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t h e n e w h a m p s h in e Volume 66 Number 38 .Friday, March 12, 1976 Durham, N,H Dorms may ask for coed living There was a surprise Wildcat Tuesday night. (Dennis Giguere pnotos, By Michael D’Antonio Randall, Hitchcock and Wil- liamson Halls may soon be ask- ing for approval of coed living for next semester, according to dorm residents and Director of Residential Life David Bianco. The dorms’ requests all de- pend on the pending decision on 24 hour visitation for a few dormitories. The Dining and Residence Ad- visory Council has submitted the concept of allowing visits around the clock in certain test areas to Vice Provost for Student Affairs Richard Stevens. If Stevens approves, the dorms will be allowed to propose coed situations, said Bianco. Stevens was not available for comment. Bianco said Wednesday he likes the idea of experimenting with a few open dorms. “We’re asking for an exception to poli- cy,” he said. Bruce Miles, Williamson dorm president, said people there have been talking about “going coed since last semester” . “The 24 hour visitation is the big thing,” said Miles. “ It all de- pends on whether or not that goes through. If it does then we can make the proposal; if it doesn’t, well...” Miles and the dorm govern- ment in Williamson conducted two polls to guage sentiment about favored life styles. In the informal survey 31 of the 379 who responded wanted the present, separate sex situa- tion. Eighty-five wanted alter- nating floors of the opposite sex, and 122 wanted coed floors with separate bathrooms. COED DORMS, page 4 The UNH wildcat versus some little bell that9s easy to hear By Richard Mori It didn’t seem like there was too much time left in the first period. I had to get back to the Zamboni ice machine so I could ride around in front of all those UNH Wildcat fans. Then I felt a tug from behind me. “Who ’s pulling my tail,” I said. “Wildcats aren’t supposed to talk,” a faint child’s voice from behind said. I felt like saying, “ I’m not a real wildcat.” But that would have spoiled all the fun for this little toddler, I squinted to see whether or not the voice belonged to a boy or girl. My sight was bad in this wild- cat costume. I had a tunnel vi- sion. And that was hazy because I had to see through the thin co- lored paper eyes in the wildcat costume’s head. I twisted around and there he stood, a little blond-haired boy who couldn’t have been more than six or seven years old. “ I like your tail,” he giggled. “How did you become the wild- cat, anyway?” Brother, I thought, that’s a long story. It would probably take the rest of the period to ex- plain. But I had to make my way around the arena to where Phil INSIDE History The shelves of dry goods in the Community Mar- ket have been around to see Durham grow since 1946. Get some history on page 3. The New Hampshire’s ski report continues this week on page five. Con- ditions are variable but for the real details catch our report. You’ve heard of the Isaac Dow House. You may have eaten from its famous salad bar. But do you know who Isaac Dow was or why he built his house on the hill? See page 16. WILDCAT, page 4 Basically no response New computer DEC 10 has Women’s By Marilyn Hackett The Women’s Center was cold and deserted when I trucked over there last Wednesday morn- ing. Joanne Simon of Disadvan- taged Women for Higher Educa- tion (DWHE), sitting at the front desk, directed me to the bridge which connects the two red buildings on incinerator Koaa known as DWHE and the Wo- men’s Center. As I browsed through a library of books ranging from Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch and The Pooh Party Book I began to feel colder and lonelier. In an hour, two women from DWHE came over to use the bathroom. Back out in the lobby, Joanne Simon suggested that I leave a message for Kathryn Mulhearn or Mary Hiller, two of the Cen- ter’s members. Simon added, “We use the Women’s Center because there’s nobody in there,” she said, “ but we wouldn't be in there it someone wanted to use it.” Several days later, after many phone calls and messages, Hiller, who identifies herself as just one inidividual who uses the Women’s Center, contacted me. “ Of the few students who use the Women’s Center, the re- sponse is great,” Hiller said. Otherwise, basically there is no response.” Hiller said the Women’s Cen- ter is especially important be- cause of the political role it plays in the University. Accord- ing to Hiller, the administration views the center as representa- tive of women on the UNH cam- pus. In a random survey of 20-odd students I found good inten- tions, but no woman who had actually been to the Women’s Center. Jane Altman, a commuter from Dover, said she felt guilty WOMEN, page 7 By Art Miller .Assistant Registrar flobert Ellis said Wednesday the DEC-10 computer system is not doing the job he had expected. “ I’d love to have the old IBM system back because I knew what to expect from it. I get ter- (Dennis Giguere photo) problems ribly frustrated at times because we’ve got work stacked up un- able to do it. This wasn’t the problem with the old IBM.” Ellis said the administration’s top priority is to get an effective DEC-10, page 7 Center ignored u Isaac Dow Neri and the Zamboni were so I could ride the thing. “ I’m in APO fraternity,” I lied. “We do this at all the home hockey and football games.” There was a roar from the crowd, which had been up to this point pretty quiet. People were jumping up and down. I looked up and the red goal light was on. “Must’ve been a UNH goal,” I said. “They wouldn’t go nuts for anything else.” “ New Hampshire goal by num- ber sixteen Cliff Cox... time of the goal...” the loud speaker cla- rified.
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Page 1: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

t h e n e w h a m p s h i n eVolume 66 Number 38 .Friday , March 12, 1976 Durham, N,H

Dorms may ask for coed living

There was a surprise Wildcat Tuesday night. (Dennis Giguere pnotos,

By Michael D ’AntonioRandall, Hitchcock and Wil­

liamson Halls may soon be ask­ing for approval o f coed living for next semester, according to dorm residents and Director o f Residential Life David Bianco.

The dorms’ requests all de­pend on the pending decision on 24 hour visitation for a few dormitories.

The Dining and Residence A d­visory Council has submitted the concept o f allowing visits around the clock in certain test areas to Vice Provost for Student Affairs Richard Stevens.

If Stevens approves, the dorms will be allowed to propose coed situations, said Bianco.

Stevens was not available for comment.

B ia n co said Wednesday he likes the idea o f experimenting with a few open dorms. “ We’re

asking for an exception to poli­cy ,” he said.

Bruce Miles, Williamson dorm president, said people there have been talking about “ going coed since last semester” .

“ The 24 hour visitation is the big thing,” said Miles. “ It all de­pends on whether or not that goes through. If it does then we can make the proposal; if it doesn’t, well...”

Miles and the dorm govern­ment in Williamson conducted two polls to guage sentiment about favored life styles.

In the informal survey 31 o f the 379 who responded wanted the present, separate sex situa­tion. Eighty-five wanted alter­nating floors o f the opposite sex, and 122 wanted coed floors with separate bathrooms.

COED DORMS, page 4

The UNH wildcat versus some little bell that9s easy to hearBy Richard Mori

It didn’t seem like there was too much time left in the first period. I had to get back to the Zamboni ice machine so I could ride around in front o f all those UNH Wildcat fans. Then I felt a tug from behind me.

“ Who ’s pulling my tail,” I said.

“ Wildcats aren’t supposed to talk,” a faint child’s voice from behind said.

I felt like saying, “ I’m not a real wildcat.” But that would have spoiled all the fun for this little toddler,

I squinted to see whether or not the voice belonged to a boy or girl.

My sight was bad in this wild­cat costume. I had a tunnel vi­sion. And that was hazy because I had to see through the thin co ­lored paper eyes in the wildcat costume’s head.

I twisted around and there he stood, a little blond-haired boy who couldn’t have been more than six or seven years old.

“ I like your tail,” he giggled. “ How did you becom e the wild­cat, anyway?”

Brother, I thought, that’s a long story. It would probably take the rest o f the period to ex­plain.

But I had to make my way around the arena to where Phil

INSIDEHistory

The shelves o f dry goods in the Community Mar­ket have been around to see Durham grow since 1946. Get some history on page 3.

The New Hampshire’s ski report continues this week on page five. Con­ditions are variable but for the real details catch our report.

Y o u ’ ve heard o f the Isaac Dow House. You may have eaten from its famous salad bar. But do you know who Isaac D ow was or why he built his house on the hill? See page 16.

WILDCAT, page 4

Basically no response

New computer

DEC 10 has

Women’sBy Marilyn Hackett

The W om en’s Center was cold and deserted when I trucked over there last Wednesday morn­ing. Joanne Simon o f Disadvan­taged Women for Higher Educa­tion (DWHE), sitting at the front desk, directed me to the bridge w h ich connects the two red buildings on incinerator Koaa known as DWHE and the W o­men’s Center.

As I browsed through a library o f books ranging from Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch and The Pooh Party B ook I began to feel colder and lonelier.

In an hour, two women from DWHE came over to use the

bathroom.Back out in the lobby, Joanne

Simon suggested that I leave a message for Kathryn Mulhearn or Mary Hiller, two o f the Cen­t e r ’ s members. Simon added, “ We use the W omen’s Center b ecau se t h e r e ’ s n o b o d y in th e r e ,” she sa id , “ but we wouldn't be in there it someone wanted to use it.”

Several days later, after many phone calls and messages, Hiller, who identifies herself as just one i n id iv id u a l w h o uses the W omen’s Center, contacted me.

“ O f the few students who use the W om en’s Center, the re­sp on se is great,” Hiller said.

Otherwise, basically there is no response.”

Hiller said the W om en’s Cen­ter is especially important be­cause o f the political role it plays in the University. A ccord­ing to Hiller, the administration views the center as representa­tive o f women on the UNH cam­pus.

In a random survey o f 20-odd students I found good inten­tions, but no woman who had actually been to the W om en’s Center.

Jane A ltm an , a commuter from Dover, said she felt guilty

WOMEN, page 7

By Art Miller.A ss is ta n t Registrar flobert

Ellis said Wednesday the DEC-10 computer system is not doing the job he had expected.

“ I ’d love to have the old IBM system back because I knew what to expect from it. I get ter-

(Dennis Giguere photo)

problemsribly frustrated at times because we’ve got work stacked up un­able to do it. This wasn’t the problem with the old IBM.”

Ellis said the administration’s top priority is to get an effective

DEC-10, page 7

Center ignoredu

Isaac Dow

Neri and the Zamboni were so I could ride the thing.

“ I’m in APO fraternity,” I lied. “ We do this at all the home hockey and football games.”

There was a roar from the crowd, which had been up to this point pretty quiet.

People were jumping up and down. I looked up and the red goal light was on.

“ Must’ve been a UNH goal,”I said. “ They wouldn ’t go nuts for anything else.”

“ New Hampshire goal by num­ber sixteen Cliff Cox... time o f the goal...” the loud speaker cla­rified.

Page 2: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE TWO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCIJ 12, 1976

Calendar considered

Yesterday was not trick or treat but New Hampshire photographer Edward Acker spotted these five little martians from the Durham Day Care Center outside T&C on Main Street in Durham.

Solar energy heat a possibility for three dorms in ten years

By Milly McLean Solar energy for the mini­

dorms is still in the testing stage, but could serve as a model for other UNH solar projects, said G eorge Sim pson, a graduate physics student and advisor to the project.

“ Certainly in the next ten years we should have one, two or three residences run by solar energy,” agreed David Bianco, Director o f Residential Life.

“ It may be a fantasy to hope these buildings can be complete­ly solar run. But in the next five years solar heat could take care o f at least some o f the heat,” he said.

“ A lot will depend on how the mini-dorm project turns ou t,” Simpson said. “ If it is profitable, the University will be interested in doing more. But it could go the other way.”

Bianco said the value o f on-

-campus solar energy projects was educational as well as eco­nomical.

The biggest expense is at the start. A metallic collector which traps the sun’s energy can cost $5000. Rough calculations on the mini-dorms project antici­pate a 30 percent reduction in electricity, Simpson said.

An average solar system will carry 60 to 70 percent o f a building’s energy load. It also in­cluded a heat storage unit for rainy days.

” The mini-dorm project is spe­cial,” Simpson said. “ It’s not a total solar energy system,

“ We’re trying to work with a small band o f students who are w orking for free. And we’re working with a building which is already there, not a building de­signed for solar energy,” he said.

“ But any energy we can save is

dollar savings for the Universi­ty ,” Simpson said.

Although Bianco is in favor o f solar heating, he said money for the speical equipment in future project will have to come from the federal government.

Federal grants have gone to groups in Maine, Massachusetts, and Vermont, Bianco said. “ We h a v en ’ t received any money from HUD (Housing and Urban D e v e lo p m e n t) yet, although everyone else has,” he said.

A new peogram from HUD is specifically for university resi­dence halls. The Solar Energy Demonstration project pays the cost o f using solar power as op ­posed to other fuels.

The first cycle o f the five-year program granted money to one university in Wisconsin and two in Pennsylvania.

SOLAR, page 9

By Susan MurrayThe Senate Educational Poli­

cies Committee is considering changes in the University calen­dar fo r the academ ic years 1977-78 nad 1978-79.

Though Assistant to the Presi­dent Phyllis Forbes stressed that the changes are “ very, very non­specific” ,faculty, administration, parents and students have ex­pressed concern over the recent­ly shortened length o f Semester I from 15 weeks to 14 weeks.

“We are cramming a very great deal in a short period o f time,” says Forbes. “ So we have asked the policies committee in the Senate to look into the calen­dar.”

Harold Hocker, chairperson o f the Educational Policies Com­mittee, said, “ I don ’t believe w e’ll be able to .propose a radical calendar for a year from now. Courses would .have to be re­viewed and rescheduled and the administrative problems would be too great.”

The committee is considering alternative calendars to the pre­sent one. The calendar now in ef­fect is the early semester plan which was proposed in 1973 due to the energy shortage. Other al­ternatives would be the tradi­t io n a l sem ester plan which would continue classes until aft­er Christmas. The quarter semes­ter plan, which is used by Dart­mouth, would have 12 weeks o f classes in three periods. All o f these alternatives have been tried by the University, with the tradi­tional plan working most suc­cessfully, according to Hocker.

Hocker said there are three main areas o f concern.

“ The faculty are concerned because they feel, particularly those o f us who were here when the semester was 15 weeks in­stead o f 14, that their time for teaching is being eroded,” says Hocker.

“ There has always been con­

cern among the board o f trustees about the facilitation o f utilities. The more use they get the bet­ter,” added Hocker.

“ And there has also been con­cern among parents about the long break after Christmas,” he continued. “ We have had no ex­pression o f concern from stu­dents except those who are at loose ends in the second week o f January and call asking for something to d o .”

The calendar committee uses established guidelines from the Senate to decide on the calendar schedule. These guidelines in­clude such requirements as two reading days before exams, a minimum o f 14 weeks in a se­mester, that the first semester start after Labor Day and end before Christmas, that second semester break is in the middle o f the semester, and that the cal­endar be balanced (the same number o f Mondays, Tuesdays, etc.).

According to Donald Murray, Chairman o f the English depart­ment and a member o f the com ­m itte e , the problem is the Senate guidelines.

“ The problem is the guidelines the Senate has given us don ’t a llow en ou g h weeks before Christmas,” says Murray.

“ Because o f the fuss from stu­dents and recreation (vacation employment), we have to start after Labor Day which cuts the- semester too short,” he added.

H ocker also said, “ Another area o f concern is that with two Saturday classes we can just fit in the 14 weeks in Semester I. That leaves no breaks at all in the semester.”

The committee will discuss al­ternatives next Tuesday, March 16. When the proposals are writ­ten up, they will go to the Exec­u tive Council o f the Senate, which will review them and will then forward the proposals to the Senate for vote.

brieflyw J ■ ■ ■

Suicide attemptMargaret Moynihan, mother c f former

US Ambassador to the UN Daniel P. M oynihan , was recovering Wednesday from an overdose o f pills in New York which the police say was an attempted suicide.

Moynihan was found unconscious Tues­day morning in her Manhattan apartment by a neighbor. A note and empty pill con­tainers were found near her.

m e by-year-old woman is in critical condition in an intensive care unit but is recovering.

Auto theftsThe Massachusetts auto theft rate--the

highest in the nation from 1965 to1974-rose 12 percent in 1975, according to figures released by the Registry o f Motor Vehicles.

The victims included Boston Mayor Kevin H. White, White House majority leader William Q. MacLean Jr. o f Fair- haven and Senate minority leader John F. Parker o f Taunton. Mayor White and his family have been victims o f eight car thefts in the last four years.

Genitalia for dollsThere is controversy these days even in

the toy industry. Among the wares dis­played to buyers from toy manufacturers were “ anatomically correct” dolls.

Ideal and Mattel, two major manufac­turers, have included dolls with genitalia

as a possible money making item in 1976. Criticism is to be expected, but “ the time is right,” according to a spokesperson for Ideal, for such real-to-life figures. They have modelled a “ drink and w et” doll nam ed “ J o e y S t iv ic ’ ’ after Archie Bunker’s grandson.

