The New Hampshire, Vol. 66, No. 24 (Dec. 9, 1975)

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Volume 66 Number 24 Tuesday, December 9,1975 Durham, N.H. pjpW m m Hr "i^l^sSs&L fV UNH’s Bill Burnham breaks away for a long gain in Saturday’s Rice Bowl in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Charlie Bevis photo) New budget director sought Stanley will resign BOB By Amy Short Greg Stanley, director of the Bureau of the Budget (BOB) is resigning next term because of his responsibilities as the new president of Sigma Beta fraterni- ty. “When Larry Meacham ap- pointed me to the position last spring, I knew nothing of the no- mination for president to Sigma Beta that happened this fall. I’ve found I can’t do both and the financial benefits of being pre- sident are Detter," said Stanley. Stanley, a junior, said he is looking for someone who can do the job well and wants to be able to make a recommendation to Larry Meacham. “Farnham, the treasurers and I are looking for someone who has a feeling of the University as a whole.” BOB is the part of the student caucus that approves monies for items that the Student Activities Tax (SAT) budget covers. It is composed of the eight treasurers of SAT organizations, Monte Childs, director of auxiliary enterprises, and Richard Morgan, treasurer of the Associates Stu- dents Organizations. “We’re another check to make sure the University is providing tne best functions for the stu- dents,” said Stanley. Stanley rewrote the B O B ’s constitution this term, “because we need more structure and because the constitution is out RESIGN, page 10 Three hospitalized Balconies collapse at Garrison Hill By Diana Gingras Three UNH students remain hospitalized today at Went- worth-Douglas Hospital in Dover following the collapse of two balconies Saturday at the Garrison Hill Apartment com- plex. Three other students were treated and released. See photo page 3 . David Midboe, 18, of Nashu- a, N .H ., suffered a concus- sion and facial fractures and was still in the intensive care unit yesterday. Jeffrey Davis, 21, of Manchester, was hospitalized for back contusions, muscle damage and a broken arm. Cronan Schramm, 19, of Hanover, was hospitalized with neck and back injuries. The University leases the a- partment building from owner Patrick Cragin. Residents said it was likely the hospitalized stu- dents would sue the University to recover medical costs and damages but when ques^'oned Monday, David and Schramm declined to comment. Police said the third floor bal- cony collapsed under the weight of Davis, Michael Halliday, Schramm and Armand Fournier who had stepped outside after they heard boards being kicked from down below on the second floor balcony. Lyttle and Midboe were appar- ently kicking rotten boards off their second floor balcony so that no one would step on them thinking they were safe. Officer Frank Witty said the third floor balcony gave way just as Fournier stepped onto it. The balcony tipped slightly forward as it fell, knocking David Midboe BALCONIES, page 3 Caucus withholds Carnival funds Greg Stanley By Rich Mori The Student Caucus delayed until next week granting $2,360 to the 1976 UNH Winter Carni- val budget. They did so on the grounds that they did not have enough information to vote. Winter Carnival is an annual event held during February wmcn in tne past nas been spon- sored by the UNH Outing Club. This year, according to MUB programming coordinator Hope Spruance, the Outing Club will not sponsor it because of the “ large bills accumulated last year.” This year’s carnival will in- clude a dance, ski movies, the third annual Night of Sin at the MUB, a snow sculpture contest, and an Outing Club ski trip. It is sponsored by Areas I, II and III, Pan-Hellenic, the Intra- fraternity council, Disadvan- taged Women in High Education (DW IIE), the Outing Club, and APO fraternity. Greg Stanley, Director of the Bureau of the Budget (BOB), questioned whether the caucus knew what they were voting for. CARNIVAL, page 11 th e new ham pshine INSIDE --------- Shoes, shoes, shoes Shoes, shoes, shoes, and more shoes. There’s a factory in Somersworth where the people repair more shoes than anywhere in the world. Lloyd and Rick Davis set up the plant last March. One of the c o m p a n y ’s orders will bring in $20 million this winter. See the heart and sole of operation on page 7. TENURE: Denied Professors Ian Walker (right) and Thomas Kemnitz (left) were denied promotion and tenure. They must leave UNH. Walker calls the tenure process a “system based on fear.” The two discuss their past and fu- tures. See TENURE page 17. “Hey S an ta , you’re getting 99 By Bob Stevenson To some he is a funny figment of someone’s imagination. To some he is a hero. To some he is the all knowing, omnipotent giver of gifts. But he is probably the most controver- sial figure in the minds of those under ten years old. He is St. Nick, Kris Kringle, Santa Claus. My friends laughed and told me I was crazy. They said the job would be more trouble than it was worth. I had accepted an offer from the Dover Chamber of Com- merce to be their Santa Claus. My first day on the job was Saturday, so Friday night I sat down and thought about Santa Claus. Who is he? What does he mean? According to folklore, he is a fat, white-bearded, jolly old man in a red suit. He lives at the North Pole with elvesand makes toys for children which he distri- butes at Christmas time. He flies about the sky in a sleigh pulled by eight magic reindeer. But what does he mean? I tried to recall my childhood to answer this question. He means fun and merriment. He, stands for happiness. But somehow I felt there was more to Santa. I decided to leave the question until I had walked a mile in his big black boots. As I drove to Dover Saturday I was a little uneasy. Why did I ever agree to this. I was going to walk around Dover dressed up like a fool yelling “Ho-ho-ho.” By the time I had gotten to Dover and changed into my Santa suit my uneasiness had grown into nervousness. I puffed up my stomach, took a deep breath, grabbed my bag full of candy, and went out into the street. Walking down the street' I could hear people snickering when I passed. “Hey Santa,” someone yelled. “You’re getting SANTA, page 4

Transcript of The New Hampshire, Vol. 66, No. 24 (Dec. 9, 1975)

Volume 66 Number 24 Tuesday, December 9,1975 Durham, N.H.

pjpWm m

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"i^l^sSs&L fVUNH’s Bill B urnham breaks aw ay for a long gain in S a tu rd ay ’s R ice Bowl in B aton R ouge, Louisiana. (Charlie Bevis ph o to )

New budget director sought

Stanley will resign BOBBy A m y S hort

Greg S tan ley , d irec tor o f the Bureau o f the Budget (BOB) is resigning nex t te rm because of his responsibilities as th e new president o f Sigma Beta fra te rn i­ty .

“ W hen Larry M eacham ap ­poin ted me to th e position last spring, I knew noth ing o f th e n o ­m ination for presiden t to Sigma Beta th a t happened th is fall. I ’ve found I can ’t do b o th and the financial benefits o f being p re­sident are D etter," said Stanley.

Stanley, a jun io r, said he is looking fo r som eone w ho can do the jo b well and w ants to be able to m ake a recom m en dation to Larry M eacham .

“ Farnham , the treasurers and I are looking fo r som eone w ho has

a feeling of the University as a w h ole.”

BOB is th e part o f th e s tud en t caucus th a t approves m onies for item s th a t the S tud en t Activities Tax (SAT) budget covers. I t is com posed o f the eight treasurers o f S A T organizations, M onte C h i ld s , d ire c to r o f auxiliary enterprises, and R ichard M organ, treasurer o f the Associates S tu ­dents O rganizations.

“W e’re an o th er check to m ake sure the University is providing tne best functions for the s tu ­d en ts ,” said Stanley.

S ta n le y rew ro te the BOB’s co nstitu tion this term , “because w e n e e d m ore s tru c tu re and because th e co nstitu tion is o u tRESIGN, page 10

Three hospitalizedBalconies collapse at Garrison HillBy D iana Gingras

Three UNH studen ts rem ain h o s p i t a l i z e d to day at Went- w orth-D ouglas Hospital in Dover following the collapse o f tw o b a lc o n ie s S a tu r d a y a t t h e Garrison Hill A p artm en t com ­plex. Three o the r studen ts were trea ted and released.

See p h o to p a g e 3 .

David M idboe, 18, o f Nashu- a , N . H . , suffered a concus­

sion and facial fractures and was still in the intensive care un it yesterday.

J e f f r e y Davis, 2 1 , o f M anchester, was hospita lized for back contusions, m uscle damage and a b roken arm .

C ro n a n S c h ra m m , 19, o f Hanover, was hospitalized w ith neck and back injuries.

The University leases the a- partm en t building from ow ner

Patrick Cragin. R esidents said it was likely the hospitalized s tu ­dents w ould sue th e University to recover m edical costs and damages b u t w hen ques^'oned M onday, David and Schram m declined to com m ent.

Police said the th ird floor bal­cony collapsed und er th e w eight o f D a v is , M ic h a e l Halliday, Schram m and A rm and F ourn ier w ho had stepped outside after they heard boards being kicked from dow n below on the second floor balcony.

L yttle and M idboe were appar­ently kicking ro tten boards off their second floor balcony so th a t no one w ould step on them th ink ing th ey were safe.

O fficer F rank W itty said the th ird floor balcony gave way just as F ou rn ier stepped o n to it. The balcony tipped slightly forw ard as it fell, knocking David M idboeBALCONIES, page 3

Caucus withholds Carnival funds

Greg S tanley

By R ich MoriThe S tu d en t Caucus delayed

until n ex t w eek granting $2,360 to the 1976 UNH W inter Carni­val budget. They did so on the grounds th a t they did no t have enough in form atio n to vote.

W inter Carnival is an annual e v e n t h e ld d u r in g February wm cn in tn e past nas been spon­sored by the UNH O uting Club. This year, according to MUB program m ing coord inato r Hope Spruance, th e O uting Club will no t sponsor it because o f th e “ la rg e b ills accum ulated last y ear.”

This y ea r’s carnival will in ­clude a dance, ski movies, the th ird annual N ight o f Sin a t the MUB, a snow sculpture contest, and an O uting Club ski trip .

It is sponsored by Areas I, II and III, Pan-Hellenic, the Intra- f r a t e r n i t y council, D isadvan­taged W omen in High E ducation(D W I I E ) , t h e O u t in g C lu b , a n dAPO fra te rn ity .

Greg S tan ley , D irec tor o f th e Bureau o f the Budget (BOB), questioned w h ether the caucus knew w h at th ey were voting for.

CARNIVAL, page 11

t h e n e w h a m p s h i n e

INSIDE ---------Shoes, shoes, shoes

Shoes, shoes, shoes, and m ore shoes. T here’s a fac to ry in Som ersw orth where th e people repair m ore shoes than anyw here in th e world. L loyd and R ick Davis set up th e p lan t last M a rc h . O n e o f th e com pan y’s orders will bring in $20 m illion th is w in ter. See th e heart and sole o f opera tion on page 7.

TENURE: DeniedP ro fesso rs Ian W alker (right) and Thom as K em nitz (left) were denied p rom otion and tenure . T hey m ust leave UNH. W alker calls th e tenure process a “ system based on fear.” The tw o discuss the ir past and fu ­tures. See TEN U RE page 17.

“Hey Santa, you ’re getting 99By Bob Stevenson

To som e he is a fu nny figm ent o f som eone’s im agination. To some he is a hero.

To som e he is the all know ing, o m n ip o ten t giver o f gifts. B ut he is probably the m ost co n trover­sial figure in the m inds o f those under ten years old.

He is St. N ick, Kris Kringle, Santa Claus.

My friends laughed and to ld me I was crazy. They said the job w ould be m ore troub le than it was w orth .

I had accepted an offer from th e Dover Cham ber o f C om ­m erce to be the ir Santa Claus.

My first day on the job was Satu rday, so Friday night I sat dow n and tho u g h t ab o u t Santa Claus. Who is he? W hat does he m ean?

According to fo lk lore, he is a fat, w hite-bearded, jolly old m an in a red suit. He lives a t the N orth Pole w ith e lv esand m akes toys for children w hich he d istri­butes a t Christm as tim e. He flies

ab o u t the sky in a sleigh pulled by eight magic reindeer.

B ut w hat does he m ean? I tried to recall m y ch ildhood to answer this question . He m eans fun and m errim ent. He, stands for happiness. But som ehow I felt there was m ore to Santa. I decided to leave the question until I had w alked a mile in his big b lack boo ts.

As I drove to Dover Satu rday I was a little uneasy. Why did I ever agree to this. I was going to walk around Dover dressed up

like a fool yelling “ H o-ho-ho.” By th e tim e I had go tten to

D o v e r and changed in to my Santa suit m y uneasiness had grown in to nervousness.

I puffed up m y stom ach, to o k a deep b rea th , grabbed my bag full o f candy, and w ent o u t in to the street.

W alk ing dow n the s tre e t' I c o u ld hear people snickering when I passed. “ Hey S an ta ,” som eone yelled. “Y o u’re gettingSANTA, page 4

PAGE TWO THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9, 1 9 7 5

briefly...

S tud en ts decked th e halls o f th e MUB w ith boughs o f holly , m ore or less, S unday a fte rno o n and decorated tw o C hristm as trees as well. (Mike D ’A n ton io pho to )

Canadians are sensitive to “m onstrous neighbor”By D iana Gingras

Canadians are n o t insensitive to th e fac t th a t “A m erica” is u s e d i n t e r c h a n g e a b l y w i th “ U .S .” and while “A m erica” in ­cludes C anada, it really includes her as an obscure satellite o f the U.S.

As a resu lt o f various eco no m ­ic events, especially th e energy crisis, Canada decided it was tim e to leave Uncle S am ’s gravi­ta tional field.

C o n s u l G e n e ra l Jean-L ouis DeLisle, w ho heads the Canadian em bassy in B oston, spoke to a group o f ab o u t 20 people in th e l i b r a r y ’s f o r u m r o o m la s t T hursday ab o u t th e changing re ­lations betw een th e U.S. and Canada in light o f C anada’s re ­cent na tionalistic m ovem ent.

DeLisle spoke in a calm and s u b d u e d m a n n e r , displaying"

n o n e o f the an tagonism one often associates w ith spokesm en of new ly conscious m ovem ent- type groups.

Speaking w ith a French ac­cent, th e C onsul G eneral opened w ith good-natured jokes ab o u t the “ p en th o u se” to the sou th , referring to the U.S. w hich m ore belligerent C anadians see as a m o n s t r o u s n e ig h b o r w h ic h th rea tens, and has a lm ost suc­ceeded in annihilating C anada’s sense o f iden tity .

The talk was fo u rth in a series o f seven sem inars on C anad ian- A m e r ic a n N a tu ra l R esources sponsored by IN ER and w hich h a s rece ived funds from the Canadian governm ent. The th ree rem aining talks are scheduled for n ex t sem ester.

The Im port Surcharge pu t in to effect last year in th e U.S., said

DeLisle, caused hard feelings as well as d isturbing uncertain ties in Canada w hich sends 70% of its ex po rts to th e U.S.

“ The trade betw een th e U.S. and C anada represen ts the lar­gest exchange o f p rodu cts o f any tw o countries in h is to ry ,” said DeLisle.

T h e Im p o r t Surcharge cast some shadow s on the large-scale t r a d in g w hich m akes Canada som ew hat a victim o f the trade po lic ies ad op ted by th e U.S. w hich send only 20-25% o f its exports to Canada.

The energy crisis also p u t its strain on U.S.-Canada relations because Canada previously hav­ing shipped one m illion barrels o f oil each year to th e U.S. is gradually cu tting back on oil ex-CANAD1ANS, page 16

The proper way to mix your drinks

By M arie C artier“ OK now w e’re going to m ake

a m u d d le d O ld -F a s h io n e d ,” chim es C huck Leach, in s tru c to r o f the M odern M ixology Course th a t was recen tly held a t Pike fra tern ity .

“ F irst you take y o u r orange slice,” sm iled Leach, a b londe m a n in his tw enties w earing plaid pan ts and slightly stacked heels. He rolls up his sleeves, lights a c igarette, and says “ Peel o ff the rind and be sure you rem ove the seeds!”

L e a c h d r o p s th e stripped orange in a rock glass. Bill Oris, L each’s assistant, had explained the d ifferen t glasses and their uses the n igh t before . A rock glass is a sh o rt sq u a tty glass used fo r m ostly pure liq u o r drinks w ith ice cubes.

Leach picks up a cherrry and drops i t in the glass. E verything on the table is clean and in i t ’s place. Leach had stressed the im ­p ortance o f a clean bar earlier w hen he discussed p rep a ra tio n o f a bar.

“ No custom er w ants to p u t his elbow in a puddle o f grenadine, especially w hen h e ’s wearing a

$200 su it,” he said.“ Now w e’ll add a little sugar,”

says Leach and drips in “ oh, ab o u t half a tab lespoon or so ,” w ith a flourish. Leach had com ­m ented several tim es on “ develo­ping a style o f y o u r ow n” w hen h e ta lked ab o u t personal ap­pearance and how to shake and stir.

“ L ucifer’s in B oston flips th e ir shaker glasses in the air, bu t w e’ll settle fo r the p inky on the b o tto m and th u m b on the top m e th o d .”

“ OK, a dash of b itte rs ,” and he throw s in a dash. Som eone in the back com m ents, “ M ust be s tro n g .” Leach had explained b itte rs and the fac t th a t they were 90 p ro o f w hen he discussed liquors, wines, beer, and how to serve them .

A w ine tasting com plete w ith cheese and crackers had en ter­tained s tuden ts the n igh t before a n d th e y also learned which wines to serve w ith w hich foods. W hite w ine is used w ith seafood and pou ltry . R ed wine is used w ith m eats.DRINKS, page 4

Bruce Stevens named Kari-Van supervisorBy Jo y M cG ranahan

“My first goal in th is job is to provide a good service fo r the s tu d en ts ,” said Bruce Stevens, new ly -h ired Kari-Van Supervi­sor. “My second goal is to im ­prove th e financial situa tion o f the en te rp rise .”

Stevens is the first full-tim e supervisor o f th e Kari-Van. He was hired th roug h the decision of tw o screening com m ittees.

The first one was com posed o f a representative from th e MUB tick et o ffice, a UNH s tu d en tt, a m em ber of the travel bureau , a m em ber o f the garage d e p a rt­

m ent, and a full tim e Kari-Van driver.

“ T h e f i r s t com m ittee nar­row ed the applican ts from 15 dow n to ab o u t five,” said S te­vens. “T hen th ey interview ed those five and recom m en ded a t least th ree o f them to a second screening co m m ittee .”

The second com m ittee , m ade up o f the d irec to r and th e assis­t a n t d irec to r o f services, the d irec to r o f th e physical p lan t, and am em ber of the. personnel

SUPERVISOR, page 11

Secret Service

There are so m any presiden tial candi­dates cam paigning in JNew Ham pshire th a t the Secret Service is th ink ing o f s ta tio n ­ing som e agents here on a full tim e basis until the Feb . 24 prim ary is com pleted .

Thom as S m ith , agent in charge o f the New England branch o f th e Secret Service said last w eek th a t “we can ’t keep up w i th t h e dem and for Secret Service agents.

“W e’re been drafting agents from the Custom s Service and the Bureau o f A lco­hol, Tobacco and Firearm s to help o u t .”

Farmer & facultyUNH System C hancellor Bruce P ou lton

is concerned th a t the gap m ay be w iden­in g be tw een agricultural sciences and practicing farm ers.

“The union o f th eo ry and p rac tice ,” said Pou lton before th e annual d inner o f the UNH anim al sciences facu lty , “will lead to success in farm ing. We can no t a f­ford to have the scientist sim ply rem ain in the lab ora tory and the farm er stay on

the farm . I t is vital th a t they be in d irect and increased association .”

The great debate“All C arm en C him ento has to do is

nam e th e da te , tim e and place and I will be t h e r e . ” A c c o rd in g to The New Ham pshire Tim es, presiden tial candidate Billy Joe Clegg, a M issouri evangelist, opened the doo r to w hat m ay well be the m ost lively debate o f th e presiden tial cam paign season in New H am pshire. “ I consider him a form idable o p p o n en t in th e D em ocratic p residen tial p rim ary ,” C him ento siad later, indicating th a t he w ould be willing to debate Clegg.

Clegg says th a t the U nited N ations is w orth less and he says we should give m oney to New Y ork City instead. He sug­gested th a t C him ento sup po rt him in the prim ary. C him ento said th a t he w ould be happy “ to su pp o rt any viable candidate who is willing no t only to preach b u t also to practice the princip les laid dow n by Thom as Jefferson .

“ Som eone who says he w ants to aid the city o f New Y ork shows me he needs to do som e re-reading o f Jefferson and the C o n s titu tio n ,” said C him ento .

Clegg added , “ If y ou respect m y ideals like you (C h im ento ) say y ou do, I solicit th a t y ou consider swinging y o u r suppo rt to a m an w ith the guts o f H arry T rum an. i t u k e s guts to run for p residen t w ith o u t a Secret Service agent, and G od know s I have th e gu ts .”

L ater in the w eek, how ever, Clegg ex ­perienced a change o f heart and asked for S e c r e t Service p ro tec tio n while cam ­paigning in New H am pshire.

Gun runningFederal Judge Hugh Bownes in C on­

cord , NH, has o rdered fo rm er C oncord m ayor J. H erbert Q uinn to answ er grand jury questions ab o u t alleged gun running to N o rth ern Ireland.

Bownes also w arned Q uinn th a t if he failed to answ er queries n ex t w eek he could fac t jail. Q uinn argues th a t evidence co llected in the case was gathered w ith the use o f illegal w iretaps.

He w on an earlier appeal to a Bownes ruling w hich w ould have confined him to jail fo r refusing to answ er th e questions. Q u inn’s law yer vows an appeal on the la test order.

Funeral services

F u n e r a l s c r v ic c o w o r e h e ld S u n d a y f o rJoh n F. H olland, 24, fo rm erly a senior h isto ry m ajor a t UNH, at th e E xete r C on­gregational Church.

H olland, a lifelong residen t o f E xete r, died F riday n igh t, Dec. 5, a fte r his sports car w en t o u t o f co n tro l on R o u te 101 in G reenland.

He was a g raduate o f St. Pau l’s School in C oncord , N.H.

He spen t th ree years in th e US A rm y Intelligence.

H olland was a m em ber o f the E xete r C ongregational Church.

He w orked at th e reg istrar’s office at T hom pson Hall.

He was hired by th e V eterans A dm inis­tra tio n to handle process applications for those w ho apply for VA benefits.

H o llan d is survived by his paren ts; E verett and E d ith H olland, a b ro th e r, George, o f E x ete r, th ree sisters; N ancy, o f B erkeley, Cal., M artha, o f E xete r, and Mrs. Jan e t E m elen, o f L ittle Deer Island, Me.

t h e NEW HAMPSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5 PAGE THREE

and Chris L yttle o ff the second f lo o r b a lc o n y and throw ing Fourn ier in to the parking lo t.

“ I f th e balcony had fallen s t r a ig h t d o w n ,” said Nancy A lexander, w ho lives on the sec­ond floor, “ som eone w ould have been killed.

“Everyone was really helpful a n d b rought o u t b lankets to keep th e guys w arm . We tried to keep them from moving until the police came because they were all in a state o f shock.

“My i room m ate and I were near the w indow w hen it hap­pened ,” continued A lexander, “we just froze w hen we saw it fa l­ling.”

A lexander said she and her room m ates had com plained a- b ou t the balconies to the Univer­sity. U niversity repairm en and inspec tors had to ld her on sever­a l o c t a o i u n s t h a t s o m e t h in gshould have been done ab o u t them .

“The whole left side of m y b a lc o n y w as s in k in g ,” said A lexander.

Patrick Cragin, w ho leases the building to the University, said he did n o t know th e balcon­ies were in a dangerous state o f disrepair.

Cragin said it is the University th a t receives and acts on com ­plaints and th a t he is n o t re ­spo nsib le for m aintaining the building unless he is no tified by the University.

R ichard G ardner, associate d i­recto r o f off-cam pus residence, s a id t h a t to h is knowledge “there were never any requests for m ain tenance .” G ardner said he was unaw are o f any p ro b ­lems.

“Som eone m ust have know n a- b o u t t h e b a l c o n i e s , ” sa id A lexander, “ because earlier this sem este r University repairm en drilled holes in all the balconies so th a t the w ater w ould drain o u t.”

A le x an d e r’s room m ate , who did n o t w ant to be nam ed, said w ood from the balconies was so ro tten th a t w hen a friend kicked a board “ it w en t to d u s t.”

“ I just w an t o u t o f th e re ,” she saidj “ if the beam s betw een the ceiling and the floo r in my ap a rt­m ent are just as unsafe.”

David Bianco, d irec tor o f resi­dential life, was a t the off-cam p­us residential offices yesterday to m eet w ith studen ts from G ar­rison Hill.

“The University is really being n ic e a b o u t t h i s , ” said Paul Sylvia, a s tuden t w ho lives in a G a r r i s o n H il l a p a r t m e n t . “ T hey ’ve offered to find on- cam pus housing fo r anyone who wants to get o u t. A nyone w ho wants to get ou t can. T h ey ’re no t going to hold us to our leases.

“They even gave m e th is ,” said Sylvia, holding up a poster ad ­vertising the UNH Garrison Hill apartm ents.

Last New Hampshirethis Friday

Next issue: February 6

UNH students call Durham apartment rates a rip-offBy Pam ela Haran

Q uestion: W hat can $300 get y ou in D urham ?

A n sw e r : One ap artm en t at W ebster House, o r one and a half apartm ents a t the Coops; tw o ap artm ents (or fou r room s) at th e W oo dm an Avenue ap a rt­m ents, o r one and a half room s at S trafford House.

If you are a s tu den t looking for an ap artm en t in D urham , you should do some intensive c o m p a r i s o n sh op p ing before signing any lease. R ents, ap a rt­m ent size and th e services p ro ­vided by th e landlord vary great­ly. W hat you find for a certain price in one ap artm en t building may o ften be found fo r a low er (o r h ig h e r ) price in an o ther building.

W hen m aking a com parison o f d ifferen t ap artm en ts, ta lk w ith the present tenan ts. T enants in D urham have m any com plain ts, the m ajor one being cost.

Sally Newm an, a senior m ajor­ing in bo tany , now lives in the a p a r tm e n ts ow ned b / W alter Cheney on W oodm an Avenue. She previously lived in S trafford M anor. Of her tenancy a t S traf­ford M anor, Newman said it was one o f the m ost foolish things she has ever done, because o f the price.

S trafford M anor is located o n S t r a f f o r d Avenue and is o w n e d by W hite Enterprises, Inc. The ren t is $525 per person per sem ester, and a $50 damage deposit is required . The lease runs from Septem ber to June.

The ap artm ents have tw o bed­room s, a living ro om , k itchen and bath . They have wall to wall carpeting, dishwashers and gar­bage disposals.

With an occupancy o f four people for nine m onths, the sem ­ester ren t breaks dow n to ,ap- proxim ately $116 per m on th for e a c h individual, or $466 per apartm en t per m on th for four people.

The ap artm en t Newm an now lives in costs $170 per m on th for a bedroom , living room , k itchen and ba th . There is wall to wall carpeting and a garbage disposal, bu t no dishwasher. The ap a rt­m ents are for tw o people, so she pays $85 per m on th , in con trast to the $116 she previously paid. She also receives th e same ser­vices and facilities a t W oodm an Avenue th a t she did a t S trafford M anor. B oth buildings are clean and the halls and stairw ays are well lit. There are adequate p ark ­ing facilities and garbage is col­lected on a regular basis. There are central fire alarm system s in each building.

L o c a te d n e x t to S trafford M anor and also ow ned by W hite Enterprises, is S trafford House. S tudent tenan ts called S trafford House a “rip o ff .”

Leo D ickinson, a transfer s tu ­dent from W orcester Poly tech, said he “ can’t und erstand w hy the ren t is so high. I th in k over half the room s here are e m p ty .”

T h e t e n a n t s a t S tra f fo rd House ren t a room w ith a small sink - stove - refrigerato r com ­

bination and access to central bathroom s.

R en t is $750 per sem ester per room for tw o people. If a s tu ­den t chooses to ren t a room as a single, he pays th e full $750.

B ecau se S trafford House is built around an indoor co u rt­yard , there are some room s w ith ­o u t w indow s. These are $25 cheaper. A $50 dam age deposit is a ls o required a t S trafford House.

One o f th e buildings in the Cheney com plex on W oodm an Avenue is set up in a similar m anner. S tudents ren t a room w ith access to central ba throom s and kitchens. The k itchens have refrigerators b u t no stoves. The ren t for each room is $75 per m o n th fo r single occupancy. One m o n th ’s ren t is requ ired as damage deposit.

