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1980 NOV. 6 C.I Soccer team meets Brown Story, p. 16 Storrs Weekly: cutting the red tape See p. 5 (Rontiectf cut laflg Campus Serving Storrs Since 1896 Vol. LXXXIV No. 51 University of Connecticut Thursday, November 6,1980 World reaction to Reagan reserved, unoptimistic Ronald Reagan (I PI photo). By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Ronald Reagan's sweeping election victory plunged the world into political reappraisal Wednesday and the initial reaction was guarded, reflecting concern over some of his campaign promises and doubts about his foreign policy expertise. China made no secret of its disappointment, the Soviets sent mixed signals and a warning on SALT and Iran said it would not affect the hostage crisis. While major allies withheld official comment beyond pro forma congratulations to the president-elect, privately their reactions were mixed and tinged with doubts over whether America would become more or less isolationist under GOP stewardship. The only nations openly greeting Reagan's election with relief were rightists in Latin America and Asia, whose regimes have been sweating under President Carter's human rights campaign. In Western Europe, hopes that Regan will infuse a new sense of leadership into the flagging alliance were tempered by fears that he understands little of East-West and economic issues and is not predisposed toward detente. In the Middle East, both Israeli and Arab officials saw Reagan's victory as being to Israel's advantage. Camp David was Carter's biggest foreign policy triumph and Egyptians asked whether Reagan "would have the same interest in continuing the process. Carter to focus on hostages, smooth transition for Reagan WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter, soundly defeated in his re-election bid, will focus his attention on negotiating the release of the 52 American hostages in Iran, a White House aide said today. Carter also is "determined to leave with grace and class" when he turns over the Oval Office to Ronald Reagan on Jan. 20, the aide said. Carter has passed the word that aides should cooperate with the Reagan team for a smooth transition to the new administration. As a last word of consolation, former White House chief of staff Hamilton Jordan told despairing campaign supporters Tuesday night at a private gathering: "In years to come, you are going to be proud to say you worked for Jimmy Carter." Carter's immediate attention, an aide said, would be devoted to freeing the hostages who have been held in Iran for more than a year. As for the future, Carter is expected to write his memoirs, and as the first Southern president since 1844, he will also establish a presidential library in Georgia. A deeply religious born-again Baptist, he has expressed in the past a desire to do some missionary work. But he has always said that he would return home to Plains. His wife, Rosalynn, has often expressed the same desire to go home "to my things" and her people. There was a stillness in the Oval Office this morning after the Tuesday election debacle. But Carter was at his desk after 8 a.m. EST and conferred with aides before a planned noon departure for Camp David. Many of the other offices were empty. It was with some dread that aides and secre- taries came to work, knowing that it was all over. Young Republicans, Democrats UConn groups differ on Reagan's potential By BEA MORITZ "The reason for Tuesday's landslide victory is simple people asked themselves, am I better off now than I was four years ago?" Tammy Shea, president of UConn's College Republicans, said Wednesday in response to Ronald Reagan's victory. Shea believes Reagan will work more with Congress than President Carter. "He doesn't care what parties his staff belongs to, but relies more on their ability to do the job," she said. Commenting on Reagan's defense policy. Shea said Reagan will not involve the. United States in a war. "He'll make us stronger. He believes only weak countries are attacked, and is going to make sure our country will be able to defend itself,'' she said. In contrast, Sydney Greenberg, vice president of the Young Democrats, called Mansfield results, p. 3 the election results a "disaster," and " advises everyone to "hope a lot, cooperate, and get your passports renewed." According to Greenberg, Reagan advocated U.S. military confrontation with Russia 10 times in the past year. "Reagan's continued support of a blockade of Cuba could only lead to war," he said. "Reagan was elected because Carter made too many promises he never kept, especially those involving inflation," Greenberg said. "But even George Bush. Reagan's own running mate, said inflation would rise to 30 percent under Reagan." "Ronald Reagan's proposed increase in defense spending, and at the time having his promised largest tax cut in history is, to quote Carter, 'totally irresponsible," Greenberg said.
Transcript

1980 NOV. 6

C.I

Soccer team meets Brown

Story, p. 16

Storrs Weekly: cutting the red tape

See p. 5

(Rontiectf cut laflg Campus Serving Storrs Since 1896

Vol. LXXXIV No. 51 University of Connecticut Thursday, November 6,1980

World reaction to Reagan reserved, unoptimistic

Ronald Reagan (I PI photo).

By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Ronald Reagan's sweeping election victory plunged the

world into political reappraisal Wednesday and the initial reaction was guarded, reflecting concern over some of his campaign promises and doubts about his foreign policy expertise.

China made no secret of its disappointment, the Soviets sent mixed signals and a warning on SALT and Iran said it would not affect the hostage crisis.

While major allies withheld official comment beyond pro forma congratulations to the president-elect, privately their reactions were mixed and tinged with doubts over whether America would become more or less isolationist under GOP stewardship.

The only nations openly greeting Reagan's election with relief were rightists in Latin America and Asia, whose regimes have been sweating under President Carter's human rights campaign.

In Western Europe, hopes that Regan will infuse a new sense of leadership into the flagging alliance were tempered by fears that he understands little of East-West and economic issues and is not predisposed toward detente.

In the Middle East, both Israeli and Arab officials saw Reagan's victory as being to Israel's advantage. Camp David was Carter's biggest foreign policy triumph and Egyptians asked whether Reagan "would have the same interest in continuing the process.

Carter to focus on hostages, smooth transition for Reagan

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter, soundly defeated in his re-election bid, will focus his attention on negotiating the release of the 52 American hostages in Iran, a White House aide said today.

Carter also is "determined to leave with grace and class" when he turns over the Oval Office to Ronald Reagan on Jan. 20, the aide said. Carter has passed the word that aides should cooperate with the Reagan team for a smooth transition to the new administration.

As a last word of consolation, former White House chief of staff Hamilton Jordan told despairing campaign supporters Tuesday night at a private gathering: "In years to come, you are going to be proud to say you worked for Jimmy Carter."

Carter's immediate attention, an aide said, would be devoted to freeing the hostages who have been held in Iran for more than a year.

As for the future, Carter is expected to write his memoirs, and as the first Southern president since 1844, he will also establish a presidential library in Georgia.

A deeply religious born-again Baptist, he has expressed in the past a desire to do some missionary work. But he has always said that he would return home to Plains. His wife, Rosalynn, has often expressed the same desire to go home "to my things" and her people.

There was a stillness in the Oval Office this morning after the Tuesday election debacle. But Carter was at his desk after 8 a.m. EST and conferred with aides before a planned noon departure for Camp David.

Many of the other offices were empty. It was with some dread that aides and secre- taries came to work, knowing that it was all over.

Young Republicans, Democrats

UConn groups differ on Reagan's potential By BEA MORITZ

"The reason for Tuesday's landslide victory is simple — people asked themselves, am I better off now than I was four years ago?" Tammy Shea, president of UConn's College Republicans, said Wednesday in response to Ronald Reagan's victory.

Shea believes Reagan will work more with Congress

than President Carter. "He doesn't care what parties his staff belongs to, but relies more on their ability to do the job," she said.

Commenting on Reagan's defense policy. Shea said Reagan will not involve the. United States in a war.

"He'll make us stronger. He believes only weak countries are attacked, and is going to make sure our

country will be able to defend itself,'' she said.

In contrast, Sydney Greenberg, vice president of the Young Democrats, called

Mansfield results, p. 3

the election results a "disaster," and " advises everyone to "hope a lot, cooperate, and get your passports renewed."

According to Greenberg, Reagan advocated U.S. military confrontation with Russia 10 times in the past year. "Reagan's continued support of a blockade of Cuba could only lead to war," he said.

"Reagan was elected because Carter made too many promises he never kept, especially those involving inflation,"

Greenberg said. "But even George Bush. Reagan's own running mate, said inflation would rise to 30 percent under Reagan."

"Ronald Reagan's proposed increase in defense spending, and at the time having his promised largest tax cut in history is, to quote Carter, 'totally irresponsible," Greenberg said.

Page 2 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

HMNKVtt MRPReapeNT:.. ANP New X) Rff^seNr 7He OPPDS/N6 wew.

Time to get used to Ronnie

I have to be President. Now that Ronnie's elected, I'll have to do

more drugs, and I'm not sure my body can take it. But I'm sure I can be president. Ronnie can.

I must run. Think, $60,000 a year in retirement. I can't

wait. Now. how to get it. First Nick. Then I'll hit Bebe for the mill.

Bill X.Carlson On The Edge

It all happened so fast. I was sitting, watching the television. At 7:23 p.m. Tuesday, the announcers were saying Reagan was leading and projected to win the election by their computers.

I had some hash in the pocket of my coat. I began to look for someone who had a pipe and matches. I thought about buying some more.

What is imperialism? Is it the old guard of the 1950s taking control of all the bozos in the 1980s. We are we? Are we not men? We are Ronnies.

It's Bedtime for Bonzo: "President Bonzo declared today that all people with little fingers on the left hand would be inducted into the army today, and would shortly join "our valiant fighting troops in the Middle East, clearing the path for our permanent path to oil."

"This is Walter Cronkite at election headquarters,and I have to leave now because my wife is waiting for me in my Porsche. And that's the way it was. since I decided to retire."

Or "Landslide buries Reagan; nation mourns."

"Thousands of pounds of rocks fell down a ravine in Calfornia today and crushed Presi- dent-elect Ronald "Bonzo Reagan." That is where the coup scenario emerges. Vice President George "Voodoo Economics "Bush is missing after his motorcade was attacked by a band of bazooka-wielding militant Chicanos.

General "Tip" O'Neil has taken control of the Minuteman intercontinental ballistic

missile system and orders the constitution suspended until the bodies of Bush and Reagan are given proper Christain burials.

A team of army bulldozers and trucks begins the slow task of searching for the remains of Bonzo. Bush's whereabouts will be revealed the same day J.R. Ewing's assailant is revealed on "Dallas."

But that won't happen for a while at least. It's 3 a.m. and it looks like the Republicans

will get the Senate, too. A friend calls to tell me he is on a four-year bummer.

That is depressing enough, but there is work to be done. The symbolic spray paint on Frat Rock. A can of auto primer will do the trick. Walking across campus through the fog to write "this is the end" on the whipping boy of student conservatism.

I spot a couple making out against the side of a Chevy Impala. They giggle a bit at the sight of an unkept non-droid type defacing the monument as thousands of others have before.

The task finished, I toss the can into the trees. The music is coming back again;

"Tin soldiers and Nixon coming..." More drugs. Damn it, the spark is there.

I've got it and there are probably thousands of others saying. "where the hell did Reagan get the votes?"

