.1 ate - UFDC Image Array 2

20
I * the independent florida .1 ate Volume 77, No. 162 Thursday Jtine28 1984 Court wrests TV rights from NCAA By JEANNINE LOIACONO Alligator Staff Writer ti ht ' S. Sipreni C(ourt riied \uednsdias fi that c'Ihge ft b 'd allitiia call evtotiate thii'ir I'a) %I dials fur tlevisiiii c(irac tit i ifi gamiiiis, a right th 1it lilI iI witis as ri' stFrictid t( 's il i1t % I t A urtitir i i tII i latir hosw hi- rluing ni l vi bir t it' or tIIir S'iitiieasterii ( iiiiiuri'tiu m'limiiiers. It' ufii'tls said tin's' w dild ()f f cr no camment mit il aii N( ]:A cmiftrcccnder (till this swek in (:hIcago is ver hll( nxt cvcral swieks will Iiterniti thi future iif ecle e io t bl lltclc%1isim o ti th(, asn md m the %car,, alittil ti I AtIIIIt Wi tiI'i'tttr IiI itarrI sai m a pi r Iar N t t w ba ea ha i i t Isrt ( i it the c( irt sru i I IVand I It I '% ithIitriii'%us t l IIs tI i s III)nitth is, ills sltt'IIeiIt vsi t v' hi t FIltrida wsIll do in ihi tutur ni ti i'frtui gut 'i 'sisiio u ii I p irm t ir ai rr sai.ti Dangerous levels of arsenic found at warehouse fire ry GAIL RAYS vlol !sI ll %' j ~ii liii" ) i() I ' it i tItIc II l it lit tiS it liil.ilaisidmit Associate Athctic Director j rmyn Focy said, "This is a %(rs .%ich atic situatii that is g(ig to take a lot of plaimiit to work out, and ws havC ( IH()CM1lient at this time." Iitit St(vse StirrIer, tI foriiiir ("ator (tirterback aiIi 196 1 Ic Iiismani i Tr( i)Ihy i wii inir I( no m 1, i( had i'Ic(ach (d th It. SFI , Tampa Bay Banldits s I t hc mIng 4w( '11d fhlp pmwcrhousc temir, hlkc T( ;cm rii amndAublri, hilt wsflild hurt smaller progiamis. ''T rich are going to hit riw1r amidi tlh p1)r are going hi get prer, Spnor it said it . g-it', g to ratee resicnw for tih, Ig siichonls i and ii h l i th n w h rrith riiritoig. l.Vsiri kid wialits ito pla fiitball )II TI\ Sp rricri sald that i" s'rall' ici h t It the ruiilii V w Ias it giiiiid, but added that ti marketplace ma'i be theii n best %%a\ to determine \iiwhich tiaiiis wsire voinig to fiid theiiselVs MI natiti al teltsijsii. ''W hat's hr is fair,'' Stnirer said. ''If there a tiarket for thiisitea"un to hc m!t\ then thli. hbnt' a iighit til bi lm hi l did not expect any major cha.s for the' 51F.C ill the aat its t'ams' games arct teivisid. "I can't sc that it will affect is iup r doi 'iPett is said. "It hasn't been a prbiilem getting lii r tcallisn rhst ision in ti past , and I doi't think it will b ( n( wii . Pettiis did express cilicir: tit hat cuild happen wkithout NC AA cmnstramrik ()j, M o% i (Jlege f ((t ba 11 'atrs. "I thiik it \,mild iirt tf l a zc f ollege nfitbalI i wIc hit (%irex ised," i said. B IIt Pet t I ai d thIIc SEC it)t '4()in 4 1 t (1d)this, 111tetari gaiiir not. iWe're not ging to try and flid IN market vnrs night w% ith games, he said. "That wN uildn't be giodi fur cilige foitibi aid we're not going to iiii it." The N(CAA's television citracts wre eiallenged I ithe 1'nivrsity4if Oklahma and SEC member Unisersity (f Gcongia, two traditionally, big fiiutiall ras. The schiliis centendnie that the contats wre a nmopv iiiaise it See'NCAA .'(rdmi I "ett w, Assist a it (:mw ui onim er ()i h t II ' C, a id nex p g Ir tII x IrI ,\ , I ) (Is I it , rIs I t hr x Iw 11 l (l lit i i ''it isaiii i ds 1 d up m a'In , Al( ard . enk li iii T o i iw ie (I ih kc iihstaiwc,, rififdf ra abb ilrtcT ad \1 ( rc thia i ditf (,r(,n tp-s t i (id . h i ideC in- Sm ticid" aid ierhI frti f stredIi . inthc arm r 1 u tiial ',,(lI Wiigc'Xaribsi i thi at was lesi'eli'ii t 1 'a ''eks ago by a ii AIlachfilia Ciiiiity Siriff's iniisestigatiris bas classifi d a apossiii rson." Damage to the 40 ar-uOld, til- r'iuif'd, wdciien structimi is estimated betwin $125,000 and $t 150,000. Alachua Countis sheriff's spokesiuian Spencer Ma iisaid p lice sass tswot men running front the Aarthousi only an hour before the fire was called in by an unidentified witness. Mann also said some nearby residents told officals they heard a few explosiou-like sounds in the initial stages (f the fire but not after firefighters were at the scene. RAbbie samples were taken by the state fire marshall's Office and are being analyzed to see if the ss'arehouse was intentionally set ablaze. Tfie fire, which took G(1aiiiesciIIe and Alachua firefighters more than 12 hours to put uit, forced the esacuiation of hundreds of norths'est Gainesville residents See 'Fire' next page z .4 Fire location NW 45TH Ave. x NW 39TH Ave. Helmets, air masks, gloves and boots lie amidst the 55-gallon drums that will store the hazardous remains of a toxic fire that leveled the Farmers Mutual Exchange in Northwest Gainesville two weeks ago. The drums later will be shipped to Alabama. State Department of Environmental Regulation officials say there is a possibility the contaminants may seep into the soil or groundwater. Third student official is added to list of absentee leaders By SALLIE HUGHES Algotor Writer A third high ranking Student Govern- ment official has been added to the list of those living away from Gainesville during part of their terms in office. Honor Court Vice Chancellor 1Lisa Donlin now is living in England. IHonor Court Chancellor Randi Drew is leaving for Oxford, England. tonight, as was already reported, to study law. Both plan to return to Gainesville b tue fall semester. Drew said Wednesdav it would not be necessary to transfer his authority to anyone' because the Honor Court anii its Board of Masters have completed the swuork schedfuiedf for summer. "We've already done everything we child have done. I'm ot missing any if the trials," Dresw said. But according to former Htiinor Court Chancellor Todd Bass, the Board of Trustees, which decides cases if SG iiiscondiict, often needs to meet at a iioment's notice. Bass said that even though the summer generally is a slow SG period, "I told mr-y Board of Masters to be on notice because things do come ul quickly and they have to be adjudicated quickly. Studerit Senate President Linda H Irton said ((e such case may ccur soon because the senate Tuesday passed a motion which ciid lead to the expulsion If any seiiators who fail to attend next swek's senate meeting. The senate failed to reach' a quorum for the second consecutive week. According t Htourton, anyis Hnor Court action against the absentee senators would be difficult with Dress' an Donlin wut (f the coufintry. "The trial would take place in the fall. That's all we can do," Horton said. Biuit 'Iress saiI that swtili% fI ib e i'ast' anywa , because senators wiuld have to be invcstigiated by H iour Court staff before the cuirt Attorn' Genral colld feciie Siettier ir not to t ry the case. Htiirton said if intediate action as needed, th senate itself could impeach any,- no-shos s if it attained a quortim. But, with 21 open senate seats ,,lnowi known, and more expected, she said the mily wa' the Senate cOuld attain quorrn would be to get a special ssrit front Drew See'Drew' page four al witsi Si2 tt iCF 'i t heli olr -- , . . .- . E It

Transcript of .1 ate - UFDC Image Array 2

I

* the independent florida

.1 ateVolume 77, No. 162 Thursday Jtine28 1984

Court wrests TV rights from NCAABy JEANNINE LOIACONOAlligator Staff Writer

ti ht ' S. Sipreni C(ourt riied \uednsdias fi that c'Ihgeft b 'd allitiia call evtotiate thii'ir I'a) %I dials fur tlevisiiiic(irac tit i ifi gamiiiis, a right th 1it lilI iI witis as ri' stFrictid t(

's il i1t % I t A urtitir

i i tII i latir hosw hi- rluing ni l vi bir t it' or tIIirS'iitiieasterii ( iiiiiuri'tiu m'limiiiers. It' ufii'tls said tin's'

w dild ()f f cr no camment mit il aii N( ]:A cmiftrcccnder(till this swek in (:hIcago is ver

hll( nxt cvcral swieks will Iiterniti thi future iifecle e io t bl lltclc%1isim o ti th(, asn md m the %car,,

alittil ti I AtIIIIt Wi tiI'i'tttr IiI itarrI sai m a pi r Iar N

t t w ba ea ha i i t Isrt ( i it the c( irt sru i I IVand IIt I '% ithIitriii'%us t l IIs tI i s III)nitth is, ills sltt'IIeiIt vsi

t v' hi t FIltrida wsIll do in ihi tutur ni t i i'frtui gut 'i 'sisiio uii I p irm t ir ai rr sai.ti

Dangerous levels

of arsenic found

at warehouse firery GAIL RAYS

vlol !sI ll %'

j ~ii liii"

) i() I ' it i tItIc II l it lit tiS

it liil.ilaisidmit

Associate Athctic Director j rmyn Focy said, "This is a%(rs .%ich atic situatii that is g(ig to take a lot of plaimiitto work out, and ws havC ( IH()CM1lient at this time."

Iitit St(vse StirrIer, tI foriiiir ("ator (tirterback aiIi196 1 Ic Iiismani i Tr( i)Ihy i wii inir I( no m 1, i( had i'Ic(ach (dth It. SFI , Tampa Bay Banldits s I t hc mIng 4w( '11d fhlppmwcrhousc temir, hlkc T( ;cm rii amndAublri, hiltwsflild hurt smaller progiamis.

''T rich are going to hit riw1r amidi tlh p1)r are goinghi get prer, Spnor it said it . g-it', g to ratee resicnw

for tih, Ig siichonls i and ii h l i th n w h rrith riiritoig. l.Vsirikid wialits ito pla fiitball )II TI\

Sp rricri sald that i" s'rall' ici h t It the ruiilii V w Ias itgiiiiid, but added that ti marketplace ma'i be theii n best %%a\to determine \iiwhich tiaiiis wsire voinig to fiid theiiselVs MInatiti al teltsijsii.

''W hat's hr is fair,'' Stnirer said. ''If there a tiarketfor thiisitea"un to hc m!t\ then thli. hbnt' a iighit til bi lm

hi l did not expect any major cha.s for the' 51F.C ill the aatits t'ams' games arct teivisid.

"I can't sc that it will affect is iup r doi 'iPett is said."It hasn't been a prbiilem getting lii r tcallisn rhst ision inti past , and I doi't think it will b ( n( wii .

Pettiis did express cilicir: tit hat cuild happenwkithout NC AA cmnstramrik ()j, M o% i (Jlege f ((t ba 11'atrs. "I thiik it \,mild iirt tf l a zc f ollege nfitbalI

i wIc hit (%irex ised," i said.B IIt Pet t I ai d thIIc SEC it)t '4()in 4 1 t (1d)this,

111tetari gaiiir not.iWe're not ging to try and flid IN market vnrs night

w% ith games, he said. "That wN uildn't be giodi fur ciligefoitibi aid we're not going to iiii it."

The N(CAA's television citracts wre eiallenged I ithe1'nivrsity4if Oklahma and SEC member Unisersity (fGcongia, two traditionally, big fiiutiall ras. The schiliiscentendnie that the contats wre a nmopv iiiaise it

See'NCAA.'(rdmi I "ett w, Assist a it (:mw ui onim er ()i h t II ' C, a id nex p g

Ir tII x IrI ,\ , I ) (Is I it ,rIs I t hr x Iw 11 l (l lit i i ''it

isaiii i ds 1 d up m a'In ,Al( ard . enk li iii T o i iw ie (I ih

kc iihstaiwc,, rififdf ra abb ilrtcT ad

\1 ( rc thia i ditf (,r(,n tp-s t i (id . h i ideC in-Sm ticid" aid ierhI frti f stredIi . inthc arm r 1 u tiial',,(lI Wiigc'Xaribsi i thi at was lesi'eli'ii t 1 'a ''eks ago by aii AIlachfilia Ciiiiity Siriff's iniisestigatiris bas classifi d

a apossiii rson." Damage to the 40 ar-uOld, til-

r'iuif'd, wdciien structimi is estimated betwin $125,000and $t 150,000.

Alachua Countis sheriff's spokesiuian Spencer Ma iisaidp lice sass tswot men running front the Aarthousi only anhour before the fire was called in by an unidentifiedwitness. Mann also said some nearby residents told officalsthey heard a few explosiou-like sounds in the initial stages(f the fire but not after firefighters were at the scene.

RAbbie samples were taken by the state fire marshall'sOffice and are being analyzed to see if the ss'arehouse wasintentionally set ablaze.

Tfie fire, which took G(1aiiiesciIIe and Alachuafirefighters more than 12 hours to put uit, forced theesacuiation of hundreds of norths'est Gainesville residents

See 'Fire'next page

z

.4

Firelocation

NW 45TH Ave.

x

NW 39TH Ave.

Helmets, air masks, gloves and boots lie amidst the55-gallon drums that will store the hazardousremains of a toxic fire that leveled the FarmersMutual Exchange in Northwest Gainesville twoweeks ago. The drums later will be shipped toAlabama. State Department of EnvironmentalRegulation officials say there is a possibility thecontaminants may seep into the soil orgroundwater.

Third student official is added to list of absentee leadersBy SALLIE HUGHESAlgotor Writer

A third high ranking Student Govern-ment official has been added to the list ofthose living away from Gainesville duringpart of their terms in office.

Honor Court Vice Chancellor 1LisaDonlin now is living in England. IHonorCourt Chancellor Randi Drew is leavingfor Oxford, England. tonight, as wasalready reported, to study law. Both plan toreturn to Gainesville b tue fall semester.

Drew said Wednesdav it would not benecessary to transfer his authority to anyone'

because the Honor Court anii its Board ofMasters have completed the swuork schedfuiedffor summer.

"We've already done everything we childhave done. I'm ot missing any if the

trials," Dresw said.But according to former Htiinor Court

Chancellor Todd Bass, the Board ofTrustees, which decides cases if SGiiiscondiict, often needs to meet at a

iioment's notice.

Bass said that even though the summergenerally is a slow SG period, "I told mr-yBoard of Masters to be on notice becausethings do come ul quickly and they have to

be adjudicated quickly.Studerit Senate President Linda H Irton

said ((e such case may ccur soon becausethe senate Tuesday passed a motion whichciid lead to the expulsion If any seiiatorswho fail to attend next swek's senatemeeting.

The senate failed to reach' a quorum forthe second consecutive week.

According t Htourton, anyis Hnor Courtaction against the absentee senators wouldbe difficult with Dress' an Donlin wut (fthe coufintry.

"The trial would take place in the fall.That's all we can do," Horton said.

Biuit 'Iress saiI that swtili% fI ib e i'ast'anywa , because senators wiuld have to beinvcstigiated by H iour Court staff beforethe cuirt Attorn' Genral colld feciieSiettier ir not to t ry the case.

Htiirton said if intediate action asneeded, th senate itself could impeach any,-no-shos s if it attained a quortim.

But, with 21 open senate seats ,,lnowiknown, and more expected, she said themily wa' the Senate cOuld attain quorrnwould be to get a special ssrit front Drew

See'Drew'page four

al

witsi

Si2 tt iCF'i t heli

olr

--, . . .- . E

It

2, alligator, thursday, une 28, 1984

NCAAcontinuedfrom page one

hinited their natiial I Xappearance,. 'They al argudthat by offering iequal payment r ii'rx pamx tileinix1

lxx NCAA an illegally fixig in'".