B oth o f the ap artm en t com ­plexes are well tak en care o f by their landlords. The only m ajor difference is th e nrice.

S tudents were asked w hy th ey chose to live in D urham if they considered the ren t a “rip o ff .” Some said they were transfer s t u d e n t s o r f r e s h m e n who couldn’t get in to th e d o rm it­ories. They came to D urham at the beginning o f th e sem ester and to o k w hatever they could find. O thers w ork in Durham and do no t ow n cars. They said their schedules were so erratic th a t th ey could n o t rely on the Kari-Van to coincide w ith the irRIPOFF, page 9

BALCONIEScontinued from page 1Cragin said he did n o t know if

he w ould be liable for the ac­cident.

R e la x in g in h e r a p a r t m e n t , s e n io r D e b b ie M u n e o n cairl o f t h e N ie k K a r a b e la c .o w n e H a p a r t m e n t b u i l d .ing on gasoline a l le y , “ If y o u d o n ’t m ind the m oney and you w an t th e convenience, i t ’s o k ay .” (Ed A cker pho to )

Cool Aid’s finals hours will be m idnight to 8 amBy R ich Mori

The board o f d irectors o f Cool Aid, voted Sunday to open the ir hotline service overnight during final exam s. They will be closed evenings.

Cool Aid will open Sunday at 6 p.m . and will close at 8 a.m . M onday. On T uesday, W ednes­day and T hursday the hours will be m idnight till 8 a.m .

“ We feel th a t during finals w e ’ll b e n eed ed m ore over­nigh ts,” said Cool Aid co-ordina- to r S co tt Stevens. “We base our estim ate on last y e a r’s large in ­c re a se in phone calls during

the p e rio d o f m idn ight to 8 a .m .”A ccording to Stevens, m ost o f

the phone calls during finals are re la ted to depression and fa­tigue.

“People ask them selves ques­tions like; Where the hell am I going?” said Stevens. “ Is school really w o rth it? Why did I ever get in to th is bad s itu ta tio n w ith stud ies?”

“ O ur job is to get people calmed dow n ,” he added. “We try to get them to take a realistic look at things. We recom m end resources like the Learning Skills C enter’s panic w o rk sh o p .”

Panic w orkshop is a tw o-hour session co nducted by instructors at the Learning Skills Center. They answer all questions from s tu ­dents and will teach them the various types o f learning skills.

Stevens said th a t “ the reason we a ren ’t open on a 24 hou r basis this year is because we d o n ’t have th e m anpow er. We are presently try ing to recru it new m em bers. I feel we will be successful in th a t e ffo rt.

“ W ith th a t assum ption , we will be open m ore hours nexf sem ester.”

Pictured above are the rem ains o f th e th ird and second floor ba l­conies a t a G arrison H illapartm entbuild ing. T he balconies collapsed Saturday injuring six UNH studen ts. (Ed A cker pho to )

Three hospitalized at Garrison Hill

PAGE FOUR THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U ESD A Y DECEMBER 9, 1 9 7 5

44 You have a funny laugh, Santa 55

S A N T Acontinued from page 1

th inner. W hat happened , did Mrs. Claus p u t y ou on a health food d ie t?”

“ Ignore i t ,” I said to m yself and kep t walking.

A young boy ab ou t 12 years old w ent by on a bicycle. He ja m m e d o n th e brakes and skidded around . “ Hey S an ta ,” he said, “w anta buy some p o t? ” He drove aw ay laughing.

I s to p p e d w alking and sat dow n on a bench. I had to com ­pose m yself. I was nervous and angry and th a t is no m ood to be in w hen playing Santa Claus.

While I was sitting I heard foo tsteps running tow ards me. I looked up to see a little boy dressed in a green beanie and a gold ski jacket on w hich was clipped a pair o f m ittens. He looked ab o u t th ree o f four years old.

“Hi Santa C laus,” he said, “ m y nam e is P au l.”

His eyes were the size o f w al­nuts and his m ou th hung open like a bulb o ff a Christm as tree.

I let o u t m y best “ H o-ho-ho” and said, “Well, Paul, have you been a good b o y ? ”

“ Yes S an ta ,” he answ ered.“ I know yo u have,” I said.

“A nd w hat w ould you like for C hristm as?”

I d id n ’t th ink it was possible bu t his eyes got w ider. “Weebles

Treasure Island” he said. “ You have a fu nn y laugh, S an ta .”

I let o u t an o th er Ho-ho and he tried to dup licate it.

Paul sat w ith me for ab ou t half an h ou r un til his m oth er came and picked him up. “ Bye Santa C laus,” he yelled and in his low est voice a ttem p ted a Ho- ho.

The m inute I had seen P au l’s eyes I had becom e Santa Claus. All it to o k was a look like th a t to m ake me realize w hat Santa Claus m eans to the children.

I spen t the rest o f the a fte r­n o o n w a lk in g the streets o f dow ntow n Dover. I talked to the kids, gave them candy, and lis­tened to all the toys th a t they w anted for Christm as.

A n d as th e a fte rno on p ro ­gressed I noticed th a t the m ajor­ity o f people w ould smile and say hello as th ey w ent by. There were a few m ore wise cracks bu t m ost o f the people seem ed to enjoy S an ta ’s presence.

All th e jokes m ade a t S an ta ’s expense co u ld n ’t affect him half as m uch as th e looks he received from th e children.

Santa is th e spirit o f C hrist­mas. He sym bolizes th e joy of giving. Every year he rem inds us th a t the season o f happiness is upon us once again.

Santa isn ’t only fo r the child­ren, h e ’s fo r everyone w ho b e ­lieves in Christm as.

Santa (Bob Stevenson) asks a young lady w hat she’d like fo r C hristm as. (Mike D ’A n ton io pho to )

Wait Until FDR Hears About This Howie Pease lost bet against FDR in 1940By Ed A cker

H e’s m ost likely to be seen standing in fro n t o f the en trance to R ay ’s Barber Shop. H e’s a short m an w ith a big smile fo r those w ho pass his way.

His nam e is H oward E. Pease, and back in 1940 he w heeled his uncle, Jam es F. B ennett, 12 miles a f te r he lost an election bet.

Uncle Jim , 73 years old, be t th a t F .D .R . w ould be re-elected and as a rew ard fo r this judg­m e n t rode in a w heelbarrow from the N ew field’s Tow n Hall to M arket Square in P ortsm outh . The distance o f 12 miles re­quired m ore th an 5 hours o f p u s h in g . Howie supplied the m an-pow er and pushed his uncle in to P ortsm outh shortly after noon th a t day, a f te r tak ing tim e ou t to replace a wheel th a t had broken five miles from Ports­m outh .

Howie was b o m in 1908 in Newfields, NH. He sp en t m ost o f his early years doing odd jobs. “ I was m arried fo r tw o weeks, then I was divorced, because m y wife drank to o m uch ,” said Howie.

H o w ie first w orked at the P ortsm outh Navy Y ard, then left fo r R hode Island. “ I t was there th a t I bough t m yself a small truck and s ta rted m y ow n refuse co llection service.”

“ R hode Island was g e ttin ’ too big, too quickly, so I re tu rned to Newfields where I was th e care­tak er a t the N ew m arket dum p for 5 years. I used to w ork a t the MUB w hen the ratio o f girls to boys was 3 to 1 !” Howie earned $29 .00 a 48 h ou r w eek, including meals, as a busboy fo r 17 years (in the old MUB).

“ The girls and boys have been good to me he re ,” he said w ith a grin. “ I en joy D urham and I ’ll tell you I can get along w ith an y ­b o d y !”

Bartending good fo r the social gracesDRINKScontinued from page 2

S tuden ts even had cham pagne (after learning the p roper way to uncork the b o ttle ). “ D on’t be ‘Joe H appy New Y ear’,” laughed Leach. “ Put y o u r hand over the to p and tw ist the cork off slow­ly .”

“ Now we mash th is all u p ,” and Leach chuckles as he looks in to the glass w ith a raised eye­brow , “ and sm ear it all around the sides o f th e glass.” he pauses and then says “ nice mess, h u h ?”

“ Now, p o u r in the bourbon ... o n e . . . t w o . . . t h r e e . . . ” and he

smiles a t the glass and then a t the audience. S tud ents had prac­ticed th e th ree co u n t m ethod o f pouring w ith bo ttle s filled w ith w ater, and a low drone o f one... tw o .. . th r e e . . . could be heard th rou g h ou t the room .

“ Put in a splash of w ater and stir w ell,” said Leach.

T h e instructors had already prepared the gin, rum and vodka d r in k s and had passed them around the class “ fo r sam pling” . M ost o f th e s tuden ts are quiet, waiting. “ We’re starting to get the giggles h e re ,” warns Leach w h o has ye t to m ix scotch , cream and special drinks.

H e s p e a r s a n orang e and

cherry on a pick and garnishes the drink.

“ A ny O ld -F ash ioned drinkers in the crow d?” and holds the drink high, then passes it to som eone in the firs t row.

A b londe girl w ith a tigh t sw eater drops a glass w hich co n­tained a M anhattan . “ Y our shu t o ff!” says Leach and everyone laughs.

Leach had described how to shu t o ff d runks and w arned, “ If he’s had enough d o n ’t give him an o ther one and have him end up barfing in y o u r ba throom . Just tell him polite ly ‘no m ore .’”

A husky , football type , s tu ­dent sips th e drink and says,

“This is a great course. I live in the B oston area and there’s a lo t of bars around . It should be easy to get a jo b .”

Passing the drink on, som eone asks Laura Ross, a UNH senior, why she too k the course. “As my m o th e r says, i t ’s good for social graces,” she replies.

H e r f r i e n d , a bespectacled ' young m an laughs and says, “ I ’m

doing research for A A .” “ O K ,” Leach says, lighting

an o th er cigarette and picking up a bo ttle , “ Now i t’s tim e fo r a R ob R oy. How m any R ob R oy drinkers in the crow d?”

The M odern M ixology course

was $15 per person. S tud ents re­ceived certificates o f com pletion at its conclusion.

F i f t y p e o p le a ttend ed the course w hich ran fo r eight hours.

“ We’ve tau gh t a t 40 d ifferen t s c h o o ls in the New England area ,” said Leach.

A rep resen ta tiv e from Pike said, “ We’re 90 per cen t sure w e’ll have an o ther course. I t ’ll be tow ards the end o f M arch and will be the same price, $ 1 5 .”

An open bar raged fo r a fewr hours afte r th e official course ended. The football, type , rolling up his sleeves, said, “ All I can say is now i t ’s tim e to go n u ts .” A nd m ost everyone did.

THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5 PAGE FIVE

G overnor M eldrim T hom son and th e Rice Bowl Q ueen. T hom son travelled to Louisiana to w atch the W ildcat foo tba ll team ba ttle W estern K en tucky in the Division II C ham pionship semi-final game. M om ents afte r th is p ic tu re was taken th e governor leaned over and kissed the queen. See foo tba ll s to ry on page 28. (Charlie Bevis pho to )

campus calendarTU ES D A Y , December 9

RED CROSS BLO O D ^BA N K : “ Santa Claus Is Coming To T ow n ,” Granite State Room, MUB, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.

H U M A N IT IE S LECTURE SERIES: “ Job as a S y m b o l o f th e O ld T e s ta m e n t,” Rabbi Fleishaker, Temple Israel, Portsm outh, NH. Richards A ud ito rium , M urkland Hall, 11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

CHRISTM AS C A R O L SING: Carols sung by the children from Oyster River Elementary School, University A r t Galleries', Paul A rts Cen­ter, 1 :45 p.m.

M E N ’ S IN T E R C O L L E G IA T E H O C KEY: Bowdoin College, Snively Arena, 7 p.m . SOLD OUT.

SIDOR . LECTURE SERIES: Overcoming A l­coh o lism and O ther Obstacles , ” Mercedes McCambridge, actress and voice o f the Devil in “ The E xorc is t” and reformed a lcoholic. Man­chester Institu te o f the Arts and Sciences, 148 Concord at Pine, Manchester, 8 p.m.

MUB PUB FLIC KS: Special rock & ro ll show featuring Chuck Berry, Danny and the Juniors, Fats Dom ino, Bo D iddley, Five Satins, and more. 8 p.m.

W EDNESDAY, December 10

M U B P U B : T a le n t n ight w ith McQueen’s Greasers and six other acts, 8 p.m.

F R ID A Y , December 12

READ IN G D A Y.

W O M E N ’S IN T E R C O LLE G IA T E BASKET- j B A LL : University o f Maine, Gorham. Lund- ' holm G ym , Field House. 3 :30 p.m.

M E N ’S IN T E R C O LLE G IA T E B A S K E T B A LL : B ro w n U n iv e rs ity , Lundholm G ym , Field House. Junior varsity, 6 p.m.; varsity, 8 p.m. A ll seats $2 or season pass.

UNH FIG URE S KA T IN G CLUB SHOW: “ The Magic o f Christmas,” Snively Arena, 7-8 p.m. Recreational skating fo r $.50 per person begins at 8 p.m . so bring your skates.

SENIOR PROJECT: “ M ichelangelo,” directed by Rob D im m ick. Hennessy Theater, 8 p.m. $.25 donation .

MUB PUB: S.S. Dennis, fu n ky rock and soul, 8 p.m.

S A T U R D A Y , December 13

W O M E N ’S IN T E R C O LLE G IA T E G Y M N A S ­TICS: M .I.T .,Lundho lm G ym , Field House, 2 p.m.

Elderhostel 975 plans materialized at UNH

RED CROSS BLOOD B A N K : Granite State Room, MUB, 10 a.m_* 3 p.m.

W OM EN’S ICE HO CKEY CLUB: Providence College, Snively Arena, 4 p.m. Admission $.50.

M E N ’S IN T E R C O LLE G IA T E T R A C K : Tufts , Paul Sweet Oval, 6 p.m.

CONCERT CHOIR CHRISTM AS CONCERT:Cleveland Howard directs G abrie li’s “ Jubilate Deo” and Saint-Saens “ Christmas O ra to ria .” Johnson Theater, Paul A rts Center, 8 p.m. SOLD O UT.

MUB PUB: R ick Bean, DJ, w ith Funk and Bump music fo r dancing, 8 p.m.

T H U R S D A Y , December 11

TH U R S D A Y CLASSES AS USUAL. READ IN G DAY C A N C ELLE D BECAUSE OF H O L ID A Y ON NO VEM BER 11.

RED CROSS BLOOD BA N K : G ranite State Room, MUB, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.

T H U R S D A Y —A T —ONE: Bruce Guernsey and Bruce Weigl reading the ir poetry, Room 130, Ham ilton-Sm ith Hall, 1 p.m.

SENIOR PROJECT: “ M ichelangelo,” a dram ­atic po rtra it o f the man based on his poetry and the novel, The Agony and the Ecstasy. D ir­ected by Rob D im m ick. Hennessy Theater, 8p . i n . $ . 2 5 J u n a l i u i i .

M E N ’S IN T E R C O LLE G IA T E W RESTLING :University o f Maine, Lundholm Gym , Field House, 4 p.m.

M E N ’ S IN T E R C O L L E G IA T E H O C K EY : Northeastern University, Snively Arena, 7 p.m. SOLD O UT.

SENIOR PROJECT: “ M ichelangelo,” directed by Rob D im m ick. Hennessy Theater, 7 & 9 p.m. $.25 donation .

MUB PUB; S.S. Dennis, fu n ky rock and soul, 8 p.m.

SUN DAY, December 14

UNH CONCERT BAND : G ranite State Room, Memorial Union, 2 p.m. Admission free.

MUB PUB: R ick Bean, DJ, w ith golden oldies, 8 p.m.

M O N D A Y , December 15

F IN A L EXAM S BEGIN.

SENIOR PROJECT: “ A Dram atic P ortra it o f L illian Heilman, the Woman, the L ife , the A r t , ” by Joanne M oody. Hennessy Theater, 8 p.m.

MUB PUB; Christmas Party and movies, “ L itt le Drummer B oy,” “ Magoo’s Christmas Carol,” and others. Prize fo r the best Santa. 8 p.m. Noc o v e r c h a r g e .

T H E N E W H A M P S H IR E is p u b lis h e d a n d d is t r ib u te d s e m i-w e e k ly th ro u g h o u t th e a c a d e m ic y e a r . O u r o f f ic e s a re lo c a te d in th e M e m o r ia l U n io n B u ild in g , D u rh a m , N .H . 0 3 8 2 4 . P h o n e 8 6 8 -7 5 6 1 o r 8 6 2 -1 4 9 0 . Y e a r ly s u b s c r ip t io n $ 7 .0 0 . S e c o n d class p o s ta g e p a id a t D u rh a m , N .H . P r in te d a t C a s tle P u b lic a t io n s in P la is to w , N .H . a n d a t T h e E x e te r N e w s -L e t te r C o ., E x e te r , N .H . T o ta l n u m b e r o f c o p ie s p r in te d 1 0 ,0 0 0 .

‘Student Judiciary Board m ay disappear forever’

By D ebbie Pierce“ E lderhostel is viewed as a re­

en try po in t; a place where the process o f re-iden tification be­g i n s , ” c o m m e n te d M a r t in K now lton , the co o rd ina to r of E lderhostel.

E lderhostel ‘75 was a sum m er program fo r the elderly in w hich s e l f - a w a r e n e s s w a s s tre ssed through the use o f the college as a hostel and as an educational sounding board .

I t was first in itia ted by the S p a u ld in g -P o t te r C om m unity Service Council, a t the beginning of 1975. K now lton said, “ The Spaulding fam ily le ft a great deal of m oney to the higher education institu tions o f the state. We re­ceived $7 ,500 fo r the purpose of organizing E lderhostel.”

E lderhostel’s goals and con­stru ctio n was sparked by the dedication of M artin K now lton . He e m p h a s iz e d , “ R etirem en t s h o u ld n o t m ean w ithdraw al, b u t an o p p o rtu n ity to develop and expand . W ith th a t in m ind, I w en t to w ork and p u t it toge ther a n d g o t a ll th e colleges to agree.”T he N ew H am pshire co lleger tha t K now lton secured fo r the program were: F ranconia Col­le g e , N ew E n g la n d College, P lym outh S tate College, Keene S tate College and the University of New Ham pshire.

The program was then funded w ith $22 ,00 0 by^ the T itle I, Higher E duca tion A ct o f 1965 (NH). The plans fo r E lderhostel could now m aterialize.

Once the colleges had agreed to partic ipate , each one set aside a p a r t o f a d o rm ito ry and created three m ini-courses to be used in the program . The Univer­sity o f New H am pshire was to serve as a m odel fo r the o the r colleges.,.

T u ition was free fo r those 65 and over, and fo r those living on Social Security . T here was a $50 a w eek charge fo r room , board , and tran spo rta tio n to the o ther cam puses.

A t D urham , the hostelers were

housed in W illiamson Hall. T hey were provided w ith weekly meal tickets f o r H uddleston Hall, where they d ined w ith the stu ­den t body.

T he hostelers were invited to a wine and cheese party by the foreign studen ts, and they also hosted a group of graduate s tu ­dents a t a barbecue. The hos­telers felt th a t the ir meals were m ore than adequate, and , as one man said, “ The m enu was suffic­ie n t ly varied each day. A nd th e r e was always good com ­pan y .”

Mini-buses were provided to bring the partic ipan ts from the dining halls to th e ir courses o r to recreational facilities. All Elder- hostelers were provided w ith a s tu den t recrea tion pass.

T h e p a r t ic ip a n ts of Elder­hostel had the op tio n to pursue t h e i r o w n ac tiv itie s if they w anted to b u t they could also take any o f the m ini-courses th a t w ere offered . In th e courses, there were no t assignm ents, no grades, and no tests.

Each college offered a course in early Am erican H istory w ithH e l d t r ip s t o lo c a l h i s t o r ic a lplaces. P rofessor Charles Clark tau gh t the early A m erican His­to ry course a t UNH. There was a bus trip each day. The hos­telers explored such places as S t r a w b e r r y B an k e in P orts­m o u th , Y ork Village Colonial R estoration , E xeter area hom es a n d s i t e s , and D urham area hom es, sites and m useum s.

Prof. Clark also tau gh t an oral history course w hich consisted o f tape-recording the hostelers past experiences and m em ories for the benefit o f fu tu re h is to r­ians. Five o f the partic ipan ts had labor un ion backgrounds. They were able to share the ir m em or­ie s o f labor-m anagem ent con­f r o n t a t i o n s from th e earlier years o f this cen tury .

Vera Q ualters o f W inchester, NH, said she was im pressed w ith C lark’s oral h is to ry course. “ His

ELDERHOSTEL. page 12

By Jo h n Snodgrass The S tu d en t Jud iciary Board

m ay disappear forever a fte r this sem ester, according to SJB m em ­ber K atrina Galvan.

The SJB consists o f 13 s tu ­dents w ho act as a governing body over cases where s tuden ts have broken University rules.

The SJB has been inactive this sem ester because a new board was n o t selected un til O ctober.

“ I d id n ’t realize it was th e S tu ­dent G overnm ent’s job to select th e n e w m em bers un til th is y ear,” said S tu d en t Body Presi­den t Larry M eacham .

In previous years new m em ­bers o f the SJB had been chosen by th e board itself, according to M eacham . This year when S tu ­den t G overnm ent assum ed the r e s p o n s ib i l i t y o f selecting a board . Associate Dean o f S tu ­

dents William K idder asked tha t a le tte r stating th e selection p ro ­cess be subm itted to him .

Galvan said th a t K idder w ants a facu lty m em ber to have the position o f being judge over the s tuden t cases instead of a s tu ­d e n t m e m b e r board . K idder

SJB, page 10

PAGE SIX THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEM BER 9 , 1 9 7 5 -spi

noticeGENERAL

J A N U A R Y F I E L D H O U S E H O U R S : T h e F ie ld H o u s e w i l l be o p e n f o r n o o n r e c re a t io n J a n u a ry 5 -2 3 , M o n d a y - F r id a y , 11 a .m . - 2 p .m . O n ly th e g y m , t ra c k a n d c o u r ts w i l l b e o p e n , t h e p o o l w i l l be c lo s e d .

I N T E R N A T I O N A L M U S IC P R O G R A M M E : E va n S n y d e r w i th M id d le East m u s ic , S u n d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 4 , W U N H , 9 1 .3 s te re o F M , 7 -8 p .m .

B U Y - B A C K O F U S E D T E X T B O O K S : T h e used t e x t - b o o k b u y e r w i l l be a t th e B o o k s o re D e c e m b e r 1 6 , 1 7 ,1 8 , 8 a .m . - 4 p .m . t o b u y b a c k b o o k s w h e th e r used a t

U N H o r n o t .

A D M I S S I O N S IN F O R M A T I O N S E S S IO N : F o r Pr ° s-

? 3 C tR o o m U2 0 8 ! SMacCdo n n lu h X i T i O : l o T m * W t S n ^ o o i is in sess ion c a m p u s to u r s leave f r o m th e M e m o r ia l U n io n e v e ry S a tu rd a y a n d S u n d a y a t 2 p .m .

S P R IN G V A C A T IO N IN B E R M U D A : 7 d a y s a n d n ig h ts , M a rc h 2 0 - 2 7 , o n ly $ 1 9 9 , i n c l u d e s a c c o m o d a t io n s , r o u n d , t r ip je t t r a n s p o r ta t io n a n d d a i ly a c t iv i t ie s . O p t io n a l p la n s a v a ila b le a ls o , space is l im i t e d , s ign u p a t C lu b S p o r ts O f ­f ic e , R o o m 1 2 7 -B , M e m o r ia l U n io n , o r c a ll 8 6 2 -2 0 3 1 f o r f u r t h e r in fo r m a t io n . S p o n s o re d b y R e c re a t io n a n d S tu ­d e n t A c t iv i t ie s .

P L A N T T H E R A P Y G R O U P S : I f y o u a re in te re s te d in c o n d u c t in g a w e e k ly p la n t g r o u p f o r p a t ie n ts a t th e N .H . S ta te H o s p ita l, C o n c o rd d u r in g s e co n d se m e s te r c o n ta c t D r R o u t le y , 8 6 2 -1 2 0 5 , N e s m ith H a ll. M u s t be fa m i l ia r w i th h o u se p la n ts a n d a b le to sp e n d o n e d a y a w e e k a t th e h o s p ita l.

ACADEMICM U S IC A U D I T I O N S : P ro s p e c tiv e m u s ic m a jo rs m a y ta k e th e p e r fo rm a n c e a u d it io n a n d w r i t t e n m u s ic a l a p t it u d e

te s t S a tu r d a y , J a n u a ry 17 o r S a tu r d a y , J a n u a ry 3 1 . C a ll th e m u s ic d e p a r tm e n t , 8 6 2 -2 4 0 5 , f o r d e ta i ls .

r n N S O R T I U M S T U D E N T S : A n y U N H s tu d e n t o n th e C o n s o r t iu m P ro g ra m m u s t c o m p le te th e C o n s o r t iu m n -c+ ra tio n F o rm b y D e c e m b e r 19 i f y o u p la n t o s ta y a t u n Th n e x t s e m e s te r . F o rm s a v a ila b le f r o m G e o rg e A b ra h a m , A d v is in g C e n te r , M u rk la n d H a ll.

C O N S O R T IU M P R O G R A M I N F O R M A T I O N : A n y s tu ­d e n ts w is h in g to p a r t ic ip a te in o r re c e iv e in fo r m a t io n a b o u t th e C o n s o r t iu m P ro g ra m f o r s e co n d se m e s te r see G e o rg e A b ra h a m , A d v is in g C e n te r, M u rk la n d H a ll, b y D e c e m b e r 1 9 .

C O M P U T E R C O U R S E , IN T R O T O D E C S Y S T E M -1 0 . C o u rse d e s c r ib e s th e m e c h a n ic s o f te r m in a l o p e ra t io n . L O G IN p ro c e d u re , b a s ic c o m m a n d s , p ro g ra m e x a m p le s f i le o r g a n iz a t io n te c h n iq u e s , a n d a des£ n d ? « 2 2 7 n F C -1 0 7 7 s o f tw a re . T u e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 9 , R o o m M 2 2 7 , K in g s b u ry H a ll, 2 :3 0 - 4 :3 0 p .m . N o n -c r e d i t , n o c h a rg e , p re re g is te r w i th Ja n is M c L e lla n , 8 6 2 -2 3 2 3 . K e v in S p e r l, in s t r u c to r .

C O M P U T E R C O U R S E , P E R IP H E R A L IN T E R C H A N G E P R O G R A M (P IP ) : T h is p ro g ra m is used t o t ra n s fe r f i le s from one I /O d e v ic e to a n o th e r , T h u rs d a y , D e c e m b e r 11 R o o m M 2 2 8 , K in g s b u ry H a il , 2 : 3 0 ^ 3 0 p m . N o n . o jd i t , no c h a rg e , p re re g is te r w i th Ja m s M c L e lia n , 8 6 2 -2 J Z J . R a lp h T h iv ie rg e , in s t r u c t o r .

R E S U M E W R IT IN G W O R K S H O P : L e c tu r e a n d d is ­cu ss io n o n jo b -g e t t in g c o m m u n ic a t io n te c h n iq u e s (re s ­u m e s , c o v e r le t te r s ) ; o p e n t o a l l . T h u r s d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 1 , C a ree r P la n n in g a n d P la c e m e n t, R o o m 2 0 3 , H u d d le s to n

H a ll, 6 :3 0 p .m .

CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONSS T U D E N T S F O R F R E D H A R R IS : O rg a n iz a t io n a l a n d p la n n in g m e e t in g W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 0 , H a n o v e r R o o m , M U B , 12 n o o n .

PI G A M M A M U H O N O R A R Y S O C IE T Y : “ C h a n g in gT re n d s in H ig h e r E d u c a t io n , ” P e te r D o d g e , S o c io lo g y d e p t . , s e m i-a n n u a l in i t ia t io n o f n e w m e m b e rs , T h u rs d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 1 , A lu m n i L o u n g e , N e w H a m p s h ire H a ll, 3 :3 0 p .m .

R E C O R E D E R S O C IE T Y : L a s t m e e t in g T h u rs d a y , D e c ­e m b e r 11 f r o m 11 a .m . - 1 P .m . C o n ta c t K a th r y n , 8 6 8 -2 0 4 0 , f o r f u r t h e r in fo r m a t io n .