Hindsight provides absolutely no relief. Better get used to it. This time we'll learn how to handle both. The President and the drugs.

Get ready to be angry fast. The next four years will be that much easier to bear

LETTERS University needs integrity To the editor:

A geek does disgusting acts for profit -- puts live chicken or snake heads in his mouth and bites them off, for instance, or eats live caterpillars or toads, or... but that's enough. Geeks don't exist alone; they make their profit from creeps, who will pay to see the toad eaten, the sheep buggered, the woman shamed. Every society has geeks and creeps, and every society despises them. Except at UConn.

The geek has two criteria for any act: Will it make a profit? Can I get away with it? At UConn, these are also the criteria of the society. Two cases will illustrate this. First, a dormitory of creeps shows to other creeps a pornographic movie made by geeks. Does the student body express disgust? Not at all. Its voice, the student newspaper, defends the event and uses geek criteria to do so: the movie wasn't illegal and the showing made money.

Another case: a dormitory of creeps sponsors a strippers' show. This time let's see what the university's president says... and sure enough he uses the geek criteria: "I'd be doing something illegal if I stopped it," he says. But he warns that it might be unprofitable: "This type of behavior doesn't look good when I have to go before the Board of Trustees or governor to request money for the school."

This letter is not intended to demand reform. One can't reform a geek or a creep. The letter is merely asking a' tediously long question: where is straight society? Where are the complainers? When a geek and his creeps turn a stereo amplifier up as loud as it can go, where are the objectors? When they start smashing bottles where's the call to the police station? When geeks are known to shout filth at other students, where are the normal people condemning them to their face? When the geeks steal, destroy, cheat, commit assaults...

Surely EVERYONE at UConn isn't on a toad diet! J.D. O'Hara English Department

Thanks for Homecoming I would like to take a brief yet important moment to thank

all those who helped make Homecoming 1980 truly "The Climax of the Century."

To list everyone would usurp all the print in today's paper, but congratulations are in order to all Residence Halls. Student Clubs, Greeks, Faculty, Alumni, and all members of the University community. With all of your help, we have accomplished our goal of "maximum participation" with a success rarely achieved on any University campus.

Additional thanks go the Athletic Department for their cooperation throughout the weekend, to the Daily Campus and WHUS, for their up-to-date coverage, and of course a special thanks to all members of the Homecoming Committee. Your long hard hours of work contributed greatly to the success of the weekend as well as to a major drop in the University QPR.

S. Flash Rohrlick Homecoming Chairman

(Eotmectintt Saittf tiUttttp tu SERVING STORRS SINCE 1896

INSPIRATION FOR TODAY

"Peace upon Carter the day he was elected. And peace upon him the day he carries oat the will of his people and retires."

Anwar Sadat, .F«?yptian president

KEN KOEPPER Editor in Chief

DAN ALEXANDER Managing Editor

GRAEME BROWN Business Manager

USPS 25990 Second class postage paid at Storrs. Conn. 062M. Published by the Connecticut Dally

Campua. Box U—189, Monday through Friday 9/8 to 11/26,12/2 to 12/4,1/29 to 3/13, 3/24 to 4/30. Other editions 9/4,12/11.5/7. Telephone 203-429-9364 or 466-3407. Subscriptions by maH 620 yearly. United Preas International photographs provided to the Dally Campus at no coat by Wllllmantlc Chronicle. Subscriber. United Preas International. Member, Assocleled Collegiate Presa.

DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau

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The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980 Page 3

PIRG petition circulated to revive $1 fee increase

By LISA STENZA

The UConn Public Interest Research Group (UConnPIRG) began circulating a petition Wednesday asking students

to support a $1 UConnPIRG fee increase, which was rejected by a student referendum vote.

UConnPIRG Director Edmund Mierwinski said between 20 and 30 people

Mansfield voters choose Carter, Dodd

President Carter received more votes in Mansfield than Ronald Reagan, according to Town Clerk Madelyn A. Eremita.

Carter received 2,633 votes, while Reagan obtained 2,096 votes, Eremita said. Independent candidate John Anderson received 1,317 votes, she said.

In the Senate race, victor Christopher Dodd received 4,230 votes in Mansfield as opposed to 1,688 votes for James Buckley, according to Eremita.

Sam Gejdenson, who defeated Anthony Guglielmo in the 2nd District for a seat in the U.S. House, received more votes in Mansfield than his opponent, she said. Gejdenson received 3,612 and Guglielmo obtained 2,264 votes.

Internship forum held today in S.U.

A series of lectures on internships for students in sociology, economics, journalism and communication science departments will be held today in the Student Union building.

Two sociology students will discuss their internships with Connecticut legal services and the ConnPep program at 1:30 p.m. in Room 101." Theresa Hopkins will discuss her work as an English tutor and dorm counselor in the ConnPep program, which brings inner city children into UConn to prepare them for college.

Rebecca Fields will

describe her internship with the legal aid office at the Mansfield Training School.

A lecture on an economic- internship will be given at 3:30 p.m. in Room 101. Bob Luther, who is preparing an economic analysis of Bridgeport's solid waste recovery system, will discuss the internship.

Two lectures geared toward communication science and journalism majors will be held at 7 p.m. in Room 101. Sallyanne Ryan will describe her internship at UConn's Stamford branch, where she organizes and publicizes Centennial activities.

RKO<;oueat?u)\xi <iTriRR<; ■# d?Q- fififi? STORRS

7:15 & 9:15 QF] 7:30 & 9:30 g]

are circulating the petitions, which have enough room for up to 2.000 signatures.

"We have no figures as to how many have already signed the petition," Mierzwinski said, "but we won't go before the Board of Trustees with less than 1,000 signatures."

The Board of Trustees Finance Committee will make decisions on all fee increase proposals this Saturday.

"By Friday, we'll know if we will petition," Mierzwinski said. "If we lose this, we'll have to work on our public relations. If students were more familiar with what UConnPIRG does. I believe they would approve the fee increase."

Mierzwinski said an informal survey conducted by UConnPIRG showed that some students did not receive the referendum forms.

"We believe it was mostly off-campus students who did not receive them." he said.

W

•***.

Weather Mostly sunny today with

highs 45 to 50. Fair tonight with lows in the 30s. Partly cloudy Friday with highs in the mid 50s. Probablity of precipitation 10 percent today and tonight. Northwest- winds 10 to 15 mph today and southwest winds 10 to 15 mph tonight.

Correction The Daily Campus

Wednesday incorrectly identified Dorothy Goodwin's opponent for State Representative from the 54th District. Mansfield Mayor George Whitham.

Alvin M. Liberman (Lofink photo).

Psychology professor wins research award Bv ELIZABETH FAY

Dr. Alvin M. Liberman, a UConn psychology professor, has received one of the nation's most prestigious awards in the field of psychology.

The American Psychological Association honored Dr. Liberman in Montreal recently with a distinguished scientific- contribution award for his work in speech perception.

Liberman's research at the Haskins Laboratories in Mew Haven uncovered relations between the sound structure

of speech and linguistic segments. His recent work in the acoustic and psychological bases of speech perception can be applied to areas such as machine synthesis and recognition of speech, sensory aids for the deaf and blind and the teaching of reading.

A leading world authority in the field of speech perception and experimental linguistics. Liberman has been a -UConn faculty member since 1949, where he served as department head from 1961 to 1969.

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Page 4 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

US. elections 'unimportant'

Iran continues debate over foreign minister Bv UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

Publicly ignoring Ronald Reagan's election. Iran appeared locked in a tug of wills Wednesday over the appointment of a new foreign minister, a possible key official in negotiations concerning the 52 American hostages.

Ayatollah Ruholah Khomeini met the militants

who seized the U.S. Embassy a year and two days ago. and praised them for handing over the hostages to the government. But it still was not clear whether the government had taken custody of the captives. and their whereabouts remained unknown.

At the State Department, spokesman John Trattner

said that the study and analysis of the Iranian conditions is continuing and that he could not predict when the American reply to Iran would come.

Although the hostage crisis cast its shadow over U.S. polling booths, Iranian public officials professed indifference over the election's outcome. The official Pars news agency

Educators fear budget cuts under Reagan presidency

quoted members of the Majlis parliament as saying the election had nothing to do with I ran. Witnesses said Reagan's name was not mentioned during a session of the Majlis Wednesday.

Rajai told the Majlis that he- was in disagreement with President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr over the choice of a foreign minister, but added that he expected the president to settle on one of six proposed names. Rajai said Bani-Sadr had even disagreed with Khomeini on this matter.

Khomeini's fundamentalist Moslem tendency, while Bani-Sadr is more moderate and Western-oriented.

The foreign minister could play a vital role in the negotiations on the hostages, in which Iran is relying on Algeria as a go- between with the United States. The post has been vacant since Sadegh Ghotbzadeh was ousted in a reorganization led by Raja last summer which favored fundamentalists.

The official Pars news agency said Rajai told the Majlis that Bani-Sadr had

HARTFORD (UPI) — Connecticut city school superintendents Wednesday warned of hard times ahead for educators under President-elect Ronald Reagan, saying one of his policy statements was a '' prophecy of doom.''

The urban educators said they were worried about what might happen to educational funding under Reagan's administration because of his pledge of fiscal austerity.

"I would say we perceive we're in for a difficult time," said Geraldine Johnson.

Bridgeport's superintendent of schools. She said that whenever there's talk of cutting expenses, "educators become very worried."

Gerald Tirozzi. school superintendent in New Haven, said he became concerned when Reagan talked about supporting tax credits for tuition paid to private and parochial schools.

"Just on that one policy statement it could be a prophecy of doom for the urban school system," he told a morning news

conference at the State Office Building.

The school leaders, who banded together as the Connecticut Association of Urban Superintendents, also complained about the state Board of Education's decision to incorporate State Act for Disadvantaged Children funds into the school funding formula for fiscal 1981-1982.

They said they were already being shortchanged under the school funding formula and felt the state was trying to pull another fast one with their budgets.

Rajai represents rejected his six nominees.

California protests early election call

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The west coast was stunned by a television announcement 6f a presidential winner long before its polls had closed, and the reaction of voters and election officials alike Wednesday was rage.

NBC declared Ronald Reagan the winner at 8:15 p.m. EST nearly three hours before polls in states like California closed.

President Carter conceded more than an hour before balloting there ended.

As a result, substantial numbers thought voting wasn't worth the trouble, and skipped it. The dropoff affected numerous congressional, state and local contests, and Democratic officials were angry with Carter.

