JU C J
FMI goal: bring pot to a ballot;
decriminalization try needs help
By TAD WEGMAN
Alligator Staff Writer
The executive director of
Florida Marijuana Initiative
(FMI), Bruce Elder, is looking
for people in the Gainesvile area
who are interested in working
for the decriminalization of
marijuana.
Elder has been traveling
throughout Florida in order to
get people behind us, and let
them see our organization is for
real.
wSL:
|j|
Dr. George W. Cornwell
... closer to 'vindication'
Alligator gains independence,
contract with UF near completion
By JAY O'CALLAGHAN
Alligator Staff Writer
The final step is just ahead.
Today The Florida Alligator is
expected to take the last step
making it The Independent
Florida Alligator.
Sixty-five years of university
control will be signed away
when last-minute contract
negotiations between the UF
and the new corporation are
finalized.
In the Tigert Hall offices of
the university attorney, the
charter of Campus
Communications, Inc. the new
Independent Alligator was
signed Wednesday by five of the
seven board members.
The contract and charter
together will put into effect the
recommendations of the
Presidents Ad Hoc Committee
on Student Publications chaired
by Professor Hugh Cunningham.
The new corporations general
manager Tony Kendizor said
that he plans to make ends meet
from increased advertising
revenues and a 15 per cent
reduction in student salaries that
will be solved by not replacing
some employees that will leave.
Alligator Editor Randy
The Independent
Florida Alligator
Published by Campus Communications, Inc., Gainesville, Florida
Not associated with the University of Florida
IN GAINESVILLE Elder was
pleased with the response to
FMI. We got a lot of organizing
done. Simone LaPlante was
made a local representative, so
now people can call her to ask
questions and find out how FMI
is progressing. We had several
people offer to help us, and
Gainesville just seems to be
generally more active in this
than last year.
The goal of FMI is presently
to get the matter of
Cornwell recommended
for reassignment, tenure
By BRUCE J. KUEHN
Alligator Staff Writer
UF professor and ecology
advocate Dr. George W.
Cornwell is a step closer to
vindication.
Cornwell was recommended
for reassignment Wednesday by
the University Senate Academic
Freedom and Tenure
Committee.
Independence Day
Today is the first day in some 65 yean UF has woke up without an
official student newspaper. Today's paper is an independent paper no
longer associated with UF in any manner.
Bellows said, that full student
salaries are critical to the
Alligators financial situation. I
look forward to independence
with the student salaries
covered.
>
The contract will give the new
corporation $35,000 to pay the
salaries of full-time Alligator
employees until June 30. The
new corporation will also get to
collect the unpaid bills for the
month of January, a figure
decriminalization on a ballot,
either in a special election or
straw vote, or in the 1974
general election.
Im very optimistic about
the vote, and Im sure we can get
a special vote on this. Elder is
waiting for the 1973 legislative
session to open in order to
determine what the procedure
will be for getting a special vote.
As soon as we get definite word
on what we have to do, well be
THE TENURED faculty
members of the School of Forest
Resources and Conservation had
recommended denial of tenure
for Cornwell in January, 1972.
Cornwell immediately
proclaimed his academic
freedom had been violated and
he was denied tenure because his
ecological attitudes were in
conflict with those of the
forestry school and the Institute
which is lower than the $55,000
expected because of a decline in
national advertising.
UF President Stephen
OConnell said that the
university will make up the
and that difference
could be in the payment of
student salaries so that the new
corporation will receive the
expected $55,000.
the contract also gives The
Alligator the use of its
able to work on the vote, and we
can really get going.
WE KNOW WHERE were
going were just waiting to see
what the legislature does about
requirements for a special vote.
In the meantime, Elder is
looking for people with
ambition who want to help us.
We need as many people as
possible, and we have something
to do for any one who wants to
help. We need lots of support
and man hours, he said.
of Food and Agricultural
Sciences.
He took his case to the senate
tenure committee last April with
strong support from ecology
organizations and
conservationists statewide. It
seemed a perfect case of
environmental concern versus
the supposed agricultural
business attitude of the forestry
school and IFAS.
equipment and offices until
Sept. 1, 1973, when Ihe
Alligator will move off campus
in return for providing
The Alligator free to the
university community at least
three times a week during the
winter and spring terms, and
once during the summer term.
The Alligator will also
continue to print the Page of
Record and the Campus
Crier in return for the use of
the Reitz Union office and
equipment.
Kendizor said the Alligator
corporation failed to secure a
written pledge in the contract
from the administration that it
would not publish a competing
campus publication.
The state cannot legally
waive that right, said Kendizor.
I talked it over with Dick Jones
(Gainesville Mayor) who was
inclined to agree. So I have Rae
Weimers (UF administration
representative) word for what
its worth that the UF
administration will not publish a
competing newspaper.
The officers of the board for
the new corporation are
(See 'Alligator' page 6)
' THURSDAY
FEB. 1, 1973
VOL 65, NO. 75
- #
Bruce Elder
...optimistic on vote
Persons interested in working
with FMI should contact Simone
La Plante at 462-1856, Route 3,
Box 94, Lot 60, Gainesville.
BUT IT WAS not to be
The senate committee,
chaired by Dr. Manning J.
Dauer, is recommending
reassignment on the basis of an
erratic decision and lack of
proper application of tenure
criteria by the forestry faculty
and Director of the forestry
school, John L. Gray, who also
recommended denial of tenure
for Cornwell.
The senate committee also
recommended that Cornwell be
reconsidered for tenure by
another department within the
university because the relations
between Cornwell and other
forestry faculty have so far
deteriorated that it would be
futile to point out error and ask
the faculty to take another
vote or to just keep Cornwell at
the forestry school.
AT LEAST FOUR members
of the forestry school
(unnamed) have indicated they
would resign if Cornwell was
retained.
Cornwell reacted to the
decision, Im pleased. I believe
the hearing panels (senate
committee) findings are a
substantial vindication of my
work at UF and of my
qualifications to receive tenure
at this university.
I wish to leave open all
channels of communication with
President OConnell in a search
for an equitable solution.
UF PRESIDENT Stephen C.
OConnell will make the final
decision on the Cornwell case.
The attorney for Cornwell,
Michael Bryant, said, Im quite
pleased at the fact-finding
because it was what we basically
tried to prove. But I dont think
the recommendation (to transfer
Cornwell) is quite appropriate
based on the fact-findings.
Gray, who has remained silent
with the press throughout the
Cornwell hearings, said
tSee 'Cornwell' page 20)
Page 2
!, Tho Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
n
My husband is employed by the university and gets a regular
Florida paycheck as a research assistant in Pediatrics Neurology and
the Reading Center.
We applied to the Credit Union and the latest information we were
given is that even though his salary is sufficient/ he is not eligible
for payroll deductions since he is OPS and not a line item (whatever
that is).
If this is true, isnt it a bit arbitrary and discriminatory? Whats
the story? Mrs. Robert F. Millot i
Apply to the Gainesville Student Credit Union and your troubles
should be over. Since your husband is doing graduate research, he is
eligible just like all full or part-time students.
You applied to the staff Credit Union, which he is not eligible for
. because hes not a permanent employe of UF. Thats what the OPS
(Other Personal Services) means. According to the Personnel
Department, OPS usually consists of four months or less working
time (there are some exceptions like grad students) and does not have
social security taken out of the paycheck.
A line item is a permanent employe who is listed on a line in the
annual UF budget. Those persons not on a budget line are lumped
together under OPS.
The staff Credit Union will only accept permanent UF employes
because it leads to more stability in the Credit Union, said
Treasurer Louise Hinton. The turn over of money and members would
be too great if temporary employes could join since a member must
leave the union if he leaves his job.
%
Whenever someone complains about lousy housing conditions and
high rent rates, Housing Director James Hennessey counter-complains
about the lack of adequate funds. With UF Housing facing such a
monetary crisis, why were Bristol sections laundry room, Little
sections study lounge and God-Knows-what-else RE-painted last
week? Surely there must be a better way to improve Hume Hall than
to waste money on an unnecessary paint job. Stephen Sickerman
v <
Hume Resident Life Coordinator Gwenuel Mingo and housing
Building Service Superintendant Benjamin Bennett arent as
convinced the painting was unnecessary as you seem to be.
Mingo said he turned in a request for the Little study lounge to be
painted because an anonymous joker had put red rectangular
designs on the walls. Residents were using the walls as a handball
court definitely defacing the lounge walls.
Mingo also turned in requests to Housing for painting Hume West
hallways, but said he doesnt know why other painting of some
bathrooms and washrooms was done recently.
Farther on up the administrative line, Bennett receives all painting
requests from area directors. He sends someone out to check the
request and see how badly it needs to be painted.
All of our painting is priority, Bennett explained, adding paint
crews have, more work than well ever get done.
Who requested painting of the Bristol laundry room and other parts
of Hume is a mystery of sorts because although Mingo denied it,
Bennett said the work was specifically requested by the assistant area
director, primarily responsible for the operation and maintenance of
Hume Hall.
There might be a confusion in titles somewhere, since the west area
of campus is organized in the West Campus Organization and there are
no area directors, much less assistant area directors.
Mingo suggested the request might have been turned in last year by
Hume officials. He also said the inspector checking the halls and
lounges for painting might have noticed some other areas needing it
and added them to the list.
Anyway, Bennett said his department checked the areas on the
painting request, no matter who turned it in, and determined they did
need painting.
The superintendant said money for repairs like painting comes from
rent, which is combined from all the dorms into an overall budget.
The Independent Florida Alliator it a publication of Campus Communication*,
Incorporated, a private, non-profit corporation. It It published five timet weekly
except during June, July and August when it's published semi-weekly, and during
student holidays and exam periods. Opinions expressed in the Independent Florida
Alligator are those of the editors or of the writers of the articles and not those of the
University of Florida, the campus served by the Independent Florida Alligator.
Address correspondence to The Independent Florida Alligator, F.O. Box 13266,
University Station, Gainesville, Florida, 32601. The Independent Florida Alligator is
gntered as second class matter at the United States Post Office at Gainesville, Florida
32601.
Subscription rate is SIO.OO per year or $3.90 per quarter.
The Independent Florida Alligator reserves the right to regulate the typographical
tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away all copy it considers
objectionable. V
The Independent Florida Alligator will not consider adjustments of payment for
any advertisements involving typographical error or erroneous insertion unless notice
is given to the advertising manager within (1) one day after the advertisement
appears. The Independent Florida Alligator will not be responsible for more than one
incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times.-Notice foi
correction must be given before the next insertion.
To eliminate cars at NewellStadium
Boyer to submit plan
to restrict campus traffic
By JIM SEALE
Alligator Staff Writer
Chief Justice of the Traffic
Court Tyrie Boyer will present a
plan to the Committee on
Parking and Transportation
which would eliminate what he
called the hectic intersection at
Stadium and Newell where
pedestrians and bicyclists and
cars have to compete for space.
Boyers new plan will close to
all but service vehicles and buses
the part of Newell Drive from
the Rolfs Hall Parking lot to the
Dairy Science building and on
Stadium Road from Newell
Drive to Buckman Drive. These
areas would be restricted to cars
five days a week from 7:30 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m.
BOYER WILL present his
plan to the Parking and
Transportation Committee in a
few weeks. Wednesday he
presented his plan to all
interested persons in the Reitz
Union.
The plan is a modification of
an earlier one by Boyer rejected
by the committee last summer.
The earlier plan provided for
closing of the streets in his
current plan, plus dosing the
street in front of the Hub from
Fletcher Drive to Buckman
Drive, the part of Buckman
Drive that runs along the
Butler outlines expansion views;
possible annex to HUD line
By CELESTE CALVITTO
Alligator Staff Writer
Gainesville City Commissioner
Neil Butler, addressing the Local
Government Study Commission
(LGSC) Tuesday night as a
citizen, not a commissioner,
outlined his ideas about possible
Gainesville expansion through
annexation to the HUD line to
protect the citizens within the
corporate limits in the area of
services.
The HUD line, as explained
by City Manager Harold Farmer,
is a boundary set up several
years ago by the U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urban Development. The
purpose was to establish a
planning area, when, under a
city comprehensive planning
grant, our efforts covered what
was an urban area.
BUTLER SAID in his
presentation before the LGSC
that outlying county areas
need not be consolidated to
1
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Review practice testing
program fpr the Medical College
Admission Test
For frse brochure, write
GRADUATE STUDIES CENTER
a division of The Minahart Corp.
P.O. Box 386
New York, N.Y. 10011
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Murphree complex, and the part
of Newell Drive from Union
Drive to the library parking lot.
The new plan will not
eliminate parking spaces, unlike
the original proposal by Boyer.
The total of 45 spaces the
original plan would have
eliminated was the major reason
it was killed.
THE NEW PLAN will
effectively eliminate north-south
traffic trying to avoid 13th
Street, said Boyer. He said a
1969 study revealed that 38 per
cent of the traffic on campus
stays for less than nine minutes,
apparently supporting Boyers
contention that much of the
Newell Drive traffic is composed
accomplish the goal of
expansion.
The real problem is not
found in the periphery (of
Gainesville) such as Archer,
Newberry or Alachua, Butler
said. The real inequity is the
suburbanites who have the
comforts of city living without
having to pay the taxes.
Butler made several other
proposals in addition to
annexation as ways to upgrade
city government:
Electing a full-time mayor
and having a city manager
without the caliber or duties
that the current post now
involves.
Electing city and county
commissioners as at large
candidates to rid Gainesville of
islands of voters. Attention
to districts provides a fertile
field for confrontation in a
legislative body, Butler said.
Assuring newly-annexed
residents are guaranteed services
on a preplanned level, such as
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of drivers trying to avoid
snarled 13th St.
If Boyers new plan is
approved by the committee, it
will then be passed on to
President Stephen C. OConnells
Executive Committee by Vice
President of Administrative
Affairs William Elmore.
Boyer said the committee, in
rejecting his old plan to close off
more streets to auto traffic,
violated two of its own five
objectives: first, to maximize
the safety of all concerned by
eliminating traffic conflicts
between pedestrians, bicyclists
and autos and, secondly, that
people coming to the university
be encouraged to use a
non-automobile mode of
transportation.
police protection and waste
disposal.
Limiting terms of offices.
Those who oppose limited
terms are either the incumbents
or benefactors of incumbents,
Butler explained.
Butler mentioned one area of
possible city-county
consolidation is in law
enforcement.
Law enforcement is one
inequity that will never be
recognized, the city"
commissioner said..
BUTLER ADDED he thought
any head of a consolidated
agency, such as law
enforcement, should be
appointed, not elected.
It should be a quality and
professionalism appointment
and not some smooth talker,
Butler commented.
The ideal situation, Butler
said, is total regional planning.
I cant name anything that isnt
desirable to plan for on a
region-wide basis.
Residents must wait
MP-
I
a year for paving
of SW 20th Avert ue
By ANDY PARK
Alligator Staff Writer
Residents of SW 20th Avenue
will have to wait at least a year
before their road is paved.
Official word came at
Tuesdays Alachua County
Commission meeting when
Commissioner Sid Martin said
actual construction on the road
wouldnt begin until December
or January.
THIS DECISION particularly
affects residents of Modem Age
Apartments, Robinson Villa, arid
the Alamar Gardens
Trailer-Apartment Community.
For these people, SW 20th
Avenue is the only access to
their homes..
A small group of Alamar
Gardens residents led by Corey
Bercun presented the
Commission with a 225-name
petition calling for the
immediate paving of SW 20th
Avenue.
Id like to give a standing
invitation for all the
commissioners to drive out this
road with your cars to see if its
suitable for residents of this
county, Bercun said.
MARTIN, who had driven out
SW 20th Avenue recently, called
it a horrible road.
SW 20th Avenue is similar to
SW 23rd Street leading to the
Village Apartments before is
was temporarily paved. When
SW 20th Avenue is dry its a
succession of auto-suspension auto-suspensionshattering
shattering auto-suspensionshattering bumps and deep ruts.