N F W H A M P S H IR E O U T IN G C L U B : M e e t in g to re c a p th is s e m e s te r ’ s e v e n ts , p la n f o r n e x t s e m e s te r, a n d p a r ty , T u e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 9 , R o o m 1 3 0 , H a m i l t o n - S m ith H a ll, 7 p .m .

U N H F L Y IN G C L U B : M e e t in g W e d n e s d a y ', D e c e m b e r 10 B e lk n a p R o o m , M U B , 7 p .m . TvVo f i lm s , s lid e s o f f o r m a t io n f l ig h t p r o je c t , - a p p l ic a t io n s a n d f l ig h t in s t r u c ­t io n in fo r m a t io n a v a ila b le .

E C K A N K A R C A M P U S S O C IE T Y : “ T h e P a th o f T o ta l , A w a re n e s s ,” an in t r o d u c t o r y le c tu re , W e d n e s d a y , D e c ­e m b e r 1 0 , R o o m 3 2 0 , M U B , 7 :3 0 p .m .

W O M E N ’S C E N T E R : P lease r e tu r n a ll l ib r a r y b o o k s an d re s o u rc e m a te r ia ls t o th e C e n te r , 1 In c in e ra to r R o a d , b y D e c e m b e r 1 8 . D o n a t io n s o f re la te d m a te r ia ls w e lc o m e .

S T U D E N T V ID E O T A P E O R G A N I Z A T IO N : M e e t in g to p la n f o r n e x t s e m e s te r, T u e s d a y D e c e m b e r 9 , H a n o v e r R o o m , M U B , 7 p .m . p .m .

T R A N S C E N D E N T A L M E D I T A T IO N : F re e in t r o d u c t o r y le c tu re , W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 0 , R o o m 4 1 , H a m i lt o n - S m ith H a ll, 7 :3 0 p .m .

A M E R IC A N A S S O C IA T IO N O F U N IV E R S I T Y P R O F ­E S S O R S : M o n t h ly c h a p te r m e e t in g T h u rs d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 1 , F o r u m R o o m , D im o n d L ib r a r y , 4 p .m .

V O L U N T E E R P R O B A T IO N C O U N S E L O R S : “ S o c ia lD e v ia n c e ,” T o m V ic c a r o . W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 0 , H i l ls ­b o ro u g h R o o m , M U B , 7 :3 0 - 9 p .m .

s3 3 ,5 0 0 ,0 0 0U n c l a i m e d ScholarshipsOver $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of these sources researched and com piled as o f Sept. 15, 19 .

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M U B , 8 p .m .

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S C U B A C L U B : W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 0 , S e n a te R o o m , M U B , 6 :3 0 p .m .

CAREERS RELIGIONST E A C H IN G C A R E E R S D R O P — IN : In fo r m a l d is c u s s io n o f ca re e rs in e d u c a t io n ( te a c h in g , c o u n s e lin g , a d m in is t r a ­t io n , e tc .) e s p e c ia lly f o r u n d e rc la s s m e n a n d g ra d u a tin g s tu d e n ts . T u e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 9 , C a re e r P la n n in g a n d P la c e m e n t, R o o m 2 0 3 , H u d d le s to n H a ll, 6 :3 0 p .m .

I N T E R — V A R S I T Y , C A M P U S C R U S A D E , & N A V I ­G A T O R S : P ra y e r b r e a k fa s t , Thursday, D e ce rn erP h i lb r o o k D in in g H a ll, 7 a .m .

I N T E R — V A R S I T Y C H R I S T I A N F E L L O W S H I P ’ C h r is tm a s c a r o l in g , T h u rs d a y , D e c e m b e r 1 1 . M e e t a t C a r- ro l l -B e lk n a p R o o m , M U B , a t 6 :3 0 P -m -

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THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5 PAGE SEV EN

The Little People’s Center-not a pre-school center

By M ike Im sickThe sound o f a huge stapler

can be heard behind the door m arked “ E m ployees o n ly ” at the L loyd Davis Shoe Co. in Som ersw orth. Inside, an o rder o f 1 2 5 ,0 0 0 sneak ers w ith soles peeling o ff were being repaired. The sneakers were m anufactu red in Taiwan.

L loyd Davis and his son, R ick set up the ir shoe-repair business in S o m e r s w o r th last M arch. Since th en , orders o f dam aged or defective shoes have been rolling in to Davis’ fac to ry w ith such rap id ity th a t Davis has erected a sign on R te. 16 w hich reads, “The W orld’s Largest Shoe R e­pa irer.”

Davis said, “M any shoes are m ade tod ay w ith no t enough care or strength . M ost o f the shoes we get are. from overseas a n d a b o u t 50 per cent are cem ent failures. O ther defects include dam aged finishes, n o n ­fitting uppers, and fau lty con­s tru c tio n .”

D avis m oved in to a vacant dance hall o ff R te. 16 in Somer- w orth and set up his business. Now there are 30 people w o rk ­ing fo r him and Davis expects to

hire 20 m ore by Jan . 1. He owns tw o and a half acres w ith 300 feet o f frontage on R te. 16. “ I w ant to fill the w hole tw o and a half acres up w ith buildings and m achinery ,” he said.

A f t e r D a v i s ’ p l a n t w as featured on th e fro n t page o f the Wall S treet Journal, he received offers fo r land and capital from all over the coun try . “ I received offers' from banks and develop­ers in U tah, Georgia, and N orth C arolina,” said Davis.

“A nyw here in the N ortheast is goo d ,” said Davis. However, the cigar-smoking, 47-year-old seem ­ed a little angry because he was unable to get local financing.

Davis’ repair fac to ry is divided in to several d ifferen t job areas. In one section , th ree w orkers were drilling holes in heels and pu tting screws in to hold the shoes together.

In the spraying area, an order o f w hite boo ts from Spain were being sprayed black. “ You can ’t sell w hite boo ts an y m o re ,” said Rick Davis.

He added , “A com m on p ro b ­lem is called m igration. This is w here a chemical used in ce­m e n tin g or finishing m igrates

By Cheryl CraaybeekAs y ou walk in to the L ittle

People’s C enter in the basem ent of th e C om m unity C hurch, you can observe all sorts o f activity going on. Children betw een the ages o f tw o and six are busym a k i n g m a r l i n g h n n k c ,

singing, and playing games w ith e a c h o th e r . A t the D urham C hildren’s C enter in the base­m e n t. o f S t . T h o m a s More C hurch, the ch ildren are occupi­ed w ith the ir ow n individual ac­tivities.

T h e L ittle People’s C enter, which has been in opera tion fo r f iv e y e a r s , and the D urham C h i ld r e n ’s C enter, w hich has been in existence fo r three years, are the tw o day care centers o f Durham .

A c c o r d in g to A ndi Fiske- Sippel, a staff m em ber a t the D urham C hildren’s Center, “ The children plan w h at they w an t to do for the day. I t is im po rtan t t h a t they develop th e ir own skills fo r th ink ing and reasoning. We are n o t a pre-school. We deal m ore w ith teaching children how to live th an preparing them for school.”

There are a few UNH studen ts w orking a t the day care centers, som e volunteers, and som e full­tim e s taff m em bers.

In order fo r a child to becom e enrolled in one o f the D urham day care centers, th e parents “ iust d rop in and nick ud an application fo rm ,” according to a s ta ff m em ber a t the L ittle People’s Center.

“ There is a w aiting list which depends upo n the tim e of the year and the age of the child. The fall is the best tim e to enroll a child in one of the centers be­cause m any o f the children are going to k indergarten .”

The L ittle People’s C enter has ab o u t 40 children and the D ur­ham C hildren’s C enter has ab o u t 20. Som e children stay at the centers fo r p a rt o f the day and some stay for the whole day.

Jan e t Ram sdell, a UNH em ­ployee and the m o th e r o f Billy, age 5, th inks th a t the cen ter is “ terrific .”

“ The kids get a lo t ou t o f it. Billy is getting m ore ou t o f day care than he got o u t o f kinder­garten ,” she said.

A n o ther paren t w ho is a UNH stud en t th inks “ day care is ju st

through a surtace an a causes dis­co loration and harden ing .” Davis, poin ted to a rack of ch ild ren ’s s h o e s w i th y e llo w streaked, hardened heels.

L loyd Davis has been m aking shoes for 28 years. “ I know all the d ifferen t processes and I ’ve been all over the coun try m aking shoes. Also I have very willing and com peten t w ork ers,” said Davis.

Davis is opening up his opera­tion to include th e testing o f shoes before th ey are shipped f ro m overseas. “ One accoun t will bring in over $20 m illion d o l la r s w orth of shoes. The samples will be sent fo r approval and tested . T hen the first cases will be sent fo r w ear-testing and fit evaluatio n ,” Davis said.

By Jan . 1 Davis expects $100 m illion w o rth of shoe billings.

Davis said, “There is no bo re­dom in th is job . Every week we get a d ifferen t type o f repair job. This tends to reduce em ployee b o red o m .”

T w o trac to r trailers full o f shoes were parked behind the facto ry w aiting to be repaired. A nother sh ipm ent is expected soon from St. Louis.

great fo r m y 2 year old Lisa.”“M ore than half of the child­

ren enrolled in the centers are children of UNH s tu d en ts ,” said Professor H arry H. Hall, presi­den t o f The Friends o f D urham Day Care, a non-p ro fit organiza­t i o n f o r m o cl t o h o lp raieo cuetain ing funds fo r day care pur­poses in Durham . ... .> “ The to ta l cost is $35 a week for children over tw o and $42 a week fo r children under tw o ,” said Hall. “ The cost is m ore for children u nd er tw o because they req u ire care from m ore staff m embers. Parents pay fo r day care according to th e ir incom e and the num ber o f children in the fam ily. If the parents are on w elfare, they do n o t pay any­th ing .”

“ Since m ost o f the parents can only pay a p a rt of the cost o f day care, the difference is m ade u p b y co n trib u tio ns m atched three to one by federal funds,” he said.

The centers also ex ist on con­tribu tions from the tow n o f Dur­h a m , in d iv id ua l people from Durham , the D urham churches and service organization, and the facu lty of UNH.

Three happy faces a t th e L ittle P eople’s C enter located in the base­m ent o f th e C om m unity Church. (D ennis Giguere pho to )

PAGE EIGHT THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

p h y s ic a l ed u ca tio n m ajor a t UNH, has logged 90 hours of flying tim e w ith the club. Soren­son said, “ I jo ined in Septem ber and I th ink it is a great deal. I ’ve m e t p e o p le a n d som etim es o thers go up w ith me and share expenses.”

The UNH Flying Club is com ­posed o f the m ost diverse age group of any club on cam pus. A lo t o f local people jo in the club to learn how to fly. Also the flight instructors, plane captain and business m anager are older.

R ecently the Flying Club has been p r a c t i c i n g flying the ir planes in form ation . On early w eekend m ornings club m em ­bers leave th e ir hom e a irpo rt a t Skyhaven in R ochester, and stay in the sky betw een R ochester and Sanford , Maine.

B e f o r e s t a r t in g up , Green s h o u t s , “ C lear.” “ This is to m ake sure no one is u nd er the propeller,” said Green.

“ The norm al clim bing speed after lift-o ff is 80 m ph. Then when y o u ’re in the air, to m a­neuver the aircraft y ou m ust get pitch , yaw and roll coord inated w ith the co n tro ls ,” he added.

A fter the flyers are up in the air fo r a while, they are prone to e n g a g e in careful “ screw ing- a ro u n d .” A sked ab ou t w h at he said on the radio, Green said, ” 1 to ld him I was going to sho o t him dow n.” Green then pulled up n ex t to the o the r Cessna 150 and radioed, “ Drat! I m issed.”

Green said, “ You have to ipay close a tten tio n w hen you try crossovers and o th e r m aneuvers. The closer the planes get, the faster things hap pen .”FLYING CLUB, page 13

1. Paul Anka.2. Dr. Lovelace.3. “How will y ou m ake it on

you r ow n? This w orld is aw fully b ig , girl th is tim e y o u ’re all a lone .”

4. Jellystone Park.5. H oppy.6. Peter Sellers.7 . The A rrangem ent ( th a t’s

F a y e D u n a w a y a n d K irk Douglas.)

8. Candy P ru itt played by Bridget Hanley.)

9. C aptain Daniel Gregg.10. Three - each o f his sons

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fci^et tbese pre-firal blues

at tbe KEG ROOMwitb tbe aeeestie bleed ef tbe Flying club doesn’t land

in corn fields anymoreBy M ichael Im sick

In 495 9 the UNH Flying Club landed in a corn field near the cam pus and tax ied dow n Main St. to announce the form ation o f th e ir club. This year the Flying Club has three airplanes and over 50 m em bers w ith an active flight school in progress.

In explaining the philosophy of the club, Vice P residen t Steve Green said, ’’When you fly you do n ’t get in to an airplane. You

' p u t it on, then the tw o of you fly tog e ther.”

The c lu b’s three airplanes in­clude: a m aroon tour-seat Cessna 172 Skyhaw k, a 1966 Cessna 150 and a 1974 Cessna 150

(both two-seaters).Green said, “The club is a real

good organization and everyone in it likes to fly. Also we have the best flight in structo rs in the area.”

The club advertises th a t a new m em ber can get a solo p ilo t’s li­cense fo r approxim ate ly $560. This is a savings of $200-$300 over flight in structio n a t com ­m ercial airports.

F or a p ilo t’s license, 20 hours in the air is needed w ith an in­stru c to r ($18 /h r.) and 20 hours flying alone ($10 /h r.).

“ Landings especially take a lo t o f p rac tice ,” said Green.

B a rb a ra Sorenson, a senior

THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1975 PAGE NINE

Apartment rip-offRIPOFFContinued from page 3hours. M ost people said if you w ant to live close to cam pus you have to pay.

M any ten an ts said landlords are n o t m eeting the ir responsib il­ities.

Jenkin s C ourt is an ap artm en t building ow ned by Ernest C utter a n d located across th e street from the F rank lin T heater. T en­ants here preferred to rem ain anonym ous.

Som e claimed th a t w hen they m o v e d in , t h e i r ap artm en ts needed m any repairs and the landlord did n o t provide them w ith in a reasonable am oun t o f tim e, o r did n o t provide them a t all.

One ten an t said , “The place was a mess w hen I got here. The l a n d lo r d n ever did anyth ing ab o u t it. The pa in t was peeling in th e living room and b a th ­room , the freezer was broken and the show er head d id n ’t w ork - it sprayed all over th e walls and ceiling.” A fter a m on th and a half o f requesting the lan d lo rd ’s assistance, the landlord provided pain t fo r the ten an ts b u t the show er and the freezer are still broken.

A ten an t in an o th er part o f the building had problem s w ith his sink overflow ing, problem s w h ich he felt re la ted to the p lu m b in g in th e ap a rtm en t above him . He called th e lan d­lord ab ou t it several tim es, b u t got no response. He bought a chemical drain opener and used it, hoping th a t w hatever caused the overflow does n o t recur.

The hallways o f Jenkins C ourt are dim ly lit. F or ab o u t three

weeks a t the beginning o f the sem ester tw o o f them were n o t lit a t all. T enants called th e lan d ­lo r d repeated ly to have new lights p u t in. T enants on one side o f the building finally p u t in their ow n bulbs. T enants on the o th e r side received service afte r three weeks.

The ren t a t Jenkins C ourt is $195 per m on th for a bedroom , a sm all living room , a small k itchen and a bath . Occupancy is usually one or tw o persons and ten an ts pay for th e electric­ity . According to the ten an ts , the parking facilities are inad­equate. The building has fire es­c a p e s , b u t ten an ts said they “ look to o u n stead y .”

The ten an ts at Jenkins C ourt claim they never received copies o f th e ir leases. A fter signing them , th ey were to ld th a t a copy w ould be m ailed to them . They said th a t they had n o t received them by th e m iddle o f O ctober.

A t t o r n e y Joh n T. B arre tt, cited S ta tu tes A n notated w hich says a landlord is required to produce fo r the ten an t a copy of the lease w ith in th ir ty days o f its signing, o r is subject to a fine o f n o t m ore than $100.

C u t t e r a ls o ow ns W ebster House, an ap artm en t build ing on the corner o f M adbury R oad and W oodm an Avenue. The ten ants have no com plain ts w ith the ser­vice. They said th e landlord re ­sponded to the ir needs w ith in a resonable am o un t o f tim e and the building is kep t in good con­dition .

R en t a t W ebster House aver­ages ab o u t $ 3 0 0 per m on th and includes all u tilities excep t elec­tric ity and phone. Most o f the apartm ents have tw o bedroom s,

Christmas Suggestions

Hundreds ofP a p e r b a c k s

40 % offAlso , UNH

(b o o k stoa ll aud io \j-------------------

a ccesso r ie s OPEN 20 % 8:00

Off - 5:30until C h r is tm as A A O H e jjg *

C om m unications m ajor R ob ert E ckhart com m ented on the relative room and board costs in D urham saying, “ C om pared to th e m ini-dorm s, i t ’s a good buy . (Ed A cker pho to )

a large k itchen and living room and a ba th . T hey also have wall to wall carpeting.

The building has stu rdy fire es­capes and am ple parking facil­ities. The halls are clean and well lit.

Som e ten an ts said the ren t is high, b u t m ost are satisfied w ith w hat th ey get fo r the ir m oney. Julie R yan, a senior m ajoring in zoology and a residen t o f W eb­ster House said “ anything is high in D urham , b u t I th in k ours is reasonable .”

The “ C oops” are tw o bu ild ­ings of apartm en ts located on D ennison Avenue and ow ned by Joyce Janes. Janes becam e land­lord th is year.

One s tu den t ten an t said, “ the landlord is very accessible. You can talk to her. I ren ted from ano ther landlord in D urham and you can’t ta lk to him a t all. He yells a t you in fro n t o f his cus­tom ers in his restau ran t. I like Joyce Janes, she listens.”

A nother s tuden ts held the o p ­posite opin ion. He said she is “ insensitive to ten an ts ’ needs. She do esn ’t lis ten .” This s tud en t had been prom ised a new stove. H is w as b roken and he was forced to use his neighbor’s oven to cook.

At th e end o f O ctober th e new stove had n o t arrived. O ther te n ­a n ts had been prom ised new p a in t , refrigerators and d o o r­

knobs to replace missing ones. They have n o t received them .

Overall, reactions to Janes as a la n d lo rd were favorable. The c o m p la in t was n o t th a t she doesn’t do anyth ing fo r th e te n ­ants, b u t th a t she says she- will do to o m uch. T enants had praise for her efforts to im prove co n­ditions a t the Coops and said she was a good landlord .

One stu den t sum m eo up w nat seem ed to be th e m ajority o p in ­ion w hen she said, “ She m akes too m any prom ises b u t a t least she is try ing to fix the place u p .”

The larger apartm en ts in the Coops ren t fo r $215 per m on th ,RIPOFF, page 10

E NEED TALENT!any and all talent needed for

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p a g e t e n THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEM BER 9 , 1 9 7 5

Air Force ROTC.

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Contact the Professor o f Aerospace Studies in the ROTC Building. Phone : 862-1480.

Put it all together in

For o n ly 22<t o r less you can le t yo u r fo lks know th a t

you got back safely.

22c or less buys you a 1-minute dial-direct call to anywhere out of state in the continental U.S. except Alaska. Additional minutes are 160 or less. Between 11 pm and 8 am weekdays and weekends until 5 pm Sunday. Rates do not apply to

coin, credit card, person-to-person, hotel-guest calls, to calls charged to a third number or on calls to points within this state.

f i y New England Telephone

SJB fateSJBcontinued from page 5claims th a t th e U niversity has the pow er to approve or d isap­prove o f the SJB, she added.

“The SJB is im p o rtan t because s tu den t judges will ten d to be m o re l e n ie n t th a t a facu lty ju d g e ,” said Galvan. “This is very serious because w ith o u t a SJB. s tuden ts m ight get screwed for n o th in g .”

A proposal has been draw n up th a t ou tlines a s tru c tu re for the SJB. This m ust be approved by K idder before it can be recog­nized.

Galvan said, “ Up un til now there has been a general ap athy tow ards the SJB. Unless s tuden ts get in te rested and actively sup- po rty the SJB, it will p robably be dissolved. The s tuden ts will be th e losers.”

DurhamRIPOFFcontinued from page 9plus e lectric ity . There are th ree bedroom s, a living ro o m , k itchen and ba th . The lease runs fo r a full year. Sm aller s tud io ap artm en ts consist o f one ro om , a k itchen and a b a th and ren t fo r $150 per m o n th . E le c t r i c i ty is ex tra . There are fire escapes and th e stairs and hallw ays are well lit. Parking is provided b u t ten an ts said it is inadaquate.

Parking is a m ajor concern o f s tu d e n ts , and m any landlords choose tou ignore it and let th e ten an ts find th e ir ow n solutions .

A t Y oung Drive ten an ts say t h e r e is n o t enough parking space a llo tted to each dup lex for th e six people th a t live there . T enants park on th e stree t. A fter N ovem ber first, the to w n bans parking on th e street. T enants th en park on th e law n, and th e landlord fines them . Som e lan d ­lords charge d ifferen t ren ts fo r th e same ap artm en ts and th e same num ber o f occupan ts fo r no ap p aren t reason.4 It pays to do som e reserach before signing a lease. T enants should ta lk to p resen t ten an ts and com pare th e ir reac tions to questions. C om parisons o f prices and physical set ups o f ap a r t­m ents help ap a rtm en t hun ters m ake th e righ t choice.

StanleyresignsRESIGNcontinued from page 1of date. We haven’t been fo llow ­ing i t .” He hopes it is approved and im plem ented by th e s tu d en t governm ent n ex t term .

He said th a t one o f the biggest problem s o f th is te rm had been the lack of o rgan izations from the treasurers. “ I originally re ­quested them to p resen t a copy of the ir budgets a w eek before we discussed th em . T hey started bringing them in on th e day we had to pass them and now i t ’s s tandard p rocedure. This is w h at leads to confused and sloppy handling o f the budgets. I t ’s a lack o f expertise th a t can be a v o id e d .”

THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5 PAGE ELEVEN

Are you interested in a rewarding job teaching the Learning Skills course?

The Center needs people, regardless of major*, who are interested in people and who are available

next semester.All applicants must be accepted by the

work study program.

The financial aid office, 308 T-Hallis still taking work study applications

for the spring term.

l/lfhy not come over and see usin Richards House, or call 862-1625

the Learning Skills Center

Driver now supervisorSUPERVISORc o n t in u e d f ro m p a g e 2 office, m ade the final decision to hire Stevens.

“ T h e re w il l b e no m ajor changes in th e Kari-Van ro u te ,” Stevens said. “B ut there will be m inor refinem ents in o rder to im prove the service. We w an t to cater th e stops to the studen ts. We also w ant to m ake small dele­tions in th e rou tes to m ake the opera tion financially self-suppor­ting .”

Stevens has n o t y e t decided w hether he will be buying or leasing m ore buses. “There will definitely be changes in th e qual­ity o f the buses to im prove the dependability o f the service for the s tu d en ts ,” he said.

T w enty-four year o ld Stevens w orked as a Kari-Van driver fo r one year before he was h ired as supervisor. He is originally from D u rh a m and graduated from UNH in 1973.

Friday’s issue ofThe New Hampshire will be the last of the semester.The next issue will be Feb. 6 .

Carnival funds withheldCARNIVAL continued from page 1“A t BOB there were som e ques­tions th a t w eren ’t an sw ered ,” he said.

“The leaders o f th e sponsoring studen t organization d id n ’t show up ton igh t to clarify things. I feel it w ould be appro pria te if the caucus voted to delay this m o tio n ,” said Stanley.

S tan ley ’s com m ent follow ed a p resen ta tion by Spruance.

“ I ’m sorry th a t th e s tud en t organizations d id n ’t com e to the m eeting ,” she said. “ It was my understanding th a t they w ould be here to answ er the caucus’ questio ns.”

The biggest concern o f the

caucus was the status o f the Night o f Sin profits. 20 percent of th e profits will go the the Greek Council. The o th e r 80 percent will go to tw o charities; the D urham Day Care C enter and the Leukem ia F oundatio n O peration.

“This m oney is going to go to w a r d s planning nex t y e a r’s N ight o f S in,” said Spruance. “The G reek’s only had a small am oun t to w ork w ith this yea r.”

S tanley disagreed. “As I u n ­d e r s t a n d the ag reem en t,” he said, “ there is no stipu lation th a t this m oney will all go fo r nex t year’s Night o f S in .”

O th e r item s questioned by senators included; -W hat are the t i t l e s o f the $300 w o rth of movies to be shown by the Ski

Club? -W hat types of publicity will be used? -W hat typ e of co n­struction will be done w ith the $ 4 0 0 c o n s t r u c t i o n b u d g e t? -W ho w ould ow n 20 com passes to be purchased by th e O rien­teering Club for $25?

“ if these s tu den t leaders can’t come before us to explain the s itu a tio n ,” said m ini-dorm H ud­dleston senator Dwayne Frost, “ th en th ey can w ait a week and come back to explain the situa­tion . I w ould have voted to ap ­propriate the m oney; how ever, if the W inter Carnival w ould have been p u t in jeapardy by o u r ac­tio n .”

S tud en t Body President Larry M eacham said, “ I did feel th a t we ac ted in the best in terests o f s tu d en ts .”

1 K I \ K

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Treat her to something special...This Christmas treat her to some­thing special - a blouse or sk irt from India, A frica , Mexico or Greece. Pictured here from India, in co tton crepe - the Lola blouse(left) $14. and the Caresse Blouse (right)$ 17.In addition to our in te r­national collection o f clothes, we carry some great all-American fash­ions like Bort Carelton shoes, Landlubber jeans, and o f course, LEV I'S .

PAGE TWELVE THE NEW HAMPSHIRE T U ESD A Y DECEMBER 9, 1975

RESEARCH PAPERSTHOUSANDS ON FILE

Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order ca.:alog of 5 ,500 topics. Enclose $1 .00 to cover postage and handling.

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH1720 P O N T IU S A V E ., S U IT E 201

LOS A N G E L E S , C A L IF .9 0 0 2 5

Elderhostel at UNH

Name

Address

C i t y ------

State — Z ip .

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ELDERHOSTELcontinued from page 5

class has inspired me to get a ta p e r e c o r d e r and interview some o f our local senior citizens. I ’ll p u t the tape in our lib rary ,” she said.

There was a course on the Pol­itics and Econom ics o f F oo d for the C onsum er w hich was taught by Prof. D onald Land. In a le tte r sent to the New Ham pshire Mag­azine, Joh n M. Wallace, an alum ­nus of the UNH class o f ‘26, ex­pressed his view on the food course and the h is to ry course:

“ I was astounded to learn th a t there is so m uch to be found ou t ab ou t foods, nu tritio n , po llu t­ion, being over-weight b u t un­d e r f e d , processing and o th e r facts relating to eating, and I know th a t those attend ing a t some fu tu re tim es will find the field trips co nduc ted by Prof. Clark in early A m erican H istory just to o good to be true. Every­one I talked to co u ld n ’t stop raving abou t how they loved them .”

There were also o the r courses, such as w riting fo r fun , canoeing a n d sa iling , painting, and a t

P lym outh , there was a special h i s t o r y course ab o u t R o bert F rost.

Pauline Dana, w ho traveled to UNH from B rookline, Mass. to partic ipate in the program , said sh e en jo y ed E lderhostel “ be­cause it was an enriching experi­ence. I t ’s good to be m ade to feel th a t one is a real and w o rth ­while person in old age. I hope to re tu rn n ex t yea r,” she said.

P eter L ihatsh of E tna Village, NH, said ab o u t E lderhostel, “ As we grow older, our circle o f friends dim inished. B ut w ith the m a n y fine co ntacts we have m ade a t E lderhostel, the circle has w idened again, and this is es­pecially good fo r the senior cit­izen.”

F or E lderhostel ’75, K now ltonsaid th a t he “was planning on providing for all partic ipan ts at no cost at all.” Kr.ovvlton was unable to do tha t.

He co m m en ted on the plans f o r E lderhostel ’76, “ We are planning to obtain funding for scholarships fo r those w ho m ight n o t otherw ise be able to at­ten d ,” he said.

K n o w l t o n ’s p h ilo so ph y is,

“ Those am ong the elderly w ho have th e m ost need of intellec­tual stim ulation , and w ho have the m ost Urgent requirem ent fo r new pathw ays of re-entry in to society are the ones w ho m ust be convinced th a t E lderhostel is fo r th em .”