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Page 5

Storrs Weekly Vol. 1 No. 3

Connecticut Daily Campus Thursday, November 6,1980

Red tape and gripes

The grievance man Ombudsman Charles Oliver

removes thorns, puts out fires, fixes wagons

/ *■

v

By KATHLEEN COFEK Dr. Charles Oliver apologized for the interruption and

paused to look over the letter his secretary had just brought in to him. "My goodness," he said, after reading the ominous first line: 'Words can hardly express my unmitigated gall...'.

"It seems a member of the faculty is upset about union dues arbitrarily' being taken out of his pay," Oliver said after a

moment. He made a few notes to himself on a tape recorder and dropped the letter in a basket on his desk that had long since overflowed with other gripes and suggestions from instructors, students and'administrators.

But Oliver doesn't seem to mind all the complaints. He's used to them -- even challenged by them. And after 10 years as ombudsman at the University of Connecticut, he's probably heard them all.

He's not alone. So far. 74 American colleges and universities have borrowed the Swedish concept of the ombudsman -- an independent political "grievance man" who investigates citizens' complaints of governmental abuses -- and adapted it to make university life a little more human.

"Institutions of higher learning have become miniature cities with 'realistic problems.' "Oliver wrote in his doctoral disseitation, and the ombudsman has become the person on campus who deals with those problems.

Oliver flipped through an inch-thick report describing the almost 1.000 grievances he handled last year alone. His analysis showed that most of them came from students, primarily white males between their sophomore and senior years who had complaints about grades or the quality of their courses.

But he also hears from angry local merchants who are tired of students bouncing checks, or "kiting", which involves juggling bank accounts and making thousands of dollars from phony credit. One restaurant owner even wanted to bar students from his business several years ago because certain groups kept using false complaints about the food to avoid paying.

"There would have been quite an uproar if that happened," Oliver said. "I had to ask for special police protection for the restaurant until things calmed down."

He's also found legal aid for students victimized by shrewd landlords. "You'd be surprised how many of them charge security fees with no intention of ever giving them back," he said.

But besides investigating complaints like these, and mediating disputes among students, faculty and the administration, Oliver also studies specific injustices he's discovered. One major project right now is an analysis of how many minority students at UConn are receiving financial aid through work study and student labor. The completed report will be presented to President DiBiaggio, and the results, he

SEE PAGE 12

illHillllll

How to bite the hands

that feed you

See p. 7 (.. I » t I

Page 6 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6, 1980

By AARON MASCIOTRA

It's mid-semester, time to pack up and move across the hall. The end had finally come for the roommates who inevitably but unfortunately hate each others guts.

Records are put in their jackets and speaker wire is pushed into a back pocket. Books are thrown hurriedly into cardboard boxes. And on the way out. a few posters are torn from the wall.

The chance to do something about mutually intolerable roommates occured last Tuesday. That was the deadline for in-house room draw. "Tonight we are trying to decide our future together." a resident assistant said during the process of filling the little unit cards. ,

That future decision was in most cases not to move, but to work out the disagreements and quirks. "Last Tuesday was the first time the two girls ever talked about their problems. Both were afraid to break the ice." a Shippee RA said. Once the girls cleared the air. they found out they liked each other, she said.

Sometimes roommates just don't like each other no matter what.

"I can't stand her face, her walk. her talk, the way she dresses, she bothers me." an irate Frats resident said.

Many times problems aren't caused by personality conflicts but the petty inconsiderate things which irk their roommate.

"Our problem was that we have a third roommate — his girlfriend. He would lock me out on weekends. I couldn't gohome.l live in Marlyand." Robert Dambergs of Eddy Hall said.

"I didn't know that when I was using her hangers and calculator that I was bothering her." a Hamilton House student said.

"She parties all the time and I don't. She'd wake me up a lot when

Too close for comfort Some roommates just aren't meant for each other

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she came home late all partied out." a psychology major said.

The University can do more to reduce lifestyle conflicts by expanding its questionnaire system to learn potential roommates' likes and dislikes. Jackie Jakus of Batterson D said.

Besides the complaints, students also offer some tried-and-true suggestions for bettering roommate relationships. "Try to be as considerate as possible. Let things slide, especially if he has a lot of pressure on him." Randy Heitner said.

"To avoid petty confrontations, don't use your roommate's things without asking first." a female McMahon resident said.

If confrontation is hard to avoid, then compromise becomes very important for peaceful coexistence. "Compromising is the key to success. Sometimes you have to give a lot to get back a little." another student said.

The first 'Doonesbury' When choosing a roommate, some

students consider their best friend taboo. "If you sleep, eat and go out all the time with the same person, you will take them for granted and become bored and sick of them.

"You might expect too much from a best friend. The roommates that test the longest are the ones that have a working relationship, where they don't have the same friends and can come home and share their evenings with each other." Karen King, the Russell B RA. said.

"Best friends have a grand illusion that everything is going to be fun and games," another RA said.

Living with one roommate poses enough problems, but there are students on campus living with two and three roommates. "It's a good thing we all have the same life styles." Diane Lamoureux who lives with three roommates in Buckley Hall said. "If one girl wanted to study late there could be problems."

"My advice for living in a triple is be as tolerant as possible and don't bring a lot of clothes. At times it seems I live out of a suitcase," Lamoureux said.

Women say their gender seems to have more problems dealing with roommates than men. "I didn't want to believe it, but... it's true women have more problems than men with their roommates. They talk behind each other's back and look for roommates to be their best friends." King said.

"Problems arise." Lynn Peterson, a Shippee RA said, "when women bite their tongues and hold everything in. Later they explode, leaving nothing out."

Not everyone has roommate problems, though. The situation doesn't always require compromise, tolerance or consideration to get along.

"Sure, we get along fine." an elementary education major said.

"I never see her."

Intersession in Quebec City January 12-18

UConn credits available. All winter sports are available. All those intersted meet in room 105, Arjona, Nov. 13 at 3:30p.m. or contact Professors Guiney or Perry, room 228, Arjona.

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MONTEITH143

Food services find gripes hard to swallow

The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6, 1980 Page 7

By LEAH BUONAUTO "Beet sugt* is up 167 percent.

Pork bellies up 62 percent. Hogs are up 43 percent," Leonard Hodgson, director of University Food Services read, frowning. "Oh, here's an encouraging sign. Chickens are up only 23 percent."

He slapped the copy of the Washington Post Food Report on the table. For Hodgson, the man who keeps the Food Service running, the price of pork bellies is important.

As director of Food Services, which oversees food distribution and preparation at Whitney Hall, Shippee Hall, Buckley Hall, Ryan Refectory, McMahon Hall, Putnam Refectory and the Jungle, Hodgson has the unenviable chore of preparing the UFS budget two years in advance. And with the soaring costs of food, fuel, and oil, projecting the cost of food that far ahead is not easy to swallow.

When asked if he thought the food in some dining halls was a little hard to swallow as well, Hodgson winced. "In an operation as large as this, you're bound to hear some complaints. You just can't please everybody."

It seems, even when a cook is pleasing nobody, there is almost nothing you can do, at least immediately, to stop him. Currently, the UFS employs 16 cooks, all of whom belong to a union.

In order to "terminate" one, as Hodgson put it. you have to complain and complain and complain to him, in writing, over an indeterminate length of time.

"I don't sit around all day trying to figure out how to terminate

University employees," he said. Over at the Associated Student

Commissaries, which oversees food services for all the small dormitories except Wright B, the policy for firing a cook is much more clear-cut. Still, it takes several gallons of spoiled broth to get rid of one-too-many cooks, Ron Piombino, the ASC president explained.

The ASC follows a policy of "progressive discipline" when chastising a cook. Piambino said. First, the dormitory steward explains to the cook what he or she is doing wrong. -If that doesn't work, Piambino said, the next step is to write a detailed letter of complaint and file it with the ASC.

At this point, many cooks shape up because of the pressure. However, if this is not the case, the dormitory can take disciplinary measures against the cook, such as giving him two weeks off without pay.

If the cook still doesn't shape up, the steward can then fire him. However, this does not mean that the cook has been fired once and for all.

He still has the option to appeal the steward's decision to the dormitory house council. At this point, the council can opt to reinstate the cook or to uphold the steward's decision.

Finally, the entire dormitory has to vote on the matter. It takes a two- thirds majority to get rid of that nasty cook once and for all.

Unless, of course, the cook decides to appeal to the ASC. which can still reinstate him. If it doesn't, though, that, finally, is it.

Unless, of course, the cook wangles a job with University Food Services.

Ron Piombino, ASC chairman (Lofink photo).

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Page 8 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

WEEKEND PASS Thursday

Lectures

Economic analysis of solid waste recovery. Bob Luther. 3:30 p.m., SU 101. Connecticut Legal Services, tutoring, Rebecca Fields. 1:30 p.m. SU 101. Rehabilitative services major, 7 p.m.. 2nd floor. School of Education, room no. will be posted. Comparative pathology seminar, R. Bull. Michigan State medicine department. II a.m.. Room 212. Animal Pathology building. Women in South Africa, A. Marotti. 12:30 p.m.. Room 211. Arjona.

Music, Dance Ballet Folklorico Mexicano, Jose Greco. Nana Lorca. 8:15 p.m.. Jorgcnscn Auditorium. $3.50. $3. $2.50. students. $6. $5. $4. general public. Sal Nistlc, tenor sax. 9 p.m.. 880 Club. 880 Maple Avc. Hartford. $1. Arizona Maid Band, Country Squire. Ellington. Downbeats, Bootleggers. East Hartford. Last Band, Carry Nations. Manchester. Jim Hammerslough, Free Spirit. Vernon. Mike and Jerry, Country Squire. Ellington. James Daniel, J.P.'s. Hartford. Shaboo All-Stars, Mad Murphy's, Hartford. Love Joy & Cleary, Murphy's Parolor, Hartford. Mountain Trout, Nathan's Place, Monson. Mass.

Prime Time, Pumpernickel. Manchester. Sneakers, Russian Lady, Hartford. Too Much Too Soon, Shaboo. Willimantic. Pointer Sisters, Stage West. West Hartford. Bob Dunn, Chelsea Landing. Willimantic. Eyes, Brave Bull Cafe. South Windsor. Free Disco Dance, 9 p.m.. Puerto Rican Center. Movies Knife in the Head, Bruno Ganz. 7:30 p.m.. 9:30 p.m.. Atheneum Cinema. Hartford. My Bodyguard, Middle Age Crazy, Vernon Cine I & 2, Route 86. Creature from the Black Lagoon, 7, 9. II p.m.. LS 154 Dreamweaver, 7 p.m.. 9 p.m.. PB 36 Ulysses, 8 p.m.. St. Thomas Center. $1. Robert Motherwell, abstract expressionism, 12:30 p.m.. Benton Museum.

Sports Soccer team vs. Brown, 2 p.m. Gardner Dow Field. Women's volleyball team vs. Vermont and Springfield, 6:30 p.m.. Guyer Gym.

