theIndependentfleorida
Published by Compus Communications, nc. Goinesvi le F orcdo, Not officially associojed with the University of Floridc
thursdayapril21, 1977volume 69, no.12I
All smilesNew Student Body
President Paul Leino (R)and Vice President GaryGunter celebrate victory.
george kochaniec jr.
Leino slate breezes into SG officeBy ROBERT RIVAS
Alligator Staff Writer
Paul laino is the next student body president and his entireFlorida Student Partys s i (FSP) ticket won Wednesday's StudentGm.ernment runoff election by a landslide--carryinig 67 percent of the vte.
i,61 0iItpoIIillid \Vic' otlie E'lectorate (NOTE) Partspresidential ciididate Russ Disinc bs 2.698 to 1,738.
AND WHILE UF students s noted overwhehniigly tortriture SG eiidorsing the ne proposed Student Bodc stitition b\o 2.349 to 1006 theiri nw c istitution wsill itgo intoeflect since'osil 17 per cent ()f the students noted.
At least 25 per cent Atheue stwdlt bois must \ote to ratisa cmnstitutnial revising.
student Cmurt Chlwellm sha\ Blchik, \wh1( drafted theproposed ci(stitutim ii th the he )() l 'i uk. l isi Iss
1 iid hc
isis not surprised the propsa (ilesd I b ics' f the ltw
"SOMFTHING OUTRAGEOUS ssimild has e to happen toiiiercosic the apaths ." Bilchik said. "I think if s sin put up I5constitutiial amendieniit to allow a marijuana c -op or tolegalize prostitutis iwe wosuIli Iss t had more like a 30
per cent turnout."Bilchik said he was "enthused" the voters endorsed the
constitution, but added "If a great enough number ofstudents really wanted to change it (SG), they would haveturned out to vote."
FSP treasurer candidate Teri Mills defeated VOTEcandidate Danny Edelman 2,6011 to 1,825, and FSP trafficcourt chief justice candidate Mike Deiont outpolled VGTEcandidate George Barthalow by a 2,537 to 1,814 margin.
THE CANDIDATES tried to give their acceptancespeeches in a crowded Rathskeller over the roir of cheeringwell-wishers and Jiim Buffet tunes blasting through thesmoke.
-',1 1 so happy I' just read to work for full year," iiesstat is s icep iresidentit IAfl iner Gars (unter sa'id.' "'The
fact that the constitution sas on the ballot broUght sut tits 1 ss That showed people wanted reform, and w're going
togi e it to them."Leino and (unter drifted through the Rat happils is the
totals swere announces.LOSER DIVINE WAS eating dinner at the Gainessille
Ililton shen lie heard lie was a loser."I feel like wve did everything that swas possible to dto,"
Divine said over the phone. "We tried to go clean and run afair race and not start any crap, but I guess it just wasn'tenough.
"I guess maybe the greeks didn't turn out, I just don'tknow," he added sadly.
MILLS WAS THRILLED since she knew she won longbefore the final totals were announced.
"inm so excited I
just can't bIelieve it," she said. "ThestUdeslS have reaI lshoin that the, believed in us. The
hardest is yet to come ut I think we can do itMills and the FSP ticket Is'se a1 ll promised to resign if th \
iso't accomplish their campaign promises ithi i simonths.
LEINO SAID HE realized he on hadsiix months butinsisted he could accomplish his our point platform in time.
Tli promiisesinclude irect election of the A ti usits andSirs ic Fee A isors Committee. which decides ho tospend $2.Isimillioni a \ear in studelit fees, a quart'riItreasrer's report, il SG financial aid handbook and aconstistUtional revision commission.
"Ve're going to do it with f t l iihe stUdeitS enits'
hopefully, but we ll do it without them i we hsse to," Leino
El lnna
Animals stolenAn animal-napper is
thought to be in theNorthwest area ofGainesville, whereseveral cats and dogshave been reportedmissing. One resident hasbeen carrying on a one-man crusade but so forhe's had no luck.
See story page 3.
School work
Working your waythrough school to pay fortuition and living ex-penses con be a drog, butsome talented students,with the help of a goodsinging voice and aguitar, have turned theworking into playing.
See Inside, page 14.
Ticket to rideUF oce lefthander Ross
Baumgarten lovesbaseball. When he's nottangling with the NationalCollegiate AthleticAssociation, he's busydowning Gator opponentswith his fastballl express,'which he hopes is histicket to the majors.
See Sports page 23.
. . .
2 alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977
UFF salary dispute settled- almost
*A$40.lsegr :iha nine-$445 rise for employer' with a 10-
A $553 raise for employes with a 12-month contract.
OTHER CONTRACTSSetup . for distribution of
merit raises.$4,$ million for merit raises awarded
for sex equity, promotions, counter offers,or merit.
TALLAHASSEE--Student lobbyists helped push a billthrough a house committee Wednesday that would allow astudent to enter contract talks between the Board of Regentsand the United Faculty of Florida.
Eight of 10 members of the HOIse Retirement, Personnel,if1d Collectis e Bargaining Committee'oted in favor of the
bill that would alloi a student to join regent-unionrrgirt iat iots--bLst the S Udent wOUld 1nt ihi CiOting power.
F student Jeff NMarcus, 3AS, said student lobbing for thebill was the biggest reason it passed committee.
Bv PAT CRONINAlligator Staff Writer
TALLAHASSEE--Bargaining non-stop through earlyWednesday morning, tired Board of Regents and UnitedFaculty of Florida (UFF) negotiators have settled a six-month dispute over salary, increases for state universityfaculty members.
In a concentrated effort to reach agreement on pay hikesand fringe benefits before the matter was sent to thelegislature just hours later, regents .and UFF officials ten-tativelv decided how to divide a $9.8 million salarypackage.
THE PACKAGE, subject to approval by both the regentsand the union later this month, gives half the total increasein across-the-board salary raises and half in merit raises.
It also includes a sabbatical leave program for 120 stateuniversity system faculty--45 for UF. And a statement oflimitation of personal liability by the reger.ts is written intothe contract.
The negotiators had differed over how to divide the meritraises. UFF wanted to grant two-thirds of the $9.8 millionffor across-the-board and one-third for merit increases. butthe regents argued just the opposite.
The regents will vote on the contract in mid-May.ALTHOUGH THE faculty union still has to allow the
bargaining unit's 5,400 members to vote on it in two weeks,UFF negotiators heralded the contract as a success.
"Clearly we did not get all of the things we wanted but atremendous amount of effort has gone into this contract,"UFF President Sam Andrews said. "We bargained andagreed and now it's up to the bargaining unit to vote on it.We like it."
"We worked something awful on this bill," Marcus, astudent lobbyist said. "We lobbied this bill through but a lotof credit has to go to Rep. Sid Martin. "
Local legislator Sid Martin, D-Hawthorne drummed upextra votes for the bill, according to Marcui
"We need ia student who will make realistic suggestirns ionthe actual bargaining talks," bill sponsor Rep. GroiRobinson said. "That will offset the politics of the tso sides
The student will acti as a moderating forceThe bill will nows.i go to the full senate
"The agreement is fair to both sides. itrepresents good faith bargaining efforts onboth sides to compromise. I also think I amvery weary because I have been up for 36hours straight and I can't wait to go to bed."
--Casear Naples, chief negotiator for theBoard of Regents.
Casear Naples, chief negotiator for the regents, said theagreement was fair and that all he wanted to do was to "getsome sleep.
"THE AGREEMENT is fair to both sides. It representsgood faith bargaining efforts on both sides to compromise."Naples said. "I also think I am very weary because I havebeen up for 36 hours straight and I can't wait to go to bed."
The regents and UFF re-entered negotiations Tuesdayafternoon--one day before both sides would be forced to letthe legislature settle the dispute.
But officials bargained through the night trying one lasttime to reach agreement before a special six-member panelwas scheduled to hear the two parties' contentions.
BOTH SIDES did appear before the committee, headed bySenate Appropriations Chairman Phil Lewis, D-West PalmBeach, to outline the contract.
Regents Director of Faculty Relations George Bedell saidthe contract was a precedent in Florida's history ofcollective bargaining.
Addressing the senate panel and a group of tirednegotiators, Bedell said, "This is a precedence-settingmoment. This is the first time a collective bargainingagreement has been made for funding."
LEGISLATORS CONGRATULATED both sides forreaching agreement before the question of salary increaseswas thrown into the lap of the legislature in accordance withstate law.
Seii. Dan Scarborough, D-Jacksonville, a member of thesenate committee hearing the UFF-regents contract, said
W-e are thankful the two parties were able to sit down awdagree. I don't knows what nwe would have done '
Tre agreed upon package is almost identical to thproposed salary increases recommended b former GoLeo (:ollis, \s-ho wsas appointed special master when thetalks broke down late in January.
Health Center funding uncertainBy ELLY HOCHMANAlligator Staff Writer
Even though Gov. Reubin Askew's 1977-78 budgetrecommendation for the J. Hillis Miller Health Center is$4.8 million less than requested, UF health officials expectthe Florida Legislature to support state hospital programswith additional funding.
Confident Askew's proposed cuts will be rejected, UFhealth officials have no plans for program cuts or patientrate hikes.
"I think it will work out. We gave more recent figures tothe legislative hearings and are hopeful they will give us theadditional money. I am quite certain that there won't beany layoffs," Dr. Kenneth Finger, UF assoc. vice presidentfor health affairs, said.
Paul Metts, William Shands Teaching Hospital directorfor administrative services, said, "We are asking the state tostand behind their programs." Metts said the state cannotspecify programs without financially supporting them.
Metts said hospital officials are "encouraging legislatorsto realize that support for state programs would have tocome out of patient revenue" if Askew's budget is approved,
but added he did not anticipate another hospital rate in-crease before June 30, 1978.
THE LEGISLATURE supplies a portion of the funding forthe hospital and determines how much money the hospitalcan spend. Askew recommended the state fund $6.5 millionof a total $33.8 million expenditure. The hospital requested$11.3 million from the state of a total $41.1 million ex-penditure.
Shands is expected to generate $29.8 million from patientbills, the out-patient pharmacy and the cafeteria next year.
Askew recommended the multi-million dollar cuts becauseof projections showing hospital patient days would level off,Metts said. But new hospital figures predict a steady in-crease. These projections were still being formulated whenAskew made up his budget, Metts said.
MEDICAL CENTER officials appeared before a March23 senate appropriations subcommittee hearing and aMarch 28 house appropriations subcommitteehearing to present the new figures.. Marta Hardy, senate legislative analyst, said the sub-committee has received the new budget information but saidthe matter was "up in the air."
House legislative analyst John Cobb said the question of
additional revenue for the hospital would be in committeesfor the next two weeks. He said legislators are consideringthe additional information.
THE PRESENT budget hassles with the state would not benecessary if the hospital was private and did not provideeducation or state programs, Metts explained. He said thehopsital accepts indigent patients for humanitarian reasonsand difficult cases for their teaching significance.
"The hospital is a revenue generating agency. It could runindependently if it didn't provide education, indigent careand install state-mandated programs such as the burn unitand the neo-natal unit," Metts said.The budget request information shows indigent patient
care resulted in a loss of $845,550.90 from Nov. 1, 1976 toMarch 31, 1977. Other underfunded programs includeFlorida Medicaid, maternity and infant care, vocationalrehabilitation, children's medical services and the Councilfor the Blind.
"These are costs incurred for state programs. It is not fairfor regular patients to pay for them," Melts said."We would like to change the legislature's method ofbudgeting. The state legislators said to determine what it'scosting you to do special things for us. They've asked usback up again next week to discuss fundinss "t-anin-
Bill may put student in negotiations
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No leads on missingpets, feared stolen
4"
Student drowns in Spain,is buried here a year laterThe bizarre and tragic death of a former as another man in Spain.
UF student found drowned in Spain more Graham, who attended UF from .1964 tothan a year ago ended when he was finally 1967,wasl t h sreturned to his Gainesville family and buried State' e ated through the efforts if thehereMonay SateDepartment and the U.S. Embassy inhere Monday. Spain. Graham's family learned of his deathTerry Lee Graham, 4302 NW 33 Ct., in December.drowned in a river while traveling nearCullera, Spain and was found there on April The 29-year-old man was buried in1, 1976. Gainesville early Monday. The Graham
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I
By CHRIS MOSSAlligator Staff Writer
On March 21, Kathy Pavone, 4AS, waswalking her German Shepherd puppy,Dennis, that she had just bought the sameday.