When it rains, the road becomes
a sea of mud causing many cars
to get stuck.
Its tearing up your
automobiles and we know it,
said Martin.
THE COMMISSION blamed
the delay on the financing of
bonds that have to go through
other bodies.
Martin said the state
secondary road fund law
requires a road be paved
between two connecting roads.
IFC to better communications;
investigate noise ordinance
By SONYA BOOTH
Alligator Staff Writer
Improved communications with individual fraternities and
investigation of the legality of the new noise ordinance as it affects
on-campus houses are planned projects for this quarter by new
Interfratemity Council officers (IFC).
New IFC officers are Robert Estes, president, Glenn Baker,
executive vice president, Marie Rauth, administrative vice president;
Boy Klausner, secretary and Jim Hailing, treasurer.
ACCORDING TO Baker, IFC officers plan to visit individual
fraternities as often as we can to keep communication open.
IFC intends to request Florida Attorney General Robert Shevins
opinion on enforcement of the noise ordinance by the Gainesville
Police Department. Baker said if outdoor fraternity parties are closed
down, then similar enforcement of UF football games might be
necessary.
We want to find out if the ordinancewnust be enforced by the
University Police Department, or if it can even be enforced at all,
Baker said.
Besides Winter Frolics, IFC plans to hold a benefit concert for the
Nicaraguan Relief Fund Feb. 9 at the Ratskeller.
Baker said IFC officers have also discussed the possibility of cable
television for on-campus fraternities and the lowering of
phenomenally high utility rates for off-campus houses with
Gainesville Mayor Richard Jones.
SW 20th Ave.
... 1 year until paved
County Engineer Roy Miller
estimated the cost of paving the
entire 3.5 miles of SW 20th
Avenue between SW 34th Street
and Tower Road would cost
$375,000.
THE ALAMAR GARDENS
and Robinson Villa residents
would be satisfied if just one
niile would be paved between
SW 34th Street and the
entrances of the two student
populated living complexes.
Bercun asked if some kind of
partial pavement could be put in
temporarily, such as that done
with SW 23rd Street.
Commissioner Edwin
Turlington said the developer of
the Village Apartments put up
$9,000 to have that road paved.
THE RECENT paving of SW
23rd Street covered a distance of
1.3 miles.
The Commissioners said it
would be impossible to get the
road paved any faster.
All we had was 10 people
there and even 225 signatures on
a lousy petition, it didnt mean
bull, Bercun said after the
meeting.
I put a lot of time into
phone calls, organizing and
trying to make something go,
but the people just didnt want
to do it, said Bercun.
@Refk Lindseu
LADIES SHOES
JUST 5.88 v
*
famous names great selection of
narrow widths.
. t T v: ;
VERY FAMOUS
LADIES BOOTS MENS SHOES
ONLY 8.88
values to 50.00
GAINESVILLE SHOPPING CENTER
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To BUrGor KING FOR A WHopPeR; Jffljj!
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The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1, 1973,
FAMOUS NAME
now 10.90
values to 35.00
Page 3
Page 4
1, The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
Style variety shown in sports ware
Editors. Note: This is part
four of a five-part series. Today
The Alligator price comparison
survey looks at sports from
golf courses to equipment prices.
By SUSAN HEMMINGWAY
AND
HEATHER ELLEN STOUN
Alligator Correspondents
Variety is the word to
remember when shopping for
sporting goods, in Gainesville.
- Supplies for the athletic
population can be bought at
specialty stores such as Jimmie
Hughes Sporting Goods, or in
discount department stores such
as JM Fields and Woolco. Prices
are generally the same for
sporting goods equipment at any
particular store, although
individual items vary in prices
from store to store.
MACGREGOR, Spalding,
Sportcraft, Wilson: these brand
names are the most popular
among department stores and
sporting good shops. Each
company has their own line of
products for each sport, with
individual items manufactured in
a variety of styles to suit the
particular needs of the sports
buff.
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Woolco
Sunshine Shopping Canter
Maas Brothers x
Gainesville Mall
Sears
Gainesville Mall
J.M. Fields
1409 NW 23rd Ave.
Jimmie Hughes
Sporting Goods
1113 W. Univ. Ave.
Imperial Distributors
of Fla.
4101 S. Main
l.
The game of football, like the game of life, requires the necessary
armor. The above necessities are sold in most sporting goods stores.
BASEBALL
BATS
H&B 500
(aluminum)
7.SS
Ml
A comparative look at prices
For example, Spalding
manufactures basketballs, but
the consumer must decide if he
wants the Elvin Hayes model
or the Wilt Charberlain model.
The prices also vary, although
there seems to be no difference
in appearance.
According to Mack Williams,
vice-president of Imperial
Distributors of Fla., the price
variation may be caused by one
being produced in America while
the other is Japanese-manu Japanese-manufactured.
factured. Japanese-manufactured. Although the Japanese
product would usually be
cheaper, in Williams opinion there
would not be much difference in
quality between the two.
THE ALLIGATOR found
that Imperial Distributors has
the lowest prices in town on
particular items. Asked if there
was any competition among the
stores, Williams replied, We try
to undersell. Imperial has only
a limited sporting goods
department, specializing in
Wilson, Spalding and Sportcraft.
They buy directly from the
manufacturer and are thereby
able to sell at wholesale prices.
We try to pick out the most
popular equipment from Wilson
and Spalding, said Williams.
FISHING
REELS
Garcia
Mitchell 300
14.47
14.99
BASEBALL
GLOVES
(FIELDERS)
Raullfngs
GJ 49
i
13.99
(
14.40
He also said they provide a
catalogue service from which
customers may order, but we
can order anything that Wilson,
Spalding and Sportcraft makes,
whether or not it is in the
catalogue.
THE SIZE of the stores
sporting goods department may
be a factor when considering the
customers convenience. Maas
Brothers has a small sporting
goods department, but their
prices parallel those of the other
stores. Jimmie Hughes being
> the only store in town that is
exclusively sporting goods has
the most extensive line of
equipment sold to the general
public.
They basically sell their
products at retail value, although
they do sell wholesale to various
area schools. JM Fields has an
extensive line of fishing, tennis
and baseball equipment.
G. Adelman, assistant
manager of JM Fields, would not
comment when asked about the
sale of his products. Calling it
embarrassing and unethical he
PART IV: SPORTING GOODS
FISHING RODS
Garcia Conolon
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12.9 )
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14.99
C. J. WALKER
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Coif
Balls
(3)
Kro-flite
2.99
2.49
HANDBALLS
Seamless
Official 555
<2>
1.49
2.40
2.00
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said he would rather attract
customers through advertising
and the quality of the store.
HOUSEBRANDS were found
in both JM Fields and Sears
sporting goods departments.
Jimmy McLean of Sears said,
Sears has things made to their
own specifications by major
companies. They then put the
Sears name on it... this is just
advertising.
The prices do not necessarily
vary just because the Sears name
is on it, either, If anything, it
would make it cheaper,
McLean said. Asked why Sears
uses its own name on their
sporting goods equipment he
replied, Which would be easier
to promote: a lot of brands, or
just one?
FOR THE STUDENT who
really wants to save money there
HAND
BALLGLOVES
Champion
(padded) (21
4.99
4.99
4.24
4.40
4
Spalding
Red Label
Ace (4)
o
4.99
3.49
Tennis
... all it takes is equipment, court, opponents
RAQUET
BALLS
Seamless
558
1.24
1.19
t
is the recreation check-out
provided by the Intramurals
Department Basketballs,
footballs, volleyballs and
handball and raquetball
equipment can be checked out
in much the same way as you
check out a reserve book at the
library.
If an item is checked out on a
weekday, it must be returned
the next day. If equipment is
checked out on a Friday, it has
to be returned the following
Monday. All that is needed to
borrow the equipment is your
student ID or your student
number. Equipment can' be
checked out at Hume Hall and
Norman Gym (weekdays:
4-10p.m.; Saturday:
10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunday:
l-5p.m.), Broward Hall
(Monday-Friday: 8-4:15p.m.),
and Florida Gym
(Monday-Friday: Ba.m.-l lp.m.).
The type of equipment varies
with each area.
TENNIS
Wilson
I
1.99
2.37
2.49
2.84
t
2.14
BALLS
Spalding
(Pancho
Gonzalez)
2.00
3.29
%
C. J. WALKER
TENNIS RACKETS
Wilson
Billie Jean
Kinq Prestige
15.47
9.99
Wilson
T-2000
Steel
39.99
39.95
39.95
33.50
31.49
Cheapest student golf on UF campus
By HEATHER ELLEN STOUN
Alligator Corraspondant
For those golfers who are not
members of private golf courses,
University Golf Course,
Ironwood and West-End are the
places to check out.
y
f fil/' I
Mk&IL
gUMAj 4
C. J. WALKER
Golf
... different clubs for different strokes
| Get a New Leaf on Life f
BUY A PLA NT
I' Hflrllfi A GARDErT
I NURSERY I
4526 SW Archer Road $
372-6097 X
"Just Past 1-75 on the Right S
Each has 18 holes, with
Ironwood and West-End
charging separate fees for rounds
of nine and 18 holes. Ironwood
has the most expensive fees for
students, and for non students
on weekdays. When asked why,
Ken Barnard, manager of
Ironwood, replied, This has
been the standard rate for the
course for years.
THE UNIVERSITY Golf
Course is owned by UFs athletic
department, and is not open to
the public. It is a service
provided for students, faculty,
alumni and guests, and
university personnel.
Buster Bishop, UF golf coach,
pointed out that West-End is
only a par-three course, while
Ironwood and University Golf
Course are regulation 18-hole
courses.
I would always prefer what
STUDENTS
WEEKDAYS
University
Golf Course
Newberry i.so
Road
Ironwood
Golf Club 2.50
NE 39th Ave.
West-End
Golf Course
9 holes 1.25
3% mites west 18 ho, 2 25
of 1-75 on
Newberry Road
Give Elaine Powers jm* Twk.
the time to make
Lose twodress sizes jEKffl^n
Complete Four S4OO
month program. I |2jggj|
B per week B Wm
iB V 'Sag v B. IIV
At Elaine Powers, a little time goes a long V '^m
way. You can lose two c.ress sizes. A lot of 1
women do. Youll also look and feel better 1 -|
than you have in years. Miraculous machines? flf
Sure. But its our personal attention that ;^B
really helps. And Team Time.'When we .' m
gang up on our figure problems together. \ Ijfl
Its fun. And it works. v rVB
Call today for your free figure analysis: B
372-9372 or 372-1744 J%
WWiiMyaeefcafricad.
(AtapriceaajrMycaaafM.)
Elaine Powers
Figure Salons
1240 NW 21st Av*.
The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973,
we call an 18-hole golf course,
he replied.
ACCORDING TO Bishop the
basic difference is distance.
Most every golfer could use
an iron, becuase the holes are
shorter on a par-three: 240 yards
or less in length, he continued.
Eighteen-hole courses usually
have four par-threes, four
par-fives, and 10 par-fours.
THE UNIQUE feature of the
University Golf Course is that
there are an equal number of
PART IV: GOLF COURSES
STUDENTS
WEEKENDS
2.50
3.00
9 holes 1.75
19 holes 2.75
NONSTUDENTS
WEEKDAYS
3.60
9 holes 2.50
19 holes 3.50
9 holes 1.50
19 holes 2.50
NONSTUDENTS
WEEKENDS
AND HOLIDAYS
3.50
3.50
9 holes 2.00
19 holes 3.00
* If you are a dress size:
14.. .you can be a size 10 in 31 days
16.. 12 in 36 days
18.. .you can be a size 14 in 36 days
20.. you can be a size 14 in 50days
22*... you can be a size 16 in 51 days
If for any reason you fail to achieve
these results, Elaine Powers will
give you 6 months freel
0
par-threes, -fours, and -fives,
Bishop replied.
According to Bishop, the
variance among green fees may
be a reflection of the
maintenance needed for the
up-keep of the course. Owners
will usually charge prices to
cover these costs, with profit as
a goal in mind.
However, Bishop said, the
university bought the golf course
with the student in mind. For
this reason we want to keep our
prices as low as we possibly
can.
SPECIAL RATES
alumni & guests
weekday 4.00
weekend 6.00
Ladies Day 1.50 MIT
Senior Citizens 2.00 MfcF
after 6 P.M. 1.50
if you arrive before
11 A.M. MF
greens fee is
1.75 for all
day for everyone
Page 5
Page 6
i, Ttw Independent Florida Alligator, Thu red ay, February 1,1973
By M. J. TIERNEY
Alligator Staff Writer
Applying the Presidents
theme of less federal help and
more self-help to the water
system, Nixons leading adviser
on water quality, Dr. William S.
Butcher, encouraged the free
market approach in the
management of water activities.
Butcher was the keynote
Miami official predicts
- ;-i
water crisis in Florida
By DAVID SMITH
Alligator Staff Writer
A Miami official warned of an impending water shortage crisis in
South Florida, unless certain measures are taken.
Garrett Sloan, director of the Miami Department of Water and
Sewers, said plans must be implemented to increase the water storage
capacity of Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades conservation areas
before drought periods create a crisis in South Florida cities.
IN A SPEECH Wednesday at the annual UF DARE (Developing
Agricultural Resources Effectively) Conference, Sloan criticized the
situation of water supply fields within two miles of salt water barrier
dams, requiring that a fresh water head be maintained at all times to
prevent salt water intrusion into fresh water supplies.
He noted a 1968 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report
recommending installation of large back-pumping stations to return
surplus runoff westward to storage areas during periods of excessive
rainfall.
Lack of progress by the corps towards implementing these
back-pumping stations is a factor affecting the problem, he said.
THE PUBLIC need only make its choice. We can do nothing,
inviting further salt water intrusion in our fresh water supply, or we
can take steps now to strengthen our water tables for the drought
periods when the problem becomes really serious,Sloan said.
He said the levees around Lake Okeechobee should be raised to
provide storage capacity up to 21 feet above sea level, but that such
action has been vigorously opposed by conservation groups.
Whenever a federal agency encounters organized local opposition
to a project of this type it usually defers action to avoid adverse
political repercussions. In this case, the recommended project
construction appears to have been postponed indefinitely, Sloan
said.
Alligator
> \
FROM PAGE ONE
Sharkey, the editor of the High
Springs Herald; Vice Chairman
Kevin Davey, a UF law student;
and secretary Tim Condon, The
Alligators managing editor.
Also seizing on the board is
Kendizor, former assistant
manager of the Hub bookstore,
Ed Cornwell, The Alligators
advertising manger; Alligator
3n-N-<9ut WtIVI IN I
Srnrragp
BUD 1202 CANS 1.29/4.95
OLD MIL 120 Z CANS .99/3.94
BUSH 120 Z CANS 1.20/4.47
PABST 120 Z CANS 1.20/4.61
MILLER 120 Z CANS 1.26/4.80
SCHLITZ 120 Z BOTL 1.20/4.61
RED, WHITE & BLUE
-120 Z 1.10/4.37
BOONE'S FARM WINES
APPLE .89
STRAW .96 WM GRAPE 1.06
TAYLOR, CHRIS BROS.
ALMADEN 1.92
RC COLA AND NEHI FLAVORS
RETURNABLE 320 Z. BOTTLES
5 for 1.00 DEP.
Nut To
In-N-Out lie cicn 210 SW
Homburgors 2nd Ay.
Nixon water quality adviser speaks
Urges water system revision
speaker Wednesday afternoon at
the Developing Agricultural
Resources Effectively (DARE)
Conference in the J.W. Reitz
Union.
BUTCHER CITED
recommendations from the draft
of the National Water
Commissions report to explain
the free market concept of the
water system.
I interpret the report as
Editor Randy Bellows, and The
Alligators student business
manager, Mike Blocker.