Systems and electrical engineering colloquim, H.L. Gurbin. 3:30 p.m.. Room 224. Engineering III. Music, Dance Robert Glasgow, organist. 8:15 p.m., Trinity College chapel, Hartford. Hartford Symphony, Hugh Wolff, conductor, Stephanie Brown, pianist, 8:15 p.m.. Bushnell Memorial, Hartford. $5 to $9. Bach's Lunch, 12:30 p.m., Trinity College chapel, Hartford, free. Arizona Maid, Country Squire.

Skyway, The Bear, Vernon. Downbeats, Bootlegger. Back to Earth, Brave Bull Cafe, South Windsor. Last Band, Carry Nations. Dennis Phllbrick, Civic Pub. Bobbl Rogers, Club Sixty, Hartford. Silverado, Country Squire. Ellington. JeUy Roll Dixieland Band, J.P.'s. Northern Rhythm, Mad Murphy's. Grass Roots, Paddy Martin's, Vernon. Prime Time, Pumpernickel,

Friday Lectures Modeling city-suburb interaction, Dennis Heffley, 3:30 p.m.. Room 339, Monteith. Special physics colloquium, Rudiger Brenn, Universitat, Frieberg, Germany. 4 p.m.. Room P-38. Physics Building.

The Ballet FoUdorio Mexicano will perform tonight in Jorgensen Auditorium.

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THE CULTURE OF EAST EUROPEAN JEWRY rVRY Historv. Literature, folklore from Hasirli«*m to l R Singer (Hebrew 277, TU TH 11-12:30. Prof. E. Goldsmith)

ISRAEL SOCIETY An analysis of the structure and culture of conternoorary Israel.

(Sociology 298-90. M W 3-4:30. Prof. Y. Enochi MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT Spinoza, Mendelssohn, Ahad Haam,Buber Rosenzweig. Kaplan.

Heschel. etc (Hebrew 104 or Hebrew 298-02, TU 6:30-9, Prof. E. Goldsmith) GENESIS: FORM ADAM'S RIB fO JOSEPH'S ROBE An analysis of the first of theFivs Boofcjof Moses. (Hebrew 298-01 W 7-9:30 Prof. H. Cohen) The following course will be offered at the Greater Hartford campus WOMEN IN JUDAIC CIVILIZATION (Hebrew 298-90)

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Manchester. Rod MacDonaJd, Russian Lady. Reducers, Shaboo. Smoke Stack Lightning, Silver Spur South Windsor. Blushing Brides, Stage West. Ray Parker and Dizee Lee/Branded Men, Pagano's, Hartford. Bob Dunn, Salina Rose, Willington. McCoy Tyner and Charles Gigliotti Trio,jazz, University of Hartford McCoy Tyner and Charles Gigliotti Trio, jazz, University of Hartford Lincoln Theater, West Hartford, 7 p.m. and 10p.m., $11.

Movies Robert Motherwell, 12:30 p.m., Benton Museum. The Seventh Seal, 8 p.m., Von der

The Connecticut DaVy Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980 Mehden. $2 Tommy, 8 p.m.. LS 154.

Sports Blue-white basketball scrimmage, 7:30 p.m., Norwich Free Academy, $2.50. Field Hockey team vs. Dartmouth at Springfield College, 11 a.m.. first round of playoffs. Second round 1:30 p.m.

Miscellaneous Tom Parks and Student Talent Special, 9 p.m.. SUB, BYOB

Saturday Music, Dance Hartford Symphony, Rafael Druian,

8:15 p.m., Bushnell Memorial. Jimmy Carter Show, 8 p.m.. ROTC Hangar. T.M.T.S., Arch St. Tavern. Hartford. Skyway, The Bear. Downbeats . Bootleggers. Back to Earth, Brave Bull Cafe.

Street Temperature, Candlelight Rest. Windsor. Last Band, Carry Nations. David Ablngton, Civic Pub. Bobbi Rogers, Club Sixty.

Freedom Express, Free Spirit. Silverado, Country Squire. Ellington. JeUy Roll Dixieland Band, J.P.'s. Northern Rhythm, Mad Murphy's.

Jeff Wleselberg, Murphy's Parlor. Mountain Trout, Nathan's Place. Lucky Look, Paddy Martin's. Vernon.

Prime Time, Pumpernickel. Manchester Rod MacDonala, Russian Lady. Crayons, Shaboo. Smoke Stack Lightning, Sheraton Valley Inn. Windsor. Route 66, Studio East Cafe. East Hartford. Bob Dunn, Chelsea Landing. Ray Parker and Dixieland Branded Man, Pagano's. Cryer, Stage West. Band Day competition, 10:30 a.m.. Memorial Stadium.

Page 9

Sunday

Movies Reefer Madness, 8 p.m.. p.m.. PB 36. 99 cents.

9:30. 11

The UConn football team returns home Saturday to play B.U. (Lofink photo).

Sports Women's polo team vs. Yale, 1 p.m., Horsebarn Hill Rd. arena. Men's rugby team vs. UMass, 1 p.m., Grad Field.

Football team vs. B.U., 1:30 p.m.. Memorial Stadium. Whalers vs. Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.. Hartford Civic Center, $12. $9.50. $6. Hellions vs. Cleveland, 1:30 p.m., Hartford Civic Center. $7. $5.50. $3.

Music, Dance Harris and Edmonson, chamber music, 3 p.m.. Old State House, Hartford. $4. Clyde Holloway, organist, 7:30 p.m.. Trinity Episcopal Church. 120 Sigourney St., Hartford. UConn Concert Choir, 8:15 p.m.. Storrs Congregational Church. Down Beats, Bootleggers. Old Hat, Carry Nations. George McCann, Lucy Ann, Fearless Foursome, Free Spirit, Vernon. Auditions, Country Squire. Cartoon, Mad Murphy's. Mickey Fendell Trio, Paddy Martin's. Justin Case, Pumpernickel. Manchester. The Morgans, Russian Lady Spyro Gyram, Stage West. Jim Gurley and the Dirt Road Special, Stage East. Sports UConn women's polo team vs. Ox Ridge, 2 p.m.. Horsebarn Hill Rd. arena. Soccer team vs. Penn State, 2 p.m.. Gardner Dow .Field. Boston Celtics vs. Chicago Bulls, 7:30 p.m.. Hartford Civic Center. $11. $9.$7.

Miscellaneous Veterans Day Parade, 2 p.m.. Bushnell Park down Farmington Avenue. Hartford.

Ongoing Movies Loving Couples, Private Benjamin, Elephant Man, Empire Strikes Back, Oh, God, Book II, Hopscotch, The Awakening, Showcase Cinemas. Silver Lane. East Hartford. Times Square, Middle Age Crazy, College Theater. Angi Vera, Athcneum Cinema. Stunt Man, UA Theaters East. Manchester.

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Page 10 By LEAH BUONAUTO

Joe UConn's descent into madness began the day he picked up his college I.D. Next to his name, where his picture should have been, he found a picture of a German shepherd instead.

He shrugged his shoulders and tossed it in his pocket, thinking that nobody ever looked at those things anyway. It proved to be the biggest mistake of his life.

The first place Joe went with his card was the Coop, to buy books. At First, everything went smoothly. Just when he had finished .rereading "War and Peace"' for the second time, his turn in line came up.

That's when the trouble began. The cashier took one look at his

I.D. card and handed him back his check. "I'm sorry." she said. "I cannot cash this check for you."

"But whv not?" Joe asked

The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

Joe's downfall started at the Co-op (Loflnk photo). longingly at Kennel Ration cans. His eyes would bug out of his head whenever he heard a cat meowing. He spent the night of a full moon

"Because you are a German howl'ng his brains out. until the R.A. shepherd. The Co-op policy specifies Put a "'""le on him. that no checks shall be cashed for German Shepherds."

"But I'm not a German shepherd. Clearly you can see that there has been some kind of mistake on my I.D. card."

Then, one day, Joe disappeared. For two weeks the University Police combed the area, searching for him. Finally, an officer spotted him, crouched on all fours, sniffing a fire hvdrant in Willimantic. "Wuff" was

"Listen, .buddy. I wasn't born all that Joe had to say. yesterday." the cashier snapped. Another UConn student had fallen "This card proves that you are a victim to Red Tape Shock Syndrome. German shepherd trving to disguise At ,nis very moment, this nasty but yourself as a student, and a rather lit,le known disease, is ravaging the mangy one at that. Now move along. You're holding up the line."

It was like that wherever Joe went. A librarian smacked him on the nose with a rolled up newspaper. The bouncer at ROTC kicked him out when he tried to get in to see "Walrus." No pets allowed. And at add-drop. they wouldn't let him sign up for ballroom dancing. "Who's going ft> want to practice with a dog?" one of the advisors asked.

After several weeks of this, Joe began to act strangely. He would sit in his room for hours, gazing

student body at UConn. While experts claim they are not sure what causes it. they do know that repeated exposure to the bureaucracy can trigger an attack.

In it's milder form, RTSS causes a variety of distressing symptoms, including heart palpitations when the victim gets within two feet of a library, a tendency to recite one's social security number at dinner parties, and sweaty armpits.

In its nastiest form, however. Red Tape Shock Syndrome can make its victims stark raving mad.

In Joe's case, it was the I.D. card that did the dirty deed. But there are

Dog days at UConn Bureaucracy does

strange things to a person

other aspects of the bureaucracy that can be just as mind-blowing.

Standing in line is one of these. Even the most placid accounting major will start to go crazy when forced to spend hours waiting in line at the Co-op to buy books.

And, with the exception of bringing a copy of "War and Peace" along, there seems to be little that can be done to alleviate the boredom of just waiting there.

Another biggie on the boredom list is filling out forms. They come in many different colors, but, after spending an afternoon coloring in

•teeny-weeny dots with a number two pencil, while being careful not to "fold, spindle, or mutilate," they tend to slur into one gigantic rainbow of monotony.

There are ways, however, of keeping your sanity in spite of the red tape at UConn. The following suggestions just might keep you from going toHhe dogs the way Joe did:

Join them. Learn to enjoy being bored. There are two ways to accomplish this. The first is to have a frontal lobotomy. For those who prefer less drastic measures, the following regimine is recommended.

Put away your dancing shoes next Saturday night, and stay at home picking the lint off your clothes instead. Spend hours in front of the mirror pretending you are a hocky puck. Devote an entire Saturday afternoon to watching the hair on your legs grow. Read cereal boxes.

After a few weeks of this, the prospect of going to the Admissions Building to get your I.D. picture taken will make your spine tingle.