K now lton also stressed, “ Our hope fo r E lderhostel is th a t the experience will begin to reveal to the elderly th e ir value and im ­portance to society ; individually , as persons w ho are growing, con­tribu ting and very m uch needed; and collectively, as an aware, in ­volved citizen w ith great p o ten ­tial e ffec t.”

A part o f K n ow lton’s dream becom es m ore real each year. E l­derhostel ’76 will bo ast o f four­teen m ore colleges besides the original five in New Ham pshire.

The colleges in C onnecticut, M a in e , M assachusetts, R hode Island and V erm ont will con tro l their own program s separately. T h e e ld e r ly partic ipan ts still have the o p tio n of attend ing all the colleges.

K n ow lton’s big dream is to see E lderhostels across the U nited States. He also w ants to provide program s in E urope, a t a rela­tively low cost.

forsale“ K A SA ’S GERMAN SH EPARD PUP­PIES:: For sale $ 1 0 0 . AKC regis­t e r e d , m ild parents, sable, black, ready to goc Call 7 4 2 -4 1 9 2 , evenings. 12 /9 _______________________________For Sale: Fender m usic master elec­tric guitar - good action - needs just abou t 10 m inutes o f w ork to func­tion perfectly , $ 6 0 . A lso ski b oots, 2 pr, b est offer. 1 2 /9

COINS: U nited States - 11 Coin Mint sets 19 7 1 1 9 7 2 $ 5 .0 0 p e r set. E isen­h o w e r P r o o f S i l v e r D o 11 ar s , 1 9 7 1 -1 9 7 2 $b eacn. 4 3 6 -6 2 8 3 . lFOR SALE: Sunlam p and Protective G o g g le s . Asking $ 1 5 , price n e So- tiable Call 8 6 8 -7000 . Evenings. 12 /91967 Chevelle Malibu 2 door coupe, 6 cylinder 19 M . P . G . , F loor m ounted autom atic transm ission, new front: tires good rear snow to es new | s - haust, $ 3 0 0 or best offer. 9 4y^Ti. 12 /9 ____________________ _____________C A L C U L A T O R S!!! T.I. SR -50A - $ 7 4 .9 5 . T.I. SR -51A $ 1 1 7 .9 5 . Pay no sales tax. (shipped from Mass) AU m achines new w /fu ll warranty. $1 Del charge. Call College Calculators (B o b o r L inda) any evenings at 4 1 3 -5 4 9 -1 3 1 6 . 1 2 /1 2Guitar for sale - six string “ T okai” in good con d ition w ith a great sound. Originally $ 1 3 5 . will take best offer. C ontact Wendee 832 Stoke. 1 2 /1 2V A N FOR SALE : 1967 Ford, ex ­cellen t condition , new tires, m any new parts, good trucker, 4 0 ,0 0 0 ori­g in a l m ile s , 20 mpg, som e con­v e r s io n s m a d e , n e w paint. Call 4 3 6 -2 9 6 4 Mon-Fri, 3-5 p.m . w eekend

all da,-, xo/io_______________________

SKIS: brand new . 195cm . K2 winter heats. Still in b ox with guarantee. $95 . regulator- U .S. Divers Calypso $40. 8 6 8 -7259 . 1 2 /1 2 ________________FOR SALE: 1 pair K2 Comp, skis $75 . 1 pair Strato’s .1 0 2 skis $65 . 1 special Kayak $ 1 0 0 or best offer. Must sell, call T om Flavin. 7 4 9 -2306 , Dover. 1 2 /1 2’74 sup-sup super beetle for sale. 1 8 ,0 0 0 m iles, one owner. Call Chuck after 5 :3 0 p.m . 4 3 1 -7 0 6 9 . 12 /9Sound City Electric Piano, 6 m onths old, m in t con d ition w ith Harpsichord bass and vibrato. $ 6 0 0 new , will sell, for $ 400 , Call R ick , 4 2 3 Christensen, 2 -2 3 57 or 8 6 8 -9 8 3 9 . 1 2 /1 2 __________FOR SALE: 1 9 6 5 VW Bus Camper0 bod y in good condition , sheetm etal w k. done on sides, four exce llen t tires, new m uffler system , starter m otor. Camper: b ed , 2 storage seats, table swings dow n for extra lon g bed, also table com es ou t for extra room . Engine included bu t blew a Valve, $ 2 5 0 o r b e s t o ffe r . Call Claire 7 4 9 -3 7 6 2 , Dover, 1 2 /1 2 ______________SNOW TIRES: Brand new 6 .0 0 -1 2 , $25/pair; Very good 6 .0 0 -1 3 , $20 pair; worn 165-13 radials, very cheap. SUMMER TIRES: Five very good 6 .50 -13 , lo ts o f other 1 3 ” tires chaep; 1 large 8 .55 - 14 retread cheap; som e large 15 .. and 16 .. tires; WHEELS for Opel and Datsun, WIRE WHEELS for Midget and Sprite. Call m e an d m ake an offer on any. 749-2941 during day and leave m es­sage, or after 8 p.m . 1 2 /1 2

FOR SALE; Fender m usic master II G u ita r (e le c tr ic ) good condition . $ 6 0 .0 0 . Call W ayne, 8 6 8 -5 1 6 9 . 1 2 /1 2F O R S A L E : u p r ig h t piano andbench, good cond . $ 1 5 0 . Also plant sitting service over vacation;. $ 2 .0 0 p er w e e k . C ontact Pam or Lisa.8 6 7 -7 2 2 9 . 1 2 /1 2Selmer Bundy Clarinet for sale. E x­cellent con d ition . Asking $80 . Call 7 4 2 -1 5 3 6 , evenings. 1 2 /1 2’72 Capri “ 2 0 0 0 ” , AM—FM stereo tape, snow tires, new exhaust and tires, runs great. 4 5 ,0 0 0 m iles, asking $ 1 6 5 0 . Gary 8 6 8 -7 2 0 5 . 1 2 /1 2 _______Camera for sale - Leica M3 w / P 1 .4 50m m lens, leather case and includ­ing sum m itar 135 mm f4 lens and case, also W eston light m eter, asking $400 or best offer. Call 8 6 8 -9 7 5 0 ask for Marci. 1 2 /1 2Head skis m odel 240 : 18 0 cm . ex ce l­lent b o tto m s, S olom on safety b ind­ings, $75 . GE refrigerator, 14 cu .ft., 2 door, 4 years old. $ 1 5 0 . Evenings 359-5088. 1 2 /1 2 _B U Y IN G A CHRISTMAS TREE? Get yours from Xi Sigma Pi-Forestry Honor S ociety . Sale runs Decem ber 8-12, 8 a.m . to 5 :30 p.m . daily in front o f Pettee Hall. 1 2 /9 .FU R N ITU R E FOR SALE: K itchen table and chairs, com fortab le living room chair'- Will take best offer; call 6 5 9 -5 8 8 9 . 1 2 /9 __C H E A P ECONOM ICAL T R A N S­P O R T A T IO N NEED ED IMMEDI­ATELY!! Have ’63 VW w ith b low n engine for $ 50 . A lso new exhaust system fits VW 1 9 6 3 -6 5 , $ 25 . Install­ed for $ 45 . Write Phelps, B ox 135 Durham. 1 2 /1 219fi7 Cutlass Sunreme Olds. V-8 P-S. 2 door, convertable, bucket seats. $500 firm. Call 7 7 2 -4 8 7 5 after 6 p.m. 1 2 /1 2 _______________ ___________REFRIGER ATO R in EXCELLENT con d ition , full-size, w ith large freez­er, best offer; call 6 5 9 -5 3 2 4 . 1 2 /1 2FOR SALE: 1966 D odge W in d ow - Van w / 19 6 9 V-8 engine, autom atic, chrome w heels, trailer h itch , panell­ed. Ideal for ski and m ountain trips. 7 4 9 -2 2 6 8 , (Suzy or Jed) to see and drive. 1 2 /1 2__ _____________________FOR SALE: Tw o continental radial snow tires, used one season size 155 , 15 (fits any SA A B), exce llen t con d i­tion $ 3 0 . For pair, call W endy after 5. 6 5 9 -3 8 3 7 . 1 2 /1 2 __________________FOR SALE: econ om ical 1 9 6 4 VW. M echanically sound and the body is in, e x c e lle n t condition . Asking $ 4 00 . For m ore inform ation call Greg after 5 at 8 6 8 -5 8 3 0. 1 2 /1 2 ________________FOR SALE: 2 snow tires - like n e w !! G e n e r a l t ir e s - b e l t e d grippers (F 7 8 -1 4 ’s). Best offer!. Pall evenings , 6 6 4 -2 6 1 2 . 12 /9______________ _FOR SALE: 1 9 6 2 Ford Falcon; 6 cy l. auto . 7 0 ,0 0 0 m i. good condition , needs tune-up, good tires, best offer, call 7 4 9 -4 2 9 9 . 1 2 /9Stereo for sale: Panasonic system , turntable, AM—FM radio, speakers, all for only $ 1 0 0 .0 0 . In great con ­dition . See Mary Boyd in 106 Jessie D oe Hall, 2 -1674 . 1 2 /1 2 .For Sale: 72 Honda CB 3 5 0 Full dress, Low m ileage, N ew cond. $ 895 . Call 7 4 2 -0 4 5 1 after 5 :00 p .m . 1 2 /1 2 .

For Sale: B ean’s insulated hunting b o o t. Size 11 - E xcellent condition . One year old. N ew $ 3 5 .5 0 . Asking $ 1 8 .0 0 . Bob room 2 10 . 8 6 8 -9 7 3 9 or 86 2 -1 6 5 6 . 1 2 /1 2 ______________ 'For Sale: 1961 V olvo P U 544. G ood c o n d i t i o n , new valves and tires. N eeds som e w ork, best offer. Call 659 -5 4 7 9 or 7 7 2 -4 4 5 8 . 1 2 /1 2 ________For Sale: 67 VW bug, new engine, very good con d ition , m ust sell im- m ed ia tly ,$600 . Call 7 4 9 -2 4 4 8 . 1 2 /1 2Ski Equipm ent: Dynastar S730 195 cm . n ew -u nm ou nted . R etail $209 now $ 1 1 0 . Hanson exh ib ition b o o ts size 4 shell fits sizes 8-10 $ 1 1 0 , 180 cm . K2 Bermuda Shorts skis with nevada toes and marker heels, exc. cond. $ 1 1 0 , K2 and H ansons togeth ­er $ 1 85 . CaU Gary 7 4 9 -2 1 6 5. 1 2 /1 2Fiat 128: 1 9 7 2 M echanically good, new starter, four good radials, no rust! Best offer before 1 2 /1 9 . Call Frank 9 4 2 -5 4 9 5 . 1 2 /1 2

dwellingsFREE RENT: 2 B edroom A pt. in ex ­change for 8 hrs/w eek w ork in apt, p r o je c t . Kari-Van route in Ports- m outh 1 or 2 students. Available now till June 2. 4 3 6 -5 7 1 3 . Seacrest Vil­lage 583 Circuit R oad, Ports. 1 2 /9

2 Bdrm, apt. for rent - ig, livingroom , heat lo ts o f h o t water, N ew m kt. very d ifficu lt to get h o ld of. Gall either 9 2 6 -3 0 5 8 or 6 5 9 -5 4 6 9 . $ 1 7 0 plus elec. 1 2 /1 22Br. Cape w ith expandable attic for m o r e r o o m s . N e w a p p l ia n c e d k itchen . Enclosed breezew ay. Full cellar. Low taxes and heat. F or Sale in Dover by owner. Can be seen by a p p o in t m e n t , c a l l a lter o p.nj. 7 4 2 -3 2 9 0 for further inform atioh , and m ake an o ffer, 1 2 /9_____________One bedroom apt, to sublet for se­m ester break, F um . Dec. 20- Jan 25. $ 9 5 . In N ew m k t. con tact John Grady5 Chapel St. A pt. 01 or MUB 153, 8 6 2 -2 4 8 6 .1 2 /9 ___________________

HOUSE FOR RENT: R ye 1 2 /1 /7 5 to 6 / 1 / 7 6 , t w o b e d r o o m , p a r t ly furnished, across street from beach, 20 m in. from UNH, couple preferred, b u t a n y t h i n g p o s s ib l e . R e n t $ 1 7 0 /m o. flexible,' Call 9 6 4 -6 0 1 9 . 12/12 _6 people needed to sublet hou se on Y ou ng Drive - second sem ester - will ta k e in d iv id u a ls or groups. Call 8 6 8 -2 8 0 6 . 1 2 /1 2 .

A partm ent for rent 4 m i. o ff cam pus on Karivan rt. 1 bedroom , kitchen. A ll utilities included. $ 1 3 5 /m o . Call 6 59 -3087 , 6 5 9 -2 4 9 1 or 6 5 9 -5 8 8 3 . 12/12 _HELP, fem ale needs place to live sec­ond sem ester w ith in w alking distance but will only be here this w eek to look , w ill consider all offers. D onna or room 2 1 9 , 868 -9 7 1 3 or 2 -1675 . 1 2 /9ROOMS FOR R E N T : Large room s with k itchenp riviledges,T V room and te leph one. 5 m inute w alk from K ari- Van route, $25 per w eek , u tilities in ­cluded. 7 4 2 -5 2 0 7 . ask for Joan or John. 12 /9Young Dr. Private bedroom in house - living room , k itchen pets O.K. , on river. $3 6 5 /sem . plus util, furnished, 8 6 8 -7 2 0 5 . 1 2 /1 2

FOR RENT. Sem ester II - duplex house on Y oung Drive - 3 bedroom , lg. livingroom & kitchen. Available to6 persons or less - $ 3 6 5 / sem ester & electricity . 1 2 /1 2 .____________________Colby-Sawyer student needs housing on or near UNH cam pus January 19-30 , 1 9 7 6 . Please write; Cam H ow ­ard, Box 5 1 8 , Colby - Sawyer Col­lege, N ew L ond on, N .H . 0 3 2 5 7 or CaU 526- 8 2 5 1 . 1 2 /1 2Desperate! Must sublet spacious 2 bdrm apt. on New m arket. $ 1 7 5 /m o h e a t a n d w a te r i n c lu d e d . Call 6 5 9 -2 8 8 7 . 1 2 /1 2ROOM for rent in private new hom e. Quiet, pleasant setting in w ood s over­looking river. T w enty m inute walk to UNH. ''Bicycle is available.) K itchen priviledges negotiable. A couple is pos- sioie. r ed u c tio n in rent for child care M ondays and W ednesdays, 4-8 p.m . A v a i l a b l e Jan. 3-Call 8 6 8 -2 0 2 7 . 1 2 /1 2Senior girl at Bradford College lo o k ­ing for a room from Jan. 19-F eb . 14 for my interim sem ester. Will oe w o r k in g p art-tim e at Great Bay Training Center. W ould prefer to live w ith fam ily or elderly couple. Have m uch experience w ith children. Open for offers - 8 6 2 -3 3 3 9 . 12/1 9.1 Bdrm. apt. to sublet Dec. 20 to Jan 26. Livingroom couch pulls out in to full bed. $9 5 all u tilities included. 53 S u m m et St., A pt 4 , evenings, A Hom e away from hom e. 1 2 /9Apt. in Dover to sub-let. 2 bedroom , kitchen , living, dining. Huge room s. $1 8 5 /m p . plus elec. 749 -4 4 4 7 b e ­tw een 8 and 10 a.m . 1 2 /1 2N ewm arket A partm ent for rent: tw o b e d r o o m s , k itchen', living room , bathroom w ith snower. For further inform ation call 6 5 9 -3 9 8 3 . 1 2 /9Single room available second sem es­ter at 24 Y oung Drive, one m ile from T. Hall, Living in Va house w ith five other male students, nice environ­m ent, $ 3 6 5 /sem ester + u tilities, call Jeff Hansen 8 6 8 -7 2 5 9 , leave m essage. 12/12

For R ent: A pt. for 2-3 on Pulaski Drive, N ew m arket. Available im m ed­iately . For in fo call 6 5 9 -5 4 7 9 . 1 2 /1 2One room in three bedroom apart­m ent available for m onth o f Jan. only or to end o f second sem ester. 13c Spring S t., New m arket. White H o u s e on corner. CaU 6 5 9 -2 7 0 0 . 12/12________________________________House in Newm arket: 3 bedroom s, l iv in g r o o m , k itchen , e tc. Partly furnished, no pets, $ 1 50 /m on th plus utilites. 6 5 9 -5 2 0 6 . 1 2 /1 2roommates

N eed 10*2 fem ale room m ates to share a 2 bed apt. at O yster River Arms, Va m ile from Lee Circle. CaU 8 6 8 -5 3 8 1 . 12/12

Fem ale room ate wanted for Sem II A pt. on Main St. in Durham . Share w ith one other girl ( a great cook ) —Come and see us or call 8 6 8 -2 8 1 3 - Betsy or Anna. 1 2 /1 2R oom m ate w anted to share a house in M adbury. $117 /m o .to taL CaU Nat after 6 at 749-2 5 1 8 , ow n room . 1 2 /9

Fem ale, 28 , prof/part tim e grad stu­dent look ing for room m ate. Own room , furnished or unfurnished. $80 /m o. plus Vautilities. 4 m i. from cam ­p u s . V ery open and direct. CaU 86 8 -7 3 1 8 . 12 /9_______________________R oom m ate needed im m ediately to share 3 bedroom apartm ent in Dover. O w n r o o m , o n K ari-van route. $ 1 0 0 /m o . Util. incl. For m ore infor­m ation, caU 7 4 2 -1 5 3 6 . 1 2 /1 2N e e d a room m ate to share large house on Dover Kari-van w ith tw o m a les . We hope y ou like music! AvaUable now or for n ext sem ester, so caU now . 7 4 9 -4 4 1 2 . 1 2 /1 2Female room m ate needed, apt. in Dover. Own room , com plete k itchen, Uving and dining. . $ 9 2 .5 0 / mo., plus elec. 749 -4447 Detween 8 and 10 a.m. 1 2 /1 2LOOKING: For room m ate male or fem ale to share 4 room aprt. private room w /w , disposal, dishwasher heat and water included, $95 . contact Jack Tatelm an, Garrison HiU m anor, Dover, 7 4 9 -4 3 9 9 on Kari-van route. 12 /12

N e e d 2 fem ale room m ates. Own room s. Furnished. $ 8 5 /m o . utUities included. 25 Main St., Apt. 9, Dur­ham. CaU 8 6 8 -7 499 after 4 p.m . 1 2 /9Fem ale room m ate(s) needed second sem ester to share house or apt. Pre­ferably in Durham. CaU Jane or Mary at 2 -1319 or 8 6 8 -9 6 7 8 after 4 :3 0 p.m . 1 2 /1 2 ______________________ _Person(s) needed to share 2 V2 bed­room country cottage on lake in N o rth w o o d . Available J a n .l. Split $1 7 5 rent. Leave name and phone num ber for N ic at the New Hamp­shire office (rm. 151 MUB) 1 2 /9F E M A L E <3) to share a beau (ifulspacious apt. Live & Din rm., D it & Bath furnished, ow n bedrm ,- on kari -v a n r o u t e . C a ll now Stephanie 7 4 9 -0 5 1 8 Mon-Thurs„ after 6 p.m . or over vacation 456-3C 11. 1 2 /1 2

L ooking to share an apartm ent in the Durham; area during second sem ester. C ontact Jim at 9 2 6 -2 6 1 6 . 1 2 /1 2 .

Female room m ate to share apartm ent w ith tw o other girls in Dover. Begin­ning Jan. 1. Own room , on Kari-Van route. $67 m onth . 7 4 9 -4 3 2 5 . 1 2 /1 2Two room m ates wanted for house in Barrington. Seven mUes to cam pus. $72 m on th + e lectricity . Own room - $62 for smaUer room w /stu d y . Jan- June. CaU 6 6 4 -2 4 8 3 before D ec. 20. 12/12Female room m ate w anted to share apartm ent. Serious student desired. N e w m a r k e t-D u r h a m Une, $75 a m onth plus utU ities. If interested , caU 6 5 9 - 2 0 6 9 n ite s or 6 1 7 -2 8 3 -3 3 5 9 w eekends and vacation. 1 2 /1 2T w o f e m a le housem ates wanted. Beautiful hom e - Packers FaUs R oad. Durham Three m iles from cam pus. R esponsible and neat. Own room , Jan. 1 on -. 6 5 9 -2 0 2 1 . $80 moAfch + utihties. 1 2 /1 2R oom m ate needed for 2nd sem ester to share 2 bedroom apt. Own room (unfurnished) rest o f apt. (furnished) about 7 m inutes to UNH by car (Va mile from Lee Circle o ff rt. 4 ) $82 m onth plus e lectricity . CaU Steve at 868-5 5 1 9 or after D ec. 20 at (5 1 6 ) 44 3 -0 1 7 6 . 1 2 /1 2

t h e n e w HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9, 19 7 5 PAGE THIRTEEN

Flying ClubFLYING CLUB continued from page 8

W aiting in th e air to land, G reen said, “ Y ou have to space y ou rse lf o u t so everyone has enough room to roll o u t on the runw ay .”

G reen always pats his aircraft after landing safely and says, “ Nice jo b .”

The UNH Flying Club m eets once a m on th in the M emorial U nion Building. A t the m eetings Flying Club Presiden t Bill Black discusses club business and re­m inds club m em bers o f flying safety and pre- flight precedures.The club’s business m anager is Bob M aynard, the plane captain is Dick M aynard, and the chief flight in s tru c to r is B jorn Olsen.

NEED MONEY FOR CHRISTMAS? WE'LL BUY YOUR USED INSTRUMENTS.

J fc w j § » U f > » l*

N t t t t o j h i mN.H.

679-5694

WE ALSO SELL NEW INSTRUMENTS

Lsmieux

Practice Riding Riding Lessons

Horses Boarded by the day, week,

and month For m ore & inform ation call o r visit

GREEN ACRES STABLESDREW/FRESHETT ROAD off Rte. 108 DOVER, N.H.

- - - 742-3377 or 742-2450

T H E N E W H A M P S H I R E is p u b lis h e d a n d d is t r ib u te d sem i-- w e e k ly t h r o u g h o u t th e a c a d e m ic y e a r. O u r o f f ic e s are lo c a te d in t h e M e m o r ia l U n io n B u ild in g . D u r h a m , N . N . 0 3 8 2 4 . P h o n e 8 6 8 -7 5 6 1 o r 8 6 2 -1 4 9 0 . Y e a r ly s u b s c r ip t io n $ 7 .0 0 . S e c o n d class p o s ta g e p a id a t .D u rh a m , N .H P r in te d a t C a s tle P u b lic a t io n s in P la is to w , N .H . T o ta l n u m b e r o f c o p ie s p r in te d , 1 0 ,0 0 0 .

UNISEX Hair Shaping Specialist

We shape your hair EXACTLY the way YOU want it.

S ep a ra te Areas For M e n & W o m e n

No Scalped LookSpecialist in Long Hair

788 Central Ave. Dover, N.H.Across from Wpntworth Douglas Hospital

5 Minutes from DurhamPhone 7 4 2 -2 2 8 9 ________________

SKI SALE - SHOWTHURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY

4 £ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** Strafford Room - MUB *y A*

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Fashion Shows

Raffles for equipment, clothing, and season passes at N.E. Ski Areas

Representatives from Ski Shops across NE will be present

Ski Swap Shop

Buy & Sell New & Used Equipment

classified adsservicesPROFEd IONAL TYPING: R eports, theses, books, Near cam pus. Call Bar­bara, 8 6 8 -2 1 6 2 , 1 2 /9F lute Lessons - given on cam pus or in D over to beginnvvrj and interm ediate level students. For m ore inform ation call Diane. 7 4 2 -2 3 1 3 . 1 2 /9T IR E D O F B E IN G RIPPED Off! General autom obile repairs. Am eri­c a n or Foreign. Tuneups, brakes, p a r ts . C a ll J u d s o n H am blett at 6 5 9 -5 4 0 1 . 1 2 /1 2B a la n c e s e a t r id in g instruction. Highly qualified instructor Day and evening lessons. Indoor arena 15 m in­utes from cam pus. Stratham N.H, 7 7 8 -8 5 6 8 . 1 2 /1 2Tw o UNH seniors available for any s m a ll c o n s tr u c t io n and/or repair work during sem ester break, Dec. 16th thru Jan 24 th . For free estim ate call; 4 3 1 -7 4 4 1 or 8 6 8 -7 3 6 1 . Thank you . 1 2 /1 2Typing services: Thesis specifications fo llow ed . Must present form at. Minor editing. 75 cents per page. Extra charge for your re-editing. 8 6 8 -7 4 0 1 . 12/12A T T E N T IO N SENIO RS! N eed a yearb ook ph oto? W e’ll do it for even less than THEY w ill ! $ 1 .5 0 per per­son. Call A1 R ichardson, 74 2 -5 7 3 2 , Other pictures, including passports and group p h o to s available. 1 2 /1 2Christmas Party - m ake it a great tim e w ith m usic and a D .J. Also sound system rentals. Call 8 6 8 -7 2 5 9 , ask for Steve. 12 /9S oorc tary to profcaoioiially t y y c tiles-is and other reports as w ell. 60 cents per double-spaced page. Please phone 6 9 2 -3 6 4 4 . 1 2 /9Expecting a tax refund? Enjoy it now . Just im agine getting to use your tax refund for your Christmas shop­ping. Call Daves Incom e Tax Service. 7 4 2 -2 8 8 4 .1 2 /1 2Typing: By experienced professional on an IBM Correcting Selectric, 10 type sty les b o th pica and e lite, rates per page: 6 5 cents /pica, 75 cents /e- lite . Phone 7 4 9 -2 2 6 8 . 1 2 /1 2Drummer w ants work: 14 years e x ­p er ien ce has ow n equipm ent and transp ortation . Call 4 3 6 -1 0 9 6 and leave m essage. 12 /9help wanted

TA N STA A FL! A n yon e interested in w orking for M acBride-Bergland pres­idential tick et should contact College Libertarians, Box 2 1 4 , Durham , NH 0 3 8 2 4 . 1 2 /1 2IostT& found

P ro fe ss io n a l photographer n ew in area needs M A LEandfem ale m odels, e x p e r ie n c e -n o t n e c e s s a r y . Call 7 49-3463 excep t Sat. 1 2 /1 2Individual eligible for w ork - study for a part-time p osition as laboratory technician. Must have had a general m icrobiology course. Interested indi­viduals should contact dept, o f Mic­ro., 8 6 2 -2 2 5 0 . 1 2 /1 2Learning Skills center needs a w ork study student w ho can type. Position open January on ly . A pply at R ich­ards House or call 8 6 2 -1 6 2 5 . 1 2 /1 2

R E W A R D : B lu e su ed e-b ottom ed north face day pack lo st at UMass- UNH game on Saturday. Please re­turn to m e, I need it desperately. C o n ta c t Jenny Hall at 8 6 8 -7 4 6 4 , leave m essage. 12 /9FOU ND: small personal phone b ook w ith “ Salamandra” as one of the list­ings. C ontact Bill at 7 4 9 -2 4 7 8 . 1 2 /1 2B ooks m isplaced? If foun d , please call Linda Averill, W illiamson 7 13 , 8 6 8 -9 8 5 6 . Needed for final exam s! 12/9Lost - black wire rim glasses - i t ’s been m aybe tw o w eeks - please call Susan, 7 4 9 -2 9 3 3 . 1 2 /1 2Lost: Watch (gold w / small face) at Wildlife Soc. Square Dance (1 1 /2 2 ) If found, please call Martha - 2 -2405 . 12 /12 _____________Lost- a long-haired tiger k itten , 3 m onths old and her name is Tasha. Disappeared in the quad Nov. 25 . If found please call Susan 7 4 9 -3 4 7 2 . 12/12Found: B ook , “Japanese H aiku” on MUB side o f c-lot D ec. 2. Call Bob 6 5 9 -2 8 8 5 . 1 2 /1 2Lost-Stolen: Ladies black w allet - im ­portant cares needed desparately and are o f sentim ental value: Return to D eb b ie Stone, Creative Arts Mini Dorm . R m . 119 or to R .A .’s R oom 208 or 2 16 . Reward offered. 1 2 /1 2Lost: black zipper briefcase. Exterior initials J .V .D .: interior name Rev. J. Vasmar D atton , S.J. C ontents im ­portant - seminar on Weds. Reward. Phone 6 5 9 -3 6 4 3 or leave at MUB front desk. 1 2 /1 2personalsThou Art God! Learn h ow John Galt and V alentine Michael Sm ith put this k n o w led g e to w ork. Read “ Atlas S h r u g g e d ” b y A yn Rand. Read “Stranger in a Strange Land” by R obert H einlein. Expand.vYnir m ind. 12/12 y ur