Blocker and Bellows did not
sign the charter because they are
under 21. The law prevents
minors from signing a
corporation charter as
subscribers. This however, will
not prevent Bellows and Blocker
from being held legally
responsible for what The
Alligator prints, as members of
the corporation.
ft
Gainesville Jan. 22, Morgan Office Machine and
Supply Inc. has been appointed as a regional dealer by
Computer Design Corporation, Los Angeles-based
manufacturer .of "Compucorp" electronic calculators,
desktop computers and hand-held micro computers.
William E. Morgan, president of Morgan Office Machines
and Supply Inc., said this appointment would enable his
company to provide area residents with the recently
introduced micro computers. These small machines feature
an array of powerful one-stroke keys for all common
mathematical, trigonometric and statistical functions. All
have ten memory registers and some models are
Programmable, with an 80-step capability.
Morgan Office Machine and Supply Inc. is located at
901-903 N. Main St. and has been in business since 1935.
Computer Design is four years old and markets its products
throughout the world.
saying the time has come for us
to recognize the task of
providing this country with a
water resource system that is the
best in the world has reached the
point where we have the basic
equipment and from this point
on new works must be judged as
an investment and paid for by
the direct beneficiaries,
Butcher said.
Butcher continued, From
this belief flow the many
detailed recommendations on
interest rates for product
evaluation about how the direct
beneficiaries of water resources
UF sewage plant
to be closed down
By JEFF MAZO
Alligator Staff Writer
UFs sewage treatment plant
is scheduled to close when a new
regional plant for Alachua
County is built, according to
Frank Andrews, state
administrator for water quality
control.
Andrews said that in the
permit issued to operate the
plant, UF is required to connect
to an advanced process plant
when it becomes available.
The new regional plant is to
be built on the west end of Lake
Kanapaha, located just west of
1-75 and north of Archer Road.
Cost of the Lake Kanapaha
plant is estimated to be
$5,060,000 according to David
Beach of Black Crow and
Eidsness Inc., designers of the
According to the charter,
the corporations major
function will be to publish, daily
or otherwise, a newspaper
containing the news of the
students, faculty and staff of the
UF.
The charter will become
official when it is filed with the
secretary of states office in
Tallahassee.
The charter requires that a
majority of one of board of
projects, whether flood control,
navigation, irrigation or water
pollution control should pay the
cost.
BUTCHER POINTED out
that even though this would be a
more efficient way to run the
country, changing to such a
system could stop many projects
now planned.
If, for instance, the
beneficiaries of flood control
projects are to be required to
pay for protection they may no
longer feel the proposed project
is worth the cost, Butcher said.
He added that the commission
VtlTHh ittlfllfB" 1 THLI AH Ul| JUfc I
plant. He added that 25 per cent
will be paid by the
Gainesville-Alachua County joint
directors at anytime shall be
elected from among the
undergraduate and graduate
student body of the UF.
The charter also states the
board of directors shall include
the general manager, the
assistant general manager, the
student business manager, the
student editor, the student
managing editor, a professional
journalist and a student or
COBBLERS CORNER
SHOES for
MEN and WOMEN
j/Sfe 1029 W. Univ. Ave.
378-2245
Jn Imports from
jBI Italy Spain *Denmark
England Greece Brazil
Fred Braun of N.Y. Baretraps
Scarlet Leather 378-2245
Bort Carleton of Boston
UF plant
... sewage to go elsewhere
Hail#'
William Butcher
... 'free market approach'
does recognize in some instances
an overriding social purpose can
be served by subsidizing a
project or program with public
money, but this should be the
exception rather than the usual
way.
Butcher also recommended
shifting water expenditures from
continued development to
more management-oriented
stance and from a rural focus
to an urban focus.
utilities board and 75 per cent
will be paid by the federal
government.
graduate student with a
journalism background who is
not employed by The Alligator
corporation.
Changes in the charter require
a majority of the full seven man
board to be made.
The charter also states that if
the corporation dissolves, all of
its assets will go to the use and
benefit of the UF College of
Journalism.
C. J. WALKER
* iuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
i
SS supports
renewals for
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w S
fl &£&$&! 2£g' ># <** IM
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' § STA 46 receiver is packed with features usually
*" Pop 169 95
A*AAA niAMruun & M tape inputs and outputs, including tape monitor,
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00 Aun IID #1 I B bass, treble, balance and volume controls. In-
A_ Z. 99 AND B| eludes $24.95 value walnut case. 31-2026
Choose One Os These Systems Built Around The STA-46 Receiver
_ m STA-46 Receiver 169.95
Reg. # II QK (2) Solo 1 Speakers 49.00
oco no I LAB 12A Record Changer 49.95
Sep. Items Price 268.90
ONE WEEK ONLY
STEREO HEADPHONES
Enjoy high volume listening without dis
turbing others. Adjustable headband, cush-
ONE WEEK ONLY SAVE ON
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fSSPfiiiPliPI This"
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30 min. 1.09 99c
Ihr 149 1.35
V/2 hr 199 179
WKKKKKtKKKm 2 hr. 2.49 2.19
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A stereo pushbutton add on tor your
present system Features cartridge eject T
button. Shut off at end of tape avoids
damage to tape or unit. 14-892
I FREE TUBE-TESTING AT ALL RADIO SHACK LOCATIONS
r r l / Ratfw/haek
Sunshine Shopping Center
373-1396
By DAVID SMITH
Alligator Staff Writer
A resolution supporting
license renewal for two
television stations, WJXT of
Jacksonville and WPLG of
Miami, was adopted by the UF
Student Senate Tuesday.
The licenses of the two
stations, both owne t d by The
Washington Post-Newsweek Co.,
are up for review and renewal by
the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC).
STEREO SOUND EFFECTS
Peg. 0k Si Q Choose any or all 4
l Q7 PaT*" f these stereo
B Ea. demonstration LPs.
THE RESOLUTION,
introduced by Senators Bill
Watson and Bob Rappleye,
originally only supported WJXT
but was amended to include
WPLG. A copy of the resolution
will be sent to the FCC, urging
the stations licenses be renewed
in the interest of good
journalism and the public.
The senate also passed on
second reading a bill loaning
SSOOO in Student Government
reserve funds to the John
Reg. Q K (2) Solo 3B Speakers 119.90
J Mmm\J Sep. Items Price 354.35
1
FULL-FIDELITY
SPEAKERS l|^
S 6O fl|
PHear the "highs" and "lows" your ||||||p
stereo music has to offer with these DBHHHHHHHH| '; v i
big floor size acoustic suspension 1
speaker systems 40 1980 f
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CHARGE IT gg
Th* Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1, 1973,
Marshall Bar Association
(JMBA). The money, to be
repaid in five years, will be used
to increase the inventory of the
JMBA-run bookstore which
supplies supplementary materials
A to law students at reduced rates.
By a 26-22 vote, the senate
denied the UF Mens and
Womens Glee Clubs $2050 for a
spring quarter tour. The money,
which would have come from
SG reserve funds, was provided
in a bill introduced by the
Budget and Finance Committee.
A bill was passed allocating
sllO2 in contingency account
funds to the Public Functions
Authority to buy and refurbish
sound equipment.
In other action, seven people
were appointed to fill senate
vacancies. They were Charles
Manos and James Manos, Arts
and Sciences; Pat McKenzie and
A1 Happ, 2UC; Mike Joannou
and Bill Leonard, Off-Campus;
and Jim Harrison, Law.
Page 7
Page 8
I. The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
Editorial
' *4 77 f
.
Independence
It was Feb. 1, 1972, a year ago today.
The editorial of 1 he Alligator began, Maybe its time for
a showdown.
The second graph ran a bit longer: Maybe its time for
UF President Stephen C. OConnell to come out from the
protective confines of his Tigert Hall office and make public
some of the actions he has in mind for The Florida Alligator
in the near future.
The near future came soon. The Alligator would not have
long to wait.
TODAY IS Feb. 1, 1973.
It is a day we expected to neither note nor remember.
Instead it marks our independence.
We are pleased with the idea of independence. Not
because we are libertarians.
We were never bothered by those who called us
hypocrites because we used the student activity fee. We
never wavered from our belief that students had the right to
distribute the fee as they saw fit. But it did bother the
university.
It never disturbed us that we had our facilities on
campus. It was in the student union, built'with student
money, for student activities, and for the student
newspaper. We slept fine.
BUT THE university could not.
Out of it all came a plan for independence.
We welcome it today.
BUT UNLIKE OTHERS we did not accept it blindly. We
have been suspicious this last month over the universitys
motives, over the validity of the ad hoc committees plans,
over the survival of The Alligator.
We believe our efforts have been to help not to haunt
- The Alligator.
This we will know soon, for several issues are still to be
resolved.
One will take many years. It is called editorial freedom.
The Board of Directors with the passage of a policy giving
editorial control to the editorial staff has taken a fine step
in that direction.
BUT THERE are many steps left to be taken. A critical
one is to insure that the board select Alligator editors
strictly on journalistic abilities and with the knowledge
that a paper without controversy is a paper without readers.
Another issue, though, is much closer to home and will
be decided in the next several days.
It is our financial survival.
WE HAVE ESTIMATED that with the presidents plan
The Alligator will have a $6,000 deficit. We have estimated
that it will take $20,000 to start up an independent
Alligator. We have estimated that the accounts from
January we had expected will fall short by some $20,000.
The board is negotiating for $42,000 in student salaries
to cover this loss.
Those negotiations are being conducted in good faith.
We need this money. And we expect the president to do his
part to help us get it.
But there are others who can help us also particularly
you the faculty member, and you the administrator.
For years The Alligator has come to you free. And it will
continue to do so. Now we need your financial support.
So call it what you want. A faculty subscription or The
Alligator Independence Fund. Well call it your vote of
confidence, your vote that an independent student
newspaper can make it on this campus.
Contact us at The Alligator.
Sixty-five years and 74 days ago The Alligator was bom
on the University of Florida campus. They say the elder
years are always the most fun.
Viva .The Independent Alligator.
Mini-Editorial: The Alligator Independence
Fund is hereby created by the students, faculty and
administration of this university. Any contributions are
voluntary subscriptions and dedicated toward > the
production of an active, responsible and independent
student newspaper. A list of new contributors will be
printed daily. To give us your vote of confidence, call
392-1687 today and ask for Randy or Tim.
Alligator Independence Fund
The
Independent
Florida
*
Alligator
HUM m 7
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El 1 i? "IjM
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Contributors
Professor Hugh Cunningham (Chairman of the Presidents
Ad Hoc Committee on Student Publications S2O
Dr. Irving Coffman
(chairman of the Economics Department S2O
Gary Rutledge (president of the Student Senate) $5
Randy Bellows (Alligator Editor) $lO
Timothy S. Condon (Alligator Managing Editor) 10
Marian Jedrusiak
(director of SG Office of Womens Affairs) $5
Randy I. Bellows
Editor-in-Chief
Gerald Garte
News Editor
i
.-'
Tim Condon
Managing Editor
Douglas L. Colyer
Layout Editor
-A .'; ."
T --..._ .. .'
Jvst another
commie plot
By PHIL PIQUE
Guest Columnist
Perhaps the American public
bias been fooled into thinking
that the peace accord between
this country and Communist
Vietnam will lead to an
honorable peace. However, we
of the Jose Antonio Primo de
Rivera chapter of the American
Falange Party at the University
of Florida have refused to let the
wool be pulled over our eyes.
The peace accord signed by
Nixon, and drawn up by Henry
Commissar Kissinger in close
cooperation with the
Communists is nothing less than
a sellout to the Communist plan
for world conquest which we of
the Falange, along with other
concerned and patriotic
American groups, have been
fighting for so many long years.
Hopefully, the American
ADVICE AND DISSENT
Yes deposit
no return
Editor:
As I am sure you are already
aware of the unfair business
practices in the Gainesville area
I will not go into detail on the
overall scene. While I am sure
there are many students and
faculty alike that would swear
by this institution, I myself am
much grieved by its means of
business.
Being a Freshman I am
required to take such courses as
CSS and CEH and to buy the
numerous books required by
each. At the beginning of this
quarter* I was enrolled in CSS
121 and bought two books from
the Florida Bookstore, mainly
because they were not available
elsewhere. After one week I
found that 1 would have to drop
the course. Being new and not
used books I was almost certain
that the books could be
returned.
But, alas! Not to be heard of.
The personnel on duty at that
time informed me that the
books were non returnable.
After having tried to explain to
this person that I had a
Drop-Add card signed by Dean
Dunkle 1 gave up. He just would
not admit that books were
V J
oomo
jidt to undermine }
sewal flwresy
people will not be fooled for
long. Certainly, we of the
Falange will do all we can to
make them see the peace
agreement for what it is: A
document of surrender to World
Communism at a time when
victory was just over the
horizon, obviously engineered
by the Zionists in this country
(of whom Kissinger is one), and
the leftist and liberal elements in
the national press, the federal
government, and the Roman
Catholic Church (notably the
Jesuits).
For one reason, and for only
one reason, are we of the
Falange gladdened by the signing
of the peace agreement in Paris:
When the American people
realize how their interests have
once more been betrayed by the
pro-Communist elements in their
countrys government, they will
returnable. Although I am sure
these books will be used for the
next two or three years the
establishment in question saw fit
not to refund my money.
It is my opinion that these
bookstore operations should be
regulated by the University or a
staff of personnel be appointed
to look into all discrepancies
involving students who are being
cheated out of their money by
businesses. I have contacted the
Gainesville Chamber of
Commerce Division of Consumer
Services and have filled out
forms, but to no avail. It seems
that not even they can protect
the consumer any longer.
GEORGE MARTIN
STEPHENSON
Lets talk
about CLEP
Editor:
Dr. David Kauffmans witty
yet serious article about the
proclivity of the CLEP exams to
lower the quality of university
graduates when they should be
raised makes a very timely point.
But in an educational
bureaucracy in which numbers
matter at least as much as
x ;
Figured N/ovid say /~\.i 1 hnugkt V'xkJ )
\ / f Tfeftmny payers arer^
'A \ indecent beha'ftorf y
* 1
8
ftfc \. : y *sa&b.
; ?h \fi £4; y\. jn I / / JS
"AS I UNDERSTAND it; a democracy; whatever that is, SAVED US FROM SOMETHING CAHED COMMUNISM, WHATEVER THAT is"
come one step closer to
understanding that the defense
of the American Dream, the
American Way of Life, and such
holy and deeply ingrained social
principles such as the sanctity of
quality, the university must
process large numbers of bodies
in order to be entitled to state
allocations. If the University of
Florida sets CLEP passing levels
too high, many students will go
to other Florida colleges where
the CLEP levels are lower. If the
University of Florida is too
fastidious about standards, its
enrollment will drop and the
support base for its programs
will melt away.
As servants of the Board of
Regents which make such
policies, university
administrators are not in a
strong position to insist on a
more enlightened procedure.
What is needed is a state-wide
organization of university-based
professionals dedicated to
employing whatever
informational and/or political
persuasion will bring about more
reponsible pratices.
Presumably the American
Association of University
Professors, the American
Federation of Teachers and the
National Society of Professors
have views equally as
enlightened as those of the
spokesman from the University
Professors for Academic Order.
It would be nice to see
something in the Alligator from
thsc other organizations as well.
RICHARD R. RENNER
Professor
private property, can only be
effected by the implementation
of the political theories of Jose
Antonio Primo de Rivera in
terms applicable to conditions in
this country. In short, only
Passed up again
Editor:
The Alligator recently
reported a proposal by Dr. Louis
A. Gaintanis to allow University
College students who made a
D or an E in a course (not
exceeding five hours) to repeat
the course, receive the higher
grade and delete the lower grade
from their record.
I support the proposal
presented to the Council of
Academic Deans by Dr.
gaintanis, but not the manner in
which it was done.