Dolls such as these were tried several years ago, but the companies ran into protests. Since then, the spokesperson said, the public opinion has changed. Be­sides, there is no attention called to anyp a rticu la r fe a tu r e .

Another real-to-life figure is a seven inch high doll o f the private detective J.J. Armes,, who lost both hands in a dyna­

mite accident when he was a boy. This Ideal offering is complete with an assort­ment o f mechanical hands.

Hearst or Nixon?The judge at the Patricia Hearst trial

rejected a defense attempt Wednesday when CIA agents trained in speech analy­sis were called in to give an opinion about the authenticity o f recordings and the “ Tania Diary.”

Hearst’s attorney, F. Lee Bailey, said the CIA had made special studies in the field as a means o f determining the au­thenticity o f espionage messages” and said the government should make such expertise available.

U.S. attorney James L. Browning Jr. disagreed with the Bailey proposal.

“ An expert tells me there is as much likelih ood o f telling whether Patricia Hearst wrote them as telling whether

Richard Nixon wrote them,” contested Brown.

U.S. District Judge Oliver J. Carter ruled that it was not necessary to bring in any government experts on the subject.

BEOG brokeAll monies for the federal government’s

B asic Educational Opportunity Grant (BEOG) have been spent, and the pro­gram is broke. New appropriations are m ov in g through Congress, and funds should be available soon.

The Student Aid Program is open to all but seniors, but it is expected that they will soon become eligible too.

A problem in funding is where the money can be used. Eighty percent o f the funds are given to privately supported institutions which make up only 20 per­cent o f the national student body. This is be in g ch a llen ged on constitutional grounds in the Missouri Supreme Court.

An unexpected increase in applications (partially due to unemployment), rising inflation and related econom ic conditions are the main causes o f the financial straits.

Poor squeezedA common misconception about finan­

cial aid is that middle-income families are squeezed the most. Poor families, on the other hand, are eligible for all sorts o f state and federal grant-in-aid money.

According to Jonathan Fife o f George W ashington University, students from m id d le -in co m e families may lose an o c ca s io n a l financial opportunity, but they are far better o ff than the offspring o f the poor.

In a report written for the Study o f Higher Education, Fife points out that many low-income students have serious trouble in qualifying for educational bank loans. Also, students from low-incomeb a r ' l r g f r o i i n d c o n o o u n t c r f a r m o r edifficulty in finding summer work.

“ Unfulfillable expectations” are raised among many low-income students who read about so called “ giveaway” pro­grams.

Consequently, many o f them come to believe that they are entitled to more aid than is available, he said.

Fewer jobs

According to the College Placement Council, students graduating in 1976 will have a harder time finding jobs than last year.

Employer job offers to students at 159 colleges are 16 percent lower this year than last year for bachelor’s degree can­didates. For masters degrees candidates, the decline is 25 percent; for doctoral candidates, 32 percent.

The council said undergraduate women received 27 percent more job offers this month than their counterparts did in March 1975.

Page 3: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY M ARCH 12, 1976 PAGE THREE

There used to be a live wildcat in the windoivBy Matt Vita

Thirty years ago, there was a live Wildcat kept in the window o f the Wildcat restaurant. Before the 18 year old drinking age, fra­ternities used to covertly sell beer to UNH students.

These are just a few o f the stories that John Grimes can re­collect. Grimes owns and runs the Community Market on Main Street in Durham-he has since 1946.

“ Most o f these stores around here have changed ownership a number o f times,” he says,

“ The Wildcat was the same b a ck th en a lth o u g h it has changed ownership. Brad’s was there. And Brennan, Ray Bren­nan owned his barbershop over the Town and Campus back then, too . Except that the Town and Campus was a meat mar­ket,” he says.

Grimes walks around the Com­munity Market and waves to friends when they come in to bu y . The Community Market looks as if it hasn’t changed since 1946. Its shelves are w ood ­en and dusty, the floor is worn down from 30 years o f heavy traffic.

“ The Wildcat used to be the place for the kids to hang out. They sold sandwiches and soda. All the athletes used to work there. That’s where they kept the live wildcat in a cage in the w indow,” says the six-footish, grey-haired Grimes. He is 59 years old.

“ Did you know that there was no beer sold in Durham until 1963?” Grimes asks. “ I remem­ber that we got beer in the Com­

munity Market the day after Thanksgiving. O f course, the kids weren’t here-they were on vacation.”

Did the kids drink at UNH be­fore then?

“ The kids used to go to Dover. There were plenty o f bars and stores that sold liquor and beer there,” he says.

“We ’ve always

had a few

“ There were no bars until two years later,” he continues. “ Nic over at the Keg R oom 'w as the first, I think.”

Grimes stops to ask an older Durham resident to confirm his answer. The man agrees and Grimes returns to his story.

“ The Wildcat served beer and hard liquor then. They and the Keg Room were the first two bars,” he says.

“ B e fo re they changed the drinking age to 18, kids from the fraternities used to come in here and buy cases o f beer. Then they’d go and sell it to people under 21. I knew what they were buying it for, but really couldn’t prove it. Really, they were illegally selling beer-I think a couple o f them got caught,” Grimes says with a laugh.

“ You know, with this 18 year old drinking age, w e’ve had a lot less problem with serving kids,” he says. “ Most kids are 18 by

the time they get to college. Be­fore 1973, when the age was changed, we used to have quite a p r o b le m . Y o u k n o w , k ids weren’t 21 until they were jun­iors.”

When Grimes started out in business in Durham, the univer­sity enrollment was only 1200.

“ The town has grown with the university, o f course. Where the Shop N ’ Save is there was just a field. All those houses built up the M ill R o a d area weren’t there,” he remembers.

“ The post office was right next door where the record store

is now,” says Grimes as he jumps up to point down Main Street. “ The First National Store was where the Keg Room is now. There was a house on the corner where the Durham pharmacy is now, and where the laundromat is there was a diner. The theatre was in the same place, but it’s been renovated.”

His eyes sparkle as he remem­bers an older Durham. He gazes out the window o f his store and seems to picture Main Street as it once was.

“ Of course Main Street had two way traffic back then. It

(John Hanlon photo)still sh o u ld be,” he laughs. Grimes is opposed to the present one way Main Street.

The students?“ The kids haven’t changed

much. We’ve always had a few wise guys, but really they’re just as good now as ever,” he says.

Much o f Durham has changed since the end o f the second World War. The university has grown, and the town has been built up. Through all this, John Grimes and his Community Mar­ket have held their place on the corner o f Main Street and Mad- bury Road.

Poll on Hood House shows dissatisfaction

$20,000 to Anderson for research project

By Joy McGranahanArlene Baer, Student Govern­

ment Vice-President o f Student Services, conducted a telephone survey o f 144 students during February to determine how stu­dents feel about Hood House now, what changes they think are needed there, and to deter­mine their attitudes on various means o f funding for health ser­vices.

“ We wanted to have input from students so we could deter­mine a standard for adequate health services,” said Baer. Baer

is also a member o f the advisory committee for the health ser­vices fee proposal.

Out o f the 144 resident UNH students surveyed, 94 said they had used Hood House at one time or another. “ A major com ­plaint about the service,” said Baer, “ was that the wait was too long for walk-in service.”

Fifty-four o f the 76 women ncluded in the survey reported

that they use Hood House ser­vices. Only 15 o f the women

HOOD HOUSE, page 12 Arlene Baer

By Educational Policies Committee

Curriculum review recommendedBy Katie McClare

The Senate Educational Poli­cies C o m m itte e has recom­mended to faculty revisions o f group I (mathematics and scien­ces) and II (arts, humanities, and social sciences) curricula fulfil­ling the University’s general edu­cation requirements.

The proposed review is a move on the part o f the committee to make course selection simpler and to improve course quality. Each department will make a se­lect number o f its offerings to meet the requirements.

“ We are now in the process o f having the departments indicate which courses are appropriate,” said Harold Hocker, chairperson o f the committee. “ We hope that it will make advisors and students more knowledgeable.”

After the faculty submit their suggestions, the college deans will review them and send them

to the EPC. “ We’ll have the pre­rogative o f returning them for reconsideration,” Hocker said.

Hocker said he did not know if the recommendations would be made in time for inclusion in next September’s catalogue.

The criteria for the courses are that they be broad, survey types o f stu d y . “ In the sciences,” H o c k e r e x p 1 a i n e d , “ th ey (courses) should deal with such things as collection and analysis o f data. Arts and humanities should be equally extensive. But these are only general guide­lines,” he added.

Hocker mentioned mixed re­actions from faculty. “ Some (fa­culty) feel it reduces the number o f courses they can offer. This is not intended,” he said. “ Some feel there is no way to offer only a few courses, that they are al­ready broad enough.”

As fo r s tu d e n ts , H ocker said,“ We hope that they will ap­preciate the listing o f courses which meet the general educa­tion requirements.”

“ A large number o f students taking an upper-level course to fu l f i l l a general requirement spoils it for the major,” Hocker explained.

The EPC consists o f represen­tatives from all five schools and colleges, including two students. They handle, among other mat­ters, policies concerning general education requirements.

We are not trying to evaluate course content, but the nature o f the offerings,” Hocker ex­plained. “ There had ne ’er been any rigid screening. What we want is for the general education requirements to be truly general. We want to take some o f the sting out o f course selection.”

By Roger RydellK en n eth Anderson o f the

UNH Chemistry Department has been awarded a $20,000 grant by the National Science Founda­t io n . The grant will provide funds to research the mechan­isms o f Neuclophilics substitu­tion.

“ The area o f our research may sound complicated, but what we will be doing basically is finding out how atoms link with sulfur and how these atoms substitute for one another,” said Anderson.

Anderson will be using the money from the grant to fund a th ree year research program. Graduate students will assist him with both research and experi­mentation.

j “ B a s ica lly , the money we receive is for chemicals and the support o f graduate students” , said Anderson. “ But without the money I wouldn’t be able t o . pursue any research at all.”

A percentage o f the $20,000 is designated as salary for the re­searcher but UNH will receive 7 0 percent o f the total to spend on equipment and to compensate for the use o f facilities.

“ The government will provide enough money for all the re­search we will d o ” , said Ander­son. “ They are aware o f the per-

I centage o f the grant which is taken directly by the Univer-

; sity.”The process o f obtaining a

Federal grant involves several steps. First, a proposal must be subm itted which outlines the research to be performed. This proposal must make clear the significance o f the project.

Second, the National Science Foundation sends the proposal

to anonymous judges across the country for review and criticism. These judges are professors and researchers chosen at random who are familiar with the area being studied.

The judges then rate the pro­posal on a scale o f one to five determining the value o f the re­search in the proposed area. If the judges feel the proposed pro­je ct is valuable, the National Science Foundation provides the funds necessary to conduct the research.

“ I submitted my proposal in A u g u s t” , said Anderson. “ I knew unofficially in December that I had gotten the grant. Usually it takes up to six months before you hear” , he added.

The National Science Founda­tion provides tbe funds needed for most o f the independent re­search done on the campuses o f American universities.

“ Without the N.S.F. we’d all be bankrupt” , said Anderson. “ I wouldn’t be able to do any o f my research without grants from the Government.”

The grant will mean research experience for a number o f UNH graduate students and it will pro­vide an opportunity for Ander­son to pursue a project which he says is very important.

“ Our area o f research is not going to save the w orld” , said Anderson. “ It is not a topic which is o f grave importance in any specific area. It will, how ­ever, provide more basic know­ledge for the future.”

“ You must have a wealth o f basic knowledge before you can tackle advanced research areas.

CHEMESTRY, page 13

Page 4: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE FOUR THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12, 1976

ROOM D R A WInternational House

is now accepting applications for American men and women

for Sept.'76

Contact: 'Munk1 Flanders, Head Resident International House

Ann Dishman, International Student Advisor, Huddleston Hall

Dick Gardner, < Residential Life Stoke Hall

Before A p ril 1

#Proposed Student Government Budget 77-

Income: &75-'76 '7 6 ^ 7 7S.A.T.: 820b t 2.55 8800 @ 2.49P.Y.R.: 2878.20 5563.00WUNH Loan: 1000.OQ repaid in full

ExpensesItem 175-'76 ’76-'77 Change

ASO Charge: 4-25.00 44Q. 00 41^.00Awards: 100.00 100.00 0Equip, maintenanceand repair: 100.00 82.00 -18.00Office Supplies: 560.00 560.00 0Salaries: 4-100.00 3650.00 -450.00Legal Services; 15,000.00 1 6 ,500.00 +1500.00Legal Services

Advisory Comm.: 0 500.00 +500.00Telephone: 780.00 780.00 0Travel: 200.00 120.00 -80.00P.R. and- Ads: 4-50.0Q '600.00 +150.00Legislative Lay: 1000.00 500.00 -500.00Secretarial: 4-00.00 1650.00 +1250.00

Students wishing to comment on this budget should contact DebMpkelatos in the Student Government office . 2-1494. "

M U§€ P I I § IN I§IN CONCERT

EARE§C R U €C 8

R E V I E W

APRIL 2,1976 TWO SHOWS 6 & 9 PM

Granite State Rm.Students In Advance $2.50 Others And At Door $3.00

Tickets Now On Sale In MUB Ticket Office

I Garden Seeds:f VEGETABLE & FLOWER SEEDS

are in atThe Red Carpet

Jenkins Ct.D u r h a m

2nd COMINGSALE

FRI. - SAT.2 PR CORD JEANS' 7.00

FLANNEL SHIRTS *1.00NEWMARKET 1 2 : 0 0 - 5 : 3 0

i T f . i T * r r r V J 7 4 2 - 7 3 1 7 1DOVER/SOMERSWORTH LINE • SPAULDING TPKE EXIT 9 TO RT. 9 i t ISA

A h , yesss. my little Irish flower. join me in a toothsome

new england boiled dinner. . . on St. Patrick’s Day

(March 17th) from 11 am-8pm

the tin palace

DormsCOED DORMS continued from page 1

“ We have no intention at all o f proposing anything with coed bathrooms,” said Miles.

Miles said 254 people indicat­ed they were willing to move o ff their floor to establish a coed dorm while 49 said they would not.

“ T he b a th ro o m situation could be solved. If there wasn’t the right one on the floor, you could either go up, down or to another tow er,” Miles said.

Bianco said he is opposed to c o e d situations by room. “ I don ’t think anything is served by that,” he said. “ I don ’t see the Value in it,‘ the dorms are not de­signed for it,” he added.

“ I have no problem at all with the idea if it goes floor by floor or wing by wing,” Bianco said.

He added, “ as long as people don ’t have to be crawling all over each other to get some pri­vacy.”

Other dorms have discussed the idea o f establishing some kind o f coed living program, but all will have to wait for a deci­sion on 24 hour visitation before even proposing coed dorms.

W ild c a tWILDCATcontinued from page 1

Well now that UNH was ahead 2-1 things looked more secure. The fans started to pick up. Everyone had seemed to be a lit­tle glum. Maybe the booze the crow ds were celebrating with was starting to take its toll.

The crow d was hard to get cheering.

They don ’t respond to my cheerleading in this brown pile suit, but to some foolish little bell that’s easy to hear and cheer to.

The Wildcat players are almost as calm and sedate as their fans. They sit there and watch the game while the Harvard Crimson co u n te rp a r ts lean over the boards, almost falling onto the ice.

And then . there’s Charlie Holt, the UNH hockey coach. He leans motionless against the boards . He looks like Meldrim Thomson

WILDCAT, page 14

Page 5: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY M ARCH 12, 1976 PAGE FIVE

| Ski slopes rainy,|grainy on weekend;:':xBy Scott Fitzsimmonsi&The latest weather and ski reports indicate conditions will not;;*;; •i-xbe very good at most areas in the White Mountains this week-::;:;:: So end.