Th NCAA has contracts with CBS and ABC tobroadcast 14 aftirnoii pamixi". ach fall. It alnx ian anilparat' agr''mxxit with the Turner Broadcast Syn xixwhich alliw the showing )f 19 gain. ihe NCAA iinit.nihxxls to nix app'aranc('\-nxr i lxwi-year IxriOd. I achbroadcast c'ild n t a in il up to $6i00,000.

But Pettus said i xony' n r x xNis the pit ( thc ixripiualnuit brought apaixnt the NCAA.

'iixy was nvr mentiiid,' he naid. 'It wx brought

because they were contending that the NCAA did not havethe right to say who was going to be on TV and when."

Ptus said he expects college football teams will "notturn their backs on the N(CAA " and will work wihli theNCAA under a newly revised televising plan, or with theColk xFootball Association a groipii of th( majorfootball powers to negotiat' future television contract.

University of Georgia Iliad F itball Coach Vinci'Dl)iley, said his team is planning on "'wiorkin within afrani-work of a national or conference package, " but thatit "astooearly tomakeany d'finitedecisiOnS.

Florida State University Associate Athletic Director Billn(ai lisa id the subject still is i x i the air," and that It(-

C ild not foresee' what woild conx' of it, but his ixaincon(,ern wkas the gamne.

'W' just ant to go II)p to that meeting, pit i a huddleand do wxhat'ver's best for intercollegiat' football," GoisiId.

III 55-gallon drimn. l The barrels must be shipped to linle,Ala., the closest hazardous wanti disposal site, naid Erii(Frey, director of hazard waste for the DEH inJackson villi.

CorrectionStudeint S(eiator Er ( ()x' , eniiate iiisiti wi xas i-

correctl stated iII Teisdax's Alligator. Cox is chairman ofthc Siliate Affairs and Ethis Co ittei.

Today''. forecast: Partly cloudy with a chance of af-tcrnoi andiii xvmnip thiixdrlorml . HiiH in g lshi lth w% tomid 90s (35 C), loxx near 70 (21 C). A eiace ofthim-drltor i rida x , hxih near 90 (32 ')

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Firecontinuedfrom page one

in a five-iuar iile, (x,000 hoi area, and wnt 6 5 peopleto lixal hospital fxxr tr xatment (A r'pliratory and xyproblems.

About 72 pxxpxi living iiar th, itle xno mstd rinkhottid xatir and are nawaing risiit'. lf wil waterniaipls that aria bexixg tisd, ,aid I iciard Archidiaexix,xxi roxiinxx' ea thtix ~rtxxi or th Alachia OinxHealth Department. Ie added that hudid iiot think ihre"lt xwild be p sit iv .

A crew from an enxiioxmental cixai xxicimpaii scaledt H. Matiriaisi inx toxn l 'to ix l x h sitx' ( xiII(, - xwx hich w xw'th x war'hoP' i payn x for the ceaiip. DE f f icials aild thx expect th clai p to cit in x' for at leanteither x xxwxnx'x'ks

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Task force recommends ways to curb sex abuseBy GREG LAMMAlligator Staff Writer

Mandating live-in adult supervisors atLIF fraternities and formalizing their litticsister programs are t\ witwass to reduc th likelihood) if sexual abuse on caricis,according toi a prelimiiiry i drft (f419ricmimenlatiisissued byii i f U specialtask force un student conduct.

The recoiiendations, issued in it 34page reoiirt released Tuesday by the tAkforce that has spent 3 moiiths studyiligthe problem, must be approved b UFPresident Hobert Marston.

Despite protests b cuimmnittmee mber-Jeff Miller, who ailso i lF Interfraternit\

(:(iur i'l Irs ltii, ttiat establi)i g lixt-iv iit x i Ir viitr is aciist l

.wIhit t's sli ttI that x\%iiiildi iot 'uric sxIIalibuisi, tcc mit I fit tee ictn ibers i oted -2 init\ or ()f'thIt(,recom mendat ion .

Miller said he supported establihing thsliit'rxisorx i thor ibut iopiisd them ipracticality because of th $12,00 toS15,(HAtt yiarl ixprisI hyi i 'iiwlil bIriiCh fraternit with

i Ic also said it wmild b iiffectieiecaise the mandate w'ild be resented b

I raternity members.Aware of th financial burden, task 'trnt

members recommended that fratrniciti'sdtionstrating ''iuireasiabl '' financialhardship b exerpt fro mthe iiandate cc

fit' cuindititi tiaI t'h y ac',It ire tIll i(-t aix a"highly com mIi ittetd a dtitl1 I\it-i''' al I IIII i irfaculty advisor.

"III caiitr, x% expect' the flint rdisciple f iost Irater itit's 11to 1imp cxith the prestcit and guildaci f a i se

parent ir resid nt advisrif ,ai ciir,''i" 'oriIuIiIitti members said idI the t rit tci reprt .r

A proiisal to formaliz the rtlatiishilitw'n F and fraternity little sisterprograms by r'gist'rigl the honorary'mrnibership groups as cliIbs icr writingthem Into thci rganizatiial iiic'iments ifUF's :31 frattrnitii', Wiax aipproxtidl\ withlittle d ixcissii n.

( :mnnittce mcerirs did l tii thatbecause' national fratermiti chapters rtist'

ti re<,'gnize little sister programs, for-nalizing thm with th' host fraternities xw.as

1utnlikelvto happen.Marston appited th' task forr to study

th iiitances if sixial abus til campusfollowing public i utrv surrounding arcalltg'd gang rapt' (b six Pi Larmbda Phifraternit rc'ccrt'r last fall. A 1

7-ear-(lId

freshan accused the mr brs if rape, butthe cmitentc 'that she was willing.

Th task fcrc also ricruincendcd that\Iarston:

0 furrcally cint ut iii fit', studcit conductgWil' that sexual abus' iir itrcion will notbc tolerated0 designat scmit rr'id'ncc halls as areashar ig lirmitud' c cppcxii' xi' iitatiui rules

Couple slain in 'one of worst' murders in Marion CountyDt DilI rri^D ltrIby BILL COPPINGERAlligator Staff Writer

"It appears to be a robbery. I've been in thisAn Ocala couple was found shot to death Wednesday business a long time and even this is up-morning in the antique shop they operated just north of s,,gPmCounty Road 318 on I-75 in Marion County, in what selling to me.Sheriff Don Moreland called "one of the worst" murders - Don Morelandhe's seen in the county.

Authorities from the Marion CountvSheriff's office andthe Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDL) they think that the Braminis surprised the thiixei as theswere investigating the scene at the Wayside Antiques store, robbed the store, or that t' ixxailais I as cctcmrs15 miles south of Gainesville near Irvine, throughout theday Wednesday. Marion Count Shcriff's spokesman Kci Ergl' sald that,

The pair, David and Betty Branum, who police said considering x'iere the couple lived in relation to the stori,'were in their 50s, was found shortly after 9 a. m. by Marty "No one could steal something w'ithit them knowing it."Gates, 28, the son of the store owner, Gainesville resident "hromitb' whole'method cf i-wratioi, it appears ioTom Gates. Police said the couple appeared to have been Fhasbmii en wle mpplcexpert in pritit'," Mirt landsaid.dead for several hours.

The Branum's were caretakers of the business for about "It appears to be a professional typce (of criic)," he said.12 years, a Gates family member said. They lived about 50 "It apptartct' a robberv. I'ccicthis iccsrcitalungyards behind the store in a double-ide mobile home. timrc anrn hii t cix rbery.ibis bisignti'."

Although police are unsure of a reason for the crime, Erg' said thi inidentiaprttid m tlilrair'aix-'ell

)m Icighit oit.i"' t Irt c ric sas a rx'r'%cIIorgaiii' 'huf(r n cIith'

c artd ctwflic rpcati furs,' It'saIdI' hlstore sits cii hill overlooking th' intrstat' abut 15

m ilcis cibitn Gait'sville and Ocala.Barbed wirxi surrounds th' 20 acres of property ci which

x ral othcr fanilit's iv. Police stalcd off the propertyliortls after the bodies wre discovcrd, and weire ira-trs tsrIng th' fairili'sc to ascertain wh ther anything was

TI xo%nir of the store, Tom Gat's, sat to th' left of theI for olt'he frot porch of the building srinberly smoking a

pipi, as investigators worked inside to detrmin e wshat hadhapp-lned.

A Gt;" fanilv ru'uuvmctmb'r described the Braiums as''wondrful people. Thuy wr' lik family members. Ve'llmisf's them.'

ff1 icials were processing th' building iII the afternoon,and th'y did not expect to rcmovc the bodies until early

\\'dccisdayi night.

Panel: Young voters' apathy will allow drinking age hikeBy GREG LAMMAlligator Staff Writer

Political inactivity among young voting-age Americans is the reason national leadersare likely to easily establish the country'slegal drinking age at 21, the leader ofFlorida's student lobbyist group saidWednesday.

The Senate Tuesday passed a bill by avote of 81 to 16 that would reduce federalhighway road cNtiirction funds for statesthat fail to raise the drinking age to 21. Atthe sane time, the measure rewards statesthat enact mandatory sentences for drunkendrivers.

This bill follows a similar mc alreadyapproved by the House. President leagan is

expected to sign the proip sal, -whic' x asheavily supported by anti-driuink drivinggroups, into law.

Both Hius' and Senate bills wcldl girt'states twyears to conform

Fred Kittinger. executive director )f theFltrida Student Associatimi, called thenational bill discriminatoryy" and a slap-in-the- face ftco Fllrida leaders tiio cat'decided for the past xxwi years, after lengthdebate, not to raise the stat's drinking age.

"It's a statement that people if ag's IS to21 are not that politically active," Kittinigursaid. 'It's easier for clii'(%i11akers ticcverlmck yci.

Arc aide t ) Sei. Patila Ilass kiuas k :s, - .,xx ho sted n for the bill, said I list ki ii is

c'cn'inccd pelc undur 21 ar it adultcnouvih to bc reqsponsible drinker .

"Tih sicnator belicvs that th maturityltcc itl those cdrinkers under 21 issuchxthatxth' are wt afe when th c drink," MarsPilaxik said.IP tasik said I awskins alsi ixupjmrtcd the

bill to climnatc bltdrI borders" betweensits with differing drinking agi' law" 'hctururagi's undcrage drlickrs ill ICstat to t ra t urto a rbcrd rirg siftat' s hrcth'y cain drink lucalt>

iSte' Liner,m] a s f rida'

D cpartmrt ct '(sTraws rtatioi, suit itFIorida lcadcrs mt ot 1t) abidc b% th<m ailre, tl s itati c cd i lup tosmuiliun iuiuftr'rai'llhicchuru f undus.

Iincr sad that state leaders nprohablsri uld cbscrv' th' mandate because the''wxcuuld stint fur xci' tih si' funds purt's'rs''d."

But Ich cpinted i ct that leaders alsowicld ha c to fr'igh the fact that they

trubl -1st' millions if dollars in touristrusc runt'unf'rom cll'gt'cu-ag' students wchis tflu)k to Floridactas bach's during springbreak 'ach sear.

GIs . Bob Grahiam's presstcrtary, SteveIIull stic, said the i go rn r o p tss the

r lbc'aus' it imp s 1' l lithe rights ifstilt's.I is against f-ruonurss cdiii ating rto sats

iat the stat drinckiug ag shiciulhu'd bcb11s11 cW ruin' tactics sIch a taking assa%lideral thierur as Ic1d".

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Drewcontinuedfrom page one

approvin the no n" 1"'n istabtion (d rephacernent

" T hi l t ni d i ai I dt;,,\ (, to cilll H a n d % \ t

')rr-ss ,jjud lii- alc-ails 1 t il pila s to l \ t is, I)xford11111ber %kith hIk a iR anld pn inttd ()[It thiat tilc "a ne

rp ri n~c \with r-cpha cii -tit scinitors had IIr cde~ ;it thc-u r f SliI iII! it

Ii a l) lcl Ill tol iicl~- tit Id lc a Iciss Ii

lriwr M Trcia urir \ uirk Fidler against Sthiiii-t hiB \.I( '11 ( tcimitoi

114 haa e III, .111 to att-e l ;I "l- w e k H ()T (

S i s illi- i S li tii I ne Ft. V 1( IIII ti1lt- qiiim Diii I pIlit i t(-Ih h b a liii (I1i TI i it tilil

()ilu to[ VIII li iic 'd t) I(, It I I Iii 11cujeutalull t it i s li btuli h s d d d t111.

Iii iii iii ;AI d i ,%l Ii a I It 1)('11w til l ill ' ir .(.

( if f1 I c f I

IME YOU STARTED

Brennan's absence was approved by the UF ad-riristration. Drew has said iis absence also was approvedh\ Tigert officials.

Assist ant D-ai1 fur iStudent Aflairs Mary Skorheim would

sot ;s s hicrli cIDii ii aimsha li btn expiltd, Citingli- drca i stu in t <nrif id rntialits las s.

lBIt i>A the thr, nr(il cBrennian, as stuiiernit budls

ic-sirlrkrit,- is xlressls iciscri by the cnistititiii>n, h si-licciirrs hiri to be r ci-stcird as a i -fulltime std-nt <during

ti-girtlin is idefinedb \ thI cirstitution as beingcriic>lle ai hIIaviing iii i i-r ciusss. tBrir ran sd iris not

>av iii ihis () t (:t raining arin lAiC tig It (i)T(" iMn iriatrur Capt . I awsr(r-i(-

ir-rll r -i ih, )T stiidvints rccei- aiproximate-I $600 for ia111m n llih ltfi(A I ralining.

.)k'rbicm ,a'dshI(, wmildnot c~mmicent ()itBrcmian' ,casci cl clf l ii lit iha it ii itmic iit i irva inrzati ai s ' sr>

c siris t i t hut tat ll clitrative p lic rli the c i rt ii , I)r-\ St \\ro(: "i t w u ab highlycititi sll I i rriirislPcldjit Bemi '

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n

alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984, 5

NASA: Fuel valve fail ure caused shuttle delayBy DAVID ALEXANDER CYRILAlligator Writer

Although the shuttle crew may have beenin some danger Tuesday when a fuel valvemalfunctioned and led to a fire, thedanger was much less than it could havebeen if the valve had malfunctioned aftertakeoff, a NASA spokesman said.

A computer aboard the Discoveryautomatically shut down the two $35million engines that had been started, andprevented ignition of the solid rocketboosters when a main fuel valve malfunc-tioned. The shuttle's third engine neverstarted.

A fire that scorched about 25 square feetof the shuttle's rear control rocket nozzleswas quickly extinguished by ground crews,said Jim Mizell, a NASA spokesman.

Everyone dealt with the problems in avery professional manner, he said.The fire resulted when pockets of

hydrogen, which usually are left behindwhen the shuttle takes off, had gatheredunder the shuttle and ignited.

The fire caused "very little significantdamage," Mizell said. A few wires thatwere scorched by the fire may have to bereplaced.

The maiden voyage of the )iscoverv hasbeen delayed at least until after next week,Mizell said. Crews are inspecting the shuttlenow to see what tests need to be done beforethe launch.

Tuesday's delay came 24 hours after adelay on Monday caused byi a backupcomputer malfunction.

Another computer functioned correctlyTuesday in shutting down the launch just2.6 seconds before the shuttle's solid

boosters were scheduled to ignite.The computer decides which of several

abort actions to take if there are problemsby the length of time the engines have beenrunning, Mizell said. Tuesday's abort was ared light signal (RLS) abort.

Had the failure occurred after the shuttlealready was iff the ground, a return tolansding site (HTlS) abort would have beenimplemented. In this most dangerous typeof abort, the solid rocket boosters and ex-ternal fuel tank would have been jettisonedand the shuttle would have come aroundand landed back at Cape Canaveral.

"That's why the fog (that covered therunway early Tuesday) worried us," Mizellsaid. "The pilots have to be able to see howto get back in the event of an abort."

Had the shuttle experienced difficultiesafter it already was into its flight, a trans-Atlantic abort (TIA) would have beenimplemented.