If the plan is to apply to
students in University College,
then the merits of the plan
should be debated and discussed
by the faculty and students of
University College before a
proposal of this nature is sent to
the Council of Academic Deans
and subsequently to the
University Senate.
Since this revised grading
system will profoundly affect
the students in University
College, the proposition should
have first been referred to the
University College college
council. The college council is a
deliberative body representing
both students and faculty in
University College and has
the power to recommend changes
and proposals to the Dean of
University College. The Council
fSk kn>w Gilbert, sometime*! s.
/ boot get yaof Comm arc oncdf \
/ tn fo'ij public, viays -that os )
persons. oaj\ i£ll dig -the humor /
and empasston of- r/teryday life? j
\ And here you arc trying fe deny J
V and
Th* Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1. 1973,
through the realization of the
Falanges program for Fascist
neo-democracy can the
American people stand fast in
the defense of all the values
which they hold dear.
presently has items on its agenda
which are closely related to the
problem of grades.
The students and faculty most
directly affected by changed
regulations have been by-passed
too often in the past by the
administration of the University,
and this procedure should not go
unchallenged.
JULIAN PLEASANTS
Chairman
University College College Council
( *\
LETTERS POLICY
Letters must:
t Be typed, signed,
double-spaced and not exceed
300 words.
Not be signed with a
pseudonym.
Have addresses and
telephone numbers of writers.
Names will be withheld only if
writer shows just cause. The
editor reserves the right to edit all
letters for space.
Writers may submit longer
essays, columns or letters to be
considered for use as Speaking
Out" columns. Any writer
interested in submitting a regular
column is asked to contact the
editor and be prepared to show
samples of his work.
afer dll, cartor charaLterb ")
V m hvmn toof s'
F=\ El T4fc>TU*r tfflZ.
PRtetOH
Page 9
Page 10
l, Th. Independent Floride Alligetor. Thundey, February 1,1973
ARAM A WiM tOL G&IC mj i
n I.. T I n JMr aljLll kI \ EBM# THESE FANTASTIC J SCOO f A SQ99 |
\A| F /\J A 1 PMlllp iBUM ,r0..cJ.r. ( 7
vnLL A jl \ nulillJ I RSS3BW good thru
\ V ft 0,X,, OA I, NO ]\
/ FAMILY it PRICES GOOD WED. NOON JAN. 31 THRU WED. NOON FEB. 7
Wilt BREAD JL#s J /13\ llP ,on I
fH" 4-88j§Kr tea bags
* "T* or more parch... ci,attli
Steak .. s l 7 //'A'l'% ioo-ct. || ||l
Steak?. e *1" \ // yr In < PKG
Steak l* MILWAUKEE \ WAi |U (W| M | I *MOW PAPER SAVi 12c VAN CAMP
wo..ANDusdacho.ce 8 c
ieaK i I I ** I t/ j §wi vu mcim ** vf 7 ** van caaap
l 6 '.Rflc/// w} 1 Tissue .3tSS'BB' Beenee Weenees 5 Ss 88'
_ "t* .co,JNw/ Tissue .. 388' Margarine 5-'BB'
TOP ROUND O *£l- THRIFTY MAID LUNCH SAVE 10. DEEP SOUTH
(TEAK hunts P wos Meat 2t 88 e Mayonnaise 2 88 e
iJIEMU Tomato Paste.... 2 9 c s,u v Au
1 mNrs phud Pancake F10ur.... 2£& 88 c Liquid Detergent. 2 88 c
I omatoes 3 can *l swhthiart aupurposi
aal leto 7c Fabric Softener VJrB8 c Astor Oil 88 c
W.kTCom 7 4 AN *l 00 Pears 3 88e Salad Dressing ... 3 !s ff8 c
green chant
r* Peas with Onions... Si 29 c lfle ...
StPdkc *1 79 ROBEYS SHOESTRING OAVC IO SAVE 46C
w-D brand usda choice beef Potatoes 39 c THRIFTY MAID V*STOKELY
Steak.. *1 Bath Soap 2is 39' Cl I/* A D TmSw AATf 11 i>
Steak ooc Dish All 79' JUWHII IM VAUUI
jT6uK L TT PIUSBURY INSTANT ~ _J| .. ..
SAVE 20c WD BRAND USDA CHOICE PotfltOP<; L£*Q C Ul with S7JO er awre gurcham exaludlag aigamtlm Ult wltfc,s7.so or £'*
BEEF WHOLE N.Y. STRIPS 16 TO 20 LB. UIUIUCo 7 C 7
AVO. CUT A WRAPPED FREE CUT FOR FRENCH'S INSTANT B
Steaks *1" Potatoes *Ss; 37' /W
Roast.. 99' Club Crackers sl' C i B
.osHHisL BBK 32.0*. il(|[
ROUND EXTRA LARGE ||| MB BAGS W BOTTLES
ROAST L 111 SAVE 45c ORANGE & LEMON LIME
ri 5 rn, iB jm Gatorade.... 4 88 c
mrs. filbert's 4 w/$7.50 or mere purchase excluding cigarettes
Lg | ooN MARGARINE save 32c van camp
??-svtf T 385 Bfic n Pork & RoaiK A ns* ftft c
Roast l 4 Tomato Sauce 8 88' IWI UUlilia .|1 OO
,^rr WOACMO,CI thrifty maid SAVE 37c STOKELY CUT vl
Roast.. *1" Stewed Tomatoes... 3ss 88* I) m AA/>
w.O BRAND USDA CHOICE BEEF SAVE 17. CBACXIN 0000 is* |irAA|| 1C AM M4* W' 16-OZ. WWC
S, $43. Saltines 3-.BB' VlUCll DcQllS J CANS OO
giCUK) IS. £ SAVE 12. CRACKIN' 0000 tl&JmZ '.BfeT
..and ,uri Toaster Pastries .... 3: 88 c '"tegm SAV c SIOI
ground HatyssKr. Kernel Corn ..5a 88 e
nPPP SAVE 10. DIXIE DAKUNO RAISIN V # 0
yd." Cinnamon Buns 2 88' iHB&r save ,2, van c*p
3,a. M ~eca,, Bunr 2ag M BT Chili & Beans 3 88 c
L (save 130 N.W. 6th ST. 3421 W. UNIVERSITY BLVD.
u> | 30' 1401 N. MAIN ST. U.S. HIWAY 41 N. in High Springs
fTOP VALUE STAMK
ON PURCHASES TOTALING
s lo to s l4"
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES TOP VALUE STAMPS
*
PRIgS 6000 WED. WOON JAM. 31 THRU WfP. NOON FEI. 7
W -D BRAND U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' QUICK FROZEN
\ YOUNG BROAD BREASTED DELICIOUS
Turkeys
TURKEY WITH RIRS v 18 LBS. A
Breast 79 c K jCE
TURKEY WINS! OR
Drumsticks .. 39 c
QUART 111 sue ID HICKORY
Smoked Ham 88 c
SUNNYIANO THIN
Sliced Bacon 69*
SUNNYIANO ROU
Pork Sausage 79*
C BACKIN' AOOD
Canned Biscuits .... 10*
IRISH SOSTON RUTT
Pork Steaks 10 £.7*7
'>*; si.". t
IRISH PORK
Spareribs 5 £.7*4
IRISH IROZIN IISH
Grouper Fillets ..... 99*
W BRAND U.S. CHOICE NEW YORK STRIP
Steaks
l iUrt BISCUITS
|U Avo :10 c
Ml :
i TmiiffU # I
w
SAVE 28c STOKELY SLICED
Green Beans. 4 88 c
SAVE 32c THRIFTY MAID
Tomatoes.... 6 88 £
SAVE 12c JUMBO KLEENEX
Towels 3 ous 88 c
SAVE 50c ARROW GIANT
Detergent... 2 |88 c
Limit 7 with $7.50 or morn purchase axcluding cigarattao
SAVE 45c THRIFTY MAID SLICED
Peaches 4 88 c
m mm mm mm mm mi mm mm mm w
f E XTRAI;
TOP VALUE STAMPS 1
ON PURCHASES TOTALING >
s ls JZ, j
GOOD THRU PER. 7 I
AT YOUR LOCAL WINN-DIXIE
- -- -- --------'---------J
W-D BRAND USDA CHOKE RIIP BONELESS
Chuck Steaks 5 ~6
w-o BRAND USDA CHOKE BEEP BONELESS
Cubed Steaks 5 ££*B
W-D BRAND COOKED
Sliced Ham .i *1
W-0 BRAND SUCtO
All Meat Bologna 75*
TARNOW WHOU HOD ROLL
Pork Sausage 99 c
COPELAND SIICID COOKID
Corned Beef *1 4V
FRESH PROZtN PISH
Trout Fillets .. 89*
4 130 N.W. 6th ST. 3421 W. UNIVERSITY BLVD.
* 1401 N. MAIN ST. U.S. HIWAY 41 N. in High Springs
Quantity Rights
fittENtd
W, HNJIE STORES. INC.
COPVEIOHT ltj
PIIISEURY LAYER
Cake Mixes 2 Sr79*
PIIISEURY RTS
Frostings 57 c
SWEET 10 UOUIO ... Hot SI 29
Sweetener. .<&Ie89 c
PIIISEURY INSTANT .10 PK *9c
Breakfast 59 c
TIPPY CAKE MIXES *-. OR
Frosting Mix ...... 2 33 c
DREAM WHIP
Topping ; 51 c
BETTY CROCKER PUDGE
Brownie Mix £r68 c
buttermilk baking mix
Bisquick 72 c
W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE
CHUCK ROAST
1 78 c I
WHnRBRRRMRMHM.
W-D BRAND USDA OR. 'A* FRESH
FROZEN WHOLE FRYING
CHICKENS
urn MM JA
YOUR
TREIZER LB. If
DAWN PBESH MUSHROOM
Steak Sauce .. can 10*
FRENCH'S
Brown Gravy 20*
SUNSWEET
Prune Juice ...om63 c
OCEAN SFRAY
Cranberry Juice .... OTTIE 63*
Pa&y SpecfaA
SUPERBRANO
Cream Cheese ... 3 & s l
SUPERBRAND
Cottage Cheese 2 aip 85*
SUPERBRAND MILD DAISY STYLE
Cheddar Cheese ... 99 c
KRAtrS
Cheez Whiz % 65 c
BORDEN'S SINGLY WRAPPED AMERICAN SUCES
Cheese Food 89 c
TROPICANA
ORANGE
JUICE
3 89 c
U. B. N*. I VINT VUI
Regular Potatoes .. 10 79*
PUSH
Florida Oranges.... 5 49*
VINE
Ripe Tomatoes 39*
PIRM HIADB
Fresh Lettuce 15*
PRIBN
Green Cabbage .. R 2 HIAOb39 C
OIORDIA
Sweet Potatoes -3 .** 48*
PRISH
Temple Oranges 10 >- 69*
Jfm Independent Florida Alligator. Thursday. February 1.1973.
RED DELICIOUS WESTERN
APPLES
8-88*
FROZEN
FOOD
SALE
THRIFTY MAID
Ice Milk
SAVE 30*
188*
SAVE 17c POtY BAG SHOCSTHNG
Potatoes 4- 88*
CHECKERBOARD MACARONI B
Cheese 4 88 c
DIXIE WHIP
Toppiog3 ... 88*
COZY KITCHEN. GERM. CHOC. DfVIIS
POOO OB COCONUT COLONIAL
Cake... <£BB*
PAN BEDI HUSH
Puppies 3 l
RICH'S CHOCOLATE
Eclairs 2 88*
OCOMA CHICKIN,
RIIF OR TURKIY
POT
PIES
SAVE 23*
? 88
RICH'S COPPER
Rich 2 ots. 88 c
TASTE O' SEA SMAU PISH
Sticks .2S&BB*
STANDARD SLICED STRAW-
Berrios 3 is 88*
BYRONS SANDWICHES |
Bar-B-Q is 88*
BYRONS PORK
Bar-B-Q Sx 88*
JENO BAKE B BREAK HAMBURGER
Pizza >Vo 88 c
DIXIANA POLY BAG COLLARDS.
MUSTARD OR TURNIPS W/BOOTS
Greens 3 c
DIXIANA POLY BAG GREEN
Poos 2 .BB
OCOMA CHICKEN,
SAIIBRURY OR TURKEY
Meat Dinners
SAVE 30*
3 88 c
DIXIANA STEW POLY BAG
Vegets.2 £l*
DIXIANA POLY BAG CUT
Corn.. 2 88 c
PEPPf RIDGE FARM APPIX
Tarts 3 &88*
MORTON BLUEBERRY, RAISIN OR
CINNAMON APPLE MUFFIN
Rounds 2 ~88*
TfOTTieS I fkoi 00
MORTOM AFFLB, CHERRY.
REACH OR COCONUT
Fruit Pies
SAVE 30*
3 88 c
Page 11
CLASSIFIEDS
Page 12
!, The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
C FOR SALE >
component stereo! Dynaco amp
Thorens turntable, 4 speakers,
NIKON FtN 50 f 1.4, 28 f 3.5, & 200
f 4 Nikkon lens call 373-3489 after 6
p.m. (a-st-71-p)
HEY DUDE! need some wheels?
Honda CB-450, really sharp, new
brakes, chain, engine, $650,
378-8260 or 376-1271 ext. 253 days
(a-st-71-p)
5-speed mens bicycle; small frame,
generator light Included, S4O; ca
Diane afternoons or evenings at
373-5088 (a-3t-73-p)
rismiP
NEW & USED
/ rwj COMPLETE UNr Os
( '( GUNS
/ /I reloading components
I -* mviNtosT ovnr sco cus
. sexuNinon
BUY SELL TRADE REMIW
I I 466-3340 MiCANorr |
\ HAPPY BECKWITH-CUN DEALER /
Q"'
VOLKSWAGEN
u VW REPAIR SHOP
Complete repairs and
£ service on Volkswagens c/>
co SHOP & COMPARE 3
* PRICES THEN COME>>
, BACK TO US! £
iffTjflPV 535 sw 4th Ave.
> 376-9381
V one SW A G E N
B Chinese Restaurant t
j- Open daily 5-10 p.m.
GREAT FOOO-GREAT PRICES
2409 SW 13th St. 372-6801
r w
I MENTION THIS ADI I;
| & receive 10% off on !|
!| all parts AC r Gates,
1 1 Neihoff and MORE
!| HULLS !!
j! AUTO PARTS & j!
;! REPAIR Open 8 to 5 ![
| Mon. thru Fri. Open !j
!; 8-12 Sat. 1314 S. !;
!; MAIN St. 372-1497 !;
1 1 ......... mm m m
TUCKERS AUTO SERVICE |
"THE STUDENTS FRIEND I
10%
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS I
We repair alt makes and models ||
CORVAIR SPECIALIST I
Compare Our Prices & Honesty I
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED I
Free Lube Job with Oil & Filter Change If
1031 South Main Ph. 378-853? I
<[ te __FORSALE>
68 bulck wildcat excellent condition
convertible all accessories call
373-6391 after five low mileage, also
10 speed brand new never ridden
(a-5t*73-p)
for sale Panasonic rs-803-us Btrack
recorder & player, 26x15x12 speaker
boxes with 12 jensens & horn
tweters also Btrack tapes call
392-8226
CUSTOM MADE JEWELRY Gold,
Silver. Diamonds & all real
gemstones. Complete Lapidary
facility. Sculpture In gems.
Originality, Workmanship, &
Materials unconditionally guaranteed.
Highest allowance on your old
jewelry. By appointment only
OZZIE 373-3894 (a-28t-55-p)
Phillips 212 turntable sllO. sony
tc-255 reel to reel tape deck $125.
call joe! 378-8491 after 5:00
(a-st-74-p)
BSA motorcycle 60 500 cc $550 and
VW van 6l 67 engine new paint job
new tires $ must get rid of $250
376-9044 (a-st-74-p)
1968 honda cbl6o runs great,
excellent condition only 10,000
original miles just tuned, new battery
& tires, excellent transportation!