Most areas report hard, frozen granular snow with only a SSfew inches o f new snow in the past week. The three inches £:j:which most o f the mountains received early this week will be ;:;x; i-S-iskiied o ff early in the weekend, if not before. x*;

The weather calls for some possibility o f snow tonight and a:;:;* w chance o f showers on Saturday with high temperatures in the jg*S & O ’s. iii

If it warms up this weekend, most o f the frozen granular

Snow could loosen up and make some corn snow typical o f ater spring skiing. The rain forcast for Saturday will make:;:;:; >::;:;jskiing in these conditions sloppy. *>:

vx; Loon Mountain reports the best condition with good to ex-;-.;:;: jijxjjcellent conditions on the novice and intermediate slopes. The S'-.jadvanced trails will not open until Saturday in the hopes that xSjthe new snow will last at least part way through the weekend. |;;;

Gene Masterson, director o f marketing for Loon Mountain, i;*; I&said the good conditions at his mountain are the result o f ex- in tensive snow making. ;;*;W i “ Most o f the snow is just too hard to do any grooming,” g ; Kil'said Richard May o f Wildcat Mountain. “ It’s just solid ice.” ;i| :::::::: The snow making machines have kept the novice slopes at :x;•SxWildcat in excellent condition but the skiing is very limited g; :::::':‘-on the upper, more difficult trails. These trails will be open S&this weekend but conditions will only be poor to fair.

Gunstock is reporting “ variable” conditions for the week- Si-jend meaning hard, frozen granular snow if it’s cold and loose g;•S&icom snow if it warms up. •&;•$:;• Catamounts and powder makers have been in use here over;:;:; ;x;i;the past week, grinding the surface to produce some loose;;:; Agranular snow which will hold the new snow better. :*;i;:;:;; “ If it warms, it w on ’t be bad at all,” said William Morton o f :*£:Cannon Mountain. ;•;•

Temperatures in the high 30’s would create the spring con-:;:; $x‘:ditions which many Eastern skiers wait all winter for, he:;:;$:*: added. . :*;:;:j:;j The lower novice and intermediate trails at Waterville Valley;:;: xSyare reported as excellent again due to man made snow. Thex

only trail open on the upper mountain is listed as fair and;;;;xSj limited. 8;;!;!;!] Most o f the upper trails do not have the snow cover to allow;-;; xfxany skiing at Waterville. •;•;

This report was compiled Thursday evening and weather;:;: SSchanges could alter the conditions drastically. For last minute;;;; Si;:;conditions before heading for the slopes, call 224-2525 in;.; SSConcord, •;•;;S;i; The State Department o f Tourism maintains current reports;;; SSjfrom all ski areas in the state. £

TheVILLAGE GREEN

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE SERVICE

ATTENTION: Faculty

& Staff

FREE ESTIMATES

STANLEY DUTTON

868-5813

NOW SCHEDULING

Spring Clean-up *Lawn Care ^Fertilizing

* Pruning &Shearing

* Roto tilling

NEED A SUMMER JOB?Bartenders, Waitresses, Cooks, Cocktail Waitresses, Maintenance Dishwashers

SAUNDERSWILL BE INTERVIEWING

MARCH 22 - APRIL 4A t The Restaurant Located Off

Rt. 1-A On Rye Harbor Rye, N.H.

FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 964-8577 DAILY 1-4 p.m.

campus calendarF R ID A Y , March 12

MID-SEMESTER ROSTERS FOR FRESHMEN DUE, 9 a.m.

RENAISSANCE C H O R AL & IN STR U M EN T­A L MUSIC: Scudder Gallery, Paul A rts Center. T IM E HAS BEEN CHANG ED TO 7 p.m.

DWHE SQUARE DANCE: Phil Johnson and local musicians w ill teach the dances. S trafford Room , Memorial Union, 7 :30-11 :30 p.m. A d­mission $1.50. Sponsored try the Disadvantaged Women fo r Higher Education.

P O L IT IC A L S C IE N C E AN D P O LIT IC A L R E A L IT Y SYMPOSIUM: “ The Theoretical Basis o f Liberation Politics,” Professor John Rensenbrink, Bowdoin College & chairman fo r a new po litica l science caucus; additional panel­ists are Professor Robert Faulkner, Political S c ie n ce , Boston College; Professor Murray S tra u s , Sociology, UNH; Professor Warren Brown, Political Science, UNH. Windsor-Charles Room, New England Center, 7 :45 p.m.

U N IV E R S IT Y T H E A T E R : Mama,” Johnson Theater, 8 $2.50; general $3.

“ I Remember p.m. Students

MUB PUB: M it c h Chakour, ro ck ’n ’ro ll , dancing 8p.m.

S ATU R D A Y, March 13

BLUE GRASS, FO LK CONCERT & SQUARE DANCE: Benefit to help sponsor 1976 in te rco l­legiate Woodsmen’s Meet to be held A pril 31-May 1 at UNH. Madbury Town Hall, 7 :30 p.m. T ickets $2, available at James Hall, INER O ffice, Room 3 , Pettee Hall, or at the door. Refreshments. s

U N IV E R S IT Y T H E A T E R : “ I Remember Mama” (last performance) Johnson Theater, 8 p.m. Students, $2.50; general, $3.

A N N U A L M IL IT A R Y B A L L : Granite State Room, Memorial Union, 9 p.m. $3 per couple, ticke ts available at the door. Formal/semi- form al a ttire . Sponsored by A rm y and A ir Force ROTC units at UNH.

MUB PUB: M itch Chakour, rock ’n ro ll, danc­ing, 8 p.m.

SUNDAY, March 14

ROUND ROBIN BACKG AM M O N T O U R N A ­M ENT: Carroll-Beiknap Room, MUB, 1 p.m. Open to all, bring your board i f you own one. Admission 50 cents fo r prizes.

UNH SYMPHONY CONCERT: HAS BEEN C AN C ELLED .

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

SCOPE CONCERT: “ Ike & Tina Turner Re­vue,” featuring Ike and Tina Turner, The Fam­ily Vibes, and the Ikettes, Field House, 8:30 p.m. Students $3.50, general and at the door$ 5 . TlCktJlb Ull idle a t the M em orial Union T ic k ­et O ffice . NO SMOKING OR D R IN K IN G AT THE SHOW.

M O NDAY, March 1 5

FAC U LTY R EC ITAL: Bruce Coppack, Bratton Recital Hall, Paul Arts Center, 8 p.m.

MUB PUB: Student Video Tape, “ Reefer Mad­ness,” 6 p.m., Intram ural Ping Pong Tourney, 6-8 p.m.; “ Elias,” band audition, 8-10:30 p.m.

TU ESD AY, March 16

TU ESDAY A T LUNCH: UNH Jazz Band, Dave S e ile r conducting . S trafford Room, MUB, 12:15-1 p.m. Sponsored by UNH Bicentennial Committee.

ICE CAPERS: Skating show, Snively Arena, 7 p.m. Sponsored by UNH Figure Skating Club.

A L L IE D A R T S : W ill ia m W indom plays “ TH U R B E R ” , Johnson Theater,8 p.m. Stu­dents $3 in advance, general and at the door $4.50. Reserved tickets not picked up by 4 p.m. March 15 w ill be placed back on sale at 10 a.m. today at the MUB T icke t O ffice, first- come, first-serve.

MUB f’ UB FLICKS: “ Horse Feathers,” w ith Marx Brothers; Laurel & Hardy; Three Stooges,8 p.m.

W EDNESDAY, March 17

O C C U P A TIO N A L EDUCATIO N SEM INAR: Steve Jones, Vocational and Career Education D irector, Concord School D istric t, w ill ptesent current in fo rm ation and answer questions o f those interested in career education, G rafton Room, MUB, 3:30 p.m.

S T R U C T U R A L IN T E G R A TIO N DEM ON­STRATIO N: Demonstration o f “ Ro lfing Mas­sage,” which involves the deep muscle structure o f the body, conducted by Allen Davidson, New England Center*7 p.m. Admission $2.

A N T H R O P O L O G Y F ILM : “ Cave People,” Room 204, Social Science Center, 7 :30 p.m.

MUB PUB: Rick Bean, DJ, funk & bump music fo r dancing, 8 p.m.

T H U R S D A Y, March 18

C A N A D IA N -A M E R IC A N SEM INAR: “ Water Resources and Water Q ua lity in Canadian- American A ffa irs ,” Hon. J.P. Bruce, Director- General, Inland Waters Directorate o f Environ­ment Canada, Forum Room, Dimond Library, 4 p.m. Sponsored by Institu te o f Natural and Environmental Resources.

M U S O F IL M : Comedy Festival, Strafford Room, MUB, 6:30 and 9 p.m. Season pass or 50 cents at the door.

MUB PUB: “ C row ’s Feet,” rock ’n ro ll band, dancing, 8 p.m.

F R ID A Y , March 19

M ID -S E M E S T E R . LAST DAY TO DROP COURSES OR W ITHDRAW W ITHO UT A C A ­DEMIC L IA B IL IT Y .

R E S I D E N C E

RECESS.H A L L S C L O S F , 7 p.m. SPRING

S ATU R D AY , March 20

A N N U A L AR T AUC TIO N: Activ ities Room, Durham Com m unity Church, preview 6-8 p.m., auction begins at 8 p.m. Sponsored by Durham A rt Association.

T H E N E W H A M P S H IR E is pub lished and d is tr ib u te d sem i-w eek ly th ro u g h o u t th e academ ic year. O u r o ffic e s are located in th e M em oria l U n io n B u ild in g , D u rh a m , N .H . 0 3 8 2 4 , Phone 868-7561 o r 8 6 2 -1 4 90 . Y e a rly su b sc rip tio n $ 7 .0 0 . Second class postage paid at D u rh a m , N .H . P rin ted at Castle P u b lica tion s in P la is tow , N .H . and at The E xe te r N ew s-Le tte r C o., E xe te r, N .H . T o ta l num b e r o f copies p r in te d 11 0 ,500 .

Join The New Hampshire.This paper

is now accepting applications for

the 1976-77 staff. See page 11 for

more information.

A FINE TRADITIONa delicious New England

boiled dinner for just $1.89served in honor of St.Patrick,March 17th from llam-8pm _________ the tin palace________ __

FOB FINE FOODS PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE

t r y : THE MARINERLOCATED AT RT 4 and 16 DOVER PT N.H.

CALL 742-5414

Page 6: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE SIX THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976

W a te rv illeV a lle y

GENERALS E N I O R P O R T R A I T S : Las t c h a n ce f o r sen io rs t o have th e i r p o r t r a i t s t a k e n f o r t h is y e a r ’ s G r a n i t e , ch o ice s o f over 1 0 0 e n v i r o n m e n t a l and c o n v e n t i o n a l e le c t r o n i c a l l y p r o je c te d b a c k g r o u n d s . See th e “ s t u d io on w h e e ls ” M arch 8 t h r o u g h M a rc h 11 in f r o n t o f t h e M U B . S i t t i n g s 9 a . m . -4 p .m . , f i r s t c o m e , f i r s t serve, $ 4 fee.

F I R S T A N N U A L C R U I S I N G C O N F E R E N C E : A p r o g r a m ' o f le c tu res , f i lm s , sl ides , and d iscuss ion s des igned t o he lp sai lors b ro a d e n t h e i r k n o w le d g e o f c ru ise sa i l ing , S a tu r d a y and S u n d a y , M a rc h 1 3 and 1 4 , N e w E n g la n d C e n te r . F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n , c o n t a c t M rs . W i l s o n , 8 6 2 - 2 8 0 0 .

D C E N O N - C R E D I T C O U R S E S : Courses are s c h e d u le d f o r one n ig h t a w e e k , 7-9 p . m . as f o l l o w s :

B e g in n in g M o n d a y , M a rc h 2 9 f o r f i v e w e e k s - c a l l i ­g r a p h y , w i l d l i f e p h o t o g r a p h y , b a s k e t r y , h o m e la n d ­scap ing , t h e e f fe c t s o f T V o n c h i I d r e n , ad va n ce d q u i l t i n g .

B e g in n in g T u e s d a y , M a rc h 30 - a f i v e w e e k course on h o m e des ign and an e ig h t - w e e k cou rse o n c o l le c t i v e b a rg a in in g .

B e g in n in g W e d n e s d a y , M a rc h 31 - a s ix - w e e k cou rse on a c c o u n t i n g f o r t h e n o n - a c c o u n t a n t m a n a g e r ; f iv e - w e e k courses o n o i l p a i n t i n g , es ta te p la n n in g , d o l l hou se f u r n - ish inqs, b e g in n e r s ’ q u i l t i n g ; e ig h t -w e e k co u rse on p rocess­ing h igh p o l y m e r s f o r c h e m is ts , e ng in ee rs , t e c h n i c ia n s .

B e g in n in g T h u r s d a y , A p r i l 1, f o r f i v e w e e k s - G e rm a n f o r t h e t ra v e le r , w r i t i n g p o e t r y , g r o w i n g an d us ing herbs . T o reg is ter c o n t a c t D i v is i o n o f C o n t i n u i n g E d u c a t i o n , 6 G a r r is o n A v e n u e , D u r h a m , 8 6 2 - 2 0 1 5 .

S O P H O M O R E S P H I N X A P P L I C A T I O N S : N o w a va i la b le at t h e f r o n t d e s k , M U B . R e m e m b e r h o w y o u f e l t as a f r e s h m a n . W e need y o u r he lp .

V O L U N T A R Y A C T I O N C E N T E R : D o v e r H ig h S c h o o l c a n n o t s ta r t a B ig B r o t h e r / B i g S is te r p r o g r a m w i t h o u t v o l ­un teers . I f y o u can d o n a t e so m e o f y o u r t i m e a n d w o u l d l i ke t o h e lp o r g a n i z e t h is p r o g r a m c o n t a c t V o l u n t a r y A c t i o n C e n te r , 8 6 2 - 2 0 5 0 .

CAREERI N T E R V I E W I N G T E C H N I Q U E S W O R K S H O P : V i d e otape , le c tu r e a n d d iscu ss io n o n j o b in te r v ie w s ( h o w t o p r e ­pare f o r o n e , p a r t i c i p a te in o n e , w h a t t h e n ) . T u e s d a y , M a rc h 1 6 , Career P la n n in g an d P la c e m e n t , R o o m 2 0 3 , H u d d le s t o n H a l l , 6 : 3 0 p .m .

T E A C H I N G C A R E E R S D R O P - I N : I n f o r m a l d is c u s s io n o f ca reers in e d u c a t i o n ( te a c h in g , c o u n s e l i n g , a d m i n s t r a t i o n , e tc . ) es p e c ia l ly f o r un d e r -c la ssm e n a n d g r a d u a t i n g s t u ­d e n t s . W e d n e s d a y , M a rc h 1 7 , Career P la n n in g and P la c e m e n t , R o o m 2 0 3 , H u d d le s t o n H a l l , 6 : 3 0 p . m .

C L U B S A N D O R G A N I Z A T I O N S

M O R T A R B O A R D : M e e t in g f o r m e m b e rs a n d n e w i n i t i ­ates M o n d a y , M a rc h 1 5 , R o o m 1 3 9 , H a m i l t o n S m i t h H a l l , 7-9 p . m .

A N I M A L I N D U S T R Y C L U B : Sign u p f o r L i t t l e R o y a l L i v e s to c k S h o w , A p r i l 2 4 , a t secon d f l o o r b u l l e t i n b o a r d , K e n d a l l H a l l . N o e x p e r ie n c e necessary . F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n cal l Sue H a y d e n , 7 4 9 - 3 4 3 0 .

CLUBS & ORGANIZATIONS

R E C O R D E R S O C I E T Y : W e e k l y m e e t in g s T u e s d a y s at 3 p . m . , W o m e n ’s C e n te r . F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n cal l K a t h r y n M u lh e a r n , 8 6 8 - 2 0 4 0 .

S I G M A X I : Bus iness m e e t in g T u e s d a y , M a rc h 1 6 , R o o m 19, S p a u ld in g L i f e Sc iences B u i l d i n g , 1 : 1 0 p . m .

CLUB SPORTS

C R E W C L U B : T u e s d a y , M a rc h 1 6 , S ena te R o o m , M U B , 8 p .m .

J U D O C L U B : T u e s d a y s an d T h u r s d a y s , W re s t l in g R o o m , F ie ld H o use , 7 : 3 0 p . m .O P E N R E C S C H E D U L E C H A N G E : S a tu r d a y , M a rc h 13

at t h e F ie ld H o use G y m w i l l be o p e n f r o m 1-5 p . m . ; S u n ­d a y , M a rc h 14 th e F ie ld H o use w i l l c lo se at 5 p . m . be- S A I L I N G C L U B : T u e s d a y s , S e n a te R o o m , M U B , 1 : 1 5

p .m .cause o f t h e S C O P E c o n c e r t .

