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P.ag 2. Th. k.4.pndr Mo rid, Alligtor Thuraday iuIy I7 19y5

StudyBy DREW DAHLE

AlligatwrStaN WrIt.r,Shining through all the cont

oerning the hews and whysacupuncture n the tact that bor'it works

casts doubts onroversy con-.and 1fs of

some people.

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They don't care if the cause of their relief isphysiological or psychological- They don'tcare if the philosophy behind acupuncture isunsound

ALL THEY CARE about is that it helpedihem

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kne *h ich wouldn't respond toconvet Ofl

He phad the tlutd drained seven times. Hetried all kinds ci ointments and medicationseven surgery ,.as performed. Yet his kneest.Il hurt.

IN DESPERATION, he decided to tryacupuncture as a last resort The results fromhe treatments w.ere "unbelievable."

Suggs started with twice a week treatments.Now he noes once a month.

"Sometimes I could hardly limp io theoffice." Suggs said. A halt hour later he couldw.alk out without a limp, and without pain.

I-e said the acupuncture needles hurt "justa little." They were inserted in differentplaces, usually along his injured leg. He saidshocks from the needle could be felt allthrough his leg.

THE ACUPUNCTURE treatmentsreduced the swelling in his knee, 5ugg said.

it's not just my imagination. It's helpedwae. It's take.nthe sorenessout of ny leg."

He said his wife has a persistent sinuscondition which has bee, relieved byacu plnet lre.

After treatmen, her congestion is im-mediately gone. Sumg said.

Nevertheless, these acupuncture"'belhevmr" must hare had their frith at least* little shake, by the endings of a recentstudy by a team of UF LMethsiWCISs.

THE REREAUCH TEAM of Doctors PeterKy e,. Jerome H. Modell. Thoktld W.Anderseu, and Segudiha A. Saga publishedtheir findings in the June 16 issue ofThd Journalof the American MedicalAssociation,.

The research was carried out at UF's W.T.Shands Teaching Hospital and the VeteransAdministration Hospital.

To determine the effect of acupuncture onpain relief. 261 patients were given fourtreatments with acupuncture needles Thetpatients complained of chronic pal. whichdid not satisfactorily respond to conventionaltherapy.

IN APPROXIMATELY NA~L of thepatients the needles were placed along"energy pathways", or meridians, according

to Chinese custom. In the other patients theneedles were inserted in control points notcorresponding to the meridians.

After each daily treatment, increasingdegrees of pain relief were reported. ThepMtients were asked to categorize their in-provement on a scale ol 0, 25. 50. 75. or IC0per cent relief.

Immediately following the final sesson overhalf the patients experienced pain relief ofmore than 75 per cent. However thisgradually diminished until one month lateronly 18 per cent reported similarly effectivelasting relief.-

THIS IS ROUGHLY the same ratio ofsuccess relief as is produced by placebos. or

Rearch showed no difference in resultsbetween those treated along the meridiatisand those who were not. nuiing doubts aboutthe validity of the "energy pathway' theory.

The moderate success of acupuncturemight be traced to either physiological or

psychologicall origins, according to team,-member Modell-

PAIN THRESHOLDS vary between in-

dividuals and within the individual, Modellsaid. By diverting the mind through"counttt-stimuitlitioin of another area of the

body, pain tolerance may be increased. hesaid.

Even in China cenain applications olacupuncture have not advanced beyond theexperimental stage. Modell said.

MODELL WAS A MEMBERof the "Acupuncture Anesthesia Study

Group of tfe Committee on ScholarlyCommunication with the PcopIe's Republic ofChina." which visited hospitals in China forthree weeks in an exchange programengineered by Secretaty of State HewyKissinger.

Modell tbwtd the Chinese doctors did notrefer to the medical principles of Yin andYang, the 5.000-year-old philosophicloondatios of acupuncture.

In the medical senum, Yin and Yaurepresent a balance of body mngy. 111mms ismuppo.Sdly caused by an inibulasce of thisengy. Acupuncture can be usad to eStorethiu internal harmony. thu, curing the E~nema.

SWREN ThE CUHNEE doctors appliedeke needles, they did not strictly Molow thepawens of the meridians, ModedI said. Theyinstead tested different areas.

ALTHOUGH 73 PER CENT of thepatients observed by the commission wereapparently comfortable when aiiesthetmad byacupuncture, some were obviously In pain. A27 per cent chance of failure is a risk notacceptable to Western standards. MOdel!said,

fli1s is only one difficulty in transplantingacupuncture to the West. the etfect of theclash of ideologies Modell said.

He said the Chines, people revereacuponcture as a national tradition, and arewholly dedicated to proving its authenticity

"If aparticulartrentmentdoesn't work, thepatient himself often feels he has failed."Niodell said.

IN AMERICA, the burden of prooffrequently rests solely on the doctor.

Modell also said he fears the profit in-centive may overshadow the need for propermedical supervision. In China, acupunctureis not practiced for profit because medicaltreatment is furnished free by the state.

Polk concedes there are "a lot of scalpers."Yet there is a regulating influence. Allacupuncturists in Florida must be physicimis.and certified by their respective professions inorder to practice.

WEEKEND W1

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Departments forced to limit expenditUresTb-.nnnd.t oM aicfr Thun.doy Ju I' 95 o

General education budget hit by stiff cutbacksBy LINDA WISNIEWSKI

Alligator Staff Writer[lI- sudent must ','e their deddemic tatalogucs s'x c'tra

Tioniths this year an~d 'omei mllga/iml suhscriptaions to If -hrarics may be cainceIlecll

I hewe ire lust sonmc ol the titbdckx UIT- students Aifaculty lace as UFE aflkaaI i to lhead oil ,i prolectcdmillion deliit mi the I 9'5.?t ientral education budget

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UF WAS FUNDED St2.318.162 by bhe Bo~ard (it Regents'his year - approximately SI ni lion more than last year's

general education budget - ut protected costs total$64.494.321. leaving UFE with a 52 million hole in its pocket

Ollices within the general education budget - which in-cludes all colleges except those that are agriculturally orhealth related - are planning budget cuts to head off theprejevted deficit.

bhe Office of Academic ,tfairs has delayed publishing the1976-77 academic catalogue this year until the budget for thenext fiscal year is formulated This delay means a savings ofapproximately 5100.000.

THE ACADEMIC AFFAIRS OFFICE will also extend thecurrent freeze on all career service and administrative andprofessional positions that become vacant during the year --meaning a savings of approximately S46,0 in staff salaries.

Special permission must be obtained from Vice Presidentfor Academic Affairs Robert Bryan before any positions areunfrozen.

The current freeze on Isculty positions in the generaleducation budget will last tndefinitely.'

The three main offices within the general education budget-- the Offices of Academic Affairs. Administrative Affairs.and Student Affairs - will take cuts from their operatingexpenses and capital outlay budgets totaling approximatelySsl0.000.

UF FACULTY AND staff members wil have to make dowith dated office equwpment and dimmer lighting because ofthe budget cuts.

Even UiF President Robert 0 Marston's office is notspared.

Marston will only till one of two recently vacated assistantto the president positions,,.and Executive Vice PresidentHarold Hanson will not hitcan assistant to the vice presidentthis year - a position that has been vacant since Hanson tookoflice one year ago

TUE TWO VACANT positions will result in a savings otapproximately $50,000.

The Office of Academic Attains has also decided to defer$200,(D) from the regents S754.0 allocation to the UiFlibrary -an allocation normally used to buy books.

Fewer library books will definitely be bought this year andthe S2W.,00 cut "is almost certain to result" in the can-cellation of some magazine subscriptions to the UiF library,assistant director of UP libraries fleming Bennett said.

HOWEVER, an allocation to the library is UF's firstpriority - barring unexpected emergencies - if the regentsallocate additional funds to UF in October this year, Bryansaid.

The library will receive approximately $545.(00 his yearhut "needs to get at least 52.6 millon to get back on its feet."UFE chemistry professor Q~r. Robern Hanrahan said.

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inmletrsuit mi tiht funitis

A "CONTlNGE NCY RESERVE kindl mi shr ge11atIucitiOnl budget wilI ilko le cilduced lromi S X. Ir

MN(XN)0 Ihi 'car I a tilun is used to Iiiiance iIetpeWo r

epeimes that occur ihrouighouit lie xci

I lie sl(X)(Xxl i t mcanis tse Ibetir I1,Ls texniu i

tiigenues" his xcr. Brian sinl. .img I hii ot prIorice% IOuitlied In .iC ot emericies

I ad sear the cnt're SI(.XX) contiigeiic tund '4,

depleted it h mioncv used to nay such unexpected V pcns% .1

S 25(MM) exhaust hood used to clear the 'ir ol p0 isoriou.tunmcs an chemistry classes

UP'S PHYSICAL PLANT DIVISION is cutting $SICXXNfronm Is budget allocations by purchasing lev fertiluer ii

upkeep the general grounds at IJF, Physical Plant directo,Calvmn Greene said.

Chipped paimt will become a more common sight at Lrbecause Physical Plant will reduce the amount of bualdmkmaintenance work.

Additional budget cuts within the general education budgettotal approximately S49OA0J

THE PROJECTED $2 million budget deficit has resultedfrom "ringe benefits or retirement benefits for facultymembers scheduled to be paid from the UF budget. im-

iationary Increases in utility costs, and pay raises for all Uii-taculty members.

Last year in January the state legislature decided tbr thifirst time to fond the entire cost of faculty fringe benefits froniUF's budget Previously, the employs and the state each pairone halt the cost of the benefits.

UF is now stuck with paying the entire cost of the benetatfrom its budget bor the tirsi lime this year - benefits whiciresult an approximately between SI million and SI 5 m1,lloi.

INCREASED UTILITY RATES totaling approximatelyv Smillion more iharn'last year compounds the problem.

U F faculty members were also given salary ratmn ttmiddle of the 1974.75 fiscal year. the raises were paidlacuily members tbr only hair of the year.

Fhese same pay raises -which average four per centremain in effect and UF must now pay these salary mecrease-lor the entire wear

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Bike path construction protestedBy JEREMIAH TURNER

Alligator Staff W rhlerLane"s ile ha, been trying hard to meet the need of itselichts but some riders are siill dissatisfied " iih whatis heen done

he city has SI miles ii bikewavs completed andi there'ipans or building '9 more mies in the futurehe lirnt bikepaths in Gainesville were buit in 1972 to

rse public schools and recreational dreas.TO DATE the bikeway system has cost S104.XX)"lEvcntually we would like to have bikepath' on all thenlor roads mn own," said Brian Kanely. Gainesvillesstunt traffic engineer

I he bikeways now found throughout the city were builtIider the dlirection of the city engineering department

b 'e state department of transportationA Bi.u 'vs Aduisory Board to the Gaitesvticl Cityrnmmi,'iOt wa , t up mn P92 to advise the commission

mi planning the paihsTHE BIKEWAYS are p~ruxrily of two types, those that

. separate blacktop paths. built beside the main existingLidwa) and those that are pedestrian sidewalks with

unps built onto corner' for bicyclists' use These rampsconstructed when there is not sufficient space to build

,eparate path.'Our nmam purpose in building the bikepaths is to giveveles a safe place to ride'" Kanely saidI here is some dissatisfaction with the paths. "I thinkI the paths could have been better planned, ShirleyLYeter. an employe at Revere Cycle Works mnineiville said.'THE DLACKTOP paths are being built lower than thesting roadway and when it rains all the sand and

irbage washes onto the paths causing unsafe conditions

rt cll Kure artowerof the Ten Speed Center, thinksPaths are all right ftw the average bicycle, but aresaf'e (or his more expensive model.My bike uses high pressure tires and if I hit a patch ofid'd skid and fall so I don't use the paths'" he said-.

IJke also thought the sidewalk paths were dangerouslust cars turning jato a street where a ramp is do not

'Lally look down the sidewalk to see if a bike is coming.anedy admitted that the temporary paths were being.below the level of the roadway and that thi, did causerohiem.

WE TRY to keep them as clean as possible. When weI the permanent paths we wril include curb and

Cr' so there won't be this problem." be saidmel) also admitted that turning car' were a problem..aid the city ha'. been painting white lines across thesection to warn nmotori't' that the area is a bicycle

mng.

SICEAI PATHS -h by Ic .kdsmr.drlvrs don't look foropprooching bikbs'

Bicyclists should use the paths wherever they arebecause they are safer than riding on the streets, he said.

Riding in a street when a bikepath is available violateslocal ordinances.

"BICYCLE RIDERS will be ticketed for not using anexisting roadway." said 14. B.G. Smith of the GainesvillePolice Department

The paths are designed to be ridden at a speed ofroughly ten miles per hour.

I enmporary bikepaths were recently completed onArcher Road from the Medical Center to 34th Street, andon almost all oi the 34th Street except for a short sectionnear the Publix Market on 2nd Ave. Permanent paths willhe built when these roads arc resurfaced and widened inthe future.

"Where we bil~d depends on funding and therecommendations of the advisory committee." Kanelysaid

THE COST of abikepath varies with the type of existingroad and land surface.

It's not cheap by any means,' Kanely said.On the UPF campus plans are being made ('or a campus-

wide bike path system."We want to eventually build paths that will separate

the bicycles from pedestrians. Gary Koepke. planningconsultant to UF said.

Koepke was unsure when the new bikepath would beconstructed.

ACCORDING TO Dr. Frank Martin, a UF professor onthe bikeways advisory board. Gainesville is ahead of mostFlorida cities in building bikeways.

A niajonty of bicyclists in town are students, Martinsaid, but it is estimated that approximately 800 citizensuse the paths for commuting tw work. Gainesville bicyclesales hit an all time high of lo.0m in 1974. and totalownership by Gainesville residents was estimated to havereached 45.000 in l473,

constitutionalityy of newonor Court rules debated

By FRANK RINELLAAllIgator Staff Writer

'.e of new Honor Court rules of procedure tot personsBefore July 8 have been labeled unconstitutional by

Sen ator rony Lom bardi last w eek.he new rules which took effect following senate passageM make prosecution easier and define attempted cheatingpunishable offense.

HIE RULES VIOLATE ex post facto (after the tact)-- forbidden by Article I. section 9. subsection 3 of'the

onstitution that says no cx post facto law shall beLomnbardi said.

. on cannot he tried for an act that is not a crime atthe t is committed. he explained.

.Amnbardi said he has talked to four Ta, professorsi'ad added they agree with his stand,.

Court Chancellor Byron Petersen however, said thelot violate the law because the Honor Court isn't a

SCoUrt,.pOSTFACTO LAWS onE apph to criminal liw.'

.i explainedI nor Court Ch antcl or 'aid hec based his upi 1n o1 Oi

' supreme C.ourt case Galhjr is Press. wh tch imius

ex post tacto to criminal law.Law professor George Baldwin said lie knew little about the

procedures of the Honor Court, but said from what he hasheard about the controversy there seems to be a question ofwhether the Honor Court is criminal or administrative innat ure.

"Off-hand I would say it is more administrative." Baldwinsaid. "I wouldn't expect cx post facto to get very far in court."

LAW PROFESSOR CUAELES CRAVER said he was alsounfamiliar with the procedures used by the Honor Court. butadded "I have to admit that I see it as a juvenile type court.w hich is vie-nd as criminal in nature," Craver said.

Lombardi said he disagrees with Petersen, saying theHonor Court is a state agency and must therefore comply withthe Constitution.

"The Honor Court has the power to award penaly hoursw hich cAn prevent the state from awarding a degree.'Lombardi said, "that make them a state agency."

LOMBARDI FAILED to conince the senate to send there'. rules back to committee last week. He said he plans anappeal to the Board of Masters.