Pavone noticed two men "just sitting" in atruck in front of the Georgetown Apartmentson SW 16th Avenue where she lives. Theyyelled to her asking about Dennis.
"HEY, HOW old is that dog?" one of themen asked.
"Two and a half months," Pavone an-swered.
That was all they said and Pavone didn'tthink anything of it. Not until Dennisdisappeared one week later.
THE WEEKEND of March 26, sevenresidents in the same northwest Gainesvillearea reported their animals had disappeared.One Irish Setter was found, one cat wasfound beaten and had to be hospitalized, butfour "breeder" dogs and one cat are stillmissing.
The owners of the missing dogs believetheir pets were stolen, although they contendmost of the dogs were penned or chained.The beaten cat's owner said her pet did notlike cars and probably fought to get away,and an investigating veternarian said theanimal had been kicked about. The men inthe truck were not seen again.
BROOK WADDELL, 230 NW 19 Ave.,reported his long-haired male cat missing onMarch 26. Since then he has carried on aone-man crusade investigating the so calledanimal nappings. Waddell says the only helphe can expect will come from a concernedand aware public.
"These were all prize animals and I've
done a lot of legwork trying to get theanimals recovered," Waddell said. "If wedon't do anything,-nobody will. I'm just atthe end of my rope," Waddell said.
Waddell said the investigation is as futileas it is discouraging and contends thatsomeone is stealing animals to "make a fewbucks on the side."
GAINESVILLE POLICE Department(GPD) detectives say they have no clues inthe missing animal cases.
"It's a difficult situation to work with,"said GPD Detective Dennis Stenson.
GPD detectives say they have troubleinvestigating the stolen animal cases becauseit is difficult to find the animals and identifythem.
THE DIRECTOR of the Alachua CountyAnimal Shelter, John Snyder, said animalthefts are a regular occurrence in Gainesvilleand Alachua County.
"We keep general information on reportedthefts but it's difficult to prove. I don't knowof any market for buying stolen animals inGainesville but I've heard of markets in othercities and counties," Snyder said.
But Snyder also said most dog breederswill not even think about buying stolen dogs.
"NO REPUTABLE owner would want tobuy a stolen animal because there are nopapers and no registration. But I guess thereare crooked breeders who'll buy stolen dogsfor indiscriminative breeding purposes,"Synder said.
Snyder added that he knows of big chainpet stores around the country where dogs arebred over and over and never let out of theircages.
"These puppy mills breed the dogs todeath," Snyder said.
4
t
I
if
4. alligator, thursday, april21, 1977
tkuway caps e~~~
Carter serves up hisnational 'energy diet'WASHINGTON (UPI--President Carter asked CongressWednesday to put the United States on a painful energyconservation diet, including taxes that could boost gasolineprices to over $1 a gallon and add $2,488 to the cost of gas-guzzling cars within 10 years.
In a nationally televised address to a joint session ofCongress, Carter said Americans must be forced in somecases to save energ% because the, are not likely to give upwasteful habits s.oluntarils.
The alternative. he said, is that "crisis.could oerss helmUs.
Making the first speech to Congress of his Presidency.Carter presented a grand design for a national energy policeofficially made public for the first time earlier Wednesdas.Its central points:
eGas pump taxes geared to add fise cents to the price of agallon ex ery year for 10 years, if necessar\.
* Heft\ taxes on "gas guzzling" cars, starting with the1978 models due this year but with rebates for gas efficient
Ca rs.0 Taxes on domestic oil designed to drive the prices
graduallN up to world market levels, and boost consumerprices further.
9 Tax credits for insulating homes and businesses, the
Lewis to lead SenateTA LLAH ASSEE (IPI )-Phil Lewis was elected Senatepresident for 1979-80 in a Democratic caucus Wed-nedad after JackGordon gase up the fight.
Lewis, a West Painm Beach mill ionaire-businessmanand father of nine children, will succeed Lew Brantlev inwhat has been called the second most powerful job instate government.
Sen. Dan Scarborough. D-Jacksonville, was selected aspresident pro tempore to succeed Sherman Winn, D-
126 children kidnappedOSHAKATI. SOUTH WEST AFRICA (UPI)--Leftistguerrillas kidnaped 126 children and at least four whitepriests at a Roman Catholic mission school Wednesdasand forced most of them across the border into Angola.officials said.
South African troops chased the raiding party from theschool at Onamulenga, six miles from the border, and
same for converting to solar heat.0 Standby gasoline rationing authority for emergency use.Members of Congress predicted the gas pump tax would
draw especially fierce opposition both on Capitol Hill andamong consumers.
The President admitted his plan would drive up inflation,but he said it would also generate jobs and have generallyypositive" effects on the economy.
He said all the money collected through the new energytaxes would be returned to consumers through income taxrebates.
Stressing the moral urgency of adopting the natisi's firstcomprehensive energy policy, Carter told Congress: "Wemust act nowv--together--to devise and implement I coi-prehensive national energy plan to cope ssith i crisis thatotherwise could overwhelm us.
Congressional leaders predicted the legislation\ would facea tough battle, with various interest groups likel to opposenearly every major provision.
Carter's Congressional presentation Wednesdav took atone similar to his grim, television talk to the nation Mondaynight about the scope of the energy crisis.
"This cannot be an inspirational speech tonight," he saidWednesday. "It is a sober and difficult presentation.
exchanged fire with the guerrillas 200 yards from theMarxist nation's frontier, a government spokesman saidin Windhoek, South West Africa's capital.
The soldiers rescued a number of the whites, ass of-ficialsaid in this regional capital. aii stit st thechildren "were herded to the border" and marched intisAngola. Ten of the 126 children escaped their captorslater and made their way back to the missiiopr
There were no details of casualties.
Longest goes to jailASPEN, COLO. (UPhI -- Singer Claudine Longet, con-victed of slaving her lover, champion skier Vladimir"Spider" Sabich, has entered a graffiti-scrawled cell in acondemned jail building to begin a 30-day sentence,authorities said Wednesday.
Sheriff's Sgt. Rick Kralicek said the cell occupied byLonget, former wife of singer Andy Williams, was the on-ly one for women in the jail, and she will share it with anyfemale prisoner arrested before her sentence expires.
1
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Utroa withRundgrenf *Sf Cf O
A Aset 60mcitytourAT FLORIDA'STATE'S CAMPELL STADIUM-APRIL24
Utopia, the multimedia musicalgroup with Todd Rundgren, hasembarked on the longest U.S. tour inits history.
The group, which also consists ofRoger Powell, Kasim Sultan, and JohnWilcox, will cover 60 cities in 10 weeks.
For the tow. Utopia has created astage show costing over $150,000. Itfeatures an Egyptian motif, andincludes a 14-ft.-high gold sphinx with
iaaer that shines from ha third eyeand emits smoke from its nostrils.
in the center of the stage set is a24-ft-high pyramid, which Rundgrenclimbs at a climatic point in the show.The state set also includes workingfountains and elaborate light sequen-ces.
The audio portion of the show alsocontains many interesting features.Synthesizer player Powell hasdesigned a portable keyboard thatcontrols a six-voice polyphonicsynthesizer. He plays this instrumentas he roams the stage.
Previous mobile synthesizer key-hoards had only one- or two-voicecapabilities. The state is designed sothat no amplifiers are visible from theaudience. They are all either concealedor built into the set
Rundgren has created a 30-minutevideotape, tranferred to film. that isbeing shown instead of having anopening act. The film features music
by Utopia, and includes a segment ofeach member of the band intermixedwith complex and unique videosynthesizer effects devised byRundgren in his personal video studioin Woodstock, N.Y.
BACKGROUND: Todd Rundgrenhas been pursuing a stage career for adecade. Since 1974, his group has beenknown as Utopia.
"It's just natural to assume thateven the current Utopia is little morethan a back-up band for thenever-ending exploits and innovationsof Rundgren." said Ken Schaffer, ofthe New York-based Ken SchafferGroup, a public relations firm.
"But Utopia has developed, throughseveral changes of personnel, intowhat is now a permanent. co-equal,four-man group.
"A major artist like Rundgren doesnot cut the pie into four slices formerely altruistic reasooa. Utopia, in itspresent configuration, represents toRundgren a long-awaited, ultimaterefinement in his search for musicalpartners who would each carry his ownweight in forming the band. and itsfuture direction," he said.
INCIDENT: Utopia recently wrappedup its fourth world tour, which covered17 countries in Europe and the far east.According to Schaffer. one incidentstands out as unique during the tour.
For the last of nine Japanese dates,
Hiroshima, the band decided to dressas sword-wielding Samurai and startthe performance by charging down the.aisle from the rear of the hall.
Schaffer said the band's stagemanager swears that he went over allthe details with the head security manfor the hall hours before showtise.
However, when showtime came, andthe four Utopians began their siege,the entire audience rose up to a man,screaming and hurling unprintableepithets at the invaders. Schaffer saidthe promoter's aisle guards soon sidedwith the audience. The guardsassumed that the band was beingattacked by local crazies, and tackledthe invading Samarais. dragging thembodily from the hall.
The show started a half hour late,but the program ran its full 2/i-hourlength. The event took place atHiroshima's Sun Plaza Great Hall, andreceived high praise in the local press.
A newspaper critic for the Hiroshima"Shimbun'' described the Samaraiincident as follows:
"Very dangerous in good nature.Utopia run in from back of hall, payinghomage to traditional warrior, but notunderstanding security Ovation beforeeven performance, this is a notation ofgreat American band on showbusiness. Utopia, the power of TheWho. and the humor of The Mother!"
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14 S5PIM iii 1,111 ALI6AT5 is a publication of Campus Co*-msnisaonsIncrparsrsd, private, sn-profifcorpration. It is pulisd five tIsws1ly excpiduring June, July ndAugust, when it ispbihsdse-ia-weAly, andduring student Wfosyaod enorpriws. Opiniosaexpressed inIM gWM5 gMesMR1OSSA LWOAM ore 8oss of th edasIrors writers of ftharticles and not
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Subscription row is 0.per yew ror$5 .0 per quarter.
Marston couldveto proposedbudget plan
By ROBERT RIVASAlligator Staff Writer
The UF Student Senate Tuesday night unanimously ap-proved a plan to spend next year's $2.54 million in studentfees-despite threats UF administrators might veto thebudget.
UF Dean of.Student Services Tom Goodale has repeatedlywarned Activity and Service Fee Advisory Committee(ASFAC) members he may recommend UF President RobertMarston reject the proposal either in whole or in part.
GOODALE OBJECTS TO the current proposal becausethe UF Athletic Association, Student Health Services, the J.Wayne Reitz Union and Student Government would allsuffer two per cent budget cuts while the Board of CollegeCouncils would be sliced from $75,000 this year to $60,000next year.
All those cuts would provide $45,000 for a Student BodyGroup Legal Services program. The money would be addedto $40,000 allocated for this year but never released,bringing the total legal services funding to $85,000.
The money would pay for attorneys, interns, a secretaryand office supplies in the Holland Law Center to provide freelegal aid to students with landlord-tenant problems, civillaw suits, criminal cases or almost any other legal need.
IF THE budget is vetoed by Marston, it would be the firsttime since ASFAC gainedcontrol of the budget in 1974 thatthe president ever vetoed an SG-prepared budget.
UF Vice President for Student Affairs Art Sandeen saidWednesday he has "reservations" about the budget but itwould not be "fair" for him to comment on whether he willrecommend Marston veto the proposal.
Goodale has been meeting with ASFAC members toconvince them to find an alternate funding source for thelegal services program, and said Wednesday he cannotrecommend Marston approve the current budget plan.Currently-funded programs should not be cut to fund a newone, he said.
UNDER FLORIDA LAW, Marston has the authority toveto all or portions of the budget and send them back to S(;.
"We want to avoid a veto," Goodale said. "It puts us inan adversary relationship with SC, and that's something I'venever been in since I've been here."
Goodale insists "there must be a tfiscally sound waC" tofund group legal services without cutting other studentservices.
In other business, the senate voted to tormallk validate lastWednesday 's SG election vote totals. Senators soted t<>sat37 new senators,D14 Student Court justices anl StudentCourt Chancellor Dan Molloys.
CorrectionAn article in Tuesday's Alligator incorrectis statd tliat
the only Eastern Airlines flight avaiilable f rom Gaiess ille t oM iami would leave at 7:15 a.m.
Actually, the Gainesville to Miami flight will lease at 7 05.m.