Priscilla White o f Mini-dorm B. Please try to understand that I’m sorry I hurt you . Please try to understand and forgive. Love, Lou Miner. 1 2 /1 2 .Christmas is com ing, everyone is get­ting sappy, photograph fo r m o n and dad w ould really m ake them happy. CaU W ayne or F q, 8 6 8 -5 1 6 9 . 12 /9RHINO AND SCOTT! Happy belated and early birthday; rem em ber that W in o s are s tu r d y and can pull th r o u g h anyth ing-inclu ding m ono and frustration. Love alw ays, depart-ing m em ber. ________________________A ttention R h in o ’s Winos: A Merry C h r is tm a s to all and thanks for making college m ore fun for m e. 12/12

N e e d R id ers to Florida: Leaving around 1 2 /2 0 . CaU 7 4 9 -2 4 4 8 . 1 2 /1 2

To Papa in S toke 815: I see y o u on Stoke Side - Stilling Hall, Why aren’t you ever hom e w hen I call? Have a Merry Christmas!!! Y ou k n ow , I got a few tricks - so call 1 6 4 0 in ‘76! Love, your secret admirer. 1 2 /9 ______Margot: Merry, Merry, Happy Christ- mas, Y our King. 1 2 /9_____________Merry Christmas to the EX EC ’S from Leo 4 . 1 2 /9 _______Merry Christmas to the Boudreaus, including Sunshine and R ebel from the Kings. 1 2 /9Dear L ittle Lady: Sm oke has never clouded the way I feel about you . The wrinkles of the heart are more indelible than those o f the brow . The Wolf 1 2 /9Split level no. 2 9 0 1 beats Shorew ood bungaloes by a m ile. Write up on it will appear in the forthcom ing issue of interiors and interview w ith proud owners in n ex t Better H om es. 1 2 /9Danny, Jim and Alpha Chi sisters, Having a great tim e bom bing around Europe but w icked m iss UNH. We think o f you o ften , and love you and miss you . Your friends from Dijon, D ebbie, Penny, and Megan. 1 2 /1 2

and. . .Silver jewelry custom m ade, your de­sign or m ine. G old w ork considered. Repairs done if possible. Reasonable rates. Call Sally. 7 4 9 -2 8 3 5 . 1 2 /1 2Wanted: H ousesitter(s) for secluded farm 12 m iles from cam pus, D ec. 20- Jan 1. Milking goat, chickens, etc. Call Loren Cobb at 8 6 2 -1 8 0 0 or 9 4 2 -8 1 6 0 . 1 2 /1 2Bahamas - Out Islands. Sail am ong the ex o tic ou t islands aboard the U.S. licensed charter sloop Tango II. M axi­mum 6 people to split $ 4 0 0 . for 1 w eek, $ 7 0 0 for 2 w eeks. For more details call Tracy 9 6 4 -8 3 0 0 . 1 2 /1 2C olarad o for Christmas. Spend 3 w eeks in Utah, Colorado and New M exico. Travel in Van to all a re a s . Share expenses, to ta l per person w ill be around $ 4 0 0 . U a ll 6 1 7 -3 6 9 -2 3 9 1 . 12/12Alabama (H untsville) ride needed for tw o fem ales around Jan. 10 . Will split price and have fun tim es! Call Katie Alford in S cott Hall 223 at 2 -1 6 4 8 or 8 6 8 -9 7 9 5 . 1 2 /1 2

Trip to Spain Jan 1-23 , 1 9 7 6 , $549: I n c lu d e s Madrid, Segovia, Seville, Cordoba, Granada, Malhea. Contact H e le n E v a n s 8 6 2 -1 0 3 7 D ept, o f Spanish and Classics. 12; /9Brazil Dec. 26- Jan 2 6 , $ 4 7 0 R d. tr. $300 R. Bd. $ 6 0 Port, Lang . Course. Som e free Rm . Bd. Bob rm, 5 1 9 .868-9 8 8 7 after io p.m . 1 2 /9_________Going to D aytona Beach, FLA for tw o w eeks in rented 8 person, self- contained W innebago. Need 7 other fun-loving, congenial persons. Cost for trip exclud ing fo o d and entertain­m ent $ 2 0 0 approx. Jan. 9 -23 . Inter­ested call Gary 7 4 9 -2 1 6 5 . 1 2 /1 2Ride needed to Georgia, A la., or Northern Fla. b etw een D ec. 20 & 24 . Will share driving and expenses. Call C hristie COLLECT at 1 -435-6006 (.between 9 & 5).CHICAGO — ride needed w ill share ?^p. i nses. to Chieago after or aboundI f i f V a . i 2 ; i 2 ” l b e r ' C a n D a r i i

Am looking for a double bed and b ox spring - please call 749 -4 0 0 9 after 6. 12 /9 ___________________

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AGE FO U R TEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE T U ESD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

editorialConsider the tri-mester plan

The com m ittee now studying ways to handle increased admissions requests at UNH should consider making UNH a year-round in s titu tion .

Student Senator Bob Hogan brought the idea o f operating the University on a three semester calendar in to a discussion w i th D ire c to r o f Admissions Eugene Savage and Faculty, Senator Prof. Paul Brockelman at Sunday’s Student Caucus meeting.

Brockelman and Savage were at the meeting as members o f the University A d ­missions Com m ittee. The com m ittee is

studying three plans o f action to cope w ith the problem o f an increasing number o f people wanting to use U N H ’s lim ited facilities.

The options now being considered in ­clude changing admissions standards to not adm it every New Hampshire app li­cant graduating in the top 40 percent o f his high school class, increasing en ro ll­ment, or decreasing ou t o f state admiss­ions.

Hogan’s suggestion is to research the possib ility o f pu tting UNH on a tri-mester calendar much like the system institu ted

at D artm outh College in the past few years.

Using the “ Dartm outh Plan” , as the trim ester idea has come to be known, would pu t UNH in fu ll operation 12 months a year. A fu ll enro llm ent could possibly be taken each o f the three sem­esters. W ith considerable juggling o f num ­bers and people, surely UNH could serve more people operating 12 months rather than eight.

The greatest d iff ic u lty the tri-mester plan poses is in im p lem entation. Radic­ally changing an entire system’s calendar

takes tim e. One idea may be to tem por­arily adopt one o f the three plans being considered now while planning a tran­sition to year-round education.

A summer program o f studies does exist at UNH. That program, however, is much smaller than the fu ll tim e operation tha t runs from September to December and February to May.

The com m ittee is currently considering a choice o f the lesser o f three evils. The tri-mester plan may be a positive fo u rth alternative.

W hatever th e reason, th e p u r­pose of th e R ecord was to m ore easily acquain t th e frosh in “ the first few trau m atic w eeks” of school.

Since w e’ll soon be sopho­m ores, please sent me my 2 bucks. I t w ould have been m uch be tte r spen t on a pack o f Mol- son ’s.

Jack Edw ards Congreve 217

Picture mistakeTo th e ed itor:

I w ould like to thank The N ew Hampshire fo r its a tte m p t to give the UNH M arching Band some good coverage. However adm irable the a ttem p t was, I am afraid th a t you missed the boat. The p ic ture th a t appeared was a picture o f the University o f Con­n ec ticu t’s 1974 Band and no t of the UNH Band. If th is had been a p icture of an ath letic team instead o f a band, you m ight have been m ore careful to avoid such mistakes.

How ab ou t p rin ting a picture o f our band in you r nex t issue?

IVhrk A. Torres, ’76 UNH Band m em bei

Trashy tissueTo th e ed ito r:T hat new gray recycled tissue

paper being d istribu ted to all University restroom s should be declared u nconstitu tional.

Forcing people to use it is cruel and unusual punishm ent.

Nam e w ithheld

The ivory towerThe ivory tower idea o f granting tenure to professors to en­

sure the ir secure pursuit o f knowledge has just one catch. Some­one decides which professors get the tow e r’s pro tection and which w o n ’t.

If y o u ’re denied tenure at one university, the firs t question other schools ask is: Why d id n ’t you get tenure?

The assumption is, tha t i f you d id n ’t get tenure at one place, our standards certainly aren’t any lower, so you w on ’t get ten­ure here.

In tod ay ’s New Hampshire, tw o professors who were denied tenure and must leave UNH ta lk about tenure, what it means to them and what it means to the ir colleagues.

Both men are well liked and respected by all the students we have contacted. The students consider both good teachers.

But they are being forced to leave.It would be foo lish to believe tha t those who decide do so

w ith o u t reason, be they good or bad. Chances are we w ill never know those reasons.

Tenure places too great a part o f a person’s life on the line. The chances o f personalities in fluencing the decision are too great to allow the process to continue.

Those who hire and fire at UNH must come up w ith a way to allow the fir in g o f poor teachers, no m atter how long they have taught, and the prom otion o f good ones, no m atter how radical the ir approach or how d iffe ren t the ir philosophy.

Ivory towers are a th ing o f the past; tenure should be.

Munchers!To th e ed itor:

A tte n tio n m unchers!!! Con­cerning the article on shoplifting in D u r h a m . . .T h e article n e­glected to state th a t eating from

the shelves is considered w illful concealm ent. Even though they have no evidence against you i t ’s th e s to re ’s w ord against yours. You can and will be arrested if caught.

Name w ithheld by request

Meacham goodbyeTo th e ed ito r:

My term of office will be en d ­ing soon, and so I just w anted to take th is o p p o rtu n ity to express a few closing thoughts. This p os­ition has been a great learning experience fo r m e, one w hich you w ould have to occupy be­fore you could really understand it. I t ’s one w here I felt a lo t o f tim e was required if I was to honestly do som ething, o r o th e r­wise w hy have a S tud en t Body President.

At tim es I really felt good in knowing th a t I was able to help some individual bogged dow n in red tape a t th is overly adm ini­stered University.

A year seems so short w hen I know th a t there is still so m uch to do. We as studen ts m ust re ­main vocal w hen an injustice is done against us; we have the channels o f governance to w ork through to offer our co nstruc­tive suggestions and criticism s, bu t if all else fails we will have to take alternative rou tes to ex ­press our concerns. Look at th is University and co n tinue to ques­tion:

1. Are we getting a good ed u ­cation and w hat can we do w ith it?

2. If th e quality o f education isn’t w hat it should be, then why, and how can we help to im prove upon it.

3. Y o u d o n ’t k n o w why y o u ’re here, th en w hy are you? Who is there to ta lk w ith w hen we have so m any problem s w ith

our advising system ?These are a few, b u t a few

which I have com e in con tac t w ith during th is past year, a few where I could have used a little more help. C ertainly I had a p la tform from w hich I could speak, b u t m y w ords are w o rth ­less unless one is b e tte r able to rep resen t you and hear from you.

The year w ent by quickly. I can say th a t I tried m y best, bu t m o re im p o rtan tly , I w ant to than k you for having given me the chance.

Larry M eacham S tuden t Body President

Frosh RecordTo th e ed ito r:

An O pen L etter to the S tu ­den t Publications Office:

I am one of th e suckers in the class o f 1979 w ho was foolish en ough to dish o u t ab o u t 3 bucks for “The Freshm an R e­co rd .”

Upon arriving in Septem ber, I tro tte d o ff to your office to ask w hen it w ould arrive. “ Oh, a couple of weeks, O ctober 1 at the la te st,” was y ou r answer. As of D ecem ber 8, the new predic-

1 tion for the Freshm an R eco rd ’s arrival is th e first week o f second sem ester.

People in th e Publications o f­fice claim no fault and say th a t the R ecord will be “ sort o f se­m ester 1 y e a rb o o k .” Well, a se­m ester 1 yearbook was no t w hat I paid for.

Is the R ecord being delivered by th e same com pany th a t was so p rom p t w ith the m ini-dorm furn itu re?

thenew

hampshine

E d ito r - in C h ie f M a n a g in g E d ito r

B u s iness M anage r N e w s E d ito rs

S p o rts E d ito r E n te r ta in m e n t E d ito r

P h o to g ra p h y E d ito r

M ic h a e l D ’A n to n io Jean M a c D o n a ld Ed M c G ra th S te ve n M o rr is o n T o m O s e n to n N ic F u r lo t t e M a rk R ad w a n C . R a lp h A d le r R o n G o o d sp e e d

S ta f f R e p o r te rs

R e p o r te rs

A d v e r t is in g M anage r A d v e r t is in g A s s o c ia te s

M ic h a e l Im s ic kR ic h a rd M o r i M a r io n G o rd o n J e f f P a lm e r T in a S h e rm a n K a th y S m ith K a t ie M c C la re M a rie C a r t ie r J o h n S n o d g ra ss B o b G r ie c o D an H e r l ih y A m y § h o r t C la u d ia R . D esfosses M a r i ly n H a c k e tt D ia n a G in g ra s D ave M ig l io r i A r t h u r R . M il le r B e ts y B a ir B a h m a n S h a r i f ip o u r N a n c y R ig a z io P e te r R in g e r S h a ro n L a v e r tu L a u re n Joan S m ith A .R . E r ic k s o n C h e ry l C ra a y b e e k A d r ie n n e A l l ie M a rg ie M a d f is J o y M c G ra n a h a n D a v 'u T o w le R ic k T ra c e w s k i M a tt V i ta J u l ie M a y n e D e b ra P ie rce Pete W eis P e te r J o h n s o n M a r ie C lo u g h M a rc H e b e r t

P h o to g ra p h e rs

C o p y E d ito r C o p y

R eaders

C ir c u la t io n M anage r P ro d u c t io n s A s s o c ia te s

P ro d u c t io n s S ta f f

S e c re ta ryT y p e s e tte rs

Ed A p k e r D e n n is G ig u e re J o h n H a n lo n ^ W a y n e K in g J u a n S a ld a rr ia g ? Ja n e t P r in c e C a ro l G ro n d in M i l ly M c L e a n A n n P e n n e y J im S c a f id i L isa T a b a k B r ia n U p so n K a th y B o u rq u e A n n e G a rre ts o n B e ts y G a in e s B r ia n S te w a r t B r id g e t B o w e .i N in a G e ry C o d d y M a rx M i l ly M c L e a n L a u r ie G o o d r ic h P a tt i G a r re t t L in d a C la rk D ia n e D u rn a ll S u sanne L o c h L y n n M a ttu c c i E ile e n M u lc a h y C in d y P a lm io t to

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU ES D A Y DECEMBER 9, 19 7 5 PAGE FIFTEEN

Women’s athleticsTo th e ed ito r:

Brian P ete rs’ ed ito ria l last F r i­day does n o t express m y views , accurately.

I am to ta lly in favor o f “ co ­e q u a l a t h l e t i c ed u ca tio n at U N H ,” just as Peters is.

The p o in t I tried to m ake in my sta tem en t to the C om m is­sion was th a t there is a big d if­f e r e n c e be tw een ath le tic (or physical) education and co m p e t­i t iv e in te rc o lle g ia te ath letics. One is an im po rtan t part o f the educational process. The o th e r is largely a public relations vehicle, w hether we like to ad m it it o r not.

In m y view, w om en are en ­titled to equal access to facilities and eq uipm ent, equal coaching and train ing , and equal o p p o r­tun ities to com pete against each o the r and against w om en from o ther colleges.

This does n o t necessarily e x ­te n d to a th le tic scholarships, however. L e t’s face the facts. The prim ary purpose o f a th le tic scholarships is to help produce team s th a t will enhance th e im ­age o f th e U n iversity - n o t to ed ­ucate s tuden ts.

If w om en w ant to go th a t rou te , it obviously is the ir right to do so. But no t under th e guise of ed ucation . Call it w hat it is.

D onald C. M arschner (Form er C hairm an o f th e Council

on Physical E ducation and A th letics)

Staged stealTo th e ed ito r:

We w ould like to shed a little “ ligh t” upon th e in ten tio ns o f the p ic ture accom panying the shoplifting article. Due to our d ev asta tin g acting ab ility and friendship w ith the p h o to g rap h ­er, we volunteered to STAGE the shoplifting scene.

We repeat, it was STAGED.We th o u g h t it w ould bring us

fam e and fo rtu n e , b u t it has only b rought us accusing looks, snide rem arks and d ifficu lty in cashing checks. The absurd ity o f it all is, w hy w ould we take light bulbs w hen we could have had steaks?

Michele R obbins C indy Spies.

Money and sportsTo th e ed ito r:

C hairm an Jo h n B eckett origin* ally s ta ted th a t there w ould be 3 public sessions w ith no co nclu ­sions m ade un til all evidence was in. A fter 2 sessions he did “ no t fo resee the need for an o ther public session” as justified by the “ fine balance in testim on y received by the com m ission. We have heard from studen ts, p ro ­fessors, coaches, and in terested citizens.” His “ fine ba lance” re ­fers to those w ho have testified , no t to w hat th ey have testified ; the “ te s tim o n y .” C learly, a bal­ance in testim o n y from w hich any conclusions can be draw n does n o t exist. I refer p a rticu ­larly to th e issue o f w o m en ’s in ­tercollegiate ath letics.

M arshner believes th a t in te r­collegiate a th letics perform s a p u b l ic relations fu nctio n and physical education , and educa­tional one. C ertainly, th is is true b u t these functio ns are far from exclusive o f each o the r.

He also believes th a t draw ing g o o d c ro w d s is synonom ous w ith good public relations. Shal­low insight on his part. The word he has confused for good public re la tions is m oney.

How can he ju stify m e n ’s in ­t e r c o l l e g i a t e non-spectato r s p o r t s , s u c h as sw im m 'ing , gym nastics, w restling, track , te n ­nis, e tc .?

He ca n ’t. B ut I can.They serve a public relations,

a l t h o u g h n o n -m o ney m aking function as well as an ed u ca tio n ­al functio n . And so do w o m en ’s intercollegiate ath letics.

Ju an ita 0 ’G rady Physical E duca tion Major

In tercollegiate A th letic P artic ip an t

U 4 H " -H E R E F L E ? 6 E ~

Q w e a p i n t o $ M o o d ̂ o / t C t e t w a s

Record apology

To th e ed ito r:An apology to the freshm en

who ordered th e 1979 Freshm an R ecord is long overdue. This oook was originally scheduled "or pub lication in th e fall and will no t now be d istribu ted un til February.

We understand the inconven­ience and fru stra tio n th is has caused m any o f those w ho p u r­chased the book, and we are sor­ry th e s itu ation has occurred.

T here are th ree reasons p rim ari­ly responsible for th e sem ester- long delay: 1) The original copy prepared for th e in tro d u c to ry section o f the book was unsatisf­actory and needed to be revised over the sum m er; th is com bined with m any late orders caused an initial delay; 2) th e p rod u ctio n process takes tw o m on ths or m ore; and 3) th is organ ization , which sponsors th e book, has serious problem s regarding staff: we lack a full-tim e d irec tor to supervise ou r activities, since m y activities prim arily involved the editing o f C a t’s Pawr and the S tu ­den t H andbook; and we had no one in a position to get th e book done.

We have done w hat we can to get you a good book as soon as possible and we will m ake fu r­ther efforts to exped ite th e dis­trib u tio n process. The R ecord will con tain m any good featu res» Rich Mori

and will be as interesting as it w ould have been earlier.Again, we apologize fo r the

long delay. M uch o f th e delay I am personally accountable for, and for th a t I personally' apoli- gize.

C hristopher Berg The UNH S tuden t Press

Women limitedTo th e ed ito r:

M y r e a c t i o n to P ro fesso r M arsh n er’s testim ony in yo u r N ovem ber 21 issue is one o f dis­gust. He sta ted th a t “ in tercolle­giate ath letics perform a public relation fun ctio n while physical ed ucatio n perform s an ed uca­tional o n e .” W omen are now only involved in physical ed uca­tion and th a t ’s th e way it should b e .” Dr. M arschner seems to be unaware th a t a w o m en’s in te r­co lleg ia te program does exist a n d i t serves an educational functio n for m any o f th e w om en involved.

As a physical ed ucatio n m ajor,I h a v e p a r t i c i p a t e d in th e w o m en’s in tercollegiate program in order to acquire th e skills and b a c k g r o u n d n e c e s s a r y f o r coaching.

I am certa in th a t m any o f the male intercollegiate a th letes have the same asp irations of coaching th a t I do. Having pa rtic ipated on intercollegiate team s will be tte r qualify them and m yself for coa-

oHJng p oc iF irm c a n d w il l H irp p tlya f f e c t o u r chances o f being hired.

The present w om en’s in te rco l­legiate program has adequately m et th is fun c tio n , b u t it has no t been allowed to grow as th e m en ’s program has. By denying the w o m en ’s in tercollegiate p ro ­gram the funds necessary for its grow th and developm ent, th e re ­sults m ay be one o f a self-fulfill­ing prophecy . The program will never be given th e o p p o rtu n ity to perform a public re lations fu n c tio n or becom e a selling po in t for a ttrac ting people to UNH. It w ould be a trem en do us loss to UNH if th is p rophecy b e ­com es a reality .

Leslie T urner

Enjoys sleepTo the ed itor.

Early to bed and early to rise m akes a m an healthy , w ealthy and wise. The early bird catches the worm . I ’m afraid I am one w ho has never m odeled my life after these tw o trite philosophies a n d there are certain ly m any people w ho feel the same way.

I en joy my sleep, especially after going to bed a t 2 a.m. and looking forw ard to sleeping late on one o f the few days I am able to.

Well, I guess ou r illustrious Service D epartm en t m ust consist o f s o m e o f th e h e a lth ie s t , w ealthiest, and wisest people on cam pus because lately they have

m a d e t h e b i r d s l o o k l i k e l a t erisers. I ’m n o t criticizing the ir life style, b u t when it in terferes w ith m ine it is tim e to say som e­thing.

The Dept, has been doing a great job on cleaning up the leaves this fall and th a t giant leaf sucker is quite a co n trap tion , b u t you m ust adm it th a t it is a little noisy. W hat 1 am referring to is tnac 7 o ’clock in the m orn ing is no tim e to be cleaning leaves outside m y w indow and I d o n ’t care how d irty it migh have been. It had to be one o ’ the m ost inconsiderate , if not, asinine,, things I have been sub­jected to in a long tim e ! If you ,, were th a t hard-up for cleaning leaves I ’m sure you could have found an o th er area to s ta rt from where there w eren ’t any dorm i­tories and then came back later The leaves w eren ’t going to go anyw here.

If you th ink my com plain t is ' unreasonable, I suggest th a t you try w riting 2 and 3 term papers, study for exams, keep up w ith assigned readings and hold a part-tim e job w ith o u t enoug. sleep. Rising early does n o t keep me healthy or w ealthy and 1 have never developed the hab it of collecting worm s. In the fu­ture, how ab o u t collecting tn • leaves on the sidewalk and suci. ing them up w ith y o u r heav artillery la te r in the day. This is one s tu d en t w ho w ould greatn appreciate it.

John B. A ffleck R anda ll Hall

Caucus skepticism well foundedSunday night the Student Caucus delayed a proposal which

would have granted $2,360 to the 1976 UNH W inter Carnival Budget.

In hold ing the m otion over the Caucus proved tha t on this issue they were de fin ite ly no t a rubber stamp organization.

The programming fund was set up about one year ago. A c­cording to Associated Student O rgan iza tion ’s Business Manager Richard Morgan, the Caucus has spent approxim ate ly $5,000 o f that.

There is about $5,000 le ft in tha t fund .The request fo r a $2,360 grant and a $1,146 loan by 12 stu­

dent organizations or groups, includ ing Areas I, II, and I II , Pan- Hellenic,, the In tra fra te rn ity C ouncil, Disadvantaged Women in Higher Education (DW HE), the O u tin g C lub, and APO fra te rn ­ity fits in to the guidelines established by the Caucus last year.

There are legitim ate questions asked by senators, however.One involves the use o f percentages instead o f do lla r estimates

in summarizing p ro fits from the th ird annual N ight o f S in. The newly-form ed Greek Council w ill reap 20 percent o f the p ro fits . The other 80 percent is to be divided equally to cha rity ; 40 per­cent to the Durham Day Care Center and 40 percent to the Leu­kemia Foundation O peration.

In past years, the Greeks have been paid fo r supplying labor for the N ight o f Sin. This year the programming fund is to be

used. Accord ing to Morgan and Bureau o f the Budget d irector Greg Stanley, there is no stipu la tion tha t the Greek p ro fits w ill be used specifically fo r next year’s N ight o f Sin.

The Greek Council should not be given 20 percent o f p ro fits earned using student money unless there is a stipu la tion that money w ill be used to plan fo r next year’s N ight o f Sin. Student money should not be used to earn p ro fits which go to specia interest groups fo r the ir own activities.

An overrid ing issue, however, is the insult accorded the S tu ­dent Caucus by those student organizations and groups which, along w ith MUB programming d irec to r Hope Snruance, are sponsoring th is event. Spruance was the on ly person among them who had the courtesy to attend Sunday’s meeting to answer senators’s questions.

Spruance answered the questions as best she could. But her answers were too vague and tw ice contradicted bv Bureau o f the Budget d irector G reg, Stanley. I f the Student Caucus had passed th is questionable budget request, the ir legitim acy as any­thing bu t a rubber stamp could have been questioned.

It was good to see the senators take a more skeptical look at the budget request.

H opefu lly , w ith senators becoming more experienced,healthy skepticism can be extended to include academic affairs as well as student affairs next semester.

PAGE SIXTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

PETTEE BROOK LANE DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE 03824

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CANADIANS continued from page 2ports in o rder to fulfill its ow n needs.

The U.S., ab ando ned by its leading trade p a rtn e r in th e th ick o f th e oil crisis, accused Canada of being an undependable neigh­bor.

F o r a w h ilo , said DeLisle, there was also ta lk o f com bining efforts to co nstruc t a pipeline w hich w ould receive oil from b o th Alaska and .Canadian oil sites in the A rctic. B ut th is too .

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“The reason fo r the cu tbacks in oil as well as abandoning the jo in t p ipe line ,” said DeLisle, “ is just th a t there hasn ’t been any r e c e n t discoveries o f oil. We haven’t found any in th e A rctic o r in N o v a S c o t i a a n d L abrad or.”

In fac t, Shell and E xxon have w ithdraw n from Nova S co tia .”

DeLisle ind icated th a t th e ex ­clusive nature o f trade rela tions betw een th e U.S. and Canada has alienated Canada from- th e w orld trading co m m unity .

W hen th e U.S. ad o p ted th e Trading Enem y A ct w hich estab ­lished th a t the U.S. w ould n o t ex port its goods to enem y na­tions such as Cuba and C hina, it was also assum ed th a t Canada was ostracizing these nations.

DeLisle said an exam ple o f Canada’s alienation was the ex ­clusion o f Canada in th e eco­nom ic sum m it m eeting held in R am bouillet, F rance th is fall.

“We d id n ’t in te rp re t it as an in su lt,” said DeLisle, “ T hey just d id n ’t th ink we had a separate voice. ‘Why invite C anada?’ they said. ‘Canada will just say the same as th e A m ericans.’ ”

Canada is now try ing to b ro ad ­en its trade rela tions and has asked to be a m em ber o f the C om m on M arket.

As well as breaking ties w ith th e U.S. to becom e its ow n co un try in the in te rna tiona l fo r­um , Canada is also tak ing steps to becom e m aster o f its ow n in ­ternal affairs.

DeLisle said 60% o f C anada’s m anufactu ring indu stry is ow ned by foreigners, 45% o f w hich is ow ned by Am ericans. A m erican m oney accoun ts fo r 80% o f the foreign capital in Canada.

One and a half years ago the Canadian governm ent passed a Foreign Investm ent Review A ct w hereby all those wishing to in ­vest in Canadian indu stry first have to apply and aw ait the de­cision o f a com m ittee . DeLisle said so far 20% of the applica­

tions have been rejected .Speaking in th e same good-

na tu red to n e , DeLisle said th a t along w ith econom ic dom ina­t i o n , C a n a d a has also been th rea tened by cu ltura l dom ina­tio n by the Am erican m edia.

Things were getting so bad, said DeLisle, th a t th e govern­m ent had to m ake a law com pel­ling TV sta tions to run Canadian programs at least 60% o f th e tim e.

“We also have problem s w ith artists and w riters ,” DeLisle said, “w ho are swallowed up in offers south o f the b o rd e r.”