"I had hoped 'oneone more Competent in legal matterswituld hate taken this up. but since no one else has I i ill do itnmnh.'' Lnmbards said explaining he isnot a law major

I hope someone with more lamiliarhti of law will come

forward and help me write the brief I need to submit to theBoard of Masters." hradded.

The Roard of Masters consists orpeterw., David Card well,Pat Wiggins. and Jim Roark.

STEVEN ROZWYNES IS expected to be confirmed as amember at the next student scinate meeting. Petersen andCardwell are both affiliated with the Honor Court.

Lombardi expressed concern that Peterson, who wrote thenew Honor Court rules, is a member of the Board of Masters.

'It would definitely be a conflict of Interest." Lombard'said.

Peterson said that when and if it caine before the board, hewould consider a modion for himself so abstain.

"I AM NOT STUCK with bias at this time." Petersen saidLomtardi said if he fails with the Bloard of Masters he will

take the case wilie Eighth Judicial Circuit Coon."I would like all the students going before the Honor Court

from now on for offenses committed before the bills werepassed to contact me because their rights are being violated,'Lonmbardi said.

"Iam in favor of the new laws. However. I am against therules being retroactive.'' Lombardi said.

* ~ ~*.#,.,nttt,., * * *. . . *

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UF StdentS U

Cosu me r GuideUCeS

cities Sl

'Good Food

Theme's a mason wty Sheiheys has b.ngoing strong in Gcirwwvilh for 15 years,.The UP Consumer Guide gives a few andanybody who has ewer callSd Shelleyscan give you a few mom. You mighthewr about the CA or other famous wubtor you might heor ain picza toat youcan cuflo' deign youuMfl. You mightewut hewr about henrages that you canget at horn, or attic, with a quick phanecoil. So dan'tkenlmenlng o everybodyelse - call Shelley's and get In on th

magic yourself.We deiver to 12:00

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377-.E.- .a

1q75. P.9 . S

By SHEILA DRAPERA^'"t~ "Srie

ANTHONY'S - 92l W. University Ave - Red a4Murphy. a blue-grass group will be providing entertainment

this Friday and Saturday nights at this quaint and cmitortable beer pub.

The three musicians play banjo, bass, guitar and nmandotand are reputed to be hot. They begin playing at 9:30 prand there is a 51.50 cover charge.

THE REEF AND BO'ITLE - 5220 SW 13th St. - DUCooper. a Iolksinger -nd baladeer, wil be offering Ioriginal tunes this week. Tuesday through Saturday.

Cooper has tour albums to his credit and has toured wisuch knowns as "Sweet-baby" Jamies Taylor and Chicag.

Backed by a guitar, this man can make you shine withsmile or make you drizzle with a sentimental tear. Showsat 9 and I I p.m with no cover but a one drink minimum.

BILRO AND GANDAL'S- 2300NW 6th Si. -Back

popular demand at Gainesviile's own wine and cheese cakeFresh Air, a tight group of tour people sounding some,.llike Crosby. Stills. Nash. and Young.

Phe group can produce subeth tour-pant harmonies I 'music begins at 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and there aSI cover charge

BLUE WATER BAY -State Road 26 in Meirose - J.'nd Louis. Atolk duo wil be playing their original tune''The Bay' this Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights beginnat 8. they will be playing at the Phsladclphia 1-olk Festisoon and are highly recommended

Bluewater Bay offers an excellent atmosphere and delica.steak and lobster dliiters.

DUB'S -4560 NW 13 St - Weston Prin, and Blackldone ot Gjainesvillc's livorite tunk-rock hands will he Ieatuj,this thurmdav and Friday nights at 10:30 and 12.30.great music to dance to and there are plenty of drinkschoose rnm. Here is a cover charge, although the anmourwas not determmed at press time.

DUT CH PANTRY - 1-73 and Newberry Road - MuP:young man who plays the piano and sings is featured at-Spirit ol '76 Lounge Foesday through Saturday nights ?4

p.mHe plays music mostly from the swing era, l93O's

1940's. You've heard your parents speak of "Stardust." 'w

here is your chance to hear it. There is no cover or mmnlnw

GREAT SOUTHERN MUSIC HALL -- 233 W. UniversiAve. - Believe it or not (i'd rather not). "Funny lady" yr

Hendrix" for 52 at 32:30 am. Friday and Saturday. It'sgreat opportunity to reminisce on the psychedelia of the b6tplus see a master ofthe guitar at work.

LAMPUIGHTER - I NW It) Ave -- This weekend y.can boogie at this Big Daddy's Lounge to the soul and rocbeats of Maxima direct fr South Florid. Music starts at'p.m. with a SI cover on Friday and Saturday nights.

THE MONK'S INN - 3305 NW 5th Ave - Somteontfinally bought the old ILongbranch Saloon and scrubbed itdown. The atmosphere now is quite enjoyable - woodentables and waiters dressed in monk's habits.

The Moak's Inn offers 30 types of sandwiches and a longlist of beens and wines. Thene is lIve acoustic music Tuesdaythrough Saturday nights provided Sy Bill and Jeannie wh<

bqgiss between 8 and 9Qp.m. Thate is no cover.

COOEY'S RESTAURANT - Steinhateheehe.a repeat performance of Adt II and III ofPlana Suite this Friday night. There is ancharge of SI added to the cost of the entree.tbrmarion call (904) 496-3501.

-- flie wilNeil Selmon'* it t a m CFor more in

CONSTANS ThEATER - "Dates at S.C" a spoof otthe older musical comedies of the 1940's till be presmsted b,the Florida Players July 16-19 .s a part of Repernoy Thete'1975. The St.y is of a girl who goes to Broadway where sh.runs Into an old boy'frIeud.

lt's totally unrtalistic but Asp and who need, reality? Thipcrfonmance begins at S p.m.

Tickets are free to students and 52 to the geitersi publicbut you bante pt your tickets early if possible -s it will bi

NOR;;h UNION LAWN - "Deliveance" with (are youready) Burn Reynolds will be the free movie pnemed byStudent Gonernnment Productions this Friday night at 9 p~m.- that is if it doesn't rain.

4.

. . . -

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*o.4 T he lndepen4.nt Acuido AMtIgolor, Thorndoy. Jlyi I7 975

GreekchrchCobtailnsPo-s for

By JOSE SARIEGOAlligator Staff Writer

A Carpatho-RussianOrthodox missionary whohad tour uncles - allpriest' -- killed in theRussian revolution, hasfound a parish in

Gaines lieI he Very Reverend

Nicholas J Woloshuk. aMonsignor of the U.S.Orthodox church, willestablish the first Pan -Orthodox parish inGainesville Sunday whenhe holds service in the J.Wayne Reit, Union.

Woloshuk 'aid hislather and his lather's fivebrothers were all priests.Four of the brothers werekilled in the revolution andhis father fled to the U Sto avoid the same late.

WOLOSHUK CAMETO Gainesville looking lota parish because hisdaughter lived here and heknew people here.

The new parish is beingorganized and tunded bythe Orthodox ChristianFellowship, a campusstudent organization who.until Woloshuk arrived,was looking desperatelytor a priest.

"The answer to ourprayers fell into our lap.'John Missing. a Fellowshipmember, said.

The only other Or-thodox service in town, a

once month 'Cr' ice .at theEpiscopaI Student C inter,w.a, conducted in Greek.Missing said

AS A RESULT, theparishioners could notparticipate in the serviceand attendance w asdropping. he said

At present, the servicesat the Union are onlytemporary. Woloshuksaid. He said he is lookingfor a church which wouldallow binm to perform theservice if it does not interfere with the church'sregular service

"I'd prefer a church."Woloshuk said 'heatmosphere is much moresuitable.''

THERE IS ONEproblem. though. he said.According 10 Greek-Orthodox doctrine, theservices can only be heldon Sunday and beforenoon which would conflictwith most other areaservices

He said there is only aslighi differences betweenPan-Orthodox and RomanCatholic services.

For one thing. thepriests can marry;Woloshuk is married andhas six children,

Another is that the Pan-Orthodox church honorshe Patriarch Demetrius of

Greece rather than thePope in Rome.

ALSO, THE COM-MUNION is administeredwith a golden spoon andconsists of two parts.bread and wine. insaead ofthe wafer used in the

C utholic OmnllhiflIOn

A nother difterencc isthat the Pan-Orthodoxtollo& the Julian calenderof the Gregorian calendarmost of us follow. Con-sequently. Christmas forthe Pan-Orthodox falls onJanuary 7 instead ofDecember 25.

Wolosbuk said he hopesto expand the service toinclude a catechism orreligious instruction, socialgatherings, a choir andcounseling for youngpeople as soon as thechurch has a permanenthome.

T HE G RE E K.ORTHODOX religiondates hack to the split inthe Catholic churchbetween Rome andConstantinople in the 11thcentury. Woloshuk said.

He said there wereabout 250 million peoplethroughout the world whofollow the faith.

Missing estimates thatthere are 47 peopleregistered as Orthodox inGainesville this summer.he said there are 125during the fall

WOLOSHUK, WHOSPEAKS nine languages,will conduct the services InEnglish. H-e was dean ofmen and professor oflanguages at Christ theSaviour Seminary inJohnston. Pa, beforecoming to Gainesville.

Woloshuk said lhe maybring some 7O0-0 yearold icons to use at theservice which his fatherbrought over from Russia.

pitoto by bet vvool

NICHOLAS WOLOSHUK

expands service

Fall of ViefiBy TERRI SALT

Alligator Staff Write'.W ithin hours ol receiving the excited phone

La11. the young Vietnamese woman picked upher child and hurried to the Saigon airport.

Nearly 3@ hours later, her husband lefthome heading for the ait'port to board.mother plane that wuld take him to Guam.

LESS THAN THREE months after theydei home, the family came to GainesvilleI heir sponsor is Dr Mason Marvel. UFassistant director ol international programs.

Dr Nguyen I hanh Hal. and his wife.Nguyen I'hi Bich Lien, wanted to leave Saigonhut 'it wa' difficult to get out, and we didn'tkno,. where to go. h s~w said. e w ddnt

kno,. i w.e could get out or if we would beallowed into the United States or any othercountryr.

Hai. director of the National AgriculturalCenter in Saigon described his last frw weeksin Saigon saying. "Nobody thought thesituation could deteriorate so quickly.

'In three weeks, the whole countrycollapsed. We lost one city every two days or',o.' he said shaking his head.

EVEN AS NORTH Vietnamese troopsappr-oached Saigon. Hai and Lien didn'tknow if they .ould be able to leave.

Lien. supervisor ofldhe nutrition program atCatholic Relict' Services. said her departure"as sudden and unexpected.

"I swent to swork and got a call from a friendsaying he could get met out." she said.

She told her co-,orkens she was leaving andlet the office around 9 am. that day. She.ent home. packed a small handbag, the onlyluflagp she '.as allowed to carry, and tookher baby girl to the airport.liii explainedhe could not leave until later." I PLANNED F'OR my wife and baby to

leave Anst. When she left. I didn't know if Icould get out." Hiii explained.

Lien and the baby arrived at the .1rpmr at Ip.m. that day but 'it was two days and two

iam accelerated refugee evacuation

FAMIL.Y UNIED PhAst by ese .ridn. otter risky departure

nights before we could get on the plane."Hai said Lien's journey as a 'long story."

IT ALL BEGAN when an Americanprofessor in Guam received letters from seof his tormier students in Saigon asking forhelp. The professor "flew to Saigon to getsome of his former students out."

Hai said. 'After my wife got out, a friendand I were Organizing a second group ofwonme, and children to leave."

HOWEVER, IT DIDN'T work. OtherVietnamese heard of the plans and rushed toget on the bus that would take them to theairport. In all the pushing confusion plantell through and the group could not leave.

At 6:53 p.yt. Hai remembered the threclearly, his brother called and said he hadlbhnd a iway for them to leave.

"lIE DIDNT HAVE time to explain, 'headded quickly. but Hal drove his car to thestreet where he could catch a bus for theairport.

Hiesmiles. "I left the ear right there on thestreet, keys and all," he said.

In the United State. Air Force plane, Hal.five brothers his sister and 20 other relativesfliew to Manila and then to Guam.

"WE DIDN'T' ALL plan to go together,"Hal said, laughing at the way things turnedout. When he arrived in Guam, a friend toldhim that Lien had trouble leaving the Saigonairport.

Ha, said he panicked for * moment and"didj,'t kno. whet to do.

"1 went wandering through the tents," besaid, describing the thousands of people

milling around him.After looking in more than 30 tents HAti

found his wie sitting in a tent with his cruingdaughter.

IN GAINESVILLE, Marvel worried abouithe welfare of his friends.

Marvel's wile Audrey explained that sheand her husband spent two years In Saigonworking with the agricultural college. Mane'.as in charge ol the UF team helping thecollege and ,as Hai's "American cownterpart"

The families became friends and severalyears later H-ai visited the Marvels when hewas in Gainesville on business.

MARVEL DIDN'T KNOW if Hai haddecided to leave Saigon. but decided to sendletters of sponsorship to the bases .hercrefugees were being sent. "in case thecy hadbeen able to escape.' Audrey Marvel ex-plained.

HAl SAID HE called Marvel 'collect onthe camp pay telephone,"and Marvel "askedwhy I hadn't called sooner."

Explaining the delay. Hat said, "Sometimesyou had to wait hours to make a phone call."because the Vietnamese stood in line waiting

to call the few people they knew in the UnitedStaes

Finally, after all the papers were processed.

Cal, Lben. Hal's mother and she child leftCalifornia. arriving In GainesvIlle May 31.

HEY ARE STAYING with the Marvelsuntil they move into a Brasdywine apartinntthat was dotiated for thawr uwe until Sept. I.

L"eThe main thing for us now Is to get S job,'

Hai is a doctor of veterinary medicine andIs looking for a job in his field.

LIEN HAS EXPEDIENCE In nstritot-elaedareas.

Hol ANDi LIEN still watch closely thr newtof her omeland.

b"Wke bap.0 someday we till be able to roback t"oour coutry again, eves If Just fr S

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rHEAtsTO SEE

MOREWITH

ftOns on tChe FM iand n

UNIVUIliy CITYlBElhSO4NCAMS CO INC.

522 N. MAIN ST.

Key== Ws

1029 W. University Open l0am-7 pm

ftodrsriedeR

Witnessmay be

A Gamnenille resident whowas an inmate in the Beaufort

lst August may bealed a a

witness in the Joan Littlemurder trail.

Little, a black woman. ascurrently bring tried for firstdegree murder in the Aug. 27.2974 death of her jailer;Clarence Alligood. She ad-mit. she stabbed Alligood IItimes with his own ikepick.hut claims he tried to rapeher.

TUE GAINESVILLEwitness may have heard Littlescream, the night of the in-cident. Aug. 27.

Abbie Kendrick, aspokeswoman for Little'slawyers said the person amquestion, "is just one of theseveral people who knewUi that may tie calledduring the courne of thetrial."

She added however that"there is not a search tin-

derway" for the witness atthis time.

KENDRICK SAID thename of the potential witnesswould not be released to thepress until it is released, "tothe-co.

needs donorsI'he Cavatan Regional Blood

Center blood drive wilcontinue through tormorrows. an attempt to meet thedaily needs of the five areahospttals.

enough blood to supply the

h o p i al f a d , do n o r gi e

Blood may be donated at1330 NW 13th St. Mondaythrough Friday, R ant. to 8:M)p.m. For the drive a bloodmobile will be at the Plaza ofthe Americas from 9 a.m. 1o 4p.m.

AutographingParty

forLeab Ross

(Mary Webb)DARK ROADS

published byHarcourt Brace

Jovanovich

Sunday2:0SCO:0

coffee & mints

"""""

bPg IC. Th. knd.p.ndent florid. Alligator Ftwwssy. July I7 i975

EDITORIAL

WallflowerAmericans are becoming a bunch of shrinking

wallflowers.That's the conclusion one Stanford University

professor reached after surveying more than 2,000college students and teachers. He found that morethan 42 per cent of those questioned consideredthemselves shy persons.