In this type of abort, the shuttle wvoildland oi a runway' in Dakar, Senegal, anorth African country, Mizell said. For thistype of abort, a ground cress' is maintainedat the runway close to the i u clean.

If the shuttle had fliw' past Africa, aiiabort once around (AOA) WOuld have beenimplemented. In this type of abort, theshuttle would fly once around th earth all(]Iand back at Edwards Air Force Base nearthe Miojave Desert in California.

Mizell said tlir shuttle's crew has prat-ticed all these abort procedures ili asimulator.

In the event of a serious tiergency,several options are open to the sliittle crewin evaciating the ship. The ciill either

Shutiabort optionsChe"I

return to landing sitetd light stop

ChoiceStrans-otlantic abort

Choice 4

abort once around

Capel Canaveral

Florida

KEdwards USA

Air ForceBase, California

JEFF GICK ALLIGATOR

slid- diiw a 1,200-foot w'ire in baskets and scape craft.then leav the pad in an armored carrier, or But emergency evaciation was notthey could take as -levator to a protected necessary, and the crew calmly exited fromroom ineath the pad. As a last resort, the the shuttle about 40 minutes after theCOUld sject themsIves from th ship in an schedtild 8:43 a. in. liftoff.

Discovery delay continues history of shuttle problemsBy DAVID ALEXANDER CYRILAlligator Writer

Problems and accidents have plagued United Stateshuman space flights from their beginning with Mercury in1961,

And 20 years later, with the inception of the spaceshuttle program and the Columbia's first attempted liftoffin April 1981, the problems have continued.

No shuttle has yet lifted off for its maiden voyagewithout having some difficulties. Recent problems with thi-Discovery have delayed its first launch indefinitely.

Small and large problems have hampered the slihttleprogram:I

0 The Columbia lost or damaged msany of its heat-protecting shields on its first mission, in April 1981.

M The second flight of the Columbia, in November1981, was cut short by 70 hours after a fuel cell malfunc-tion.

0 The third flight of the Columbia, March 1982,resulted in the loss of more heat-protecting tiles, and therewere problems with the ship's toilet.

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On th- fourth flight if the Columbia, Jui 1982, thetw'o $25 million solid bostr rockets sunk in th- Atlantic.

* Spacesuits malfinctiored ss- ithe fifth flight iftheColumbia in November 1982, prveiiting schsduldsp)acess alks.

0 The sixth flight if th Columbia, in Novembei r 1983,was hamiier-cd bi a cmuiit-r failur- that dllayid laiidingfor nearly cight hiurs.

0 The first flight if thi Challtngier, it January 1983.wsas dlas id 2.5 months by niigin c-aks asd also iwas

uiisticcessful in sitting a satellite iito its plai d irblit.0 On Challeng-r, second flight- in February 1984, two

more satellites were plat'cd in impr p-r Orbits asiid aballoon that ssas to hav beei used to practice shuttl-manctuvers blww up.

But problems sith space flights start i iig befre thshuttle program ssas developed. A feif thi- iimri srriisspace flight failur-s:

0 In 1965, Gemini 6 was hampired by an engine failuiresimilar to the r-cent Dicsotcer iigin failur-. A plasticc-rver was left n a fu- liise, which halted takeff 2.2

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COMICS * SC-I B OCKS e MACSETGAMES * POSTERS

I Sale -Sale - Sale* Fone-c- Borgvtns & Pres AN dvy 0 BvoomC con

Ensue, is, 5Pa canse sIper custvmHour.: M-s 9 .m.

1122W.UnI.Av s 374-8593 Sun.1e.'

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secids before launch.N In 1967, Apollo rupted in flames, killing its three

astronauts, when a short circut ignited its cabin's pureux'gn atmosphere.

N In 19710, Apollo 13 was ablrrted 329,915 kilmetersf rom the Earth when an oxygen tank exploded.

hlle space program sf the Soviet Union has had its shar-if problems. A few Russion mishaps:

N i 1967, hiring the re-entry, Soiuz 1 crashed 'herits landing chute failed, killing a csmonaut.

0 In 1971, a failure is iai air valve caused cabildecmipressii on the Souz 11, killing three cuismoniauitsduring re-ntrs.

0 1ii 1974, Soisruz 1.5 was forced to make an emerge-i.elanding after a docking failure that destroyed Salsut '3.

N In 1982, during the Salyut 7 mission, an attempt to

put a irian-nt base in space, a leaky propellant systemiidestroyed rarly half if the ship's steering jets. An att-ipt18 daYs later to rescue tws'i c-usmonauts stranded in t hlstation also ws'as a failure. The ship with fresh suppliers NitCuruw -xploed, but ths c-smonausts s-scaped.

adds life.Dr. John Johnston

"UF Insuran ce A cce pted' 373-5510

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'I6, alligator, thursday, tune 28, 1984

Opinions

Throw 'em out

liclationis bcbtwcrn Stmicent 0),,crient andlTigert I lall art getting a bit to> cozy, if yon askus. It seers that whan an elected student t leaderwants to betray the interetts ar( trust o>fthe

student bd , all it takes is ,I perfunctory nod(frtiti sorte ttidd ( ' 'l I igrl adrii tstrattor toclear the way.

ThU iSsIIu here I, absciit-c lead r- i, aod ithia rae'ac lid ctnic e ra prtptIrtio til i lith, laI

few wXec'ks. St if finials a ' tther' is it ratiti

thii in s cai o rit r it' wItofll tilt' o < 1 t k )lii

( f 1 (1 lw iI It r i i In th rIitis" :

Y I st Id ilt yI I prtIN id iti I rIgh t m

sloit I throi i hMt ()T (:basictrait 'i lltilltht io t > ks i if Nm ti (:arolina;[th, Il t r r

Xb ltlc t hei ilw 111 h ihsl l sit u<Ic t 'i'licial d 'I cc ,

ta ril iii ii i a rLi I t illt t 1llI bIt I t

F'1_Itt t tt t it iic f" )if Iif I It , \'1' t (Ii I S Xl h I

%%Itll ii tlliIca t\ lit( titti1 ,1It I It i I t I I'lI :

I d i l nIi Ill( ' tIIf I i I 1 iitt I l' lI f I

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I I I i\% tI i t1, t1It i i ill I t';1 1( 1 XXII1 '1 l1

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pr) I I Ik I t B If \ iv 1 t a t 'itII fi II i p( I I I

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w l Gpr . ntlyamiwidsth coraiMdArwB,S nd ( . a is i\ ia , former hcad <(,fth16 rME reaur\ P )icc wll) wa :rvimovc( tI d tl y ww

h% d teru I roclcctric utilit- - C I .VAik, 1n\ action ai 't mihltar\ officer, ,,peciall if

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alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984, 7

OpinionShould the student body president be above UF law?

I (-an no Iiger resistt he urge to deer tlihcx bysmial lackif respect for b)th student buds law and university

regulatiis in tlhe cmit Iinititiincg miitrovers\ over OscarBrennanis six-week paid leave () Iitbien ice imI his jo)b aspresident 04 the student teds

It woiid appear that ( iar it'i-s mlallgaie Brci-anhas kept himself well , ilthri-s that others mistfill \ a ith the full suppms i l I utitFadmiist rstinMI

i1st r-centll, this sais hindistratim nimed 21 sti'dntsenators ot it) office I1 r not msiuuii i tie rei sren-its i tfitud tI ds lass a dI uIn ir it rIgII IIt is b\ s I) ic itimaiiitaitiing lfll timus status 'is sild-iits 'ss - tuimluitSiiatc Prcsident t (;rig Ott did iot escapthIiad

mi istration ' axe W haPt is he s< urnice betwn b.1tcllatf, pre"'ident and stiudent hb d% pwsidcli A i w -cit1

thcrm 1 a bi differ(1cc.Jot a ciipl f \ eks is, i -k lilii luil obargs

against niBr ua , citing that I ss ins im i lat s sud -. fralstatlite" cm situational iro i is rid l iuis rsitsrcutilatihi.s . A brief 1I(k at th c ifitIII. andregiilati s , Nill reveal this to be true

First, stiui aent bods lass 32:3.4 gis es is ai iiidicatissu ifwhat type of responsibility wi can expect froti ir studentleaders. It states, "it following uideli t-s shall be used

GUS KEIN

A Conservative Viewfor unacceptable reasons for absences front the regularSenate meetings . . . :4. Out of towsn trips not pertaining

to approved Student Senate, Student tGs-eratneit orUniversity of Florida business . . . 5. Regular eiuilsymix'isettschedules.-

Although Brennan is not a student senator, ifi( wutuldthink that his more important office would wsarrant greaterattention than a Student Senate seat. Apparently, he doesnot feel this way. Having executed i contract with the U.S.Army, as required by students entering the advance courseof Army ROTC, tie receives $100 per month it addition to

the sieral thousand dollars ie receivs from the studeitbity. This activity is unrelated to SG and alss is a ruguilar

emlilyms cit schedule.Nxt, studit btmdy law )700.31 status that "Candidates

for resident , ice resident and Treasurer shall tIet thefolisawing stualifications: 1. Registered as a full timststudent . . . "One wsuild think atus feble minded in-dividual wiuld b abl to s cthe intent f this law. If thatis rot possible, the Student Body Cistitution (Article :3,

Sectis 2) clarifies this further: "The President, ViccPresident and Treasurer shall b repuiired to niiiroll for all

termss if said year. Erillisment shall be defined as com-pleting registration for classes and paying (if required

nrllitment fees." Brennan has riot registered for summer sirpaid any fees to the uniersit. -

()f cuirs, whiui Iiiuor C>urt (hief Juistics Randyis Ir(wreceived the charges filed by Fishr, he declined to rviswthem, citing that it was the iversity's decision. That may

be so, et it is interesting to note that Drew also is leavitown and also has a vested interest in seeing tthis cuititroversy dit i;uickly. He should have delegated thirespinsibility to another justice of the court for review .

I ask the actinistration for an explanation as to th'blatant Mc-iisistencies in its policies toward studetleaders. In light of the abve, the administration(, task i,quite formidable. What is the difference between a seat<president and a student Idy president? There should bnone. As for Oscar Brennan, he should do his job sru uit.

-which I think tie has done through abdication. We ought to.put someone un the payroll who will work. In Oscar'.ballgame, the bttom of the ninth inning has arrived. Let'

see hi lig hei s-an rule above the law before he strikesmit.Gus Kin is a junior in liberal arts and scieitiss and acouncilman on Iit UF Coll(gc Republican ExcutivCouncil.

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J44

R a p e nro%, y a d t 0"', misunderstanding crimeMyth # 1:tape *jds , . ; 1

Foci: Hapt is1" t . d % lh ,l" 10osM If desire . ! - Thu-- . a y r i1 s

trc plan ned the jp Iac, J' a r 1a 11 VI tIn t I I c It I I ed . r th 1 1111m 1,,cI bI r atl I t soi h . aII it it It Ii

is (d t s cihIrI, hfr in ' a xIalr'(,!atiV )1 .Myth # 2: It is the urnsu ibilims ml th-

ivictis that Iroduces irapeFact: The ralsist is looking fir ithe ri gltcoibination o uf cI)pp)rt iIuIitv aIIs Iulinerabuility. Anyis% ss sIuI m nI, r acirdI ss (Ilage, physical appearance, marital status,ethnic, religious or socioeconomicbackground can be -- and lias beenraped.Myth # 3: If you are going t hibe raped,you might as well relax andh enjoy it.Fact: Victims' responses to rape reflectthat the violence and intense trauia ofthe event wcas neither relaxing nor en-joyable. According to one survey, afterbeing ralped.

4-( reported feeling afraid of men28% said it affected their sex lives27" , - ,-' , ' in mii re

afraid of being on their oxvi237 said it damaged their trust iIImale-female relationships

17 felt hostile toward men

Myth # 4: Th m %0i,

Fact: It 50 ~ m :-

t tim k11 1 h r 'tt a k r 1 a basuialls I 0t 0 emto l

kui w tox Ohvi0i 111 nd r Illr--Itiushipsl- thIi t o e n r al utrust, i . . si ris ils I ils I fri t iils

i'i55e5 iighbls n rru latus s-.

Myth # 5: Must rap-s hap in twstreit-Fact: Approximatelx' half of all reporttd-rapes occur ethnic usth ictitm's ho -icorin the home of the attacker.Myth # 6: Hape will never happen toMe.Fact: If sou are a female, there is a 1-in-

10 chuatuce that yui will be a victim ofsexual assault sometime in your life. leiand boys also are victims of rape.

Myth # 7: Women havec rape faiitasitsthat reflect their desire to be I

Fact: As MollyI Haskill points out ill

"The 2,000 Year (Ad Misuncderstandinug:Iape Fantasy,"

For a woman to fantasize rape in thecorrect sense of the terra would be to

hu t ,(-I I n t 1fi

t sir. ( I is i quustussuu I I i u his I ti i

m (m tniiil Iit riind nml i s u u u shi u III

hs y ins inaiin x rw u h

Myth #8 8"- l t n il iir rt I Iss m u1- . sd t l ii . the ir 111 s" "tscrss" rl s"wi r sslIIi u ti i s " ""y usm-si s tI

i I IIi r . r p ,th ti s ne r i

Fact: I-I 0 s tstssisuss Is hitt sisls'-4 Ito 5-nyt if re rit r t s are r ssps t sdl

to be false. This corresponds with falss-riports for stu r violent crimes. NesYork police ex-suad statistics indicatetit only :3.4 percent of ra complaintsare unfounded, a rate comparable to

those of other felonies. When a lawenforcement agency recs-ivus a complaintif a criminal nature, and the in-

vestigation that follows disclosts that anoffense neither has occurred nor n as-xattempted, that complaint is -un-founded." Of the number of "iu-founded" rape complaints reported tothe Ness' York Police Department, only

1 1 p r I wI r I th s- I

Myth# #9: \mli\ e p

Fact: Iap- Is us i it riis us i Ii11(arl. 9, prcent)f rciplrted rap-s, i

Sus -i, usschlmigicxl nt si tsmi -It lmossit h s ul sian us hi i I his uux1l0

11 isk tosuai pe ls liks' Ib(m114

Myth # 10: rapist j uiuira/ s-durI nlgd

Fact: \lsst rapist arc at- latupsr-l s invuulsued iii partnership : usman.

ar marriusd tutm es with fillies. TllCMt Isfrom all educatiial, sc-

'uipaitisraal.rciil atn( Icsiltural

Ibi ikgisr isitds. I hyI is do) st stiffsr fruIIinormal pI pulatiMisus l persmialitx

,corf-s.

Vic-titms its ths ,area art service b thufolluswsing xaiencies:UF campus:

The Sexual Assault Becovery Service,392- 1171

The COunseling Center, 392-1575Women's Walk-Itn Services, 392-1575University Police Department, 392-

1111Alachua County:

Rape Victim Advocate Program

tj

JL m. I I mi

1 5 A - -- -- - - - Imw w a 14ftere v v 0

I'F stuu I lBodyl i-siii-u I Isir lrenn-t i show/i us Ti ar! ipating in llM TC' s.rurcs'si 1 sas scoI uI idr firs rc-sntl1j fo,psusi/slu- tislsitissuis if Sf ni/i-s.