$346.00 call bill at 376-9968 after 6
p.m. (a-3t-74-p)
black $ white tv portable only 6
months used call 378-1024
(a-2t-74-p)
Scott Solid State Stereo Amp. SIOO.
GE Super Trimline 400 Stereo
Record Player $35 Call 373-1121
(a-2t-74-p)
motorcycle helmet, bell, size 6 7/8,
like new sls; glass top table, perfect
for drafting 2** ft x s!fe t $35, will
haggle, 378-5552 or 373-3859
(a-st-74-p)
1 bed double box springs a foam
mattress sls call after 6 378-9057
(a-2t-75-p)
Fender Tremolux amp and speaker
$175 call Walt at 392-7956 or
378-5138 (a-lt-75-p)
Waterbed king size, frame, $35. TV
antenna and booster S3O. Washer and
dryer both for SIBO. call 373-6987
(a-lt-75-p)
Bose 501 speakers SIBO, 6 months
new, can handle 100 watts rms
apiece, phone 392-7210
BURMESE KITTENS for sale. 8
weeks old, litter trained, adorable.
Papers available. $45. call 378-3746
after 4pm or weekends (a-st-75-p)
1966 Open Kadett Good Mech.
Lond. $295 New Clutch Muffler
Starter 5 Gpod Tires Call 376-7625
(a-st-75-p)
BUILDING 25x90' in Newberry nice
for small business or warehouse will
rent or lease call after 6:00p.m.
378-4261 empty will negotiate sate
(a-st-75-p)
Brand new portable Brother
typewriter. Full features, 10 year
guarantee, sll9 376-0089 (a-st-75-p)
Craig 2605 electronic notebook,
miniature portable cassette re c.
3V?xs/2xl/* in. just weeks old. new
SIOO now 80 call 378-2152 ifnoans
373-2465 (a-2t-75-p)
J V
C FOR RENT >
lirge rooms student rooming house
for older men $66.50 includes util,
kitchen washer dryer a.c. ch parkino
lease 376-6652 378-8122 walk
campus (b-10t-68-p)
ACTIHIfIES
PRESERVATION HALL
JAZZ BAND
FRIDAY-FEB. 2-8:OOP.M. STUDENTS $1.50
JWRU BALLROOM gen. public $2.00
TICKETS ON SALE AT
CONSTANS THEATRE
GP<3&
!> r
m&~j
"!
HIGHEST RATING!"
-KATHLEEN CARROLL. N Y Daily News
COLUMBIA PICTURES P'nts l
A FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT FILM
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 4
700 PM
9:30 PM
50<
UNION AUDITORIUM
"AWARENESS
GROUP
led by DR. WALT BUSBY ... A group I
experience that provides the opportunity for
individuals to get to know themselves as well
as others
MONDAY ...FE8.5...7:00P.M. I
CALL 392-1655 |
FOR RESERVATIONS |
II man I
I missing HOa Is 3SR A I
I Two I
an alan j Dakuia e 1
DOnoviSion technicolor
J fr om corner bros a k.nney leisure serv.ce rjj^l
M?COdv]
II PRE-SALE FRIDAY
I 12:304:30PM2nd I
I FLOOR BOX OFFICE I
Yoga
FRIDAY MORNINGS
10:00 A.M.
-12:30 PM.
Instructor
Ms. CAMEON
Charge:
SB.OO
Register in the
JWRU Program
OFFICE, RM. 310
gator classifieds
( FOR RENT V
s
1 ,br. apt, air conditioned, carpets
private patio, near law school and
Westgate Shopping Center. Nice and
quiet, lease through Aug. $l4O
373-1376 (b-40t-69-p)
hawaiian village: avail now july 31
turn 2-bdrm apt: pool, dish, Indry, 2
baths, ac, cable. $240 mo. sublease
378-5905 (b-st-72-p)
SUBLET MARCH. 2 bedroom
townhouse. landmark, call 373-3254
(b-st-73-p)
A NOW!
AT: 2:25 4:50 7:15 9:40
mcqueen
7 MacGR AW
THE
GETAWA N/
SUBURBIA
DRIVE-IN
ACROSS FROM MALL
is it as good as The Godfather ?!
The answer is ...no, it is better/' I
MBC TV (Chicago)
The /flw I
Valachi /Ijv I
Papers Mjjk J
OtNO OC LAUWCNTMS
praaants HV^IfiPPP
Charles bronson
UNO VENTURA
-aTERENCE YOUNG film THE VALACHI PAPERS' 7^^^*^- 3^^
JOSEPH WISEMAN JIUIRELANO
WALTER CHIARI GERALD S 0 LOUGHUN IB
AMEDEO NAZZAAI Sc-aanpia* by STEPHEN GELLER r=ri
lari an Nm book Tha Valachi Fapara" JK.
W PETER MAAS ay RIZ ORTOLANI I
Miflatf
AT 9 P.M. ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON
"808 & CAROL & TED & ALICE
mmbbhhbbhbbbbbbbmbbhbbbmi
Aquarium Sale
10 gal. All glass $4.99
20 gal. $11.99
25 + 30 gal. $22.95
Biozonics Power Filter
$9.99 reg. $16.98
Silent Giant Air Pump
$9.99 reg $15.99
OVER 6,000 FISH TO CHOOSE FROM
Love For Sale
11218 N. Main Street
[Gainesville Shopping Center
"ROYAL park I
tmema 1&2 i
3702 NEWBERRY RD PHONE 373-4277 |
\ FOR RENT S
female for own room in comfortable
apt 32-43 month 1239 nw 9 ave by
centre theatre immediate occupancy!
call 378-2878 or 378-7096
(D-st-74-p)
need to sublet room at the Place pool
sauna one block from campus V*
February rent free 376-8187 Call Art
after 6 or leave number (b-st-74-p)
1 br apt furnished air & heat $125
mo paid thru feb 15 378-0333
(b-st-74-p)
AT: 3:10 5:25 7:40 9:55
JON VOIGHT
and
BURT REYNOLDS
> ** M ttfSfjKUfflHjHMf
WMA
7 BIG DAYS
ADMISSION SI.OO
AT 7 & 11 PM
The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1, 1973,
NOW! C%
(^^^JjOIUIENT^
Female roomate own room in small
house near medcenter. 55/month and
A small utilities call 378-9848 or
372- after spm. (b-st-73-p)
own room 3 blks from campus,
liberal male student. $65 complete.
373- (b-3t-73-p)
1 br., air conditioned, carpets, private
patio, 2 pools, unfurnished. Rent
only $125/month. Beautiful grounds.
372-6411, after 6:00 p.m. (b-lt-74-p)
spacious single room to rent In four
bedroom apartment SIOO. month
including utilities call Lynn at:
376-8237 day only. (b-st-75-p)
male or female roomate to share
2bdm apt. 69.38 per month plus V?
utilities only 2 blks from campus
YOU MUST SEE IT call Roy
376-1939 after 6p.m. (b-3t-75-p)
one bedroom townhouse, french
quarter, furnished or unfurnished,
quiet, spacious courtyard, call
378-6517 (b-10t-75-p)
2 brd apt fdir rent. OBrien apts, 501
nw 15th ave, phone 373-1857. rent
$l7O per mo. ideal for married
couples, grad students, etc. come
by.(b-10t-75-p)
r ~ v
x WANTED >
PRIVATE BEDROOM and bath in
new mobile home. Spacious, many
luxuries and very quiet. S6B mo.
378-2079 or 372-8611 (C-st-71-p)
SHARP LUGGAGE set wanted,
fairly new. also set of STANLESS
STEEL COOKWARE. 372-3875
anytime Diana (c-10t-61-p)
ROOMATE WANTED female share
lbd apt. near campus all convinlences
$74 call 372-6513 available NOW
(c-3t-73-p)
roommate own room SSO + V*
utilities no hassles call kay at
378-8766 after 5 or 392-6178 during
day 1325 nw 3rd place close to
campus (c-3t-74-p)
ROOMATE to share modern,
spacious, two bedroom apartment
with maid UF student; $65/mo V 2
util. 905 nw 40th ave 378-2079
(c-3t-74-p)
Roommate needed for own room in
brand new house in the country
included central air & heat & a
library call chuck 373-6745
(c-st-74-p)
ROOMMATE WANTED SSO + *A utl.
share room gatortown call 373-0189
no hassels about anything (c-3t-74-p)
roommate wanted, own private large
bedroom in trailer. $ 60 month call
373-2356 (c-2t-75-p)
share Ig. bedroom w/bath in house
with central heat & air, carpet,
private pool, share groceries &
housework 75/mo &
378-8971 (e-2t-75-p)
HELP WANTED__^
organist/pianist for established
progressive soul & light rock group
doing college one-nighters & clubs,
steady employment 378-8156
(e-st-74-p)
I OftAGON LAOV
I presents...
Page 13
11 Starts TOMORROW!
[ lots M. W l)H 1/1 I
He has I
100 ways to ki11... I
and they all work!
LAST DAY I H I 1
POSEIDON
ADVEN
ture
I United
,pgj££h I
&
EEClujl Starts TOMORROW! I
ACADEMY AWARD I
WINNER I
LAST DAY NOW IN ENGLISH I
H WF|MCoiitinis
& Holidays
M _I 11 lSv V Y
WwfrwWi wWfflTlPrf |
H*I;I|IT M -J -Mttj
| 111 W. Welvfsy in, ]
CHICKS I
LAST day IN CHAINS I
LAST HOUSE Nothing behind
on the left but Prison Bars... I
Nothing ahead I
GATOR CLASSIFIEDS
x HELP WANTED >
Xmas lave you in debt? Seriously
willing to work? write P.O. Box
12828 for interview appointment.
(e-4t-74-p)
part or full time distributors and
supervisors needed unlimited
opportunity. Apply In person 2220
sw 34th st. Piccadilly apts. clubhouse
8:00 p.m. (e-2t-74-p)
Are you a grad student, married with
children and need extra income? You
can work out of your home and earn
extra money. Call 376-0089
(e-2t-75-p)
wanted: waitress A bartender full &
part-time day A night shift must be
21 apply bench A bar 1222 wuniv no
calls (e-st-75-p)
Now accepting applications for
summer Camp Counselors at
Pinewood for boys and girls in
Hendersonville, N. C. conservative
clean out students apply to Box
4585, Normandy Branch, Miami
Beach, Fla. 33141 (e-10t-75-p)
/
C AUTOS >
Ford Galaxle 500 66, 352 cid, v 8
engine, radio, new tires, new battery,
low mileage, top condition, $499.
373-1245. (g-st-72-p)
72 opel rallye assume balance $2050
credit union call tom 392-1919 or
3 92-1730 8:00-4:00 weekdays
(g-st-73-p)
65 Dart GT conv. 273 vB, air ps pb
radio htr automatic, buckets, good
tires $550 Tom 378-9856 (g-4t-73-p)
70 Z2B camaro, equipped for racing,
headers, air shocks, mags, hispark
ignition, new engine, traction bars,
excellent shape call mike 372-7385
64 VW runs good radio good tires
sound mechanically asking $350 call
3 72-9303 ask for doug hobbs
between 5-7 p.m. (g-3t-74-p)
1966 ford custom 4 door v 8 air
condition!. power, radio 6,000
rriiles sine tglne overhaul 378-6750
S6OO (g-3? .4-p)
;
71 Duster 340 top condition runs
great many racing extras included
new tires new clutch new Ingitlon
need tuition money Chris 392-8401
(g-st-75-p)
VW squareback *66; engine needs
work, new paint $499 call 373-2550
after 5 Oclock
J oo |
1' wwvKrr I
PIUS 1
"STAR 8:48
Sandy SPANGLER Duncan I
MARKETING MAJORS
spring quarter graduates
ijt American Cxprea* Co.
1 r !'
An international organization employing more than 5000 people is proud to
announce expansion plans for its Southern Regional Operations Money Card
Center.
'/ v A it
Ihe American Express Card is the most widely used travel and entertainment card
in the World having centers in New York City, Mexico City, Haywards Heath
England, Phoenix, Arizona and MIAMI.
These expansion plans create opportunities for two marketing representatives.
ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWING, FRIDAY FEB. 2
For information and appointment call
CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT CENTER
392-1601
e American express Co.
(an equal opportunity employer)
Page 14
i, The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
C PERSONAL
student group to europe this summer
swks make friends no hassle
with transportation or rooms time
for what you wan: to do. info.
392-8466 (j-10t-68-p)
Wedding invitations $11.50 per 100.
Cliff Hall Printing 1103 N. Main.
. Rubber stamps, resumes, programs
business cards, offset printing.
(j-20t-55-p)
Co-eds Facial Hair removed forever,
fast, low cost gentle hair removat.
EDMUND DWYER, Electrologist
102 N.W. 2nd Ave. Call 372-8039 for
appointment. (J-ft-54-c)
Natural Foods. Vitamins, Hi-Pro
products, yogurt makers & juicers.
Sunflower Health Foods. 7 W.
University. Downtown, 378-8978
(J-29t-59-p)
Tailoring quality work men and
ladies alterations 27 yrs with local
mens store business phone
373-0253. Home phone 376-3019.
6-South Main St. (j-st-64-p)
Strawberry, Blueberry, Raspberry,
Peach Fat free, slim turn,
good to eat. Are you with it? Yes we
are! Yogurt, Yogurt, RAH RAH
RAH!!! Get it at Mother Earth, 604
N.W. 13th St. 378-5224 (j-4t-73-p)
POETRY WANTED for poss.
inclusion in cooperative volume.
Include stamped envelope. Editor,
Box 4444 c, Whittier, Ca 90607
(J-3t-73-p)
Volunteers wanted to participate in
an interesting study of how we
perceive ourselves and others, earn
$2.00 for an hour of your time Call
392-0149 between 1-3 p.m.
(J-st-73-p)
attention art students interested in
selling any of your work please call
378-6345. this week, after 6 p.m.
(J-4t-74-p)
The initiation Into the house of Tep
; is the 72 pledge classs first great
step Congratulations new Tep
brothers love your little sisters
(j-lt-74-p)
afghan hounds apricot female, shots
akc reasonable price call 481-2871 or
481-2751 after 6pm. ()-st-74-p)
BOWLING FANS!! well miss pink A
black, yellow A green, Abrown A
grey from lanes 11 A 12 late mon.
nlte. please call us at 378-5886 we
were having trouble concentrating on
lanes 7 A 8 and would like to have
more time to get used to such
distraction 'Mt-75-p)
Brownie-Je t* aime plus que hier,
molns que domain Love. Strawberry
Hill (J-lt-75-p)
"When 1 was a self-made man
thought I knew it all, then..."
continued Saturday
night-8:00-auditorlum-Jim Ward,
keyboard gospel rhythm A blues
(]-2t-75-p)
lost 1-18-73 german Shepard, female,
black w/brw paws, near Plaza, was in
heat reward for any information
leading to return call 373-7170 or
373-7235 (l-2t-74-p)
REWARD for return of small tan
terrier lost tag. no. 4045 call
378-8392 (l-st-73-p)
LOST: Navy Blue Jacket Lost in
Vicinity of Larsen Engineering Bldg.
Last Wed., CALL 376-3990 After
1:30 (l-3t-75-p)
N SERV ML__^
L.S.A.T. COMPLETE REVIEW
COURSE Smell Group Instruction by
Specialists In Their Respective Fields
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION IS
HIGHLY CQMPETITIVE BE
PREPARED!! AMERICAN
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES
3 7 2-3922 1-305-651-3880
(m-st-63-p)
PROFESSIONAL TYPING
SE IVICE now has exclusive
Magnetic Card Typewriter.
Dimension, constancy, error free,
higher quality, typing. Dictation by
telephone and excellent copying
services top. Call 376-7160.