The results were so astounding to ProfessorPhillip Zimbardo that he announced his intentionof opening a shyness clinic where shy Americanscan help each other overcome their problem.

The folks at Civitan Regional Blood Centerknew all about shy people even before Zimbardo'ssurvey. The center, which serves six counties, isregularly plagued with the problem of searchingout blood donors in a blood-shy society.

Perhaps shyness itself isn't the only reasonblood donors don't come forth in droves. Many nodoubt are wary of potential discomfort oftenassociated with blood-gathering paraphernalia.

But as one donor declared, "it's less painfulthan getting a shot, and if I get in an accident Iwant to know there will be blood around."

Others just don't seem to care.Summer is acritical time for the blood center.

The annual exodus of students from this towntakes away about 45 per cent of the center'sregular doors. But unfortunately, while thesupply has decreased, the demand remains thesame.

In order to meet the needs of the five areahospitals the center needs about 60 donors a day.When these donors aren't available they have toship it in from blood centers in Jacksonville,Orlando and Marion County.

Of the five hospitals who regularly use thecenter. UF's own W.T. Shands Teaching Hospitaluses the lions share, about 67 per cent. We wouldlike to see Ilhe UF community take the lead indonating this much-needed commodity.

Today and tomorrow the center is wrapping upa community blood drive in an attempt to catch upon the shortage. Dornrs will not only have thesatisfaction of knowing their gift could savesomeone's life, but they can also assure themselvesof blood if they ever need it under the center'sblood assurance plan.

So if you drive a motorcycle, jump out of anairplane, or tame lions in your spare time,donating blood may not be such a bad idea. . .justin case.

In any case it's the neighborly thing to do. Andwho knows, it may even help you overcome yourshyness.

A,

Linus paic

* .- tsr.dot.p,.c.d.ad'.f0m.ds weda.* Noi I. .gped wi$h a psaidoon.* Nov. oddrmmss and slphon. nunmbar, of

Non., will b. w,0h.d only if writer thaw. *us,cojse Thed~.orrsnrvn.*h.nghto .dit nil I.".rforspoct

Wri'.n may gsjbm.,i longer euboy. columns or letflrnto b. contdered icr tin a, sopohkng Out columnsAny wrir inm,.sd in .,bmnting 0 regular colun .o&k.d to contoct 4h. .d41or and b. reported Ic k'owsompi. of his work

'Vaic PCtU NIMI 'Wt Wills IEM(T

Mayors askIt has sometimes been said

that the U.S. government isgood at only two things:Waging war and collectingtaxes.

Well. it would seem, thatour government has lost its Thetalent bor lighting wars. And governthat may be a good thing, paovidirgiven the causes at chooses to 'servicelight for, to the p

However, faith in Uncle know wSjmns ability as a tax collector UJNFIa still rampant in the land. A states

wh~ole flock of true believers ficiestlyshowed up in Boston last ttugs howeek for the U.S. Conference to proniof Mayarn. which a

THlE MAYORS,especially the peethe big city democrats. were Thelobbying hard for increased althoughandouts from the federal people.government. efficient

The primary mechanism Inferniri'r the distribution of this (IRS).laygesne .s'the federal revenue bureawcsharing program. This five- adnminiyear program, which has cost the bess30 billion, is due to expire talentsnext year. govern?

The prime goal of the the fedmayors was renewal of .peind.revenue sharing. Their Thissecondary goal was the revenueDiversion of more of the loot gullibleto themselves. Federa

Revenue sharing was born you'llbecause of the faith in the statefederal government's tax to doco'leeting ability. The theory One'goes something like this: Federa

for bigger share of

local and statements are best atig the people withs". They are closerttopic. and thereforehat they want.L)RTUNATELY, theto not have a suf-

-efficient gang ofsteal enough money

dt all of the "servicesre so badly needed bypie.federal government.

Ih remote from thehas a wonderouslygang of thugs: the

.3 Revenue ServiceSo some bright youngrat in the Nixonstration decided thattway to combine theof the two levels of

mient would be to haveLs tax and the states

was called federalsharing and sold to apublic as the "New

lisa". The old one, ifremember forced theand their subdivisionsall their own stealing.can see how the "NowRism" would be

The Independent

Florida Alligator

IA heny KteadeeJ-" eV. CekMa bdeyst aAn eMelphwC *.yfllppTea MS4eim*wyMc. Jr.s1a olyJim kapSfl .Odande Mull,,

politically popular. Localgovernments can dispense'without taking. Goodieswithout pain.

Take Gainesville as anexample. The city commissionis using its revenue sharingtunds to hold the line with"only" a one mill tax increasewhile still going ahead withsuch glorious projects -s therenovation of the HotelThomas.

CUSHY as it is. the statusquo isn't good enough formany of the big city mayors.They feel that they are notgetting their fai, share of theloot.

In their view, too much ofthe swag is siphoned off bysmall cities and the relativelyhealthy cities of the south.west. lTey point with con-.siderable scorn at such citiesas Houston which ran abudget surplus almost equalto its share of the federal loot,

All of this underscores thenecessity of adding a "greaterneed' factor to thecalculations according toChicago Mayor Richard J.Daley, the leading advocate ofthis idea.

b- -a.ee-.

Mdin-Cghfee

.Ah Gne anan ra

AsSudet~n.eMenepr

Atagc -tntAdVurlWing -aag

Cavculalo a Clanttd Mancwr

lootAnother change being

pushe is an increae inrevenue sharing funds inyeats in which the economy isbad. The idea here is thatlocal taxpayers can't affordhigh taxe, in bad years.Federal taxpayers. ap-parently, are different people.

THIS NEW wrinkle hasbeen dubbed "countet-cyclical revenue sharing".Can't you just set that termbubbling up from dsep withinthe bowels of thebureaucracy?

As ridiculous as federalrevenue sharing is. then is agerm of truth in the theoryunderlying it: The federalgovernment is incapable otspending money intelligently

However, the state andlocal governments are onlymarginally better. Eachindividual as the only reallycompetent judge of his or herown seeds.

SO HOW about runningrevenue sharing like this:

Each person sends his other income tax into the IRS.The bureaucrat deductsenough to pay his salary andremit, the rest to the taxpayerwho spends it in accordancewith his or her needs.

Of course, you might askwhy we send the monqy In atall.

That's not a bad question.

Tea wider

'uhShd hr

PC S. 133fl Uflvvist*GeI Oemwein.4 huaceMice bhM t, C.Ihp ha1729 Weu Ae ~ p sn

Sutnasn O~fec. $oe 37.Idetw,.I bseme3g. 6gg

Adverna, e,,, n Petvi,Ost*enens 376.44W2

BRIAN DONERLY 2

Tb. independent Rorndo AI~gonr Thhiudoy July f7 19, Pigoqs

ebellious youth of 60's have gone undergroundriend told muethe other tav hem iti< he hail gr(,n ISlate to participate in Ihe youth rebellion and wcaningof today's counterculturesaid he used to sit through the long boring Clade~V ot

school bolstered by the media. knm. ledge that ciliegehe new testing grounds tor alternate lite styles t thetional Protestant work ethicINDERGROUND" newspapers sang the praises Pt thenon-conformists then, anti pred ieed I he lul ul ce ~u

-not''Fhe Great Society' to a philosophy ii mecli. the imminent conversion ineser anme oft anti itaoil trying to pinpoint just t'hen and w here that "Utopian

"' limped away to an unheralded demisehe Stient MSjerty' wtas right when, during the i ace

and Vietnamn protests of the siM es. ouiragedl parentsto convince the pt-ess that it "as lUSi a tabble-rousingeiking up all the dust anid conluson

lost kids are good kids." they'd say I knew thes' wcreback then, and time certainly has borne out the truth instatements today.

rat depends of course. on iahat you miean by '"good" kids.d"here mean, the smooth transfer of tradliiinal

rican values to the young andl immatureYLES MAY have changed some since the sixties. ,tu

inly no mnore than they have during any transition tronmdecade to another.erica's supremist foreign policy may be changing almosttowards what appears to be the position proffered by theiamt protests. but this change has taken place mostly due

,reign1 political pressure not change from within.ind tree enterprise still reigns as a sacred cow over our. Most people want it that way. they're certainly gettingd say.

ckand roll, that grand bastion of depraved anti-social

>orts does not seemSbe Forrer's specialty

IlTOR:le drivel that Greg Forrer passes ott as opinion in hisinn in the July 4th Alligator demands rebuttal Forrershis criticism of Atlanta Braves announctrn HamiltonJohnson on their alleged overuse of nicknames for theern, and their financial allegiance to the ball club, not thelnmg public Forrer strikes out on both counts.

anmiltori and johnson. who announce at the beginig ofGame (per federal regulations) that they are paid by the

yes. have t wo purpose'. l-irsrettentan their listeners soy'll comec back for more. ano secondly, advertise the

pfulvy endea the playersto a dee sth auence andmainly. those woeful players needI all the help they Can getbet the folks mn Gainesville. Ga moe the nicknames --- andplayers, contrary too rrer's assumptions, probably don't

JKEWISE, Hamilton and johnson's promotion ol theye' is done quite realistically. Despite the source of his

ry. Hamilton talked at length otn . recent telecast aboutBrakes' high-school performance two night' before (iwe

zrs). knd Ralph Garns hittig slump tine for It agaiiistustori),lamdlton and Johnson arc line sportMcasterS. but Forrerrto think that to be worthwhile the) should be critical of

Antagonistic towards the ean, they're lollowirg. Howwould Ois Boggs have lasted here at Florida if he'd met

se 'qualifications'?ireg. you've got .tlot to learn about sports

Rudy Miller7AS

PA4UL SC HIJLKEGI'IEST COLUMNISTI'

'jikes has hecti grossly mutated into 'I slick entertainment

vamt rrnminescert If -rank Sinatra w ooing mrillinsWHEN ROCK qtars greedily grab for every single dollar

iallahle to them and hoard their prohic in Republican taxshclicrs, wh shouldn't evevvbtxdy else gro'. Up looking outprntmirIl for No I9

Why jot imecst, or better yet get your pareiits to loot thelill. sm or sesen thousand dollars in a liberal arts education tosecure a high pasmrg job when you graduate?9

She only trouibe w'iih ihat particular course 01 Wction 5s thL

estiltit mcrflow. ol iutrimed workers flooding ihe h,tirket a ll eager bor their sh arc ot a shrinking &cY Omlie pit

Mn be it wOuhd hase been easier to tiiet colic1 diplomasbor sale .it S5AoX . shot, no four year residency requiremtent is'iccessars I he results wmuild be nearly the same

NO, THE spirit of America was not changed by the turmoilIf the sixties It swas qude spectacular working and hoping fora ha ige from selIi sh tess to souperat 'on but this 'N9-year-oldouintr5 is not set up for such .' change.

AnI seriously doubt that a revolution of niakontentso Ud sta ed mn im plemciitmi t hcir goals cit her Madihon

Asenut is too expert at incorporating the sI ightest bit ot

protest to lit the comm nercialI shape of the country.What happened to the rable-riouscrs and paradise-

I sioniers of I he past decade? I think they have truly goneunderground to live as best they can amidst the splendor ofAmerican society. You'll hear from them again, rest assurredof that. I only by worldly exam pie.

I'VE FORGO1TN MY LINS!'

Lotz diguard

idn't want toat

EDITOR:As a UF- student atd ] loyal

(jator basket ball fan. I feelthat John Lot, owe' the UFcomnintity in explanationfor Bruno Caidwell's with-drawal from school.

According to a report in the'anesville Sun,' Caldwellwas dropped from scholarshipbecause LolL would not allowhim to attend somnmer school

L

&

to t@ LEWOSt. W urns ad IWO UC rcr aiM III P~W3 AMA.uFa(t~tThkr.'

UF namedcto maimtain his eligibilityCaldwell was quoted as sayingthat Lots made a "rule' thatdoes not permit hisattend summermaintain ilirequirements

If this quotationI rind such a rule I

outrageous andBasketball playersbetter parn of iWo

(fall and ,,nter) I

playersschoolgibil,

toto

is correct.,to be both

absurddevote the

quarters.o athletic

pursuits. Why can't theyattend summer schol tomaintain their eligibility' II'this rule were to be extendedto other spoils. such asfoolball. Florida's startinglineups would be decimated!

If Coach Loft is asdedicated to the Gators'

C basketball program as hepurports to be. why should heeuiforee a rule which is soobviously a hindrance to his

I eelduthe reason forCaldwell's withdrawal lieselsewhere, in the "'littlethings' he alludes to in theport, but does not explain.Caldwell was too flashy a

guard to suit Lotu' tastes. Itwas evident to anyone who

witnessed a game last yearthat Caidwell was yanked the

keep a flashyICaidwell

moment he breathed im-

correctly I believe Lotzplayed Caldwelt not becausehe wanted to, but because hehad no "ne else of comparabletalent available,

Lot prefers the zombie-type guard Pihe kind of guardwho does exactly what he'stold to do, with no nm-provisat on The bostic-typeof the armstrong-type. Youknow, the type of guard thatcouldn't hit a 15-footer if hislife depended on it. but canhandle the ball fairly wellNote. [ott did not recruitMike Ledernian)

Norm "Bruno" Caldwellled the Gators in assists, wassecond in scoring, second inthe nation in free throw

r

percentage, had two yearsahead of him at Florida, buthe had to leave school becausethe coach wouldn't let himtake eight hours in summerschool in order to keep hisscholarship?

What goes on here?I beleve Caldwell left

because Coach John Lkovmade little or no attempt tokeep uimi at Florida. Coachjohn [otz just did not like theway Bruno Caidwell playedbasketball. Too flashy! A hotdlogi

Ask Auburn'sJohnson, Coach Lotzwant him either!

Eddiedidn't

Randy Wagner71M

-NThe Independent

Florida Alligator

Rick AdelmonSpoil. Edilor

JiMemMn oSeier

L

Gory SolonofAnus tJNesitor

J

Not space shots but pet snakesconcern Cape Kennedy youth

By KEITH MOYERAm.gar Staff Writer

You would think a kid who has spent the major part cihis life in the environs of Cape Kennedy might be highlyinterested in space fight.

But not Bruce Alcock.Bruce. who has lived in the Cape Kennedy area for over 13

of his sixteen years said. "I think tht space program is a reallygreat thing, but you know, you get used to It after a while."

His father Bill has worked for the Martin Company, anaerospace contractor, for over 20 years.

BRUCE WAS HORN in Orlando in 195S-one year afterSputnmk-and lived there until he was three. His father was thentransferred to the Martin Company's Wichita, Kansas officeuntil Bruce was five. He then moved with his family to CocoaBeach in Brevard County in 1%64 and has been living inIndian H arbour Beach, a small town in south Brevard. for thelast Iten years.

"'ve seen every shot since I've been here," Bruce said "'veonly gone up to the Cape to watch shots one or two times. Iusually watch them from my front yard.'

THlE THING ABOUT Bruce is that he would rather befishing with his dad than worrying about space mittens.

"Me and my dad go fishing down at Sebastian Inlet. I reallyenjoy fishing shot."

Bruce also collects snakes. He currently has only three, aboa constrictor and two rat snakes, one red and one yellow.

"I usually have more than three but my allowance is onlyenough to feed the ones I have. I have to buy rats and mice formy boa and they cost quite a lot.' he said.

HE ESTIMATES he has owned inert than 70 or SO dif-ferent snakes of all kinds in his years of snake collecting.

Bruce figures that being a kid in the Cape area does have itsadvantages. Schools are mere science and math oriented thanother places for example. But niostly it's probably the same asanywhere else.