M U B H O U R S O V E R S P R I N G B R E A K : B u i l d i n g closed M a rch 2 0 t h r o u g h M a rc h 2 2 ; F o o d Serv ice an d Pub closed M a rch 2 3 t h r o u g h M a rc h 2 7 ; G am e s A rea o p e n 9 a .m . - 4 p . m . M a rc h 2 3 t h r o u g h M a rc h 2 6 ; B u i l d in g a n d R e c e p t io n C o u n t e r o p e n 8 a .m . - 4 p .m . M a rc h 2 3 an d M a rc h 2 5 , 8 a .m . - 8 p . m . M a rc h 2 4 and M a rc h 2 6 , 8 a .m . - 5 p .m . M a rc h 2 7 . R e gu la r h o u rs be g in S u n d a y , M a rc h 2 8 .

ACADEMICM U S I C A U D I T I O N S : P ro s p e c t i v e m u s ic m a jo r s can ta k e th e p e r f o r m a n c e a u d i t i o n an d w r i t t e n m u s ic a l a p t i t u d e test S a tu r d a y , M a rc h 2 0 . Ca l l t h e m u s ic d e p a r t m e n t , 8 6 2 - 2 4 0 5 , f o r d e ta i ls .

O C C U P A T I O N A L T H E R A P Y W O R K S H O P : M o n d a y ,A p r i l 5, N e w E n g la n d C e n te r . R e g is t r a t i o n a c c e p te d on f i r s t - c o m e , f i r s t - se rve d basis u n t i l F r i d a y , M a rc h 2 6 , $25 in c lu d e s lu n c h an d c o f fe e b reaks . F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n c o n t a c t D i v is i o n o f C o n t i n u i n g E d u c a t i o n , 8 6 2 - 2 0 1 5 .

E L E M E N T A R Y S T U D E N T T E A C H I N G IN E N G L A N D : I n f o r m a t i o n m e e t in g M o n d a y , M a rc h 15 , R o o m 1 0 6 , M o r ­r i l l H a l l , 12 n o o n . M e e t in g w i l l i n c lu d e sl ides and f i lm s on t h e p r o g r a m , a n d te a ch e rs w h o have p a r t i c i p a t e d in t h e p r o g ra m w i l l be p resen t .

C O M P U T E R C O U R S E , I N T R O D U C T I O N T O SPSS: C o urse is an i n t r o d u c t i o n t o S ta t i s t i c a l Package f o r t h e Soc ia l Sc iences , a w i d e l y used s ta t i s t i c a l p r o g r a m package . M u s t have PPN ( c o m p u t e r a c c o u n t n u m b e r ) and k n o w h o w t o s ig n -on t o t h e c o m p u t e r . P P N ’ s m a y be o b t a i n e d f r o m sec re ta ry in R o o m M 1 0 7 , K i n g s b u r y H a l l , see th e c o n s u l t a n ts in R o o m M 1 0 8 , K i n g s b u r y H a l l , o r ' R o o m 1 0 4 , M c C o n n e l l H a l l f o r s ig n -on i n f o r m a t i o n . T u e s d a y , M a rc h 16 an d T h u r s d a y , M a rc h 18 , R o o m 1 3 5 , K i n g s b u r y H a l l , 9 : 3 0 - 1 1 a .m . N o n - c r e d i t , n o charge, p re re g is te r w i t h Jan is M c L e l l a n , 8 6 2 - 2 3 2 3 . J im C e r n y , i n s t r u c t o r .

W O M E N ’S T R A C K C L U B : P ra c t ic e T u e s d a y s a n d T h u r s ­days , i n d o o r t r a c k , F ie ld H o u se , 8 p . m .

W O M E N ’ S S O F T B A L L C L U B : M o n d a y , M a rc h 15, Be l­k n a p R o o m , M U B , 7 p . m .

INTRAMURALSM E N ’ S H A L L H O C K E Y R O S T E R S : D u e M o n d a y , M a rc h 15 , S ena te R o o m , M U B , 6 p . m . , $ 1 2 f o r f e i t u r e fee per t e a m . R o s te rs a v a i la b le in R o o m 1 2 7 , M U B .

RELIGIONSC A M P U S C R U S A D E F O R C H R I S T : A g a p e H o u r , S u n ­d a y , M a rc h 1 4 , R o o m M 1 2 2 , Paul A r t s C e n te r , 7 : 2 7 p . m . Spec ia l t o p i c o n re la t in g t o p a ren ts .

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 : “ Pressing T o w a r d t h e G o a l , ” P h i l i p p ia n s 3, F r i d a y , M a rc h 1 2 , H i l l s - b o r o - S u l l i v a n R o o m , M U B , 7 p . 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 : D i n n e r a t t h e O ’ L e a r y ’ s, F r i d a y , M a rc h 19 , 6 p . m . Ca ll Dave O ’ L e a r y , 7 4 9 - 3 7 4 7 , i f y o u pla'n o n g o in g .

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 : W e e k ly p r a y e r m e e t in g s M o n d a y s t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y s , R o o m 18, H a m i l t o n S m i t h H a l l , 5 - 5 : 3 0 p .m .

S U F I D A N C I N G : D a n c in g a n d a s t ro lo g i c a I w a Ik s W ed n e s ­days , 7 : 3 0 p . m . G a th a k a s classes, t e a c h in g s o f P i r-o - m u rs h id H a z ra t I n a y a t K h a n , T h u r s d a y s , 7 : 3 0 p . m . C h e c k M U B I n f o r m a t i o n D esk f o r r o o m s , 8 6 2 - 1 5 2 7 .

B A H A ’ I C L U B : I n f o r m a l d iscuss ion s ■ e v e r y T u e s d a y ,R o o m 3 2 0 , M U B , 7 -11 p .m . A l l w e l c o m e .

Ski Spring Ticket March 1 to closing $75 March 8 to closing $65 March 15 to closing $55

Campion Lodge Bunkhouse $5.00/day, $5.00 for 2 meals

Midweek Student Rate with I.D. $7.00/day

Ski Spring Discounts 603-236-8311on daily lift tickets coming... for snowWatch your College Bulletin Boards conditions and or visit your local Ski Shop. information

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the M em orial Union Student Organization is currently accepting applications from UNH Undergraduates. Eight salaried positions must be filled by students willing to put forth time and committment. Applications may be obtained in the MUSO office located in Rm. 148-MUB.

^President

^Treasurer

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*A rts Chairman

^Entertainm ent Chairman

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^Darkroom Chairman

MUSO is the largest student programming agent at UNH. Students interested in gaining practical experience in accounting,management,contractsand program production should apply Application deadline is Friday, March 19 at 4PM.

*Q 0 lC H 3 C K 3 O O Q O 0 -C K 3 O 0 'P O O O O O Q 'O O C>C>0 'O 0 O O O 0 C H 3 O C 3 O O C 'R ’C < 3 O 0 -0 O 0 -p e E 0 -a -l^ £ T n -r H !3 g !H > Q -n < 3 O < ^ ^

Page 7: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976 PAGE SEVEN

UNH Women’s CenterWOMENcontinued from page 1about not using the Center and e m p a th ize d with what it is doing. “ I don ’t have the time or the need to use it,” she added. A ltm an suggested taking the concept and expanding it. She asked, “ If there was a men’s cen­ter, how many men do you think would use it?”

“ I wouldn’t use it if I were a woman,” said Chris Tompson. Tompson said there is a reverse d is cr im in a tio n in fa v o r o f women. “ I think women can do anything they want to anyway,” he said.

Sarah Shea from Hubbard has “ seen pamphlets and posters from the Women’s Center. She said, “ I don ’t think this campus has many problems in the area o f w om en’s issues.

Laura Winkeller said she is tired o f discussing feminism and wom en’s issues. “ I’m not afraid o f strikes against me as a women - they ’re against me as a person.”

Hiller said the University pro­vides a protected atmosphere for

women, at least in comparison to the outside world. “ We get a lot o f transfer students and stu­dents who have been out o f school for a while at the W o­men’s Center. After y ou ’ve been out there for a while, then you know what a wom en’s center is for.”

“ I ’m very i interested in the W om en’s Center,” said married, commuter student Karen Walsh- Bay less. Walsh-Bayless said she used a wom en’s center in Tam­pa, Florida for moral support when she was single. “ Women are brought up to feel that th e y ’ re h a lf a person when they’re single...they were saying it’s alright to be single in our society.”

Kathy Forenger o f Stoke said, “ Some women need the W o­m e n ’ s Center.” Debra W ood­ward, agreeing, said, “ It’s not complete apathy - some people don ’t need it.” Neither o f the two students have ever visited the Women’s Center.

Frequently survey questions about the Women’s Center re­

su lted in responses such as Marilyn Dako’s, “ What is the Women’s Center?”

Physically, the UNH W omen’s Center is two rooms in what looks like an old army barracks across from the parking lot next to the Paul Arts Center. It is out­fitted with two broken arm­chairs, a worn carpet, a small table and a few wooden chairs, and a collection o f books and posters for and by women.

Staffing at the Women’s Cen­ter appears to be sporadic. Over the phone, Kathryn Mulhearn refused to comment on student response to the Women’s Center.

H iller explained that many who have helped to run the W omen’s Center over the last few years are now part time stu­dents, working or are about to graduate.

The Women’s Center offers a referral service for pregnancy tests, birth control access, and gynecological help. Hiller said they do less o f this type o f work than they did a few years ago

WOMEN’S, page 8

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Problems with DEC 10DEC-10continued from page 1

student data-base run into the computer.

“ Our main effort is to get the same data supplied to us from the DEC-10 that the IBM used to give us.”

Ellis added, “ We haven’t done this yet and this is where w e’ve run into problems. Since the computer was officially put into use March 1, w e’ve been unable to get our administrative work done properly. Right now w e’re not in very good shape. We have no access to student informa­tion, thus losing the ability to predict our day to day opera­tions.”

Ellis expressed concern about the DEC-10 not being able to provide special services to indi­viduals.

“ Say s o m e o n e wanted to know all o f the seniors in Phi Mu Delta fraternity. As o f right now we could not tell them. The DEC-10 just does not have ac­curate information on all the students.”

He added, “ We’ve got to get the student data base up to date so we can get some o f the paper work done that has been piling up here.”

Ellis said, “ Little things add to my frustrations concerning the effectiveness o f the DEC-10. The add-drop process had to be run twice because we couldn ’t get it tnrougn on a single run. JNow that’s frustration.^

Ellis said the DEC-10 system is not terribly effective in punch­ing out computer cards. He cited the drop-add card as an example.

“ N ex t semester we’ll need over 120,000 cards made by the DEC-10. If it doesn’t do the job effectively who knows what will happen.”

Ellis expressed concern about the time and room schedule for next semester.

“ Until the data base is up to date, we can’t file information concerning the time and room schedule for the fall semester that should have been done al­ready. It will be out on time, but it’s delays such as this that frus­trates me very much,” said Ellis.

Ellis does not expect any pro­blem with converting incomplete grades from semester I to the fin a l grade report. The final grades for this semester should also be out on time.

The DEC-10 has been in oper­

ation since March 1. When asked about its efficiency since that time, Ellis said, “ As far as pro­cessing information on students - nothing has been done. We’re almost there as far as getting the data base up to date as o f Febru­ary 29 when the IBM went.”

He added, “ some progress has been made getting inquiries o ff the system, but a great deal more has to be made.”

Commenting on whether or not the university made the right decision in purchasing the com ­puter Ellis said only time will tell.

“ Personally I’d like to have two computers in use. One for the academics and one for the administration. This way they would be happy, and we would be happy,” said Ellis.

R ich a rd Bergeron, assistant professor o f math in computer sciences blames the administra­tion for the problems they’re having right now.

“ They would set a date for the conversion process, only to post­pone it. This went on for a year. They’ve got no one to blame but themselves. They’ve had plenty o f time to get the computer run­ning to avoid the chaos they’re experiencing now ,” said Ber­geron.

Bergeron favors the DEC-10 over the old IBM. “ You can’t wen compare it to the old IBM. 30 students can be doing primi­tive things on the IBM and now you can have 60 students doing extensive things on it,” said Bergeron,,

Students generally favor the DEC-10 over the IBM but find it hard to acquire time on the DEC-10 to put work through it.

D avid P o o le s , majoring in math, said, “ There are times when I have trouble locking into the DEC, but I think it is much faster then the old one.”

Ellis said the DEC-10 is a to ­tally new concept the campus must get used to.

“ The DEC-10 is supposed to be used as a back up computer to handle extra work loads. The University uses it as its main computer.”

He added, “ This puts a strain on everyone, but we have to make it work. We have no choice There’s been too much time and resources put into this to back out now .”

Ellis said,, “ It’s a re-education o f the entire campus. There’s a total re-education all the way

down the line.”Ellis said April 1 has been set

as the date things will be running according to schedule but has serious doubts about it.

“ It’s possible,” said Ellis, but I really doubt it. Not the way things are going now. It’s going to be a rocky road for awhile.”

In our constant e ffo rt to m odify and im prove the Kari-Van system, w e need fe e d b a c k !! ! !

During the w eek of March 15th, w e w ill once again ask your opin ion on certa in issues regard ing the Kari-Van.

Q uestionaires w ill be made ava ilab le on a ll the buses and may be turned in e ith e r to the d rive r or the MUB Info, desk or ticke t office. Your thoughtfu land honest answers w ill be very useful and grea tly appreciated.

p,.™**sudm»:iMCAT REVIEW COURSEThe National MCAT Review Course has been presented at the fo llow ing locations in California:

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The deadline for INFORMAL senior yearbook picturesis March 15 ,1976.

Be sure that your picture is submitted either on or before that date! • We are under no obligation to accept any informal graduation

pictures after March 15th.

Informal graduation picture guidelines:★ 3" x 4 " print ★ Black & White ★ Glossy finish ★ Head size to approximate 1" in width ★ $3.00 fee & filling out a GRANITE graduation card.

The GRANITE, M.U.B. Rm. I25

Page 8: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE EIGHT THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976

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CenterWOMENcontinued from page 7because other agencies now offer these services. The center is plan­ning another gynecological self- help session in April.

They also hve complete infor­m a tion on an assortment o f w om en ’s meetings throughout the state. Consciousness raising groups can be arranged and a trainer found if enough women show an interest. Information on wom en’s studies at UNH is also available,,

One student remarked that it would be “ neat to have a place

just to get together and do exer­cises, because women don ’t al­ways have enough access to the field house.”

The W om en's Center is now organizing a body movement group with the hope o f doing some modern dance, mime, or whatever those who show want to do.

Susan Hoffman, head resident o f Fairchild, said the Women’s Center can help students. She has referred students from her dorm who have had problems to the center to make arrangements for C.R. groups.

David Belcourt, head resident in Randall, remarks, “ I know some o f the guys in the dorm who need help, too. Personally, I’ve become more curious about wom en’s issues,,”

“ The location o f the W omen’s Center is not conducive to hav­ing people just drop by ,” said Hiller. “ You have to make the effort to truck up there.” It is a place where a woman can be alone,” she adds.

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Page 9: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12, 1976 PAGE NINE

Solar energy at UNHSOLARcontinued from page 2

Bianco said he wasn’t “ very h ap p y about” HUD granting money to those schools but said UNH has not appied for funding under that program.

He did say UNH will apply for money in this program in the next five years, although no spe­cific plans have been made.

Any university can apply for the program. A plan must be submitted for the integration o f a solar system into one resi­dence hall. Zoning and building permits must also be cleared.

The Residence Office did re­quest HUD funds several years ago for an alternate energy pro­ject at Highland House, Bianco said.

The proposal lay for two and a half years in government offices, and was never acted on. Bianco said funds were not granted be­cause the University never fo l­lowed up on the request.

Despite the lack o f federal funding so far, solar research is going on in the Physics and Mechanical Engineering depart­ments.

“ We’re always interested in any alternate energy source,” said Associate Professor Gerald Batchelder. “ This is the one that’ll take o f f first.”

Batchelder is working with 30 Thompson School students on a tool shed using solar heat. The shed will be student-designed, using low-cost materials and will con ta in equipment to record sunshine, air temperature and other data.

Simpson hopes to design ano­ther solar project to supplement electric space heating at Forest Park Apartments, the University-

ow n ed housing for married stu­dents.

“ I live in Forest Park and have been working for three years to reduce the rent there,” Simpson said.

If the project gets funding, a deck o f solar collectors would be built on the wall near the mini­dorms.

Although the Forest Park pro­ject is still an idea at this point, the solar heater would probably

be similar to the one planned for the m ini-dorm complex, and would begin to pay o ff after 10 years, Simpson said.

Bianco said his office is open to “ atly sound and reasonable project that employs alternate forms o f energy.” “ They deserve to be listened to and followed up on ,” Bianco said. “ But it takes sitting down and writing to the federal government and get­ting the m oney.”

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Page 10: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE TEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID AY M ARCH 12, 1976

“I realize that it’s kind

editorial

of slow, but isn’t it PRETTY!!”