DeLisle nam ed Jo h n K enneth G albraith as an exam ple o f a Canadian w ho left Canada to come to th e U nited S tates to ad ­vance his career.

Canadian governm ent is m ak­ing it m ore d ifficu lt fo r foreign publications to survive in the hope o f spurring the crea tion o f m ore and b e tte r Canadian pub li­cations.

“ O u r n e w s l o g a n , ” s a id DeLise, “ is ‘in harm ony w ith , and d is tan t from , o ur ne ighbors’

“A lthough Canadians com e to the U.S. w ith o u t being spo tted as foreigners,” he said, “ there are differences. We are n o t as fast o r as rushed as you are.

“ If yo u go the W estern part o f Canada th e re ’s still a V ictorian air ab o u t i t .”

The group attend ing the talk discovered th a t th e p ioneer drive to pop u late unsettle lands is no t over ye t.

In th e m idst o f w orldw ide a- la rm over pop u la tio n grow th, Canada is concerned ab o u t her scanty pop u la tio n o f 23 m illion.

DeLisle said th a t in the period f ro m 1 8 5 0 - 1 9 5 0 Canada re ­ceived one m illion im m igrants b u t lost as m any to th e U.S.

A lthough Canada has decided to fo rk o ff on a road d ifferen t

from the one the U.S. is fo llo ­wing, it does n o t know w here th e road will lead.

“W e’re no t sure we w ant to be a big pow er,” said DeLisle, “ bu t Canadians th in k th ey have som e­th ing to preserve.”

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THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5 PAGE SEV ENTEEN

“It’s a system based on fear.”

TENURE: Two that were deniedBy David Towle

“By the tim e th e appeal on m y tenure decision was m ade, I had con tracts fo r three books, had ten articles accep ted or published in referred journals, done a dozen bo o k reviews, and been part o f the program in m any scholarly conferences a- round th e c o u n try ,” said assistant h isto ry professor Thom as K em nitz.

“ I had a num ber o f le tte rs from ed itors o f the to p journals in m y field a ttesting to the m erit o f my w riting and a num ber of o the r le tte rs from d ep artm en t chair­men and ex-chairm en a round th e coun try supporting m y case.

“My file was full o f le tte rs from s tu ­dents supporting m e for ten ure , and my teaching evaluations had show n im prove­m ent in every course over my six yeafs here. My service was certain ly everything they had asked.

“ Y et, I ap paren tly was one o f the easy cases to deny. Even before I appealed when I asked Dean Spitz w hat evidence to present indicating m y w orth iness for tenure , he to ld m e: ‘N o evidence; there is no w ay yo u are going to get tenure a t this un iversity .’ T h a t is a d irec t and exact q u o te .”

N ext sem ester is K em nitz’s last sem es­ter teaching a t UNH.

“ A ny system o f evaluation is n o t going to please som eone n o t evaluated very h igh ly ,” said Dean o f Liberal A rts Allan Spitz.

It is also true a person w ho receives te n ­ure is still part o f a system involving p ro ­m otion , wages, m oney fo r scholarship.

T hat person, concerned ab o u t incom e, p rom otion and rep u ta tio n , m ay n o t be as vocal as people the system no longer a f­fects.

“T he UNH system com es as close as any I know o f to p ro tec ting the dep art­m ent and th e indiv idual,” said Spitz.

N o t all agree.“ I ’m finishing m y last year o f teaching

here, teaching an yw here ,” said assistant art p rofessor Ian W alker, w ho was refused tenure last spring.

“ It leaves me scam pering around lo o k ­ing for a w ay o f earning m oney six m onths a year so th a t I can have the o the r six m o n th s to m ake m y a rt, and never becom e involved in an academ ic in ­stitu tio n again. I ’d ra th e r dig d itches.”

U n lik e K e m n itz , w ho was recom ­m ended by his d epartm en t fo r p ro m o tio n and ten u re , W alker’s problem s lay in his departm en t.

“ One person on the departm en ta l p ro ­m otion and tenure co m m ittee was o u t fo r m e,” said W alker.

W alker said he had heard th a t a t the first m eeting o f th e co m m ittee , w hen the chairm an m en tioned gathering m aterial on his case fo r th e departm en ta l recom ­m endation , th e person “w ho was o u t fo r m e” said: “W hat m akes y ou th ink anyone will recom m end h im ?”

A ccording to W alker, an unusual set o f circum stances strengthened the posi­tion o f th e person dissenting W alker’s case.

The chairm an o f th e com m ittee re ­signed and th e new chairm an, along w ith an o ther m em ber o f th e com m ittee , was h e a v i ly d i s t r a c t e d d u e to personal reasons.

“The fo u rth person was th e one o u t for me, and the f ifth was playing politics w ith h im ,” said W alker.

“ I inserted a repo rt on the tw en ty five shows I was in. This person m ethodically w ent th rou g h and cu t th is m a teria l,” W alker continues.

W alker also produced a list o f five o u t­side judges, well above the num ber usual­ly en listed in tenure cases.

“This person called these un im po rtan t and invalid, saying th e judges were friends of m ine. He then p roduced seven m ore ex ternal judges, m ost o f w hom w eren ’t fam iliar w ith my w ork. The num ber o f slides o f my w ork sent to these judges was lim ited to ten . The seven replies cam e back e ith er positive, o r neu tra l due to lack o f m ateria l.”

“ T h is co m m ittee m em ber th en dis­missed these, p roducing his ow n and o the r peo p le ’s slides to show how bad mv w ork was to th e rest o f the departm en ta l

TENURE, page 18 Ian W alker

f r jM W H H M l W lM iU lil.U IK 3 B H M M B H 8 M M H

Student Government ’75-What happened.

Friday Feb. 14, 1975 UNH S tu d en t Body Presiden t Larry M eacham m et w ith three

of five m em bers o f th e governor’s council in an a tte m p t to block the nom ination o f F rank Carter fo r s tu den t trustee.

M eacham said he opposed C arter’s nom ination because o f the “obvious political reasons for his n o m in a tio n .” He said the governor should choose one o f th e persons nom inated by the s tuden t governm ents o f UNH, P lym outh and Keene S tate Col­leges.

S tud en t President Larry M eacham m et w ith M anchester Union Leader Publisher William Loeb fo r w hat M eacham called “a to ta lly inform al d iscussion.”

Loeb and M eacham conferred ab o u t the s tud en t tru stee post; House Bill 43 , w hich w ould require th e ro ta tio n and election of the s tu d en t tru s tee ; and m oves in the legislature to take the nom ination o f th e University System chancellor aw ay from the trustees and give th e choice to the governor and the governor’s council.

Tuesday Feb 18, 1975 A m otio n w hich w ould have lim ited s tu d en ts ’ use of the pass-

fail o p tio n in courses fo r academ ic requirem ents was defeated by the University Senate by one vote.

Friday Feb. 21 , 1975 F acu lty m em bers have reac ted angrily to the S tud en t C aucus’

successful effo rts to b lock a p roposed restric tion on th e use of pass-fail grading.

S tate Senate ac tion on House Bill 43 was delayed un til M arch 5 tod ay . A t th e request o f S enator Alan R ock, the Senate put- o ff th e decision on the s tu den t trustee bill because som e o f the Senators were absent.

Friday Feb. 28 , 1975;F rank A. C arter was ap po in ted s tu den t trustee by a 4-1 vote

o f th e governor’s council today .C arter, 18, was G overnor M eldrim T h om son ’s personal choice

for the post.S tud en t Body P residen t Larry M eacham said, “ In no way

were we against th e nom ination o f F rank C arter the person. We were against th e typ e o f selection used - b la tan t political p a tro n ­age.”

Meacham - “good to leave”• e

Larry M eacham will resign as S tuden t B ody Presiden t Jan . 1, 1976.

By M ichael D ’A n ton ioLarry M eacham ’s year as s tu ­

dent body presiden t is just ab o u t o v e r . Jan u a ry 1, 1976 Dave Farnham L akes o v e r ; g o n e a rcM eacham ’s chances to change things a t UNH; gone to o is his energy.

When th e senior from C o n ­necticu t to o k office, som e o f his m ajor concerns were allowing dorms- to establish parietals, keeping the pass-fail op tio n open for s tuden ts, and the Univer­s ity ’s budget ba ttle .

W hen elected last N ovem ber, M eacham said he was sym pa­th e tic to the problem s of s tu ­dents w ho com m ute to UNH.

One o f the early lessons o f M eacham ’s s tin t was th a t m ost s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t actions com e as reac tions to decisions made w ith o u t warning.

“We o ften just d o n ’t seem to g e t th e i n f o r m a t i o n , ” said M eacham , “T h a t’s w hat made the job very frustrating , we were always rpaeting to som ething, n e v e r w o rk in g on- our ow n ideas.”

O n e o f t h e f i r s t th in g s Meacham had to react to was the ap po in tm en t o f F rank C arter to the post o f s tu den t trustee by G o v e r n o r M eldrim T hom son. C arter’s ap p o in tm en t was said to be a rew ard for his e ffo rt in the governor’s re-election cam paign.

T h o m s o n ’s ap po in tm en t o f C arter was w hat M eacham called “ b la te n t political p a tron age .” T hough M eacham lobbied at the s tatehouse to change the gover­n o r’s m ind , Thom son chose no t to ap po in t one of the five stu-MEACHAM, page 19

Fam ham - “just a student”

STUDENT GOVERNMENT, page 18N e w ly elected S tu d en t B ody President David Farnham .

By R ich Mori“ I d o n ’t feel any d ifferen t

since I got e lec ted ,” said S tu d en t Body President-elect Dave F a rn ­ham . “ I ’m just a s tu d e n t.”

F arnham did say he had an ex ­perience recen tly th a t has s ta r t­ed him thinking.

“ I was going to D over,” he said. “ I was doing ab ou t 50 m ile s -p e r -h o u r on rou te 108 when I saw a girl thum bing for a ride. I d id n ’t know w h ether I

-would stop and pick her up, bu t I stopped ab o u t 150 yards dow n the road from her. She came running up, opened my V o lk s w a g e n ’s p asseng er-s ide d o o r, and said, ‘Jesus Christ, F arnham . I recognized you w hen you drove by. I voted for you and you d id n ’t know w h eth er to stop and give me a r id e .’”

“ I was shocked ,” he co n tin ­ued. “ I was really m oving-50 m i le s - p e r - h o u r - - a n d she still knew who I was. I co u ld n ’t b e­lieve she recognized m e .”

F arnham said, “ I had been th ink ing and planning for my campaign for S tuden t Body Pres­ident (SBP) since last Decem ber. B u t I w as a lw ays uncertain ab ou t m yself until one a fte r­noon in late Ju ly .

“ I was sitting w ith a s tuden t on one of those orange lifeguard tow ers dow n at H am pton Beach.We were checking ou t the girls on the beach and talking abou t election strategies. He to ld me I had a really good chance to win the SBP’s race if I played things

FARNHAM , page 19

PAGE EIGHTEEN THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

I refuse to put m yself in that position againTENURE continued from page 17p rom otion and tenure co m m ittee ,’ Walker.

said

“ One m em ber o f th e com m ittee later to ld me he was so confused he d id n ’t know w hich way to go. A nother said he w o u ld n ’t have voted the way he did had he realized th e source o f the in form ation he was evaluating. T hat source was the o th e r m em bers o f th e co m m ittee .”

“The college com m ittee looked at raw m aterial. The sum m ations draw n by the tw o individuals in the departm en tal com ­m ittee were so libelous, so deceptive, th a t no decision could be m ade except a nega­tive o n e ,” said Walker.

W alker sta ted th a t later in the y e a r 'an investigation in to th e incongruities o f his case was co nducted by a group o f full professors in the art departm en t.

He also said th e chairm an o f the d ep art­m ent “ co u ld n ’t believe the ind iscretions”

tion involved in th e tenure decisionThere is m uch m ore to W alker’s case.

But the sum of all the details is th a t he was refused tenure . He em phasizes th a t he is n o t b itte r. D isgusted w ould be a b e t­ter w ord.

“Why does this hap pen ?” he continued . “We have a system , originally in s titu ted to p ro tec t people from ex ternal pressures. It has becom e an in ternal pow er politics game, to o n e ’s ow n aim , to o n e ’s ow n end, to o n e ’s ow n benefit.

“A person comes in, perform s profes­sionally, and they are th rea ten ing the te n ­u re d p r o f e s s o r . . . and th e people th rea tened can use th e p ro m o tio n and tenure system fo r the ir ow n p ro tec tion . I t ’s a system based on fear, th a t ’s w hat it is.”

“This applies to o th e r universities a- cross the co un try , n o t just h e re ,” W alker added.

T h o u g h th e tw o have never m et, K em nitz’s s ta tem en ts echo W alker’s. In

in the case, and w rote a five page repo rt conversation he m entioned one senior “dem anding he be called in to expose th e colleague com pelled to com m en t on his irregularities” to groups above his posi- outspokenness, saying th a t m ost professors

in his position were w orried ab o u t getting tenure , and there fo re com placent.

“ If I w ere a s tu d e n t,” said K em nitz, ” 1 w ould be w orried ab o u t th e op e ra tion o f the p ro m o tio n and tenure process fo r tw o re a so n s . F irst, there is th e old New England saying, ‘y ou can ’t get th e re from here .’ I t is very d ifficu lt fo r a good s tu ­dent from here to get in to a to p graduate or professional school, because nationally • this university - so far as the college o f liberal arts goes - is no t th o u g h t o f as first rate in in tellectual term s, how ever good our hockey te a m .”

“The second reason is the ope ra tio n o f the system against in te llectua l diversity m eans th a t s tuden ts are n o t exposed to m any o f th e m ore sophistica ted cu rren ts o f th ou gh t.

“G reat in tellectual debates and m ove­m ents w hich are o f im portance in th e rest o f th e w orld are hard ly reflected h e r e . . . N othing produces a lively in te llectual a t­m o s p h e re like advocates o f d iffe ren t view points, in te llectual and social, as well as political.

“This university lacks liveliness and in ­tellectual diversity because th e p ro m o tio n

and ten ure process deliberately m ilita te s against o th e r th an being like Joe.

“The s tuden ts are th e losers, th e en ­trenched facu lty th e clear gainers from the w ay the process op e ra tes .”

B oth professors leave UNH in June. B oth are unsure o f fu tu re plans. W alker, though he has received offers from o the r institu tion s, said, “Because o f th e em o­tional to il o f th e past year, I absolu tely refuse to p u t m yself in th a t position a- gain. C ould you see going th roug h this w hole th ing once m ore?”

K em nitz, though qu ite less ba tte red th an W alker, also indicates he will stay a- way from teaching , in th e im m ediate fu ­ture a t least, due to his experience a t UNH.

B oth will survive. T hey are high-ranking professional in th e ir fields. B ut the ir cases p o in t o u t a questio n n o t ju st applicable to UNH, b u t a t universities and colleges across th e co u n try .

Is th e tenure system , designed to enrich a n d s u p p o r t a c a d e m ic a , ac tually a co un te r cu rren t, causing stagnation and forcing some people in academ ia o u t?

Student Government ’75 - What happenedSTUDENT GOVERNMENT continued from page 17Tuesday March 4, 1975

A proposal to lim it the use o f the pass-fail op tio n by those pursuing the Bachelor o f Arts degree in the College o f Liberal Arts will be aired a t the college facu lty m eeting tod ay . „

“W hen a m ajority o f the Senate is fru stra ted by the use o f th e , , L ’two th irds rule, then it m ay be necessary for the individual co l­leges to a c t,” said Allan Spitz, dean o f th e college.

Friday A pril 1 1 ,1 9 7 5 The S tu d en t Caucus will “ take a hard lo o k ” a t s tu d en t p ro ­

grams and then m ake suggestions for budget cu ts Sunday to the University R esource Task Force.

S tuden t G overnm ent will ask over 1 ,000 s tuden ts to w rite le t­ters to th e ir legislators to p ro tes t possible cuts in the University System budget.

Friday M arch 7, 1975The s tud en t trustee bill is on its way to the desk o f G overnor Tuesday A p ril 29 , 1975

M eldrim Thom son for his signature of approval or veto. S tate Sro UP ° f s tu den t senators is planning a cam pus w ide peti- Honsp ohsprvprc pynppf Hip la itp r tion e“ o rt to prevent the state legislature from cu tting the

The bill was delivered to the governor a fte r th e S tate House m illion University System budget,and Senate passed the bill earlv th is week. e ffo rt will cu lm inate in the presen ta tion o f the pe titio nto th e legislature nex t week.

Friday March 14, 1975 The s tu den t trustee bill was killed yesterday by G overnor

M eldrim T hom son. T h om son’s veto and failure o f the Senate to override th a t veto defeated the bill w hich w ould have allowed studen ts to elect the ir representative to the board o f trustees and w ould have ro ta ted the post from school to school.

The S tud en t G overnm ent is m aking plans to tell the state legislature th a t s tuden ts oppose the proposed $11 .5 m illion cut in the University System s budget.

S tud en t Body President Larry M eacham said, “We w ant all the in-state s tuden ts to co n tac t the ir legislators and let them know they oppose the cu ts .”

M eacham con tinued , “ It is essential th a t we get the in-state studen ts and the caucus to g e th e r .”

M eacham added, “We have got no m ore to lose than we have lost a lready .”

The University Senate will consider allowing dorm s to estab ­lish the ir ow n visitation policy a t the ir nex t m eeting,, May 5.

“ I t ’s a self-governance idea to allow each dorm to m ake up its m ind ,” said Ed W ojnow ski s tud en t m em ber o f the subcom m it­tee o f visitation .

The S tud en t Caucus voted yesterday to partia lly fund a com ­m uter cen ter located in th e M emorial U nion Building.

Plans also call fo r th e off-cam pus housing office to be moved to th e center. 8

Friday M ay 2, 1975 The S tu d en t Caucus will hold a cam pus rally T uesday in East-

West Park to dem onstra te su pp o rt fo r the U niversity’s request o f $52 .9 m illion from the state.STUDENT GOVERNMENT, page 19 L arry M eacham

elsewhere in educationNo free parking

Parking policies a t the University o f Iowa have been changed to p roh ib it 11 UI adm inistra tors from parking free in four specially designated lots.

Lists o f officials who were previously allowed to park free have been rem oved from signs near the lots.

Those w ho parked free before bu t m ay no longer include: UI President Willard B oyd, Vice Presidents George Cham bers and Elwin Joliffe , along with the Dean of G raduate Studies Duane Spriesterbach, and Jo h n D ooley, form er d irec tor o f the dep artm en t o f tran spo rta tio n a t the Uni­versity o f Iowa.

The T ransporta tion and Parking Com ­m ittee at UI, com posed o f UI studen ts and staff m em bers discovered the policy and m oved to have it d iscontinued .

Remedial coursesM any universities have been forced to

set up rem edial courses and w orkshops to

help studen ts acquire basic w riting skills which should have been taugh t in high school.

Som e univeristy officials blam e the in­com petence o f a large num ber o f studen ts to co nstruct sentences and spell words correctly on less stringen t college en ­trance requirem ents.

The d irec tor o f rem edial courses a t the University o f South Carolina believes high schools are guilty o f over-em phasizing lit­erature a t the expense of gram m ar.

Jerom e W eber, University College Dean at O klahom a University, a ttr ib u tes part o f the problem to a shift o f em phasis in the schools from basic skills to m ore per­sonal grow th. To o thers th e tendency tow ards illiteracy am ong studen ts reflects a society dom inated by television and ra ­dio and in w hich the w ritten form s o f com m unication have lost ground.

Political leaningsA Gallup survey based on 900 in te r­

views w ith studen ts from 57 colleges showed th a t while 30 percen t o f the freshm en leaned to the left politically , 53 percent o f the seniors said they identified

w ith the left.54 percent o f studen ts polled favored

the legalization o f m arijuana, 65 percen t s u p p o rte d ab o rtio n under all circum ­stances, and only 18 percen t felt p rem ari­tal sex was wrong.

T he survey, probing s tud en t religious a ttitu d es found th a t 65 percent o f the studen ts believe in life after death .

Sex change operationThe S tate o f Iow a paid the expenses of

a male to fem ale sex change o pera tion in 1974 for a prisoner a t the W om en’s R e­fo rm atory in R ockw ell City. The Daily Iowan a t the University o f Iowa reports th a t in a rou tine body search following arrest fo r arm ed robbery , the person w ho has no t been nam ed, was found to have characteristics o f b o th sexes.

Since the person was established in th e female gender role, the $20 ,000 opera­tion was perform ed a t the University Hos­pitals.

“ While a person is a t a state in s titu tio n and m edical care is requ ired , i t ’s provided

b y U n iv e r s i ty H ospitals,” said Joh n Thalacker, assistant d irec tor o f th e Divi­sion o f A dult C orrections.

Copyright protection

Congress is now considering new co py ­right legislation w hich, if passed, w ould p r o h i b i t rep rod u ction o f copyrighted m aterial fo r in ter-library loans and reserve desks.

L ibraries copying articles w ould be lia­ble for $50 ,00 0 fines.

The new law will p ro tec t au tho rs and publishers from losing revenues because of free reprin ts.

While dup lica tio n for criticism , com ­m ent, news reporting , teaching, scholar­ship or research w ould be legal, reprin ting on a w ider scale o r “ system atic” rep ro ­duc tion for classes w ould be illegal.

E ducators testify ing before the House Judiciary S ubcom m ittee on C ourts, Civil L iberties and The A dm inistra tion of Jus­tice th is sum m er said the bill w ould be devastating to th e teaching process.

THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5 PAGE NINETEEN

“Senators need a lead er”FARNHAMcontinued from page 17sm art po litically . I l l tell y o u , th a t really gave me confidence. I got so psyched th a t I co u ld n ’t wait fo r S ep tem ber to come so I could start w orking tow ards get­ting e lec ted .”

Farnham said he did n o t th in k he w ould beat Jim Ilerchek by a four to one margin.

“ I was cam paigning hard to the end o f th e polling tim es,” he said. “ I th o u g h t th e vote w ould be m uch closer because H erchek cam paigned so hard. He really inspired m e the way he cam p­aigned.”

F arnham said th a t m ost s tu ­dents d o n ’t th in k th a t th e s tu ­den t body presiden t is an im por­tan t position .

“ I w an t to be a responsible leader w ho will prove to the s tu ­dents th a t the s tu den t body p re­sidency is an effective, im por­tan t position , ” he said.

“ In viewing the perform ance of past SBP’s, it is easy for s tu ­dents to m ake th a t observation th a t I have no real pow er.

“The last tw o SBP’s I ’ve obser­ved, Alec B uchanan and Larry M eacham , have n o t proven to the s tu den t pop u la tion th a t the SBP is a w orthw hile p o sition .”

Farnham said, “The lack o f ac­tion has h u rt s tu den t in terests in the past. In 1974,' for exam ple, Alec B uchanan show ed a serious lack o f responsib ility w hen he failed to p resent five nam es to

Gov. M eldrim Thom son for S tu ­den t T rustee selection by the a- greed-upon deadline date. This resulted no t only in a political patronage ap p o in tm en t in p res­ent S tuden t T rustee F rank Car­ter, b u t it also h u rt th e image o f studen t leadership around the s ta te .”

F arnh am said he feels th a t L a r ry M eacham ’s greatest ac­com plishm ent has been his in ­creased co n tac t w ith the s tp den t body. He said he w ants to in ­crease th a t co n tac t.

“ B ut M eacham ’s biggest m is­take was th a t he d id n ’t lead the S tudent C aucus,” F arnham said. “ Senators need a leader, n o t to influence their decisions b u t to direct the ir effo rts tow ards the problem s o f the s tu den t body .

“ I agree w ith Greg Cope and Dave GpNun th a t som e senators are n o t as m otivated as th ey could b e ,” he said, b u t they fail to state the reasons are no t per­sonal. I t ’s inheren t in S tu d en t G o vernm ent’s system because o f the lack o f in fo rm atio n and a lack o f leadersh ip .”

Cope and G aN un had accused s tuden t senators earlier th is year of being unm otivated .

F arnham said there has been a problem w ith senators n o t shar­ing in fo rm ation this sem ester.

“T o aid the in form ation p ro b ­lem ,” he said, “ I ’m going to be­gin to build a resource base o f knowledge for fu tu re s tuden ts so th a t th e y ’ll know w h a t’s been going on a t UNH.

“A t the present tim e there are

no records o f w hat has happened during previous adm inistra tions. E v e r y th in g has been handed down by w ord-of-m outh . S tu ­dents have no w ritten record o f the achievem ents and failures o f past s tud en t leaders.”

F a rn h a m said, “We haven’t had leaders in the past w ith the foresight to create a co n tinu ity betw een ad m in istra tions.”

“ The first change I will im ple­m en t,” he said, “ is w ith in s tu ­den t governm ent. All senators will w rite an opin ion and obser­vation o f th e issues discussed a t the various m eetings they a t ­tend. These will be kep t on file and open to all s tuden ts fo r the ir in fo rm atio n .”

A n o th er m ajor goal o f F arn h ­am ’s is th e un ifica tion o f s tud en t leadership.

“ S tarting w ith th e people w ho were in th e University Union for Progressive A ction (U PA ),” he said, “w e’ve got to get s tuden ts working w ith each o th e r instead of against each o th e r .”

UPA presented a proposal for a MUB Board o f D irectors w hich was n o t passed by th e s tuden t caucus th is fall. They w ithdrew their proposal and sent it sepa­rate from a caucus proposal to the University Senate S tuden t Welfare C om m ittee.

F arnham w ants s tud en t gover­nm ent to becom e m ore involved w ith th e G reek C ouncil, the S tu ­dent A ctivity Tax organization (SAT) presiden ts, and the dorm presidents.FARNHAM, page 20

M eacham : batting ,500MEACHAMContinued from page 17dents recom m ended by S tud en t G overnm ent.

M eacham failed in his trustee efforts and though he came very close to defeating the governor in a rela ted battle over House Bill 43 - one th a t w ould have al­low ed s tuden ts to elect a tru stee - he was again fru stra ted by New Ham pshire politics.

“We rallied behind the bill, it was sponsored by R epresentative Leo Lessard and we alm ost got it th ro u g h ,” said M eaeham .

House Bill 43 was vetoed by T hom son. The House o f R epre­sentatives overrode his veto foi th e first tim e, b u t th e Senate did no t and the issue was dead.

M e a c h a m ’s en tire adm ini­s t r a t i o n was m arked by im ­proved re lation w ith state o ffi­cials. M uch o f th e cred it fo r the im provem ent goes to th en Vice- P re s id e n t Dave Farnham and Senator Bruce Fiigen.

F arnham and Fiigen w ere the driving force behind lobbying e f­forts on th e behalf o f th e Uni­versity S ystem ’s budget request. They w orked all spring and were successful to the po in t th a t state leaders to o k th em seriously and proposed cu ts in th e budget th a t were n o t all passed.

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A t t h e en d o f last spring M eacham was ba tting ab o u t .500 on his original goals. Residence halls w ere denied th e right to de­term ine th e ir ow n parietals by one vote, a m otio n to lim it the use o f pass-fail was defeated b u t the individual colleges to o k up the issue, and th e U niversity’s budget was cu t by ab o u t $10 m illion b u t relations w ith state o f f ic ia ls were upgraded. The c o m m u te r c e n te r was being p lanned b u t had n o t m ateria l­ized.

One success th a t stands o u t in M eacham ’s m ind was S tud en t G overnm ent’s assistance to Lord Hall residents try ing to retain their retirem ent-age jan ito r.

“ It m ay no t sound like such a big deal, b u t it was one tim e when we helped studen ts get w hat they w anted w ith o u t doing the whole thing for th e m ,” he said.

W hen M eacham re tu rned from the sum m er, th ree issues - p a rk ­ing, m ini-dorm reba te requests and the elim ination o f the ski team - were aw aiting. They had to be tak en care o f before any thing else.

“As far as parking goes, a lo t o f s tuden ts, especially the m in i­d o rm r e s i d e n t s , r e a l ly got screw ed,” said M eacham . “ No provisions were m ade fo r them The fine increases were a sur­

prise and unreasonab le .”M eacham said last w eek he

was an ticipating a law suit being brought by studen ts against the University over th e parking is­sue. Since th en stu den t efforts brough t the $10 fines dow n to $5 and no suits are p lanned.

The S tud en t Caucus supported the ski te a m ’s effo rts to be re in ­s t a t e d and eventually helped fund th e group as a club sport.