Bruce thinks 'l's "pretty good' that the Aauiericmns aregoing to dock with the Russians on the current A ppollo-Soyazmission

"it's bound to help things," he said.BRUCE SPENDS THE remainder of his time "cruising"

with his friends, playing basketball and going to Boy Scoutoutings.

He will be a junior at Satellite High School. in SatelliteBeach, this coming fall.

What about after he graduates in two years?'Well I would like lo be.,n engineer," Bruce said.

An aerospace engineer?"NAW," he .eplhed.Just give him a fishing pole and a snake and hell worly

about space shots 'ome other time. BRUCE AJLCOCK t yicFOfit's te some oscanywherw.Ils.

The golden dream of Americais slowly tarnishing for Mr. Parris

'i '' aphoto by nck rmen

MEA OCEcapturingng 9hw space shot

Spectaocle/uni page ni

HERE'S THE DEAL: There is no competition in CocoaBeach. guys. Eserybody's either a married engineer or asurfing vegetable. Just mention those three little words'Independent Florida Alligator" and you're in.

Don't believe nmt? Ask Sandy. the stringer for W-I-O-U-w ho introduced inc to Harry - gasp - Reasoner. Or Jainy theUsherette. Or Debbie. the sweet sixteen-year old TexasHioress I mesmerized w ith my suave drooling technique.

What space shot?

THE SEARCH FOR HARRY EEASOT4ERWe trashed a swell party Monday night. John Denver had

just left. John Wayne 'as supposed to be there later on. nnd'omeone said they saw Harry Reasoner at the bar, althoughwt' gol thrown out before we could nmake sure. Swell party

Harry Reasoner wasn't there. though. He was at Wolfie'swhere my friend Sandy accosted him and bent his ear for fourhours. After the launch Tuesday. Sandy took nme to the ABCstudio to meet hint He 'Isn't there, so she split, and I a ited.

Sonic people think networks hase it all bagged, and can dono wrong. Well, maybe CBS is cool) efficient, with UncleWalter and their concrete "Temporary" building across from'lhe gantryway.

But on launchday. ABC looked like a 'tdeo edition of theAlligator. Hardly any of the famous network class as evident.

By KEITH MOYER

AjJIgatocrStaN WriterVmice Parris is not your ordinary hitchhiker."It's not a matter or ,.hoice that I hitchhike. it's out of

necessity.""THERE'S JUST no way I can afford a car "Parris is 61, graying. intelligent and articulate, Parris just

lound his first job in a long time"I came down to the Cape from Pennsylvania in 1%63 to

find a job in the space program. E latched on with Pan Am onthe Air Force Eastern Test Range contract and spent sevenand a half good years with them" Parris said.

BUI IN LATE 1970 Pan Am staged a massive layoff astheir contract ran out and at age 56 Parris was one of theunfortunate victims.

"What kind of job can a man my age get." asked Paris."Who wants to hire.a 56 year old man?"'

Partis has not had a steady job since his 1970 layoff andjust recently found his latest job through the florid. StateUnemployment Service.

"I GOT A 303 at a hotel in Cocoa Beach. It's sort of.ahandyman thing and you know they really worked my butt off

People were bumping into people, the director whispered ajew last minute instructions to a coatrack and in comes Hary -gasp -Reasoner.

"Mr. Reasoner" we say. "I've got * message from Sandy.She says Hello and Goodbye."'

Harry-gasp-Rcasoner grunts. it is the most articulate runtI've ever heard, full of whimsy and mature 'isdos.

"I'll have to tell Cohen." he says. I wish I krnw wbo Cohen'as.

Later on, Harry and Walter met by coincidence at thespartan restroom behind the studio. Neither one saidanything, but then. what was thate to say?

waxErs muon o'mumN AtE YOU nUGonO'DUSENT WHO IS HUGH owasEmT

You should hane seen. the list of the V-.-P's who weren'tthere! Bob Mope tain't itere. John Wayne wasn't there. EvenPresident Wha:'s-hks-ame wasn't thene. His daughter wasthere. She makes Lynda Byrd Robb look like CatherineDon Rove.

Who was there? Hell if I knot who they were, but the placew as crawling w ith Very Iipornant People. You could idil theywere Very Important, because that's what their name tags,aid.

Thny didn't look like Very Important People to me. In fadt.mois: ot thesi looked just like us Marginally ImportantPeople. Cxcept they were on the other side of the rope and.w eared more.

today.' Par is said.Large gashes and bruises on his hands attest that his

current job is aInything but easy.His new job is nearly 2%) miles from his Indian Harbor

Beach home and Pantis must hitchhike every mile of the way"SOME DAYS I'm lucky and get good rides, but on others

I stand out on the road for hours." Parrus said."I'm a Pennsylvania boy,' said Paris. "I started college

back in the dark age. at Villanova in Philadelphia. After ayear I transferred over to LaSale.

"1 was taking four hours of engineering counsts and threehours of ehemjistry every day. Thea I would suit up after classfor three or four hours of football practice everyday." Pantissaid.

BUT WITH hard times and even harder ceerses Parris wasforced to quit before graduating. He worked .roond atvarious job. for many year. and eventually got into the air-conditioning trade.

"IN FACT , I've got over 26 years in the air-conditioningbuisneus. That's what I dId for Pan Am." Paris said."Youkno, that's one thing about Cape jobs." said Parris, "Youcan 1ose them juut as fast asyo get that."

I TLD Jainy the Usherette it keep an eye out for famouspeople, but nobody came by. Shk pointed out Susan Ford tome. just a. Gerry's little girt whinsed by me with the poolphotographers turning little eddps in her wake.

That's about it for theViP's. Thene were a Ist of Russiansin the stands, and they were gneat fun to watch. They did notsweat (they weren't allowed to) sad when they spoke Englishthey rambled .n like dIsinterested junkies. God knows whatour ambassador sounded lk, over at Turytani babblng hasdime-store RussIan.

I was very disappointed because Robert Goulet. the famoussinger and nihilist philosopher wasn't there. Gosls had saiin the pqpee that It doesn't matter if the space program goeson or see, became we'll all be dead by then anyway, what withpollution and tin bomb and all. I was looking leeward todrownng a few brews .i1h B* and asking him just what fluehell he meant by that retiark. But, hey, what does It matter,

A WEEG AND A FRAUEDAll right, okay, here It It: Good - b Elas I mean It.

After this little artile, I'. going to bna welcune at theCape as. say, Willian Presmie bin that's the bWa, It desnmean I am not truly awed by the fact that 650 toes ofAmerican TeCChnOIOy blasted .1f in my face at an incredible'peed Tuesday. and today the better part of that moeket willbump delicately with the Russian Soyus. And the Russiansw ill open their door. And everyone will shake hands. That'sprogress, folks.

rs's

*1

a ,

e

-ITh. independent FIOFddO Ailigulor Thurndoy JuIy 17 1975, Page 3

NWice a year, In January and July,Silver City conducts store-widesales. No regular merchandise Isremoved and everything Is reduced.

COME EARLY FOR THEPICK OF THE CROP

Men's ShIrts o BeltsTops. Dr Mse S

Jeans 0 Hot SoxBathing Suits.e Purses

Jewelry

YeK ,* S.W. 7th St. Next to Subterraflflf CircusII

Open 10-10 daIly; 12-I Sunday L

Morston asks city,ciltyfor seating fa

By KEVIN BLOOMAlligator Staff Writer

Planning icr a hF runs seating tacility willbt delayed until tall quarter.,UF PresdentRobert Q. Marston said Wednesday.

Marston made the statement at a meetingwth city and county officials Wednesdaymorning

Reasons cited bor the delay were the lack ofa Board of Regents bonding feasibility studyand the lack of "concrete comm,'ttnments" bythe city and county for linauicial assistance.He also said he would prefer Cc tt until fallwhen the entire student body as on campus

"WE DON'T WANT to try and do toomuch while more thai, half of the studentbody isn't here to respond." Marston said.

Marston also asked the GainesvilleChamber of Commerce, County and Citycommissions to report on the feasibility of UFreceiving hinds from the city for (he massseating facility.

"W're not talking about bargaining forhow much." Marstdn said. 'but we need toknow if the city and county can help back the

MARtSTON RECEIVED VERnALsupport for the facility from Chamber ofCommerce Presitent lames Stringfellow, CityCommissioner W.S. "Tiny' Talbot and

0 e

-J

Couna

Durtanec.

countysupport

(0mm iss ion

falbot (old Marston,.'all 07n us

State Senatorurged Marstontacity 'sayingsomething like

Bob Saundersnot to delay"it's now

this."

(.hairmarn

"whatever you

lack

need

(D-Gaimesvzlle)plans for the

or never for

HUGH CUNNINGHAM, UF public in-lormation officer said UF Athletic DirectorRay Graves will begin a state-wide effort tosolicit private' funds for the project

"There's nobody in this state Ray Gravasdoesn't know," Cunningham said. "he canget in touch with the right people

"A lot ol deals are made on fishing trips inthis stale and Ray as a great Aisher-man."Cunnmnghani said.

Cunningham also said 'word has been setout through the grapevine that if anyonewants to have their name on part of thecomplex they can, if they donate 15 milliondollars."

UF HOPES TO RAISE $6 to S7 millionfrown private donations to add to the ap-

rcive in urplus stdntbuildng funds netyear.

The estimated cost of a mass seating facilityis 121 million.

5

A

UE EU ENGAGING DIAMOND aDAZEWITH LOVING ANnaPATION

0

When You Think df Diamonds

.4

Your proposal was brilliant. . herapane sweet" and lo'in". "An "ow fm'tha

most Important symbol of our Ion.hr diao . l hl wcoo, terihone,

On. that glows with f lesy brillianceas ycvr Ione.foiwysi.

GaIn emvIIe's Diumond Cent er

In The Goinemville Mcli f't.eGoinesviIle Florida 37a4I3

*1

Ercy

rug. l . Ind.p.n. Fsondo AIgELOr rflrun y y tz 7 5

Security Guards:Introduction brings 50 per centshoplifting reduction in area stores

By30SF SARIIiUOtlligjaiur Shft '. ri Cr

Wuihl rht sr~lUe r AI in (,AIIILl% ' I F

IM() SEf l'RIll (at Ali omPmdllk I1I

anoh 01 h&'>Id'rtm isn, 1 'ti NCnu 0

shop iun m t mIesli m hlanFTir II ilelk

tfuI thes ieed at

i l tesil'hit uIi % Lgetiuri n orse, M

AND THE MARKET FOR secirit' ismitrca'mg

I wis 1imardI.,resideiI ol HltwarINeuruts Services. saud he climates his lirmiloes S25.XMJ worih ci business a scar and it

has doubIed mn .' ear.A hi lent Security Systems holds contracts'

for more than S3SO,(0X) w.orth ol servicesannually, according to president and parttnwner Steve Mahn. Abilene has increased iisbusines, by 50 per cent in the past year. hesaid

MAHN ATTRIBUTES ihe increase inbusiness to the high crimic rate which he saidis making people "lustitiably paranoid."

But how secure are the security guards?In 1970, a niental patient in a halfway

house. Robert Scott Sanders. who was toundinnocent by reason ol insanity in the murderol tswo girls in Tallahassee. was found workingin lknsacoia as an armed security guard.

AiMdin 1971, Lester Harvey Cribbs. asecurity guard for a local lirm, was founddhad it his post w ith a bullet through hisIorehc.d A coroner's jury ruled the deathacc ade n taI.

THESE INCIDENTS and others wtthlxory screened and trained security guardsled to the passage of a law by the Floridalegislat ire to require licensing of all security

guardsIh lfat. wil go into effect October i and

tull require guards to carry idenrilicationinrd, have niminium grainimg in use of

wecapons. limit the conditions under which a

no more power toan ordinary citizens

gun could be carried and provide forbackground checks of applicants.

Presently, however, A bilene Securityprovides no formal training for their guards,.most of which do nor carry weapons.

EMPLOYES ARE "ENCOURAGED" toattend the Santa Fe Community Collegecourse in industrial security. Mahn said.

the guards receive on the job training inlieu ot formal trainig. Mahn said

Ahilene. according to Mahn. does not "playpolice " heir guards generally do not wearunlforms or carry weapons because theircustonmers prefer the guards be an-com~spic uou i

FOR A GUARD TO CARRY a weapon, hemust have military or police training and athorough background check. Mahn said.

And every time he is to carry a gun on theloh. a guard must clear it with Fred Kirchoff.the guard supervisor.

Abilene concent rate' more on thetechnology of security than in security guards.

F

Mahn said. Ini addition to guards, theyprovide all tforms of electronic surveilancesystems such as alarms and closed circuittelevision.

Because or its different philosophy onsecurity. Howard Security relies to a greaterextent on security guards.

"OUR JOB IS T0 PREVENT, not waituntil the crime happens," Waiter Bell. headof security at Howard, said. "If we cartprevent the crime from ever happening, we'vedone our job."

Every guard must complete at least 70hours ol instruction in industrial security as acompany policy, Bell said. They also musttake a I S hour course in use of firearnis bystate certified instructors. *

Howard security gnflhs do not have gunpermits from the county because securityguards working on private property areexempt from the law requiring them, countyattorney Norm LaCoc said.

HOWEVER, L.COE WAS UNSURE if asecurity guard working at a supermarket

wouldihinit"ICLeiiISC C't'Il

ihouigh ii I, i1 l.tt }VOIpTI ii I ils Op

he publiliiBell s.u.I his ompani is risuredi or

MMXXl hnitlciIe irislranct agenm 1)

giuird .gamist possible sit ii a seiirity gilardis negligent or breliks I he law

All their guards tarry guns and wecarliiiiormis ,ndI lxdges oi the JOb' their miiii

puirptosc 'in lyr l et erreni to possible crimeIN THAT RESPECT, lhes seem rvasonahls

lies line quote a deterrent value, AkinMoirrn. of Ihe Gamlie"' ie PcI ce Depart -ment. said "II e more I hey teninma Is) see olSuniform, the greater the deterrent.Gainesville merchants agree."Merchants kno,. and recognize

shoppers," Sharon Polk. manager of theGainesvillt Mall Association, said. "But sineewe've had the guards. there have been, fewerthefts.

LACON DAVIS, manager of the Publix atthe Westgate shopping center, cited a 50 percent reduction in shoplifting since hiringsecurity guards

And yet security guards do not have anymore powers than an ordinary citizen, ac-cording to the State Attorney's office. He canonly detain a suspect until the properoufliorities make the arrest and he can use hisgun only in self-defrnse.

"IF HE PERSONAL~LY saw the offense, hecan step in and take scdion," Ron Shema, aninvestigator with the State Attorney said."But he can't place anyone under arrest.

Neither does the fleeing felon law apply tosecurity guards.

Lt. Herb Meizius of the Alachua CountySheriff's Department said there was no way'a guard could shoot a fleetng suspect.

flit job is not without its hazards."Anytime you put on a weapon and a badge

aad walk out on the street, you become atarget," Captain Jessie Hines of HowardSecurity said

He said he was shot at three times when heanswered a call to a friend's business onenight. H-e had no gun with him and had tocrawl away to notify the sheriff, who even-tually arrested his assailant.

A

HAROLD AND MAUDE

T wenty- yea r-old Haorold.soutrageous suicide attempts oreignored by his bored, busy motherwho is trying to find him a bride viacomputer doting. Even hispsychiatrist can'theip him as haroldcontinues his fovorit. sport of at-tending funerals of people hedoesn t know. At one such event, hemeets irrepressible. 80-year-aidMoode who teaches him how tolov, and savor life. Stors RuthGordon 5enfs

7,00; 9:30F01. SAT., JULY 18 19

2ND FLOORi AUD. REITZ UNION

SLACK GOD, WHITE DEVIL

wit. Yoe Msgdbhnte Oemd Del bey,

Wid by W.aub.r 3.6.e

with .9h1, ftrm. Gdauber Rocho -on 0nlrmotional recognlfion and numerou.prp1.Roc,. as viol.,$ ond revolwtionary, hruteland .motonolly .htterIng. Hisient s anotwith the mouldering symbols of a decoylngr.Iuglon or conrvpted .oclety. H. sMku todlscover for wail,,plIght ofthe dlspo.sed.