Everything’s rightStudents in Williamson Hall and in other halls have spent a lot

o f time planning and po lling to devise a plan fo r coed living in their presently sex-segregated dorm itories.

I f 24 hour open visita tion is approved in concept, then they can ask to be one o f the dorms experimenting w ith both open visitation and coed living.

The whole idea has been brewing all year, bu t residents o f the dorms wanted to keep it a secret. They were afraid tha t i f too much o f the plan was revealed too soon, the ir chances fo r get­ting approval would be endangered.

The polls conducted by the dorm government at Williamson show that a large m a jo rity o f the residents who w ill be living there next year want to make the change. O f the many options offered, m ixing the dorm flo o r by flo o r or w ing by wing were the favorites,

A large m ajority indicated they believe the idea would work in the ir dorm because separate bath facilities would be readily available.. Bruce Miles, W illiam son’s president, said he and others in the dorm government have tried to ask all the questions and th ink o f all the problems before they propose the ir idea. The other dorms are fo llow ing the same strategy.

The alternatives being considered include plans to accomo­date both men and women who want to live either on a mixed or on a segregated floo r.

The problems that firs t come to mind when coed living is mentioned seem to be the easiest solved. Many dorms have tw o bathrooms fo r the ends o f the floors. If they do n ’t, residents could be placed on alternating male, female floors.

Living closer to the opposite sex usually develops more mutual respect than problems. Everyone knows someone at another school who lives in a coed dorm . Most say residents live more like bro ther and sister than anything else.

Everything seems right fo r UNH to start allow ing students to redirect the ir own lifestyles, i f on ly on an experimental basis.

Students have demonstrated they are w illing to do the w ork and make the sacrifices to in itia te the ir own alternative to the traditional dorm situation.

AGR ThanksTo the editor:

As the 1976 Alpha Gamma R ho Torch Relay for the Dennis Williams Leukemia Fund winds dow n , I w ould like to take this opportunity to thank all those w ho helped make it a success.

S p e c ia l thanks go t o Ray M a th e s o n o f the O ffice o f Recreation and Student A ctivi­ties for all his indispensible help and s u p p o r t , an d t o Gene F r a n c e w a r e and the U.N.H. News Bureau for their help in publicity.

Others whose help and partici­

pation were greatly appreciated are President Mills for receiving the torch as it arrived on cam ­pus, the New Hampshire State Police w ho escorted the runners from the first leg at 4 :5 0 a.m. until the last leg at 5 :5 0 p.m ., and all those w ho donated to the Dennis Williams Fund.

As o f March 5th the fund t o ­tals $220,00 , I w ould also like to thank Marc Hebert and Chuck Oliver for their help in the actual r u n n in g o f thet torch , State H o u se P ress S e cre ta ry , Joe Zelmer, for meeting us in C on ­cord, and New Hampshire repor­ter R obert Stevenson for his arti­cle o f Tuesday, February 17th.

A lso, congratulations to Will Moore for a jog well done as Chairman o f the 1 9 7 6 Winter Carnival Com m ittee.

Paul M. DelSignore Chairman,

A G R Torch Relay Committee

Women’s CenterTo the editor:

Okay, what’s going on? Why don ’t people know about the W om en’s Center? This letter is in response to a recent proposal calling for a W om en’s Issue mini -dorm that would provide “ one of the facilities that seems to be lacking on this campus (is) a program or center dedicated to the issue o f w om anhood tod ay .”

Mr. (M s?) Baron has dismissed the existence o f our W om en ’s Center.

Could it be that we happened to be placed among the chicken coops at the edge o f campus or is it simply that we have abso­lutely no funds allocated to our organization and therefore little independent power?

Although we may not be a large and profitable organiza­tion, we do offer assistance to University wom en through pro­viding local references, w om en ’s su p p o rt groups, a specialized library, an information table at the M U B, a w om en’s studies pro­gram file as well as sponsoring visiting speakers and occasional

\ social activities. Also, we exert influence on various administra­tors whenever w om en’s issues are brought up.

Finally I would like to say that the Center is only a room , the people are the organization. THE C EN TER DO ES E X IST , if you are concerned about this or­ganization, come to our m eet­ings, help in creating goals and activities, and make yourself a part o f the W om en ’s Center.

Kim Cappel

Christ CrusadeTo the editor:

I would like to take this op ­portunity to clear up any mis­conceptions people might have a b o u t C a m p u s Crusade for Christ.

Campus Crusade for Christ In­ternational is one o f three inter­denominational Christian groups on the U N H campus, the other two being Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and the Navigators. These three organizations share the com m on goal o f working w ith c h u r c h e s to introduce people to the claims o f Jesus Christ. In this way, these people might have the opportunity to make an intelligent, considered decision about Him.

Crusade is a non-profit organ­ization; all donations are poured b a ck into its ministry. Staff members are paid with funds which have been given expressly

for their support by churches and in d iv id u a ls ( fr o m off- campus) who believe strongly in their ministry.

Crusade has various ministries other than that on the college campus. They work with lay p e o p le , high school students, and athletes, as well as minister­ing to the physical, material and spiritual needs o f people over­seas.

On campus, Crusade assists stu d e n ts in investigating the claims o f Christ through small and large group Bible studies, seminars, and lectures, and by bringing various speakers and groups to campus. Fellowship meetings and prayer meetings serve to strengthen Christian fa ith . Crusade does not seek members, and in fact has no “ m embership” as such; we like to consider ourselves a resource f o r t h e i n v e s t i g a t i o n o f Christianity. Above all, we seek to present the gospel in a clear, logical, and relevant manner.

Denise DiSarro 226 Fairchild

Pass-FailTo the editor:

It ’s time for student govern­ment to take a stand in the Uni­versity Senate on Pass/Fail again.

L ast year, Student Govern­ment blocked a move, in the Senate to eliminate Pass/Fail. This year, students might not be

thenew

Hampshire

E d ito r- in -C h ie f Managing E d ito r

Business Manager News E d ito rs

S ports E d ito r Ass is tan t S ports E d ito r

E n te rta in m e n t E d ito r P ho to g ra p h y E d ito r

M ichae l D ’A n to n io Jean M acD ona ld Ed M cG ra th S co tt F itzs im m o ns P a tti H art M ark Radwan M ike M in igan D a v id Reed Ed A cke r

E d ito r ia l Assistan t S ta ff R eporte rs

R eporte rs

C laud ia R . Desfosses M arion G o rd o n R ich M o ri D iana G ingras T in a Sherm an K a th y S m ith K a tie M cC lare M arie C artie r Jo hn Snodgrass Dan H e rlih y Jon Seaver A n d y Schachat C laudia R . Desfosses M a rily n H acke tt A r th u r R. M ille r Betsy Bair N ancy R igazio Sharon Lavertu A .R . E rickson C he ry l C raaybeek M argie M adfis Jo y M cG ranahan David T o w le M a tt V ita Casey H o lt ■Debra Pierce Pete Weiss V ic k ie S choonover

A d ve rtis in g M anager A d ve rtis in g Associates

C. R alph A d le r Je rry D ’A m ic o E lizabe th G rim m C rys ta l K en t K a th y PhelanJud i C la rk Roger R yde ll Lauren Joan S m ith B ob Stevenson G il HulseM aureen O ’C onne ll B rent M acey D ic k Casselberry Jud i C la rk C yn th ia F rye Janet Larson S co tt M u rra y Susan M u rray Peter R inger Skip W oh lgesm uth Doug C ard in Helene S ilve rm an E lizabe th G rim m Peter Johnson M arie C lough M arc H ebert Leon B oo le

P hotographers

C op y E d ito r C op y Readers

C irc u la t io n Manager P ro d u c tio n s Associate

P ro du c tio n s S ta ff

Typese tte rs

Ron G oodspeed Dennis G iguere John H an lon W ayne K ing P a trick D ’A n to n io S tew art Berm an Lisa Tabak Janet P rince Gw en George R alph M ille r A le x is Kallas Sarah B enne tt M ark Mans L y n n D e rr ic k A nne G arre tson N ina G ery Charlene Genest N ancy F istere M illy M cLean P atti G a rre tt L inda C la rk L y n n M atte red C in d y P a lm io tto L inda M uise Janice Seeley B ill W h ite .Laura M cLean G ary Schafer

Page 11: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y MARCH 12, 1976 PAGE ELEVEN

so lucky. The editorial staff o f The New Hampshire and some student senators have come out for the elimination o f Pass/Fail; and without a united student government stand, there will not be any chance o f saving it.

The concept o f Pass/Fail creat­ed an option for students to use in their non-major course plan­ning. It encourages students to explore courses outside o f their major and helps them in fulfil­lin g b a s ic education require­ments while relieving some o f their work load.

F a c u lt y and administration say that Pass/Fail weakens aca­demic quality. Academic quality comes from proper teaching by a faculty o f quality. It is too easy to blame students and the sys­tem for the decline in academic quality.

Students have come and gone, academic quality was high, and the system has worked in the past. N ow , there are problems with academic quality, so stu­d e n ts an d the system come

under attack.This is not to lay blame with

the faculty. But we all know how their pay has suffered, how their class sizes have expanded, while they have lost considerable control over University affairs. Is it not possible that deteriorating conditions have led to a decrease in motivation towards excellence in the faculty? Could this be a major factor in the decrease o f academic quality?

We ask that everyone consider the Pass/Fail question carefully. We appeal to both faculty and students in this fight. We urge you not to eliminate a viable- option for students under the false guise o f saving academic quality.

This could be it for Pass/Fail. Speak now or forever hold your peace.

Jim Herchek Commuter Senator - L .S .& A .

Anthony J. Leocha Senator - Stoke Hall

“Mel the Smell”

To the editor:Well, it seems that Mel the

Smell has pulled another one o f his classic boners from the par­ade o f sadistic headache hasslers.

First he tried to ruin every waterway from Durham to the sea cost by introducing a refin­ery that could have turned Great Bay into the w orld’s largest adul­terated oil well. When the Dur­ham voters slammed him in the kisser, he tried to force the re­

finery down their throats by having it imposed upon them by neighboring towns. Fortunately, the neighboring towns slammed him in the kisser too .

T h e f ir s t le s s o n was not enough. This Gorgon-eating glut­ton returned for more punish­ment in the form o f a pulp mill large enough to strip New Hamp­shire o f every tree it has, and pollute the Connecticut River, from the Verm ont-New Ham p­shire border, to the Atlantic Ocean, south o f Connecticut.

Now he has decided to pull the super boner o f super boners. He wants a nuclear power plant

built in Seabrook, for the pur­poses o f generating electricity. When it is working properly it can g en era te enough boiling water to kill every living thing that is swimming the eastern sea­b o a r d , fr o m Portsm outh to M ia m i, Florida. If something goes wrong; that hill hacker can b lo w a hole in Maine, New H am psh ire and Massachusetts that will be twice as deep as the itchy end o f the Old M an’s nose is high.

Heir Smeldrim has introduced a resolution forbidding all state em ployees from speaking out against his dictatorship o f the

intelligentsia and the adjoining idiocracy.

His resolution has been passed by the four hapless headsmen of Dracula’s bedchamber, The un­fortunate people o f New Hamp­shire have lived to see govern­ment o f the smell, by the smell and for the smell. Now state as well as federal em ployees must either keep their mouths shut or go to the back o f the unem ploy­ment line.

Henry Butler 40 Main Street Durham, N .H .

the new hampshireThe New Hampshire is now accepting applications for 1976-77 positions.

if you’re interested in journalism, anything from writing to production and layout, come work with us. We offer a stimulating atmosphere and a real learning experience The new staff will take over for the April 30th issue.

The New Hampshire is seeking imaginative and dedicated students for the following positions:

*Editor-in-chief *Managing Editor *Business Manager * Advertising Manager *News Editors (2) *Sports Editor

*Arts Editor *Photography Editor *Productions Associate *Copy Editor *Circulation Manager *Reporters

*Photographers *Secretaries *Graphics Designer *Copy Readers * Advertising Associates *Production Workers

Applications are available now in room 151 of the MUB.

mmmm R O O M DRAWWhere will you be living next year?

Q: W hat is the room draw procedure this year?A : It’s the same process but simplified by eliminating the Intent to Participate stage. DRAC has given its support.

Step One: application and prepayment. Step Two: sign-up for a room

Q: Is the room draw p rio rity system the same as the last tw o years?A ,\ Yes. If more students apply than the capacity of the halls, those who have been on campus longest and have

earned the most credits will be notified before room sign-up that we are unable to accept their application. Their prepayment will be fully refunded.

Q: W hat do I have to do?Refer to the the Application Schedule below for the first day you may apply and make the required non-refundable S50.00 prepayment. The number o f semesters you have lived on campus (on the 30th day following Registration Day) and the academic credits you have earned will be certified; attempts to falsify this information on the application will be basis for your elimination from Room Draw and forfeit of the prepayment.

APPLICATION SCHEDULE Residence Office, Stoke Hall, March 29 thru April 7, 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

.v.v.v

s

IIIS:®:

You may apply

March 29

March 30

March 31

April 1

if you have lived on campus:

1 semester or less

2 semesters or less

3 semesters or less

4 semesters or less

April 2

April 5

April 6

April 7

5 semesters or less

6 semesters or less

7 semesters or less

8 semesters or less

If applications up through one semester group (e.g. 7 semesters) exceed the capacity of the Residence halls, the next group (e.g. 8 semesters) will be notified we are unable to accept their prepayment.

Q: W hat about signing up fo r a room?This will begin April 19 for those with a valid Room Draw Pass. For the Common Interest Halls, like the Mini-Dorm programs, you must be admitted first. The established priority system will be used. Look for the full

•>vvvv.*

Page 12: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE TWELVE THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12, 1976

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Telephone 749-4585

Health service surveyHOOD HOUSE c o n t in u e d fr o m p age 3 said that they went in for rou­tine gynecological check-ups. S om e o f these women com ­p la in ed th at there was not

enough o f this type o f service o f ­fered at H ood House.

When asked how they were willing to pay for health services, the students surveyed were given three options.

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The first o f these was a man­datory health fee, o f which 53 students said they would be wil­ling to pay, 30 said maybe, and 56 answered that they wouldn ’t pay.

The second choice offered in the survey was an insurance charge to pay for health services. Seventy-one o f those surveyed said they liked this idea, 20 said maybe, and 45 did not like this proposal.

The third suggestion posed in the survey was a fee-for-service charge, optional to an insurance charge. Sixty-eight from the sur­vey said they would go along with this, 17 answered maybe, and 52 said they would not pay such a fee.

“ I found it interesting that the majority o f the students that said yes to the third proposal were freshman and had not used Hood House a great deal,” said Baer.

W hen ask ed whether they were satisfied with the service at Hood House, 67 o f the students reported that they were, and 27 said that they were dissatisfied with Hood House.

“ I’d like to conduct the same survey on commuter students next tim e,” said Baer. “ I think it would reveal some entirely dif­ferent feelings.”

A proposal for the health ser­vices fee will be submitted to Vice Provost o f Student Affairs Richard Stevens on Friday.

For saleMUST SELL 1975 Pontiac Ventura SJ 260 Cl 3 speed engine stick shift- Bucket seats Radial tires,2 snow. Get­ting m arried ,asking $350U or best o f ­fer Call 8 68 -5 6 34 days or 8 68 -2 1 36 nites. 3 /6

FO R SALE 4 Piece R ed sparkle drum set, 7 cym bals Ziljadan, Ludw ig hi -hat, $ 1 5 0 .0 0 . Clarinet V ito w /case $ 50 .00 - H ofner Triple Pickup Guitar w /case and small amp $10 0 . 2 Cush­ion chairs $ 8 .0 0 a p iece. C ontact 868 -2 7 05 or 9 2 6 -5 0 20 . 3 /6

FO R SALE : 67 Ford Super-van, un­ique; panel sides with n o side d oors , b o d y a n d fram e excellen t, good m e c h a n i c a l l y , s o m e custom izing d on e , asking $70 0 , 6 59 -5 2 86 3 /1 6

B R A N D NEW yellow canvas sk i-boot bags. Can be used for alm ost any­thing. Retail $19': now $ 7 .5 0 ! Call Jean 2 -1648 or 8 68 -9 7 95 . 3 /1 6

N O R T H F A C E IBEX for sale. 31b prim e goose d o w n , m um m y design sleeping bag; Vi year o ld . Used on ly several tim es, new con d ition , asking $90, value o f $14 0 . C ontact Jim or Phil room 7 1 2 ,2 -1 1 4 2 or 8 68 -9 8 96 . 3 /1 6

STEREO SYSTEM for sale. Sansui 200 receiver, Garrard zero 1 00 turn- able. pr o f Pioneer CS88 speakers $65 0 ; 868 -5 7 12 . 3 /1 6COR E> UK O V JEAN3- St'CiUal oale illthe 2nd com ing . N ewm arket. 2 pr. for $ 7 .00 . Pearl-button western shirts $5 .00 . Sale Fri-Sat. store open Tues to Sat 1 2 -5 :3 0 3 /1 6

72 V .W . V A N . V ery good running con d . Great tor spring + sum m er Travels. Very little rust, g o o d gas mileage. Call 8 6 8 -5 1 24 . 4 /2

MUST SELL: Panasonic/B SR turn­table. Empire m ultiplex A M /F M -8 track Stereo R eceiver. B oth in very good c o n d it io n - B oth for $90 Call 749 -3 6 42 . 4 /2

7 4 Kawasaki 4 0 0 0 , electric start, fron t disk brake, 1050 m iles, excel­le n t co n d it io n , 2 helm ets, chain ca n d y b lue, $ 995 1 -60 3 -3 82 -8 4 57 4 /4

A PPLIAN C E SALE ! One year old 2 0 ” Magee gas Stove $7 5, 4 0 ” doub le oven , GE stove in great con d ition $50. Call 8 68 -2 6 95 4 /6 .