S okfs, PANrs, LoNGAND St o tfEiE
FATIGUE GREENm.ASo ORD iiom mTAW ANOMRTi ittilE.
AI~N' AG ITICAND TRIIRfjo~l-SAT.7 ~ biti~lf. 7 -5
alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977, 5
We Ii.,l L.g.~F o1 0 Tnursu'uay, '.Q""z ', i''F' Iwm
Animal poisoning
spree continuesTwo mwwrc doves ba,.v alh-n \, itim *tothe dvadh pmson1)81 and h ' killiZni 'pri' 'ldt! hai itakeI mirm than to30 dm!
anid a n m ii m i ' ii(a,!f- preadmtc itside thc student
F shutto ar u o hGamey s nsil ted cabrmiril -tvphlr d \\ rdmsdathe t osetv' d VsIImnLs ne MI Eastel Sun1da anld
\\t iter r. im at su wit ri i t eth't ru ts pir
ttiti . e k in it I i er
Spri \4ithw itcid'rti \\ilsFi~' 'i' hi l pril s It \ lt
Si'iii iiciide- i i dIiI I t the KItei I Ft !
wi enI It J( 1 -11"i t I I Li I I jI i s rs I I im I, 4M t Itdi, k it
I t\ m.' hii wishes i ic n, tt imtII I c eI( i iifl I II assi Ii , I !
l, wiellr wt" L iiheran Chur c . 826 I ljccsii ce
It Ild rtl , d om of om ed \ wiesd
Fund set up to helpassoc. health directorpay son's medical bill
V amnI I riends ha% t started a tund to help Dr "'i I hiamK Iem t issoia te d direct ()r (oAt 'F Studen t HealIt h Se rv ices, pat r imf wa 1 )i I Is t ha t bega n min(I ittmg ~y a tt er h i son
m11 t rF, c a cc IdentIL-itm Kivim. 22, spent a w,%eek in mtensi\e ca re alter the
Npri 4th accident In (Gamesv ille. He died April I 2thLanm w,%as not included im the Klemns*imsurance pobecv, sot riends ()t the tamik started a tund to help pat, the bills
ANtnt w %ho wishes to contribute can send donations tothe Lt n. ersit, LUtheran Church, 1826 W *Umiversit\ Ave.
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IL- n1lineit~ tkiarat4eiv, rimril 11 1977
0.
Aj
EnPHOP
Accent and the College of Artsand Sciences
present:
"The Emergence of Psychology as a
Science
A free lecture by Prof. Robert Watson
Tonight 7 p.m.Little HallRm. 117
Part of "The Appealand Illusion ofScience" series
GREAT * -RLIQUOR
STORE -- HUTV(INS, .Fm AM 21. 22. 23
EARLY TIMESBOURBON
ox .5 1
CNADIANMIST
9.
58.75
ALVETEXTRA
QT.
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C FORD'SSCOTCH
50.7S
m gotort urs aoyopr 21 1 7
1
Late books get burgersBy JOHN DRUCKENMILLER
Alligator Writer
Ronald McDonald's "arch toe, theFamburglar. will be at the new McDonald'son NW 13th Street todav swapping hani-burgers instead of swiping them.
Anyone wanting a hamburger can swsatsti Burglar an overdue book from Sante ieHeli""al Lilrars for a ree all-heel ttpaieand bun.
"IT'S ALL part oI National Librars'iVeek,' said Joe Brannon. iM-al supervisor otMcDonald's Restaurants. We re- workingwith the library to get the ierdt Ibooks inthe community back in circulation.-
Although ti program is aimd-i at t-tracti tG-tinss Iiv's outli. Brannon sa ianyone turning tit a late book at thc it(-\,McDonald's sill receisi- a imburge
f"Ilu-l-v[Ii I I IebilierwAill Ibetiissiiu ithambril-ers and ses also plan to ov ii-pu"peitshim iwhen aihoosgIsuet mii In
Sierra seeks enOn the saiieisening President Jiimis
Carter announced his energy ci-sirittie"'gr""u t""en "ti"I lo""consers nation program as proposed tothe Regional Utilities BoardiR UB).
Barney Capehart, local Sierr iClibsleader, asked the(, aboard IWednesdai\ to)adopt an aggressive energy conser atinprogram and reverse its traditional plisof encmiuraging energy consumption toiiirease profits.
i ie are not intending to represent ano-grouth attitude. we are simple asking
added. "Anyone who brings in a book fromSanta Fe Library will get a hamburger,though.
BARBARA SAJOR, public relationsspokesperson for the downtown librar, saidthe burger-book swap is something new forthe area.
"Elaine Frances, The library's director.saw a similar idea in an out-of-statenewspaper. " Sajor said. "She called Mc-Donald's and thev went for the idea. Nofin-s s ill be charged for the recovered books.
'Ake decided to try this swap program tose ho the response is. We have aphitenomnenal amount of books out"
Sajor said the IHaimburglar will be at thencis McDonald's all day today and thepuppet shows for school-age children will last
fi (ti ' 3 1 ) .m . to 4 1 .sI folded that pcIpe returning lbiks are
r--i l t) Iring them t( lit- tieN \cDlonilds. 'it past the Gainssille Mall on\W l Iht Striet
ergy programp pIc to lseener-g\ in then m si efficientnminner,'' Capwhart told the board.Ill a hIourpage "tatemient the club asked
M " to u a- stecli director (t sI rts
coiis-ers aton. pros ide pub i miiormiat i11d teiiichl sersic iriiiii nsrirstiiiontcelhmipics and resamip tht( rate andbilling sructure tor the(, utilities.
HUB agreed to stud\ tht( plan and tossurk toward eierg consiriation bhasinig hearing fur public inputt iithi
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believe hkie~v, d i i 01 107
S. llinntr thusd. ao erril 21.1177
Budget plan challengesFortune; favors schools
B. Alligator Wire Ser' ices
Local State Rep Bill Andre s haschallenged the authority of House Ap-propriations Chairman Ed Fortune. D-Pace.b% recommending a budget for schools an
1
universities that is $75 million more thanFortune wants.
Andrews, D-Gainesville and chairman ofan appropriations subcommittee, saidWednesday schools and universities cannoteff iciently operate on spending recom-mendations set by Fortune.
"THERE'S NO way schools anduniversities can operate with only the 5.2 percent increase Fortune wants," Andrews said.
"The inflation rate is 6.6 per cent. Thisissue has got to be discussed. -
W hile recommending increases bex ond the5.2 per cent level, Andrews also called fornew taxes to support education.
However, Fortune contends that the staterevenue will not be available to fund An-
Car honk prA UF student received a skull fracture
above his right eye during a campus fightWednesday but hospital officials said he wasin satisfactory condition after he was treatedand released from William S. ShandsTeaching Hospital.
Carl Ray Garman Ill,7AGwas leaving afriends car on Buckman Drive at 11:30 a.m.when a flat bed truck pulled up behind ihecar and (he driver began honking the horn,University Police reported.
Garman went to the truck, according topolice, and began yelling profanities atdriver Louis Collins.
Nancy Yacuzzo, the car driver, said
drev Srecoimimended inc reass'"THIS SFTS the iti' fr
coil rs-.' Rep Earl Dixon. D-Jackson ille.said. "It will full' bring to focus thequestion of whether we need new taxes.-
If Andrews' increase package is approvedit will given UF's William S. ShandsTeaching Hospital and Institute of Food andAgricultural Sciences (IFAS) some relieffrom budget cuts they are expecting thissession.
A N D R E W S' SUBCOMMITTEErecommended giving $2.5 million more toShands and $2.3 million more to IFAS thanFortune wanted.
The panel also recommended giving anadditional $12 million to communitycolleges to meet increased enrollments. andsetting up a special $26 million program inpublic schools for gis ing specialized trainingto slow learners.
The full committee is expected to vote onthe recommendations some time next week.
ovokes fightCollins struck Garman twice then kickedhim in the head, cracking bones above hisright eye.
Garman fell to the ground and Collins fledin the truck, police said. A passing studentcarried the injured Garman to the Infirmary,but he was later taken to Shands for treat-mient.
Yacuzzo got the license plate number frontthe truck as it fled off campuspolice said.UPD reported the number to the GainesvillePolice Department who located Collins andbrought him to UPD.
No charges have yet been filed againstCollins.
4ack's PlaiceBUTLEIP. PLfZf
t%F~tUOUS ~l9
~ l2rflebraru no hoer Wai
99~S rn& r_hirts0 a 4
* ackC9 p 12Cei( mnn ues. Sat -9a~-p
S 92M-7vMzUTiLM PLTA Close. Stn.W - S. uupsOu S 37Z-5280
**************
Q: Chill-Lagering is:a) A popular German country and western singer.b) A Scandinavian winter sport played without clothesc) A new ethnic TV comedy about the owner of an ice
cube factoRnd) The right way to age beer
A: (d) Sorry, Chill-Lagering is not Olga and Svendrunning around in a snowstorm in their birthdaysuits. Chill-Lageing is the way Schlitz ages beer.They age it cold. Ven' cold Down to 29 5 degreesThe result is a beer with sparkling clarity Abeer that's crisp. clean and bright.I suggest you look inti inue night now
THERE'SMIST ONE WORD
FOR BEER.I ~ ANDYOU KNOWIT.
I,Si~d tkd~r
Dean of leeir
p/
-. *5 . . -. ]
we %A I I gwjljg, I I lug 4UUYI up[ I I 'c I,
CELLA%Friday Night
A rl22nd8 .- 1 am.
Broward DormLower Level M
AllRefreshmcnt You Want(Beer, Coke and Popcorn)
I-
E $2.00 General Public$1.50 w/Area Activity Card$1.00 w/BRA Activity Carda
UUNMMM
, ,-w1%09 ,IIW- 1.61wIW
* THIS ISEARTH WEEK
* SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FOR TODAYWILDLIFE FESTIVAL
PLAZA OF THE AMERICAS 10:30 am.-I p.m.Don Grooms, a local musician, will be playing at 10:30 a.m.Barney Capehart, President of the Sierra Club, will speak on Energy andResource Conservation.Steve Humphrey, on expert on wildlife, will give a speech on Florida
"THEIHUDSON." a documentary filmed by University of Florida student,David Worren, will be shown at tonight 7:OD p.m., Room 361, Reitz Union.Also o presentroion onManatees byJomes "Rsddy" Powell.The fim "LAST SAVOF THE DOLPHINS?" will follow.
FW
0
0
Hair Cut $5.00Go elegant or tousled. Our staff is anxiousto serve you.
Rooster's Comb240 S.W. 13th St. 372-1266
asliator. thursday, april 21. 1977.9
Student taste buds testedBy MELISSA KANEAlligator Staff Writer
"You can't tell the difference betweenPepsi, Coke and Royal Crown," Dr. JackFaricy told the 400 students in his Marketing331 class.
Disbelief ran through the auditorium."AND I'LL bet many of you can't even tell
the difference between Coke, 7-Up andginger ale."
This statement was greeted by laughterand louder dissent.
But Faricy says he's right, at leastsometimes, and he's willing to try the ex-periment to prove that preferences are notalways based on objective fact.
"I TRY to pick those whose hands arewaving the hardest. Those are usually thetoughest and most motivated," he said.
The students are blindfolded, taste samplesof the three soft drinks and try to identifythem.
"Sometimes the experiment works and
sometimes it doesn't," Faricy said. "I canusually count on 33 per cent correct answerson the basis of chance alone."
IN ONE experiment, the first volunteeridentified Pepsi correctly, but identifiedCoke as'Royal Crown and vice versa. He alsotold the class that he was a Coke drinker.
The second student (a Pepsi drinker)identified Coke correctly, but couldn't tellthe difference between Pepsi and RoyalCrown. The third volunteer gave the sameanswers as the second.
Next, Faricy asked for three differentvolunteers to distinguish between Coke, 7-Upand ginger ale. The first volunteer went thefull eight trials without a mistake, the secondmissed on trial six and the third missed ontrial five.
"I LIKE to get the students involved. Itgets them talking about the course and it getsthem committed," Faricy said. "Less than50 per cent of the students can identifycorrectly the three cola drinks."