In Portuges. with English sub-tils

Preceded by a short film.,Memories of a Congoco

SUN. JULY 20-6:30: 9:302ND FLOOR AUD., REITZ UNION

J . WAYNE REITZ UNION

PRESENTS

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Computer sBy KEVIN BLOOMAflatrStaN Wdt

Gainesville Police Department (GPD)officers are getting away from one of the limeworn hassles of their job. Paperwork.

With the installation of a S44.O00 wordprocessing system. officers call reports overthe phone to a dial dictation machine

THE REPORTS are later typed out inlonghand by secretaries whose exclusivefunction is to monitor the system.

Lt Robert Mitchell of the GPD said theprimary function of the system is to increaseefficiency of police reports and give officers inthe field inert time to answer calls.

"I estimate our officers on duty save about30 per cent of their on duty time by using thesystem., Mitchell said. The advantage isthey spend4 their time on calls. not writing

ystem freesreports

GAINESVILLE PATROLMEN expressedmixed reactions to ihe new system None ofthe officers would allow their names printed.

One officer said the new system "is agodsend. It's like I suddenly have time to be aop. nt a umtlormied reporter with writer's

Another officer 'said although the steextricated him from 'ome of the tedium ofmwriting reports. "you end up writing a reportanyway. the dictated part serves as a roughdraft. I can tell I'm writing better reports butI don't know it that's worth S44.0."

THlE WORD processing system is con-posed of four magnetic card "Selectrictypewriters," four "dial input systemrecorders.' and IS portable dication units.

Die system is housed in what was once partolf the GPD jail with carpeted walls and

Gainesv ilacoustically tiled ceiling.

Officers call predetermined numbers to getthe attention of the Input recorders. Then bydialing a sequence of numbers they can re-record portions of the report, review materialand make corrections.

"IT ALL ADDS UiP to art error-freereport. according to Marcia Buchanan.superisor of the GPO Word Processing

The processing center is staffed by threeoperators on the day shift and three on thenight 'hift

"From midnightt to 7 am. no one stays inthe office." Buchanan said, "but themachines are operating all the same so wemaintain a seven day a week.operation."

PORTABlE DICTATIONby the GPD Detective Division

24 hour a day

units are usedto "give a clear

patrol mencut on-the-spot description of the scene of aninvestigation." Mitchell said.

Patrolmen are not supplied with portableunits in their police cars, hut Buchanan saidany dial phone can be used in conjunctionwith the word processing system.

The investment in the processing systemwas a result of a study by Director of PelleServices Nolan Freeman. Freeman's studyshowed 25 per cent of the average patrolman'stime was spent on paperwork.

MITCHELL INDICATED he thought themoney was well spent. adding that equivalentdollars saved in man-hours added up to thesame pay it would take to put six patrolmanon the street.

"The system enhances the producd of thisdepartment," Mitchell said, "service to thecommunity."

3y HELEN WHELANA&etrStaM With.

BARNACLE BUSTElha A slide show and patty showingmovies and slides of the club's recent trips to the Ezumas andthe Cay Sal Banks will be shown tonight at 8 p.m. in theCamelot Recreatlwt Hall -n 3425 SW 2nd Avnne. ContactG.E. Rysdtkewltsh at 392-4545 or 37248775.STUDENTS FOR FAIMWORiCERSs Petitioning all Publixsupennarket. In Gainasville Will take place from to a~ni. to 7p.m. this Saturday. Call Kathy at 3734102 or Terrn at 377.7129 for further information.BENEFIT: There will be a concert Thursday night at 7:30pin. at The Keg on SW 16th Avenue with an admissioncharge ofSi and beer specials costing 25 cents for a glass and1125 Ibr a pitcher. For fourth , information call Terrn at 377-.7129.SUMD SHOW: Florida farmworkers will meet Sunday at 7p rn-in room 1 18 of the]J. Wayne Rcstz Union. Call Kathy at

* WRAT'S RAPPENflG.-3734101 tor further infonnetion.500G0E, The. Steve Momrs band will perftnm for the OldieGoldie Nit. at the Broward Poolside tonight front 8:31:30p.m. Call 392-7535 for more information.DAMES AT SEAS Tonight though Saturday the Florid.Players will present "Dames At Sea" at 8 p.m. in the Con-stats "Theater with an .dnmislio price of $2. For furtherintbrmatioe. call the Constasts Blox Office at 392-1633.POT LUCK: The Gay Community Soe.c Center will have.afree pot luck dinner tonight at 6:30 p.m. at 107 NW I5STerrace.GO CLUE. The Go Club Tournament (or the swnmmerquarter will take place every Saturday at 8 p.m. in room 118of the J. Wayne Reitz Union. For more information callGeorneR. Hwang at 377-2866.CINESE MOVIE, "Lonely Seventeen" will be shownSunday at 2 p.m. in the J. Wayne Reitz Union auditorium for50 cents. Contact George ft. Hwang at 377-2866 for moreinformation.REVOLUTION, The Revolutionary Student Brigade will

meet Monday night at 7:30 p.m. in room B 70 of the J. WayneReit: Union.ARAbs The Arab student organiaaoo will meet thisSunday night front 8-I l p. in room 123 of the i. Wayne Rbit.Union. Call 376-7610 for further information.STODNE SOUP: Stone soup and baking bread dles wiNl beheld tonight. and Tuesday and Thinsday of next week friv 5-7:30 p.m. at the P.K. Youip Ltb School with an admisaio. of$2. Call Joe Sheppard at 378-9752. Buddy Fish at 376-0706 -rDr. A.B. Packer at 392-2327 for further inftormatlo.SLACK BELT T1ST: Board breaking. free sparing. form

woghniqun., and weapons will be included in a test duringwhich four person will attempt to acquire their karate blackbelt on Friday at 7 pin, in the Florida Gym. The tast is free.and open to the public, and marks the first test since theSensei. Ngo Dong. died.ORThODOX LUTURGYt There will be an Eastern Or-thodox Liturgy mEnglish bor all interested persons on Sundaynuonning at 10 a.m. in room 361 of the). Wayne Reatz Union.For further information call John Missing at 372-75a0.

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BONANZA

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'U

Marston 's Viewof Mass Seating Center"You don't ever like to say "Now or

Never" but an the cate of the maws seatingactivities center at the University ofFlorida, that's the -ay It I.," PresidentRobert Q. Marston told agroupof clty andcounty community leaders Wednesday.

"The need for a theatre for theperforming arts, a maam mating facilityand a natatariwn on the campus and In thecommunity has lang boun felt and now wehave the beatchance we've ever hadthat Itwill ever be dos.," Naritan said Inreference to the student building feeboudlng prcgrnmnow being atded by theBoard i R egets.

Mariton traced the history of planningfor the cutter, pointing mat that btidentGoyenmeat last laB ceinmitted sio,m8 toa mass sating fadu~ty and that a meetingIn his office with sabhist leaders franacross the campus at tinttime recited Ina unaulmoms endorsement of planning forthe facility. He anolnted a cenmittee ofthre. adn thre. faculty members andthree adminhstra Lrs to develop plans for afacility and circulated their prellinnazyplan to cuups and comunuty leaden InFebruary. The cunittee's final plan wascaapletedIn late J3w. and give. the samewide clrculatlos. Mars also said that hehad dlseued the - inwit legisltsand other Sbat had.r., Inching al""nk

"Tb. bqrdmn ci -ro for any who mightoppo-ed the pla Is qps those who couldcanvnclngly say that we will aever needthese type faefitu', Naritn sdded.

Marsten said it Is the Intention at theIUniversity, If the anding program Isconsummated, to cantaut a faculty angthe lines of the plan produced by the

U

Im,*vrtant Infevmeatun to *tttdnts, flomity & tafat tit Unwvevtlty of Pbodn.

committee. The group's plan calls for a 11to l4,J00eeat coliseum for mulfuroeuses, a tec.eat theatre for the pert ra-ining arts, and a natatwriua.

"When you try to deign too manyfunctions into a single building, thecompromise can be very amazing toevery famctloa," Mariae said.

Marite Invited the cammusity leadersto appoint three additlonai minnbers to theplanning comitan. He wjggsed thatcommunity participating -n that canmit-t. would provide th. oppurtwtty forenmmunltg Involvenent In planning S-nancing, and other support that will beneeded to make the facility becomereality.

"Let'stake what we have done up to thispoint and go forward," Marston anpi.-s.Marioen said that he hoped to start

spending -nm "real dollars" for architec-teral design by mdf all after the studentshaeve raiuned to campus and the Univer-shty has "reasmale ahawrance" that the

Marston Commits $10,000To Continue Center Planning

The following latter Iran President Robert liarSon was aunt Wednesday to Dr.Kenneth Finger, chairman of the planning committee for a -ma sating activitiescenter:

"Thank you and your committee for your final pregrmuate report an the mainseating actIvIties canter. As your cawnittee continma. to advise me ma this project, it Isclear you will need funds for mich activities -s developing Mkatches, revising deignconcepts, visiting to similar faculties elsewhere, etc. I am making $le,Uo0 from privatesources availabl, to the committee for these pupoen.

"Dr. Hansen will provide you with the named o three Individuals from the communityas additional members of your committee"

BloodOn Campus Today Through FridayThe Civitan Blcogduoblle will continue

accepting blood doamS.,. from the U?community bee 9 n.m. to 4 p.m. daIlythrough Friday an tk. Plaza of the

According toary Wigi. S the CillsoRegional Bleed Curder. It take lee than 46minutes to egpidae b. isle peocee.Dan an - (puke, -ap.stature -- f etc.>)before 1S S Vbe. e re willbe nD

Wiggie asi Wcplsmatly U

bsod Easey, s aetuoeflbrt them-ew deonr.

The anmalt Sumne Mood Drive Is

necessitated because .1 the decrems InGalnesvile's summer population. Since an

five area hoepitaig, aditial blood mayhnaveto be dhped lnlf lbal donorncamctbe foed.

V ityous

bonding plan will go forward.lie explained tint he las other maney In

hand and pledged from private sources tobe used for planning, In adjdt to the

atdn -eere that etudest governmentleads have said will be made available

Theoar ofResets hbm ordered that atoaSiblty study be made" Sf the fsuancecf additional bends backed by aStuent feesfor couctili ci na e.amic facili-ties, -nc e lb-parpoe, -as s-ting failltles, the renorew availablethrough sch a band I.u., and the Soalsystendide priorities for the -s Sf sethbead." Thi **u Is scbuanls to bepresuMled to the Bloard at lbs bpt. 8,meeting when other camlknents pro-sumnably will be made.

Archiect Neil Webb has said that theUniversity could get a "'ii month to -neyear head start" toward cashsrutn S ains. suatng facility If arateetural asdother planning could begin as -oo - thebonding program Is approved, withouthaving to wait for hamad sale proceeds. Heestimates that this planning woulM aappxl-ae-yW .

Slate Sen. Robert Saunders, In atten-dance at the meeting Wedbneuday, agreedwith Mason .aut the pri oric thestructurn.

"If there I. ever going to be a facility .fthis type, we'd bittar do It now: this maynot only Sf er the bust opportanity, hut theonly opportunIty ever tad. this" Saundersaid. "We must quit quibbling over minordetails. We camnod divide the rabbit beforewe catch it."

Saunders, saying It Is "a matter ofjudgment rather than any law mne canpoint to," advised thst he do.s not believecomniing student fee funds to caufle

Deadne For Ordering

Caps, Gowns is FridayStudents who wish to partIcipate in

August cunmmement mast mabkeS theirorder for cape and gowna to the Speciallervices de*k a the suramem S the

tb~ hand 3.4*.,. at Mhe b byt:3 p.m. Friday.

Friday Is DoodleFaculty 3ri.fIhg Fmr Grgde 3.msevuL

Ff'i ay 4 pmg . m'ay is he dpmi fortuegs ghtelie 6k ~uaved pSe r "fr later e

ifs Open Offie Briefing far faculty Friday b- d hon thae i rerdat 4 p.m. In Academic Alfaius, US5 Tigerd grades should efact their =aaemicHatl advisor flmalya.

Invites Communify Leaders

ToJi PlnnngCmitee

r.

U

then of.a mea sating facility will affect

Rep. William Adrms also In abtte-dance, a u. LIaar "coulreduce utility bcpd silo citlmus to highereducation if they d not agree with -immade ci atdmit fee money," but that"eat funds are the wily awreforthUStype of cuntriwtisn( asesating center)as far as the House is cacemued."

Senatsr Ba uners -re Pr. Iduat Mar-siwi to take the leadership by saying,"TabI. inih we need and this is whatwe're adn to do." He also aid thereneels to be 'a clear elpsit n whehe ornot thefacltee wil be forth ms Sf the

Mars Masted that the -inn falLBtlueldoube open to tannloty lnthe

-am way other fancite mci med bythe eunnnity and raiedi the gruptint all .1 the cly's high adioSl anmancemuts are held In Florida Gyina-

"These facilItIes would be qpua to thmeemmahty mndvr any ricmStances win-tiher or not a nickel I. given," Mariensaid, but cautioned tint thur. weld bescheduling problinu, as there are nowwith other fadlAlan

"We could act radioed. w c ampsni-ties for a two-week eseventom, for.mUh" Mars t tmsM

Board vf &ugets' umber Jack Mc-GrIM, also pruaent at the meeting, irgpd"gaig forward silh S. program," butce d fhn l t warnedd to inge more InGUr tiSIng that these tedIma= will be forboth acame and neacaenic me."

Ciliar cxreel.n at th. meeting latin-

Chamber of Catme Prma~t JamesSfrlgf SIow, who Initiated the meung,"We came here to olrs help.d.e'dlk. yap to tellus how we ean help."

Chamber member N.M. Parrish:"There.,re -~ In ton who feel thecould be merit In a joint velture betweatthe oramunity and the University. We'r,heru towaportyou, to flid a way to help."

Chamber mutber Mervin Greeham:"Te'ssrnsuppcrIn the crrmmnIty.

There's aneedin alnesyille for all thre.of these things."

Faculty member Manning flsuer, anumber of the canter planning eomit-tee: "Thm canmittae Is completely cmn-vinced there Is a need for the totalpackage. The time Is now. We are behindIn the southeast. The University cf Florislimer because we don't have propsrfaciltis.ene perfor.sve.md hewouldn't have cam 'are If they'd kbout

tudent ody President I. aton:" Students have ihbm that shen ginas thefaca, they will surt the whole 1dm. Wemust put amid, the arguments thataStuent feee aen be vieoS.e W* aoshow that Uhuw hB e a ulur me S S.funds than patting them to ae foracademic bildlnp.Stwdemts mint becossulted at eVery Sep a the w ."

County CommIslies e m Jc

Oltyramuam

elnmim,~nIman Bymnme sdyearbliags. Caflamf-you-m."