(m-55t-58-p) I
LEARNING, SELF-HYPNOSIS
effective study A better memory
Donald G. Pratt Hypnotist Licensed
373-3059 Certified. (m-10t-58-p)
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term
papers, reports Fast Call anytime
372-6767 Phyllis Negotiable rates
(m-3t-74-p)
WERE WIRED FOR SIGHT AT
UNIVERSITY OPTICIANS. 535
S.W. 4th AVE. 378-4480 (m-ft-54-p)
take It off, take it all off your Income
tax at federal accountants and tax
consultants 35 n. main st. $5 and up
378-5552 mon. thru sat. (m-st-72-p)
TYPING term papers, reports,
theses, dissertations, fast, accurate,
LOW rates. SCM electric. Call Audrey
373-6105. anytime. (m-3t-72-p)
GOOD TYPIST accurate prompt
expd thesis disser. Term paters
underwood elec type call Thelma
Rose 373-1984 9-5 or 373-1429 after
6 (m-llt-75-p)
ONE of the finer things of Ilse-Blue
Lustre carpet cleaner. Rent electric
shampooler sl. Lowry Furniture Co.
(m-lt-75-p)
TYPING Term papers,
theses,dissertations, etc, fast,
accurate, low rates, close to campus,
call Audrey 373-6105, anytime
(m-3t-75-p)
will do typing at home call Cherie
Francis phone 376-2805 (m-st-75-p)
IMItSI fPGI 1:40 3:40 5:45 7:45 9:55 J
[n.W. 13th STREET and
I 23rd BOULEVARD y t
[ WALT DISNEYS
o f 1 And I
B OR y BAREFOOT I# I
Matthau/Burnett I
23rd BOULEVARD | ", .A.
1:40 3:40 5:45] (F 3 *lYTllllc
7:50 9:55 N All about love and marriage! jWffl
ALLIGATOR CLASSIFIEDS
To place classifieds, use the form below, and strictly adhere to the
following instructions: Minimum charge is $1.25 for 4 lines. For each
additional line add 35 cents. Multiply the totel by the number of days the
ad to run, then subtract the discount. The discount below is applicable
ONLY if the ad is run in coneacutive days. THERE ARE NO REFUNOSI
The acceptance of payment with acbertising copy does not constitute a
binding agreement on the Florids Alligator to publish said copy. The
Florida Alligstor reserves the right to act as sole judge of the suitability of
any or all advertising copy submitted for publication, and the right to edit,
revise, daisy, or reject any advertising copy.
Mail the ad, with remittance (check preferred) to: Alligstor Classifieds,
Room 330, Reitz Union, Gainesville, Florida, 32601.
Deadline -3:00 p.m. 2 days prior to starting day
DO NOT ORDER BY PHONE
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Buildings tell the story : ; ,-- >
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UF teaching hospital recognizes
memory of former Sen. Shands
(EDITORS NOTE: This is
the final part of a five part series
on UF buildings.)
By DALE THOMAS
Alligator Staff Writer
Former state senator William
A. Shands died recently, but his
memory lives on at the UF
teaching hospital, which bears
his name.
IHV EXTRA
F ill Wk K GREEN STAMPS
iBB when you
JHJ on
WHHbBBhhB
Eft tlvo
Feb. 1973 ...
I WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF WTH THI. COUPON AND PURCHASE Os | pjlta -TH IH COUPON ANO hCH.., Os | H tH,, COU. D O. I WITH THIS COUPONANO PURCHASE OF I
I | 1 A# aII labnl f kUOiiX I fAJOIIx
20*-off label JJ Vaseline Intensive ; Prell Concentrate j Gillette Gillette Platinum Plus S
Prell Liquid Shampoo JJ Care lotion J Shampoo S Trac II Blades Jj Baser Blades
7-oz. size JJ 15-oz. size J{ V* J| 5-ct. pkg. ij ... .l_
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WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF | Publlx (* ,T M THIS COUPON ANO 7UMCMASK 07 I pSB WITH THlft COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF I SH! WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE Os I SflP WITH TNI. COUPON ANO PURCHASE
lOc-off label ( J ,j j PuWU i Pv^lx
Right Guard {{ Playtex Tampons JJ Johnson's Baby Powder { Ora-Fix Denture Jl Gillette/
Spray Deodorant JJ Regular or Super ij 14-oz. or 24-oz. can Adhesive j! Techmatic Bands {
4-oz. can it 30-ct. pkg. |i i*x.ir.. **_ F.k. 7.1*7*1 }J lVs-oz. size j{ 5-ct. pkg.
(Ex.ir.ft W.A.. F.k. 7, I*7| J j (lx.ir.ft W*.. i.k. 7, I*7*l II j j (lx.lr.ft *<(. F.k. 7. I*7*l | I (lx.ir.ft SF.*.. F.k. 7. t*7*|
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AfterSha S ve >C Lotion JJ Johnson's Baby Lotion jj Man Power jj Pro Tufted S! Colgate J
Regular or Lime || 9-oz. bet. ii Spray Deodorant |j Tooth Brush JJ Toothpaste {
- I 4V4-OZ. size il *.k. 7.1*7*1 j{ 4-oz. can jj Medium, Hard, Soft JJ 7-oz. tube
(x.irM W*d E.fc. 7, I*7*l JJ Jl (1x.1r.. W*., f.k. 7. I*7| || (Ex.lr.ft WW- I.k. 7. I*7*l ,J (lx.ir.ft W.U.. T.k. 7. 1*71)
[[llll^WGreenStampsrflllllll^GreeirstanipslSillllj^WGreenStampsHiliyil^GreeirstampsHllllllJwGreenStampsfS
WITH THIS COUPOII ANO PUACHAM OF J| PUbS( WITH THI* COUPON AND PUACHAU OF | PubS j"" WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF | PubSl WITH THIS COUPON ANO PUNCHASI OF | PUbS e* *" WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF | MRHI
15c-off label jj FDS Feminine Jj 'nard tZtZd !' Wella Herbal ij Listorlne 1
Scope Mouthwash IS Spray Deodorant JJ Rel'Hr fr l Shampoo JJ Mouthwash
J 12-oz.bot. JJ 3-oz. can JJ Regular or Super ~ 4-oz. size J 20-oz. hot.
i (Ix.im W. 4.. F.k. 7. 1*71) || (Ex.ir.. Sk. 7. l7*i | | V-OZ. COO (Ix.ir.ft W(.. S.fc. 7. 1*7) 1 J il M lr.. F.k 7 I*7ll
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... it .. it White Rain Hair Spray i Wella Balsam *1
Johnson s Baby Oil JJ Bmaca Breath Drops JJ Mferdan* ij Unscented, Regular JJ Conditioner
4-oz. or 10-oz. size ij Vs-oz. size JJ Denture Tablets J J or Extra-Hold JJ Regular or Extra-Body
(Upir9iW4., Nb. 7, It7l M llzpirti Wd Nb. 7, 1473) !| 40-Ct. fIZC !! .. J } #
JJ Si WW F.k .7. 1*7,1 JJ 13-oz. can JJ 8-oz. size J
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!' 1 I I
fiNpltol TaklMs Si Sominex Tablets JJ JJ Bufferin Tablets JJ Murine Eye Drops
Vft !l lo ~ 16 .r 31 l. ftlft. 163-cl. pkg. IS-ft. ftift.
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WITH TNI* COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF | PubS WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF | PybllX WITH THIS COUPON ANO PUACHAM OP WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE OF WITH THI* COUPON ANO PUACHAM OF BBl^S
Days Ease j i Ty-D-80l Automatic J j Woolite, Any Package j A||y Co #|., S j Damp Rid Closet
I v Bowl Cleaner iJ Toilet Bowl Cleaner ij Any JJ Filter Packaae Dryer or Refills
llx.lr.ft W*4. F*k. 7, 1*7) J J (lx.ir.ft WU.. F.k. 7, 1*7) J J (lx.ir.ft W '** 7 7 J J (1x.1r.. WW. F.k. 7. I*7*l Any Package
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$1 Or More jj Wear Ever Teflon- jj Spice Island Spices jj Jet Dry jj Kama Laa Penty Hose I
Os Any Candy jj Fry Pan Jj Any Purchase jj Solid or Liquid jj Any Purchase
WW.Pok. 7. I*7ll JJ WO. F.k, 7. 1.7,| ,J (Ex.tr.* Wri. F.k- 7, I*7*l Jj (Sx.,rM ON. Fok. 7. I*7*l Jj
Shands, a UF alumnus, spent
years in public service. He was a
Gainesville city commissioner, a amember
member amember of the State Road
Department, president of the
Gainesville Chamber of
Commerce and influential in
establishing the University
Hospital, as well as serving 18
years as a state senator.
THE CECIL N. WEBB
Pavilion is named for one of the
few people not directly related
with UF in an administrative or
teaching capacity.
Norman Mehroff Hall is
dedicated to the former poultry
husbandry professor who was
with UF from 1924*63. He
became department head of the
Poultry Science division in 1949.
Philip K. Yonge Laboratory
School honors the member of
the Board of Control from
The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973,
w
V'Â¥' j
Shands Teaching Hospital
.. praise for many activities
1905-17 and again in 1921. He
was also an alderman of
Pensacola, a member of the
Board of Public Instruction of
Escambia County and served in
numerous other important
positions in public service.
THE PERCY L. REED
Laboratory is named for a
professor of engineering who
(See 'Buildings/ Page 18)
Page 15
Th indspendsnt Florida Alligator. Thursday. Fabruary 1,1973
Page 16
j 'n \ Be the "First Lady in your home this historic birthday month by serving one
rt. |U|fy / I \ of Washington's or Lincoln's favorite recipes. Create an awnos^ehso
1 KUOIIX / \ our finest tradition, when great men with hearty ap P etl '*
PRICES EFFECTIVE / /America leader
Tatty
Cinnamon Disks.... %!T 37*
OPEN A.M. 9 P.M. MON THRU FRI ftll... Damniilc ,2 z 4c i B [4
9A M TILL 7 P.M. SATURDAY SrfrCUS pkg. Jl S A J
HQmmftfl Marshmallows.... ,# iT 34*
BDBHSI ETV/9 37-
v~iUk £!" T* I*y S-* ,:; 3T Orai.geJ.ice
cimt* ct4c.rr.*. Jlk Licorico Candy.. P k g 37* kac
Potstoos ........... h.* 77* ... u ~ **
U.S. No. 1 French's Genuine
/ j a a Omnk ri Idaho Potatoes...... 10 £, 99*
' uce *- Golden Delicious 4 £49*
EVERYDAY LOW PRICK Carnation \ \
_ ah| a __ #. 1 \ U.S. No. 1 Delicious Florida
'To^wS,*. 1 ? 14 hMffiMQ \J(BM Jwi
Jiffy Cake Mixes ... .Sls- B. Greenroccoli £S 39-
Apple Sauce 30 c ms T G \ jOH i Tasty Tomatoes K.' 39*
cat Food £ls* W AT Fresh Mushrooms -*gg.
EVERYDAY LOW PRICK Cascade Electric Dishwasher
- 20 Tsuyy Flavored largo Sis# Froth
Detergent ;.. 43 c MMOgOA Pineapples 7.V39*
Polski Wyrobs T 47* IMRSigil i^MM
EVERYDAY LOW PRICK Food Storage Bags Ulg|pignmlfldnfli
Glad Baas a dl. 3T c
EVERYDAY LOW PRICEIGIad COttOgO ChOOSO £ 79
Trash Bags P k 9. 73 Mozzarella Cheese .. r'isr
V O Y Wisconsio Cb.oso gar
r\ J I LI Longhorn Cheese .... >" 99*
PUBLIX ( \ Kraft's Sigaatur. traod M J?
MjT&Yfek >V Sharp Cheddar £:**' Ms i ""tj
Margarine U S3'
GainMvilu Ma £££*-; Sr*!* Ja£
SouirCreani *2 37' KHOHOO
f sfiL fill ilMl Sroehfest Clvh Cere Oil
Y3jecan Stria Margarine : 35* c^*.,fi-^.r.
j p Sweet .r iMtttenniik Listerine Antiseptic. .7. s r*
i T r V*;.
Sbl^P^P^-4 IBHiWPIBiIHBPI ""-V quld s ,,
m e T^T^TT^\r! j>,N A>vSa3 r Gr Bath on ,r *9*
wnmNS\ \\ viil H i Cream Tarts srry:.. --- ...
x "*sl ryyHlj 1 j,L- m lirysi Cat Litter b. 6S C euave tnompoo .a. 63*
£-
Coffee Filters *jj! 36 Dentel Cream 3 £r 54*
bTBBBBBBBBI 1 I MMr|BHPVMBpa|H
Tmmiii IThTiTiTiTi ii fm iiTiii mil i?m 7 iTi iiiTiii iiriJ
m
m*mAm:
sct mi. MM >^^SSBBfck
aTiilr Delmonico Steaks... K *2 / food \ HMjpEmMfS^^R
Key Club Steaks .... :r *1 H4fJAH
i Pot Roast 89
JiJjSfg; *MMi I Swi rt Premium Proten Boneless DA W #
rmfH English Cut Roast ... :v. $ 1 \J [V^
Swift Proten
Beef Short Ribs 79* H|MEy|^|
SWIFTS PREMIUM PROTEN
INSPECTED HEAVY WESTERN BEEF SALE
Family Favorite
Delicious Oorman-Style ~ i
Tasty Genoa or
Cuban
&. £. -mamme? 2mmr*t Jfc.
fc OK''\iEli< *< .gpg%gr
'- '* i : iF
.. .- BWH **"" l **"****** Costa Brava Sangria s/5...... sl.29fejpag^
Halibut Steaks r *1" Taylor Dinner Winei/t 9.1 3-59nE|f^|
Mackerel Fillets .... TB9 l ."* 9 5?. i/s h !L_
where l^f
V wjt IX i i
pleasure M m
fi s"J* GAINESVILLE SHOPPING CENTER GAINESVILLE MALL WESTGATE SHOPPING CENTEItH
||||| jy IOM N. Main StTMt I*3o N.W. 13* IM W. Univnily Avow. d 341* SkM gg pp^--^pj^--^(-
jMimm HHIII MHBSBBBm 4JjUJj]AXB Mg|B|^M
PnilHili
WJK JIF :: JB|. Jljr
(niRRniiniMirsfISSVWYWIYVFIVnB^niVVPIiVTVPVITrTIFnHRIHBMBBSIBH^
The Independent Florida Alligator. Thursday. February 1,1573,
Page 17
Page 18
I, The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
Buildings Buildings>""
>"" Buildings>"" 1 l
x FROM PAGE 15
taught at the hydraulics
laboratory. He was a faculty
member from 1920-45 and
acting dean of the College of
Engineering from 1930-32.
Duncan U. Fletcher Hall
commemorates a Florida U.S.
Senator elected in 1900, who
was closely identified with every
stage in the development of
Jacksonville.
The College of Business
Administrations building is
named for its first dean, Walter
J. Matherly, who in 1926 helped
organize that school. He was also
first dean of the University
College.
FRAZIER ROGERS Hall, the
agricultural engineering building,
is named after a UF alumnus
who was an avid sports fan and
timekeeper during the 2os.
Dar McCarty Hall honors the
31st governor of Florida who
died in office. A citrus and beef
grower from Ft. Pierce, he
entered politics as state
representative. He won many
decorations for valor during
World War 11. Elected governor
in 1952, he suffered a heart
attack in February 1953, and
died in September of that year.
Several buddings are named
for UF scientists noted for
research:
Robert C. Williamson Hall
honors an ex-chairman of the
physics department. He carried
out research on the
photoelectric effect and roman
spectroscopy.
Arthur A. Bless
Auditorium, an adjunct of
Williamson Hall, is named for an
original member of the Physics
Department when it was part of
Engineering in 1928.
John R. Benton came to
UF in 1905 as one of five
professors who moved with the
school when it came from Lake
City. He helped lay the
foundation of the College of
Engineering and was the
cofounder of the Florida
Engineering Society. The present
Benton Hall is the second
building of that name; the first
one built in 1911 was torn
down because of an unsafe roof.