U

210 Faculty Members Promoted,Tenured; Some Both at Same Time

I

dowment for the Humanities. He serv- Metallurgical Society of the American tion Fellow f-- the New York Zoologicalea in l9'l-/fJ as acting project director Institute of Metalldrgical and Mining Society, an in 1979 was an Indo-for the program which continues to Engineers, past national director American the Fulbright Interna-bring together the professions with the (three terms) of the National Associa- tional Sc rs Exchange Program.humanities. tion of Corrosion Engineers, past chair- Dr. Auffenberg received the Ph.D. inAs a consultant, Dr. Schaub has pro- man of the DEPTH Committee of the 1956 and the M.S. degree in 1953, bothvided assistance to the U.S. Federal National Organization of Heads of from the University of Florida; and theHighway Administration, The Florida Departments of Material Science and B.S. in biology in 1951 from StetsonDepartment of Natural Resources, Engineering; and he has served on University. He performed graduateHumble Oil Co., Consolidation Coal Co., numerous panels and review commit- study in zoology at Harvard in 1955 andthe West Virginia State Road Commis- tees for the National Academy of curriculum study at the University ofsion, the Appusacluan Power Co., Sciences. He participates in several Colorado from 1959 to 1963.The University of Fionda is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative ActionI

The 210 University of Florida facul- Associate Professor - J. F. Collins, M. TENURED: Associate Professor J. F.ty members listed below have been pro -B. Hall and D. C. Sarrett. TENURED: Scott; Assistant Professor - E. P.moted and/or approved for tenure by Professors D. W. Legler and D. R. Graham. PROMOTED: To Professorthe Board of Regents. There were 147 McNeal; Associate Professor C. B. - R. G. Langford (T), J. L. Ward (T)faculty members who received promo- Walker. and A. Wehlburg IT).tions and 125 who received tenure, EDUCATION FLORIDA STATE MUSEUMsome receiving both at the same time. TENURED AND PROMOTED: To PROMOTED: To Distinguished Ser-Faculty who were promoted but were Associate Professor - S. L. Krogh and vice Curator: - W. Auffenberg (T); Toalready tenured are designated with D. D. Ross. TENURED: Associate Pro -Curator - N. H. Williams (T).(T). Most of those promoted who are fessor J. Archer. PROMOTED: To Pro- HEALTH RELATEDnot yet tenured, are in tenure accruing fessor - L. M. Crocker (T), L. L. ' PROFESSSIONSpositions which will merit their ap- Lamme (T), W. M. Parker (T), S. E. TENURED: Professor M. A.plication for tenure at a later date. Schwartz (T); To Associate Professor Clendenin.- E. S. Amatea (T). IFASARCHITECTURE ENGINEERING TENURED AND PROMOTED: ToTENURED AND PROMOTED: To TENURED AND PROMOTED: To Professor - K. R. Reddy; To AssociateAssociate Professor - R. H. Schneider, Associate Professor - E. T. Dugan. Professor - J. M. Bennett, W. G. Bog-L. J. Strange, and W. L. Tilson. TENURED: Professors J. L. Ham- gess, E. B. Bolton, T. K. Broschat, D.TENURED: Professor R. E. Cox. mack, F. J. Taylor and W. Viessman; G.Burch, D. E. Canfield, G. E. Fitz-PROMOTED: To Professor - R. W. Associate Professors - L. H. Oliver patrick, D. M. Flinchum, H. L. Gholz,Haase (T), G. D. Ridgdill (T), G. Schef- and S. Tfekci; Assistant Professor - E. P. Lincoln, R. E. Litz, R. P. Muraro,fer (T), J. M. Trimmer (T). F. E. Fagundo. PROMOTED: To J. W. Prevatt, J. A. Rutledge, S. 0.BUSINESS Distinguished Service Professor - J. Ryan, F. M. Shokes, M. F. Smith, R. K.ADMINISTRATION H. Schaub ( T ) and E. D. Verink (T); Sprenkel, C. D. Stanley, C. E. White.TENURED AND PROMOTED: To To Professor - L. W. Couch (T) and J. TENURED: Professors R. Baker, M.Associate Professor - S. S. Kramer, J. F. Mahoney ( T); To Associate Pro- D. Corbett, E. P. Gibbs, W. J. Kender,G. Lynch. TENURED: Associate Pro- fessor - H. W. Hamacher and P P. J. E. Marion; Associate Professors C.fessors - H. P. Benson and C. A. Khargonekar; To Associate Research R. Anderson. K. L. Buhr. A. R. Chase,Schriesheim. PROMOTED: To Pro- Scientist - G. R. Best. E. C. Greiner, J. S. Shonkwiler; Assis-fessor - J. L. Kramer (T). FINE ARTS tant Professor G. W. Tanner. PRO-DENTISTRY TENURED AND PROMOTED: To MOTED: To Professor - A. Ali (T), M.TENURED AND PROMOTED: To Assocint Professor - N . Smith. J. Bassett (T), D. W. Gorbet (T), W. T.

Four Faculty Members Are NamedTo Distinguished Service Positions

Three University of Florida faculty ,'members have been namedDistinguished Service Professor andone has been named Distinguished Ser-vice Curator, bringing to 15 the totalnumber of faculty members currentlyon campus who have been singled outfor "outstanding accomplishments inteaching or service work." There havebeen 28 named to the special positionsince its inception in 1971. The othersha metied.ns are made by depart- HARRER SCHAUB VERINK AUFFENBERGment chairpersons with approval from several educational institutions and other professional societies on an ac-deans. Final selection is made by the other groups. tive basis.University's Personnel Board, com- The author of more than 40 publica- As consultant, Verink has advised theprised of administrators and faculty tions, Dr. Schaub is co-editor of two Aluminum Association, the Sandiamembers, with approval by the Presi- books, Engineering and the Corporation and Materials ,Con-dent. In addition to the honor, the rank Humanities and Engineering Profes- sultants, Inc., a corporate entity whichcarries additional pay. sionalism and Ethics. His interests in- he serves as president. He was chair-GUSTAVE HARRER clude engineering education, highway man of the UF president's search ad-Director of libraries since 1968 Dr. construction and soils research. visory committee.Gustave Harrer has an international He is a Fellow of the American Socie- Dr. Verink served the ALCOA Cor-reputation for his work in computer ty of Civil Engineers. portion as an engineer and managerautomation in libraries and his ties to Dr. Schaub previously taught at from 1946 to 1959, following his U.S.the Association of Caribbean Universi- Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Purdue Navy service. He received the Ph.D.ty, Research and Institutional University, and West Virginia Univer- and M.S. degrees from Ohio StateLibraries. That organization recently sity, where he was chairman of civil University in 1965 and 1963, respective-named him an honorary life member engineering and then associate dean. ly; and the B.S. in 1941 from Purdueas a member of the Organizing Com- At UF, Schaub holds the position of af- University.mittee in 1969, a member of the first filiate professor of history. He receiv- WALTER AUFFENBERGExecutive Council, subsequently with ed the Ph.D. from Purdue in 1960; Dr. Walter Auffenberg, curator oftwo terms on the Council and a term as M.S.C.E. from Harvard in 1949; and herpetology and professor of zoology,President. BSCE from Virginia Polytechnic in came to UF in 1956. A teacher/resear-Also past chairman of the 1948. He performed post-graduate work cher in tropical biology, he is involvedSoutheastern Library Network's Board in the history of science and technology with the systematics, ecology andof Directors, Harrer came to UF from at the University of London's Imperial behavior of large reptiles, particular-Boston University, where he was direc- College in 1975-76. ly caranid and iguanid lizards, as welltor of libraries from 1960 to 1968. He ELLIS VERINK as land tortoises. He has research pro-previously served as assistant director A nationally known expert in jects underway in Florida andof libraries at Stanford, 1957-59. He metallurgical engineering, Dr. Ellis southeast Asia. He is working on com-received the M.A. in Germanic Verink came to UF in 1965 and has puter analysis of the courtship ofLanguages and the Ph.D. in Germanic served since 1973 as chairman of the alligators.Languages and Linguistics from the materials science and engineering Author of almost 100 articles,University of North Carolina in 1950 department. In 1979, Dr. Verink was manuscripts and other publications,and 1953, and the M.S. in library named UF Faculty Teacher-Scholar, Dr. Auffenberg has been recipient of 25sciences from the University of Illinois the highest annual faculty honor grants during his tenure at UF.in 1954. bestowed by the University. He is a fellow of the AmericanJAMES SCHAUB His fields of interest are in corrosion Association for the Advancement ofChairman of the UF Department of and metals selection. He has been in- Science.Civil Engineering since 1969, Dr. vited to serve as keynote speaker or He has served as a National ScienceJames Schaub has sought to align lecturer at major conferences, Foundation Consultant to Madurai (In-ethics and humanism with his profes- seminars and workshops around the dia) University, a USAID Consultant tosion. He was project co-investigator for world, including in Brazil, Venezuela, Bombay (India) University, and aEngineering/Humanities of the Belgium, England and Poland. Biological Sciences Curriculum StudyHumanities Perspectives on the Profes- The author of more than 75 articles, Consultant for Israel, Uruguay, Argen-sions program, begun at UF in 1976 pamphlets and other publications, Dr. tina and other areas. He has been aunder sponsorship of the National En- erink is president-elect of the research association and a Conserva-

Employer

U lSITY

GESTIIProduced by the Division of Informationand Publications Services and paid for afusual advertising rates to communicate

official notices & important information tostudents faculty & staff at the Universityof Florida.

Haller (T), D C. Herzog (T), D. M.Janky (T), F. A. Johnson (T), P. G.Koehler (T), P. M. Lyrene (T), F. G.Martin (T), J. W. Mishoe (T), H. N.Nigg (T), D. C. Sharp (T), A. A.Staughn (T),rJ. H. Tai (T),rD. W. Webb(T); To Associate Professor - R. M.Schireman and W. D. Shoup; ToAssociate Research Scientist - S.Narang and L. Ou.

JOURNALISMAND COMMUNICATIONS

TENURED: F. L. Smith. PRO-MOTED: To Professor - R. L. Kendall(T).

LAWTENURED AND PROMOTED: To

Professor - G. L. Dawsonr M. A.Oberst and W. F. Taylor. TENURED:'Professor M. M. Criser. PROMOTED:To Associate Professor - S. J. Willis.

LIBERAL ARTSAND SCIENCES

TENURED AND PROMOTED: ToProfessor - E. F. Bejel; To AssociateProfessor - R. L. Jimenez, D. S. Jones,S. G. Kosch, L. J. Iambardino A. R.Matheny, M. L. Radelet, H. H. Rennert,0. M. Schutte. TENURED: GraduateResearch Professors E. R. Andrew, R.F. Berkhofer, R. M. Hare, D. B. Rut-man; Professor R. J. Bartlett, J. E.Rowe and N. S. Sullivan; AssociateProfessors S. L. Detweiler, W. C. Parr,S. E. Sanderson, N. J. Smith, R. A.Yost. PROMOTED: To Professor - A.G. Agresti (T), G. E. Bowes (T), R. H.Carpenter (T), J. Casagrande (T), C.C. Chu (T), P Feinsinger (T), S. M.Golant (T), I. M. Lasiecka (T), M. M.Malvern (T), L. J. Severy (T), J. B.Twitchell (T); To Associate Professor- J. Glover, A. J. Rosalsky (T), PSikivie; To Associate Research Scien-tist - R. B. Piercey.

MEDICINETENURED AND PROMOTED: To

Associate Professor - S. P. Baker, R.B. Marcus, A. B. Peck, J. C. Peterson,E. G. Ryerson, J. H. Silverstein, C. M.Tylkowski, R. E. Vuchinich, C. M. West.TENURED: Associate Professors M.Anderson, R. L. Bucciarelli, P. Mehta,M. K. Raizada, R. G. Maurer, G. E.Merwin, F. Moazam; Assistant Pro-fessor M. B. Resnick, A. F. Sullwold, C.A. Williams. PROMOTED: To Pro-fessor - R. K. Blashfield (T), C. A.Crandall (T), J. P. Krischer (T), L.Wajsman; To Associate Professor - D.J. Barrett, R. F. Davis, G. W. Devane,N. L. Edwards, A. L. Harwood, K. R.Kellner (T), P. W. Stacpoole.

NURSINGPROMOTED: To Professor - M. A.

White (T).PHARMACY

TENURED AND PROMOTED: ToAssociate Professor - M. J. Katovich.PROMOTED: To Professor - R. J.Bergeron (T) and L. S. Hendeles (T).

PHYSICAL EDUCATIONTENURED: Associate Professors W.

W. Chen and D. F. Foulk. PROMOTED:To Professor - P. D. Welch (T) and N.S. Whiddon (T).

UNIVERSITY LIBRARIESTENURED AND PROMOTED: To

Distinguished Service Professor - G.

I 1]

A. Harrer; To Associate UniversitLibrarian - R. H. Howe, L. F. LeonardR. F. Phillips, J. B. Treadwell.TENURED: University Librarian S. E.Ives; Associate University Librarian C.H. Fellows and M. K. Hruska. PRO-MOTED: 'Ib University Librarian - N.F. Pope (T); To Associate UniversityLibrarian - G. T. Cornwell.

VETERINARY MEDICINETENURED AND PROMOTED: To

Associate Professor - M. S.Bloomberg, E. R. Jacobson and C. W.Lombard. TENURED: Associate Pro-fessors R. M. Bright, M. Brown, V. M.Shille; Assistant Professor - L. L.Werner. PROMOTED: To Professor -D. D. Buss (T), J. W. Harvey (T), I. G.Mayhew (T); To Associate Professor-P. T. Colahan (T), L. M. Hutt Fletcher,R. B. Parker (T), L. C. Peyton (T).

ow

8, alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984

I~ I I I I , . .

S E44 IT E TtERIT A IM N T S PI rM1E T

7r

PUBLISI IL IWE E KLY Y 'TII1E IXDLPI'AMIxI3 INDE T L IDA ALIGATOfl

a triW ti s E x trav a g a n zi : ' F i far rs &Fircw s rks- is a pre- IF hOrtfh 1)1 Jils c IbratiOlnslated for Sundayi t 6 p.m. A concert (f

American music performed h lorida oPs (Or-cliestra highlights ithe frei sio at thi UF 13 nidshel .The evenim x will lb topped off % 'Ith fin ss( )rks display.Flks ar isiited to brlints pinici ippcr,.Y c-has, y'all Trasl to Kissisie for simie

IhMt rods isactisi at lth -4th S I mi-Aniial Y Silver Spurs Rd-i at th Silver Spurs ArinatIis lriSda , Satirdla\ niidi Siida\ . C niitri iWsstiII

sij prsfissisal rodi (Iloss is inl parades ds arem t ap. (Call 3()5-S M75(0)() r mi inf o.

stiil E d riansisFli: EC i idor lia pstes r iII i

d- is ; 1a at 0hC (iinutsr ( allsri-s ithrisi h XiiA .I 3. Thptirs \ire rscreatid is part ift a

campaissiheat iaitsrae in 1hs I tin A rica

ciintr ii nd the scslction I -isis stronisi iisa'ers ts

discc)Ira _fcilliter-aev and promiotc languau., anw d \u r11in,

skills Thi yllirirs r ) dn iu is

iassi h K rick. A Click srk ()rang, "tails

K i isik, siirrialistic II% (i ient tilte f Iitbl hisl% Mr iI I ths iftTiset't v h siI Zed

Beithi hii ,b \\i ; I!" r sd ( As Ith- li itz

Ml

II

ss-t)iuuiiuit l's

5:

lIII aII's Mtsisic Stisre I li K-> ri-s, itsy

NessNN Rsality Kitchn3,3 T3 'lei tin/(cr''lirsilas . Skattci lil~esiliissi l ndSs~tsrslRichlenbacker's 3 37iuiss il4 Ja71 Ali

Stars jazz)

The threat of censorship:What Johnny can't read

(enter (372-5347) - InidiaaiJonns d thI I sipls ofDoom, Gremlins, Bach1or Partsl

Cinema and Drafthouse (376 ti843) -- SPslsiCinema Plus (371-2226) - Grsystoke, The Legend of

TarzanHippodrome (375-4477) ThDe raftsaii s

DaughterOaks Six (378-8818) - Karats Kid, Star Trek III, This

Natural, Breakin', Streets of IirePlaza (378-2434) - Rhinston'. Conan the

Des5troyer, Beat StreetReitz Union (392 1653) - A Clockwork Orange

(Friday), Eating Raoul (Saturday)Royal Park (373-4277) - Cannonball Run II.

Ghostbusters, The Pope of Greenwich Village. TopSecret

By Katthy Hansen

BY MICHAEL GARCIA

In an age when nsstcwsspapi r stands unashamedly displaymagazines and books that %%all()-, in the erotic, it's fan-tastic that Hlssckleberry Finn and Catcher in the Ryes'sHolden Caufield ar considered "anti-Americas'troublemakers.