Donations Being A ccepted

The University of fluids Is an Equal EmphJaln ardamil Adriuati *Ske Ensvm

P D

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Th. independent Nondo Amigaor Thu,-*oy flui U IfS SPo Y

Florida Alligator Sports IV~i \\ UNIERSITY OF FLORIDA. GAINESIL.FLORID, SATURDAY, APR. 28, 1q28 NUMBER 27

Gtodin spuad of 1909 lines up for tsaw picture

Rumors of violence see UF to GainesvilleBy JUDY MOORE years before the resentment against All campus activities took place in Buck- HE WAS RECOGNIZED as a man of

AllIgator Staff Writer Gainesville disappeared. marn and Thomas Halls. Buckmian contained courage and unquestionable integrity but he-Dr. Andrew Sledd, president of the Lake dormitory rooms, a gymnasium and an in- was unpopular at UF because of his austere,-

EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the last i * City college was named UF's first president at firmary while Thomas housed the ad- retiring personality. Hie was a stickler forind.s of three srtice. traeIng the hklaory of a salary of S2,500 a year. ministrative offices, the dining room, the academic standards and is credited withLUF be.It. bqgnnhnsIn 1853.,Today', ,tory When the school opened. University library and the classrooms. setting UF's early foundations of highd&.crlh. UF'. move from Lake City ad the Avenue was an unpaved dirt road connecting OFTEN T HIS PROXIMITY caused scholastic achievement.Anet 25 year. or i. GsknesvW. campus. problems such as Farr encountered while In I9O9 Sledd resigned to become president-

On Sept. 24, 1Q06, 102 young men arrived A UF profesor wilh trying to teach an English class or, the floor of Alabama Southern University and.to begin school at the newly buit. 571 acre, above kitchen. tsR'e page eighteen)two building UF campus in Gamnesvitle. a loaded rifle over his

Just a year hetore. the legislature had voted ". My class studying "Paradise Uast"Gainesville the 'ite of Florida's male L ~4e.n assembled each day coincident with theuniversity after a bitterly contested struggle KIICUle Uhe Uejpiment climatic point in the preparation of thebetween Gainesville and Lake City for the - -.~u midday meal. Up through the cracks in thelocation of the school. gal UUUIVIfloor came the vociferous shouts of the cook

UlF OPERATED on the old UF campus in and a blasphemous stream of profanity whoseLake City in l 05-O6 until buildings on the UF todowntown Gainesville more than a mile range E've never heard surpassed.Gainesville campus could be constructed, away "Mixed with the clatter of pots and pans

Lake City, still bitter over the loss of its On his first trip to the campus site in the and the hiss of sweam came the overpoweringcollege, brought bhree different injunctions to spnmg 0 f I9T5. Dr. James Far,. English stench ci boiling cabbage and frizzingrestrain the shipping of university equipment professor in Lake City and newly chosen UF onions. Milton's feeble attempt. to depict theto Gaimesville. All were overturned, vice president. described the following scene horrors of Hell paled into insignificance amid

Even so, Lake City men refused to be hired as he drove down Alachu. Ave. (University this real inferno.to help with packing, and no Lake City livery Ave.) "BEYOND STRETCHED a rough PRESIDENT SLEDD was a distinguishedwould hire wagon teams. Teams bad to be _country road, on each side weed-covered intellectual, being a scholar in both Latin andbrought in from Gainesville. fields, with here and there a Nearo hut. Greek.

Amid tumors of violence, a UF professor Thle low, water- covered stretch was a Before coming to Florida, Sledd taught at.ith a loaded rifle over his knee led the desolate and forbidding scene. Emory University in Georgia. While there, heequipment wagons to Gainesville. "We could see signs of activity - Thomas wrote a paper questioning the righteousness

As they left Lake City. some of the people and Buckmari Halls growing under the hands of racial bigotry in the U.S. which gainedlining the streets booed and hissed. but most of masons. My heart sank and I wondered if national notoriety.just stood silently watching. as if at a funeral we could ever attract students to this spot or Although his wife's family and its Cocoprocession, convert this bare place into the future great Cola made fortune had made large donations

FOR YEARS. Lake City residents reftised university of our ambition. I went back to to Emory, Sledd was asked to resign becauseto send their sons to UF and it was nearly 50 Lake City feeling chidled and discouraged." of the paper. rrwSel~g d .rs

S New.s I

Peg. la. i independen* MouidaMAligau, Thurndcy July .7 "975

ViolenceDr Albert MLurphree, president of Florida

Female College mn Tallahassee, was appointedpresident

By 1912, Colleges in Arts and Sciences,Agriculture. Law, Engineerimg, and Teachmnjwere in operate and there was a graduateschool and an agricultural eaperimenlstation.

FRATERNITIES HELD "SMOKERS.,where the boys got together to smoke andhave sang a longs, but the school upheld strictrules against drinking and gambling

In 1915. Murphree denied the existence olany drinking at UP and said there was verylittle gambling. He admitted there might besome card playing but if students werecaught, they would be liable to expulsion.

Women were not allowed to go intofraternity houses on campus mniless Ac-companied by a chaperon of "recognizedsocial standing.'.

IN KEEPING WITH THE times. a newcourse was instituted in 1916 dealing with allphases of the Prohibition problem. In aProhibition Oratorical Contest that year. the$10O first prize went to Gabby Knowles. andsecond went to Spessard Holland (ex-U.S.Senator.)

When World War I came many studentsleft school to fight.

The College of Engineering operated -s avocational training school and all otherdepartments assisted with the work of theStudent Army Training Corps.

Prom the beginning, UF had a newspaperand mn 1912. it was formally dubbed the"Alligator'heFor years, football newsdominate th rnt pages.

IN 1fl4, SOMETHING came along tomomentarily take the boys ' minds off foot-.hail women. Although women would not

aliPn sga+n Ijaus

he ollicially admitted until 1947. they wereallowed to take courses at UF not offered atthe Florida Female College in Taltahassee.

In 1928. President Murphree died sud-denly, throwing the school into a period otnmournimg Vice President Farr took overtemporarily and in September of 1928, DrJohn J. Tagert. a Rhodes scholar and tornmerU S Conmssioner of Education accepted the

By the time Tigert took over, UF had grownto 2.(fl) students and covered 950 acres.

UF HAD WHAT MAY have been its firstriot in November 1929. Several students hadgathered in front of the Gainesville Sun to seethe results of the Florida-Alabama footballscore as it was received. The Gainesville chiefof police wanted to clear the streets and "hot-rodded" through town at 20 mph. injuringone person.

A riot ensued but was quickly broughtunder control by the student body presidentwho leaped on a soapbox crying for order.

In 1930, UF celebrated its 25th birthday. Afew years later, Tigert petitioned toTallabasnee to move UF's founding date backto 1853 when the East Florida State Seminaryfirst began receiving state support. Thelegislature agreed.

TIGERT MAY HAVE made the requestbecause every time he attended a dedicationof a new college, university presidents ftomaround the country were arranged in line

Tar was away near th end of thet lin.

UF veterans who were still around in 2953when UF celebrated its 100th birthday wereheard to remark what a short 75 years it hadbeen.

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forcesB, LINDA WISNIEWSKI

Alligpter Staff WriterIFE is tryilg ti 'ii sonic red iapeI hereinre IiU r I ask forces 'ure Ippointed Itses(day I siuld

hr administrative - faculty ratio at UII.

Ihlit groups should "dent' ly m elhcen and Or un-

productive 0(dmmnl'tratIvc practices and propose alternatives"ii these practices exist. ExecutIve Vice President HaroldHanson said at a presidential stafi nmeetmrw

THE GROUPS WILl include task forces at the i Ifilhs

to seek out, cut redMIdler Hlth ( trter mi t Insime it Ioo i nd\eri tultuirc$ tentcs thLe i illis I IIuLImonil FPihis Gireu1 ,- I'(Jd tim the stil onmiiitet 'I ,tadtiu tdtans

Hinsoni was instructed to lurm the iask force' by StaicUniniersals 5Sstemi ( harcellor LDr F I l ork

Ihbestudy on administratisered apemins be ctmpletedl tllquarter. 1-EPG ('hairinan Bill Jones 'iid

Jones and I-EPG Secretary Manning 1),uer mci w ithHanson ltst w eek to discuss the dupicatior ol adm~iisiracseres pOsi biht v.

Tb. independent Rorndo AJllgti Thrsay July 17 >975 Pqe '

tape at UFHANSON TERMED .dninstralnvc duplicaton w pel

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showm ig t he respon1sibIiht ies oleach administer 0r at tUF.lini

Ihe chart wilIsaid, adding that

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describe each administrator's dot 'es Jineby determinig the responsibilites of cad!cnmmttee vaIl discover if "duplications

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"oq. 20 Th. independent Morndo

CommiAJIbgoor Thurtdny ;u it1/S

ttee seeks to protect part of local historyBy JUDY MOORE

Alligator Staff Writer

I or those Aih, haic groflwrp .icknowledgmng the bigI. lonald, "M" .i the

rimae inarchitecturalti.n a trip dowA I

imlesvillc I 1 st 1'ie atLu tiC dn he A iiew m

ci' hiaking cexperiLenleMne gabled port toed

a hored homcs oiesvillc\ flht. prlticc an

mi' caimm irb1 t1cc, esLe nm

J~ scock punching,'Ce lammed, TV dminier

MANY PEOPLE WOULDC 1.CCe hislr. htomes such

<'Ce prcLtrved the t ask atesga eltk ordinance to

le sut h hu Id ings wouldTm An Cd's matter

Iii members oC, incsville's H istoricFP eservat ion Program

(imm'ttec, who lace thatI. is have been working onlhv ordinance since February,ui expect no solution until1e end of the summer.

Because ol a growingcommunity concern about thelick Hf regulation of historicMies. the Gainesville City*mmissiofl appointed theteceryation committee inebruary to .tudy therobjem and suggest an,ral program for historic

preservation, mncluding a city

I he primary purpose of theIiimince would he to, hibit the demolition ofldm gs classified as historicIi irks and created a citycu board which wouldrse and regulate exterior

HISTORIC LAND-iRK has tentatively beeno is the conmm''ttee 4' 0

ii Ig or area more than 50* old that has ar-

ural. historical or.1i gtiilicance.

r u ics made by the

Sea crest

A

HISTORIC PREEVATION BEGINS phai by bob WoOlOne odhome on Eost UnIvrJIty Avenue is saved

preservation committee and alocal club. HistoricGainesville Inc. found thatabout 200 houses InGainesville are more than 50years old and might beclassified historic landmarks.

Jane D. Myers, aGainesville realtor andsecretary of the preservationcommittee, said an ordinancecould not legally preventowners tram destroying their0%wn property.

" A LT H OUGH W ECOULD not prevent peopleIronm tearing do&n their ownproperty. we could delay itWe may he able to make themput their property up for salelirst." Myers said.

Similar historic preser.-vatiofl ordinances are suc.-cessfully in operation in manycities around the country, butordinances in some cities.such as Santa Fe. NewMexico, have been tennedunconstitutional.

"WE HAVE TO BE veryesarefu about what we nciuuein the ordinance. Manylandowners in Gainesville areagainst the ordinance. Weexpect a lot at complaintswhen the ordinance comes uptar public hearing." Myerssaid

The ordinance would havea public hearing before thecity commission makes a finaldecision

Myers said it was importantfor the city to give owners ofolder buildings the incentiveto improve their property.

"WE RAVE TALKEDABOUT giving these ownerscertain tax advantages. Wewould have to go through thestate for that and change thelaw, so I don't know howfeasible it would be," shesaid

Committee member CarlJohnson. a Gamnesville at -torney. said the preservationcommittee would suggest tothe city commission that anarchitectural review board becreated to oversee regulationand keep an ongoing in-ventory of historical sites.

at Crescent

Johnson said the committeeis now trying to decide if thereview board should be anindependent city bonrd of asubsidiary to the alreadyexisting City Plan Board.

"THE PLAN BOARDdetermines city zoningrequirements and historicpreservation ordinance mightrequire some rezoningAlthough suggestions fromthe architectural review boardmight be entered down bygoing ihrough the Plan Boardbefore reaching the citycomin ission. r econm -miendations would be morepowerful with the backing ofthe Plan Board." johnsonsaid.

Johnson added, "An in-dependent architecturalreview board would be able toadvise with more expertise,but many of the con,-missioners feel there arealready too many board, andmight not want to createanother one"

JOHNSON SAID THEcommittee hopes to be readyto wake its suggestions to thecity commission at the end ofthe summer when the ZoningRcwrite Committee submitsits recommecndations to thecommission.

The Zoning Rewritecow mittee is presentlystudying and rezoning allareas of the city

* 'a* -*

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'U

2 bedrooms 2 bothsCentral air S heatDishwoskher garbage disposalTrash ompoctor

Refrigerator ye makerWoll to wo orpts

Lorge poolIwo tennis courtsGiant 'sundecks withShuifle board courts

Utility room

For mafA infarmnatrn contact Fmmett WiNlim Paretti RcaI tstaie

Public walkway to the beochPublic boo* romp to the Inte-coosta!

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Ifer thru July 15,1g75-$2,OOO rebate at closing

tfl Hypolita St Phn" (9O4) R24-U3f5 Si. Augustine, Ha.

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PRICESGOOD

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Gree Cabbage . .

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tufter Cookies .,e., Con Your Own V. 9 .bS.? (Ca. f T wslve Plnt JosI

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VATIRBED owIba 'red crotied frams

Fou potled bd r'th headboard tIlOor wr I(onird.' *,ode 'o regular bed

Corns ,se I 377 0288 1 31 157 p1

*ri,,,e.,<h , c. pork clam., c OmTPU5

laundry oIab,s'd *-ougCOl Otlers SO

a a so Ib ow us -rn a'

,orod,Iron $Ifl ,,bet. f.r.0? 55Mon Coil 373 53 o,,,lm. -S 5,$,p)

MUS7 sELL Nor CLArnm 150 Corno,,do us,.rbo los e t.o b.l.eve

lor ChorI. 0a 5 155 pd)Color IV old Sears 10 $40 Mak. 378

FOR SALE

wir 'edd*.1q "cmm,0r 'or 'overs

& U~J 1 )ng j AtOy dscordofoao i,, nd neovei n co,',ortobls f.neSeth or on 53A 37? 4564 'c St 1 .

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pe 7 A S'd.'.aW F lori' 0y ->er-, - -7 l tI5

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FeoturirunseeIa rmn1970,iterrey,Woodst

'9 6 previouslylive pr-

:es from 1956 toncluding Mon-

Isle of Wright &ock Festivals.

a

SORT ONCASH?

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We currently hove a large selection of mobilehomes in stock. Any of these reconditionedhomes con be yours for $350 or less when youassume the payments. Stop paying rent andOWN YOUR OWN! 4

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FOR SALE

4'-I

59 m

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.5m Li I~r

2 ,!i t' 3 eA4 A> **s ''rdy 1 ~

5' )il 72 66|3 ,'o3'

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37 .r6 'te 'i

FOR RENTr. tor nfl wmmrrer quad.!r 2 br turr,

api $97 50 + Ad lies Vrsayuopt No9 tolt 377 8962 oh.r 10 p m or 378-2651before 6pm( t

2 bedroom 1boib duplewl ,n qLuieI oreccilole qo campus cent heor and a.r!married couples only No children orpsi, $175 per mo 373 0966 ofier S prmlbS 5 56 p1

Female Rormaifl Wonmed to, fall OokForest opori mint, 33 I SW 13 Sr Own.

Dunm $l0 month +I 3 utilrtre But 'o

aomp's_Ccli 7 75lb5 5

tiberated coopl. teek. 0o thor. nrc. 2

couple or 2 people men preterredsoytn ou erDckPdwih

,Pr vary i mmediot. occupancy Torn373 9359 lb S 5' Sl1

.Rocomooe wanted. inn room in two a

mellow 70cc t bit Is per month toll

alter 5 3 373 7MS ,r'den' (b 4' 157 p}

ROOmTOIS 6 bLocks tram campus porroL

ar 2 hr house R7iper no own room 370

nC4 Becky (b# &55 p}

Room r~anitble for ,urrmer .n cownihouse with central nr Pony', cowlmonke,, etc VERY MiLLOW vm%

reasonable 37&-5746 (b St55-p)

Ow root. n 3 b.d'ooTIho*,.*r*rf*$eo for r.,rnotd.t of summer cjr i

33-36 (b5 S16-p1

Horm. or Renr) br horm. Avo'I S.>i 1is

61k tO UP 4 vaco'ie2br 5125 On take Avoil5ep

Over 50 sting. for SeptUn.'.d ~.otEstate Aisoc Broker

IISNE 164h Ave3T"'"

bO, 55-. r

As you .1* hbenisywolling hor lte heM .odlqg

OWJ226, Magic In ArnricooSrecd Mold.', esn' ,.s

gled . lM o&M .M.Mvbe-l eedn .