Or beat them. The next time you're standing in line somewhere, pretend you've lost a contact lens. Then, when you've got everybody on their knees searching for it, make a mad dash for the cashiers desk. Not recommended for people who wear glasses.

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vy . .. ■ - •■ •" • •.-••...•.•• The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980 Page 11

By USA STENZA The University of Connecticut's

Storrs campus stretches across 3,100 acres in Mansfield and Coventry. As a result, campus transportation has been a concern of both students and administrators. Alternatives to walking range from practical to peculiar.

The UConn shuttle buses provide transportation for more than 3.500 students daily, according to Harold H. Gagne, the supervisor of transpor- tation operations.

"The buses were originally in- tended to transport commuters from the parking lots to their classes," Gagne said, "but now they accomo- date all students."

Students have mixed reactions about the bus service.

The shuttle buses have been running for eight years and are totally student-operated this semes- ter, Gagne said.

Four shuttle buses are in operation from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and two buses run from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. on weekdays. The buses travel through- out the campus and on Thursday and Friday evenings their route is ex- tended to Four Corners stores in Mansfield.

"Since 1 live in Towers and all my classes are across campus. I take the bus all the time," Linda Atzl, a fifth semester education major said.

Long and winding road

Ways and means

off getting around campus John Tunila, the resident assistant

of Fenwick House, said he never rides the buses. "They take too much time." he said. "I could walk faster."

The shuttle bus: one alternative to walking (Loflnk photo).

Some students who complained about the buses have developed alternate methods of getting to class. Bicycles were most commonly men- tioned.

"I take my bike because it's healthy for me," Tad Chamberlain, a fifth semester English major said. "I live off campus and it's a lot cheaper than driving a car."

Chamberlain said bicyclists develop "a sense of comradeship" with each other. "It's a good way to meet people." he said, "because we share a common interest."

Mark Williams, the resident assistant of Goodyear B dormitory, roller-skates to class every day. "I started to skate last year and I liked it." he said. "I skate in all weather, unless there's snow on the ground."

Williams said he skates right into his classrooms. "As long as I'm on time, nobody minds the noise." he said. What about the stairs? "1 go up on my skates sideways." Williams said. "It's easy."

Williams said people occasionally joke about his skating. "They make comments about discos." he said. "For some reason they associate skating with disco."

Tad Chamberlain best summarized the transportation issue: "Anything beats walking."

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ENGLAND SPAIN GERMANY IRELAND DENMARK GHANA ISRAEL EGYPT INDIA MEXICO SWITZERLAND

Summer Programs

IRELAND MOROCCO HOLLAND ENGLAND SPAIN MEXICO AUSTRIA EGYPT PUERTO BELGIUM ISRAEL FRANCE j

IGREECE 'TALY INDIA PORTUGAL TURKEY

Work Programs

ENGLAND IRELAND FRANCE NEW ZEALAND

Page 12 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

. . . More than just counseling FROM PAGE 5 hopes, will be made public to "combat some dangerous misconceptions."

"There's a lot of antagonism on campus over rumors that minority students are getting all the money." he said. "The figures show that whites far outnumber minorities in work study jobs, but people keep listening to politicians' talk about welfare chiselers.

"But these rumors end up causing a bigger problem: hate." he

explained. "Once people have made minorities a scapegoat, they're vulnerable to having other ideas put in their heads, and we start seeing incidents like what happened over in Scotland. Ct. That's dangerous."

Oliver has had a taste of discrimination himself. His original career goal, he said, was an administrative position in the Hartford elementary school system. Instead, his B.S. in education and M.Ed, in counseling only netted him a teaching position.

Ten years later, he went to "seek his fortune," through a scholarship from Harvard and returned to his hometown Hartford, with a certificate of advanced study in urban policy, but all he was offered was a job as guidance counselor at Weaver High School.

"I had really expected a promotion," he said. "But it began to look like I wasn't going anywhere." Then, in May. 1970, a friend recommended he try for the new ombudsman position at UConn.

Oliver at work in his Monteith office (Loflnk photo).

The position had been created only the previous year to deal with growing racial tensions at the University. Dr. Frederick Adams, former vice president of student affairs and services, had temporarily accepted the job from President Homer Babbidge until a full-time replacement could be found.

"I had set up the ombudsman position to deal with the immediate problems of bodily harm and destruction of property," Adams said. "Dr. Oliver had the strong background in counseling and mediation that the situation required, as well as a demonstrated concern for students in particular and people in general."

This concern prompted Oliver to immediately open his office to any grievances within the University, not just racial problems. Within five years. the "overt" racial confrontations had died down, he said, and he was able to survey the potential power for reform the campus ombudsman held. His doctoral studies at UConn culminated four years ago in a 197-page thesis on the ombudsman's success in American higher education.

But this success does have its limits. Oliver said he meets with occasional resentment from Student Affairs and Services and the Office of Residential Life, which fear he might be muscling in on their territory.

"They like to define me as a 'counselor,' " he said. "They'll do things like call me on the Counseling and Testing Center's line instead of the ombudsman's line."

But Oliver has no real worries about University power struggles. He reports directly to DiBiaggio, and even though his powers are strictly advisory, he feels his advice carries weight.

"Sometimes people need more than counseling," Oliver said. "They need results."

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questions about repro- ductive health care. 423-8428

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COME MEET AND TALK INFORMALLY WITH UCONN ALUMNI ABOUT CAREER OPPOR- TUNITIES WITH MAJOR CONNECTICUT CORPORATIONS. The following companies will be participating in Career Carnival '80: Connecticut Bank & Trust Timex G. Fox & Co. Stauffer Chemical American Can Company Covenant Insurance People's Savings Bank

Ct nnecticut Cheesebrough-Pounds Heublein Burroughs Corporation General Dynamics Friendly's Xerox Corporation

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Thettonneciiciit Daily bampus. thursdav. November 6,1980 Page 13

LOSTANDFOUND LOST: On Friday night, WonWs, Gold watch with black corded band If found please call 429-5858. Has very great sentimental value. Lost at HOTC or SU. If6

HELP WANTED

GYMNASTIC OPENINGS: Part-time evenings, tentatively February-March 6-8hrs/wk, 7 wks, $5-6/ hour. Contact Mansfield Recreation Dept. 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs to apply. Deadline for application Friday, Nov 14. EOE. HW14

ARTS & CRAFTS INSTRUCTOR Openings: Part time Saturdays, $6./hr., tentatively February or March. Examples - Creative Drama- tics & Expression, Printmaking, Stlchery, Paper Mache, Jewelry, Leathercraft, Calligraphy, Magic, Paper Craft, and Water Colors, etc. Contact Mansfield Recreation Dept., 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs to apply. Deadline for application Friday Nov. 14. EOE HW14

FOR SALE: Holley 800 Dble pumper spreadbore carb Just rebuilt. Excel- lent cond. $80. Call 487-9316 between 3 & 10 pm M-F. FS7

.—~ ~ • Unique Imprints - We sell direct screened T-shirts and screened jack- ets. All colors and sizes Call 487-6139 for more information

FOR SALE: 1974 AM Hornet hatch- back. Economical, no rust, new paint, very sound mechanically. Offer. $1500 Negotiable. Call evenings 5:30

Technics M22 dolbx cassette deck. Rewind auto play, full auto stop. Flourescent Peak meter. Excellent condition $120. Call 487-8894 eves. fs7

REMEMBER THE ILLIAD -- COME |OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/year SEE "ULYSSES" Thursday night at irouncf. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, St Thomas Center 8 p.m. $1.00 Asia. All fields. $5O0-$12O0 monthly, donation. Sponsored by St. Thomas Sightseeing. Free info, write: IJC Box

Jtudem Committee. e6 52-CT3 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625

THE PRACTICE OF ZEN: A public _„ S^Thanks It's true - after two years of private parties. SB. Sound is going campus wide! We specialize in rock & roll but there's more you should know. Call Mike or Scott at 429-1572 after 7p.m.

— M6 FOR ToSharonin

To Lisa Y. my little brother, You're the beet little brother anyone could aak for. Good luck tonight on the exam. I have all the confidence you'll do well. J.I.

EVENTS

ACTIVITIY SUPERVISOR OPEN- ings: Part-tirru tentatively during December pub'ic school vacation. Conduct athletic and recreational sport activities, arts & crafts activities etc., 1st-8th graders or 9th-12th graders. Contact Mansfield Recrea- tion Dept., 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs to apply Deadline for applica- tions Friday, Nov. 14 EOE. HW14

I'm a rehab services Major!! What the heck is a rehab, major?! Do you know what C.R.A. is ?! Come to the Gentry Building (Education) 2nd floor (Room# will be posted K-and find out! at 7:00 p.m. Thurs. Nov. 6. E7

ARTS IN ENGLAND: English 292, taught in London, Jan. 4-20. First check due Nov. 3. Places available See Lee or Joanna Jacobus 410 Arjona.

UCONN SKI CLUB This is your last chance to enroll in our Party on Skies. Don't be left out, we already have over 180 members, come find out why. We're collecting dues ($10) and deposits ($50) Wednesday (2-5) and Halloween Fri: 12-5 in the Student Union Lobby.

FITNESS INSTRUCTOR FOR SENIOR CITIZENS: part-time week- day morning or afternoon, 8 weeks, $6/hr., starts January or February. Contact Mansfield Recreation Dept., 4 South Eaglevill Road, Storrs to apply. Deadline for application Friday Nov. 14 EOE HW14

The Learning Clinic wants part-time TUTORS in all subjects K-12. especi- ally secondary math, sciences, and languages. Call 774-7471. HW6

Help wanted retail sales clerks full-time and part-time, minimum wage Mature individuals for used bood store Paperback Trader IV, UConn Campus at the rear of the Storrs Post Office Building, rte. 195. Phone: 487-0261 HW7

OVERSEAS JOBS-Sumrr>r/year round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All fields $500.41200 monthly. Expense* paid- Sightseeing Free into-. Write: IJC Box 52-CT3. Corona Del Mar, CA 02129. HW1

WAITRESSES needed <c work dinner shift three nights a week in a small dorm Call Chuck at 487-4931. HW7

HELP WANTED: Colpitts Travel / Dedham is seeking students to work as campus representatives. Benefits include free travel and monetary remuneration. For further info call Pat Antonellis at 617-326-7800 (9-5) or 617-327-1687 )after 6). HW6

HELP NEEDED to work in kitchen of small dorm four nights a week and alternating Fridays. Get three meals a day in return. Call Donna at 487-5369. HW6

"ASTRAL SOUNDS' Cassette Recording. A real "get off". Free brochure upon request. M.C Enterprises, 121 Tobey St., Providence, R.I. 02909. A10

WATCH OUT! - "Reefer Madness" is coming! Don't miss it. Sat. Nov. 8th, PB36, $.99. Sponsored by Stowe C. 8,9:30, 11. e7

talk Friday, Nov. 7 in West Hartford Workshop No. 8 in Coventry, given by Richard Clarke PH.D. Zen Teacher and psychotherapist For more info, call 233-0111. E7

ICE SKATING CLASSES UCONN STUDENTS Monday and Weds, mornings, 11 am - 12 noon 10 classes for $10, including rental skates Begins Wednesday, Nov. 12. Register by paying fee at Recreation Office, Rm 9 in the Field House. Class cancelled if less than 15 people enroll.

