-TV, New Haven: John's proved it." MARV ALBERT — Sportcas- 'UConn will put it all together DAVE SMITH— Sportscaster, HAL LEVY— Sports Editor, WFSB-TV Hartford:"Provi- in the end ter WNBC-TV, New York: "The and come out a winner. A Groton News: "Tough to pick, Providence Friars, as they are repeat performance of last - dence is the best team in New but the Friars are the favorite." England. There is not a weak so strong and one of the best year." PETE ZANARDI— Sports- teams in the nation." LEIGH MONTVILLE— writer, New Haven Register: link in their foundation " GDL PETERS — UPI New Sportswriter, Boston Globe: "No question, Providence." TERRY PRICE — Sportswri- England Sports Editor: "UConn "How can you go against a TIM TOLOKAN— Sports ter. Hartford Courant:" Provi- will beat Holy Cross and Provi- team that has done the things Editor, Norwich Bulletin:"Prov- dence is the strongest team." (ftunnecttcut Satin, dampua Serving Storrs Since 1896 VOL. LXXX NO. 86 STORRS, CONNECTICUT THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1977 ■P* Ferguson tells committee: Build on present structure By JO ANN NILAND The creation of a strong central plan would isolate UConn at Campus News Staff body is the most important thing Storrs from other state schools. UConn President Glenn W. the legislature should consider, The Waterbury, Hartford and Ferguson told the legislature's said Samuel Gould, Connecticut's Stamford branches of the Univer- Program Review and Investiga- higher education commissioner. sity would be included in with the tions Committee Wednesday in Searle F. Charles, executive state technical and community Hartford that it should " continue director for the state's community colleges to form the Connecticut to build on the foundations of colleges, said the committee's State University, while branches higher education we already plan was altered "substantially" at Torrington and Groton would have." to conform to widely-varying o- be eliminated. He disagreed with the commit- pinions. State Rep. Dorothy K. Osier. tee's concept that the state needs Essentially, the committee's [Continued on page 3| a more powerful commission to control the state's higher educa- tional institutions, in an interview after the hearing. James A. Frost, executive Victim found alive secretary for Connecticut's state colleges, said the components of TOWER CITY, Pa. (UPI)— At least one of eight men trapped inside the committee's plan weren't the Kocher Coal Co. mine has been found alive, a company official presented clearly and that he said Wednesday night. "thinks the whole thing was a "We have made definite voice contact with one of the men," said discussion, but I'm not sure." Leon Richter, vice president of the Northeastern Pennsylvania Coal "The plan we had was in outline Co., owners of the mine. form. Everyone had his own Jack Tisdale, of the Mine Enforcement Safety Administration, said interpretation — no one was rescue workers talked to Ronald Adley, 37, of Tower City. He said he really clear," he said. did not know what physical condition Adley was in. Frost agreed with Ferguson, Richter said there was no indication whether any of the other saying he is "interested in the missing miners were still alive. development of a coordinating Rescue workers made contact with Adley by drilling a 60-foot communications hole through a coal seam into a section of the mine in (Staff photo by ■ Dave Lee) council" to oversee the Univer- sity, state colleges and two-year which the men were believed to be working when a wall of water Window to the sun schools. roared through the mine Tuesday. Committee to 'drink' in student comments By BARBARA ADLER Campus News Staff The state Liquor Control Committee, which is looking into a liquor permit for the Commons Dining Hall, will hold a public hearing next Tuesday in the Student Union Ballroom to hear the students' side of the controversial bill. The hearing was arranged by Michael Lawlor, a fourth-semester liberal arts major who had worked on the campaign staff of the. committee's chairman, state Rep. John Giordano, D-East Haven. "I talked to him (Giordano) and he said he was in favor of UConn getting the liquor permit, and I suggested a hearing up here. It's the best thing. Students have a lot to say, and the merchants in the area were the ones raising all the noise in Hartford during the committee hearings," said Lawlor. Inter-Area Residents Council (IARC) Chairman Steven Donen said the hearings will "give the students a chance to say something about the permit. What's important here is whether the opinions of those area businessmen at the previous meetings or the opinions of over 15,000 members of this community will prevail." Frank Napolitano, assistant vice president for student affairs and services, said he could not say what the effect of the hearing would be on the future of the liquor bill, but said he was "glad that the committee is making the effort to come out here. It will give mflre people the opportunity to speak, and the committee will get a chance On tap to see the facility they're talking about." "The hearing is a good idea," Lawlor said, "because it all comes A student employe in the Anonymous Pub serves up a pitcher Wednesday, as the Liquor Control down to who is more important — the merchants who may lose one Committee made plans to visit UConn next week to hear student reaction to a bill which would allow the per cent of their business, or the students who have no place to go." Commons Dining Hall a full liquor permit. [Staff Photo by Stove McGoff]. .... /' focus Dear Glenn To: Glenn Ferguson From: Anonymous faculty member Re: Faculty evaluations Glenn, This is to inform you that the faculty on campus is in a state of rage. We thought you should know, since you are the president of this place and since Ella Grasso threw out the letter we sent her first. The reason is because those little pinkos over at FSSO have published faculty evaluation results. Frankly, Glenn, some of us did not do so well. What we are worried about is the fact that if these evaluations are considered seriously think of what it will do in the future when some of us professors want to transfer to a better paying university. I mean Tium really, Glenn, how would the folks at BU or Harvard react to my record when they see that students called me "caustic, boring and dull even with a lampshade on his head." Speakeasy That isn't even a correct evaluation by those little buggers.They've never seen me with a lampshade on An unsafe expedition my head. Anyway, Glenn, you've got to stop those liberal McGovern types over in FSSO from running To the Editor: ibility of leading groups of sup- ticularly if it's snowing. another evaluation next year. 1 must question whether or not posedly less-experienced hikers, Without crampons, an ice axe is If the students call me boring again my children will your readers are expected to take such as on the 1975 UConn of little more use than a walking begin to use me as an armrest. Warren Doyle's "Katahdin" ar- Appalachian Trail Expedition? .stick. Not even the most ele- ticle seriously (Daily Campus This same leader takes on one of mentary safety precautions were But that's not enough. What must be done is to the most magnificent and danger- taken and under such dangerous never allow another evaluation like that again. thought the story was written ous mountains in the East without conditions. They had no gear for tongue-in-cheek, but the egocen- even a compass. White-out is not an emergency bivouac, no way of Remember if* these evaluations continue, dull tric embellishments of heroism unheard of, as a matter of fact, coping with any injury, not even a it's fairly common in the moun- professors like me are going to have to find Doyle included left me with the friend to alert authorities should employment elsewhere and leave the campus full of impression that he was serious. tains, particularly in December. I they fair to return, a not-unlikely Is this the same Warren Doyle doubt even the park rangers event considering their state of those lively, show-biz type lecturers.
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