"'"*u,

Wellaren t

LEWISJewelrCenvy- CLASS RINGS

ot~losW A 1 CH REPAIRS

2W0W UnIvenfly A.*372-4106

fhm lndependen$ flordo Afigalor, Thuredoy July ' 1975 E'og. 25

REMEMBER DOO-WAH-DIDOY?

HIPPO HOPwhitee scks optional

LIVE 50 s MUSICFRIDAY, JULY 25. 8:30 P.M.

LIVE'S0sMUSIC. FRi$3.00 STAG

FREE BEER

EE BEER$6.00 DRAG

Advanced sale at Rebel Discount $3.50 ot doorThe NEW HIPPODROME THEATRE

1540 N.W. 53rd AVE. - 375-lHIPP

itSTRANDED?We offer free pckq ftdelivery. Reasontle ~cnoil tim . bets.trumnusims or completeavediae*.

r1~0'

-. r *bc.u* a PIIni'Wohe di elcorilyPerm11.b. foa.wIS franepor* you - -50 mi4e wfth a Ott ise p8*30m.*. -n - .s.i charge

asthyItria otticar nies adl sewic*

Miller-Brown Motors4222 NW 1lidh Street

i ye5U~ 1+ .atI trlnspGrtt.ol tI@ d oaimL$ ER1NG -M IN C I

This FRI & SAT

July 18nites

8 19

LIVE AT THE KEG

the

MILDEW

A variety of entertainment ic. The

THE JAZZ PROJECT

JAZZ PROJECT

wiji be back soon!

20&-SW lhth Ave. 3-07

4

No better DELI-STYL E SANDWICHES in town

DAILY SANDWICH AND BEER SPECIALSI

TONITE! July 17 the U.F.W. benefit

I1.OO cover (for UFWU)-Busch 23' glass '1.25 pItcher

3n

FOR RENT

lso im igjot ", ""9 p "

RN 0375 AO04mr 173 92M6 iF 5* 159

JULY PNT fRSE' Hlowe >WN omntoot'out 3bdrn oAK FORESI A PTWasher d' e r I oded 'hru Ciug r's

3769)6$.,k'2'1Sf9p)

2 .reor responrsbLe *.rm,'l., 'eded s

ow 373 I754 ~l S 9j____

Sty rce 2 ~ or rnndmiooed trpp-shed'mnbdte ho me On shady lot cJose in UFAva'loble n~ow $135 rn 550 deposit

sLlbLn'api tan & enie, genuol AC, lose

to corrus iown big oin $lt00mrr + '

'tlirre, 377 9915 lb 51 159 p1

Re 'he 1 Li o ren, o roanm .iFh, brondrnew hors. I aCr hoc kyord central F -

and ii nully i orocied 1Cr0 moles ft om

imftuo $'00 iurhrn 5115 turn tol 3724231 ieiween9 5O bi_9

fo rnt 12 w'do rob'eI itone part' mytnrn'thed air real pork hn$ ool, ctose:

10 conmput 15O per rto 37R 806 otter5

Or. bdr apr for rent Ayoilable lranrow or.,i 1he end of Augutt $1 4

or 376O990 (t21 15 9p)

Need 2 rleon iWerai roomc,,s ownroom ,n rrc, 3 bedroom duple. forn it'

W AN TEDS""'S' ro*f**rot .nrld I 3 f

t $1X)reni I 3 utuli.e. of 3 bdrm' ha use

L nqw re Jon, Hulffmio i5O2 N vW 6th Sto~lr 30 n, Weedas nyim

3t77-3085 :tos NE 21 Wam

thee s acathat ues no

378-0779

a

pog. 26, Th. independent Rodido ASIigoto, Thursday. July U lfS

- - -- - -- - -- -~ ~ -- ,

FREE EL ECTRO NIC EN GI NEAW N YSWITH EACH

19ff N. MAIN ST. ptiO#E4372-13C I

Ti PEWRITERpKOBIEEWS?

We' ve got oil the answers

Sales-ServiceShppill*-4555

rf1AiESswS T EMS724 N. Main ---.---.

------ - -.-- - -- -- --- -- -

by SAIanusP. Thompoe, F.R.S

A supplemeotry txtdesdgned to deliver youfrom the preliminary itwnors of Differental ICalculus and the Integral

sdfsles plus .4 poeag. axo PMe.S.nI1 A.claS. m isu 5

NAME _ __ _

ADDRESSMONEY REFUNDED IF NOT SAISFAED

------ ------ a---- - -- -

~OL L YOLCANEA4PM -1 OPM

CH ICK EN, FR ENCH FR IES.

p COLE SLAW ROLLSFREE REFILL ON ALL DRINKS

SDE LIVERY SER VICE- CALL 37-31

1805 S.W. 13th

-. 5SW AR CHER R D.

Open l0om -8 pm dailySundoy 2 -4

We hnds8 apsIi ad.A Friendly Produce Market Just for YOU

Western Lettuce Large Heads 294 eachVine Ripe North Carolina Tomnatoes 39$ lb.Large Brown Egg. 694 Dot.Ruby Red Grapefruit 2-254Larr. selection of other vine fruits vegetables

I Much. Much MoreI We accept FOOD STAMPS

MIKE'SBookstore . pipes

Tobacco ShopDowntown

25-4\stn-Tg.ME A TMOa

*" 'n 1V 'tS9

17 Un~Sre

WANTEDtC2*t1A ro 'ml.".o'*t to. 2 b

*r<d (nll 372 970)1n .eno. tce r.

tuC -p - -~~o ' *n pooTV U''G* * * l olafr

sr.d .,n oom ,n .ue. Cr o

that inon, p Sept wiI na mp n

Cons.voiy nol. nommot. a io,.

on. b.4oom ois rso. 0cornp.u.t

Scuo qJ, tn. i.~ m.st

s. gnn n s.v.td. to. cpu

lie' "la'ec4.at rtopoo.nnmon. .*- i-p)

Ru.*caI~ G'.1n on.' c ms

.hl50 rbs n.col3"-nO' 157p

m~it rbuil ngc. oo co . ~o

SI Cil 772 -g It 59p

973- Veg rojp fli 4 .d i

Why Do The Heathen Rage?"

This scribe .as neic, a subscriber of the no,. defunct Life magazine, butoccasionally saw one. The Christmas issue of 1%64 featured many beautifulpictures and noted art works of Biblical subjects. Life then proceeded to attackthe trusm,.orthiness of the Od and Ness Testament, and did not even spareJesus Christ, Who said of Himself, "before Abraham was, I AM!" John S:5S.

The immediate traction of this isriter at that time .as that "LIfe" isa thewrong name for tia publication - it should have been "Death"! Here weresome of the reasons for thi. severe judgement: The Creator said to the tinstman He created, Adam "Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely cat; butof the tree of knowledge of good and evil. thous shalt not eat -for in thme daythou eatest thereof "THOU SH ALT SUR ELY DIE I" Genesis 2:16, 17. Thedevil attacked The Word of God, by subtlety beguiled and deceived Eve! Deathreulled, just as God had said. "And it is appointed unto men once to die, butafter this the judgement - Hebrews 9:27. The publication called "Life", inthe .dter's opinion, earned for itself the name 'Deat" by attacking TheWord of the Lord God Omnipotent!

Death came to Abel who we. righteous In the sight of God, because hisbrother Cain rejected The Word of God, and God's testimony against his evil:"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doent not well, sinlieth at the door!" Genesis 4:7 DEATH came to all the peoples of the earth inthe days of Noah for corrupunh God'. Word and ways, excepting eigit people.Again. a result of rejecting God's word and the wickedness that followed,DEATH came by a rain of fire and brimstone front heaven upon all theinhabitants of Sodom andGommorah-only Lot and his two daughters escapedas a result of the urgent prayer of God's friend and obedient servant,Abreham! Time and again Pharoah had the opportunity to obey God's Word asMi.scs warned him. He refused, and death devoured his army in the Red Sea.

Down through the ages, since the time of Adam, Death has swallowed upevery generation! Our own generation"i ro Pdly "passing away" recentlycounted 89 death notices in just one paper!

Consider the (oily of mere man's atteel on God's Word. A prominentevangelist of the past generation. George Stewart, told this story showl thosewo attack The Bible and those w.ho fear The Bible might be destroyed: the

biggest fool he ever heard of was a man who took a crowbar and went out tooverturn Lookout Mtountain. But he lound a bigger fool than that when he wenton the other side of the mountain and found * fellow with his shoulder againstthe mountain to keen it from being overturned! The true Christian, to whomThe Spirit of God has revealed the truth of The Bible, in seeking to defend TheBible is not concerned about it being overturned or destoyed, hut rather isgreatly concerned about the unbelief cauded by the wretches attack on The.Bible. unbelief does not make The Word of God without effect, but fulfills mmin producing Eternal Death to those who reject it.

There arc those who tell us that much of The Bible iM "myth" andespecially the first pMrt of Genesis: "in the beginning God created theheavens and the earth: Is it a "myth" that the heavens and the earth exist? Is ita "my th" that the earth is filled with wickedness, ,iulcnce, murer, and that theearht produces thorn, and thistle., etc., both physical and spiritual kinds? Is ia mnyth" that women bear children ii suffering and sorrow? Is it myth thatman dins and returns to dust? "FOR IN THE DAY THOU EATESTTHEREOF- disobeys God-THOU SHALT SURELY DIE"! Genesis 2:17"FOR DUST ThOU ART AND UN'TO DUST SHALT THOU RETURN!"Genesis 3:19 3. that a "myth"- "what fools these mortals be!"

Consider the following truths of God, not myths, all you who are in theembrace and rasp of DEATH! God has commended His people to hearwitness, "whet er any hear, or whether any forbear!" t is no myth but G.d'sTruth that God took Enoch to Heaven without dying and going into the grave!It is no myth but the Truth of God that II. sent a chariot and horses of firedown and separated Elijah from Elisha, and things of the earth, and took himto heaven mna whirlwind! It is no myth but God's Truth that The Virgin maryconceived by The Holy Ghost and gave birth to The Lord Jesus Christ! It Asnot myth but God's Truth that Jesus Christ arose literally omit of the rave onth. third day. and about 40 days later while talking to HI. disciples, theybeheld Him arise from the earth and ascend toward s heaven until a cloud hidHim out of their sight.

If 3ou belicie these things to be myths, in God's Name, why don't you resignand get nut of the Chunkh of The Lord Jesus Christ, if you ever joined? Have)ou no integrit',? Are you remaining in the pulpit or pew to straighten out TheLord God Omnipotent? Jesus Christ said, "I am the Way, The Truth, and TheLife." They who reject Him as such are condemned to eternal blindness,darkness and death. 'ce predict from what As written in God'. Word you willbe much better off on the outside than ott the inside! Do not hypocritically useHim Name until the time when He comes end hurls you out! In the song Godtaught iiosrs, He speaks of "The Lowest Hell!" Dciii 32:22.

"Fr If wr wsuld judge ,,ursehe, we should not be judged.' lst Cirinthian.

"FORBEAR THEE FRflI MlEDDLING UITH GOD - THAT liFDESTROi THEE N4ITi" 2nd Chron. 35:21. King Josiah. of judah. did notheed this warning from a heathen king, and died.

Box 44)5. Decatur, Gieorgia :iooai

l'enin A.sn,***

:372-6511Reu e rochures Newsleters

I-

- -II

mdlSIL _AO APA

PERSONAL

SI FREE 'lCET to ROLLNo 5T-,sir ,C 'I or. @ D'n~w l ach I, vek -It plr~ TM H

fARTS '0* NW 13* Si & M. ppis

whiila peedo SwIm r1 <9' +>

'er All!r, , Aqgiai ,c ,,r

3448 W hi., 3739233 S 52.

-O l 40,O ho' err> cr-

a 9cOQ itIif' 20 ~r o.pe. r.,,-

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ALLCAN

378 0700)IN Main

youET

Spaghetti Dimner

aisrod

Above meol mncludesspoghefti moot sautegolden winad godic bred,

-e or Colt

$2.49Thur. a Fo

Julyl8 1Sts

3469 .w-qmlher-mood 99.eonw.sU - - -

er orm has dew.Iopa ultra of handsome anid highly tu

rl~lai tOuul weather gormen, ihot ar* resosited worid -Ide

lh*."qua combmteoson O, ighilness 06,d iug'nes andI.Iiiled *ale' prooF

- isa <orrIts bomaut rname pc"'ni .amrnu tI, tnd no

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IIEN'S A UATIC AND TRAIL Siu""'14 40WSTUN4ERSITYMElNUI 373-9233

tON1iY. tAMY 10-7 SdIUSUT9-7

PERSONAL

' 15 1W Sit Au ,of I3i> ,t hufnt II

n} r1

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2

I 40 ret

.143 ~

SERVICES

lis quOlht.edl ')iruLnr!t . Bevedy t

Sep10"'be -es s il 370 9 '52 (* St ISA

(Vi 5 11k ~e j0 44R(Id) ft 52

Experenced cer,,t,.d omsituclor ofsw, mmmPg oli special cc,' Ilcate Ir

'utrvc, on of hondicopped Oer1u

low Cnll 475 232l .mi 5' 56 p]SCUBA CLASSES STARTING Ju 'y 28 All

sbe .qu prner. provi'ded 4 open'ae, dves Fo , so ie cIoisei

llnCo h as, of Wid r~ngdo Alo, ! & FM I Cooler In 48W

Un' 373 923_i' rI ~ y

~l 725 YIA 5

'SM 1 '

W3l TyR 1 w 1 -urltS

' ' fr7T', ud1en TOsEwRd4 t'l'iillli' 'R 5'9 'i' ,9

r~oble 135 Iu49 !vd!b it ISO E a -STarPrE P paddCm 0le Ia 'ea, LIF. p

$.70< H ail $I0 Ml!]de,, $rorer

ilP!NG EDItkN Ain-'', i.iIiss ee ''0

14~tiIrm Pallr !Jt MA 4~e .n rgish iM'58*! 7657 _ 19

L -N r %O Ot E, 'HAA

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The lit' I h ut,' er ihd trIT ~ la t fe

C ek . enerom,.l 'r'

Iw! l te j~Siet -ti,1 6o ~ h sf

>0er M.elI Fih do,e 1 01~s 'i

Ah r'oIl 379e '. Wr mor o, It9

Bugma hog ond ermTe woe world

Ther~ 100'aks sht1 >l 'or n tmeo

P msrrt B92 49 . II It56-p t

,orjand itg ,td frltSbro@n LN

IoTCet lNsE rtemy Col Ccck qae Plers373 636 mee Tr!o;I 3a,y 59 atr k

sinaoffred or LS bro' CO

iuai-d tresog ohm r mllc Ic 1

37 ,xh17 cLlt 32 p i i .