The Caucus also was active in helping m ini-dorm studen ts w ith their request fo r rebates for u n ­delivered fu rn itu re.

M each am d id n ’t accep t the position o f leader o f the caucus. He left th a t job to C hairperson D e b o ra h M ekelatos. However, m an y o f the C aucus’ actions were spurred by the p res iden t’s leadership or lack o f leadership.

M eacham is a m iddle of the r o a d leader. He characterizes him self as n o t aggressive and no t p assive . T hat “ n o t an y th in g ” posture has o ften been criticized by s tu den t senators.

T h e s t u d e n t p r e s id e n t is h e a d e d f o r C o lo r a d o th i s January . The dem ands o f the presidency will be gone. W hat’s left are the m em ories o f w hat he did and d id n ’t accom plish.

Dave F ranham will inherit the challenge and sure fru stra tions of the office.

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Student Government ’75STUDENT GOVERNMENT continued from page 18Friday M ay 9, 1975

T hirty-one UNH studen ts and 5 from Plym outh S tate College presented a p e titio n signed by 3 ,034 people to G overnor Mel­drim Thom son in suppo rt o f the University System $52 .9 m il­lion budget request.

The governor gave th e com m ittee a polite , b u t unencouraging reception .

A rally suppo rting the University S ystem ’s $52 .9 m illion b u d ­get request drew ab o u t 600 studen ts to East-West Park.

The purpose o f th e rally was to dem onstrate s tu den t support. All 12 speakers urged the granting o f the full budget request.

The University Senate narrow ly defeated a plan to allow dorm itories to establish the ir ow n visitation hours.

The decision was criticized by stu den t leaders w ho backed the freer parietal policy.

Tuesday Sept. 9, 1975.Parking problem s and the elim ination of the ski team dom ina­

ted debate a t th e S tu d en t Caucus m eeting Sunday night.

Tuesday Sept. 16, 1975 The S tu d en t Caucus unanim ously condem ned the University

Parking and Traffic C om m ittee for unreasonable raising o f p a rk ­ing fines.

Tuesday Sept. 23, 1975 The In tra -F ra te rn ity Council has asked the S tuden t Caucus

for a second $500 grant to pay their share o f the debt incurred by th e Sebastian-C otton C oncert o f Sept. 12.

Tuesday Sept. 30, 1975 S tu d en t Vice-President David F arnham called for s tu den t co n­

tro l o f the M emorial Union Building.F arnham said s tuden ts should have “an equal ro le” in

decision m aking a t the s tuden t union.

Tuesday Oct. 7, 1975 The University Senate voted to approve a s tud en t m otion to

condem n the unreasonable increase in parking fines by the U ni­versity Parking and Traffic C om m ittee.

Friday O ctober 10, 1975 A plan th a t will expand the off-cam pus housing office and

move it in to th e M emorial Union Building has been approved bj; R ichard Stevens, the vice-provost fo r academ ic affairs.

Tuesday O ctober 21, 1975 The S tu d en t Caucus tab led a proposal to establish a s tud en t

board o f d irec to r to opera te th e M emorial U nion Building.A request by the D isadvantaged W omen in High E ducation

for use of the s tu d en ts ’ lawyers was delayed by the S tuden t Caucus.

Tuesday O ctober 28, 1975 The S tu d en t Caucus approved a proposal th a t w ould establish

policies fo r th e opera tions o f the M em orial Union Building.In effect, the proposal gives s tuden ts m ore contro l over the

opera tion and budget o f the MUB.

Friday N ov. 14, 1975 S tud en t Body President Larry M eacham w arned yesterday

th a t S tu d en t G overnm ent m ay take UNH to court over in­creased parking fines.

Tuesday N ov. 1 8 ,1 9 7 5 The S tu d en t Caucus voted Sunday to have the proposed

Memorial Union board o f d irec to rs repo rt directly to UNH Pres­ident Eugene Mills.

Friday Dec. 5, 1975 The University Parking and Traffic C om m ittee voted to re­

duce the $10 parking fines to $5 yesterday.The reduc tion of the fines will be tem porary to see if the $5

charge is an effective de terren t.

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PAGE TWENTY THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9, 1 9 7 5

‘Students can exist without Student Affairs’FARNHAMcontinued ironi page 19

Farnham , who is a b ro ther at Sigma Beta fra te rn ity , has a l­ready accepted an invita tion to sit on the G reek Council.

"The dorm presidents should get involved w ith s tu den t issues like pass fail and parie tals,” he said. "T hey should no t be con­cerned solely w ith social activ­ities. Some of the presidents in Area II have already expressed a desire to get m ore involved. The more partic ipation the better.

"There is an organization cal­led the SAT p residen ts,” F a rn ­ham said, "b u t the s tud en t presi­dent hasn’t been involved w ith it. In the past the SBP’s office has been forbidding. The o th e r SAT presidents haven’t felt the office lias been open.

"A t tim es in the past there has been antagonism . I w ant to close that gap. I w ant to take away the th reat th a t we (studen t gov­e r n m e n t ) c o n t r o l the purse strings and work together. A fter all. w e’re all s tu d en ts .”

Farnham feels tha t the Office of S tu d en t Affairs has overstepp­ed their jurisd iction in som e are* as.

“ S tu d en t Affairs contro ls the MUB, and they have tried to gain influence over the SAT o r­ganizations and stu den t govern­m ent itself by creating new posi­tions. positions th a t could be fil­led w ith studen ts. The program ­ming co o rd in a to r’s (H ope Spru- ance’s) position could have been handled by one of the senior MUB night m anagers.”

“ And then there is MUSO -

else? I ’ve asked m yself th a t ques­tion over and over. The answ er is th a t the M emorial Union S tu ­den t O rganization is supposed to be coord inating en terta inm en t for the M emorial U nion, includ­ing the MUB PUB.”

Presently th e program m ing for en te rta in m en t a t the MUB PUB is being co nduc ted by a co m m it­tee under the leadership of P ro­gram m ing D irector Ray M athes- on. MUSO has a representative on th a t com m ittee .

“ As far as I ’m co ncerned ,” said F arnham , “ studen ts can ex ­ist w ith ou t s tuden t affairs, bu t s tuden t affairs cannot exist w ith ­ou t studen ts. I will deal w ith them through represen ta tives.”

Farnham said he feels th a t the adm inistra tion has been effective in the past in im p o rtan t issues and diverted the ir energies to such issues as parietals.

“They have effectively played the facu lty o ff against the s tu ­den ts ,” he said. “We should have been w orking fo r solutions to p rob lem s like grade infla tion , plus/m inus and pass/fail.

“ I ’m against any pressure on faculty by the adm in istra tion to a r t i f ic ia l ly low er g rades,” he said. “ I ’m opposed to the recen t notices from adm inistra tors to faculty w hich say th a t professors are giving too m any A ’s and to cut it ou t. This type o f action sets up artificial barriers which are to ta lly co ntra ry to the p rin ­ciples o f the w estern concep t o f the university , one o f w hich is grading on m erit, no t by the bell curve.”

“ T h e E d u c a t io n a l Policies C o m m itte e o f the Universitythe M emorial Union S tu d en t Or Senate io going to rocom m ond

ganization ,” he said. “Why is it called that and no t som ething

th a t pass/fail be abolished to ta l­ly ,” he said. “ I just heard ab ou t

it Tuesday. I ’ve got to do som e research on th a t issue. I do plan to fight it in the S en ate .”

F arnham scoffs a t the parking problem .

“ I w ant to clear th is up before I take office officially on Jan. 1. I can ’t com m ent at th is tim e on how I ’m going to go ab ou t i t ,” he said.

“ I do feel th a t th e d irection we’re taking on fines is w rong ,” he said. “ E xcept to reduce th a t $10 fine to $ 5 .”

A m ajor objective o f the S tu ­dent Parking and Traffic C om ­m ittee has been to reduce traffic fines. One o f those fines which the SPTC has recom m ended be lowered is the $10 fine for p a r ­king a registered vehicle in an u n ­defined space. The SPTC w ants it reduced to $5.

“The d irec tion we should take is op en in g up those 24 lots which proh ib it s tu den t park ing” he said. “ S tud en ts are d iscrim in­ated against. Faculty and S taff have a prio rity . Parking should be on a first-com e, first-served, basis.

“The shu ttle system is the an ­swer to m any of the parking problem s. It can get people w ho park in outly ing lots in to cam ­pus fa s t,” said Farnham .

The University o f New H am p­shire m ust com e up w ith a new policy soon on adm issions s tan d ­ards. The m aster plan o f UNH calls for a m axim um o f 10 ,500 studen ts a t this cam pus in 1980. UNH is fast reaching th a t m ark. Presently there are over 10,200 studen ts at D urham .

A d m is s io n s C o m m itte e (a standing com m ittee o f th e Uni- vprsiiy Spnatp) rhairm an Paul Brokelm an calls the problem “a result o f trem endous population

grow th in New H am pshire.”F arnham says he favors “ the

raising o f standards for in-state studen ts as a m eans of co n tro l­ling adm issions ra the r than de­creasing out-of-sta te en ro llm ent o r a l lo w in g f o r u n l im i t e d g row th .”

Presently 32 per cent o f the UNH-Durham studen ts are o u t - of-state s tuden ts.

This is seven per cent above the 25 per cent lim it established by the Board o f T rustees. The Trustees waived those standards which allowed the adm issions o f­fice to accept m ore out-of-state studen ts.

“ S ti f f e n in g up th e criteria w ould also go a long way to ­wards increasing academ ic s tan ­dards, a cause o f concern recen t­ly ,” F arnham said. “ I d o n ’t w ant to sound b ru ta l here. I ’m not. But I feel th a t if a high school senior from New Ham pshire real­ly w ants to get in to UNH, h e ’ll make it if he tries hard en o u g h .”

F arnham gives all o f th e cred it for the success o f last M ay’s Pos­itive A ction fo r the University System (PAUS) e ffo rt to Gibbs- H unter senato r Greg Cope and form er senato r Bruce Fiigen.

PAUS included a lobby e ffo rt by ab ou t 30 studen ts from UNH and P lym outh S tate College in C oncord in favor o f increasing state funding o f the University System ’s budget.

“ PAUS was the in itia tion o f a new phase o f s tud en t ac tion t o ­ward gaining su pp o rt fo r things w hich are in the in terest o f the s tu d en ts ,” he said. “ I hope to w ork w ith the s tud en t govern­m ents o f Keene and P lym outh to set up an ongoing lobby ef­f o r t fo r s tuden ts aroun d th e s ta te .”

F arnham said he believes th a t one issue w hich th is lobby effo rt can be used in is the upcom ing debate on a m andato ry health care fee. T hat proposal will be presented to the S tud en t Caucus a t t h e i r u p c o m in g S u n d a y m eeting.

“ I am against the m andato ry health care fee for tw o rea­sons,” he said. “ F irst because there are m any studen ts w ho have alternative insurance plans and should no t have to subscribe to this policy.

“ This is an o ther area where the studen ts are being forced to pick up th e tab because the state is n o t providing adequate fu n d ­ing to the U niversity ,” he added. “This is one place w here s tu ­dents have to draw the line. If we d o n ’t s ta rt now studen ts are going to be im posed on in the fu tu re .”

Farnham said a small group o f friends helped him in his cam ­paign.

“T h ere is one individual, h ow ­ever, th a t I ’d like to th a n k ,” he said. “ I ’ll alw ays hold special thanks to form er s tu den t senator Brian Snow , who gave me the in ­centive to run in th e fall o f 1974, m y second sem ester a t U N H.”

“ Snow knew w h at th is cam pus needed tw o years ag o ,” he ad ­ded, “ and I ’m really beginning a n a d m in is tra tio n th a t could have been started in 1973 had he been e lec ted .”

Snow was defeated by Alec B uchanan in Nov. 1973.

“ I ’m looking forw ard to the job o f s tud en t bod y p res id en t,” he said. “ I realize th a t it will take away from my tw o favorite pasttlm es, tennis and chess, b u t I th in k i t ’s w o rth the e f fo r t.”

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THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1975 PAGE TW ENTY-ONE

e n te rta i nm entT u e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 9 , 1 9 7 5

M flWhat do you do when you gotta do som ethin’?

By Je ff Palm er

The F rank lin is showing a toad, movie. Y ou d o n ’t feel like d rink ­ing dow ntow n or at the MUB Pub. T here are no parties you w ant to go to .

So how else can y o u spend a night in D urham ? S tudy?

To prevent y o u from taking on a night o f tex tb o o k s in des­pera tion o f any th ing b e tte r to do here is a list o f activities, any o f w hich y o u m ay try if a dull night appears im m inent. All th a t is needed in m ost cases is a friend o r tw o , a little m oney and an open m ind:

1) Buy trashy m agazines and ju n k food for an evening of vicarious lust and possible in ­digestion. The m ore pa rtic ipan ts

the be tter.2) Take as m any friends as

you can round up to th e W ildcat to play th e Greek songs on the jukebox and dine on th e ir G reek cuisine. M aybe the ow ner will let you move back the tables fo r G re e k dancing if y o u spend enough.

3) F ind a friend w ith an ex ten ­sive record co llection and hu n t through them all fo r messages scrawled on th e inside groove. (Exam ples: i'ne K eanes' L et i t Be says “ Phil and R on n ie” , re ­ferring to producer Phil Spector and his w ife, and The Eagles On The B order says, “ He w ho hesi­tates is lu n ch ,” m eaning G od knows w hat.)

4) Sing Christm as carols. Any tim e o f th e year. A nyw here. Even if y ou are to ne deaf.

5) Build a cam pfire on to p o f

the hill in fro n t o f th e MUB for a weenie roast, using w hatever rocks y ou can find. B ut m ake sure you p u t back the rocks exactly as y ou fou nd them .

6) Have shopping cart races in the Shop ‘N ’ Save parking lo t.

7 ) F o llow a UNH security guard on his round s fo r an en tire night and try to strike up a co n­versation. The discussion in the early m orning hours m ay change your life.

8 ) W a n d e r t h r o u g h S t o k o t olook a t the paintings on the walls. D o n ’t miss “The Life Of T h e H ot D og” on the sixth floor, guys wing west. (If the elevators are b roken , w hich is m ore than likely, and y o u have to take the stairs, y ou m ight find S toke 9.)

9) Take a conste lla tion book o u t o f the library and learn to

t r i v i a !Mike Mercury was the man who constructed the famous Super­

car.

1. Who wrote the theme song fo r the Tonight show?2. What was the name o f the dw arf who was one o f J im West’s

arch enemies in The Wild Wild W est?3. What were the firs t tw o lines o f the original Mary Tyler

Moore theme song?4. What was the name o f the-park Yogi Bear lived in?5. The F lin ts tone ’s pe t’s name was D ino, bu t what was the

name o f the Rubbles’ pet?6. Who was the star o f the movie The M ouse That R oared?7. What movie is th is scene taken from ?

8. What was Jeremy B o lt’s girl fr ie n d ’s name in Here Come the Brides?

9. What was the name o f the ghost in The G host and Mrs. M u ir?

10. How many wives did Ben C artw righ t o f Bonanza have during his lifetim e?

answers on page 8

The Wicked Hard Question o f the Week: What was the M un­ster’s street address?

recognize m ore than just the Big and L ittle D ippers and Orion.

1 0 ) S ta g e a F red Astaire- Ginger Rogers musical num ber around the T-Hall flagpole.

11) Have a picnic in the hall o f y o u r d o r m o r a p a r tm p n t build­ing w ith all the people who have fo o d to con tribu te . The best tim e fo r this is on the eve of a vacation to get rid o f all ex tra food. Use noth ing o the r than w hat has gathered in yo u r room (No w atering dow n any liquor - you m ust pass it a roun d , d rin k ­ing it straight from the b o ttle ) and finish every d rop , bite and

crum b.12) Play hide and seek in the

College W oods, o r divide into team s and play Cat and Mouse. D on’t fall in the river while chas­ing e a c h o th e r around , and w atch o u t for exposed ro o ts .

13) Late at night take a friend to any o f th e fireplaces on cam ­pus and keep the fires burning.

T hink for yourself and you can p ro b a b ly com e up w ith m ore ideas on how to pass the night in D urham . Leave those tex tb ook s on the shelf. D o n ’t let them get in th e way o f your education .

Exeter Players become Brecht-Weill playersBy M arilyn H ackett

A friend o f B erto lt B rech t’s in Berlin once said, “Every child know s th a t B recht is n o t very particular w ith regard to in te llec­tu a l p ro p e r ty . Of course he pinches things — b u t he does it w i th genius, and th a t ’s w hat m a tte rs .”

Three P enny Opera, p u t on by the E xete r Players last w eekend in E x e te r’s Tow n Hall, is based on m aterial filched from Jo h n G ay’s The Beggers’ Opera and re ­veals B recht no th ing short o f a first class pilferer.

The stree t singer, played clever­ly by David Caldwell in de­m eanor no t unlike Joel Gray, began w ith a lovely, lilting caba­r e t m e lo d y to t h e a c c o m ­panim en t o f a ra th e r d iscordant group o f reeds, brass, and per­c u s s io n u n d e r G ra f M ouen. “ S hark’s tee th are p re tty , dear, pearly w hite , d ear...” sings the street singer w ith a sly, am used glance a t the audience.

The original score to The Beg- gers’ Opera by Pepusch was dis­carded by B recht w ho felt his language cried ou t fo r a new musical setting , tem po and drive. Brecht called on K urt Weill, th a t “en fan t terrib le o f a tonal m usic”

infam ous th rou g h ou t G erm any in th e year 1928, to produce the music th a t w ould com plim ent w hat was to becom e his m ost fam ous w ork.

“ You are ab ou t to see an opera fo r beggars, seeing this o p e ra w as conceived w ith a splendor only a beggar could

sw ag g er, reports w ith typical B recht cynicism , “ H um an p ity is m y business, and business is te rrib le .”

And thence fo rth th e Brecht- Weill-Players com bo bom barded th e audience w ith d irec t hits which faltered occasionally in delivery, b u t never in b itte r and

w h ic h k e p t the audience in stitches w ith each new diver­gence.

M other Peachum (played by a lively Patricia S tedry) sets her c o a l i t io n o f ragam uffins and whores against Mac the K n ife’s organization o f crooks, including characters played w ith a savory

Human p ity is m y business... ...and business is terrible99

conceive,” announced the street singer, as he faded in to the role of a pauper in th e eighteen th cen tury , a m em ber o f the B.B.B. (the Beggars’ Big B ro ther).

The B.B.B. is lead by th e n o ­torious Mr. J .J . Peachum (Budd P eters) fa th e r to peaches a n ’ cream Polly Peachum (Genevieve Cora Fraser). Like Fagan in Ol­iver T w ist, fa ther Peachum heads a den o f thieves. Peters, taking o n his role w ith a pom pous

w itty co n ten t.As th e sto ry unfolds ( and the

p l a y g o e r s u n w in d ) , P o l ly Peachum sings w ith wild eyes and a delightfu l tou ch o f cock­ney accent a fantasy story of a barm aid and a black p irate ship. Polly unw ittingly becom es the second’ wife o f Mac the Knife (Paul G ustavson), the m ost dan ­gerous crim inal in L ondon. The m a rriag e scene is a diverting t i r a d e o f com ic im proprieties

touch - Bob the Saw (Indulis Gleske), Jake the Scum (JohnGregg) and R eady M oney M att (D ick W arn er)- and draws inTiger Brow n, Com m issioner o f P o lic e (E d F ran c o ). I t ’s all rem iniscent o f G ilbert and Sulli­van com edies o f intrigue and e r­rors. B ut B rech t’s sardonic ly ­rics, “ Even sainted folk m ay act like sinners, unless th e y ’ve had their custom ary d inners,” add a

black ta in t to the hum or.If the E xeter Players’ acting

was slightly s tilted , it u n in ten ­tionally suited the p lay ’s m ock­ery in its own fashion.

The Players also did an in te r­esting thing w ith the stage. On a basic and highly functional set of silvery w hite walls, they p ro ­je c t e d s lid e s , o ften betw een s c e n e s , to t h e jazz-classical sound of the band. Projections o f individual. E xeter Players, w ritten naration o f upcom ing events in the dram a, and slides o f crow ds w ith gas masks on and prisoners in co ncen tra tion camps kept the audience en tertained and suggested the atm osphere th a t was developing in G erm any as B recht and Weill w rote.

G ustavson, who upgraded his to ta l perform ance every tim e he sang a solo, brought the play to a close w ith the right tou ch of irony in “ Oh B rothers w ho live on while we are D ead” just pre­vious to Mac the K nife’s hang­ing.

But I ’ll clue you in, it finishes, as th e street singer relates in his finale, w ith a “ Happy Ending, Nice and T idy, a trick I learned in school, b o y s...” , concluded with am ateu r finesse th a t was al­together qu ite pleasing.

PAGE TWENTY-TWO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU ESD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

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THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5 PAGE TW ENTY-THREE

Have a schm altzy Christmas...

Offerings

By David ReedC hristm as - w hat a w retched

holiday. One o f those m anda­to ry fam ily occasions th a t ends w ith a hangover a t best, b u t m ore likely w ith bored om , bad tem pers, and a brom ide.

But if y ou dare say th a t TV football a t G ran dm a’s w ith m o n­strous little cousins and the ir n e w ly sm ashed plastic dum p trucks u nd erfo o t is n o t y ou r cup of egg nog, y o u risk the b rand o f heretic. A fter all, you could be alone on Christm as.

Like K atherine Jo hn so n and Joh n Sparrow . T hrow n toge ther in a qua in t New England inn -- ah, fa te , - th ey sustain each o t h e r t h r o u g h S ilen t N ight, L on ely N igh t a t T heater by the Sea th is m on th . I t m ight be b e t­ter called “ Help Me Make It Through th e N ight” -- for b o th the stars and the audience.

N ot to say th e p rod u ctio n is b a d . S y lv ia Harm an as Mrs. Johnson and William J. C oppola as S p a rro w pad th rough the m audlin message on ten d er feet and w ith ten der hearts.- L ynn P a r s o n s as Mae, the ch a tty , cheery inn hostess fa-la-las holiday hom ilies w ith bub bly ex uber­ance. And Jo Ann Y eom an as a new bride puts a blush on her bashful hub b y , S co tt W eintraub, w ith her delightfully revealing babble.

B u t TBS m anaging d irec tor Jon K im bell adm its Silen t N ight, L onely N igh t sm acks a b it o f “As the Stom ach C hurns” o r w hatever soapy opera y ou wash your em otions w ith . He know s R obert A n derson’s Y uletide vig­ne tte m ay appeal m ore to doting m atrons than to degree candi­dates.

F or w hat i t ’s w o rth , thou gh , (Ilia play docc n o t ohimo w ith I>hon--

S e t in the Tw enties, S ilen t Night, L on ely N igh t be trays its age in its inability to p u t a lonely m an and w om an in ad jac­ent ho te l room s w ith o u t ex pec t­ing them to a t least' share sex if no t love. W hat else can m en and w om en do together? In fact, th a t’s its basic hangup. Harm an and Coppola fidget through tw o acts o f rehashing one them e -- “ I d o n ’t w ant yo u r body, just you r c o m p an y .” Help me make it through the night.

Recognizing the saccharine in th is s c r i p t , d ire c to r Russell T reyz plans it for every Noel heartache possible. H arm an’s eyes w a te r w in s o m e ly . C oppo la’s stoicism cracks in a trem bling self-confrontation . And Parsons, a 1974 graduate o f UNH m us­icals fam e, chirps carols so jo y ­fully y o u ’d like to bash her if you could stop laughing.

M ichael Spellm an’s set ,cap­tures the coxiness o f a snow ­bound inn - a canopied Em pire b e d w i th q u ilt, red orienta l throw rugs, and a golden tinsel tree which ascends ingeniously in to a chandelier hanging. It even snows on cue outside th e red velvet draped w indow . Only Bing Crosby is missing.

B ut the cast does old Bing one b e t t e r . D o n n in g D ickensian hoop skirts, m uffs, bonnets , and w aistcoats, they sing carols be­tw een acts while the coffee girl se lls h o t c id e r a n d g reen - s p r i n k l e d s u g a r c o o k ie s . Schm altz, pure schm altz. And decent en te rta in m en t for visiting parents if no t fo r a h o t date.

Silen t N ight, L onely N igh t plays th rough Dec. 21 at T heater by the Sea in P ortsm outh . The Owl and the Pussycat opens Jan. 1 fo r those o f you no t in F lo ri­da.

William J. C oppolla plays Jo h n Sparrow , half o f a stranded Yule tide couple in S ilen t N ight, L on elyN igh t now at T heatre b y th e Seaey glad tidings (till th e end). Mrs. Jo h n so n ’s husband, forever away o n business, has left her to make som e Christm as cash. Spar-

. (Mel Reisz p h o to .)ro w ’s w ife, Tie finally confesses, h a s spent th e last five years gurgling a t th e walls o f a nearby m ental in s titu tio n . And the tw o

lonely hearts have 90 m inutes o f play tim e to capsulize 12 all- night hours o f guilt, uneasiness, and, a t last, com passion.

Snow flakes on m y shou ldersd o e sn ’t mean tha t Jo hn Den vet ts desparate fo r Head and Shoulders < It means his special called A R o c k y M ounta in Christmas is on television th is w eek. For details, see below.

The e m p ty fireplace stands in w aiting fo r Santa Claus in A B C ’s special th is 'w eek tha t fea tures th e voice o f Jo e l Grey. The special, fea turin g

people and m ice as main characters is calledThe Night B e fo re Chris tmas

TU E S D A Y ,D E C E M BE R 9

NBC has what they claim is a “ Special T rea t” at 4 this a fternoon. The special is called The D ay A fte r Tom orrow , a science fic tio n story set in the year 2000. A d ­vance p u b lit ity says tha t the h igh light o f the show w ill be special effects showing what i t ’s like to approach the speed o f light in a spaceship.

The Twelve Chairs, Franklin Theater, 6 :30 and 8 :30 p.m. One o f Mel Brooks firs t movie endeavors, and he had it even back then - no t as sophisticated as Young Frankenstein, bu t great pre-exam relaxation.

A National Geographic en try takes random looks at England and some o f its more beau tifu l areas, including the O uter Flebrides and London ’s Fiousehold Va- valry Regiment. It airs on channels 11 at 7 :30 and channel 2 at 8.

Joel Grey and Tam m y Grimes supply the voices fo r the characters in ’Twas the N ight B efore Christmas, on CBS, 8 :30 p.m. Based loosely on Clement M oore’s fa ­mous poem, th is is an animated special about a newspaper tha t claims Santa Claus is a fraud.

It had to happen sooner or later - F rank ’s w ife has fin a lly found ou t about Hot Lips, his partner in passion in M *A *S*H*, CBS, 9 p.m . This episode details a series o f m inor con fronta tions brought about by letters from home in the M *A *S *H * unit.

W EDN ESD AY,D EC EM BER 10

It is a season o f giving - and i f y o u ’re able, giving a p in t o f blood just m ight mean one more person w ill live through Christmas this year. The B loodm obile is in the MUB through Thursday.

The Concert Choir Christmas Concert (she sells seashells...) is sold ou t fo r to ­night. Just so you know what y o u ’re missing, i f you d o n ’t have tickets, Cleveland Howard o f the music departm ent w ill d irect the choir in G abrie li’s “ Jubilante Deo” and Saint Saens “ Christmas O ra to ria .” The concert is in Johnson Theater at 8 p.m.

The Twelve Chairs, Franklin Theater, 6 :30 and 8:30 p.m.Santa’s all bent ou t o f shape because no one has the Christmas sp irit in The Year

W ithout a Santa Claus, A B C ’S animated special at 8 p.m . Shirley Booth and M ickey Rooney are the voices.

Rick Bean favors the Pub w ith funk ’n bum p, 8 p.m.John Denver brings a R o c k y M ountain Christmas to ABC ton igh t at 9 p.m.

Filmed in and around Aspen, Colorado, the special has Valerie Harper (Rhoda) and O livia Newton-John as guests. Songs include Denver’s im m orta l “ G rizzley Bear.”

TH U R S D A Y ,D E C E M B E R 11

On the un-enterta inm ent side, there w ill be classes today. Bah.Though the Franklin previously announced tha t it would end its schedule last

night, th e y ’ve decided to stay open fo r another week. Tonigh t, running through Saturday is Woman Under The In fluence, a John Cassavetes film starring Peter Falk (w ith ou t trenchcoat) and Gena Rowlands. This isn’t the kind o f light material to beat the finals blues, bu t ... any port in a storm.