IHuck and Holden?! Anti-ArericanI?! Hick has stolen aplace in readers' hearts for nearly a century now, and hasproven time and time again that his soiil is nothing short ofpure gold. Holden, too, has proven himself again and againas the boy who tries hard to be accepted im a society forwhich lie is too good.

But the phenomenon known as censorship has declaredthem lepers of society.

The threat of censorship of the written word is not acurrent concept. The struggle to censor material has beengoing on for centuries, and can be traced to the fifthcentury B.C. when the philosopher Anaxagoras' bookswere burned. But, even in today's age of permissiveness

and opsn-iniidedness, censorship still swings its angryswcord.

According to the American ibraries Association's (ALA)information officer, Marcia Kuszmatil, incidents ofreported censorship cascs have increased threefold inrecent years -- from 300 to 1,000 cases a sear.

Censorship is a continuing battle that all citizens haveto be aware of and deal with," said Jean Rhein, director ofthe Seminole County Public Library System. "Since wewill always have different opinions and philosophies, wewvill always have censorship.

Even today, censorship is a real phenomenon. Librariansiave lost their jobs for refusing to remove books from their

shelves. eacliers are backed into a corner when they haveto decide between what a self-appointed censor wants and

w,%hat they feel a student should know.Censors, wcho believe they are workim for the good of

the community, would have students believe they live in asanitized world, and that the "reality" portrayed in books

See 'CENSORSHIP'.-- - -.- page four

BEST BETSpringsteen, the prince ofAshury Park, will bepremiering his first conceptvideo Wednesday on theFourth of July. MTV will bethe proud host to the Boss'sDancing in the Dark" video

in which Springsteen doessome fancy steps. So if youdecide not to watch fireworksthis year, stay home and catchflhe Boss's own fireworks onTN. ' ieok f

THURSDAY JUNF 28. 1984

ltit

t c rsssr-1 ii

2. AX~pplaus . Thursday. Jun( 2' S 1164

Elvis goes gaga on 'Goodbye'BY LOGAN D. MABE

Tripc, tripe, trip and more trip Thc m()0 If \whatlxix ( ixtcilIi aid the Attractions (III this latii albm,.moili ri (r lIX u i rl i, i c i b ibicissxullx likuin d to th

ini xeti liix()I farm animal".('1%cilhalf ia chbancc, tHIPalblifil its,, asthc solc

xisuppi 1 rtiiipillar ii thi tem ple ifi l iiufuln sx N cr xih i aIt ri r I) x i ch prl l int descend d to thc <ix pthl s(f

s i ii imalit\ morc <iui k uxthniix l iiu ro, E i iIt is ieixt'luII\ c ii'ho rx x. l\xar,,il

D c lai i c aim,,s. ,pirtrd to th top 1)f thip'rkrcS lil lit l iii x977ian u 'stlablisd I xhim lf wminxi t i l

uiNit prmi isin , I ial nt i k r , ith ihis iid t ualbm I .\AIM 1s Truc

Ii mithat ifi tiati (: ix xlia'i h i lt t iit r i lalbIturI Ila bb Xiii iip ix ixmdx ick rac alltuiihe %%t. E

)frf (1 lia had i I ni li i trisii Illthii hli tI I uIxhtut iIII(riit. iiiiM it /i (p m th pX) i li ix a lI rihad] Iiir m ii , itcorp iist mii l i(ix lis r ulk wollb i H % as plila' i t.

le rallotpccpt is eallothIsvI, mc( e ral6ed ()lit (if t he

anivr1\ snarl H)in t aplircl.% xpres-sivrromnAnd theni, spamimn4 hIII',last two r) FleasWe, P'PICh T1hI

( lock and(I Im pcria 113 drootm, ( )stcIIlo be4aii to ) V() r(I-thli

brink. Gimodbil Crucl World is it sad repor-t (f \Ohathappeed as(:1st4) dipped painh-ssk l ito compicte ald

hitter happinessThri'x iio accinti Hw flr xx hat hax happncd ihri. T i

xi soid like liiii mu ic. TheAt alx axx iiithi At

tractiuui xMi'iiiY )ii elar l imiatixi' xmle si h uldx i i petiItito hav the pliug iullid and ilt them di4 ff peaciil.

Addin mgixult to iiju r , (:ustellklbrin s XiIi iii n l iliDar l Hail to share the X alx li IIthe i'lrxt xmiig, 'lih (I () l.

Flall i T 1 w .

\\W haX a t i a . ' u a al s x iima ini themII)ci Ie rt.l %aryl Hail, JhIIIIi ()atex i EI is Ixu(u:ioll xxcI w%%ith uuixhtlx

xiowxx at the Sahara Thx ciili IcWan ii'Nxiwx to itsriii lrui a kigx ii ( If h 0i'V as trip.

At line ilpoiit in ix elli carter, yricx het' %% wx r(xtricklx tabuu. III fact, the firxt xix albliiii Illalla'id qI itwell with listeners dciphcring thc o g for thwiliseh s.

Ever ,ince ht( be ,an to cmnsciousl\ cmnccentrate (if)portieuymiiaxtiex, (>xtello hax mad surc r c all rialimn howx

eleVer wii( lyric is by includi ithe texThe custom has backfird, though i I i ber of thxigs on this album. II I'"'Hme Truth","'ii I lxixchrmick

his favorit' subject i tiie' axain: Box ix iiii < fiu ite miitinigirl. I hung up the phone tonight Just is xi x\mial I loix

xiii n()ee t(xhis wild haxe been ciiciiiciii mii Nx thithings start to bother mc.n

And bother him they shield. Ti ix xith sami m \ x I(,for years, stood as a hero to all tise guiyx iiistxintburned by th disaffectiis of th 'emal' rac. The GoHappy album alone contained no less than iai alf -dozeii

Colen's & Mane Stop16i20 \\ . I I/4,

373 3 _3 -000

(women & long hair (long hairslightly more) slightly more)

SYLVESTER DOLLYSTALLONE PARTON

"-3N 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45

2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10:00Starts Friday! AK'O1 D)SE"A.SKIE a'N (, R

THEDESTROYER2:oo 4:oo 8:oo 10:oo

BARBARIAN FESTIVALSat., June 30 10:30 am-1:00 pm

Lawn of Plaza TheatreSociety For Creative

AnachronismBelly-Dancers From

Balloons & BowsStrongest Men & Women in G'ville

ln( (-<>t o )II.Ai I(n IiI lx >rni n)I. AI inril iiinthIast it ii a i i . (:is t l 14s riing mi r Ia i Ist In d Ii t

t in L ait r i uim plf ijxO ith n cifx ssin t xit. SpiffinX .1110 abwut il)thi , s ms n oodb,,c :rucl Wo~rld arc

% ls ( Ls . ( s t Ill Ii 1r \ I r irIw ) - ia r i I -I j Ikii ns( I I i xf ior S i( -Aii. li ). II i tti ( 114il ,n, rI \\in i I lxt Bf I sd, aI ista I II tI1 li Ias th I - i/ )i IIk m f x ziIi g sel-

tin iit I it. iTh if i i (Idri s iisiiii' ti syri i p liii'ei ike, x"W hy1 1 1m t I ti Is x I I tiand 'I xi iiiessFi1 ii t x ictim (Ionclinless," %NIk,( :()stcello chants m cr and <wer, for nearly

f i iin i iiit its,' 'I\ iianna Ii l i id.' iBit appear tly noti i

all the w xli li he is arthil h udod xirli lack ii Sida i )n iIDespitc all thc schhwck (m this albiurn, there arc t,,w,() ngs

that are i iorth rc idinii iefor lthrxw in lthc r Iciti'ni ana.'li' cA pi rteisiti ( ' is the)I llsn i' i th e albiail thIat

resm, IIIi I (c istIIi xx d I 't yd cii d iiiuithr r k. B\ f (u : tel (st andards, it is also ) o f "hIis fi nest s( ngwNrit ing ev ff ort s ()ithiis )r it i t her )as1 t Ial)bIMn. This mne so g ms) th rollghly

itli s Isa I thIin v .Is( ) , thI i r( r( I, i t so i T d Is I i kc iaInIm I s t r t ini thi Iu rxtut t ln d ixithlis s i s nt I I I

y X it I i sII ii ii x i Ii iI I iu tli tIi n i nx i

Ih l iiI s s i I f I I liifit IIIm, ' a il ( l i i IlI SIf IIIti ll, m IIf II Iir ittrat hi i h ( st cI s swarthysoicc itand passionat c yearni iit f r s i i i s c i lt icaitrcf Irl-li. IPr ,s idI nIt IiB IiIna(Il icit a ian i i is undIter ( st el I ss t i Ict t ( scruti in %% he i n i s, -Thwey'r I i 4hti ng ia bmilirci pI ) n) i % r hilltop iin thc land j s t another tiny islandin% adhil w n hc' gL(t the w holc world in is hands Andt hc Hvavyweght (:Tamnpion fights in thc InternationalPropatLandla ar Wars Thr-'s already mic spaceman illthc White Houise \% hat d() \mi -,%ant another onc for?-

If am nyn , thms twro! rnbers ca 11 on)ly%-encmiraigefans c\(.-r\w rc that imas h (:ostello isn't bevmnd hmpc.W ith thc fauilit\ u ith \%Ii ih ('ostcllo puts mit rcords, itshmlildi't bc too) iljng 'tw',\ .10 re n mber I I pops ill. But

thc blj (pistion "k il (. How ln Im will the public be 4uilling2 to bct allthir ceht tor ninc dollars for \%hat coml<c F N %% C 1 1) c h itn ( Iit I f t r ip1)

Solid Wood Furnituro

Quality Bedding for Less

Book CasesUnder $50.00

DesksUnder $60.00

DressersUnder $75.00 818W Univ Ave

Mon -Snt 9:30-6:00 Sun 1 5 377-6700

Oil' JACK Da

MINI SKICONTE4

$200 first prize

$50 second prize

$25 third prizeAll contestants get $10 (20 max.

Don't forget . . . July 4thNational Recording Artist

AE45

FANTASTIC FORTIESPOSTER SALE

New posters are here:cars, girls, scenic, animals,abstracts, art deco, florals,

sports and many more.

40 % OffBuy one poster at regular price receive

40% off 2nd poster of equal valueexpires 7'16/84

CUSTOM FRAMINGSPECIAL

20% offselectNeilson 8 Clark metalmouldings (with custom framing order)

expires 7 31 84

Original DesignsOaks Mall(next to Sears)

RTST

)A

DUBSNW 13th St.

4th of JulySpecial

PER DAY UNLIMITEDFREE MILEAGE

We havmspeciallrates

netweeku.calIfor Detis

You Deserve National Attention.CALL NOW FOR RESERVATIONS!!!

377-7005GAINESVILLE REGIONAL AIRPORT

3400 NE 39th Ave

I

I

)nd

)ANIELS

Applause, T hursday, June 28, 1984, 3

Rourke and Roberts are warm, wittyand real in 'Pope of Greenwich Village'

We arestickingout our

necksto offeryou the

mostexciting

shoevalues

in town!

SValues to

50%OFF

whilesupplies

last

intheOaks Mall

Dut)h Pt

THC

A1BEkROOM

Fr & St / 9:30 pt

Traxi1 75 Nowherry Rd,

373 1468

Deli & Sub Shop

The Salty Dog Saloon

Fast DeliverySuper food

14Dt1eft BeersFuliy Stocked bar

BY JEANNINE LOIACONONot since Th Big Chill has a movi( come0 lit that has

been worthy of seeing t icl. There hal been 01( good1111 i ntil htils' last year- l"l b after 0(1" sitting I rsat isfied.

''/zePop cofGf (r teie Iilage is a bg eept (It I ikeI'/e Big Chill, it was eass to walk out of the theaterknowing you e'joved the i owie, but not knowing exactlywhy. And, also like The Big Chill, tIls ((n 1' .i5 1s 1 Io,.appreciated the second tirn around.

I/l( , 1of1/ G;rl'"iichV 11il/age stars Micky Bourke)ihncr, Rubnc 1 0iz), and ric Robert~s (StarSO). The HIMn

is golmd becas (f 1ourke and Holitrts. They arc the filAdmittedl\ , TI' opc of Grccnivich Villagc, bascd mi

thi l 1( 111 Vincelt Patrick, is rather lan 111 >lt. Theor\ d ocn t recall\ de\vch ) into all v elimiactic ilidh-

Rather, it Is the dcvelopilllit (If the characters, t\%1 Italiallpos played by llourke and Iloberts, that Iake it a

Ilpassioilatl upbeat mo1 .Also reminiscent (4 The Big Chill is thc fact that Thc

P'opc of Grccnwich Villagc ik about the hecarthr-caks andimportance of friendship.

Rourke pla's fCharlil, Iilit ailmanalr IfI i ri staurant.R oberts pi 15 PatiliI, Charli'ithird c((((sill 5111>o or1Iks as a

(lets I - 111 tllo w(t i ter at tis 11ariw sl taurailt .T he t\n, arcri't Just comsilw, the\ arc parsanio (as the

Italians wmol.say)- thicker than blomd. Yet thicirs I,, mtyou)ir typical, everyday brother-like relatimiship.

Paulic (played mioaiiificciitly by Robertk) Pim an tableyoung rn4 all who cmoanly itv0s Charlic into trouble,tim king (it]yof ( harlic"'s good)( when hl e does so.

Charlie, ()ithic other hand, is ()nly slightly better thanPaidcl ic is do,. i and-oit n w ,flin 4 o hmld m o IIdream:i: nIi,,h v iwnrvomnrmnt A,,Ik tridrlremd (tit(-

I (kl /1111ilased i Darrsi Hannah) savs, he's ist oleInch away from in)11 a good person.

1 t il till w I till' i ''1ovi t you realize Charlie is a goodperson. a(1 'v is >a11 w 1'. ' wateh their drink, smoke,l~al 11iblc'it1ii1 stet ic1(111\N1a\ t rieligl4i till' stoley. Yet at the

i(Ithtilm l i 'I r ; o , '''Iwallt to neet those gilys.F "Om"atek , ThI' tpc of (;rcfrmich Village doesn't

tak' itselfto() seriusly. it is perhaps is a tle's t han realistic11)k at lift' ill citeip ary New Y rk. With Mafiosoleader nams for characters like Bed Bg iE'dy Grant(Burt Y mung), Nick thc Nom- and Jimmiy the Cheese, ymimniht find yourself wmnderlin if ()u'rc reallk supposed h,hc1 ieve tIk

tt if it Is a litti leunrealistic, it also is fun. even throughMIC O ofthe most Ilitclisc scelle's ill tfic Ilovic when Pail(iehas 4(ttcen hirlf1 (and 4f course Charlie) ill trouble withBed Bug Adv >a i i 111comnplete anguish comes

That's another trcat thlnllg atboult his fill. Charlie and

Paiiis 1 iIes arc 11 big rIllerc(astcr ride after another.

St\ be broke and it If work, gambling awayth"owiaids )f dollars mne minute or vettiniv "hacked ill" theiwxt , buit t hose arc not t he t hings you remember. You

capim-. i tllerstand, (they use lots If Italian words) themilmpirtance of their relationship.

t 'iortimiatety thkI,,i a summer inovie, which meanis thatiwit her Hourkc , r Roberts will havc a good chance of being

II ItiderAd for 1Academ Award nomination -Sll)l'th in thy Ith deserve for a warm, real portrayal oftheir characters,. But Thc Pope of Grcernihich Villagcdefllte1% isthcb o 4 the summer, and probablyt he \ car. ( apbsc a

$2.00Til 6 pm - EVERYDAYIStarts Friday

Bert Reynoid."Cannonball Run i" (PG)

FrSati- : 3:00-5:25-7:40-9:55-12 Mid.

Bill Murray 'Dan Ayk royd"Ghost Buster" (PG)

Fr-Sat: 3:00-5:25-7:30-9:45-12 Mid.Sun-Thurs: 3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45

Mickey Rourke"Pope of Greenwich Village" (R)

Fr-Thurs. 2:30-4.56-7:20-9:45Don't Tell Anyone"Top Secret" (P1G)

Frt-T'hurs: 2:20-4:10-6:00-7:0-9:61

at hews Fri-Sat ONLY Ighost Busters" (PG)112 Mid.Cannonbali Run 11" (PG)-12 MId.