Fort''en Y Aec arrale far the.Uniei rvy A' e ,, 7 11 1 .IC Ital 16r

1.clen 33-436m3 rrI"'0 3T IS puNC JNC0go3vr ,(NC( H|oup 1 0Ae Clan

I -nt upe dl oute op o. lem A

11r-i5(kd4r AWr Col 3 -2 15 It ' St17

FRENCH SA S 1dALtAN Wlit 'rSg

pV pge Ahren 376ltlf $1415

pro r.e'kroneig eh IIl k reaq

till 7 4AJAW I 2, SM p

s c'so ho F'et r'Ldl~tsle

CCLI' rlit' I'o'et' rIgpuiln

t-3 t 'I hi. P'llr,~e %

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ruiin 3u7 ,O7. <I .hsseras

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er mLI.2 85 redm e9'ceihln'

377- BIKE

Chali'sChickenis d.Ivwerlng

asi

K\

377. 992-102

.e.rLIVE BLUEGR ASS MUSICby.

RED an MURPHY *I Th is Friday & Saturday

9 30 p.m.

A NTH ONY'S21st-37

-9 2

U.U.EE.U.UCUpemeuU"u"u

Th. ir'dependenf Florida Ajilgoto, Thurudoy, )uiy 7

NEED A CAR,RIGHT NOW?

Wel rent you one.Bythedaywet ornienib,for as long as you need IL

Caflus tout our speddanrate&

Sto

Quick neghborhoo

ifo daalv W9Eku nr0 mnhlu

Werates.TORLeasingMain St

259.

E Independent Florida Alliator

for ,r.n*

I IoMt found

I -a

3 DAIS T- 1Niet

2 day. rmr

day. -or 10 MC ufdlI- ric lmnd d liri

Spdove or bym,. Th

d*con The d ma beundto IU pl.'cobi y | cnllvhe

An mctee i yt 2 l-S2vedgn c I.'doe o

Iad ii. a n .,btroc s id p,.

Aetn' of pyy snt wit Rd-

adrlnn copy umid not. a- - .-cafjt . b.ndigow.nI,

Pct sol. udeont 4

.detm,.elo r'f n y -

1975, Pog. 2'

4-

VAN OR

r

fly oov No-Sef Engh~hCurlyPerlfonent

377-26

achwinn Cy clerySales S Service onAll makes of bikes

uSe

Pag* 26. Th. lndependent Flordo AlIgotor Thu.,4ey. July I7, 1975

r-

bJJS

0)54

if'

S

0)

Susan Scott

Annes looking good in thislace inserts front ond bock,wedges ore found

Your nextAffairs Irorsondols wil

dress by Rag Doll It s cool pink, with

for super comfort. Her sfrow and ropeiour Shoe Gollery.

affair could be lust arounm, Martini Osvoido. They'r'h soft Feother-lined uppers.

'V rt5*t colored

naturally

d the

at Suson Scott,

iS

e cushioned crepeGet your Affair in

Foreignbottomblue or

leather

Cobbler's Corner-V

YouThe

rebu

locking good in this woodenrlop ond scarf knotted front

other leons. $27 00,Brothers

sole high wedge from NINA.isoa natural with denims and

in the Ladies Shoes deportment, ot Moosof course.

Don I wait for woshdoyMoos Brothers. It s a great

come in arnd check out THE LAUNDRY ofnew place where you II find pri-

washed denim, muslin, chombroy and rmodras. Do it in separates,dresses and bumpers.Moos Brothers ofc

Located behind Pacesetter Sportsweor, of

A-s

a-)

a -

H' Aii

K

Maas Brothers

Maas Brothers.

Bruno loses scholarship, leaves UFI F ,,.sketIball plat

Iacen d ropped tromiwhtlalrship and ll rotiiin

uriher ior the ( atiirs

Sholarsh 'p mi accordari L

COACH JOHN LOTZ*nforces summer rut.

Lii ba.sketb

ilukl ce r'uNJ l Jil

Tel. ~ , ,, . l

Io c h~Si n I'C it

itirmg the rcguiiu itII THE nihicir tceds 1w p.

\I rug4Ilme in .a cutse tie is

,d mhjt Ltirs( It uihletec

di'iduiihl sI to whelthei .1 redlert 'A d', mlide

C ildwclihad tireads tllculi\AL ttotrse, Ii the spring

Ilitoriuitormng IoIlowmg heenml of the quarter

C(ldWell. who toild not bereached 1(1r LOmnit. plans

1 ran' Icr 0o another school1CMt 'Cat. sit out OneC 'car amdhen comp~lte his tu 'cfliiiing years of eligibht sC ada cl ~ ud have to w. at

Mti FIhcesi ( .Ltlwehl thoseiOL aiilir IandIhicNsiithc 'ill

Litiqi tI leIge~ im mi ibemL

( D I. I) EI L I. A

mNLdtll mi t ridloin I reclhrti' pclui t rI lit seJsOhl

.i"i.L'tI sei' e actj. Ihg ( ' ors

iiinuktr Ileidin4 Ihe teiim

ime ui anCii r1(

U jduialk worked Iiis as mlt(.1 st 1114 spil lit istragred

ci1 13 Ilolits per garli

lhw (,ttrs w Il look I)ci irriing Icqcrnmen Mike

I gderiman Ion Host it. Bobi mds Jerry Moore, andGreg Armrimon 1i take up

I he slack in Ihe backeourtI rdermnm .i7n. d Hostite sO'4 I

grath alt ol act ion last yearCAIDWELL GOES UP FOP SHOT AGAiNST GEORGIA

plans on tronhferring to o school in or near Florido

The Independent

Florida Alligatorlbsrmer, MJiy 17. 19T P.ge M

UF soccer players support their own habit

- - r -----

4/ j tsr

t'I~ a'S

-a

photo by 10. .kipp.r

UF INTRAMURAL SOCCER CLUB MEMBER (FOREGROU ND) Cagoins? Latin American team

OMPLETES PASS

By ROD DONALDAnlIpso. Spurla Writ.r.

Did you know some UP football players mustpay for their own equipment and tran-spornlton?

Blame seniantics. not the recession. Thesestudents pay real football, known as soccer in

WITH THE EXCEI'ON ol an occasionalsoccer ball or use ot the athletic van, theUniversity provides 'irt uallv no Funds forstudents w ho 14 sh to play the most popularsport in he world.

No interest here. suu say" Ehe UiF In-trarnural Soccer Club attracted &) hopefulslast year

With overcro14dig a definite problem. theLatin American Soccer Club (LASGI wasformed this year to allow more people toparticipate.

OTHER SPORTS attracting limitednumbers of competition and spectators, suchas tennis and golf. hase Iared very wellfinancially compared to soccer

Though the players themselves mustinance the program). both the UF Intramural

and Latin American Soccer Clubs are ex-perimenhing successfully with fielding twoteams.

According to Robert Eley. UF IntramuralSoccer flub president and left wing, the club

was created in 1953.Eley credits Intramural coach Alan Moore

fkr much of the club's success. Moore hascoached the club in the past. a job nowbandied by ESty.

The real credit Ibr the program's success.however, belongs o the ayr thiemseles.

Carlos Ecos. coach of the LASC. noted histeam receives no aid tromn theuniversity. Weare entirely supported by our own members['his makes it hard to plan game' We arehoping to lInd a sponsor

1 he major difficulty involved is in travelexpenses leamn members must pay food.lodging and ga. in addition to providing theirown transportation.

Smnce Finding reasonable competition Cannecessitate traveling to such places as Tampa.Georgia and even Alabama, expenses can besignificant Also, many teams are reluctant tocme to Gainesville to play if some sort ofaccomodatnons are not provided.

Despite the problems, both teams continuetheir efforts. During the summer, the UFPhItramural Club practices Tuesdays andT'hursdays, while the LASC meets Mondaysand Wednesdays. Bollh teams practice onSaturdays.

All practices are at 5:30 pm. and accordingto both coaches everyone is welcome.

STEVE MORRIS BANDIn Concert

FREEat Broward Pool

Sponsoredby

E C.C G

ton ghtatf830

BrowardBasement In

Case of rain

Iso

a e - - r e -

FPug.30 Th. ndependent MoridoA~tigotvr rsdOy Jty 17N7

Hernandez relies on brains not brawnBy JACK DIAMOND

Alligator Sports Write,[~he atmosphere in the

'-ronton was tense dS heamsix, Hernande, and Mondraentered the court

rhe serve, and Hernande,bravely takes it ['he onethought gomng through hishead is, "I can do 'I'"

his body swings, hi, cestaarching through the air withthe swiftness oh lighmning. ashe returns with a Cortadashotleading his team tovictory

Later, while sitting in thelocker room. Hernandezimks hack to the first time

he stepped onto a coont, whenhe was just seven years old.

He thinks about the ten

scdr' It took bi to learn howto plan thai mi ght in Acapuktoin %5 when he played hisfirst professional game, andthe gruehng practice nights inbet weeD.

Hermande; was born inMexico City on October 4,.I 947 He first became in-terestcd in Jai-Alai bysneaking io the fronton towatch the players Now,thoosands, of people inTampa and Ocala watch him.And bet on him. And win."I eat, do it', he said strongly.

"No matter what. I can win'.Some spectators, when they

first see Hernandez, doubt hisability because of his smallsize. (55"-120 lbs.) Most ofthe other players are forty to

itly pounds heavier YetHernande, said "In theFronton, it doesn' nialter howbig you arc ' Where theother players use their size, Imust use ni wits."

His favorite shot is theCortada. a low, bard shot justabove the bottom cushion ofthe front wall.

Many know Hernandez asthe "Arana'' or Spider, for heis constantly reminded of thenights in Acapulco when heclimbed high up the walls toretrieve difficult shots.

"Spider Is like my secondname, and I like it' saidHernander, "It makes mefeel good, and want to tryharder, when the audiencescreams 'Come on Spider-

photo by bob wool

HERNANDEZ POSITIONS HIMSELF FOR RETURN SHOTone of the smallest ployersat Ocolo

COmeI On,Hernandet is as interesting

off the court as on Gettingalong w.ith the rest of theplayers is important to him,and be engages in otheractivities with his team mates.

"Hernandez is g reat atcheckers"', said the playersattendant Enrique DelCampo. 'and he is usually inpretty good spirits. urnless heloses at cards.''

When a jai-alai victory ishis, Hernandet throws botharms up into the air. "This ismy happiest moment" hesaid. "It is like a normalreaction. "At the enid of the

game. I am happy.""There is seine incentive'

explained Marty Fleishman,the public relations man forthe Ocala Jag-AlaI fronton."Players receive fifteendollars to win, nine dollars toplace. and six dollars whentheir team shows.'

Keeping this in mindHernandez will earn close toSI8.O00 annually for playingin Ocala and Tawpa.

Because of his versatility,'Spider" usually gets placedwith many different partnersa night. "I have nopreference'' he said. "I likethem all, just as long-as weWith

Yet many spectators arenot aware of how hard it is towin. And along with winnngis the pain that accompanieseach game.

Blood spilled from anelbow that he injured in theseventh game:, but Hernandezjust smiled and kiddedaround. "'It is the business"she said with a gentle laugh.

Spider does not thinLs hiscareer will last ten more years.so in planning for hisretirement, he has taken twoyears ot electronics, and plansto open his own TV. repairshop.

In Acapulco, of course.

THE SPIDER PREPARES TO DOBATTLEIl must urn my wits'

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In hospital rooms and

drivers bring families together,.

att iu nerd's

Bet ause thar's whvre the drunk driver's victims wind up.flrunk drivers are involved in at least 25.000 deaths and

trashes every yeurAnd what ixin you do?

800.000

The first thing you tan do is get him 0ff the road. For his sake and yours.

Do something. Write the National SafetyMichigan Ave., Citag", ChIllinois, 6061L.

&cream Bloody Murder.

Sportswritersneed protectionfrom ath

Sportswrs arc often

accused of puftery - thestory that builds up wherethere is not, the account thatroot, root, roots for the hometeam

Undoubtedly the ranks oflthe sportswriter have hadtheir share of shills and hacksmn the past years. However, aswith most reporters ingeneral, the quality of thenation s sports reporters hasrisen to a point far moreunbiased and conscientiousthan in the past.

THE TREND is stillcontinuing, but what has itbrought them?

Detroit Tiger managerRalph Houk faces assaultcharges filed by Baltimorewriter Phil Hers!,. Bostonwriter Bob Ryan says he washit by Red Sox' Doug Griffinafter writing unfavorablyabout Griffin's performance.Dallas writer James Walkerwas banned from the TexasRanger clubhouse totreporting some Rangerplayers' criticism of outfielderJeff Burroughs. The Min-nesota Twins' broadcastertarry Calton was the target ofsonic shoving by the Twinscatcher Danny Walton,.

it appears that a good manypeople in pro sports, bothathletes and executives.expect writers and an-nouncers to teed themsteadily on creamy. whippedpuffery Writers w ho choosenot to go that bastard routedo not expect favors. gifts, orthe love of those they report

THEY ALSO don't expectphysical harassment andthreats.

Whether the writers werecorrect in their reportage ornot, the sports figures in-volved are asking for somehell to break loose in the lormof disciplinary action.

Commissioner Bowie Kuhnshould see that they get it.

AND WHILE he's al it, heshould do something aboutthe AII-Star balloting. There's

etes?

(;RECF(HIR EOPINION

no question that sonmething iswrong with the situation as itnow stands if one man canstuff the ballot box withthousands of votes and PeteRose is elected lo an outfieldslot while playing third base.

Yes, yes, at's fine to becritical. H-ow about con-strucive?

Okay - Bowie Kuhn is inlove with the one man-onevote idea and also seems tofavor the 6 million ballots castthis past year

INSTEAD OF the stacksand stacks of ballots ready forthe taking in minor leagueballparks as well as retailoutlets around (he nation.why not a ballot mailed"OCCUPAN'I' to every

available home address in thenation9

Those that are taans get oneand use it, those that don'twill thrww it away with othermail they have no use tir. Onemight imagtne a tired-up fanrunning all "ver town tocollect extra ballots fromtriends and neighbors. but it sa great deal less possible thanthe grab system HOW

As tar ihe tans and theirknowledge oI the game?What to do when you waitHenry Aaron or HarmonKallebrew in yOUr All-Starsquad but you haven't theheart to put him in front of ayounger. more deservingplayer?

Why not two or three openslots for such choices aboveand beyond the normalplaying roster? It could beworked out.

Now if Bowie and Gillette(Alt-Star sponsor) will slophoning their LouisvilleSluggers. maybe therewouldn't be so much yellingat AII-Star lime.

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Remember, the drunk driver, the abusive drinker. the problem dnnkermay be sick and need your help.

And your voice will be heard.

'Va

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IAAF

says noyards

The Intern at Grid Amfad (urAthletic Federatin IAAXF)has announced It wii nolonger accept any vJualilsmg

flies for the I ilOm picsin yards I he IA A - placed in

must he in a mietrit rate. dndliar times tonserted' 1rmyards to meters will not beaccepted either I he I AAFalso plans to drop all recordsset in yard' trot, it's recordhooks,

Most major track meets inAmerica already une themetric distance,, and with theannouncement of the newrule, many other major meetswill switch over, at least untilOlympic qualiying is pastSuch prestigious events as theFlorida Relays, the PennRelays, and the Drake Relayswhill make the change tometric next year,

I he U S is the only largewountrv not to have made themieiric system its system olweights and measure' so thereare not problem'' out side theI S with the new. rule

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Seating

changes[he University Athletic

Department has announced achange in its allocation ofstudent seat' lot the up-coming season

Student Bloc seattng w &I bereduced to 27 I per cent,&onsist ent with Iast year's 27per cent participation.Stjdceni 'eason ticket seating

will he increased to i4.3 pertent. and independent 'eating,

ildl he tipped to 52 4 per centi the total seat'

I his .qpproxiates the u'clist sear ol student seaflngiacilities [he Athletic

D)epairi mien, ilso announcedI hat 'I uden t 'east,, ticketsjlts are tip more than 7percent Over same time last year

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