1970 M A V E R IC K — 6 cy l. standard trans. 4 5 ,0 0 0 orig. miles. Over 20 m pg. G o o d m ech, co n d .; som e rust $7 50 Call nights 749 -3510 . 4 /9

1961 VW BUG F or sale: solid b o d y , good engine, sunroof. N eeds m inor r e p a i r s -n o t h in g s e r io u s . Asking $10 0 -B e st j f fe r gets it. Call Carol- -6 5 9 -3 1 3 8 . 4 /9

INFLATABLE CANOE— 8 ’ one man (or 2 children or 1 girl and small dog) strong durable vinyl. - M C -1000 Real­istic Sprekers 1 yr. old 8 ” woofer/ lVi” tweeter. Bought for $150 ; want $75. CaU 742-3233 4 /2

PUPPY FOR SALE; female Shep- I hard-Husky; 4mo. old Black & Silver ' markings has had all shots (incl. ra bies) $ 3 0 . GERBILS for sale, reasonable prices, all ages available CaU 742-3233 . 4 /2

19 7 4 FIAT X I /9 , brown; 1 3 ,900 m ile s , ziebar^ed, stored winters, michelin X .A .S . radials, Ansa header exhaust, modified carburation, more! 868-5379 , 1971 Chevelle 2 D , H.T., 307 auto, tinted glass, very clean 926-7182 . 4 /2

F orJ,?rle , 1971 VW Bus’ 2000 miles on VW factory rebuilt engine and transmission and a new clutch, body perfect, am-fm, 6 good tires $2000 or best o ffe r 8 6 8 -2 2 4 8 weekdays around 6 p.m.

For Sale: Frye Boots m en’s size 10 Vi. ccn n ln- Waterproofed. $35.6 5 9 -2 1 4 6 . 4 /2 .

Great Buy! 73 TR-6, white 50 ,000 P Y « . New ignition system 5 good

L on K f e lsUelectric overdrive, 35 aud 29 MPG. FAST! no accidents, no b°aynist undercoated. Great Road nard A o or best offer over. Call Bob 659 -5003 any day after 4 .4 /2 .

CHEAP CHEVY N O VA - ’68, very faded glory. Needs lots of work, but

fui oi junxnu arounu.$ 1 5 0 or b est offer. CAU Dave. 742-6583 or 862-1490. MUST SELL FAST. 4 /6

Skis - Kastle cpmCHAMP 1 75 am. - used once Tomic poles; Ladies Gar- mont boots, size 6 , fyrolia step-in bindings, all equipment in good con- dJl10IL * 90 Package CaU 868-5492 after 7 p.m. 3 /1 2

®,AL1E: a Realistic-44 turn-table Sfi« W 7U7 c,ovef ; Pnee: $15. CaU 3 /12 LabonvUe.

HANG GLIDERS for sale/trade newUovdu,gllci5rs by Sky SPorts, Sea­gull, Pliable Moose, from $250. Les­

sons, plans, kits, parts, repairs, books, AoVA3.lable- Interested? CaU Carl 787 -6 3 15. 3 /16

P iY ffD E h fT Y EQUIPMENT FOR SALE. Over 50 major brands of high quality audio equipment avaUable at very low prices, with full factory war­ranties. For consultation, a demon­stration, or a price quote contact: Rick GUlett, Hubbard HaU, Room 405, 2-1757 or 868-97 51" 3 /1 2

F or Sale: 7 cu b ic fo o t refrigerator w / freezer com partm en t. ExceUent c o n ­d ition . Perfect fo r 2 persons. $70 or

o.Ae=- CaU Sue at 8 62 -1 9 52 days; 4 36 -2 9 58 evenings.3 /1 2 .

FOR SALE- .three 4 ft. flourescent la m p structures w ith tw o grolux bu lbs per fixture. AU three fixtures f o r $ 5 0 .0 0 or $20 .00 each. Call 659-5707 after 7 p .m .A K C re g is te re d Germ an Shepherd puppies - 7 wks. o ld . Black wifti ten •

rn,ar kings. w orm ed , shots, laper trained. $100 . to g o o d hom eJlease. 9 6 4 -8 4 4 4 .3 /1 2 m ’

SPRINGER SPANIELS; 5 male pup­pies- 5 wks. old, A .K .C . registered; Champion bloodline from both par­ents; will seU at 7 wks. old. Valued at $230 .00 will seU at $150. each; Steve 207-676-3351 evenings. 4 /6

SKIS - Two pair of cross country skis. ExceUent condition - Turlett S k is, size 8 boot, bamboo poles (205); Asnes Turlangren II (2 2 0), size 11 boot and poles, $ 45 .00 each pair Call 9 4 2 -5245 . 3 /1 2 _____________________1966 Mustang- 289 V 8 , Runs Good, good rubber, $400 or best offer, 868-2959 after 5 p.m.F O R S A L E : 1 9 6 9 P ly m o u thSatelUte,, exceUent condition 66 ,000 rmles, no rust, extremely reliable. $ 1 ,100 8 6 8 -7056 , ask for Chris. 3 /1 2

New Bow and Arrows. Shakespeare 45 lbs. Laminated (RetaUs for $75 .) with 6 Razor Blade Hunting Arrows (Bear) and 6 target arrows $45 . CaU1-332-4381 or Rm. 54 Spaulding Life Sciences ask for Frank B ald.3/12.

Guitar Strings....lowest prices....most brands....Electric and acoustic, also guitars, etc... CaU Bob 6 79 -5694 -Not- thinham, N.H. (deliveries arranged). 3 /12 .FOR SALE: 1971 Sujuki Titan 500, exceUent condition, reasonable price, call after 5 :3 0 p.m. 772-3211 Exeter. 3 /12

SPEAKERS: Realistic MC 1000 - Dual component, oiled walnut. fuU guarantee vana ror a ‘/a years. Best of­fer- (origmaUy $120 new) Katrina 2-2173 or 868 -9750 . 3 /1 6 .

SKATES FOR SALE: girls? Hyde fig­ure skates-- size 8-9. only one month old. Good condition but too big for m e. Asking $30. negotiable. CaU Nancy 749 -2978 . 3 /1 6 ____________

o®A E F : 19(37 Ford FairlaneGTA 8 cycl, good tires aU around, runs g o o d , needs minimal brake w ork , only asking $ 2 0 0 .00 , need money badly - caU Pete at 868-5322 Sunday thru Thursday anytime after 10 p.m. 4 /6

IP n on AEE£ 19,?4 Fiat 128 Wagon 34,000 mi, ExceUent condition, good radial tires. AM -FM , Ask­

ing $2700 ; will negotiate. CaU Gary evenings 742 -5941 . 4 /6

SELMER BUNDY tenor saxaphone for sale. Perfect condition. w/Brilhart metal mouthpiece. Asking $200. CaU Gary; eveninss 742 -5941 . 4 /6

PEDDLERS BICYCLE SHOP: One Cate St. Portsmouth, N .H . 436 -0660 . Mon-Fri 1 0 :3 0 a.m. - 5 :3 0 p.m. Sat. 9 - 5 p.m. Eve. Tues & Thurs. 6 :3 0 - 9 :0 0 . New-used-repair- Puch, Kab- u c k i, M iy a ta , Peugeot, Rollfast, Jeuneut. 4 /6

FOUR RESPONSIBLE senior girls wish to rent house of faculty going on sabbatical next year. Preferably in Durham/Newmarket area. Can give fa m ily references. CaU 659-3943 after 6 p.m. 3 /1 2

THIS 2Vt bdrm., Portsmouth Harbor- view Apt, needs 1 or 2 ladies to make it happy. Semi-furnished. 3 blocks to Kari-van, great neighborhood and a friendly roommate. Split $150 plus utUities*l ApriljBruce 436 -6432 4 /9

Female roommate needed to share apt. with one other. Own room . 1 /2 fu rn ish e d . 1 5 mins. to campus. $92 .50 per month each for rent and h ea t, ca ll L in d a , 8 6 2 -1 7 0 0 or 332-3842 .

FEMALE roommate wanted to share 2 room apt. with kit. and bath. Good location in Durham and cheap. $70 mo. inc. heat, water. CaU Barbara Sorenson 868 -2907 . 4 Newmarket Rd.Apt. 2, Durham.

Roommate needed to share 2 bed­room apartment. Kitchen, livingroom and bath (furnished), own room (un­furnished) Approx 6 miles to UNH, Vi mile irom Lee circle off 4 west $82 month plus Vi electric. CaU Steve 868-5519 , 4 /2 . _

dwellings

roommatesR O O M M A T E W AN TE D , u w n room in N ewm arket w ith on e other. Dogs OK . $ 8 2 .5 0 /m o . plus e lectricity . Call A llison 6 5 9 -2 3 7 9 . 3 /1 6

FURNISHED SINGLE APT. for one or two people in uurnam. wall Torn Sadler 86 2 -1 2 9 2 or Bob Audet 6 5 9 -3 60 2 .3 /1 2 .

FURNISHED ROOM for rent in pri- ' va te , new home. Quiet, pleasant, wooded setting. Easy walk to UNH. Reduction in rent for chUdcare Mon­days and Wednesdays, 4-8 p.m . Kit­chen privUeges negotiable. A couple is possible. CaU 8 6 8 -2 02 7 .4 /6

Yr. round cottage. Swain’s Lake, Bar­rington. Camp renovated in and out. 2-8 ft. sliding doors overlooking 130 f t . fron tage , cement dock, Heat $240. taxes $396. wiU consider 2nd mortgage. 6 9 2 -2662 . moving. 3 /12

Let tenants pay your rent. 4 unit apt. house newly renovated. 2 more pos­sible, if handy. Inc. $8 ,060 . WiU con­

s id e r 2n d m ortgage. Reduce to $45 ,000 . CaU 69 2 -2 66 2 . m oving.3/12

GOING ON SABBATIC AL?Resporisi- ple newlywed couple would like to housesit in Durham area for the 1976-77 academic year. CaU Dave Lemonick at 8 68 -9650 or 862 -2299 . 3 /16 . ________________________________

lost & FoundLO ST: W om an ’s eleefric T im ex wrist watch . Black wrist ban d, w ith sUver face. Lost som ew here betw een the MUB and Strafford A ve, Saturday n ight, Great sentim ental value. If foun d please call “ C huck ” 2—1789 3 /1 2

LOST a Bowmar Calculator last week either in MUB or in main library. If found please caU 942 -5504 Reward. 3/16

FOUND: 1961 class ring in A lot- CaU 862-1025 to identify or come to TSAS office in Barton HaU 3 /16

LOST: hooded, blue wool coat on Bids Night. Please return to Aloha Xi Devine 120 or call 2 -1055 and leave a message. 4 /2

servicesHAVING A PARTY or dance? “ Live disco show” for aU types of enter­tainment, Funk, soul, rock & roU, light shows, requests, contests. A great time is guaranteed. Contact Jimmy 926 -5020 or 868 -2705 leave message. 3 /1 6

NEED A PICTURE? We do photos for passports, job applications, wed­dings, groups and teams, plus por­traits, candid, copying and more, for less . Try us, caU A1 Richardson 742-5732 . 4/1&THE VILLAG E GREEN, landscape maintenance service: now scheduling spring clean-up, weekly lawn care, oth er n eed s. C all Stan Dutton, Barrington, N.H. 868 -5813 evenings. 4/9

PROFESSIONAL TYPING ON IBMQolootrio r h nine o f ton tjrpo-faooc.Prompt service and impeccable copy on longer papers, dissertations, arti­cles. Pica: $.75/page, Elite: $ .8 P ' page. CaU Jed: 749 -2268 4 /2

Going on Sabatical? Three very re­sponsible seniors seek a quiet neigh­borhood and would like to take care of your home for the 76-77 academic yr. CaU Doug D. 8 6 8 -9 81 5 .3 /1 6 .

PEDDLERS BICYCLE SHOP: One Cate St. Portsmouth, N.H. 436 -0660 . Mon-Fri 1 0 :3 0 a.m. - 5 :3 0 p.m. Sat. 9 - 5 p.m. Eve. Tues & Thurs. 6 :3 0 - 9 :0 0 . New-used-repair- Puch; Rab- u c k i, M iy a ta , Peugeot, Rollfast,

_ Jeuneut. 4 /6

Your car had a rough winter, or just need some work? tune-ups, brakes, valve jobs, etc. Done for very reason­able rates by experienced students CaU BiU Chisolm at 868 -9723 and - leave a message.3 /1 2

help wantedThe Upward Bound Program at UNH has an opening for a Sophmore or a Junior w ork study student with strengths in Math and Science. Im­mediate opening with possibUity for continuation. during the summer some experience working with adoles­cents helpful. For further informa­tion contact: 862 -1562 . Dan Garvey, Robinson Plouse, Rosemary Lane. 4 /2 .

Page 13: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976 PAGE THIRTEEN

Anderson gets grantCHEMESTRY continued from page 3

And our work will add to this fundamental knowledge” , said Anderson.

Anderson will be expected to submit a report at the end o f each year o f research. Along with the reports, periodical re­search articles are expected for su bm ission to scientific and chemical journals.

“ The articles we will submit will be sent to anonymous jud­

ges as was my proposal” , said Anderson. “ If the articles are well written and presented, we should have no problem having them published.”

Anderson is pleased to have been awarded the grant and plans to provide as much work as possible to UNH graduate stu­dents.

“ I think that Federal grants to faculty members in general are a good reflection on any univer­sity” , said Anderson. “ It is a statement o f recognition by a scientist’s or professor’s peers.” “ If the point o f the university is to expand the scope o f know­ledge, then the faculty should strive to research as many areas as p o s s ib le ” , said Anderson. “This research should provide graduate and undergraduate level experience to the students.”

No money from the grant will be used for undergraduate sup­plies, but it will provide an op ­

portunity for undergraduates to be close to research procedures.

“ I hope no one thinks that a grant o f this nature is unusual” , said Anderson. “ Many professors at UNH are being awarded grants

in many areas o f research. I am sure that the students o f UNH would be extremely interested in their projects and should be­com e familiar with the good work going on around campus.”

GRADUATION LISTA lis t of undergraduate and

graduate students who have indicated they plan to graduate in May, 1976

is posted on the bu lle tin board in the ha llw ay outside

room 8 of the Registrar's O ffice, Thompson Hall.If you intend to graduate

and your name is not on the list contact:Mrs.Nancy French

(Undergraduate Degree Analyst) or Mrs.Betty Tanner (Grad,MVB,DCE, Thompson School) Degree Analyst) at

862-1554. Please also notify us if your name is on the list

and you do not plan to graduate in May.

MUSOPHOTO SCHOOL

Registration March 16 & 17

12:00 - 2:00in room 148 MUB

"MUSO O ffice”

Classes in Beginner Black & W hite and Color

Advance Black & White

Students $13.50 Non-Students $15.00

Students previously registered $8.50

REGISTRATION IS LIMITED

classified adsHelp wan.ted: Experienced pruners needed to prune apple orchards used for plant disease research. Hourly wage based on previous experience. If interested contact William MacHardy, Dept, of Botany and Plant Pathology, B e f o r e M a r c h 1 9 , T e l . 8 6 2 -2 0 6 0 .3 /1 6 .