Burglar better not eat his bootyA 250-pound calf was slaughtered and effects on humans if eaten," University
stolen from UF's dairy research farm and Police Department Investigator Bob Hesterpolice say the meat from the animal could be said.harmful if eaenby uma animal was killed Police do not know what effect the serumand stolen sometime before 7 am. Wed- wiuld have o hum as but Hester said itnesday from a cow pen at the research farm made ctws stiff and animated in theirlocated in Hague, 12 miles northwest of mitements.Gainesville. Cow rustling and theft is not unusual in
"The serum from the vaccine is still active Alachua County, according to Hester. Therein the cow's system and present in its meat has been at least one other cow theft at theand would have alarming but not lasting UF farm in the past two yea rs, he sa id.
Iedvu Im[
THE KUCATION OF SONNYCARSON will play WED.&THURS., April 20 & 21, at 7:00and 9:30 in the UnionAuditorium for 50c. Adoptedfrom a black militant'sautobiography, this story ofindoitable spirit traces thepath of a young block throughthe hallsaof a ghetto school andthe one-way streeftsof ghettoeducation. The birth of amilitant It presented as achoice between holding actionand experience. Stars RonyClanton and Don Gordon.
I7
WALT DISNEY FESTIVALALICE IN WONDERLAND, FRI., April 22 at 5100
8:00& I I.00SNOW WHITE, SA T April 23.5)11.h 00& 1 100.
PETER PAN, SUN., April 24, 5:00. 8:00 & 11:00.
-.Ah Id.r.dl. --- -000
The J. Wayne Reitz Union and the Division of Off-Campus Housing present
THE HOUSING LECTURE SERIESfeaturing
UMBRELLAS FOR LEAKING ROOFS AND THELIKE.
Carl Opp, Off-Compus Housing Supervisor, will talkabout tenants' rights & responsibilities tonight at 7:30p.m. in the Reitz Union Lounge 123.
THE CANDLELIGHT DINNER SPECIAL featuresVEAL PARMESAN W/SPAGHETTI & SAUCE
TOSSED SALAD GARLIC TOASTSMALL TEA
All for S1 75 plus too today. April 21, between 4 30 and 7 00p.m n ithe Reitz Union Cafeteria.
WANTED: STUDENT ASSISTANTS TO THE PROGRAMDIRECTOR beginning Septesber. 1977 to aselgIstIn
opqpling of progreamefoe the J. Wayne Reiftz Umklo.Candtotes must be full time students atfU. of F. and have a
at least 2.0 to be eligible. Job descriptions and ap-plications are available beginning today in the ProgramOffice, Rm. 330 of the Reitz Union, between Sam and 5pm.Applcation deedline Is May 6th or until interviewschedule is f OWe.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY nights at 9PM,HIS'N & HER 'N, HUMMIN' & STR UMMIN,
SINGIN' & SONGIN byMcMICHAEL & C
ON THE ADVENT SCREEN:Sports on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.60 MINUTES on Sunday at 7pm.
StudentDrawing Contest
The Reitz Union is sponsoring a Drawing Contest open toall students. Here is your chance to have your workdisplayed and your talent appreciated.
Drawings must be submitted to the Reitz Union ProgramOffice, Rm. 330, before 5 pm, May 10. Judging will be heldMay 11. Contestants may submit up to three drawings withsubject matter open. No paintings or crafts will be accepted.
1st Prize. $150 2nd Prize. $75 3rd Prize: $25 GiftCertificate. 5 Honorable Mentions: $5 worth of artsupplies each wst and 2nd Prizes are purchase prize awardsand the pictures will beio e a prt of the Union's per-manent art cotllecticon.
-3v
------------
pq PFA Pit
-mid
Ir INK- - - - IlLmm&.,,m&,let's
10, alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977
edtorials,opinions
OptionsUF's dead week policy is one of those rules that
is meant to be broken sometimes.A final exam falls on the last day of exam week
and nobody can stand the thought of waitingaround until Friday. So everyone agrees to hav-ing the test early, and the test is given during deadweek.
And this is fine, because if anyone in the class,instructor or student, objects, the early test is off.And the student can take the test during thescheduled time.
Evidently this laissez faire system of testing hasgot some people riled. And the UF CurriculumCommittee responded last week with a surpris-ingly knee-jerk reaction--abolish dead week.
The proposal would mean exams could only begiven during exam week, and it would allow forpapers and other tests to crop up during the lastweek of classes. Another solution floating aroundTigert Hall would eliminate exam weekaltogether--meaning finals could be scheduledanytime--including what is now dead week.
We don't think much of either idea. As deadweek regulations stand now, no major papers canbe assigned or tests given during the week beforefinals. If the class or professor wants to ignore therule, it takes the consent of everyone affected.Any student has the right to object and take thetest at the scheduled time.
We think the "charge" that dead week has lostits meaning is actually a point in its favor: itgives both students and instructors an option.
And options are something there are just too lit-tle of at UF.
Brick wallA controversial program to provide students
with free legal aid service cleared one hurdle inthe Student Senate Tuesday night and now facesan even higher one.
The program, which has been called the "bestthing to come out of Student Government in thelast 10 years," would give any UF student up to$500 worth of free legal assistance--for a range ofservices including consultation, draftingdocuments or courtrootm trials.
The hurdle Legal Aid Services faces now isthe big brick wall known as Tigert Hall. Ad-ministrators plan to stall on this worthwhile pro-gram because, these argue, current programsshould not be cut--even by two per cent-to fundttt-w (ttes.
That's ridiculous. hll Student Senate wasright to approve activity and service fee fundingon tthe basis of program merit and sr-ice totstudents, rather than autotnatically re-fundingold programs. And Tigert Hall has no right totdisregard the months of student input that in-dicates students want legal aid service as soon aspossible.
A 1974 law explicitly grants student govern-ments the authority to spend the activity and ser-vice fees that come out of students' tuition. Andwe believe that SG, despite its foibles and follies,knows more about spending student money thana well-intentioned bureaucrat it a plush TigertHall office.
If enrollment continues to drop, acti itv andservice fees will also decline. The demand fornew and better student programs will mean axingother, less vital areas of the budget such asathletics, free concerts, and special interestorganizations.
These are difficult and unpopular decisions.And students, not administrators, should makethem.
1977 NYTSpec:
EDITOR: In reply to the letter headlined 'Care couldhare saved life," written by the nine inconsiderate andignorant jennings Flail ground floor girls, here is a messageto their and to others whoI hasie a tendency to junitoconchusions
independentflorida
liatorDebrahlbert Editor-n-Chief
Andy Newman Managing EditorTom Julin News Editor
Andrew Fromon News EditorNorma Villafana Art Director
Max Hackney Photo EditorNick Pugliese Sparts Ed tor
Jan Qaeiia Inside EditarDavid Finkel Wire Editor
Paul Anderson Opnons EditorBill Hackney Layout Editor
Lisa Sheres Loyou Editar
C.E. Barber General ManagerMrs. Eaetyn Best AdministratrAnne Simpson BaakkeeperLynda Homier Operations ManagerLarry Johnson Interim Advertising DirectorKim Ranclatph Advertising Assistant
KotrinaSanchez Ctassified ManagerGale Smothers Accountant
Jay Katbes Business Manager
Published by
Campus Communications, Inc.P.O. Box 14257 University Station, Gainesville, Florida.Office behind the College Inn, 1728 West Uniaersity Ann.Classified Advertising--376-4446, Retail DisplayAdverising--376-4482, Newsroom--1376-4458,Production--373-9926, Business Offtice--376-4446.
41A<N
Being the owners of the deceased dog, we would like tk
point ott some facts to these so-called college girls. The first:rc woUld have to be that all the car windows and %eitIsere left wide open to all:o: a sufficient amount of air to hrcirctlated througlrourt the a-rked car.
We vo'uld also like to point out that the dog was rarc-l :at all left alone. less art emergency arose, as one did isttritas'.AND AS FOR tt( -arrc istrs tet to reninthl e
m~d'rrrs.'' s rrr rrrcst tract oradthe wrrntg adress--s- %vn%'
tIhe oime girls also mentioned the wsord responsibilits\the themselves knew\ wshatresponsibilty meant, the\ ws'hid
la rr handled their feelings it a more ciilized inmantriinstead oI writing maIios rumors thrs w'Aouldl l-
(( II lted Iv, to timd out the truth instead 0fr takig mattc'mtotheir s'r o Iarods and <hstort g tht trrut .
Wc are f indng it ers difficult to accept the death o MIdoig. wliim h1 c\ 1%clo\ ed\ er mur ctch. As fr r the nine girls. csc::dtld like to , tchIt \ r lettter c hih\% asc on itl' a b nchhe,,i I m, no t orkrtg it a easier forr us.
So beore or gruid f loor clan decides to get to togtth'trnd rcrrif\ tihr w- world cwith y'otr false information, take ti,
Gary Rosenberga ri Ikensor
Letters PolicyThe Alligator welcomes opinion columns and letters to the
editor. All manuscripts must be:Typed, doubl paed,on a Go.character line.Signed by the author. Nanms may be witheild from
publication if the writer circles his or her ama, writes"withhold name"by the signature and provides a good reasonfar withholdingthename.
Sen coluinsis and letters to "Alligator Opidons Editor,Box 14257, Gainesvle, 32601,"* or drop them by TheAlligator, 1728 Wagt University Ave.
advice and dissentletters from readers
Death not from carelessness
j
7
EL
-. 5,
alligator, thi 77, 11
& O/n4Jf
ERA defeat damns reactionariesRIGHT-WING REACTION has struck again and the ERA
has bitten the dust once more. Defeated last Wednesday 2 1-19. the ratification fight was a magnificent example ofiohtics in action.
Moronic politicians responded to ERA opponents'moronic arguments, absurd distortions and outright lies andshowed their true opinion of the worth of the women ofl'lirida and the rest of America.
I'e paternalistic posturings of our dear legislators wouldhave been ludicrous in a less important situation, like acircus or a freak shows. As it is. however, women have beenstabld in the back Is i gang of unfortunately powerful.issholes.
IF ONE WAS' %%iI ing to concede ans integrity at all toM 'V i opponents. ine night sionder ifntiR A people arewinding the same tuig usualls iialled the "Equal RightsAiii ndment" or it perhaps they have mistakenly picked up
something out of, sisixt Machiavelli. The incredibly assininestateieiits made in apparent seriousness lb\ these peoplec'rt Iii ii did not comne out of the innocuous first section of)tli ER A.
Indeed, this short and amazingly clear first section is anattempt to limit the power of the State and apparently, atleast) nothing else. in direct contrast to everything elsego\ ernment does. The 50-some years it- took to get the ERAthis far is, in part, an indication of the reluctance ofgovernment to restrict its power in any way.
Among the most ridiculous of the accusations opponentshlie hurled against the ERA are these:
* The ERA will destroy the famis. (Bullshit. It saysnothing about nor has anything at all to do with the familystructure.)
* IT WILL CONDONE homosexual marriages.
EDITOR: I am writing in response to your editorial in theThursday, April 14th issue. Why don't you open your eyes!The defeat of the ERA amendment was no doubt a result ofthousands of letters sent to our senators prior to the time oftheir decision.
I sent one myself, asking that they please defeat anamendment that would do little but lead to more federalcontrol over our government. I felt that the amendmentwould have put more decision making power into the handsof those in Washington instead of our locally electedrepresentatives.
This is only my opinion and is not the reason I'm writingyou. I am writing because I was apalled at what you said inthe editorial concerning the senators, and I quote, "andthey'd rather kill worthwhile legislation than anger the
In my opiniondoug hazen, Jr.
(Horrors!) (Donkeyshit. Anyway, the State should not beconcerned in any way with personal relations betweenindividuals, including intimate, long-term ones.)e The ERA will require unisex bathrooms. (Horseshit.This is one of the most absurd "reasons" of all. What reallymotivates many people making this argument are feveredvisions of black men pissing next to little white girls. Besides,France has had unisex public bathrooms for a long timewithout an problems. Even more besides, most homes andapartments also have unisex bathrooms, which cause nodifficulties that I am aware of.)
* The ERA will force women to be drafted and fight nextto men. (Crabshit. Women could always be drafted. It couldbe, however, that the ERA would make this more likely. Ifso, then it might be less likely that this monstrous institutionof slavery will be reinstated.)
THE LIST GOES on and on, but this should be enough toshow the depths the reactionary right will sink to in theirefforts to maintain or increase the oppression of theirneighbors.
The ERA will eliminate the paternalistic work legislationwomen are subjected to, such as maximum lift weights,working hours, etc. It is also (perhaps mostly) of symbolicsignificance, indicating that over half the human race mustnow be considered as such by the male rulers of the various
voters.' Are you condemning the fact that the senators'decisions were based on what the voters wanted? How couldyou possibly not want our representatives to represent us? Ifthe majority of the people were opposed to the bill, does notour basic "democratic" way of governing suggest that theyshould vote the will of the people?