BERMUDA SPRING BREAK. 8 days and 7 nights Includes flight, lodging, activities, free beer and more in this island PARADISE From $265.00 Contact: Pirn 487-6937 E12/11

Bagel Brunch -- All you can eat for $1.50! At Hillel House Sunday, Novembr 9th at 2:00 p.m. Eliana Bar-Shalom will speak on "Growing Up as a Jew in Communist Rumania" Everyone is welcome. e6

MISCELLANEOUS

YuConn Jack's Typing Service: Fast, accurate. Convenient location. Edit- ing. Pickup/delivery on campus. Li- brary lobby meeting point, mornings Call 487-1929, noon-11 p.m.

If he hasn't taken you to the BIDWELL TAVERN in Coventry, be sure he's the one who says I'm sorry. M-

EXPERIENCED PIANIST give les- sons. Studied at Eastman School of Music; B.M.Hartt College of Music; Diploma, Conservatory of Naples, Italy; taught at UCONN and MCC. Excellent training for beginning and advanced students; $7.50/half-hour Call 429-4530.

WHALE MUSIC SYSTEMS .., the Best in Sound and Lights for any musical occasion Reserve now for your semi-formal. Call our •'NEW number: 487-8470 M7

I

EXPERT TYPING - Reports, Re- sumes, Research projects. Will pick up and deliver. Reasonable rates. Call Sandy at 875-4781.

PERSONALS Andrea. Met you at the laundromat Please call me. lost your number Collect M-Fri. (212) 765-3157/week- ends. 487-1998 David P10

Marge: Jay

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!! Love,

L.C.: Hey cutlal I love you madly! Your admirer In the silver jacket.

Happy Birthday BUBBA! Love, our roomie P.S. T.Z.

Dianne, Happy 19th Birthday. Live it up! Do everything we wouldn't do! Love, Louise and Becky.

Lori B. Happy Birthday, finally the big "19". En|oy because after twenty it's all downhill. Like I really know Love your buddy - Lori

DIANE- Wishing you the best, most exciting, thrilling, fun-filled, everlast- ing birthday you've ever had. Love, 2nd most bizarre (and family)

for making the past months some of the besK.ever. Your warmth, love and affection follow you wherever you go. I hope the time we spend together, become fond memo- ries of the past - Love. J.I.

Ridgefiejd: I met you In McMahon last Thursday and really enjoyed your company. What time do you eat dinner? Stewart

Confused Senior: If you keep doing thoughtful things, I'm going to get Involved again, in spite of what I said. Confused Senior

TO You Know Who: YOU'VE GOT MY ATTENTION! If you tell me where to find you. I'll take you anywhere you want to go

Patty-Happy 19th Birthday Hope your day is as special as you are. May all your dreams come true! Love, D & D

To the Attractive blonde girl who's chair broke in the pub Tues. night - Hope to see you soon Barry & Shelly

I love you enough to stay or to go. We've loved and we've shared in a very special way. It may never be erased, though believe me I've tried to. It's O.K. I understand. It may be easier to say good-bye now The love has grown so deep that I may no longer need you in my life so much aa I want you as part of my life I love you enough to say good-bye.

a great are my

Tony, "personally", I had time Thursday, but where winds? The Portuguese wine is STILL on Ice...

Cookie - I Love You!

Hungry on weekends? Come to 7 Gilbert Road, Saturday, Nov. 8, and get a home-cooked chicken dinner for $2.50. Sponsored by V.F.G.C. E7

Sunday, Nov. 9th. Crandall D's Pancake Pantry. All "U" Can Eat - $1.50. 9:30 am to 1 pm. Plain, blueberry, chocolate chip pancakes, 1st beverage Free! Sausage .50 extra. E7

DOOBIE BROTHERS at New Haven Oct 16 - buses leave S.U. at 5:30. ALSO- Concert bus to CARS show at Htfd Civic Center Nov. 13 with side trip to DIRE STRAITS at Stage West. Leaves S.U. 6:00 p.m. Both trips include motorcoach ice & refresh- ments! Call Bob at 742-9913 for info & reservations. E10 «

Come to Jim's Cafe in Goodyear A on -Saturday Nov. 8 for the most amazing brunch to ever hit UConn. Our diverse menu and outrageously low prices will astound even the most hungover. It starts at 8:00 and ends at 2:00, so there's no excuse to miss it. Be there. E7

I do expert tailoring, alteration, and weaving. Please call for appointment between 9am-9pm ask for 'Neriman' 146 Hunting Lodge, Storrs. 429-1444. MDecl

M — R, Dec 2nd marks our second. I hope there ARE many more to come. Love, M.E.7

CHRISTINE-Did I ever tell you that I really love your socks? How about your WOOL sweater?

Do you jog 15 laps barefooted? If you do then this personal is for you I'd like to get to know you better. From the girl in the Business Major (P.S Couldn't build up enough nerve to write It sooner.) (P.S.S. Think back at the track.) E.T.

Girls- Need a ride home when your date's too drunk? Call the escort service. 486-4800.

Audio Accessories, Cables, Adaptors, Blank Tapes, TV, Stereo, Radio, Repairs, Antennas. Next to Hardee's Back Door. 487-0071. M19

MUSIC MANIA plays th est of rock & Disco for informatio call George 429-9176^ Jim 487-4969. M10

WHOLESALE ALTERNATORS Startes, generators - foreign and American. $5. Allowance with exchange. Call 684-5288 for prices. Rebuilders. A's AUTO ELECTRIC in Stafford Springs, m 12-11

Want a real disc jockey for your next dorm party? Hartford D.J. with sound system now available. Com- petitive rates. 429-1513 or 1-673-2215. mil

HAPPY BIRTHDAY STEG! - Sorry It's late. Love, A 5th of Eddy.

Ding Dong The Pig Is Dead! Which Old Pig? The JUNIOR PIGI Ding Dong the JUNIOR PIG is DEAD!

MEEP

To ZONKER with the blue eyes, and to ED with the blue nose, it was nice meeting you last Sat., sorry I had to leave so suddenly, maybe we can talk again sometime. - The Clown.

Happy Birthday Diane L.! How does it feel to finally be legal? From your friend on the other end. Love, Susan

Tracey, it was great seein' you! Whatever you're gonna do tonight, give me a call!! See you soon!!!!

8HERI- One year ago )oday was the beginning of an excellent friendship... not mention Amaretto Sour parties, nights spent drinking Carlo Rossi and those unforgettable "threesomes" Happy Anniversary! Love Ya, Ti sh

Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, o^, Chairface - Sorry I had a Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, cnange o( hearl Typewriterface Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, Ork, .. Ork, Ork. Happy Birthday Dude. •

WANTcD WANTED TO BUY - used paperback books and comic books. Paper back Trader IV, UConn campus at the rear of the Storrs Post Office building. Route 195, Storrs, CT. 487-0261. WMarch13

Wanted: Men's Hockey shoulder pads. Medium-large. Call Pete at 487-9281. Keep trying.

Female needs room or apt. within 1 mi. from campus. Call 237-2975. w7

UConn MOTORCYCLE ASSOCIA- TION: Weekly meetings at TED'S. Thursdays 6:30 p.m. New Members Welcome. E6

FEELING FROGISH? Mirror, mirror on the Wall: A workshop in Self- image. Free. Monday, Nov. 10 7-8:30 p.m. 102 Union. Campus Advance. E10

Mangia, Merritt B Spaghetti Dinner. Saturday, Nov. 8, 4-8 p.m. All you can eat plus bread and punch. $2.25 Be there! ClAO.r E7

3AGEL BRUNCH-All you can eat for $1.50! At Hillel House. Sunday, Nov. 9th at 12:00 p.m. Elians Bar-Shalom will speak on "Growing Up as a Jew in Communist Rumania" Everyone is welcome. E7

Sandy, Darshan's typing servant at VEGGIE DINNER Saturday, Nov. 8. your service on selectric. Call me at 400 to 8:00 at LLC, Beecher/Vinton 429-4083 for sliding rates. .60 Double (Towers). $4.00 all you can eat.

W6 Eggplant, Quiches, Souffles, casser- oles, Ambrosia, etc. E7

space

FOR SALE GET YOUR SHIRT TOGETHER. Solargraphics is now part of Nassiff's for Sports - Best prices, top quality, custom-printed with 'on-time' dell- very. Call us today; 423-5274 01 evenings from 7 - 10; 429-8789. FR11

Handmade gold and silver jewelry at Jewels Verne, 768 Main St. Williman- tic, in the Book Emporium. Custom work, repairs, wedding bands. 456-3563. FS20

FOR SALE: 2 Ohm C2 speakers, must sell. Call 487-8558, keep trying. FS6

Men's Levi's pile-lined denim jacket. Hardly used. Size large. Call 456-1553 FS6

TRIUMPH TR6, 1974, excellent con- dition. Beet offer. Please call 643-4117 after 5p.m. fs11

Grinder Sale!" Ham-Salama 1.90 Roast Beef 2.25 in E.S. Smith Cafeteria Pick-up Novem- ber 8th 10 a.m.-2p.m. Get them now while they last!!! To order Call: 429-9384.

Where else can you hear the Beatles, Kansas, Styx, and others together? Come see "The Dreamweaver" Nov- ember, 6

Earn Extra Money at home. Collect names for us. $25 per hundred guaranteed. Send stamped self add-p ressed envelope for Information. Ver- non Company P.O. Box 295. Water- town Ct. 06795.

BAKE SALE. Thurs. Nov. 6, 9-2, at the Student Union. Sponsored by the Nu^'^on Club. Come and enjoy! E6

COMEDY! ROCK! NEW WAVE! Saturday, Nov. 8 in ROTC Hanger

, wi,.n.TH.5 JIMMXCAWEaSHOWJ..