Joseph Weil Hall is named
for a man credited with helping
awaken Florida to the potential
of atomic and nuclear research.
During his service as dean in
1941, the Engineering and
industrial Experiment Station
opened.
Alvin P. Black, faculty
I THE Fat Rat sez j
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member for 47 years, was head
of the chemistry department and
gained distinction for his
research in water purification.
Merwin J. Larsen Hall
dedicated to a head of the
Department of Engineering from
1951-65. He came to UF in
1 937 and developed
engineering-education and
research programs.
The Earle B. Phelps
Laboratory commemorates the
author of numerous books on
public health engineering, a
phrase which he coined. He did
research in developing a method
of strength measurement of
sewage and wastes and devised
the first index to measure the
degree of water purity and
polldtion.
o William Bartram Hall was
named for a pioneer botanist
and naturalist who gained fame
when he once described Florida
plants and animals to the king of
England during pre-Revolution pre-Revolutionary
ary pre-Revolutionary War days.
Another name which dates
back to the pre-statehood era is
Mary M. Reid, for whom the
third womens dorm to be built
at UF is dedicated. She was the
wife of the fourth territorial
governor of Florida, Robert R.
Reid.
ANNIE D. BROWARD Hall
honors another gubernatorial
wife, that of Napoleon B.
Broward.
James W. Norman Hall is
named for a professor of
education who came to UF in
1916. He laid the foundation for
the building of the P.K. Yonge
School, and served as an
administrator until 1946, when
he resumed teaching.
Nathan P. Bryan Hall is
dedicated to a former Board of
Control chairman who was in
office at the time the old College
of Law was founded in 1941. He
was a U.S. senator and a circuit
judge, and was known as the
Father of the University Law
School.
THE JOHN F. SEAGLE
Building was named by his sister,
who left the building to UF. It
was once planned as a hotel, but
was never completed for this
purpose.
Jessie Ball DuPont was a
philanthropist and member of
the Board of Control. The
building which houses tlie
Childrens Mental Health unit is
named for her. The Board of
Regents named it in recognizing
her contribution to a broad
program of child care in the
state of Florida.
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Stennis still critical
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen.
John C. Stennis, D-Miss., shot
twice during a holdup in front of
his home, rested in critical
condition at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center Wednesday after
nearly seven hours of surgery
that disclosed no apparent
permanent damage.
Cries of outrage and calls for
strict new legal deterrents to
street crime swept Congress the
morning after Stennis, 71,
Viet fighting down
SAIGON (UPI) Clashes between Communist and South
Vietnamese troops Wednesday dropped to about half the number
reported in the first day of the Vietnam cease-fire.
Political bickering kept cease-fire supervisory teams from
monitoring reported violations.
SOUTH VIETNAMESE military sources said there were 100
incidents reported between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. Wednesday.
There were. 209 incidents reported in the proceeding 24 hours,
between 6 a.m. Tuesday and 6 a.m. Wednesday, compared with 409
incidents during the first 24 hours of the cease-fire.
The Joint Military Commission composed of representatives of
the United States, North and South Vietnam and the Viet Cong
held its first meeting but it was not known whether any substantial
progress was made toward getting the four-nation peace-keeping force
into the field and toward arranging the first release of American
POWs.
UNDER TERMS of the Vietnam peace accord signed last Saturday,
the Joint Military Commission is responsible for negotiating specific
arrangements for evacuation of the POWs and for providing logistics
and transportation for the International Commission for Control and
Supervision (ICCS).
So far, the head of the Viet Cong delegation to the Joint Military
Commission has not arrived in Saigon and there was no word when he
was expected.
The Communists asked that a helicopter be sent to pick up the
delegate somewhere along the Vietnam Cambodia border, but no
map coordinates were given to pinpoint the spot and no helicopter
was sent.
Almost 3,100 persons have died since the cease-fire started at 8
a.m. Sunday, including one American serviceman and 16 civilians,
according to official figures. But sources said the steady drop in the
number and magnitude of the incidents showed the cease-fire was
slowly becoming a reality.
U.S. presses for Laos POW names
WASHINGTON (UPI) Defense Department sources reported
Wednesday U.S. diplomats in Paris have received indications
Communists will soon hand over a missing list of American Prisoners
of War held in Laos.
The Laotian list was omitted from an official POW accounting
North Vietnam provided Saturday at the signing of the Vietnam
cease-fire. Since then, U.S. officials have pressed for it both publicly
and through diplomatic channels.
Perhaps 60 new names might be added to the roster of 610 living
and dead POWs in North and South Vietnam when the Laotian figures
are included, Defense officials believe.
jgrn* HOW DO YOU k h
MS* KEEP THEM DOWN
m 2 f ON THE FARM JT^nJ
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JhJ T A HE-MAN
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chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee and one of
the most respected and
influential members of the
Senlte, was robbed and then
shot Tuesday night by assailants
described by police as two black
youths who immediately fled
the scene*
A spokesman at Walter Reed,
Maj. Frank Garland, said at
dawn after Stennis 6-hour,
35-minute operation that he is
conscious and he is resting
comfortably. His vital signs
remain stable.
Garland said Stennis
condition was very serious,
an Army term he said would be
equivalent to critical at most
civilian hospitals. The
prognosis is guarded, he said.
During the operation which
ended at 3:20 a.m. EST
Wednesday, Garland said,
surgeons removed one bullet
that entered Stennis left thigh
and shattered against a bone,
which did not break.
A second bullet which entered
his left chest, tore downward
through his stomach and
intestine and lodged in the lower
back, was left in place. The
hospital said its presence
creates no problem.
Stennis showed no greater
internal bleeding than is
considered usual for this kind of
wound, Garland said, and there
was no damage to his heart,
lungs, or spine.
Asked if there were
permanent injuries, he replied:
None are apparent, as far as
permanent injury is concerned.
Quake kills 12
in Mexico
MEXICO CITY (UPI)
Mexico Wednesday appeared to
have been spared major damage
and casualties from an
eathquake that shook a large
section of the country with a
force greater than that which
destroyed Managua, Nicaragua,
six weeks ago.
Twelve persons were reported
killed by the quake Tuesday
afternoon, all of them in two
small towns on the central
Pacific coast. Approximately
150 others were reported
injured. Government officials
were still assessing the effects of
the quake.
HEAVIEST damage appeared
to have been in the town of
Gomez Farias in Jalisco state,
which officials said was 40 per
cent destoyed.
The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1, 1973,
: 0488 MJJMifK
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* 200 W. University Ave. / 372-4106
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I Hardback and paperback books marked down up to I
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Page 19
Page 20
I, The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
Serves, entire community, not just UF
Free Aid at Speech and Hearing Clinic
By SHYAM PARYANI
Alligator Staff Writer
The Speech and Hearing
Clinic located on the fourth
floor of the Arts and Sciences
Building, offers assistance
without charge to anyone who
Bt mm y
R SH V,J|
fr jfl '*> Tiffl /, HW
J.B. Mobley, former city manager, dies
J.B. Mobley Jr., former
Gainesville City Manager, died
Tuesday. He was remembered by
associates as a good city
manager during one of
SG info booth
The Student Referral
Program, sponsored by
Student Government, will
open a booth today for
students seeking help for any
problem.
The booth located across
from the Hub, will be open
Monday through Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a
30-day experimental period.
For more information call
Don at 392-6962 or Jim at
392-7199.
Cornwell
<| FRbM PAG£ONE_^:
Wednesday he still did not want
to make a detailed statement.
BUT GRAY did say, I
disagree with many of the
recommendations by the hearing
panel and its recommendations
exceed its jurisdiction.**
The reasons the forestry
faculty recommended denial of
tenure were revealed in hearings
ATTENTION:
Former High School
Keyettes and Key Club
Members!
There will be a meeting
Thursday February 1,1973,
at 7:30 PM,
Room 301 Reitz Union.
WINE FESTIVAL
AND SPAGHETTI ORGY
February 24, 1973
sponsored by Circle K
has a speech or hearing disorder.
It serves the entire community
of Gainesville, not just UF.
Problems handled range from
deafness to inarticulateness.
Although attended by over 80
patients a week, the clinic exists
primarily as a laboratory for
Gainesvilles major periods of
growth.
Mobley served as city manager
from 1937 to 1950. Prior to this
he worked 12 years as assistant
city manager.
I
- Prof to speak
Associate Professor Sam
Bowles from Harvard
University will speak today at
2:30 p.m. in Caiieton
Auditorium.
Bowles,, founder of the
Union of Radical Economy,
will speak on The Iron Fist
of the Invisible Hand: A
Critique of Capitalism;
I
before the senate committee
which began last June. (The vote
of the forestry faculty is secret
as part of procedure).
In the report issued
Wednesday by the senate
committee, the committee said
the evaluation of Cornwells
publication of research articles
were faulty.
THE NUMBER of
publications by a professor is
one of the criteria for deciding
undergraduate and graduate
students majoring in Audiology
and Speech Pathology. Indeed, it
probably would not exist if
there were no students to train,
according to Mrs. Margaret
Pollock, coordinator of the
clinic.
I
Bike ID
Mark Rayfield, left, was among the first of more than 700
students who identified their bicycles with their social security
numbers at a series of "bike days" sponsored by the University
Police "Operation: Identification" program last week. Frank
Valdes, coordinator of the Yulee Area "bike day" watches as
Mark engraves the number with an electric engraver loaned him
by the program. UPD Investigator Gene Gladin sounded a police
siren to draw people to where the bikes were being identified at
several of the "bike days". He called the program a
"tremendous success" so far.
Jennings Area will hold a "bike day" today. Any student, not
just ones living in the area, can have their bicycle identified free.
The process takes fewer than 10 minutes to complete.
For infomation, call the UPD station at 392-1111.
Among his accomplishments
were assisting in organization of
the citys pension plan, bringing
Eastern Airlines to Gainesville
and the establishment of the
City Recreation Department.
. ~4"
whether tenure should be
granted.
The committee said the
evaluation did not include some
54 research articles and 20
general articles published by
Cornwell.
Also, one basis for denying
tenure was that Cornwell did not
complete a formal research
project. The committee said
Cornwell did complete the
research requirement though he
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At present, there are more
than SO graduate students and
20 seniors working at the clinic.
These students are evaluated and
graded by supervisors each
quarter.
STUDENTS ARE required to
work in certain areas during the
Mobley also organized the
City Mangers Association of
Florida and became its first
president. He was a past
president of the National City
Managers Association. Mobley
also helped establish the city
manager form of government in
Vero Beach, and until his
retirement in 1967, served as the
right of way agent for the
Florida State Road Department.
A. Clarence ONeill, a former
associate of Mobley, added that
during his term as city manager,
Mobley executed certain
government-city projects such
as the paving of streets, and (the
beginning of) the WPA. The
WPA was the Works Progress
Administration -a work relief
program designed by President
Franklin Roosevelt for
unemployed workers.
did not complete a formal
project.
THE COMMITTEE finds
that the weight of evidence
shows error in the vote of the
faculty. The faculty had
erroneous material before it as
to research productivity and
took into account personality
factors or judgement on trivial
items in appraising Dr.
Cornwell, stated the report.
In conclusion we find Dr.
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year including practical
language, articulateness, voice,
rhythm and hearing. Mrs.
Pollock revealed, Students
work not only at the clinic but
also at the Medical Health
Center, Veterans Hospital,
Sunland Training Center, and
the public schools of
Gainesville.
Each quarter, students
actually work with several
clients who are appointed to
them under the supervision of
faculty members. Kay
Kuechenmeister, a graduate
student, stated that of all the
people she has for patients, she
most enjoys working with the
kids.
The clinic is mainly financed
by UF. The space in the Arts
and Sciences Building, the
secretary and the utilities are
provided by UF. The clinic is
run by five supervisors who also
teach specific courses at the
university.
Working in the clinic is only
supposed to be a part-time job
but often becomes a full-time
job, expalined Mrs. Pollock.
Many of the students are able to
practice in the clinic through
scholarships and fellowships
from various sources.
SOME OF THE equipment
used in the Clinic is made
possible by grants from the
Office of Education. Ellen
McAneny, a graduate student
working for her Ph.D.,
enunciated the feelings of most
of the members of the clinic
when she said, We need money
for more supplies and secretarial
help. We do a good job with
what we have, but we need more
money. There is only one
secretary for all five faculty
supervisors.
Any student who thinks he
has an auditory or vocal ailment
may take advantage of the clinio
by visiting it on any weekday
between the hours of 8:00 a.m.
and 5:00 p.m.
Cornwell to have definite value
to the university and
recommend to the President that
he seek a new and proper
assignment in which a new group
of colleagues could arrive at a
proper decision on tenure for
Dr. Cornwell, added the report.
Cornwell, after more than a
year of battling for tenure and
after spending about $9,000 in
legal fees, must now await
OConnells decision.
Tlie Independent
Florida Alligator
Tim McKee
... 200 IM
UF swimmers psyched for win
No holding back against Tenn.
By ANDY COHEN
Alligator Sports Writer
At the conclusion of last
season, Bill Strate, the only
graduating senior from the 1972
Gator Swimming Team was
praised as being a good
swimmer. All the good
swimmers are now gone, said
Strate at last years awards
banquet. The only ones left are
the great ones.
Those great ones will get an
ample opportunity to prove
themselves, Saturday afternoon
at 2 p.m. against their
arch-rivals, the Tennessee
Volunteers.
The meet which will be held
in UFs pool is expected to come
down to the last few races.
THE GATORS have had poor
practices all week long. The flu
has greatly hampered our
ip
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John Reeves
... 50 freestyle
practice time, said Head
Swimming Coach, Bill Harlan.
On Saturday we only had six
athletes well enough to swim.
Yesterday was a little better but
still far from perfect.
Harlan is quite sure that all of
his ill swimmers will be ready for
the meet on Saturday.
Tennessee has a very strong
opening relay team, said Harlan
on Wednesday. In fact they
havent lost a duel race in over
five years. This year they should
be as strong as ever.
Harlan sees several crucial
races in the meet. One in
particular is the 200 Individual
Medley, between Olympic Medal
Winner, Tim McKee and
Tennessees former National
Champion, Kendell Prigg. This
should be an extremely close
race, said Harlan.
. .-*' '.T
H9sif* v
INf
i',
vJRr J^Hr\
Bill Harlan
. .. eyes foe
HARLAN ISNT planning on
holding back at all in Saturdays
meet. If were not really
psyched up for the meet, it night
be a long afternoon.
Harlan knows what his team
must do in order to beat
Tennessee and eventually
become SEC champs. McKee,
(Will) Artley, (Gary) Chelosky,
(Jim) Giiffith and (Pete)
Orschiedt are our big guns. They
must win in crucial situations.
Along with that, (Alan)
Whittaker, (Rick) Dawson,
(Steve) McDonald, Bill
Hoffmans divers and our other
top performers have to get us
enough seconds and thirds to
win. If all this can
simultaneously occur, well be in
fme shape, said the Gator
coach.
The Volunteers will come into
a / See it only at 5
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The Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973,
% Juijh,* .. *.
Pete Orschiedt
. ... captain
town early Friday evening and
are expected to have a brief
workout in UFs pool later that
evening.
Its been a long time since
g&v
mr 3 h
apt
W>
Bill Strate
. only 'good'
/THURSDAY
FEBRUARY I, 1973
y. .[:[
: I|MBHImk i
Jim Griffith
. .. freestyle
weve had so many great
swimmers graduating,
concluded Harlan. Im sure
they would all like to go out in
style.
i
a
Bill Hoffman
.. diving coach
Page 21
Page 22
!, Th Independent Florida Alligator, Thursday, February 1,1973
Waiting period is over
for Dickey and Co.
The giant shadow of southern football falls over
the campus Friday afternoon as the Gators begin
Spring practice.