-- s$0"' \ ~

dole be \rwo S Serries s0 c sc

de oe a 5ke l\j Ao 999

\t o19* - f-C

u e .- ---- -f O . o s.

-c e.

- ---6 e

where time CIHIICe is yEers.-.

1209 . UniVersy Ave. 0 372-22t

rA

378 8818s A"MATINEE & TWILITE SHOW

STAtTINGAFORt6 P I

The Karate Kid PG(1:30 4:30 (12.25)7:30,10:15

Star Trek iI PG(2:00, 5:00 1i 2.25)7:45,10:15

The Natural PG1:30, 4:3051 2.25)7:15,955

Breakin' PG(2:00. 5:30 (a 2.25)7:45, 9:45

Streets Of Fire PG(2:15, 5:30 (a 2.25)7:45. 9:45

Ad*vetise in the

Alligator &

watdi your salesdevelop

Call 376-4482.

-1

4. Applause, TlTursday, June 28, 19S11

CENSORSHIPcontinuedfrorn pag(' tint

ike CatchrIr th lit0p and Of flit 'cand t fitois notxsist.

"Ther are Aiidt'sprta' Iprtiit t ssrs ior tnr'rs Irstip) all it rthI fci ntrys said I I r'alilt(, Katz, exectitfIve director of It'

\atitial C tialtiir A aiinst 'Censo rship. 'hr is no plac hat is t1irrmm1i' antI nIt b s k that is ltitriii . Ar y 1tirg callsr aft atckedIwo ycar' agt a it Tampa pbtilic fibrary director, tL"i

\Itirose, w'as instructed to r'riov certain children's b1o)ksIrom the library. The b ks were sex inst rurtiti n ks for'hildrt'r and included Pter MalI's "Wher) i I Cnit'

Frot. ~Ultimately, andI after a ityear if sftruggle, thesbtks were moved to the adult sti mnit \M'irosr'

resigned snir aft'rward-'A 1rt if rfc miplairits art' abut children's literature, but I

feel it is fi'lthiparents' resp t ibility to ''nsttr thtir children'sreading in pubic lilraries, Iffh lii said.

'Censors don't want anyone to readanything that is objectionable. In a sense,it is a kind of mind control, bof they don'tsee it that way.' - Ted Hipple

W it'Iil' p itibIii ait , hl s i IIhra iW's auII-j)I Itar tagt''t' ftr'r'i sors, tiIv'rsits librarws narc' 'tralls rxeM'5 tpt ['I'lbrari's art' aniii lth' topi f tmt rsi lifbraties m l itht'tir tr a t'rart him- ifr'tbi-s s r h c sh i p, it

'ilrdin4 to Gits lIarrer, dir t r o f I 1 s bar

"I sre arch ibrarit tn t h t ite rj )sit it f a its hfit

fiat i printed ' f artr ii d r ,r j rccarb1

ibrars, antd evn th moft tisi t(it t ie tuu nitti

idea will understand thattt wtsr t hrit ri it m iittsfrsip ri'ps

iginrg fiat'k I lust' ir'u sbn s u ld fn h ih

a l r fad and riftc Th AL A for nw sppicit's l i s t t

t> arts librarian who has b' n tilt f rts tar sst I liir'ftising to remos a 'i

Derinis Day, charrii iff th t(fHi Al A ( t

fitellectual ,lfreas m, f r csn toi 1( m lali PTr()base theright as taxpayers to itmi flithii l'animd

olf"AtilN01%. w 'vc bmughlt ccrta!;in matcriaks. but ww nftlail ita k r rt r2tiIzatoI I t ''trtit ] 'ippIs I th

pii s ttl] 's %Nhen Fi'm eeI~nc rd

Ovcr the years,. maii% boo(ks lhivn ft,1t fh< ,!d, un n

blad of cistis It rs ip. IiiP33,jaftmft-w it'tlynlwt denied pliblicat~i ;1 lt 'I itrd Ntates b(ICalISC (

it' h beral usr if lit''d 5 rs. .1) I a ri icriadY C hatt rl i mr ks as tpit rit b o r F ede ral co r

hich decided thc bowkkxwa,, not pmlrwigraphiC.

The reputed h""o"sex"alit"f Virginia Wolf, WillaCather, Emly Dickinson, I 'einssee Williams, Walt

Wtitman aid John Milton caused their works to lie

Tolay's ten rost frequently censored i oioks are J.D.Salingcr' Catcher in the Ry the anonyiously written GoAsk Alict, John Sti(nbeck's Of Mice and Men and Th,'raps of WIratIr, George Orwell's 1984, WilliamColdlng's Itord of thc Flies, Jidy Blume's Fore'er, Th

Boston 'mien's Health Book Collective Our Bodies,Ourstlt'ts, Mark Twsain's The Adventures of IfuckleberryFinnri, and l Iarper le's To Kill a Mockingbird.

Censors have blacklisted iTo Kill a Mockingbird becauseof its proficient uso f the word "rape," and Go Ask Alic'

because of th' heroti's sexual encounters arid ise of drrngs.Never min that t message in both of thes books oit-

wifghs anything the censors might fi ridietrimental iIIthem.

lt'ai r' Th' Adrrturs of rikltiberry Fim has 'beiaccus d bthe luman Relations :ormitte ofN MarkTwainitr eliatr School in Virginia to b "workingagaits tht miting pot theory of ir cottntry" because of

IIick's si iff the wr n iggr" The committee called th'/ovel "tisni," ac sing it if w orkinri againstf th' 14thArrttt enttif the Confi itutii t an rsfai li the Preamblthat it"r"a""fits i/f itt ni life- lift r " "l "t"irs"t i

s IIit 1 mr' H it idss sat if Tht Adi tfur t it

f m k(l rr '1/-tin' ti, Alli t i r f i Aim rica iiterat ir c comsrom (it) sThirt w a hthin hbtorc it Thct irth's ib "

"")t1~ " t'" J ""(d "tc" , .Th l"Itcli en"a-cd Call(luic IIthc lp, i, sald to bc 'a,1Fr-;dhiih iiar% rivital (d f I cknI) ssv. r id and

it- i i, \ft k / /l I \ l I k )It A titail'"" . r s rhantii0i\ iniic t

Pli ' 5" m J ib I :NU 1 utl \ (Jirl t i Sanhlrll "/n"If i f/i fitsilt a d n or lts- a d

"/>liii ' i:hrs iit 't

1"" "/ " fdt s Io it/i5''t iisa di'ilv vi*I 1111\ I - titI-, 11;\(. I/ i i lli

22 bbl e b(.lm(k hioli nm- mcr 19,-2, r( mims1 onclt (d thr% f prcld offk i thal i ri f )t H if '

tNazi ( .

( tsT f/T tI i 1a /ti i t I

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pa iint ii fir% tah w (rld. A!,(). thc% arc cheitcd fl ihrpoint i n o, (wors . ii thw% arc r(Obbcd f 1th .1w\ mine t id reia( ,

A"s iciiallilli F',zlik hn saIld_ Th(,% that (<lit i p

ricit her 1hbef t IInyr afct

UNDERFIREIESE' AR 'TH BOOKS M4 T (:M MONLY FOUND ONT IL (ENM(I' S LiST:

Catcher in thRu Ic J'D. SalingerT/o 'dorl' Iuttr Nathafil I 'lawthorri

Th Xlurchart of XVtnic( Williarn ShakespeareBra' A'tr World Aldois HuxleyGo Ask Alic AnonymousTht Adr iituris of /nickl'i'crr 1rinn Mark TwainT'h 'rapts of Wirath John Steinbeck

Nintc'lun Eight-Four George OrwellLord of th( F/its Williarm Goldinglouc' Story Erich Segal(nu I/' cu- ()r th (ciukoo's Ns/ Kcn KeseyTo Kill a Mockingbird Iarper leeThi/itaril of A Young Girl Anne Frank/)lircraCe Jam(s Dickey(f .ie (Id flit John Sft'rilibeck(uli1odlic's. ()rt/i us The Boston \forrren's

I Iral th B04k ( :()11ctive(Tht larn'it Tret Gordon Parks

/ak lJike A/u John Griffin

(bic 1)(111ill thc ifc of Ivan I)cllisovich AlexandcrSolzlinitsv'n

f/a ih/ild in thfl('romistl Ita Clawde Brownflali/ol

sla u1Jhtc Illmusc- I C

A Scparat lt

TF/ti (:tttm/ l'erf/tlI-orc, r

Ci lic 1d1 1i l w i't'rii iii! l'ni.s/ttti'it

f/ol /ti( A

Aitc! f/'/l \\lor/ li it f I )u/aq.

lht!iifi/ \/at

( d,/ h2

__ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _r__ _ _ __ _-__ _ __ _ _-_ _

~"s~s' j

1,"I' '\\ l i i \ 0 ( \! . ( ,

I-4NF RES&

FIREWORKS)wit lol I i

).-RIDA 10'ls ORCHLlSTRAM llmbcr., <>(f, thc,11nl > ill y ph<>n

\ lrGU (\ iiing 1),m ri(a mlinusi(,

jPj(( (I th w grossmil S1)&('laUr firevorks

Sut ay', JUI' 1stStarling at 6 p.m.

al thIlc. ' - anlt'shell

WUFT-FMCLASsiC89-

William ShakespearcKur in ft \ /ti Jr.

John KitwlesPearl S. Buck

Judy BlunPlato

Fodm-rIDostoevsky

ric uIlal M lvillcti/n'es \ecrtt

alph tlliOnridl-d-t e .c vr

joWlPh I fellcr

[ 3jt( )) R '( ( )\n

alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984 9I!

I

is having a

salestrewide

up to 50 discout

1125 West University Avenue375-1211

GRADUATE POSITIONS IN HOUSING

e HALL DIRECTOR (HD) is a half-time position intended forgraduate students which is a9 month appointment from the Istof August to I1st of May (approximately)

a The HD s responsible for spervisitg 3 9 d r ' O t 'Assistants n on-, are of 150 400 s udents

* The HD must hve on campus in his/her area of responsibility

" The beginrnig solory is $5,000for the nine mriontth contractperiod, less the cost of a furnished apartment ($80-100 permonth), which includes utilities and telephone

QUALIFICATIONS: During the time of employment the applicant must be admitted to graduate school, enrolled for not lessthan 8 semester hours, (preferably in student personnel,counselng or highereducation), and have some organizedgroup having experience

0 Apphcations are ova. able at the HOUSING OFFICE (just eastof Beatty Towers Residence Area)

* On-campus interviews will be scheduled during July

* APPLICATIONS DEADLINE:4:30 p.m., Noon, July 9, 1984

11

WEEKEND MADNESS:One Price PizzaAll Toppings Free *

0 Thin CrustSmall or Lare

Deep Dish La9* 4.976.97- --- 371-7442* ~

I i s., its -io 2t o t ',I t i i I asic 0,.

(00 00000 0 000 0 00000000

PRIMO "The Mostenthusiastic)ICYCLE'.('Ic shop

WORKS intw

CRUISERSONLY$129.95

10 - SPEEDS $169.00

Call for otherSpecials

All Service GuaranteedU LOCKS

$19.951124 W. Univ. Ave.

371m9650U U ~

4444444444444

r-Al A"-, DII I

FAIT I\

TOxs1Cj.1 t

0

.

*

S*0

S

a" FREEl 0Piece Wings with Every

Pitcher ALL DAY THURSDAYMiller Lite * Bud $3.50

Heimeken $5.00

FREE!Hors Deouc. r es 5 to 7

FARAH'S ON THE AVENUE1120W University Avenue

378 5179

SAxI 'I'Y I)O(;SALOON

Illu ) RititIoom & iBaDr

Ior Ill .,.,Il-

I itk sr oni

, Ft I I 'dlh Is I I

1 (

It1(11, '1,1I t'( II,(g i,"d A A ~

1.1 ~Orf .1' I '

Eli I mirittit

'//I II( I I I)toi

l i I r iil(r iff it /* )(/its1 i t)and M/.Itiotm > r / tic /iitcCall 375-6969 For Delivery (Beer and Wine Too!)

SUMMER SALE

FREEBuy 1 Nylon Short @ $70.00get the 2nd one FREE

Save 20% -.50% onAIRegular Priced Merchandise

The Gator Shop UF Plaza1702 W. Univ. Ave.

444

4

, ,Koppers protests to be aired tonightBy LOGAN D. MABE showroom and you couldn't see 15 feet out the windowAlligator Staff Writer because of the smoke," Glaser said.

Glaser, who said he suffers from asthma, said the odorsMany northwest Gainesvill residents who share their coming frotn the company are a daily occurrence. "Youneighborhood with the Koppers wood treating plant will can sit there and smell it," he said.it ve a chance to air their complaints at a special public Most of the odors that permeate the neighborhood comeinformation meeting tonight. from the chemicals used to treat lumber, Kennard said.Rep. Sid Martin, D-Hawthorne, four Alachua County Those chemicals, he maintains, eventually seep into theCommissioners, and representatives from the En- ground and pollute the water supply in the aquifer.vironmental Protection Agency and the Department of As faras curtailing the odors, Gainesville Department ofEnvironmental Regulation, also will attend the meeting. Environmental Regulation air engineer Greg DeMuth saidSome of the residents in the area are complaining that Koppers will install an odor control system before Sept. IKoppers' business makes the neighborhood stink, causes that should cut down the amount of gases that escape fromhealth problems and pollutes the underground aquifer that the wood treating process.supplies the city with water. "Any way you cut it, there's going to be an im-"I know that we have some major problems that they provemient," DeMuth said.(Koppers) haven't been discussing," Chris Kennard, one of DeMuth said the odor control system is made upthe residents, said 'Wednesday. "Here we have someone primarily of a "scrubber" that takes the gaseous emissionswho is polluting, probably killing people," he said. and condenses them to a liquid form that can then beKoppers spokesman, plant tnanager Don Perdue, was processed through a water treatment system.unavailable icr comment. "It (the scrubber) is sort of a mixed bag. A very, veryKennard said he has distributed more than 10) good beginning point," DeMuth said. "It will be an ob-questionnaires to residents and businesses in the area vious improvement."around Koppers in hopes of finding out swhat specific Kennard, however, said the $40,000 scrubber systemproblems, if any, have plagued the residents. won't do the jot that's necessary to adequately control theOne respondent, Glenn Glaser, a former employee of odors.Harper Datsun on Northwest 23rd Avenue, said the air "From what I understand," Kennard said, "they'requality at the auto dealer was so bad he had to go to the basically wasting their money.-hospital on several occasions. Glaser said he eventually swas Kennard said lie hopes to get funds allocated in theforced to leave his job at Harber because of health con- county budget for monitoring the plan, providing warningcerns. signs around the facility to keep children away and obtain"There were times that we were actually sitting in the earthen fences along the Hogtowivn Creek.