Dance this Mess Around with New Wave Muzak. Check out our intro- ductory offer. For parties with that different kind of sound. Call 487-4898 m7

Cruises: Club Mediterranean, sailing expeditions! Needed: Sports Instruc- tors, Office Personnel, Counselors, Europe, Carribean, Worldwide! Sum- mer. Career. Send $5.95 + $1 hand- ling for Application, Openings, Guide to Cruiseworld 145, 60129, Sacramen- to, Ca. 95860

Having a party? Need a sound system? Call Phil's Mobil Music Machine. Collect after 5 pm at 563-7665, ask for Phil. m11/11

MONEY: Bring empty bottles and cans to Villa Spirit for sash!' MDecl 1

Four Corners T/pijt at your service on selectric Books mv apecialty Sliding rates .60 double. Call Sandy at 429-4088 NOW: M16

Tired of paying too much insurance on your auto? Call Tom Lobo 423-6374. MDecl 2

ROAD TRIP to Springfield Friday morning. Its been a long wait (357 days to be exact). Don't let Dartmouth be your Bridge-Waterloo. Plane to Carbondale leaves 11/18. Be on it! Good Luck. -Tom

Chnstophe- Merci pour un mois magniflquel II faut celebrer au- dessous de las lune et des etoiles ce weekend a Maine. Je t'aime. -A

The Sherman 414 singers - Boy, do we have a "song" to pick with you; but remember - THIS IS THE LAST WORDI

Put on your leotards, Superman; the birthday flight is scheduled for Thurs. night (featuring the official Theta Hota Cheta ray gun). Beware the killer drapes and keep your nose clean cuz the munchout control squad has YOU under surveillance; watch for wild R.A.s on acid (i.e. R.I.M.R.I.- M. and the a list). Let's go for it, watt da — It's your birthday!!!! Love and drugs, Colleen ("isn't this fun?), the Kleenex Queen, and WILD Bob.

FRIENDS* STRANGERS AND OTHER CREATURES OF THE NIGHT. Gavin's birthday is Saturday, November 8. Send a nice guy a card.

To Polock McMahon 3 South! Happy Birthday Bertl Love, J., D K., K.

Pam and Maureen- Talk to Chairface

Dear Bettina: I am intrigued by your melodical voice and captivated by your photograph. I await our first rendezvous The Scarlet Speedster.

FLEVIN: Is it true you think "grape- nuts" is a venereal disease? The suuad

Larry, Happy B day wall celebrate It In Jan. Surprise on Sal Love Irom your sister

Patty- Hope your 19th b-day is as special to you as you are to us. From your two favorite brothers, Sharon and Michelle.

Jamie- I've craved for you for toe long. Wipe my drool. Your smiling Molinhead.

Sonova Beach: Your parties are definitely the best anywhere. But when's the next one? Some admiring ladies.

This weekend could prove to be charisvescent.

PUBLIC FREE!!! Need to buy some- thing? You'll find it every Sunday (9am-3pm) at the Eastern Connecticut Flea Market (Junction of 31 and 32, Mansfield). Over 100 dealers, open through November m11/21

David Wright Jewelers. Diamonds Gold, Gems. Custom Designs, Re

£ai!!i A_p£rB.'!a!i- MOtM MEGASOUND. for your next party! ABSOLUTELY THE BEST sound on campus! Megaparties require MEGASOUND! Call anytime 742-8480 (Coventry) M7

Housing needed during winter break for on campus student working full- time during vacation. Preferably walk ing distance from campus. Call Mershe-429-270* Tnr 404©. MfT

Liebe Madchen aus Stuttgart: Danke schon fur letzteVi wochenende. Ich habe elne gute zeit gehabt. Hoffent- lich, werde ich du am Freitag auf die

Hayrlde" sehen. Ich hoffe das du dieee notlz verstehen, weil meinen Deutach 1st nicht sehr gut. Auf Wledersehen, Lone Ranger

To the Doctor: When can I come to another one of your LOVE sessions that you inadvertantly labeled an appointment. By the way, you're #1 in my book, too. So smile...GEJ

To the good looking guy In the rust corduroy jacket I walked to class in the Cham building Monday afternoon: What a Badl I'd like to get to know you better... how bout it? Your little

[THE CORNERSTONE SAGA - Some- |where, somehow, somebody must have kicked you around some.

To A in B - Hoping for the right time and place. ComSci 102.

Alfred Lawrence Patterson- Your time will come. You're still very yo ">g and there are many people who would vote for you Don't jump ship.

Good Morning AMYGDALA

ACTIVITIES The Connecticut Home Economists in Business invite interested students to a meeting Wed. Nov. 12 in Stamford Cost is $5.00 and includes dinner & speaker. Please call 429-1224. Rides will be arranged. A6

GEOGRAPHY INTERSHIP talk by Jim Stockmal on his work with the Southwestern Regional Planning Agency, and Ted Parsons and Greta Jespersen who intern at the Middle- town Regional Planning Agency. Wed Nov. 5, SU 101 at 7:30-8:30. a6

I

Page 14 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

MARKETPLACE RIDE BOARD

Ride needed to either Ithaca or Buffalo - trying to get as close to Toronto as possible Leaving Thurs 11-6 or Fn 11-7 Returning Sunday Share expenses Call Missy 487-5361 RB6

RIDE NEEDED from Hartford to Storrs m the A M & from Storrs to Hartford in the P M Daily More th?" willing to share expenses Please cal1

Brenda 423-0168 RB14

Ride needed to Hartford Thursday afternoon. 11-6 I'll share gas. just get ne to the bus terminal by 200 Call 467-4040. RB6

RIDE NEEDED To Westport. Wilton. Norwalk area this Friday afternoon CaH 429;2564 £fter_6_30_ _RB7

RIDE OFFERED to Stamford Via Merntt Parkway This Friday at 4 00 Call 429-2564 after 6 RB7

ANYONE GOING to NORTH HAVEN or New Haven area Friday, please call 487-9101 Will share gas expenses RB7

Ride needed to and from RPI in Troy, N Y. weekend of Nov 16 Will share expenses 487-5284 ask for Chris. RB6

FOR RENT Room available Jan. 1 - Furnished - Willington Oaks Apt. -$80 & utilities - Call 429-6592 FR12

One bedroom apartment in new building Heat, hot water, dishwasher included Plush carpeting, privacy In West Willington, ten minutes to campus. Sublet $310 plus security. 487-0552 fr11

LOST: Light-blue suitcase on Arrow Lines bus from New Haven to Storrs on 11-2 If found, PLEASE contact Mary at 487-4581. Keep trying. Contents GREATLY needed LF7

WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU'RE MISSING!! Were you. wondering whatever happened to that needed notebook, favorite sweater or senti- mental item? Check the campus lost and found located on the east side of R-lot down the stairs from the Frats in an auxiliary service trailer The hours are from 2-5, M-F Call 486-2194 for further info Other valuables in Police Dept vault LF12/4

rLORlDA PLEASE-lf anyone is plan- ning a trip to Florida for XMAS please contact Mike at 429-1572 after 7P M Will supply necessary supplies' RB6

RIDE NEEDED TO ITHACA or Vicinity Nov 6 or 7. returning Nov 9 will share expenses Call Mark 429-7404 RB7

RIDE NEEDED TO New Bedford Mass Leaving 11-7 and returning 11-9 Will share expenses. Call Mark 429-7404 RB7 -

RIDE NEEDED UNIV OF NEW HAMPSHIRE for 1 person Leaving this Friday anytime and returning Sun Will pay expenses Call 487-8801 ask tor Sandy RB7

Ride needed back to UConn on Sunday Nov 9 from Cape Cod Will share expenses Call Donna at 487-5369 RB6

Ride needed to Colorado, anytime in November Call 429-2702. ask for Amy in 206 A RB10

Large room for 2 people in a student rented house 2M miles from campus Available Jan 1, 1981 Rent $87 per person - $10 utilities - (plus security). Call Barbara 429-0536 evenings or 486-3901 days Please leave a message. fr11

Female roommate wanted to share house on Bolton Lake Own bedroom, completely furnished. $85 plus utilities/security 643-2958 fr11

LOSTANDFOUND FOUND - Baby kitten, gray tiger with double paws Found in Codfish falls road area. Call 487'1757. If7

To whoever stole my wallet at the laundry Tuesday: now that you've ruined my life, at least mail me back my identity, or the remains of it.

LOST Moonstone (white stone) ring at Field House 10-31 If found please return to intramural office. LF10

LOST: Grey rimmed glasses in black case Lost between Montieth and Jungle If found, please call 742-7719 nights or 429-2967 days. I»7

FOUND: 11/3 ONE PARAKEET. Claim at Home-Ec BLDG room 211. Or call at 486-3828. if7

If you find yourself missing jewelry, glasses or keys or other items - try checking out the LOST AND FOUND ares in the STUDENT UNION, REC- REATION DEPT.. and the LIBRARY If no luck try the POLICE DEPT. If 12-4.

FOUND: Two balck male mongrel puppies in foyer of Jungle Cafe on Friday afternoon Call Linda Wenner 487-0137 If7

LOST: Rectangular, blue wallet with double brown stripe in the middle. If found, please call 487-9734 If7

FOUND: Bracelet in Arjona on Fri Oct. 31 Call and describe 487-9500. I»7

LOST: Yellow economics notebook Possibly in Ariona, on Mon. Oct. 27. Call 487-9500 If 7

LOST: 1 sweater (high sentimental value) and a pair of shoes Saturday morning 10-25 on field beTlind field house. Call 487-6361 or 3 Ellsworth if found. LF6

LOST: One pair of pinkish colored eyeglasses in a burgundy pouch Left in AS55 on Oct. 16. Please call 487-7093. LF6

UCONN FIELD

HOCKEY

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This is for all marbles.