I feel a newspaper certainly has the right to voice theiropinions in their own editorials, but I also think they shoulddo so with some thought as to what they are saying.
T.H. ConsbruckltUC
EDITOR: O.K. All right. I've had enough. I've finallyO.D.ed on the male supremacy which taints the pages of
illustrious governments in this country. Beyond this, I'm notsure the ERA will bring much concrete progress. You cannotliberalize attitudes and beliefs by passing a law. But this isenough.
It is possible the ERA will be used to justify forcing peopleto deal with individuals they do not wish to deal with, as in"anti-discrimination" laws. But the State, in its greatauthoritarian wisdom, is doing this anyway. The ERA mayor may not accelerate this process, but I'm willing to chanceit one more time.
A CONCERN I have if and when the ERA is ratified isthat the mainstream (or moderate) part of the women'smovement, so long directed almost exclusively at this oiictarget, will collapse, short-sightedly assuming its job is done.The moderates, often quick to denounce their more radicalsisters, equally often seem to consider the ERA the be-all andend-all of the movement. It isn't. In reality, the task will bejust beginning.
In contrast, the more radical part of the women'smovement by now seems to be self-supporting and self-generating. These people already know there are manymore important things than the ERA and will (hopefully)car-ry on with them come hell or high water.
One cqpid warn against expecting the State, the greatestdestroyer of rights that ever existed, to establish or protectthe rights of women in American society. One could say it islike paradoxically expecting freedom from oppression. Onecould also warn against expecting any great progress in theliberation of women come the ERA. But no matter. Thecompany's a lot nicer on this side of the barricades.
Chalk up another victory for the forces of reaction andauthority.
Laissez faire.
newspapers and confuses the basic understanding of whatshould not even be an issue!
I wonder if Joseph D. Hall would cringe if the ERA werelabeled and titled "NONSENSE" and if it happened to be hisrights and equality placed on a line and tossed around.
Equal Rights were guaranteed once, but there werefootnotes and asterisks which kept a certain group of peoplefrom obtaining their rights. Because of this repression, therehas got to be some change and it will come. We will win andthe crazy part of this entire issue is that we will ALLwin . not just the female of us.
IN MY OPINION, Joseph D. Hall and all of the people outthere who want to remain unequal, are ASSES!!!t!!!
Lin EricssonA woman, equal
___________________________________________________alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977, 13
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By MIND KEIRNANAlligator Staff Writer
TALLAHASSEE -- Two weeks into the 1977legislative session, the Equal RightsAmendment is dead and the House hasdesignated a speaker for 1979-80.
With six new bills already sent to thegovernor for review, the legislature isconsidered further along than usual at thistime. Before the 60-day session ends,lawmakers will hammer out a nearly $5.5billion budget and take action on thousandsof prospective laws.
Some of the controversial bills headed forpolitical battle this year include:
Education
A series of bills being proposed cover awide range of areas in Florida's educationsystem, including:
9 adding a student to the nine-memberBoard of Regents, which sets policies forstate universities. The student would serve aone-year term and selection would rotate soeach of the nine state universities arerepresented. The legislature passed themeasure last session, but Gov. Reubin Askewvetoed it.
* adding a student to the collectivebargaining table for negotiations betweenthe regents and the United Faculty ofFlorida. The student representative wouldnot have voting powers, but act as a liaisonbetween students and the bargaining process.
0 establishing a civil engineering school atUF. The bill includes a $750,000 ap-propriation to start the programs.
a granting $500,000 to women's athleticprograms, to be divided proportionatelyamong the nine state universities. Sen . PeteSkinner a member of the local legislativedelegation, introduced the bill and said hemight withdraw it if it threatens academicfunding.
Crime
Guns and how to control their sale anduse, is the subject of several bills confrontinglawmakers. One would require a 40 to 72-hour "cooling off" period before a personcould buy a gun, allowing law enforcementofficials to check for a criminal record.
Another series of bills would ban the sale
77~]
of cheap handguns commonly known as"Saturday night specials."
THERE IS also a package of legislationwhich would establish a statewide crimevictim compensation program similar toAlachua County's.
The issue of abortions is back. A bill hasbeen filed to permit abortions only if themother's life is in danger or if the child maybe handicapped with serious birth defects.
Marijuana
The bills to lower penalties for possessionof one ounce of pot are back, but then so arethe legislators who have killed the proposalsin the past.
The bills make possession of up to an ounceof pot a misdemeanor punishable by a $1100fine. Possession of more than an ounce wouldremain a felony with a maximum sentence offive years in prison.
Environment.
Some of the major issues concerning theenvironment this year are the Cross FloridaBarge Canal and solar energy.
There are several bills which would haltthe canal project permanently, and a morefar-reaching bill which would requirerestoring the land around the half-built canalto its original state.
AS FOR solar energy. one bill wouldestablish a statewide energy policy andseveral other measures encourage the use ofsolar energy. The most comprehensive billwould force all public buildings to operateon solar energy unless otherwise approved btthe governor and the cabinet.
Putting out a lit cigarette on the streetcould become illegal if a bill is passed thatmakes lighted substances thrown on theground a form of Ilitter.
Consumers
Some of the bills pending that give con-somers a break would:
* hold the line on electric rates in homesthat use small amounts of power.
* require utility companies to chargelower rates during "nonpeak" hours. Bothmeasures would reward those who conserveenergy.
* allow a person to transfer a prescriptionfrom one pharmacist to another withoutobtaining a doctor's permission.
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Open 7 A.M. to 11 P.M. DailyDon't forget the Flag Lounge for cocktails. Songs and musicby Bill and Barbara.Conveniently located at 1250 W. University Avenue, across from the mainentrance to the University of Florida-
14, alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977
Playing their
way through
SCh 00DARYL HUNT george kochaniec gir
. . . UF theater major performs at local night spots to help pay for food and tuition.But," Hunt says, "the money bit is actually what I like least about it."
isage )I twi oIighits a eek.1 uw much I get is between the
management and myself. I know I could gettwo or three times as much outside of town,"Hunt says, "but I get enough to get by. Youhave to realize that there are an awful lot ofgood musicians around. Competition isrough. I think I'm one of the lucky ones.
Bs PATRICK CONNOLLYAlligator Staff Writer
There's no business like show business.especially if it helps pay for college.
That's the case for UF students Darvl Huntand Debbie Harris, who have each literallyput their talent for singing and playing to"ork.""It's simple." says Hunt. "I wouldn't eat if
I didn't do it. I've got to do it."A THEATER MAJOR active in the per-
forming arts (recently appearing in theFlorida Players' "The Boyfriend" and"Movement' 77"), Hunt plays music "with acountry twang" and likes doing "JamesTavlor-Cat Stevens stuff." He's a regular atplaces like Mad Monk's Inn. Bilbo andGandalf's and Diamond Jim's.
"I'd like to think I'm pretty versatile. Ising and play the six string and twelve string.With an adult crowd I can be a bit more
sophisticatedd' he says.Hunt has been playing guitar for nearly
four \ears and had his first job a few ,earsago for ten dollars in a New Jerses coffeehouse. ''Iusic up there is e erx here,'' liesass. "and it s easv to learn. I picked ip alot of what I know tip there.
"I'VE FOUND that people acttuali\ likeims \oice. hiidn't reals think it s'as miiforte, and I neer thought I'd oake mones atit.
Hunt credits "being familiar and gettingalong with the management" as the mainreason he is able to work so often. usually an
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"BUT THE MONEY bit is actually ssftat Ilike least about it," Hunt says. "I hateknowing I have to go after the mones. Mymusic comes out of an emotional need. andwhen I'm out there I try and please in\ self aswell as the audience. I like the feedback. ButI know I have to do it, and that bugs mesometimes."
EBIt HAKKIS. . . puts her earnings from guitar playing towards financing her theater degree atUF. Eventually, she hopes to write her own music and put out a record.
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Hiaing to work also has ither drawbacks.'nm constantly jugglitig mI calendar.'
lunt sax s. ''and I have to carry m calendarwith me to make sure I don't sasy 'Yeah. I'llbe there' to someone ani theni find out Ihave a job that night.
"MY THEATER CONFlICTS a 1(tbecause most rehearsals are at night, andthen there's schiu'l, too.
"But I'll tells\0u.' he sa s. "it IIIbecme.wsiirthwshiil when I'm dii ilig a iiiim long ti(isong and somewhere in the back there's acouple snuggling up coie to inn iiianother.That does it for me.
)Iet Hunt thinks 0f himself as more ()I tiactor than i musician. '\Iusic is less to m .
111d with the state ()I thc tinwWsinarket.''It(-says."-\(u can't really (h)art mn must(-. It',,nit siiimiething I'm going to pursue liter en.
NOT SOswith Debbie Harris.With a bachelor's degree in French uni
like Hunt, also working on i theater degree.Harris doesn't play as oftenn but nevertheless'sit\S,''I hav ambitions. I think I hit- I. mm,abilit iiland i i stfew sears I'd like to tr indgo professional. I'd like to writi enonugihmai ti ciii, miki ris'irid and gi friiii other '
Sii ncbecmiiingI lult ii un stideit Inthefall. Iarris his had to cut ilssn herengagements to "abnit OnIei ivrs t',threi months. I isialls jil1s betws 'iiiJuarters.
SHE HAS SUNG at Mad iiik's utandB eilend GAndall'sn addition to ther
(See 'Playing, page 15j)
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By PATRICK CONNOLLYAlligator Staff Writer
It's slim pickings for things to see anddo this week.
The biggest news (if you haven't heard)is that Jimmy Buffet is returning toGainesville this Sunday at 8 p.m. inFlorida Gym. With him will be GambleRogers. Tickets are$5 for students and $6for the general public the day of the show.Tickets are available at the University boxoffice, both Rebel Discounts, Music Shackand Recordsville.
Don't miss the EIGHTH ANNUALSPRING ARTS FESTIVAL going ondowntown this Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 6 p.m. Over350 artists from throughout the countrywill be exhibiting their works, and morethan twenty local theatrical, musical anddance groups will perform in the enter-tainment area. There's also a new "handson" area where adults can learn and ex-periment with various arts and crafts, in-cluding macrame, pottery and acrylicpainting. The festival is held on NE 1stStreet from 2nd to 8th Avenue.
If the "wild blue yonder" is more toyour liking, there's going to be an AIRSHOW out at the Gainesville Raceway(state road 225) on Sunday from 9:30a.m. to 4 p.m. Advance tickets areavailable at Sears and J.M. Fields, and ad-mission is $1.50 per adult, with admis-sion for children under twelve free. Just
Plavina .WOO
(continued from page 14)
places around town. This summer Harriswill play two weekends at the Blue WaterBay in Melrose, which she says, is good."The place is packed during the summer,and what I earn I'll use for living expenses.Otherwise I wouldn't get by."
Harris describes her music as "mellow,although that's an over-used term. My musicis quiet, with a lot of blues. I don't have thevoice for heavy rock and roll, and I don'tplay commercial stuff. I do Bonnie Raitt,Billy Joel, Joni Mitchell material, plus someof my own."
For Harris, the money she earns goes toliving expenses and, in doing that she says,directly helps her in financing her education.
"I THINK I'M BETTER paid than in anyother job I could get," she says. "The going
I
"Sure, I'd like more money. I think thoseguys (the owners) could easily pay more, butthey're out to make money, too, and with allthe kids going around pounding on doors,you can't say 'Hey, I'd like more money.'They'll just fire you and get somebody else.There's an awful lot of good competition."
With experience in folk and classicialmusic and lessons in voice, piano and flute,Harris says she has always enjoyed music.
"BUT THE ONE THING that really getsto me is when people won't listen," Harrissays. "I know a lot of them go to clubs just todrink and be with friends, and theythink the singer is just background music andall, but it still gets me down.
"I don't think of myself as an entertainer.-I love singing and playing and enjoyknowing that I'm appreciated," Harris says."I think of myself as a singer, and I want tobe heard."
Casual slip on wear from Bart Carleton. Leather and canvasuppers on a comfortable bottom for summer.
Now at.
10MZWEST UnMULyPov4 ne.I E
k.
about everything imaginable is going tobe there, from Snoopy's doghouse (whichactually flies) to scale dogfights tosomething called "The Flying Gator."Gliders and helicopters will also be flyingaround.