Rob D im m ick, a senior in the drama departm ent has a project called “ M ichel­angelo” in Hennessy Theater at 8 p.m.

I t ’s ta lent n ight in the MUB Pub, fea turing McQueen’s Greasers and six other acts.Hope Lange is a dedicated doctor who believes less extensive surgery should be

undertaken on a breast cancer patient in NBC’s M edical S tory , 10 p.m.

PAGE TW ENTY-FOUR THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

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THE NEW HAM PSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5 PAGE TW ENTY-FIVE

FOOTBALLcontinued from page 28

—W ith a little over th ree m i­nutes left in the th ird qu arte r, a blocked p u n t by U N H ’s R ick Kelly gave th e W ildcats the ball on th e W estern 13 y ard line.

O n th e se c o n d play from scrim m age, Allen handed o ff to B urnham , once again he was h it hard and once again he fum bled the ball.

Y oung recovered fo r W estern K entucky and by th is tim e it ap ­peared there was no w ay UNH was going to drive for a to u c h ­dow n.

—Finally w ith UNH in posses­sion of the ball a t the W estern 49 yard line, w ith eight m inutes left in th e game and UNH still down by 11 po in ts, A llen fum ­bled th e ball and Fields reco­vered fo r th e H illtoppers.

Five fum bles and five good s c o r in g o p p o r t u n i t i e s were s to p p e d . If the W ildcats had been able to capitalize on just a couple o f those chances, th e o u t­com e o f th e game could have been a lo t d ifferen t.

W estern K entucky scored first in th e game in th e last half o f the first quarter.

The H illtoppers go t the ball on the UNH 43 yard line follow ing a 47 yard p u n t by S co tt Seero. Q u a r t e r b a c k Steve Larim ore engineered a good drive, capping it o ff w ith a tw o yard plunge for th e to u c h d o w n and W estern K entucky let 7-0.

UNH cam e back in the begin­ning o f th e second q u a rte r w hen Dave Teggart h it on a 27 yard field goal.

The W ildcats had a first dow n on tfte tiu ito p p e r lb yard line bu t a good defensive effo rt by W estern forced UNH to settle fo r th e th ree poin ts.

The only o the r score in the game came on an 87 yard pun t re tu rn by the H illto ppers’ R ick Caswell a t th e end o f the first half.

I t was an excellen t p u n t by Seero, fo r a to ta l o f 48 yards, b u t u n fo rtu n a te ly he ou tk icked the UNH p u n t coverage.

Caswell ran the en tire 87 yards w i th o u t being touched by a W ildcat defender.

T h e W ildcat defense p layed a n o t h e r ou tstan ding game in keeping the score close un til th e last second o f the game was o- ver.

C o -c a p ta in linebacker Dave R o zu m ek , playing in his last game as a W ildcat, led the de­fense w ith 14 solo tack

C o -c a p ta in linebacker Dave R o zu m ek , playing in his last game as a W ildcat, led the de­fense w ith 14 solo tackles. O u t­s id e lin eback ers , Charlie M c­M ahon and G lenn Myers each had eight tackles in the game.

D e fe n s iv e e n d R ick Kelly m ade six tackles, including fou r for losses behind the line o f sc rim m ag e . Kelly also had a blocked pu n t to his credit.fum ble the ball a to ta l o f seven tim es, five of w hich were lost, all in crucial situations.

—On U N H ’s first drive o f the game, Allen was able to move the W ildcats from the ir ow n 28 yard line dow n to inside th e Hill­to p p ers ’ 30 yard line.

T hen on a first dow n play from the W estern 24 yard line, Allen was h it hard try ing to pass by Young, causing him to fu m ­ble th e ball.

H ill t o p p e r linebacker Rich Green recovered the fum ble for W estern K entucky to s top the UNH scoring th rea t.

—In th e beginning o f th e th ird q u a r te r , w ith the H illtoppers ahead 14-3, Allen was again h it fo r a lo t try ing to pass on th e W estern 37 yard line, th is tim e by T andy .

T h e r e s u l t w as a fum ble, w hich was recovered by Y ound 32 yards from the line o f scrim mage.

—L ater in th a t same quarte r,TTNH h a d a c p m n r i d o w n r»n t h oW estern 15 yard line, follow ing a 47 yard pass play from Allen to wide receiver Lee Pope.

B urnham ran up th e m iddle tw o plays later, was h it hard by th r e e H illto p p e r players and fum bled the ball. I t was reco ­vered by Fields. A score a t th a t po in t by UNH could have m ade a big difference.

The New Ham pshire reaches over 10 ,000 readers. Try a classified ad (m ust be in to us by W ednesday a t 1:00) fo r our last issue o f the sem ester. M a y b e say good-bye to a friend. Or M erry Christmas.

Hockey team in 5-1 win

NOTICE - W ARNING

E FFEC TIVE DECEMBER I TO A P R IL (

Parking on all streets, highways and tow n parking lots prohib ited between the hours o f 12 m idnight and 6 a.in. starting December 1 to A pril 1. A ny vehicle so parked during the prohib ited hours and dates shall be subject to being toweu away at owners risk. The owner or owners snail be required to pay all tow ing costs and fines before the vehicle is released. A ny vio la tion o f tnis regulation snail be punishable by a fine o f five dollars ($5). Should court action result, the penalty shall not exceed tw enty-five dollars ($25). DURHAM POLICE DEPARTM ENT

Fumbles hurt football team

HOCKEYc o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 2 8

m ore m ade th e s top , b u t G ould s n o v e le d in the reb o u n d at 11 :24 to m ake it 2-1 UNH.

D efensem an Paul Powers set up G o u ld ’s second tally . Powers raced deep in to the Eagles end of the ice to apply som e ex tra forechecking.

H e g rabb ed the puck , and while being dragged dow n from behind, pushed it to forw ard Bruce C row der.

C row der could have sho t, b u t he passed to G ould , w ho was standing in fro n t o f Skidm ore w ith no one near him . G ould Fired a ten fo o ter high to the right side to m ake it 3-1 UNH.

Hislop scored on a play th a t looked to be a carbon copy of G o u ld ’s second score.

Barry Edgar (playing w ing in p la c e o f Dave L um ley, who moved back to defense) sw ept the puck over to Cox, w ho in

tu rn passed over to Hislop all alone in fro n t. He slapped one by Skidm ore from eight feet o u t to m ake it 4-1 UNH.

C ox’s th ird period goal closed o u t the scoring. He tipped in a Burke slapshot on a pow er play at 11 :55 .

H olt was pleased w ith th e way E d g a r played forw ard. Edgarplayed all last year on a line w ith Hislop and Bob Miller. This year H olt decided to try him a t d e ­fense, b u t after Sunday night Edgar m ay find him self a t wing for a while.

“ I t h i n k w e ’ll leave well enough alone,” said H olt when asked if he w ould move Lum ley back to forw ard, and Edgar back to defense in the n ex t gam e.

A f te r t o n ig h t ’s game w ith B ow doin, the W ildcats travel to B oston to m eet N ortheastern in an o ther Division I con test t o ­m orrow night.

UNH S afety S tan M cD onnell(33) leaps up and grabs a W estern K entucky pass in tended for flanker Bob H enry(25) in last S a tu rd ay ’s 14-3 W ildcat loss. (Charlie Bevis pho to )

Tight race in ECAC hockey

W ildcat w inger Dave L um ley (14) m oved to defense last Sunday night against BC. Here Lum ley moves in close fo r a sho t th a t never m ade it by defensem an Jo hn M cGuire (23) and goalie Paul Skidm ore (29). UNH w on 5-1. (Ed M cG rath pho to )

By Rick Tracewski

I t ’s beginning to look like th is just m ight be th e craziest ECAC Division I hockey season ever.

The season is only th ree weeks old b u t there have already been ;hree m on th s w o rth o f surprises.

B rown has am bushed Cornell, Harvard has been upset by Penn, V erm ont has been upset by ever­ybo dy while lowly Colgate and Yale have been giving m ost o p ­ponents a tough battle .

T hree o f those shockers o c ­curred th is past w eekend, the first busy w eekend o f th is y e a r’s ECAC race.

F rid ay night Cornell visited Brown fo r w hat was supposed to b e a c lo s e , exciting hockey game. Instead it tu rned o u t to be a 7-2 Brown rom p.

T hen S aturday a fte rno on in a- n o th er Ivy League game Pennsyl­vania upset Harvard 4-3.

And S aturday night Yale a l­m ost m ade it a perfec t Ivy upset w eekend, giving Cornell a tough battle before finally falling 5-4.

M ea n w h ile in upsta te New Y ork, V erm ont was suffering a 5-3 loss a t the hands of St. Lawrence. So now V erm ont, one o f th e preseason ECAC favorites, is 0-4 in Division I and 0-7 over­all.

V e r m o n t , Y a le (0 -4 ) and Princeton (0-2) are the on ly win- less team s left in the ECAC race. BU (3-0) is the only undefeated squad.

As fo r the rem aining m iddle 13 t e a m s in th e standings, th e y ’ve spen t th e early weeks o f the season beating each o ther.

UNH beat BC who beat Brown w h o b e a t C ornell w ho beat U N H .- S o w h ic h t e a m is t h e b e s t ?

There are a couple o f key g a m e s co m ing up this week which will p robably help explain the early ECAC race. W ednesday night Harvard and BU w ill ba ttle while S aturday Harvard will play Brown.

PAGE TW ENTY-SIX THE NEW HAMPSHIRE T U ESD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 1 9 7 5

Ed McGrathDefense the key last Saturday

Last Saturday was the Grantland Rice Bowi. As far as both defenses are concerned, it should have been the Circle Bowl.

Both defenses played well, forc ing the opponents to punt (eight punts fo r Western and six fo r the W ildcats), turnover the ball, giving the ir respective offenses good fie ld position.

The way the offenses played, the defenses must have thought they were searching fo r a quarter in a spherical room . When they came o f f the fie ld , the offenses d id n ’t w a it long to make the defenses come back on.

Western’s defense recovered five o f seven UNH fumbles, in te r­cepted quarterback Jeff A llen fo r the firs t tim e th is year, and held B ill Burnham to a to ta l o f 67 yards (six net yards in the second half).

Bill d id n ’t B urn ’ em.The W ildcat defense recovered one fum ble, intercepted tw o passes

and forced the H iiltoppers to punt e ight times. On tw o other fo u rth down occasions deep in the UNH end, Western chose to go fo r the touchdow n, and was stopped.

On U N H ’s firs t possession in the th ird quarter, A llen fum bled the ball and Dale Young recovered fo r the H iiltoppers 32 yards behind the line o f scrimmage on the UNH 31 yard line.

U N H ’s defense held. And they came up w ith the big play.Later in the quarter, W ildcat linebacker Glenn Myers intercepted a

Steve Barimore pass.A llen threw a bomb to Lee Pope on the next play, giving the W ild­

cats excellent fie ld position on the Western 15 yard line.Two plays later, A ll American Rick Green popped Burnham and

jarred the ball loose. Western got the ball and started to drive from their own nine yard line.

Three plays later, Western lined up to punt. UNH defensive end Rick Kelly blocked the punt and recovered the ball on Western’s 13 yard line.

Burnham tried to drive through the m iddle o f the line on second down, and was again met by Green. And again he fum bled w ith the H iiltoppers recovering the ball.

Western had troub le moving the ball also. UNH allowed the H iil­toppers to move inside the 40 yard line on ly five.tim es in the whole game.

So while the Western defense, led by Green, caused the W ildcat offense to give up the ba ll,'U N H was keeping Western punter Walt Herod busy.

On tw o o f the firs t three Western possessions, the H iiltoppers moved the ball beyond the UNH 40 yard line. A fte r the scoring drive, making it 7-0 Western, the ir offense moved inside the 40 on ly three more times, and tw o o f those times were in the closing minutes o f play.

The score o f the game is deceiving. UNH had the opportun ities to blow the game wide open, bu t fum bles killed them.

On the other hand, the H iiltoppers d id n ’t do a hell o f a lo t on offense either.

212 yards to ta l offense isn’t the most impressive to ta l fo r a w in ­ning ballclub.

The most impressive stat, and the one tha t explains UNH losing, is the 100 plus yards the Western defense caused the W ildcat offense to lose.

W ildcats last in YC wrestlingBy Pete Weis

The University o f R hode Is­land w alked aw ay w ith th e Y an­kee C onference W restling C ham ­p io n sh ip s , held at Lundholm G ym nasium last Saturday nigh t, w ith a w hopping to ta l o f 177 points.

URI m anaged to capture 6 o f the 10 final m atches, w ith Bos­ton University and UMass each w inning tw o o f the final cham pi­onship rounds.

The W ildcat w restlers travel to Brunsw ick, Maine for a m atch w ith B ow doin College o n W ed­nesday and then will re tu rn to D u rh a m fo r a hom e m atch , scheduled for 4 :0 0 on Satu rday ,Dec. 13, a t Lundholm G ym nasi­um.

UNH was unable to place a w restler in any o f the final m a t­ches. However, the W ildcats did secure th ree fo u rth place finishes - S co tt W ood in the 118 lb. class,Nabil Boghos in the 134 lb.

class, and Mike Latessa in the 142 lb. category.

Boghos w on by a decision in a prelim inary round over Valario

o f U C o n n and then lost to P u c ino , the eventual 134 lb. finals cham pion.

Boghos en tered the consola­tion round s, winning his first m atch there by a decision. He again faced Valario in the finals of the conso lation rou nd , this tim e losing a decision in a very close contest.

W ood and Latessa also lost to eventual finalists in the early going and ended up losing in the finals o f the conso lation m atch ­es.

“We have some good w rest­lers on the team , bu t as o f y e t, none th a t are really outstanding , which is w hat you need in a six team to u rnam en t such as th is, ” said UNH coach Irv Hess after the m eet.

UMass m anaged to grab its tw o wins w hen Cliff Blom defea­ted K ryzak o f BU in the 158 lb. c a te g o r y and Dennis F en ton beat S taulo o f R hode Island in the unlim ited class.

The p o in t to ta ls fo r the team s in v o lv e d in th e to u rn am en t were: URI - 177, BU - 138, UMass - 116, UConn - 34, Maine - 33, and UNH - 28.

UNH grappler S co tt W ood gets ready to try and pin his opp on en t in a p ractice last week. W ood too k fourth place in the m eet held here last Saturday. (Mark R adw an p h o to )

UNH tailback Bill B urnham tries to pick up a fum ble in th e G ran tland Rice Bowl gam e last S aturday. The W ildcats fum bled seven tim es and lost five of th e m iscues. (Charlie Bevis p h o to )

UNH forw ard Pete Laskaris (32) tries to jum p shot over URI defender Stanley W right (24). T he Wild­cats d ropped to 0-3 while the R am s upped the ir reco rd to 4-0. (D ennis Giguere pho to )

THE NEW HAM PSHIRE T U E SD A Y DECEMBER 9, 19 7 5 PAGE TW ENTY-SEVEN

Gymnastics team is optim istic

By M itchell G u n tyDespite th e cancellation o f all

their first sem ester m eets, the UNH gym nastics team is looking forw ard to the s ta rt o f the ir sea­son.

In place o f a cancelled m eet, the gym nasts will give a season preview tom o rrow a t the Field House a t 4 :0 0 p.m . They will go through the ir rou tines just as if they were com peting.

The gym nasts are optim istic ab ou t n o t only w inning th e New E n g la n d c h a m p io n s h ip , b u t going to th e N ational cham pion­ship.

“W e’re all co n fid en t,” said Jo n A m es, senior co-captain from N ew J e rse y . W e’re co nfiden t th a t w e’re going to the na tio n ­als.”

A m e s c o m p e te s in th r e e events, the high bar, vaulting, and floo r exercises, b u t a knee injury suffered during a pre-sea­son exh ib ition is ham pering his practice.

Christine Leahy, a freshm an from G lastonbury , C onnecticut, feels th e sam e w ay. “We’ll do all right, b u t w e’d do b e tte r w ith m ore kids. W e’ve got a small team .”

P e a rc e W ag n e r, senior co ­captain also from New Jersey , is no t only op tim istic ab o u t the team , b u t his ow n perform ance as well.

“This should be m y best sea­son. I t b e tte r be, i t ’s m y la s t.”

This should please Coach Lou D atilio w ho feels th a t Pearce is the best vaulter to ever partic i­pate a t UNH.

Dick T rem blay, D uncan M ack­enzie, and Bill M cCurdy ro un d ou t the five returnees from last

year.D ick, a jun io r from M anches­

te r, placed second in the New E ngland’s last year in th e floor exercises and looks to w in it all this year.

Sophom ore M ackenzie, from South Portland , M aine, is the m ost im proved all-events m an on th e te a m . H e s h o u ld be a co n tend er in every event.

M cCurdy, a senior from New Jersey, finished second in the all- -events in the New E ngland’s last year and he, also, looks to move up.

On th e d istaff side, w atch for C h r i s t in e L eah y , M ary Jane B ourgault, a freshm an from A u­b u rn , M aine, and Harri R osen­b e rg , a re tu rn in g sophom ore phys. ed. m ajor, also from A u­burn , M aine.

Coach D atilio is p roud o f the way his te a m ’s m orale has n o t sagged during th is absence o f m eets.

“ I t ’s d ifficu lt to find ath letes w ho derive individual jo y from p a r t i c ip a t io n and m ovem ent. W hereas the eastern European a th le te is to ta lly suppo rted by his political system , the w estern a th le te ’s discipline m ust com e from w ith in .”

“We have som e O lym pic per­form ances right here a t UNH, a t tim es, b u t n o t th e consisten t p e rfo rm a n c e s needed fo r the O lym pics.”

O lym pic perform ances? Well, th e s u m m e r Olym pics a ren ’t until A ugust, b u t if y o u ’re loo k ­ing for a preview (or a t least a p a rtia l preview) com e to the Field House tom orrow a t 4 :00 p.m . F or the gym nasts, the ir sea­son starts then .

UNH center Kevin Martell was named to the Division II All- America team last Thursday by the Associated Press.

Martell was named to the first team. The six fo o t one inch, 215 pound senior from Gaithersburg, Maryland has led the UNH offen­sive line in blocking for the Wildcat running backs.

One o f those backs, Bill Burnham, took advantage o f the blocking enough to rewrite the UNH rushing record book.

Martell was also picked as a Kodak All-American in the college division. He was named to the first team by the American Football Coaches Association.

Track team opens home scheduleThe UNH indo or track team opens its hom e schedule tom orrow

when T ufts invades the Paul Sw eet Oval a t 6 p.m .Last S atu rday the W ildcats traveled to Maine and lost 83-29 to a

tough Black Bear team .Swimmers open season with a win

In the ir first hom e m eet, the UNH swim m ers ou td istanced Holy Cross 60-44 last T uesday in Swasey Pool.

The swim m ers travel to Maine tom orrow in the ir second m eet o f the year, and travel to C onnecticu t Friday before sem ester break.

:W estern K en tuck y tailback Lee Jefferson(44) gets crunched by UNH defensive personnel. C ornerback Bob M orris(55) and linebacker Bruce H u ther (57) m ake th e tackle. (Charlie Bevis pho to)

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PAGE TW ENTY-EIGHT THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TU E SD A Y DECEMBER 9 , 19 7 5

W. Kentucky beats UNH 14-3

UNH quarterback Jeff Allen was constantly harrassed by the Western Kentucky defense in last Saturday’s 14-3 UNH loss. Here defensive end Karl Anderson pursues A llen(15). (Charlie Bevis photo)

Fumbles kept UNH from victory

By Dan HerlihyWhen the W estern K entucky

band struck up “ C alifornia Here We C om e,” as the clock ticked off the final seconds o f the game la s t Satu rday , everyone knew “the party was over” for the UNH football team .

B u t it was one heck o f a p a rty !

Who w ould have th ou g h t back in A ugust, when the W ildcats be­gan the ir season w ith practice in 70 degree tem peratures, th a t the year w ould end in th e even w ar­m er w eather o f Decem ber in Louisiana, w ith UNH fighting fo r th e D iv ision II national cham pionship?

The W ildcats began the season s tro n g w ith opening victories over West Chester and Boston University. Then came the loss to Delaware and right away peo­ple started to look the o th e r way.

T he W ildcats follow ed w ith win after win, and the football fever here on cam pus grew and grew, reaching crescendos w ith victories over M assachusetts, for the Yankee C onference cham ­pionship, and Lehigh, in the first round of the NCAA Division II playoffs.

A win against W estern K en­tucky in the semi-finals w ould have p u t the W ildcats in the fi­n a ls n e x t S a t u r d a y in the C am elia Bowl in Sacram ento, California.

B u t as a l l o f th o se who w atched the game on national

UNH b-ball team loses to URIBy Bob Grieco

T h e U N H baske tball team opened their hom e schedule last night w ith a highly unim pressive 72-50 loss to the University o f R hode Island Rams a t Lund- holm G ym nasium . “ I ’m shocked by the poor exhibition here to ­night. I have no answ ers as to why and feel I should apologize for our perfo rm ance,’’said UNH coach G errv Friel.

Having a hard tim e penetrating the tigh t R am defense, the hoop- men got in to a hole 10-2 relying o n o u t s id e s h o t s th a t just w eren’t going in.

They then started going to the hoop bu t could no t gain any ground as rebounding becam e a factor as it has in the past for UNH.

N ot being able to contro l the boards UNH got behind 20-7. Mark Graebe then h it for two points while being fouled .

He missed the free th row bu t managed to steal the ball as URI moved dow n court.G raebe’s shot was good and he was again fouled.

He m ade this one to pu t the W ildcats w ith in eight.

G ood ball contro l got UNH w ithin fou r b u t a R hode Island b u z z e r sh o t m ade the score 35-29 a t halftim e.

UNH came o u t running in the second half b u t co u ld n ’t hit and all o f a sudden the W ildcats were down by twelve.

Costly turnovers and missed shots (UNH shot 29% in the second half) hurt the W ildcats offensively.

television over ABC-TV will tell you , it was no t to be for UNH, as the H illtoppers dow ned the W ildcats 14-3 in th e Rice Bowl dow n in the Bayou C ountry o f B aton.R ouge, Louisiana.

To say th a t the W ildcats had m ore than one o p p o rtu n ity to w in th a t game w ould be an understa tem en t, b u t to simply say t h a t W e s te rn K entucky played well w ould be even m ore of an u nd ersta tem en t.

UNH had p len ty o f advance warning ab ou t how good the W estern K entucky defense is and how good its ab ility to take charge and contro l a game is, b u t to fully appreciate it yo u had to see them in action .

The H illtoppers were able to contain th e W ildcats’ tw o key o ffe n s iv e th rea ts, quarte rback Jeff Allen and tailback Bill B urn­ham . W hen a team is able to do th a t against UNH, its chances of winning are p re tty good.

UN H’s running game, which has been one o f the W ildcats’ keys to success all season long, was alm ost com pletely stopped by the W estern K entucky de­fe n s e . The W ildcats managed only 19 to ta l rushing yards on 43 attem pts.

In ac tuality , UNH gained 133 y a rd s rushing th ro ug h ou t the game, b u t a t the same tim e lost a to ta l o f 114 yards being caught behind the line o f scrim m age.

W estern K entucky was able to tackle a W ildcat player fo r a loss o f yardage 14 tim es during the game, including seven q u a rte r­back a a c k in g c o f Allpft.

A llen was under an enorm ous am oun t o f pressure from the H illtopper defense all a fterno on ,

The UNH defense then started to fall apart and they found themselves dow n by as m uch as 24.

“ I t was a poor team effort. There was no quickness or exe­cu tion in the second ha lf,” said Friel.

The only highlight o f th e se­cond half for UNH was a couple o f h e a d u p p la y s by Tom Cavanaugh and Steve Singelais.

Also a clu tch three po in ter by M ark G raebe, who was high scorer for UNH w ith seventeen points, helped keep th e W ildcats

causing him to force his passes an d th ro w the ball away on m ore th an one play.

W estern K entucky has been doing th e same th ing all season, as th e H illtoppers ended the reg­ular season as th e to p defensive Division II team in the coun try .

A ll o w i n g a little over eight points a game to be scored a- gainst th em , the H illtoppers held

from to ta lly d isappointing the ir hom e fans.

R h o d e I s la n d was led by sophom ore Stanley W right, who had eighteen points.

The- Ram s, now 4-0, have a very young team w ith only one senior and look to be a th rea t in the Yankee C onference.

The UNH W ildcats, 0-3, will take on Springfield W ednesday before return ing hom e to take on Brown in L undholm Gym nasium , F riday at 8 :00 p.m .

the opp osition to an average o f o n ly 5 9 .2 yards rushing per game.

W este rn K en tu ck y ’s starting defensive fro n t four, consisting of Karl A nderson, Sam Fields, Dale Y oung and K eith T andy is no t th a t big, b u t all have the lightn ing quickness th a t m ore than m akes up for thpir lack o f size.

By M ark R adw anTo m ost know ledgable UNH

hockey fans, the w eak spo t on this y e a r’s team is in goal.

But a fte r last Sunday n ig h t’s goaltending by Dan Magnarelli against B oston College, goal is no longer a weak spo t fo r the W ildcats.

M agn are lli tu rn ed aw ay 27 Eagle shots as UNH got back to w inning by dow ning BC 5-1 in M cGugh F orum in B oston, Mass.

Sohpom ore M ark £vans will be in goal ton ig h t, w hen the W ildcats take on B ow doin Col­leg e in 'S n iv e ly Arena. Game tim e is 7 p.m .

“The defense was g rea t,” said M agnarelli, a five fo o t, nine inch 17 5 p o u n d e r from B righton, Mass.

“ I had to m ake the initial stop , and the defense was there to clear away the rebo u nd s.”

Some of those initial stops w eren’t the basic saves seen in any college hockey game. He made som e darn good saves.

A f te r an early first period pow er play goal by BC, M agna­relli stopped any th ing th e Eagles c o u ld f ire a t him , including m any close in shots w ith the shooter wide open in fro n t.

BC had eight pow er play situa­tions on the n igh t, and could only capitalize on one.

M agnarelli’s real test came in th e t h i r d p e r io d , w hen the Eagles came o u t flying.

UNH was leading 4-1 going into the period , b u t BC sm o­thered Magnarelli w ith 12 shots, m ost o f th em in th e initial part of the period.

T h e m o s t im p ressive ston

B o th A n d e rso n and Fields sacked Allen for a loss three t im e s , while Young m anaged tw o sackings o f his ow n.

Along w ith being able to con­tain the W ildcat offense, W estern K entucky also forced UNH to

FOOTBALL, page 25

came w hen BC winger Joe M ul­len found him self all alone in fron t of th e net w ith the puck on his stick.

M ullen fired to the far side, bu t Magnarelli m ade a quick pad save to steer the puck in to the corner.

“ This was a good game fo r all of u s ,” said UNH coach Charlie Holt after th e game. “Now we can go in to vacation over .5 0 0 .”

T w o goa l perform ances by senior captain Jam ie Hislop and freshm an Bob G ould plus an o ­ther score by senior Cliff Cox spoiled a good showing by BC goalie Paul Skidm ore.

Skidm ore m ade 24 saves, in ­cluding m any like the stops his co un terpart was m aking at the o ther end o f the rink.

B ut noth ing could stop the W ildcat a ttack . The passing was quick and crisp, the h itting was hard, and the shooting was accu­rate.

BC’s 1-0 lead lasted for tw o m in u te s . A fter Mike M artin ’s score a t 5 :59 , Hislop tipped in a Tim Burke slap sho t on a pow er play a t 7 :59 (w ith BC tw o m en dow n, and th ey only had four penalties all night).

S e c o n d p e rio d s have been deadly to the W ildcats in the r e ­cent past w ith Cornell and BU racking ii$ a to ta l o f six goals against UNH[ in th a t stanza while the W ildcat? were held scoreless.

B ut against BC, UNH tallied th re e second period goals to none fo r the Eagles.

Taking advantage of a face o ff in BC’s end, W ildcat forw ard C ecil Luckern wheeled fo r a quick sho t on Skidm ore. Skid-HOCKEY, page 25

Wildcat guard Steve Singelais drops the ball in for two points last night against Rhode Island. UNH lost the game 72-50 in Lundholm Gymnasium.(Dennis Giguere photo)

Magnarelli paces Icemen in 5-1 win