NEED A PICTURE? For a job appli­cation, passport, or to give to a friend? We do these, plus candid por­traits,, group pictures, weddings and m uch m ore. Call Al Richardson, 742-5732 3 /9

personalsSoft, warm hands, and (deep, deep down) a soft, warm heart. - a very big clown. 3 /1 2 .___________________________D EAR SPIES OF 1C Williamson: Would you like us to check-in as we pass your windows. You seem to know everything else A-Tower is do­ing. So glad we give you something to talk about. Signed: Nameless (you ’ll think of one for us). 3 /1 2

STEPH: The residents at 22 Young Drive are appalled at the accusations that were so carelessly hurled in our direction. We are God fearing men;aCtcxid u laaaca ic g u lc u ly i w r it e h o m oweekly; read the Bible nightly, and would like nothing more than a good wholesome relationship with a maid­en at the State U. The Dudley Do- Right Fan Club. 3 /1 2

STEPH: In my opinion the residents at 22 Young Dr . are the best looking, most virile, smoothest talking gentle­men on campus- A real pleasure to know. Cathy T. (D.V.P) 3 /1 2

TO GLENN FISH, Sometimes I was happy and I’ll remember that. Have fun, be happy, and good luck. Good­bye from your turkey. 3 /1 2LIBERTARIAN PAR TY Thankyou, MUB, for the table. Thank you, MUSO, for the showcase. Thank you everybody, for listening. Join us to­night in the Grafton Room at 7 p.m. for more stimulation! 3 /1 2

HEY PUPPY, Been cold around here lately without Shirley. Sick TUNA better get well. To more shopping sprees and trips to tne sea. Thanx Snaps four roses and Love, Ben. 3 /12

CATYA - would rather be blue think­ing of you, than happy with some­body else. Spring fever’s got a hold on me. Love, lollipops, and smiles- AG 3 /1 2________________________________

C O N G R A D U L A T IO N S M AC- At least now you know that someone else besides me wants your body. 3 /12

DEAR F .F ., Stop by for some quick sticking when you get a chance. 3 /1 2

TO O U R ARM ENIAN COYOTE: Happy 20th birthday! Hope your escapades include a good bottle, of scotch, a pack of Tareytons, a P.D, prospect, and a cure for the morning after- Love, the bottom bunk and the sleeping bag. 3 /1 2

Zuff: If you don’t promise to do your rancid laundry more than once every 3 months, I’m moving out, and so is Heg’s. Signed, Mungas. 3 /1 2

H E A R T B R E A K HOTEL; Message from Pres. Ski: Greasy Club meeting Sat. nite at da pres, house, All mem­bers should BE THERE Special g u e s t s i n v i t e d a r e , I m p , MR,L,DJ,DC,JB,DB, plus a cast of thousands and Cleo. 3 /1 2

Hey you seven on 24 Young Drive! The party was fantastic and the read­ing material in the bathroom proved highly educational. Thanks for every­thing and we’ll be seeing you in the K.R, Miss Library and friend. 3 /12

BIG BLUE, so we didn’t make it this year, you’re still number one in my eyes! Good Luck/Love 7up. 3 /1 2

FAIRCHILD Florida expedition. . -Plum,Mo,Nance,Ollie, and Chuck? Remember Paxton and by all means don’t let the road come to own you. I will miss all of you but the White Mts. are here with Sara and I, my eves always catch the whisper of a journey sucn as yours, nave run. Love and Fleetwood Mac, Harold & M. 3 /16

TO G,G..: Congradulations on being ■welcomed into you favorite sorority. Chi Omega has to be the best if you’re in. I hope your new sisters bring you much happiness. Love, Flash. 3 /16

s n ( i t * •

Sail the Caribbean During Vacation. $400 or $100 per person. 6 days-5 nights. You determine the cruise, boat: New Clipper 32, Captain pro­vided, info. 2 -2434, 868-9892 Greg Brown 515 Babcock. 3 /1 6 .

HEY, H EY, HEY! Going to Florida over spring vacation? 2 girls need a ride to any part of Florida and back. Will gladly share expenses!! contact: Dusty 2 -2670 or 868 -9759 . 3 /16 .

W ANTED: double, queen or king­s iz e d m a ttr e ss . Beth or Tim 659-5350 . 4 /2 . _ _ _COOL AID — OPEN SUN-THURS 6 a.m.- 12 midnite -Fri-Sat 6 p.m .-8 p.nf.; call or drop in - 862-2293 on or off campus- located in the basement of Schofield House. 3 /1 2

TENNESSEE or N. CAROLINA? Ex­penses shared with anyone going to or thru them at Spring Break. Espe­cially if you can share return trip as well. Mary or Jane 868 -7499 . 3 /16 .

W A N T E D : O u tb o a rd motor 20horsepower and up. Ask for Brad 868-9885 or 2-2393. 3 /16 .

HELP! Need ride for two to N. Caro­lina area on 19th, after noon or shortly afterwards. Will share ex­penses. Call 862-2061 ask for Tom or leave message and number.3 /1 6 .Make money with your Camera! Over 2 million photos and color slides are bought by newspapers and magazines each year. Learn what kind of photos they want for booklet, 54P, i.i§ces Potpourri Ltd 10 Innis St. Dept D l , Saugus M A. 0 1 9 0 6 .4 /2 .

Great summer camp for 10-14 year old boys - learn safe lake sailing and canoeing in the beautiful Maine Wil­derness from July 1 to Aug. 1. For m ore inform ation call Randy at 868-9885 or 2 -2393.___________

Sum m er J obs: Nanfucket Island. Locally published book lists of jobs, how to find them, accomodations, survival $4.95 Ambertis Fabrications, Box 883 Nantucket Mass 02554 . 2-4 weeks delivery.3 /16 .Can give good home to adult dog -no puppies- spayed female preferred. Call Karen 868-9788 Jessie Doe 1 0 8 .3 /1 2 .

EUROPE 76 - no frills student tea­cher charter flights write: Global stu­dent teacher travel, 521 Fifth Ave­nue, N .Y ., N .Y . 10017 call (212) 379-3532.

RIDE NEEDED TO LONG ISLAND: (Seaford). Leave March 19 ; return March 28. Also ride needed for 2 any weekend. Will share driving and ex­penses! Call Andrea at 868-9726 or2-1670. 4 /6 .______________________________PROJECT IN CAMBRIDGE- God­dard Grad. School for Social Change to be offered in seacoast area. Fall ’76 Years study in Am Lit- of social protest leading to M .A. degree. Con­tact Fred Metting, 431-8498, 4 /9

POTTERY & W EAVING CLASSES- beginning early March. Also studio fa c ilitie s availab le fo r potters. CRAFTSMEN’S M ARKET. 105 Mar­ket St., Portsmouth, open Tues. & Thurs. 12-10 Sat. 10-5. 431 -6070 or 642-3137. 4 /6 _________________________

W A N T E D : Light weight summerdow n sleeping bag. Ask for Mia. 868-5770 3 /16 __

W ANTED: Land Resource Econo­mics:* The Economics of Real Proper­ty by Barlow, willing to pay generous price cah 1-942-8515 after 9: 30 p.m. 3/12

I Tpre-paicl class ad form

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Make checks payable to: The New Hampshire, Rm. 151^ Memorial Union. JClassified ads M U S T be c lea rly w r it te n o r ty p e d . We canno t accept re s p o n s ib ility fo r ille g ib le ads, D ead line fo r T uesday ’s paper - Sun. a t 1 :0 0 . D ead line fo r F r id a y ’s paper - W ed. at 1 :0 0 . S o rry , no re fu n ds fo r ad cance lla ­tio n s . M istakes on o u r part m e rit one e x tra ru n .

I f yo u are in te rested in p u ttin g a va lid ann o u nce m e n t in e ith e r “ Cam pus C alendar” o r “ N o tice s ” , i t shou ld be d ire c te d to th e u n ic e ot K ecrea tion and S tu d e n t A c tiv it ie s , ro om 322 on th e u p p e r f lo o r o f the M em oria l U n io n and n o t to th is paper.

Page 14: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE FOURTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y MARCH 12, 1976

WildcatWILDCATc o n t in u e d fr o m page 4 with that black hat on. In con­trast, Bill Cleary, the Crimson coach, is jumping up and down and patting his players on the back.

“ These New Hampshire fans w ere m ade fo r the Wildcat team,” I thought.

Professional-like fans, profes­sional-like team. Does this atti­tude really belong at a school like UNH?

Whatever happened to the guy who was psyched up for the game? Why did the players hold th e ir feelings to themselves? D on’t they have any school spir­it?

In m y m a sco t uniform, I stopped to talk with a familiar face I had met at the MUB Pub earlier this semester.

“ If psychology has any role in this game,” I said, “ The UNH team is dead.”

“ Yeah,” he said. “ But w e’re ahead, and we got Cox and His- lop and Mags and w e’re number two in the ECAC. These pin- strippers from Harvard can’t beat us.”

Just then the cow bell started clanging. The fans follow ed suit. I just stood there and acted stu­pid. No one was paying much at­tention to me.

“ Why am I here,” I thought, lo o k in g d o w n at my baggy brown imitation fur legs.

Harvard’s goalie, named Petro- vek, had just made a spectacular save. The crowd groaned.

I was running back to the ice machine; I had to find Bob Ipa- vec, who was dressed as the other Wildcat.

We were supposed to ride on the Zamboni between periods. Then Fd take o ff this suit and give it to the regular wildcat, Todd Minor o f the APO fraterni­ty.

I climbed up on the Zamboni.“ Now watch your head the

first time around the ice,” said groundskeeper Neri.

Neri knew how to handle that ice machine. We zipped around the ice with ease.

UNH fans rushed out o f the stands. Their destination was ei­ther the hot dog stand or the bathrooms.

I w aved and clapped and waved again as the Zamboni made new ice on the hockey rink.

One girl made a face at me as the Zamboni circled the Snively rink. I put my thumbs in my ears and made a face back at her.

That was the extent o f the re­sponse I got from the hockey- crazed fans.

I stopped clapping and settled down to a nice ride on the back o f Neri’s ice machine.

We finally finished the laying down o f new ice and headed for the corner. We were o f f and the gates closed behind us.

Neri stopped the Zamboni and du m p ed the sn ow he had scraped o ff the ice.

I jumped o f f and headed to­wards Todd Minor, who was waiting intently under the blea­chers.

I stripped out o f the brown suit and he jumped into it.

He was anxious to get into itj try and lead the wildcat fans in their cheers. It was his last game^ since he was graduating.

“ You didn’t look as though you knew what you were do­ing,” Minor said. “ Y ou ’ve just got to go out there and do stu­pid things.”

“ T hen n o one will notice y o u ,” I said to myself as I looked up at the dark bleachers that were overhead and then trudged slowly out o f Snively.

• The New Hampshireis now accepting applications for the 1976-77 staff.See page 11 for more information.

220 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 t

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

New EnglandTelephone

*

For only 22c or less you can reassure Mom you’re right on top of your studies.

Page 15: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976 PAGE FIFTEEN

N.H. quilts celebrate American lifestyles

Sufi dance leads to ecstasy

By Marion Gordon“ Quilting is one o f the purest

forms o f folk art,” said Marion Stocking to a group o f about 80 women in the Strafford Room o f the MUB last Tuesday.

She presented a slide show o f quilts from the 18th Century to modern times. The show was part o f the Tuesday-at-Lunch series sponsored by the New Hampshire Bicentennial Com­mission.

Stocking, a home economist for the Carroll County Exten­sion Service, has been research­ing and cataloguing quilts for the past ten years since seeing a Con­w ay bicentennial showing o f local work. Most o f the quilts in her slid e show are privately owned.

“ Patchwork quilting in Amer­ica began as a necessity for warmth,” Stocking said. “ Then the patterns were made into an

art and women exchanged these patterns keeping a “ scrap bag” for future quilts.

“ Quilting always reflects social trends and attitudes. They reflect what is most important in the lives o f the women who make them.”

On the screen flashed different styles o f work. The “ album o f quilts” shows pieces o f plain fabric used for autographing and often presented as gifts to minis­ters who moved on to a new town.

When men turned 21, women used to make “ freedom quilts” w ith masculine and patriotic motifs. Especially important for 1976 are the “ commemorative quilts” which usually depict his­to r ic b u ild in g s , scenes and events.

Stocking said, “ In the 18th and 19 th Centuries women learned to sew at an early age.

By the time they were o f mar­rying age, they were expected to have 12 quilts done already and the thirteenth was a bridal quilt. Any use o f the hearts m otif al­ways signifies a bride’s quilt.”

A ccord in g to Stocking one pa ttern might have different names in different parts o f the country. One is a pattern which is called “ bear’s paw” in New England, “ duck’s foo t in the mud” in Long Island, and “ the righ t hand o f friendship.” in Philadelphia.

Stocking described the “ white on white” technique as “ the ulti­mate” . The detail o f the design is worked out by the closeness and tightness o f the stitches. “ How close and how tight to pull the stitches is something which takes experience,” Stock­ing said.

She attributed the recent revi­val in quilting to the new in­terest in handwork in the past 15 years and also to the bicen­tennial influence. “ I think it’s also a part o f the back-to-nature move and the nostalgia o f ‘the way things used to be ’. It’ s also aQUILTS, page 18

tempos Candace Crawford and Ann Anderson show some of the bicenten­nial quilts shown at a MUB lunch Tuesday. Anderson’s “white on white” history of America took three years to make. (Jack Adams photo)

Shiek Mansur Johnson and his “big leader” , Sam Lewis,

r^— ■— p r e —v ie wF R ID A Y , MARCH 12

And Now For Something Completely D ifferent, M onty Python at the F ranklin, 6 :30 and 8:30. Saturday, too .

Rennaissance choral and instrumental music performed live in the Scudder Gallery, Paul Arts Center at 7.

Square dance benefit fo r DWHE (Disadvantaged Women fo r Higher Education), instruction and fun in the S trafford Room,MUB, from. 7 :30 -11 :30, $1.50.

I Remember Mama, last tw o performances (ton igh t and Saturday), Johnson Theater at 8. $2.50 fo r students, $3 general.A bargain at any price.

M itch Chakour rock ’n rolls at the MUB Pub, 8 t i l l closing. Saturday, too.

Anne Jackson - Eli Wallach fans get a rare tw o hours o f them as a couple whose marriage sours when she prods him to start his own business. Twenty Shades o f Pink on Ch. 7 at 9.

Science-fiction adventure dives in The Neptune Disaster, a submarine mystery w ith Ben Gazarra, Yvette M im ieux, and Ernest Borgnine (1973) on Ch. 5, 9 at 9.

For T .V . to study by, the Netherlands’ Broadcasting Orchestra plays R achm aninoff’s “ Rapsody on a Theme by Paganini” on Ch. 11 at 10.

SA TU R D A Y , MARCH 13

Bluegrass-folk concert and square dance benefit fo r the Woodsmen’s Team at the Madbury Town Hall, 7 :30, $2.

The annual M ilita ry Ball goes bicentennial this year, a fo rm a l/ semi-formal a ffa ir sponsored by A rm y and A ir Force ROTC, open to all fo r $3 each in the Granite State Room, MUB, at 9.

Judy Collins and Leonard Cohen share Soundstage on Ch. 11 at 10. An hour o f favorites -- “ Send in the C lowns,” “ Suzanne,” etc.

By Elizabeth GrimmHere’s another Wicked Hard Question o f the week: What do Omar Khayam and Doris Lessing have in

common? The answer is a belief in Sufism.My first introduction to the Eastern religion was Wednesday night when I attended a Sufi dance

lecture.The special evening program was sponsored by Harmony magazine, the UNH Student Publishing Org­

anization’s spiritual journal. Magazine founder and editor John Grady feels that another role o f Harmo­ny, besides publishing itself, is to present such programs as Sufi dancing to the UNH/Seacoast commun­ity.

Sufi dancing is held every Tuesday in Durham, but Wednesday night a special guest came to lead a special evening. Blond, pony-tailed Sheik Mansur Johnson from Boston led the dancing. A Sheik is a leader/teacher o f the Sufi Order.

Appearing with notebook in hand, I began to question him about Sufism. “ Let’s dance first,” he said. “ Your heart is your notebook .”

The dances and words were easy to learn. Mansur called the first dance, a Buddhist dance, a “ spiritu­al square dance.” We had partners and corners and many o f the steps were repetitious. “ Sri ram. Jai ram, Jai jai, Ram om ” chanted eight o f us. It means “ Praise the Lord.”