Watch next Tuesday for the UF Sym-phonic Band Concert at 8:15 p.m. in theUniversity Memorial Auditorium. Thegroup is just back from an appearancebefore the American BandmastersAssociation in Sarasota and a between-quarters tour of several Florida cities. Theconcert is free.
This is the closing weekend for both theHippodrome Theater's "BUTLEY" andthe Gainesville Little Theater's "THEMISANTHROPE." "THE MISAN-THROPE" closes Saturday, while"BUTLEY" continues through Sunday.Call 375-HIPP for Hippodrome informa-tion and 372-4509 for Little Theaterticket information.
An academic approach to the theaterwill be presented tonight at 8 p.m. in Mc-Carty Hall Auditorium with Dr. LelandZimmerman's lecture "THE PAINTERIN THEATER: A CHALLENGE TOTRADITION." Dr. Zimmerman served asUF Director of Theater from 1955 to1974, and the lecture is open to thepublic.
Nothing new in art this week. Exhibitscontinuing' through April are theCERAMIC EXHIBIT at the Artisan'sGuild, Monday through Saturday, 10a.m. to 6 p.m., the Virginia Myers "ATime For Malfeasance" show on thefourth floor of the art department from8:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. Mon-day through Friday and the "ContinuityOf Tradition In Latin American Art" ex-hibit over at the Grinter Gallery from 11a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday.
16, alligator, thursday, apri 121, 1977
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LILLIAN P. LAUVE7*4-JACXSONVILE FLA 13OXES
WINNERS SAVE 20' SAVE 34' SAVE 30'TEPHINS MRS. EMILY C. ROSSIGHT DTYJ aN
CEEI MRS, H. 0.TH JR. THRIFTY MAID MANPOWER STICE THRIFTY MAIDI JO__,A' E CORN, ANTIPERSPIRANT APPLE SAUCE,A. -AI-"' SWEET PEAS, . 1 BARTLETT PEARS,CE C LA C FC CP
VI ,OAG CAEC SLICED CARROTS SIZE GREEN LIMA BEANS ORMEC IE IACIKINSON OR PORK & BEANS CUT SWEET POTATOES
PGTON EOLA GALL FABERGE ORGANICLUtSON ROMETA 6*. PONT6
CEECCA PAC"1 $J1., SHAMPOONGTON OPAL .- OTJ HEE1N DONALD &.ALLEN$
@ A 5"O 'BTL. - ..A [)- - CANS CANS
OLD ARROW THRIFTY
5 CHANCES TO WIN MILWAUKEE LIQUID QUICK0003 1 VitT DODS 2 VISITS
S1115ED1SAVEaBSAV 21G1 IN 1.M T, -W 5 5.BAI IN 13,AN I IN 6,111
I IN IMAM I IN Gim- -- - N - 63-PCKHALFC
12-02 f ItGALLONS
.,AA.ESAE517SEREDHS+ SA E1'SAVE 21,
1401 N. MAIN ST.130 N.W 6th ST.
3421 WEST UNIVERSITY AVE.OPEN SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
HIWAY 441, HIGH SPRINGS
alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977, 19
8415 ADEffN C -QUANTITY RIGHTS
W-D BRAND W-D BRANDUSBA CHOCE USDA CHOICEUSDAO B AND
BONE EN ''BONELESSUSACOE
SIRLOIN IRLOIN T-BONESTEAK STEAK STEAK
$
.LBB.LE
SAVE 20 , SAVE 30c
Patties . 3 2" pranks . . . 99c Fis Cakes 59'Pork Ham 99' Sausage .". f89 Biscuits . 6 79'por Na" '09AN Sausag. 89 ,,PgRAND CREAM TA
Bacon . 99' Frans 1 . C leese .U.$1"9
Bacon. $.1. 1 Sauerkraut. 49c Yogurnt.6la -. 9 .RAFTS SINGLY RAPPED AME RICAN FOOD
Bogna . 99' Lamb Leg . $1"9 eese . . $1"9
1IRI
8tEF PEO?
W-D BRAND USDA CNOECE
WHOLE BONELESS
SIRLOIN TIP
LB.$119ESAVE
ROAST .$.
STEAKS .BONE-EN CENTER
CHUCROAS
400M"*FRESH PORKL7USDA WRER.NDSLICED ASSORTED
GRADE"A" NICKCORY H ~~ U.S.D.A. CHOICEFRESN FROZEN SWEET BONELESS EULL.CT PORKWHOLE I SLICED ROUND COPFRYERS BACON STEAK
C9 $, 59 HARVEST FRESHL 4 -LB.9SNOW B
LB. PKG.
LB. CAULISAVE 30' LB. HARVEST FRESH
D'ANJOUMoe ION IR~N, M SAVE 10' P ABuns . 2 $*1* EGGO WAFFLES "o"n. 3 s $10 HARVEST FRESH
,R AE- .-. C RROZER E P K GREENSIZEPeas
. . 3 , $1' UPie $.8.9. . S1" ATIO FRUDE FIESTA OR Enchiladas 2 a $1"Shells $100 MEXICAN DINNERS . N-A'9 NO HEAD OVERShls2$. F 110 Margarine '69' FRESH CACorn . 99' PKG 1SAVE Margarine 55 LETTU
NO HEAD OVER
GREEN
ORTON ~SEA FAC, FROZENFROZENPROCABB
I -oz.MEAT SHRIMP POOREBOY HARVEST FRESH
DINNERS 'N BATTER SANDWICHES GR16-o PKG. 10-oH. PKG. S
110$ $ 49 CIECITRUS
PUNCH
SAVE 38' SAVE 30, SAVE 40' 6 .7
39
49
SAaCHOICE
K Ci- LB. 9
IN QUARTER
$ 19Ds LB. SAVE
IALL
FLOWER .A 69WESTERN
S .5 O99c
MBERS 6EOR 991 39CtISPICE .O. .0. LB. 2549,
AGE . . 19V JUMBO10U .0 0 B STALK S
' JUICYLEMONS
1279C
01 N. MAIN ST3421 WEST UNIVERSITY AVE.1401 . OPEN SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.-7:00P.M.130 N.W. 6th ST. HIWAY 441, HIGH SPRINGS
WI'
I
hi
20, olligator. thursday april 21, 1977
Mystic Raven
Tonight
Lunch CocktailSpecial
You Cant foola finish line.
MGB:National Champion
in E Productionfourout of thelast five years.
$5,150P.O.E.
HARFREDAUTO
IMPORTS506 E. University
3724373
alligatorclassufieds
FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALERECONDITIONDISTEFEOCOMPONENTS lowprices 90 day warranty brand names - nowgoosee speaker units Bill 378-0192 (4-25-Wt-o)HOIN -16 saibatw-t h-y- 6xtas6nd 3
sailing(lessons $1600 292-2555 or 372-4618"f 6p6'"(421-106o)
Kenwood KA 3504600 wattsInfinity 2006spkers BR 710 T &hue ca. system 8mo. old 5 yr. worr. stool it for $400call392-9969 for stats. fter 6 pm Dean (4-21-
75 Ford F250 4 x 4 air power steeringautomatic trns. mog wheels with 1200x165 tires and lo camper $4900 stv*376-8443 or 372-5405. (4-21-5-.)
mob. 6. 12x60264. ,-lrlog.lo,
trees; loan value 4500; will deal; call392-2976.5:30, 275-7863 web.k.nds.ask for Pam.(4-22-5"-6)
PANASONIC COLOR TV 12" prtabe 200slsa te pituetube still uderwranty$22. phone 376-2567. (4-22-5-.)
Mobile Horne, 1962 Fleetwood, 10 x 55 fur-nished, carpeted, 2bdr., studio. $3,200, wll
finance. call Marc of 378-9406 after 6pm, lot396Mob cy-4-22-5t-.)
Import d Handwoven Hammocks. in-credby comfo,,able, bg enough fo you
and yous. reat fo- lounging, studying,mping, wedding and graduation gifts.
many c yolor
combos. Bring a friend and try one out. $35.376-8.49 (4-22-51-6)
a se.ll 16ns for sale. yosiron preset oom
lens 75-230.m. 5.59 with case .nd lensshade. used once mini. $125 392-9578. (4-22-51-o)
0I$& 6 dont be up.6di Smoke Det. 11demonsisote in your home onm of fth best
9. . frthspic.no6.6g. or p.e275-223. o-(4-20-0-.o
FREE PUPPY half lob, half shop,housebrokegood tempered, bown andblck 377-0768
(421-21-.)
schwinn 21" varsity light, bike rock, lock.$45, co lafter649p177-0519 (4-22-41-a)
girls blue columbia bicycle 3 speed 26 inch
good condition cheop for more informationcall 92-79< )4-21-2t-o)
74 HONDA CB450. Excellent condition. Justuned. First $750 takes it. Find rood
machne. Aft-r4p .m .6-733or495-2639(4-26-51-o)
2 bdr mobile home, fully furnished andcarp-ted-t 'ol sh.d, oc, e.nt. h.ot. Tieddown on shaded lot. Really nice. Must sell,negotiable. Call 375-4063 (5-2-10-o)
mob.e home 8x, 26 6m on large shadylot; travel trr 17' self-cont. both excellent$9950.o. AC$100 SOa., storageshed 1120Dph.376-0207.(4-26-51-.)
1 p.i'Boso901 mint condition $420. or best
offe'-dynoco po-5 pr.omp w/cobinet $200firm - cb rdo-cheopl call 377-2994 or376-6299(4-22-3-)
4;;with Special GuestGAMBLE ROGERS
Jimmy Comes Back Home To GoinesviIle
SUNDAY APRIL 24FLORIDA GYM
8p.m.TICKETS: $5.00 STUDENTS
$6.00 GENERAL ADMISSIONand Day of Show
Available at:University Box Officeboth Rebel Discounts
RecordsvilleMusic Shock
A Student Government Production
KAWASA 500 1975M70006MI. Sfty Barord ck.est $1000 Coll John 377-280 (4.26&-10)
d .6it Rctivner 35 wa t per channelarge adirnm sooii dali tnslw/stnton cridge. call Andy 37-744Nego6 e -5. (426-.)
HORSE for sole, 1/2 .or-ghb., 1/2quaredr.orse. 6 yr. old gelding, fi stcondi-.on, rcearalsle p rkm. WWdl, sddleavailble. 46-3762. (426--11)
Rg. Appolo4. gelding 16. .6tir/-iu-tpe/pleasue e*cel. tmp. 1%00. 10speed bike Ivners excel. condo. $40.49-967. 4-22-21-.)
FOR SALE cheit-of-drowers, s h.I., lamps,mic. i.msPr Pc.-s n.goabe. If t.,.st.dCALL 377-799fter5p. . (4-22-3-.)
Small pub Fr Sole-University ore. Greatopprutfrsma opraonPhon.373-7M95ftr 5 p.m. (4-26-SI-.)
SCUSA Dr0I1 Aqolo.ng "Coyp"',eirilo, ,,pefecondiion ony SM.00Don't pss up *. sbrgain. 392-76. (4-26.5.)
CAR 0nd HOME STEREOS, Prf-ss.o. -I
tollrtions, all brands discounted andguaranteed, I day ser.ic. for crs, 3.77-4217
2-11 p. (4-26-S-a)
Sher.wod S7100A 50 wat rece.er $145,Dynoc. PAT4 4nd modified ST120 andPine.er TX900M50, TEAC A6010 and AN10
$075. 377-42172-11 p. m. (426-SI-.)