.'We DeliverQuality"

2 \t

too

A V. It

oppopow0

I

By VALERIE KOWALAllgator Writer

I Ilh m k"I ,iIft I,-' lit

;i(0 ' N (Il \1 li t I 1)0t' d I:,

I x i, 1 1,

MacKay uiBy SUNITA RAMAYYAAlligator Staff Writer

ih( cmitrt)virsia Ir"-F1calial 1m"I w i d t f final I bw laid

F] rjida (I Iigrtssiiit' t If I B ddintroduced i mi an i wtt t to it\\aItr IProj(ts iIt in th .Iw ,oUld prel%-nt comipicti i ()f the

canial %it tutulink-jac kstiiit j)(7it1 ff M\lucto \i tus s aiddib t onHiti th is to i lthl()ugh lFrida%

FIour memoirs if fth- i ,Hep Charl Ifs nutt of Jo

ppurt ti h p i t i o iUild th entu- iun-i is t tanid stin ithav rtui1,

ihr iisa e niii SIiiKs nst eti in Iaain c \a Ka ott i. i

tu f it. r i-urn%

rr t fack tr#- ttriSacc

li lft t b ald u 1;ikwkxi-u- y r sc o u t

ti tis i n ' "itI fIit I d /ni.If ir,-n prii t

ges ic niide iith

SI a I I IIIi Iit ,i i tt e sa i

to es tis ne d It ii til w itsi h a a

i i

it t it ; ~ 1 d jIj

kges canal deathHo1w thaI Bi t ( III (.itiu t hrn us d th

iiu fi n n in-i Ii t rI fi I Iitt I \1 (acK is

n(TiIiIt i i is ha n Ii id t I i o:itIuri tIn\1it H it ir tm s i s, wh.iii ,i f i bi i da it I

o (utiii iittttuii J ii ks -siii n t

tI- c -oIII II Isv a I fin x tiimi ) tit t t m A i t )awt I iiit i

fin lidm ih-,hrsn th ,, lan i is foa- tncitniit f iittr aidntIu ii y i m akd tht

ctl . 'I'm( c rh m , whao was i n \\t e h- i t nmrte totha t Tur e. h l lb t h b rgecnl ss

iIs, wditA lm ltont i m on e s Ith ( inu k i is foit t otsI rut--eu still stii, it, i-tiin iytutii

n-n thut I muT-u Il-n-' - i s-sn, Ihe uum- 'is lstr this sunilluHit i-si , , aln ilt If ta b ict iisu ih ii is

fu-sfii tn - mkiw i, n Hl I i ji li i wff issifitI i s.1 nn r 41 11 11)"rt It(- iuit l i I1t ItItus t j( fn fin

1 I1 f B1t1,ll i 1i ' ! \ c t ) ,Ik \ t

NOTiceMonday, July 2nd is the last day

for Textbooks refundsmake sure you have the correct books

for your classes

I

Fast, Free, 30 Minute Delivery

Ask For:"Ge'(-t Acquainte(I

Special"

3.9912' pepperoni Pizza or 1 item of choice

Campus, SW 378-2415- NW, NE 378-2832Voids other offers Expires: 7r37,,84

-- - -- - --,- -

PALO VERDE POSCHE1 & 2 BR Units 2 BR Houses

$265 - $275/mo. $300 - $325/mo.Call 377-5221 Call 373-0067 *

ARCHER WOODS CAMPUS LANDAPTS

$6285 o. $ m- $25mCff 1373 8727 Call 373 0067

0 0 GA c 378-6683

BRIDGE LIGHTTOWNHOUSES LAKEWOOD VILLAS

1 BR Townhouses 2 BR Townhouses

$269 - $289/mo. $440 - 445/mo.Call 377-5221 Call 372-0688

WOODLAND CEDAR RIDGEVILLAS I & 2 BR Patio

2 BR Townhouses Apts. 8 Townhouses$410 - 440/mo. $230 - 315/mo.

Call 376-1670 Call 377-8362

CEDAR RIDGE FOX HOLLOW 11VILL AS

RILLAS I1 & 2 BR Units

$260 - $360/mo. $259 - $319/mo.Call - 32-5765Call 378-1151Call 372-5765

10, aligator, thursday, une 28, 1984

Fairbanks cleanup begins

alligator thursday une 28, 1984, 11

- --.---.--- .-b

I ;1)) (I

USDA Western Choice ~Country Style Pork Ribs

$119 Great 1lb. for B B QFamily Pak Assorted

Pork Chops-1 391b.j

We peel anddevein shrimp

Fresh ;Daily

Stone Crab Claws

$3"b.Headless

Rock Shrimp-11" lb.

Premium QualityWhole Grains

'I -Fresh Dailyf 'iFreestone4outh Carolina

Peaches-39 1bGreen Peanuts

591clb.Great for boiling

MEATDEPARTMENTUSDA Western Chiice

Rump Roastlb. Boneless

Delmone oteak399 lb.

k-USDA Western Choice ~Family Pak Cut Up

Fryers j9t lb.3.~g., 3Bible"s

Super Lean Pork

Spare Ribs-'1" lb.

Pink Snapper$199 l.

No charge for dressing

Kingfish Steaks$2, lb. Cut Daily

K

Normans Extra LargeBrown Fertile Eggs

ISea Salt29" 1b.

Irw

Slver QueenCorn

We Accept Food Stamps Improved California Variety- servd Purple Hill Peas

lb./1$7-99bushel.

Boneless

Round Steak$169. . b.

No maniumns-No LimitPrices Good Thru TUES. July 3

Fresh Is Best~ Fresh IZs Best "White Acre Tree Ripened

Peas-59'lb. Man os. /:io

Fresh PickedLarge Vine pe Stake Okra6 b.Tontatoes.59' a 1b9.b

rea-4 99lb.Jumbo Western

Cantaloipes.99qeac

117T 14

-II

II

Fresh Daily'~Round Strip

Watermelons30-

each 351b. avg.Spaghetti

Squash-z9tib.

All Red Meatis USDA Western

Choice

I ,, III i1 I I I jUSDA Western Choice

Sirloin Steak$299 lb.

Center Cut

Pork Chops-w19'

USDA Western Choice

Extra Lean

Cube Steaks-l" lb.

Family StyleBottom Round Roast

$169 lb. Boneless

We peel anddevein shrimp

Fresh Daily

Lobster Tails899 lb. (Slipper Tails)

Live Maine Lobster

699 1b. 11/-4 1b.

FREE RecipesAvailable

T.V.P. Mix(Textured Vegetable Protein)

Trail Mix$1 lb.1 j]

All Red Meat j

is USDA WesternChoice --, fil l II I

U SDA western Choice

Chuck Steak$1,59 Great for

lb.cookouusLean Ground Beef'

99 b. .b. or more

I(4'

$159dofOu"Oft" $ tos."TI

GuareateedLarge Headless

Shrimp$499 lb.3 lb. or more

resh Is Best I

/)

I/I/IThompson Seedless.

Raisins $129 lb.

Unbleached White

Flour-39 lb.

'K

-I-

I"-"r

I fu ff 4.

-- 7L- I N.W. 23rd Ave.Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9.9, Sat. 9.7, Closed Sunday

I

Fresh Daily

Large Red Ripe

Nectarines-69"b IRed Ripe-Santa RosPlums-49 lb.

I

I

\

I

1 4, 1)

FOR RENT A -- ryS

N. G8d D1$ - A. Ap? W ,Doubl- p w-h . R-omm e1,r ,-p 31se 7a813 21 1

.7 7ur 2 b6dro pm 777trn 7' t only

2

$2O4AA'7mon6

Be88.7.

7777n0h 6.77mon7h 12mon77h677.7. 5.7737777Olie Ap77 A 7oble

F-om $169 00

Cambrid ge mCo

SW 34h SVillage Apts 8 31 2711 10NW 39, A e

37 39M88 13 241i

H720777BRA

Pedr eal"y -d mh

J/3 2505forDe - 1,nve ieS 13 23, 211

17rg77777nNew P71 W2VV lk2 f, 7 7 S 11U rnh7d I7 A & 3U N It

273.$245 $295, $125 S1 .L77dry 11 W D l ne 77Ho7k p, S7n7 Fe 1.-ceApi 37A8 198 11 A / 14 1,323i

71Glade UnA- rIhd Nee N U, 7 ,nd VA I $28110 m

1r 2 Br, 28 28 17).dry277 W 17 117772p 77 7-7S S

$2:15 3182 $125 -, 872 LR P 373 7222 0972/ /R 3 23 1

BARGAINf01- bed .

Fc tbo e T Vcaon

371333731,728 7y4 $5 .,'777.7

'-1 37d,-, 39 37773 772 R,)(62' 7 777

$- 2 . f737 '77.77 N77 f$3

-1771A--7 717)4W77.

23974-739777 ,A-27327

RD777777 37 N Of I F

7777777d2771783577372777

7777 77d777739 7777777 3 777 6 7777- 28 2 77'7'2e

3/7 '3 6 3 72 7.7

, .' 1 NW 1 3,77' 16 7, U 7777747 S19

N.- 3 BLKS N L -- d-

776.C -777777S77227727377.

7""'8" 2)

A VA37 )5 / 13 1 5Ai, 11 1-6 '/" S5

2 3/ ! 3378 93U 8 J 25 A 23C

AJAps X)N NW H"3/ 4 A /- ee,

s $ S2$2r

1, Aper ? 's 31 76Q 378 9c,

>i, S .,9 $ 5 0 6 17 3 5 3 2 . 1

_- CIAp S A d 'T' " '" A d""2 -"4 1d Ae 2 75 r 111, 1- d n11r41; 8 1 '31 C

F1$ 372l 3^ 3)

ler. 2.5b- - l 3e 25 ,, S /3U,50 I-y6789 6 28 -g--,B-4 373 173 2 3

4727d ave3786r6r B 127 r 3 7734 81 eab

Archerw dd I ,m owf- d 2,7brr FEe ue

- 1, -1sr t U , peS2o o * J l- e es. u, 6 sm vah le- -il-3 - e enw e

Co-gempor 3ry 11,11g378er,63Br312 7 3 71242

6 81 3 2 7 3 7 8 1 -1 3 1

G -1-ci- 2rge,2New Ct. d, - 6 e " a,-o s ro u n o.t

372n0gemen 78B666-1r8 37823 3? 7 .

6 13 23 1$ _18f, B.Nc 1e os

m7 $280b2e P7.77777777n77.2

C--, rySe-qngSTONRIDGE

1, 2 1 3 b -rm n.s d lpp7l.- Tn Tnn ,h 777r7s p77.

,gh .- o, dkpod . d m- h

1. et oUF -d S hns 3800G F177 777777 F7732608 375 112 1

kNDYWINEly sp 7,777 m77den 8.7n 8 7777d -

P-1t -11 sun. wgh o m

77SW A,,7perd 3757771 733

-d77,7e n7w77 nd777 3/3 3

7 4

A4Bnhouse Apt

Foall wnRatesbo n ou

4 J$1 m 392 185/.174

* $310/mo.

372-65l 33 45 oy~772737

[; be $ 40 yru

7d7777 377 7373 ? 37

$877 7777 777. $26 27777 7

SO 'c . 77 8 7

b A s A

A Pi, d

Beautiful

fnhouse ApsFall Rates

r. $265/mo.

r.$ 10/3 .

372-6535

$299 S- r$Ae 3 C769 3 8 8 90 j.

1 3362 6 28 4

b. , Aprm j* , ** e75 5 i

ed onotGrtoA C e'

79cre o r r 'cf s-oe

ans V 250 An'

nd,

98&

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37E

4 B

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Fe

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W

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SAj

7ee, 37776663- 37378777 3. ,

SHORT WALK TOU.F.

20 -- 1, - ekad-11 oflo- $135 for all Summer B7 l S. 2.7. CA 7777 378 pl. 510 lect7 8d7p7 s7 5M2.7 2 8 7pt 37

2 717150 J y 7 12 6 2

* HLPi * I need 2 Fen Rmaes far Aublet wr7::t/uly, 2 brm opt, div.ded bh7. 7Pef Nn m.ers Walk T.C7 ps rom7F

mpl- , p.l,_'sA 7 -1,C .lo77Ap, 3478 Own _ o_ m In7 NW 3 Bdrm Hose Pets 0 K& 2.d2 A -37-2%.,7k8for 7 (88 797$160/m7th pl.s 1/3 , 7ea7h Call 7dy

2821377 8439 7 3 2 2-77 S7 77s 7ad Con77 n27 n77, 7In7g 7nly WAlK to shoolll F-m, needed ,n 4bd

blsr to U n new y em e seIt- houe arosfrom 'he O'Domaen Summerw- F77 1.<7 AH Only7 $100 B Ter B/Myb 7fa l .77 l negt Cal 3776502

883390 7 3 3 1 ke7ty g7

ge 2 B nerly M37 f7

r7sht2d cove. et7 Mt to gd s77den 7tsk, ah e / n

$2 807777 777777 77.777m.77.7m7A- kersfo 7he Fall Call 904 681 08 4 71R h77773757727, 3765957 018 2 1 7le 7ve message. .t374 4189 6 28 2 22

77 7 77ho7777 r7 Brm. c ng fan 71nd f7 Jy, 77n ed277m7n777.7 rg 2b7.7'n d,y. 7A . 7pol bk8bs.n UF $1975 b h 7P7 7P7 , 1 ndr, 7bl7ny $153/m77

91'$250 db7 F-r1 7. 7serD -3773 5 PlusI", u777.es 3750431 v 9nns 7 5 4 2e fryn 7 3 2 1877177te n ded 4 S77777 73, r hed pl.s77777a .370- 1 77277777777.7771 77771- 77

ROOMMATES I. .1 "d "n " 739, 33777

-1-e n smokrf wn1rm, bh f rihd o~.111, c777d $20077777 777 , 7r77 7d7 77w 77r 77m 7n 2777 7 ' 71771 7p7

Wr1du1-e 11 d1- N' e , 10 mn r1~~ he dr , nSW $150 - medu a378 370 8 20 27 2 378 2621te 4 2

- -d - h- WX)MA TFOP N At

7 $8317 7( , Al, 8tf7 / _ 7I2M.77 M1l 3/37747 0, F MM If 111 , /:3 3 ,

WINDN A W fll rI- hae re oALIK f() j 0 w t% rrehed nom m It" b 2? h , "."A n $11 r I 4

1 n 36 66 52 H ij 8 o Ise o -,6,n s 'e st- h wop ssr FInne11 y 2X onps A-v

ti em mr -- ede o - b r (om le or! ob F1 33146 30 k /462

1, $A, 2S ) Fr,., . 7. 7.7. . ,d 77 7 7 777 FoD pt 37.7. 2'I.77 1'/38',

A IA 89 4 62 e, /1, 1.2;

-d-Wi f hd . .. m m. .

7,W777 77733 3 (A,,337 . 7 877 131132

8 A

oommates Uni m ted ",

-,, por

H, -0, .1, 1,' 1','71

Fees / Roommate

WantedA"

- '-d- y

3, 0,* I

S3 3 3 N E 3-1 d o 6 S2

s-3/8 027 3

6 2 6 a eW2 ,,1 G od a IC- V2J7

3 3 2

, f5 M601eo bo op 2 F P o e d e /ILL MArS 3so114(1')d.r.d. .

h Ved I'll, 4'3 98 /A,

u ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 5 2t1- I 8 20o 1 'V mr

she rn 2a2 I e t.R c)d o 7 5 pau

WantH e / /2o o oka3/

E"ad'oom in hosebloks Il-rompsReal7 $1157 7nc tAv I7bl J 7 7sIIIs

mo re Call 377 3811 7 5 3 2

REAL ESTATEFO SALE 12x7"4 Moble Home 277edroom,

I Both $6000 Ntg Phone 378 6024 Ask o,Frank 19 14 3

Swcip 250r11-hg, sfl- c.7s, (m t )top77 r.7 l 77 f 77 of 1470 0 , it B01

w77d.d, 2 77ods 3 mt NE 7 .Ch,,_.n777 7f 1us. ,n G'vlet 4663392 7

24 10 3

N-0r UF16 NW 29h S 3 br 2 bth7 am P7 7le t, ya r m d d , d .bl 7 777p r7

M-s see . 7ppre7te $68,000 Call 3744804 . s7 2410 3

OWNER F INANCING 7P77ned1 70., 3621NW 35h T7r, perf77.77 77177 7n 77,U77vwI3k o bIn-,, 3W5g33 6Plo . 4 2 C(-e,, A H- ,--r f e rd I., -- ,s$63,00 fv-ns45 2490 Assmale rms

737 965 5353 7 12 4 3

FOR SALE*USED OFFICE*

FURNITURED Iss tble, h r& m111h1 mor:

6 7 3 N 2 3 d A , 37 32 7 ,166 2767 7

Ch,777s ) 7777777mB7 d72737 Sh,,

2 4 CcDm -e ! 29 00 s-1-, 49 00 pH- Ym rws rws hp 433 M Yn1 J240 4

RECYCLED BICYCLES77 s77 77nd7r$7777 3.72 m 7777rr 7n7y777 y,

777.77&77r777 '2.77777y re7p7r7 , re 1,bep7o W 777 r- 777777 A7 372 489 8 2 24

11 crt'se n A TEPEI SP( At STS

NIA I p s N1e 71t 7. .7.