With TV tubes still hot from the Pro Bowl, its
starting all over again, this time however for just a
month. Florida will rest after the Orange and Blue
game March 3 which signifies the end of spring
drills.
Coach Doug Dickeys strategy for the early start
is that it will enable football players to compete in
other spring sports. Also, any unforseen injuries that
come up will have a little extra time to heal before
the Sept. 15 opener against Kansas State.
COACH DICKEY is not a man of many words.
He very seldom says anything controversial or
predicts the outcomes of games or seasons.
But hes one of the best coaches in the country.
If you disagree with the way Bear Bryant drives his
athletes, Dickey comes out as the top man in the
Southeastern Conference as far as coaching ability
goes.
What Spring practice adds up to is an early
grooming for a possible SEC championship.
ITS BEEN A long time since John Reaves and
Co. were picked as possible winners. Since then,
Dickey has built up the program, and in three years
he has the team ready to take the title.
The four seniors lost last year have sophomores
and juniors itching to take their place. The
transition will be quick.
Spring will not bring the Gators into full-bloom
though. Several key players will miss the practice
sessions.
ONE, DAVID BOWDEN, is playing baseball
already. Without him the quarterback situation is up
in the air again.
Vince Kendrick will also be out still nursing an
ankle injury. The coaches say they dont want Vince
to get hurt again but he laughs and says they dont
want him to hurt anyone.
He seems ready for the fall.
POSSIBLY MOST important, Nat Moore might
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sit out the Spring festivities, wounded at the knee.
He is recovering but the coaches will take no
chances with their main TD getter.
The offensive line remains intact as does the
backfield barring any more young players breaking
into the starting lineup.
Lee McGriff doesnt look anything like Willie
Jackson but he will fill the wide receivers shoes.
The defense will no doubt be the best in the SEC
next year. Thats no big prediction considering they
will have the best five linebackers in the country
and a backfield that will be very difficult to score
on.
LOSING FRED ABBOTT and David Poss would
hurt most schools but Slamin Sammy Green and
a junior college all-American named Johnny B.
Foreman, along with returning starter Ralph Ortega,
Glenn Cameron and Chris McCoun will take up any
lost power.
The Gators meet Southern Mississippi in game
two next year and then face Mississippi State in
Jackson. LSU and Alabama follow with Mississippi
coming to Gainesville Oct. 20.
An open date follows before what might be the
crucial game of the year at Auburn Nov. 3.
In 1939, Florida tied the Tigers in Cliff Hare
Stadium 7-7. Thats the closest any Florida team has
gotten to a win.
ITS BEEN a long time.
If 1968 was The Year of the Gator and 1970
was its namesake, what do you call 1973, a year
when all the marbles arent riding on one or two
players.
In this first issue of The Independent Florida
Alligator, we should be able to come up with
something appropriate.
But well just leave it plain ole 1973 and let the
team make a name for themselves.
Abbott goes in 6th
By Alligator Services
The Minnesota Vikings dethroned by the Green Bay Packers in
1972 after four consecutive NFC Central Division crowns, bounced
back big with perhaps the best selection of talent in Tuesdays
National Football League (NFL) draft.
The snowbound Norsemen went after a couple of Floridians,
choosing Miami running back Chuck Foreman in the first round and
UF lineback Fred Abbott, an All-SEC selection in 72, in the sixth
round. Foreman, expected to give the Vikings needed backfield speed,
was happy to be drafted by an NFL contender, but Abbott was
disappointed, as he had been contacted before the draft by the Dallas
Cowboys and had been led to believe the Cowboys would choose him.
Minnesota also selected Arizona comerback Jackie Wallace, a likely
starter as a 73 rookie, Arizona State running back Brent McClanahan,
Illinois QB Mike Wells, Minnesota tight end Doug Kingsriter, and
Northwestern wide receiver Jim Lash in the first half dozen rounds.
Wells is regarded as a backup for Fran Tarkenton, but the other
draftees are given a good chance of moving into the starting lineup
next season for the Vikes.
THE TOP THREE picks, team by team, were as follows:
ATLANTA FALCONS Greg Marx, Notre Dame DT;
Tom Geredine, NE Missouri WR; Nick Bebout, Wyoming OT.
BALTIMORE COLTS Bert Jones, LSU QB; Joe Ehrmann, Syracuse DT; Mike
Barnes, Miami DE.
BUFFALO BILLS Paul Seymour, Michigan OT; Joe DeLamielleure, Michigan
St. OG; Jeff Winans, USC DT.
CHICAGO BEARS Wally Chambers, E. Kentucky DE; Gary Huff, FSU
QB; Gary Hrivnak, Purdue DT.
CINCINNATI BENGALS Isaac Curtis, Dan Diego St. WR; A! Chandler,
Oklahoma TE; Tim George, Carson-Newman WR.
CLEVELAND BROWNS Steve Holden, Arizona St. WR; Greg Pruitt,
Oklahoma RB; Jim Stienke, SW Texas St. DB.
DALLAS COWBOYS Billy Joe Dupree, Michigan St. TE; Golden Richards,
Hawaii WR; Harvey Martin, East Texas St. DE.
DENVER BRONCOS Otin Armstrong, Purdeu RB; Barney Chavous, South
Carolina St. DE; Paul Howard, Brigham Young OG.
DETROIT LIONS Ernest Price, Texas A&l, DE; Leon Crosswhite, Oklahoma
FB; John Brady, Whashington TE.
GREEN BAY PACKERS Barry Smith, FSU WR; Tom McLeod, Minnesota
LB; Tom Toney, Idaho St. LB.
HOUSTON OILERS John Matuszak, Tampa DE; George Amundson, lowa St.
RB; Greg Bingham, Purdue LB.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Gary Butler, Rice TE; Paul Krause, Central Michigan
OT; John Lohmeyer, Emporia (Kan.) DT.
LOS ANGELES RAMS Cullen Bryant, Colorado DB; Ron Jaworski,
Youngstown T. QB; Jim Youngblook, Tenn. Tech LB.
MIAMI DOLPHINS Chuck Bradley, Oregon C; Leon Gray, Jackson St. OT;
Bo Rather, Michigan WR.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS Chuck Foreman, Miami RB; Jackie Wallace, Arizona
DB; Jim Lash, Northwestern WR.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS John Hannah, Alabama OT: Sam Cunningham,
USC RB; Darryl Stingley, Purdue WR.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Derland Moore, Oklahoma DE; Steve Baumgartner,
Purdue DE; Ptet Van Valkenberg, Brigham Young RB.
NEW YORK GIANTS Brad Van Pelt, Michigan St. LB; Rich Glover, Nebraska
DT; Leon McQuay, Tampa RB.
NEW YORK JETS Burgess Owens, Miami DB; Robert Woods, Tenn. ST. OT;
Bill Ferguson, San Diego St. LB.
OAKLAND RAIDERS Ray Guy, So. Mississippi P-PK-DB; Monte Johnson,
Nebraska DT; Perry Smith, Colorado St. DB.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Jerry Sisemore, Texas OT; Charles Young, USC
TE; Guy Morris, TCU OG.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS James Thomas, FSU DB; Ken Phares, Mississippi
St. DB; Roger Bernhardt, Kansas OG.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Dave Butz, Purdue DT; Gary Keithley, Texas-EI
Paso QB; Fred Stuart, Bowling Green, OG.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS Johnny Rodgers, Nebraska WR; Dan Fouts,
Oregon QB; James Thaxton, Tenn. St. TE.
SAN FRANSCISCO 49ERS Mike Holmes, Texas Southern DB; Willie Harper,
Nebraska LB; Mike Fulk, Indiana LB.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Charles Cantrell, Lamar Tech OG. s,
UF junior eyes baseball season
' *1 N
Bowden likes bat over pigskin
By GREG FORRER
Alligator Sports Writer
If he had to choose, David Bowden would take baseball.
Correct David Bowden, mild-mannered UF soohomore,
sheds his Florida football jersey at the end of the season to
fight a never ending battle for truth, justice, and the
American way: baseball.
\ *- IKE ? OTH s P rts ver y much, but I truthfully have to put
baseball at the top, said Bowden through the chain links of one
of UFs batting cages.
In casual discussion concerning the cold war that rages between
football and baseball advocates, Bowden concurred with the idea that
there exists an undercurrent of sports articles and writers who feel it is
their duty to uproot baseball and make football the new national
pastime.
Actually, there is no national pastime, said Bowden. No national
pastime? Perish the thought, but hes right. Baseball people have long
abandoned the thought that baseball is all there is. Perhaps they are
the more perceptive of the two sports concerns, because football
seems to feel like they need to make it known that they are the
greatest of all sports.
In this country of ours, where so many professional sports make
fans live and die by their favorite, it is wrong to insist upon
superiority of one over the other. It is high time that the football
figures get rid of their innate inferiority complex which they acquired
because football came second as a major spectator sport. Peaceful
coesistence is the logical way out, for many people are tired of
accepting both football and baseball on an equal plane while some
football enthusiast feels the need to upgrade his baby while
downgrading baseball.
BASEBALL IS A great game, and Florida is going to have a great
team this year. Weve got the great bulk of last years squad back this
year, and that experience is going to help, added Bowden.
Also, the fact that the top candidates for third base (Bubba
Huerta), shortstop (Jim Reidelle) and second base (David Bowden)
played semi-pro ball together this past summer gives the Gators
three-fourths of an infield that knows each other and what they are
likely to do on the diamond, which is valuable in any game situation.
David Bowden is looking up, Coach Fuller is looking up, and if you
could see and hear the others who comprise the Gator baseball team,
youd find yourself looking up just when the first baseball game is,
because its going to be one hell of a season.
In fact, to be nice about the whole thing, dont bother looking it
up. Its March 2, a word to the wise is sufficient.
I UNIVERSITY SHOP UNIVER \
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For the ground hog to
decide about spring.
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When you can OWN ... I
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The Independent Florida Alligator, Thuradey, February 1..1973,
Bowden hits halfback Nat Moore
... quarterback prefers tossing baseballs
Page 23
TOM KENNEDY
Page 24
Tha Independent Florida February 1.1973
| II I
I I Intramurals
I rrm
The deadline for Womens
Independent Bowling is this
coming Monday at 5 p.m. You
need four to a team and it is
Free.
The Fraternity basketball
draw will be made today at 4:30
in the IM office.
Teams must be signed up for
Co-rec volleyball by this
Monday. We hope to have an
excellent turnout for this
activity.
The deadline for engineering
league basketball is also this
Monday.
The deadline for Mens
Independent tennis is Feb. 7.
The plade to sign up for all these
activities is the IM office in
room 229 of the Florida Gym,
392-0581.
UF Rugby
club drops
match, 42-10
The superb team of the
H.M.S. Intrepid soundly
thrashed the UF ruggers by a
score of 42-10 Tuesday evening
at Norman Field.
The Britishers, whose assault
ship is visiting Jacksonville,
dominated the game, scoring
three times in the first half and
four times in the second. In the
first ten minutes of the second
half, UF showed signs of a rally
by scoring twice. The first time
when the Gator forwards took
possession of one of the
Intrepids rare wild passes and
rushed it into the touch zone,
the second time on a forward
rush from a lineout. Loose-head
prop Gil Ruderman scored both
tries. Wing, Roy Brewer, also
made inspired but frustrated
efforts to even the score.
Recovering from the Gator
attack, the Intrepids crew stood
firm and regained control of the
game.
Although possessing a marked
height advantage in the lineouts,
poor throw-ins prevented the
Gators from using their
advantage. Floridas. forwards
were not on the ball frequently
enough or in sufficient numbers
to win possession of the loose
play. The few times that they
did seriously contest the mauls,
the Gators failed to slip the ball
to their teammates.
On the positive side Florida
fans received a demonstration of
what Rugby should and could be
like at UF. The Intrepids team
was in excellent physical
condition. Their lighter forward
pack used, speed, coordination,
and correct posture to best
Florida in the set scrums. In the
loose play the British
demonstrated that ruck and
maul need not be undisciplined
mayhem as they repeatedly
rescued their trapped comrades
and won possession of the ball.
The Intrepids backs, avoiding
the American obsession with
power running, baffled the
Gators with their accurate
passes, mutual backup, and swift
changes in the direction of
attack. The British combination
of skill and experience swamped
Florida.
APPETIZERS
Ant.paito 1.50 Salami and Provotone 1.35
Shnmp Cocktail (61 1.50 Pimiento and Anchovies 1.00
Juice, Tomato or Gropefruit 30 Celery and Olivet V'r .75
Baked Clams (10) 2.00 Escargot 2.00
Clams on Vj Shell 1.00 Tossed Salad .50
Garlic Bread .50
SOUP DU JOUR
* 1- n_(l u f
i/oiiy
Cup .35 Bowl 50
CASSEROLES
lasogno 2.75 Baked Mocarom 2.25 ~
Momcorti 2.15 Egg Plant Parmigiana 2.00
Ravkolt 1.95 Stuffed Egg Plant 2.50
Stuffed Shells -2.25
Served With Salad
SPAGHETTI
r I, -eel 1 nltf,
afWn
Meatball 2.00 Oil and Garlic 1.65
Sousoges 2.25 Butter 1.65
Cloin Sauce (Red or White) 2.25 Mushrooms 215
Marmara 1.75 Meat Sauce 1.75
Shrimp Sauce 2.75
We also have lingume or Shell Macaroni
(Above Served with Salad and Bread)
DESSERTS
Italian Cheese Cake .75 Pudding .40
Rum Coke .60 Spumoni .50
Pie -50 Tortoni 50
Jello 35 Ice Cream 35
BEVERAGES
Coffee .20 Ice Tea .25 Expresso, pot .50
Tea 20 Milk .25 .35 Beer 50 .65 .75
Soda .25 Sanka .25 Wine, glass 60
If Youre in a Hurry, j;
With no Time to Spare ...
\& r LUNCHEON SPECIAL
YK/Jk Roast Beef, Pastrami, of Corned Beef
served on Fresh Rye Bread
with Coleslaw and a Beverage ...
m/7 lONLY
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily j!
(Available in store only)
[ ty 17 20 .- Un ivers 11 y Ave "" Next to Baskin-Robbins
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SUPER NIGHT
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VK An of th Great Sound Plus Gainesvilles Oldest Tradition .VaUShV.*!
mini-skirt CONTEST
vX 25 for Ist Place XvSvlv!
$lO Tor 10 Best Contestants
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ENTREES
Served from 4:00 P M. Until Closing
- 3 25
Veal Cutlet Parmigiana
Veal Scaloppini Marsala
Veal Cacciatore .. ......
Veal Rollantini
Veal Scaloppini with Mushrooms or Peppers
Chicken Cacciatore (Red or White)
Boneless Chicken Pormigiona
Pork Chops Pizziola 1
Sausage and Peppers
Above Dinners Served with Spaghetti and Salad
Combination #1 'Combination #2
MEAT BALLS SAUSAGES VEAL CUTLET EGG PLANT
ZITI GREEN PEPPERS RAVIOLI
240 293
SEAFOOD
Shrimp Scampi 3.25 Broiled Lobster Toils 6.95
Fried Shrimp 3.00 Lobster Tail Fra Diavola bAf
Shrimp Morinoro 3.15 Broiled or Fried Fillet 2.10
Shrimp Parmigiana 3.15 Combination Seafood Platter 3.50
Served with Potato and Vegetable or Spaghetti
and Salad
FROM OUR BROILER
Broiled Chicken, V> 2.25 Broiled Pork Chops 2.50
Broiled Sirloin Steak 5.50 Broiled Chopped Sirloin 1.95
Above Orders Served with Potato ond Vegetable and Salad
-
fS/rr/r#
i/fifU ll.di.ni-. Inn m.n; ( n'ri'.c
TELEPHONE 1800 N.E. 23rd AVE
373-6415 GAINFSVILIE FLORIDA