Jesen 6x9 Irovial speakers brand new$ W-11A-. 27-2114 or Joel 375-4811 (4-22-
-uny 10 speed w genero light, -e frontrit and tire and sears car carrier phone377-2360(4-26-4"-.)
for -1. Raw crushed nittisf&achir like6 111 Rick at 372-8691 (4-25-31-a)
Car cassette deck f ff- 9 140 new,soofic $61-. A. 1 yr old Dn375-1334
or.377-056 (4-211 )
1974 YAA0IAHA 500, excellent condition, oicool, siy bar, Winle, smooth running,
good handling bike. asking SM5. call
377-3077 (4-275t-)
FOR RENTonly 3 blacks from campus.UNIVERSITY
APITS-.3saltering pii summer discount
res. 99ph0, furnished. AC Si.mingpool Call 376-8990 or cme by now. 1524
NW 4th A. (4-24-20-b)
STUDENTS ONYEfficncy and 1 bedroom p andAbedroom house Call 376-1379 (421171-b)
emal.1 r mpte.w6nd . share 2 brop
$ perm- + 1/2 ul.iht.l prefer grd .de-t'or-oringpersonc-' l1 """' ' 377-058
3 bit. .p., larg 1clean 6611, .r.
har and a,Ic- a rt summer 373- SM (4-8-3-b)
SUBLET.--t-61616.6616fair6616161 (111rent FREE. c-" rygies-across from c.-
puS $6/mon Call Bob 377-208 (4-11-41-b)
carpel p9 . . ok close to campus $1606mnth
5100 security d .pil( 1n fre 372-0599enet111669 (4-19-01b)
mster bedroom in 3 bdrm lownhous, toper month. Partilly furnised, Ok Forest
anlyte,(4-19-61b)
dywr nice yard April 15 )ny xtra callV7-7004-15-31b)
Must st-las- for w-m r2bedrootm, 2bth'-rn - - - pt --ith" BA, ndP '-l
REDUCED NBOT9ALE RATES - 111S7-6964
toom.66tB .weed - h6v 6 own room in.60 2-6.4. .o. 16 d.,.I,
$1/mo. Available 5/15 on 11 a9frlin " s a "ito Jeff27-a40264-21 -b)
Need a paft for siezoesqaly? SM0.nd1/.fil. for own neoom in fuiied %onho~sw/'Fi'l''''' l"d'y. C" C"y.^AvvdaAu1.37-.07 (42150-b)
, br.,1o- new $a ,,ce,, e s ow ,,,e
and .wer Included 400 6- I 270-602V .(51-6)
9e.1esks Wetd.14, .pripro in 2-bd funsh-red pt, on Aer road. 164.77./11onth, 1/3
utilities. Cal now 376-9576. 375-3220. (lni,#t)(4-22-S-b)
DAKC 3r lusIM" .Complete Brake OverhaulH.Es WRAT WEDO 30,000 MILERhn_ brkei o al,four whpsis Gmar nedl
with top qaity 9 . 116 GuadmI. d rcg ind oig l Foreign Cars.h.l ylo d - Ch ris. , Disc. Extra
cyhndIII flushuh andrefil Clyde's Tirehydruic brksyste wth
- dpo.nt.wheel & Brke Servicebeang. Adjust broke. on al915 E. University Ave.40.1 -heels pedl clttrice aid
* 12:.2$4:Uk1O * .
n d bou Ra i o , f.,o safety
-d s:006491tULIVND "" 1 7:1 5 4
MA RK0 CHSTINE MCHAELCAMNESERRAULT
w 1 STARTSIDOUBLE YOUR
DY.NO-MrTE FUN!
STARTS TOMORROW*,.o 2:10 4:10 6:05 0:05 10:00
Mk.rn
He doesn't get md. He aesev n
--- "MHEFAUER" GARY CONIWAYKIIELOPKMM(C-H AEL DANTE ERE EML
Geor r r Fe. 0ohn Carmody k1. Ptc eam , Huap Monen
Mj.wfftk,,ydy-1
Henwdoesn't get mad.dHeegetssev
, ,I
-- ...
I
,AA-
MM
ntry Problo.TCallSHurricw 000 sOOt*r
1SuhMain St.
AT THECANOPYThursday
Night
ST. PAULIGIRL60c
Chuck Murphy'on
Keyboards& Guitar
Sublot for sunt O otOrwOodu opts. 1/2June, July & ugust. oneo, or ,three gis.67.50/mo plus 1/4 .ls e acd.cloil377-1944. (4-22-5t-b)
1 br unfurnishedandht 405A nn9lone$h14npow93750303.(4-29-l t-b)
FEMALEROOMMATEwBneededto subletprite room and both in furn 2 apt atcountryvill gfor summer quarter, call375-397 (4-22-St-b)
3bnboth w duplex shogio carpet centralheatand air pets ok 3931 n Ist terr.375-033(5-6-1 51-b)
IMEDIATE OCCUPANCY large 2 bdr $188,onall 2bdr. $166, central AC, furnished,carpeted. 376-890. (4-22-St-b)
brand nowfunishedl, btopdalnosfunitnte $159. bikesride n to pusormlcontrolhot and air shog carpet water asewer1220 nw 12st 375-0303. petsok. (5-27-30t-b)
Sublet large room in house on acre lot inN section for summer jun-4ougst $W0sonth 1017 NE 13th place, goinesvile
372-5037. (4-22-5t-b)
$125 UTILITIES PAIDLovely furn opt in good ro. Oair, hoot,corpot, drapes, appliances, no lease. Idealfor student. Open %m to npm 377-6992
206 $100Bike to compusl Lovely opt in goodneighborhood. Large R's, patio op-pliknces. Kids and pets wlcomel Open9a tontnpn 377-6992.
3 0S NEAR UFBike to clason Beautiful home in goodresidential neighborhood. Spacious rooms.
cont owand hoot, Crpets drapes, don,firoploce, garage, appliances. Fenced forkids an petal $225 month) Open 9om to
pm. 37702.
DON'T GET STUCK FOR SEPTEMBERWhere will you live next foil? Spring is nottoo sorly to start planning. We hoveoaoilable fall rentals now in all areos andall pricessto fit your budget. (4-22-5t-b)
GATOR RENTALS, INC.113$ E16th Avenue
Open7days 377-6992Open 9omtotSpn broker
I br cpt2 blocks from campus almostonewshg carpet control heat and oir $159 300
nw Iats 375-0303. unfurnished pets okaM rndsaewer included. (54-5-b)
At E Apartments.your call wil put It all together
I and 2 br at. Game OutstandingRoom Recreational
FacfltievPost andSauna Pon
Somper POWtTab$"Phone,
375-1111
Lm" adis Pa"".Affangemntn UnwsM
G0"
ftso OW
Must ubnlose fo I summer 2 bedroom 2 Live m beautiful home for smo price asboth u'nish'd opt with on BAR and Pool op, 3bd2bth noit, unt5 isln,omREDUCD NEGOTIABLE RATES call 375-6964 campus. $otutifut snbutbon ore. $400421 S b)nmnth 3
77-
7210ofr7 (4-27-5-b)
Huse shore Two blocks from low shl OWN ROOM in 2 bed. opt.toital rentfrn425NA2St. Call Bob 377-4951 (421--b) now thru august 31 is 250 dollars. onblock
from Mod. nentsr. Iftmlo no- ) 375-5953summer sublease june 4-oug 31 central now (4-21- t-b)or/crpet/poil. $150 month anduthlties. -- _376-3135 offsr 6pm (4-25-t-b) ONE BEDo pt. move in now but no rent is
du until June. on bl. fro Shnds. summitsublet summer I nroomin 3 bdr wind. housoptsoii375-5953immeditelyi(4-meodows opt completely furnished 112 21-1-b)month and 1/3 utilities tll Jeff 375-4377onynisbt5:0D4:00 pm best (4-25-St-b) W A NTED
COMPAREyou, cn have your OWN opt for under $100 Mie nonots In sumernq9000. nwith UNIVERSITY APS SUMMER SPECIAL of- fun shodonn fosuypotmrtt hown1 Lrr_ I&2hldtopts gn-144 mn,h oont$115no +l/3 utilitiescallfodutnshodACpstrcondosimmningrpx
rox373-7777.p4-22--nn"y3hbla'ksI onmopus it'1524 nw 4tha- . 376-8M90 (4-25-t-b) Fornme roommate wanted for fat own
bedroom and 1/2 utilities. call Borbara atOwn room in large house 3 blocks to u 2 376-0615 ofter 400pm. (4-22-51-c)bas kitchen portolly furnished no lase_nourtop by 1616 nw 3 iv. ask at EARN$5
pocht5Z/75 (4-22-3t-b) andseo how smrt you oreat the sometime
neartompus-furnished 3-oon opt., water intellectualobilities testsfurnished, upperclassmen, $125 month wilbegiven113 n w 2nd avel. tl 372-0139 (4-22-3t-b) Saturday noting, April 23
storing PROMPTLY o on,Own room in 3 bedroom opt $70 plus 1/4 STUDENTSutiitis. April Rent Free Call Jeff 375-7067 toil to rgttstr392-1056, 9 to t.Georgetownnpts (4-26-5t-b) Will receive feedback by mail.
(4-22-5t-n)
mo qr So/mos. pots ok - good location. GOLD SILVERCoil Onnor Nancy 375-532 (4-21-2t-b)
Top ptnces poid for clss rngs, old ijawloy,
etc. OZZIE 373-3894 Confidntiol (-3-45t-c)Beouttful 1 bd rm Townhooso. Groot too __________________couples pots Quiet Country Clsos to com- WANTED 4 people to share o chrh r bootpus April rent free. $10 mo furnished deep seoofishing trip all day 40-50 miles in377-7188 (4-22-3t-b) the Guf, bonm fishing Apr. 16, $29 pser-
sonol Don t,2-7349.subleing I bedroom opt. in countrygardens or summer, 1/2 of une rent free. Wanted: opn-minded, liberal oonmaetofully furnished $150 per month. call Andy share 3 bedroom house noo nonpus.375-7744 (4-2-5t-b) utilities, t-ot, pho split3 woys. Call Stovs
373-6212 (4-18-5t-c)SUOLET, Roonols wontsd or summ _________r.____JUNE RENT FREE. country gardens - acro CASH FOR GOLD, sterling, diamonds,from campus $63 month. call Bob 377-2088 jewelry, class rings, coin, and scrap gold.(4-26-t-b) Will visit you anywhere. 475-109 Mo. Ri-
non (5-9-301-c)2 females needed .o sublet 2 bdrs n . 3bedtm opt in Vizcaya opts fao summer roommate wanted for beautiful house nearquarter Has pool near shopping. Call low school. must be clean and lkei ople377-2142 oft or eve (4-2-5t-b) and nnils. Fior into oll Jeff at 373-2030
aftr3pm (4-21-St-c)lorgeooom in scludd house 5 min from
compus, unfurnished, $67/monrh and 1/4 Roommate Wonted to shore New fully fu -ufl hs . c aonsnllo377-633 or 373-2420 onshod 2bd opt.1051smon $1/2Wtil Cal
(4-26-5-b) ofter 5:-00p. 375-3608 (4-t-3t-c)
SUBLET I bedroom Air. 2 blocks from cam- Roomate Wanted to shore Now fully fur-
pus May-August Call- 377-5900 ofter 4. ishsd 2bd opt. 105/non od 1/2 util callSUBLET (4-26-5t-b) ofter 5:00 p.m. 375-3600 (4-21-3t-)
sublet; shore I bdrm. opt. howninon village helipl desperately need fotste roomote tofurnished$80 mo. ougust fr"call3724390 shore 2 b townhouse. opWil rent frb(4-22-31-b) bus/bik to campus. landmark opt. cin city
no move in nowl 375-947 (4-22-41-c)liberal, mature roommnl wanted. 2 bdm
turn house. cntrolo/c. $100.nDpertnonh roommates)swantedturn2bd 2 bogon-& 1/2 uditfis 1122 n. .31s ve. anytime wood optll507 $135 mn ngo$ 85oo2 po-Ron (4-22-3-b) ple plus ut opil paid con by or til1
375-7111 give mes fnorJoe (4-21-3-c)LOOt own pac-ts dt in lrgo3 dt _________________house.AC,yfil. 5.$75/-ooand 1/3ttis. grodstudent seeksquiet. notfomaleItolarge bock yard at 923 NE 3td 0ve 375-8638 share opt staring sept. we.11)hv) f o I look(426-5t-b) faro on opt andt nt It stoorl soly. Pot
Sub________p__GorwdAp_._Av__bl 392-2056 (4-25-5t-c)Sublet I $0 opt Gotonaod Ap. Auntciois ________________May I Rent negotiable OPon to renew wanted: open-minded, beal roommsto
lease June Dspotot Call 3722483 / shoto 3 bedroom house near campus.392-7552 (4-26-51-b) utilities,rent, phonsplit 3 wys. Cil SISteve
DER ___ AL___C___M ______ 3736212 (4-26-6t-c)"OLDER MAL0 ROOMATES" ________________
onurnshd room in 15 room huso, 2 EA$10 -pbloks from campus, k tchen, 00 loS 9. n- ounoonhowsort yotrs
cludos utlo ose, first last deposit, tthsatmetimtlrent now -s for fall, 378-8122 4 46 intellectual abilittis ests378-W6527 to 10 5-4-10t-b will be given
Saturday, May 7onm toent in 3 00house snrnonly stortngPROMPTLYot9-
I uniy30 $58 plus 1/3uti mo. Ask fr STUDENTS- Rodnif 377-0288 (4-22-21-b)i1- no tegistor39-1056, 9 to .