.rc 3ew -l3 22 70o e s 1. N

7777 7713 23 47

S O A,,,A*-,

p7737 r 7 7 1, de77 7 rr7 3 -v y ,

F/rn 4 Sale34

7 7s 3,s 71 ,V 77E

I , 5 1' 3 1 i4 1

1-- -1 N - 3 1 4er'

24

Furn 4S' ale3I36262844

' 1 37A6AHA 2,'ER18 B P B~

H AE O I u !SE 5fnafix,284

NIKON F, blk body, 50 mm I-ns and csw.Nikko 200 mm Aelephoto & 24 mm wide

-ngl. S-nP-1k 420 trlb MAny" xrcs.

All qipmen exclln cdio M k.ff., 376 2006 7 3-2-4

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processing -(l Dnoon 3 704N) "'I") m) 8 13 25 6

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alligatorij (I(C6CC(ptintIg a1 pli(cat)o S for

MANAGING EDITOR

Fall Semester 1984

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Every Friday & Every Saturday9 pm -Midnight

A DotIlar A Dozen 'Topless'Oysters5pm - 7 pm

V5CK C___N\ fith St No Covur Proper Drs

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* MANAGEMENT *TRAININGOPPORTUNITY, Athlete , At6. 6)r, 6 6 s s 6

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4th AvenueChiropractic

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378-7888

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STUBBIES SHORTS

a ''New credo card! No one refused Also,nformn .d6On receiving VISA, Moter rdF~y 111,9 ,h no (red,,t he , Fee brochure Collt'l" v"o ' 0 p ' j-,ng w, ur federally N)",95 1266 iens n 245 7 5 4 9'p " d hqi' %, kool P ole p.1of hkense

1"' 6 howr% Other , ene*" " t(" o hmugh n,, tronsi -

A-n mif lse, b)i-Ir . 11a IWADO-KAI,ail GUlf ATLANIJ( A:PWAY, K R T373-2426 K ARoATly oned progr to

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6otc a Berm udas $23.88 . . . '1'5 966")d ( , 6. 9

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Pr H AV INGFUN YET?

dens o , d 3

0 IBM'S UF GRADSUF s class of 84 will be an important

factor in the future of' InternationalIiHsiness Nlachii's (I.\I

Accordliig to Careirg-- (iiiies Ii rictoriaurice NIasbrr\ l ,VF iaik' I t IitopI nif tmiusirsiti 's 1hose giiadiates ss r in'lii 'I

b\ IBM1. ()f the 100 VF signal JIMhuil,morethaii half r ci'plac Mi1 ii i L i ai15 s ire huat ti atit li IBM', I fA soa toplat c

i s

Miaybcrr\ it ls ) said I Ml uas thcc'r mrat leahr iII thli ihirIg if grilsie fr th last fiI c \ ars, ,, su-n throig thli

'82 '83 joib rei ssin..1 P 841 wIll m ark it t i mii p int for J)b

impl mnii i \ayibi rrs\ saild. ''A i c stuiiitsoi 'ill b' gcuadiiatiig s itin tI' iixt scar

shuIIIlI ci gisti c wss itfI it i ci'I'r rm I1ieIciiter so ithes ill pi tI (e i in thi

Database, which ists ll griidlatiIInstudents and gives caruer'i iifoi d lowatiMpreferences.'

0 SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATECiting the success of the years she has

served as an Alachua County School BoardMse-nctiu- as a e-miimst ratiiiii f' lcciimm it ine toiexcellenee' a r ra( allc 0said sim- plamus to officially aio ht iccandidacy' today for re-election.

UF Adjunct Assistant Profess r JeanWestin already has said she is running forthe seat on the fise-member sc'iihol boarif

Gallant has been the District 2 mmiiiberfor the past four years and served as sclioolboard chaicsomiat cduringi the 1983-841school year.

Alachua County successes during thi

ti t- include passing a biid issue ifor schoolconstruction, and local students movii ginto the top 25 percent ill the natii forstandardized test scores. Gallant saitf

In Brief

M FEE DEADLINEStudnilits taking courses Sumnuer B bave

until 2:30 p.m. todato pa\ their fees andiWIa$27) late if arger.

h-c ra l h paid either fit pcirson at thcStl' it ' irimi ul Si rsji s trailur b hindt i t( fll)b t i 8:30 a.m .and 2:30 p.m.,

r i tw rdrop1 b ix at t i iiorth nd(f tih

VII >I I II thI I I ro I x slIIIIid ,5 rit cthti i na m -nsanjd addrcsses on itih( back (dtici fcc ca d i f t it( l o 1;1(,thum

tr-tic d i tf mail

, w d lt i % Im toda% h. im II

0 DISCIPLINE POLICYF officials had just cause in firing ac-

countant and union activist Pam Rijos lastvear for falsiftyig fhr eiplosietint record,acco)rdin4 to all indepciidecio arbitrator',riiliiig4.

r i ji ' is iiiss l s is 'im a nd a to r ' " a rlitrator t( Itse r Kuairis is cludedf i his 1page( rulmi4, ,,c thmiLgh her job pcr-foria ce ias satisfatir\. Kai s ruldthat 'F ist iiIifiiriiily% adIIimiist'discipline it all rc d falsificatii casn's

"To permit (lijos) to remain as an (,mip sy'ee iould b setting i tpr -cedent cii-trary to t th ( ii ersit s ' psliis .'' Keardecided.

Hijos, ssfIwI worked as o il' accountiatclerk for five moith s bfre sfe was ter-miated i Noveibr 983,claimed shelias fired becateise she was act i'c il% w 5mand minority liin gries atic .

BACK TO SCHOOL SALEBackpacks

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If r j r - r EM[ar4 4 -i- H

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FREE)This coupon and your student fee card will giveyou free admission to any performance untilOctober26.Not goodforCarom Clubhouse

OCALA JAI-ALAI

DON'T MISS 25 BEER AND 250 HOTDOGS MONDAY NIGHTS! Monday, Wednes-day Friday and Saturday nights from 6:45PM, matinees Wednesday and Saturday fromnoon. You must be 18. State Road 318, be-tween Ocala and Gainesville (and 1-75 andU S 301). Now 13 games at every perfor-mance. 1st game 6:45.

C I-

OCAL2JAI-ALAI

Vehicular Left TurnB cycists are allowed to make left turns in

the same manner as motorists. Use the left-turn-only lane. If there is none, do as follows:

* scan behind for a gap in traffic" signal with an extended left arm* move through the gap to the right of the center line* signal and yield to oncoming trafficI make the turn, continuing on the right edge of the lane

Gainesville Bicycle Program - 374-2107

14, alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984

Air Conditioi 9

6 Recharge

PlusFreon

Oyde's Tre and Brake91s E. Univ. Ave. 0 377-9681

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LADIES NIGHTFree Beer & Wine to all unescorted Ladies

204 Chicken Wings7:00 - 1:00

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II

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alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984, 15-r

CALL 3764481

Delancycontinuedfrom page sixteen

But as a junior, Delancy found his role.His scoring tendencies leveled out in lowdouble-figures, while he raised his assistsaverage to 5.9 a game. He tormented op-posing teams' leading scorers with hisdefensive prowess.

His final season saw much of the same, ashe relinquished even more of the scoringduties to freshmen Andrew Moten andDarryl Gresham. His passing remainedconsistent and he became UF's all-timeassist king.

And now, after finally adjusting to hislvi"to rol' the man they called "Fan'"s

BLOOM COUNTY by Berke BreathedPm, YOUe exsiarKrotwR KNowl JMS' imp )CvwEAStY oV-S T rp

ARI U1 RA M07HER Jr /T Msee i Yu

~0 -

BLOOM COUNTY by Berke BreathedSoN.1 I I an I'm Nt x it I THTO (;/.oRi/ I/WMY IURI MRI/ I'M REAVYII I

K q 'I/CR'/ l IqR /7 I MT RHOIW CM RT/I ' A I/N/W M IAON T ' 1 - TIIAN I('K

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faces another transition - one that Sloanfeels can be made.

"I don't know exactly what the Bucksplan to do with him, but I do know thatVernon has three great qualities that canmake him a fine pro player," Sloan said."He's an excellent feeder to the interior ofthe defense, he's great out on the fast breakand he's a devastating defensive player. Iwould imagine they could use all of thosequalitiess.'

St. Jean agrees that Delancy has thequalities his organization is lxiking for.

"In our system we will post up eitherguard," St. Jean said. "We expect either tofill the lane. We weren't looking for an IsiahThomas."

Vernon lDelaney can tbe glad fur that.

--I

16, alligator, thursday, june 28, 1984

Sports-

Delancy faces anotherrole change w'th Bucks

or UF career as-st leader Vernon Delanic - c setcond-round draft choice ofe Ml-a-t'Kee EB'ks the p sviewch itr m torward at UF to poini guard

or Nlwaukee us' tarks anther sear of trans an.

UF swimmersexceiin iriis'by PAUL ENRIQUEZ

. gator Wr ter

* .74i4i-l. -

Itt -I,

AssIsts

2.83.05.94.6

$coring

17.810.312.98.9

By BILL KINGAlligator Staff Writer

Vernon Delancy is nostranger to transition.

In the past five yeirs, hehas made the move from theriu-and-gun Miaii prepranks to the hang-and-bruise 1Soutliast-rn C( i tference; 1981-from the tittercd sre-ts of 1982Overtown to the preppie- 1983-lincd walk ()f UF: from akttiiing, spring tfor ard to IcIItirIlliud d tisfrib)u11 tig\ t i1g.

\()%% li acces vct another transitionmic that, i sI uccessfil, will maki the

hardctrts his plact- of biisinessWhenl thc Mikwaukce lBncks madc

Vernon Declanc% their third round pick IIIthc NBA draft itwkathcey handed him -an i itatim i to bask tball's btiggisItim

that f rom t ic to th pro raks.It I t itr isiti t l that D tlanc h itloi.g

dram-d t if makil1111It's, itdr-cam, s,(mwthinL I hmve to think

ab ii titDt latc i t idt its li it Ipcil isenior eason. " lten III thi, radio abmutmlvs mkin4 *350.000 and $4 i, t c yarI wouildiit know w% hat to do, witl; all thitt

At It Itt s - I ii -~a it (i 't 'MA t I Ic 67 t ) ht a ,1 v t Iworintbout inumbcrs (gl h [ b r hm c

-s -b)i i\sli tili g it i ct - I H ll

at

i( an %at I an ' il am t l;; ':( !1i-tri u it- i n \tt' ia u i

Ill<#p liwlo thc tc,'f ahe 1)mtii I() th % think I (n

P Il if ii lid i -it i ll ~ i ii lii iI t I i t \ it i I l t 11 it ti- i i I

i h t thi 1. d f t ittr ri ti ti t t h

't ' d tt it t- I Is i'- th 1t i i ii

Another recruit gone:Leiter inks Yank pact

By SAM DOLSONAl~igutur Staff Wriet

; fi icc' Sialt illl-tsa ul. !Amateur athlctcs ihan ;t la n;1 tA clbldcddtotng [m ~g ul r I;

(;ato irs ad is nd a proft ssional baseball ,it rI

t ris r , it i(o tiu\ s yilar iN a thotte irt(or' i i rhii li iii i( ]i,,I ach, N .tIt i a sittstati

frrs rtra 1atki i m Iatc htdIto'r t I a m d0d, 000.

Mik.e-H.,th andkMarya\\roachedonkcatJkHNe and'I tJPi-tlcd t.

major stpj iturni ttt ttdreamIto a Tracy Cau kins succeeded Monday in her quest for an T lf IIt-handed fireballer twas txpctur it ltto he part oreal it. Eai wiiiTo i the rigt to reprn ttthi Olymiptc berth by utinn tng the 400-meter indivcual r ey dei aistati' ftonfio tch off the iittolid diettitigne-lo tsta-titled Statis at thi Sttter Ilsmics ii th departure oft oss Kibler and Cla Daniel. Iillegas, ltLOs Angeles. That prestigiois honor i s (aulki ts I t-gaith ii ( - i-k hopiig t at iit al i i'Ii ixfi - oth r hall ofi the proposed Inamic dio, signed a pro pactachieved b placing either first or sco i th lit II disid

1 l eveIts atidtwl l . Cailkiis iest ti-gait iith Iith-l os Angeles Dodgersearlier thisnmonth.Olymnpic Swefiti Trials being tell i IIndianapolis, Ind. positiii i a shti tilt\ the restof thc field t aw i t 4fill- 00 T'l 1UF brass night have been able to foresee lhitHeath broke the American record it the 200-metr mter Tmedlt. coming. After all, the Yankee organization does havefreestyle Mondax with a time of 1:47.92, xhilt Caulkiis Disappointment riteitigedil silrme Tiueslay hoe r, iits rpimtatioi of gettitig what it goes after.qualified for the 400-ieter indiidual medley in 4:41.72. Catilkins f aled to <uali f it the 400-iter briastst trok. Indeed, the pheno did nt cme to Newe York cheap.Wavte placed second behind Cyntthia "Sippy \oodhliad \as te acid a goal that ste had set for hlit-sclf a Leiter's contract stipulates that the Yankees still pay lioin the 200-miteter freestyle Tuesdas and, was clocked iat fits-ycar-old, sheiii sl ipiacd second i the 200-mite Ilr is shiooig. He will attend Rutgers Universifty in the off -2:00.15. freestyle. The UF freshmaia attled Woodhead, a 180 sason.

Heath, whkot seas ranked 16th in the sword it the 200-01% smpian, head to-head for tie last 50 ietrs. Iit sitled . Ies waianted me," Leiter said. "I stas a second-roundmeter freestyle last year, pulled off the biggest stirprisi for second place. pick (thlie Yankee's third overall), but wst-hat I gut seasMondaY when he titdueled former American recordholder I i action late WXXd sdayf ight,IHath woi the 100- comiparabii to their first-rounder (Jeff Priest, a right-Rowd Gaines. After breaking Gaines' mark in i miitter freesttle- switi a time of 49.87. Caulkins finisad a handed pitcher froni UCLA).preliminaries, the l'F sophomore smashed the mark again duappointiiiig eighth in the 100-meter backstroke and t as e iiter w-as selected with a choice the Yanks received a.in the finals, onlY missing the world record held by Michatl clocked at 1.04.14. Hth oiti his tutalifted in it it iits ompensation for the free-agent sigiing of Rich "Goose"Gross of West Gertnany, b .37 seconds. lo the OIlympits. Gossage b the San Diego Padres.

STUDENT MEMBERSHIP ooA Burgers & Beer Joini Till Aug.,10thTwo1 %$. Specialtv Burgers initiation $10.00IS\e(new9embersonly) Ni or $ 5.5

Membership $30 plus taxicludes 2 (Coors drafts, softdrinks or tea. "ti t tiVIii rs W CiOURT FIEs

EoExpires July 8th 1984 11-19 1,hiNEn-oy our BIG screen T V PUBLC WELCOMEI-A. "3e;i71430 SW 13 Street 377-0348 J t430 SW 13 Street 377-034j

" -- I

I I no

I

GarY St. Jean in a phote interview from hisCape Cod home. "We cOITIpare him to PauiPressed. lie's very active and platic I5 gutddefense, and at 6-foot-5, he can si t fltoOT

from the back court.-But Dlancy never has played th plit

It would be yet another transition ."I've never rials thought about pla a

at point guard," Delaticy said. "But I t iiI can do it. I can handle the al! indp iwould just have to adjust.-

Delancy faced his first roli'cbangv trirooki campaign that iarnd him fr s:'-

At-America honors, I umpedpii ad iw grabbed 5 rhtmt

roai thj it bI I aselini iI I W %

"-)I( )a[C., w dc-( )pe II )i ( 1 I Ica Ji n r embcr tth)m, di

i ts high o Ih' i td )il i l t I

li (if r

ha It If t

(,atrt ..

ts s itt iltiin-t\ytr ilii

f out 1)blut(,chipper Fii (it- %II \

t li n iat I if f tli t ( ii it Ii

See Detumnry