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Remember the

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St. Thomas Center

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HAPPY

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sign that tomorrow** test will lx' heavy with questions from chapter (\. Someone you know- is about to get a phone call. He's not going to like it. hut he's going to come through. When this is over, do something special for him. Tonight, let it be Ldwenbraui

Lowenbrau. Here's to good friends. •9»0 Brr- WwM ."US« t>. Mil* BXWOO ConKM"! Md»r«u««« «»SCOnw> W

N

The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

ACTIVITIES

ECONOMIC INTERSHIP talk by Bob Luther, Thurs. Nov. 6, SU 101 at 3:30, '•■*? — on an economic analysis of solid waste recovery a6 -r^r

SOCIOLOGY INTERSHIP talk by T -*-•-' Rebecca Fields on work with Conn. Legal Services, and Theresa Hopkins 2£M on tutoring in the Conn Pep program ■*■* * Thursday, Nov 6, SU 101 at 1:30-2:30 JriJl MfaB ""* -*M"

UConn Polo games Women v.s Yale ^aiMiJ on Saturday Nov. 8. Men vs. Ox Ridge on Sunday Nov. 9. Games are at 2 p.m. at the polo arena on Horsebarn Hill Road. a7 ' — g - -^-w -^m

Celebrate election results with a laugh! THE JIMMY CARTER SHOW Sat. eve. Nov. 8 in ROTC Hanfler. Presented by Hilltop council. a7 Lauren Fuchs [Nelman photo]. National Student Speech-Language- Hearing Assoc Speaker: Industrial

SSS^FH? r Fuchs breaks record Speech center -139. 3:30 pm.

wved^ WelC°me Re,re8hmen,s Senior captain Lauren 16 assists for a 62 point total. Fuchs, in the last game of Besides the total point FREE DISCO DANCE on Thurs. 6 - fae regular season, has record, Fuchs also owns the SrtonS^cJK?." BYOB.* \iM' broken the all-time career career assist record with 32. points record in field hockey This year, she has led the PHYSICAL THERAPISTS - Don't f fh University of Huskies to a 10-2-6 record forget the -SAPTA COFFEE HOUSE at ine. universuy oi nusaies io a IU z o recora on Nov. 7 - rm. 311 - su Commons - 7 Connecticut. scoring 7 goals and assisting p.m. until 1 a.m. BYOB, mixers and Fuchs, a senior with 12. munchies will be provided. Music by ..«- ,. ._„ »„H;_J n D.J. GOCO TIME GUARANTEED! midfielder, has tallied 33 C^pp- oP+inn a7 career goals and assisted in kjvn^ci. ai^uuit

FEEUhrG~FRO~G7sH?lMkro"r7m7r7or 32 for a total °f M P°ilUf- ™ \XTHT TQ on the wall: A Workshop in Self- The record was previously till VY11UU image FREE. Monday, Nov^ 10, 7-8 held by Val McCord in 1979 wm,s Q, 7 F M w;n p.m. Union 102. Campus-Advance. . J . ., , „ . . . WttUi, »!./ r.M., will A10 who scored 46 goals and had broadcast today.s soccer

action between the UConn Huskies and Brown University at Gardner Dow Field. Andy Yound and Harold Darak will broadcast all the action beginning at 2:10p.m.

Water polo team seeded first

By SCOTT PETERS The UConn water po.j

team has been seeded first in the New England Water Polo Championships, which will be held at Harvard this weekend. The other teams selected to compete are Williams, lona. and Trinity. UConn first plays Trinity Saturday at 12:00.

UConn. now 16-4. has won 14 of its last 15 games. By placing first or second in the New Englands. UConn will advance to the Eastern Seaboard Water Polo Championships, to be held at West Point Nov. 15-16.

(Ed. Note — Scott-Peters\ is a member of the UConn water polo team.)

Page 15

UNIVERSAL FOOD STORE

... Soccer FROM PAGE 16

an average of 2.33 goals per game, while Moseley has allowed an average of 1.75 goals in the four games he's played.

"I've seen Brown four times this year and they have good goalkeeping and are as aggressive as usual," Morrone said. "This game presents a great opportunity for us. Whenever you get a chance to tie a record that's 31 years old (consecutive wins record) it's quite an accomplishment.

"We'd love to do it. We may not get another chance like this for a long time. But we have to beat Brown in order to do it. And that's never been easy."

... basketball action FROM PAGE 16 Following this Thursday's stop in Norwich, UConn will play

at the Field House Friday, Nov. 14, at 8 p.m. in an international exhibition against the Obras Sanitarias team from Argentina, a club composed of several members of the Argentinian Olympic team. The South American team will play exhibition contests throughout the Northeast against all eight Big East Conference clubs. Tickets for that game, priced at $3 for general admission and SI for UConn students, are nowon sale at the Athletic Ticket Office located in the Field House.

Connecticut's final pre-season outing will take place on Friday. Nov. 21. when the Huskies visit Southington High School for an 8 p.m. Blue-White team scrimmage.

Tickets for that game are priced at $3 for adults, $2 for children under 16. and $3 for all tickets at the door the night of the scrimmage.

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Page 16 The Connecticut Daily Campus, Thursday, November 6,1980

Soccer team to face Brown University By CHARLIE VACHRIS

Since the early *70's. whenever UConn plays Brown in soccer you are guaranteed a tight, well- played game. And today's contest, scheduled for 2:15 p.m. at Gardner Dow field, should be no exception.

Despite the Bruins' disappointing 3-6-2 record, they rave played consistently well. losing many close games including a one-goal defeat to Eastern power Corn 'II.

Added ii centive for the 18-1 Huskies will be the quest for two school records, which will be tied today if UConn dele its Brown. A win over the Bn ins would match UConn's r -cord for most consecutive win's. 17. which was set in 1949. A victory would also tic the Huskies record of .nost wins in a season. 19. which was set in 1978 and tie J last year.

Up until ihis season, both UConn and Brown have been in the New England tournament for every year but one since 1972. The Huskies missed it in 1977 when they had goaltending problems, and the Bruins failed to make the tourney last year for the first time in 12 years.

Brown doesn't stand much of a chance of being picked for the tournament this season, but won't be a push- over for the Huskies. Brown was 5-8 last year, but gave

the Huskies a scare in their last meeting, before a Joe Morrone goal gave UConn a 1-0 win at Providence.

"Records don't matter in this rivalry." UConn coach

Joe Morrone said. "They'll have fire in their eyes. Brown has nothing to lose and everything to gain in this game."

"Despite their second

The UConn soccer team will host New England rival Brown University this afternoon at Gardener Dow Field. The Huskies will be trying to tie school records of 17 consecutive wins and 19 wins in a season [Neiman photo].

SPORTS

straight losing season, the rivalry is still there," Morrone said. "When a tradition like this one builds up it takes a long time for it to diminish. I'm sure they'll be very psyched up for us. This is a typical Brown team. They're hardworking and aggressive."

The Bruins' offense will be led by Dan Carusi, who has scored 10 goals and seven assists this year for 17 points. Midfielder Stu Mountain is another offensive threat, with 13 points on 11 goals and two assists.

Brown's Carlos Fernadez is a highly skilled halfback who played high school soccer with UConn's Elvis Comrie at Fort Hamilton H.S. in Queens. N.Y.

Brown's defense has traditionally been their forte and this year's squad is led by freshman sweeperback Sherman Swanson. Fullbacks Jeff Hacker and Bill Champaigne will also anchor the defense.

Greg Mitke and Richard Moseley have shared the goaltending duties this season. Mitko has played seven games and given up

SEE PAGE 15

s.

Basketball action tonight

Mike McKay was the leading scorer on the UConn basketball team last season, averaging 16.7 points per contest. He and the rest of his teammates can be seen in action tonight hi Norwich during an intrasquad scrimmage.

Bird leads Celtics to win over Atlanta

BOSTON UPI - Larry Bird scored 22 points and Chris Ford added a season-high 20 Wednesday night to power the Boston Celtics to a 104-87 victory over the undermanned Atlanta Hawks.

The Celtics placed five players in double figures in running their record to 7-4. Atlanta, playing without leading scorer and rebounder Dan Round fie Id who had a bruised thigh - plus two other - slipped to 5-8.

Bird had 11 points in the first quarter when the Celtics jumped to a 27-22 lead and never trailed. Boston upped the lead to 52-43 at halftime, despite 19 turnovers.

Ford had 13 points in the third quarter, when the Celtics put away the visitors, building up a 27-point lead, 88-61, at the end of the period. In the third quarter the Hawks hit on just two of 15 attempts from the floor scoring their other 16 points from the foul line.

Rick Robey' added 15 points for the Celtics while Robert Parish had 12. 10 in the first quarter. Rookie Kevin McHale added six points and had five blocked shots.

The UConn men's basketball team, prepar- ing for its second season in the Big East Conference, will make its first public appear- ance of the 1980-81 season tonight when the Huskies visit Alumni Hall on the Norwich Free Academy campus in Norwich for a'7:30 p.m. Blue-white full team scrimmage.

This will be the second consecutive year Dom Perno and his club has journeyed to Norwich for a team scrimmage. Last year the event was witnessed by a full house of more than 1,700 fans.

Tickets for the stop in Norwich are on sale at the following locations: Ogulnick's Jewelers and Bruce's Shoes in Norwich; Montville Pharmacy; Peter X's Cafe in Oakdale; Mallove's Jewelers in New London; Ansyl Camera in Groton; Mali Books in Groton and Olde Mistick Village; Administration Building at UConn's Southeastern Branch at Avery Point; the UConn Athletic Ticket Office in the Field House in Storrs. Tickets are priced at $3 for adults, $2 for student v. All tickets on sale at the door the night of the scrimmage will be $3.

This year's Connecticut team will be led by co-captains Bobby Dulin, the only senior on the squad, and junior Corny Thompson.

Also back this year are juniors Mike McKay, Jim Sullivan and Clay Johnson along with sophomores Glen Miller and 6' 10" Bruce Kuczenski.

Among the newcomers who will have an immediate impact on the UConn fortunes is 6'11", 248-pound Chuck Aleksinas, the Connecticut high school great who played at the University of Kentucky for three semes- ters before transferring back home to UConn. Aleksinas sat out last season with the Huskies after his transfer and has two years of eligibility remaining, starting this season.

Also slated for plenty of court time are a trio of talented freshman recruits -- 6'5" Norman Bailey from Northwest Catholic High in West Hartford, 5'11" Vern Giscombe from Cardinal Hayes High in the Bronx, 5'8" Karly Hobbs from Cambridge Rindge-Latin in Mass- achusetts.

SEE PAGE 15

Ivy League title at stake By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

First, it was Brown coach John Anderson. Now, it's Harvard's Joe Restic. But the appeal is still the same: Somebody please beat Yale.

"We need some help. Somebody has to beat Yale for us to have a chance," laments Restic, whose Crimson host non-league for William and Mary this week.

Yale is 4-0 in league play while Harvard. Brown and Princeton are all 3-2. The Elis can clinch a tie for the Ivy crown this weekend with a win over Cornell at the

Yale Bowl. Yale has won or shared

nine Ivy crowns Dartmouth has 11 and two of the last three. Cornell, thought by many to be a dark horse, is 2- 2 in league play.

In the only other all-Ivy matchup this weekend, Dartmouth, 2-2 hosts Columbia, 0-4. Brown is idle while Penn, 1-4. Brown is idle while Penn, 1-4, hosts Villanova and Princeton entertains Maine, the first Ivy contest since 1934 for the Black Bears.

Yale dominates the defensive standings in the

league once again, although they have lost linebacker Jeff Rohrer, their leading tackier, with a broken ankle. The Elis lead in total defense 191.7 yards and scoring defense 8.5 points. Yale leads ' in defense against the rush while Dartmouth is best in defense against the pass.

Yale's 35-7 victory over Dartmouth last week also catapulted the Elis into the lead in two of four team offensive categories. They lead in scoring offense 29.5 points a game and rushing offense while Brown is tops in passing and total offense.


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