IWill) rctoofeedback by mo.
on unfurtnishd bedroom in lovely n. (4-27-5-c)home no so.s$s5 month + 1/4 utilities __No pot no mr snfonotton cil 377-8521. wanted donated clean roody In 0useKop tyng (4-27-5t-b) cithtg, furniture and household tomts for
curth b hidingg lnutyard'ltocalanytnsuibloo I br coory gardens opt f or ;- 375-7931 (4-22-2t-c)metwithfoil opton 1/2un ,t*0 rh00160
pt. mnc 1 toLenny . 376-0755 (4-25- n.d studous mol to shotnic.ly furnish3t-l ed noewa3bdrm hosinmgt'villforsir nmmno
out/oor fl 1$oto. + 1/2 uhl Contact .1.a'
JUNE RENT FREE sublet French QGantor Apt 377-2672 (4-27-SI-c)No 70-200 R 1/2 both Near pool Cal
377-957 pot Spn (4-27-t- b) RoommatoWanted Clos to nompus Snbikeo ne Air Cond. Rent $5 404W. 2nd
own om n --to one block from school St. V5-4243 4-22-2-c)$10000 pt/mo units pd call 373-6504,on by 109 nw 20thst )4-25-31-b) HELP W A N TED2 bdrm opt available Juno 1 20/month.
Low utiltes, central io, carpeted, pool
Sublet whole opt or 000 bdtn. 3V5-359 Counselors far prt Colin boy's nd
(4-27-St-b GtIrs Gstp, otto b16-Aog.17. From
.- _______ $ 325-25 plus ooot, boord, S houndry. OnlyCONSIDERATE female oonnate - yout own clean cut coosrviove C uog stod*tsb idsoo pun nn 30s hoosa - n los o a need apply Coop Pinoood, P.O. Sadspost $100 inuds eo- thing 3754-M 4505 NotRtttodp rncsomot Subch., FL(4-27-5t-b) 3314 (422-100.)
wanted married couple husband to do WEDDING INVlTATIONS Two week deliverymino, maintonence and pordorbin ex- undeds o, styes Cliff,Ha,)Pinting 1103change for apartment. please co i 376-966 N. Main 376-9951(6-3-49-i)fom8:300mto 530ptm (4-26-101.)
COED's facial hair removed permanently.TROUBLE getting a summer job? If you can Call Edward Dwyer Electrologist, over 25work hard and want a challenge you c on years experience. Call 37
2-039 (6-
3-49
1-i)earn $2000 or more. call today for interview37
2-3009 (4-21-51-o) IMPROVE YOUR LOVE LIFE. HAVE A NEWMAIR STYLE. Phone 377-2643 Sommie of
tho6h annual SunlndCarnival needstfun- London 716 W. University Ave. (6-3-49-i)loving organizations or groups to buad andrun own booths. Creative minds call SAM- For counseling before university commit-
SON at 392-1606 (4-21-SI-) M oees and boards, elect DAN MOLLOYCHANCELLOR of the Student Court
MAKE MONEY in your own room on your St-j)own time collect laundry and ROTCuniforms in your dorm coll Dave 377-5634 Learn Karate beginning classes start soon(4-25-5-o) $10 per maon. for more n fo call 376-1928 or
375-0141 Cvong Nhu Korote Federation. (4-
AUTOS 15-10t1)
SPECIAL FOR QTR - Reserved 4 week park-ing ONLY $15.00 at Golor Pork 1736 N.W.Ist Ave withthis coupon. $40.00 to end of
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SjJpjWI4 .alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977, 23
Ross Baumgarten
UF's ace lefthander is aiming for the majors
george kochaniec jr.THE 'FASTBALL EXPRESS' MEANS TROUBLE DOWN THE LINERoss Baumgorten has derailed five opponents with a 2.39 ERA
By MARK JOHNSONAlligator Sports Writer
Kate Smith doesn't sing God BlessAmerica. She belts it.
Graham Kerr doesn't broil rump steakflamande. He creates it.
AND ROSS BAUMGARTEN, ace UFpitcher. doesn't throw the baseball. Hewings it. Fires it. Flames it. Smokes it.
And loves it.So much so that he wants to play baseball
for a living. A boy's game for a man-sizedsalary. Fame, fortune and fastballs. 'Tilldeath or waivers do us part.
AND YOU KNOW, folks, RossBauniga-rten might just make it. They guv'sgot major league written all over his 6-1,170-pound frame.
Now the time is rapidly approaching whenBaumgarten finds out if he's the next BobFeller or just another Walter Mitty.
"It's always in the back of my mind,'*Baumgarten said as he sat in the lat af-ternoon sun by Percy Beard Track, the windwhipping through his bushy black hair. "Ihave an older brother, and when I was out ofthe crib he started throwing balls at ime-. Thefirst game I ever played I pitched.
"IF I DIDN'T make it I'd probably goback to Chicago and work--and plan tobecome a stockbroker.''
The folks in Chicago, howeser, iight bebetter off taking stock Itis 21-vear-old sleft arm. It imtight put iiat ( ) tlIi tabibI' andbreai i Iis wit
tI think he's as good a pitcher as l,, V v'i'rworked with,'" UF Pitching Coach Ste,'cWebber said. "First of all he's a smartpitcher, li's a good competitor and he's got agood moving fastball."
SECOND OF ALL. Baiuiigarten getsbatters out. His not-so-secret ingredient is ailively fastball that moves quite a bit,especially forward at a very high speed. Adda curve ball. Throw in an occasional slider.Season to taste.
For Baumgarten, the formula so far hasworked for a 5-2 record and a 2.39 earnedrun average, tops on the team. He also leadsthe team in strikeouts with 43 and incomplete games with seven.
"My fastball has a lot of movement and I
throw it for strikes," Baumgarten said. "Ithrow mostly 90 per cent fastballs. I feel Ican get most college batters out with it.
"IVE GOT a good curve. But one of myproblems is I have tremendous confidence inmy fastball and I depend on it too much. Iget in a jai and I want to go with it.'
AccordiNg to Webber, the breaking pitchmay well determine if Baunigartei puts hisname in the sporting pages or the business
section, in box scores or Dow Jones averages."We've worked hard oi him coming up
with a good breaking pitch," Webber said."That's probably the key. He's worked ol it.I think he's learned how to pitch using a
variety of pitches. Still. I feel his fastball ishis out pitch."
THE WORLD doesn't exactly stopspinning every time Baumgarten throws abaseball. Still, the pressure to pitch well andcompiled a good set of stats is a lot to takewhen things like boyhood dreams are istheline. But BaUimgartei keeps at least out-wardly calis.
"There's pressure to perform. but I don'ttake i its pressure.- hesaid. -I just go outand do [n\ best. I hae personal goals and Ithink everyone d s. But if iss take tihemtoo ssriousl the aff ectour pia and iostart pressing.
"'iu 'ri either d iss' tic job l s r s w 'rs not.SolsalrlI think I'm doi ' tshe >b
BAUMIARTEN, a jumor, probabvosldhit s. done ithe i list sis'car. too), it ehadl gotten the chanc. But there sis niup in his transfer I rom Palm Beach jiiorCollege, alid he vas dc'rhie isebible bthe Nutii al Collegiat Athletic Associatio
NCAA) Battisgarte isied thit-i NCA, butlost-partiall . he claiis because oIV lack ofstpport fromL aF thletic officials.
So BaUigarten sat out a ear, compiled a5-2 record in the Cape Cod i'agus in th'summer and returned for what hi says willbe his last season of college baseball, eventhough he has a year of eligibility remaining.
He's still bitter, pointing outi recentcircuit court decision which restrained theNCAA from putting the University ofMinnesota on athletic probation. In thatcase, the university claimed that in declaring
(see 'Baumgarten' page 24)
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II
24. alligator, thursday, april 21, 1977
MocsdropGators,3-2By MARK JOHNSON The Gators hadn't even been shutout, muchAlligator Sports Writer less no-hit.
UF, however, woke up in the sixth inning.The Florida Southern College tFSC) The Gators pieced together three straight
Moccasins are now the No. I Division I] base hits, with Ward singling home thebaseball team in the country. team's first run to make it 3-I.
The Gators will attest to that. The Moes But the home team was struggling. Thedowned UF 3-2 Wednesday night at Perry Gators managed to squeeze out another runField, and in the process showed there's in the seventh when second baseman Johnnothing small college about their 31-9 Cortese walked and scored on a sacrifice, arecord. wild pitch and a ground out. No hits, but it
THE MOCCASINS struck early, and was 3-2.though the bite wasn't deep, it was enough to UF CENTER FIELDER Joe Ward hit intohold the Gators back until the late innings. a double play to end a possible eighth inning
FSC hit Gator starter John Stamper for uprising,but right fielder John Brantley kepttwo runs on three hits in the first inning, with up UF's hopes with a lead-off single in thedesignated hitter Andy Hill driving home ninth.two runs with a double to deep left center Nick Belmonte, who broke the Southeasternfield. The Moes added their third and final Conference stolen base record last season,run in the next inning on two more hits. came on to pinch run and stole second on the
"They were bleedin' 'em in there," first pitch to designated hitter Jim Shulock.Stamper said after the game. "If they had Shulock, however, struck out on a low 3-and-been rattlin' 'em off the fences that would've 2 pitch from FSC reliever Stuart Hicks, whobeen one thing, but they weren't hittin' that stifled the rally and dropped UF to 28-10.well." Stamper settled down and pitched eight-
MEANWHILE, FSC starter Andy and-two-thirds innings, allowing only fourMcCaffigan held the Gators hitless for five hits in the final seven frames.innings though he gave up five walks in that The Gators are now No. 8 in the country inspan. Quite a change for a team hitting .313. the latest Collegiate Baseball magazine poll.
Softballers state tourney underdogsFlagler College and the nine dwarfs?UF Women's Softball Coach Donna
Dlotbier thinks not. While she says Flagler isthe fax rite to win this weekend's state in-terciilegiate tournament in Orlando, shemaintains her Lads Gator squad as a decentchance if eat ing exeryrne in the brlirek.
IF UF CAN CET b1),, a cirple bullies today,that is.
The I (ators bgin play in the three-dav. irruble-chination tournament toda atHO (M m Fc rIida In tfrrsn atiiiinalL'niacrit (FIL'i it tam LTF .wasn't able tobeat mtu ist esn
It the lets ;ators are able to survixiii' haisiatch-up, th itake in Flagler. xhich\ will
be going fur its seurd straight state title.LT, 13 3 12in the season, handed Flagler itsiiilx setbaiktfirs sear.
(from page 23)
three if its basketball players ineligible, theNCAA--withouit due prices (if lxwxs--dlprisr'dthe athletes if the right to x-rfrmi . TheNCAA is uippealing
"IN.THAT CASE the judge ruled ei'l). hat xN htad claimed I i r (AlH CAM.ilthri iti tvas' t iiferent rule infracti nci
Baluruisr u,'xr a'x srf .fic prs t l I rt nirstudent lMlt hcre the% didii't protect IM,
It t tr s m 1 i (t I slill xb sr iswntmnw itt:,ix iist the i dimi stration m it Ifi
"WE'VE GOT a terrible draw," Dolbiersaid, "but I think any team who wins thetournament has to play 'em all and win 'emall."
Dolbier said her team "improved a lot"since last losing to FlU, although she ad-mitted her squad will be at a realpsychological disadvantage.
As for Flagler, Dolbier said, "I think thatwe can beat them if we're playing well, buteverything's got to be going right.
"ON ANY GIVEN DAY, any team couldwin." Dolbier said of the 10-team tourney.
The Lady Gators will be without shortstopIinda Blackman, who's out with shoulderand knee injuries, while second basemanPatti Tuttle is a question mark with an in-jured knee.
NCAA. But when I step on the field, it'sforgotten."
Nox Baiugarten is just concerned withgetting aill he can out of his one season ofmajor college baseball and then--with luck--rgettigdrafitedilliiiJurIr-
I'se piis itd all IIms tifi and nAorked a ifImlife to be f rr rd enr gh f'' he said. "This suar
It irt ixr Ii rr~'rs'g xt fis C II'll tnd mit. The suispensc will be olver.Fther I' m g dc nouhx' i r lxI not.
T Its'll t h xd f It tills ien itelice is the
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