“ All o f the dances we do come under the general title o f ‘Dances o f Universal Peace’,” said the Sheik. “ They are actually ‘meditation in action’ and the purpose is threefold: To purify the physical body, to increase joy , and to promote ecstasy.”

We danced for an hour and a half. I felt tired, sometimes dizzy, yet all the while exhilarated. Mansur explained that when you begin to meditate you get ‘itchy’ and when you dance you get tired; but through the ‘suffering’ you grow.SUFI, page 16

SUNDAY, M ARCH 14

M O N D A Y ,M A R C H 15Two showings o f Shakespeare’s Henry V, which Laurence O livier

produced, directed, and starred in; Ham Smith 216 at 3:30 and 6:45. Free and in color.

“ Lunch at the D um p” plays a free concert in the S trafford Room, MUB at 8 (courtesy o f MUSO).

“ Elias” auditions rock ’n ro ll in the MUB Pub 8 t i l l closing.

Rich Man, Poor Man concludes ABC ’s firs t mini-series super-soap w ith a tw o-hour “ m ature” clim ax o f love, violence, courage, and hope on Ch. 5, 9 at 9.

Homosexuals: Out o f the Shadows repeats a 1975 David Frost special review o f depictions o f homosexuals in film s,Ch. 5, 9 at 11:30.

It’s that time of year - Munch- kin munchies are coming Sun­day at 7 on Channel 7.

Believe it or not, the original f ilm version o f I Remember Mama comes to Ch. 6 at 3:30. Irene Dunne’s enduring performance as Mama makes this a tim e ly stroke o f luck fo r those who missed the play here or wanted to see it again.

Hustle w ith Burt Reynolds as a cop and Catherine DeNueve as a callgirl, at the Franklin, 6 :30 and 8:40. Monday, too .

Stoned soul evening ahead. How about tok ing o f f w ith The Wizard o f Oz (one more tim e) on Ch. 7 at 7, and then scrambling to the Field House at 8 :3 0 fo r Ike and Tina Turner in concert($3 .5 0 in a d v a n c e , $ 5 a t t h e d u u i ) . I f y u u W d l i l LO set! t h e

Wiz himself, y o u ’ll have to miss ha lf an hour o f the concert. r Decisions, decisions.

A fte r it all, Rick Bean w ill still be spinning old gold in the MUB Pub, 8 t i l l closing.

Homebodies can enjoy tw o T .V . glitteries: A Jazz Age special w ith M itz i Gaynor and Linda Hopkins, 1976 Tony winner fo r her Bessie Smith revue on Broadway, Ch. 7 at 9, fo llow ed by an all-star Salute to William Wyler, f ilm d irector and 12-time Oscar nominee w ith Fonda, Heston, Streisand, Audrey Hepburn, and more.

Page 16: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE SIXTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976

Horse ranch gets back in the salad again

Lunch at the Dump blu

By Claudia R. DesfossesIt seem s like you should

knofk on the door. But you don’t have to. A hostess will greet you when you enter The Isaac Dow House, the restaurant on the h ill where Route 4 branches o ff to Portsmouth.

The Isaac Dow House is one o f the most popular restaurants in the UNH area, but many people don ’t know that at one time in the late 1840’s a gentleman far­mer, named Isaac Dow, owned the large white New England home and all the land around it.

This homestead stayed in the D ow family until the 1920’s when it was bought and turned into a palomino ranch. “ Many local people come here and re­m em ber when this restaurant was a horse vranch” said Pamela Wallis, assistant manager o f The Isaac Dow House. The old New England framework creaks with hospitality, and once you open the door, more hospitality shines through.

The House is decorated with a chandelier in the front hallway that’s been there since the home was built. Stained pine tables, antiques on the wall (most o f them old farm tools, ayuh), old paintings, and Victorian stained glass w indow s nffpr an afm nc-phere o f rustic New England.

“ Fifteen to 20 percent o f all our customers are University people,” said Wallis. “ Ever since we opened in December o f ’73, we’ve had really good results.”

If you go to Isaac Dow for dinner on a Friday or Saturday evening, y ou ’re best bet is to show up between the hours o f 5-6 or 9-11. “ Our peak hours on the weekend are from 6-8,” said W allis , “ and there are times when people may have to wait up to one-and-a-half hours.”

Customers waiting for dinner can be served their favorite cock­tail in the Tavern upstairs. The wait is worth it. Once you sit down and order dinner, you can stroll over to the salad bar, have oven-warm dark and light bread and butter, beets, green bean salad, cottage cheese, garbanzo beans and o f course, salad with cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, let­tuce, onion and your favorite dressing (Italian, roquefort, Rus­sian, French, or oil and vinegar) topped o f f with crunchy, spicy croutons.

“ All meals come with salad bar (lu n ch and dinner), hot bread and all the tea and coffee you can drink,” said Wallis. The Dow House is most famous for its meat. “ We cut and age our ow n m eat fo r four to five weeks,” Wallis said. “ We have a meat cutter here that works full time.”

The waiters wear blue cordu-r o 3? joanc a n d b lu o d o n i m w o r l ishirts. The hostesses, dress pants and blouses.

The Isaac Dow House seats about 70 people but “ We’re add­ing about 35 seats for a total o f 105,” Wallis said. “ The exten-

The house on the hill belonged to Isaac Dow. (Stew Berman photo)sion will be made toward the highway and there will be a bay window overlooking Great Bay and the Mountains. The kitchen will be enlarged and the salad bar will be brought out into the center o f the floor so you can approach it from both direc­tions,” she added.

Meal prices range from three

to six dollars; a children’s menu is offered with half the average adult portion.

I had the Teriyaki Steak Kabob ($2.95 at lunch; $3.95 at dinner includes baked potato). Four large pieces o f tender beef m arin ated in Teriyaki (soy sauce, lemon, garlic, butter, and spices) with cherry tomatoes,

whole mushrooms, onions and green peppers. Mmmmmm.

If you ’re not up for strawber­ry cheesecake, but want to top o ff your meal with something different, try the Jamaican Cof­fee made with Myers’ Rum, Tia M aria, C o f fe e and Whipped Cream. Ayuh!

Kubrick films by candlelightBy Marion Gordon

Watching Barry Lyndon, Stan­ley Kubrick’s latest cinematic feat, is like walking through a museum o f 18th Century mas-

Sufi dance leads to ecstasySU FI c o n t in u e d fr o m page 15

We danced a Japanese dance, an Arabian one, and finally a Hebrew ‘hello/good-bye’ dance. The lyri­cal chanting was peaceful and calming.

After dancing, we sat in a close circle. Mansur talked about the beliefs and history o f Sufism. He studied under the late Murshid (“ big” leader) Sam Lewis, who was one o f the first people to introduce Sufism to the United States.

“ Sufis feel that joy is not a spirituality alone but in the union o f the spiritual and material world,” said Mansur. “ To be all animal or all angel is not good. Sufism is one o f the three main esoteric schools o f the Eastern world. The other two are the Buddhist and the Vedantic. The Yogis are concerned mainly with spirituality but the Sufis are concerned with humanity; it is a difference o f form .”

The Sufis have absorbed the influence o f many religions over thousands o f years, and-in turn have done the same to others. Often Sufis were outcasts and turned to expressing their beliefs through poe­try and music; hence the importance o f dancing besides meditation.

Sufi dancing is held every Tuesday night in St. George’s Episcopal Church in Durham at 7:30. Sun­day night is the time for candidates interested in being initiated into the Sufi Order.

When I danced, a baby took turns riding on his dancing mother’s and father’s back. It obviously wa enjoyable -- when we stopped dancing the baby cried.

terp ie ce s . From the opening scene to the closing scene, the camera acts like the hand o f an artist, composing the characters and objects like figures on a can­vas.

Nominated for seven academy awards, including Best Picture, Barry Lyndon was adapted from a novel by William Thackeray, V an ity Fair. Kubrick wrote, directed and produced the film

Marisa Berenson

Ryan O’Neal

which was in production for over three years entirely on loca­tion in Ireland, Germany and England.

The landscape scenes vibrate with the light and color o f an impressionist painting. The suc- ces o f Barry Lyndon lies not with the heroic attraction o f the

KUBRICK, page 17

By John Grady The big stand up bass goes

“ Thump Thump Thum p!” The tinkling mandolin’s sound cuts through the air like a whippor- will’s call. The banjo twangs and the fiddle squeals out the tune. Two guitars ka-chunk out the rhythm.

Back and forth the players trade licks. Out step Ron, Matt and Chris to wail out the chorus: “ Now we shall see what the fu­ture shall be ...!”

Peter takes the lead on banjo. Big wide smiles are breaking out across the bands’ faces. The a u d ien ce starts to clap and shout: “ Y EAH !”

Y o u ’re stomping your feet, you ’re feeling good: “ All right!”

You ’re getting that “ Lunch at the Dump” feeling.

That’s that happy feeling ev­erybody got at the Stone Church on March 3 and 4 when the “ Lunch at the Dump” bluegrass band performed. They will per­form on Monday, March 15 at 8 p.m. in the Strafford Room o f the MUB for free sponsored by MUSO.

“ Lunch at the Dump” has such a contagiously good time when they play you can’t help feeling great!

In a house in the woods o f Davisville, N.H. from out o f kicked-back acoustic music jams around the wood stove, six in­dividuals formed the band. They were learning their instruments together, exploring their love o f “ Bluegrass” music together, ex­pressing themselves and evolving a sound together. “ The Kear- sarge Valley Mountain Boys” was a title kicked around.

T h en d o w n to the Stone Church to play on Sunday hoot

n igh ts and before long Matt Leavenworth (fiddle and guitar), Ron Langley (guitar), John Hol­den ( f id d le ) , Chris Pimentel (bass), Peter Leavenworth (banjo and dobro) and Jim Barthelemy (mandolin and guitar) were all singing together solid as “ Lunch at the Dump.”

In 1 9 3 8 , B ill M on roe , a mandolin virtuoso, started a new ch a p ter in A m erican music h is to ry w ith his “ Bluegrass Boys.” The unique “ bluegrass”

Members of “ Lunch at the Dump” jam around lead guitarist Matt Leavenworth. (Tom Fritz photo)

sound he pioneered is a synthesis o f mountain music with roots in the British Isles and the Appala­chians, country music, jazz (be­cause it’s so improvisational), Big Band swing sound, gospel and contemporary writers.

“ Bluegrass is a young music. It’s only about thirty years old and still growing and we’re a part o f it,” Said Matt.

“ It feels good. It’s head music - comes right o ff o f your head, from your heart,” said John.

Bluegrass is acoustic music. At its best it has a pure natural s o u n d l ik e c lear f lo w in g mountain streams.

A lth o u g h the themes o f many o f the songs are sad (losing your woman, getting stuck in the city), the bluegrass singer’s got his tongue in his cheek, the music’s making.it, all worthwhile and keeps him smiling.

The pure, happy sound and the good country life o f blue­grass are all part o f the lifestyle o f “ Lunch at the Dump.”

“ Although we were all raised in the city or the suburbs w e’re all trying to get into a quieter life style. Our music is a part o f t h a t ,” said Peter.

Matt and Peter are students at UNHC They and Chris live in

Newmarket. When they’re not singing Jim is a blacksmith, Ron is an electrician and John repairs musical instruments and Volks- wagens. These three live in that house in Davisville.

Among the tunes in the band’s repetoire are “ I Am A Pilgrim” and “ June Apple” which are tra­ditional songs.

They do “ I Ain ’t Gonna Be Treated This A Way,” another classic. They do songs by the L ou v in Brothers and Jimmie Rodgers, also in the traditional vein . “ Thank The Lord For Everything” is an old gospel song they sing. Gene Clark, Eric Anderson and John Prine are among the contemporary writers the b a n d ’ s drawn upon for material. “ Hello In There” is one by John Prine about old folks and about getting old.

“ Here’s a tune with a little hair around it !” says Ron as the Dumpsters take the stage again. The slide dobro ’s soaring, the fiddle’s squealing and the bass is thumping again. The whole band is gettin g into it. “ Y EAH !” shouts a guy in the audience. Everybody’s clapping along.

Catch “ Lunch at the Dump” Monday at 8 in the Strafford R oom for free and feel GOOD!

Page 17: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRID AY MARCH 12, 1976 PAGE SEVENTEEN

Trivia?Last week’s Wicked Hard Question answer: Pat Paulson’s dog?

Lyndon.1. Who was being chased by the aliens in the TV series The Invad­

ers?2. What piece o f jewelry does Mr. Clean wear?3. According to Funny Girl what street did Fanny Brice live on

when she was beginning her career?4. What was King A r th u r ’s nickname in The Once and Future

King?5. What industria list wanted Christopher George’s blood in The

Immortall6. What was the name o f the farm tha t the animals lived on in

Animal Farm?7. Who played the Senator in The Farmer’s Daughter?8. Who played the matchmaker in The Matchmaker, the movie

from which Hello, Dolly was taken?9. Who was the brother o f Cain and Abel in Genesis?10. What year was Fantasia released?

Wicked Hard Question o f the week: What to ll-free number was once advertised so tha t you could make a reservation at any Shera­ton Hotel?

'0P6I '01 '6 q io o q /Cdj iqs ’8 MOP-uiy\ uivijjim. 'L tu iv j xouv\y ‘p puvjjivw m q u y '£ U&M > 133-US faud}i "£ Suujvd uv 'z (sfduuiqx T o j/ Tq paTvjd) jusauiy\ picivpj mj

much as the face itself. m arble sculpture. FortunatelyUnfortunately, perhaps, for the story required little o f her

the careers o f Ryan O ’Neal and but m o u r n fu l, m elan ch o licMarisa Berenson, their roles in gazes.the film valued little more than As with his other films, parti-sitters in a portrait gallery might., cularly 2001 , Kubrick uses mu-

O ’Neal’s susceptibility to tears sic as an invisible prop to his set- at the sight o f death is still as tings. Posthumous credits arestrong as it was in Love Story. due to Bach, Handel, Mozart,Except for a highly emotional Schubert and Vivaldi for music scene by his son’s deathbed, he which enriched the tone andfaints and deadpans his way quality o f Kubrick’s personal vi-through most o f the film. sion o f an era long out o f sight.

Marisa Berenson was apparent- Barry Lyndon will not make ly chosen for her role on the anyone lose sleep agonizing overstrength o f her facial structure the problems and conflicts o f itsrather than her acting ability, main character or his society. ItWhereas the scenes were set up is not meant to. But its visuallike R e m b ra n d ts , Berenson and (sensual impressions will lastlooked like Rodin ’s contribution long after any plot has foggedto the art o f film - a piece o f with age.

Kubrick films by candlelight

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K U B R IC Kcontinued from page 16 main character (he possesses lit­tle o f that), but with the com ­pelling beauty o f the photogra­phy which sets the scene more than any action or dialogue could do.

With sparing but effective use o f a narrator (Michael Hordern), Barry Lyndon documents the life and times o f Redm ond Barry (Ryan O ’Neal), an Irish country boy who leaves his romantic no­tions behind him and plunges on to find deceitful love, bloody wars and greedy people. Barry himself is a headstrong, oppor­tunistic man who, having learned the rules o f the game, takes it upon himself to become the gen­tleman o f wealth and means he believes himself destined to be.

Barry owes the bulk o f his good fortune to fate. He is ac­tually rather dim in intelligence and sensitivity although physi­cally courageous and spontan­eously affectionate in a way which makes him a very believ­able and sympathetic character.

Ryan O’Nehl and Marisa Berenson float up a lazy river in Barry Lyndon.

fight in the Seven Year’s War. From then on, he turns to deser­tion, spying for the Prussians, card sharping and finally a mar­riage o f convenience for him but hardly for his wife, Lady Lyndon (Marisa Berenson), or his resent­ful stepson, Lord Bullingdon.

With the aid o f a Zeiss still- camera lens, Kubrick was able to film interior scenes by candle­light only. His use o f light and

...deceitful love, bloody

wars, and greedy people...He flees his home after sup­

posedly killing a rival in a duel only to find out later that the duel was rigged. The man is still alive. After being held up on the way to Dublin,he enlists in the British army and goes, o f f to

shadow is breathtaking. Golden, somber tones highlight the detail and nuanee o f a room , faces, ob ­jects like a Rembrandt painting.

Another director telling the same story might have relied more on action and dialogue and

quick cuts, Kubrick allows the camera to rest on a face or a scene, letting the drama o f si­lence and expectation say more than any amount o f words.

Like the narrator, the cinema­tic point o f view is objective. By selectivity and deliberate ambig­uity Kubrick does not dictate any morality or strong affinities for any one character. Through the use o f slow pans and long shots , he presents the story with distance and clarity, which re­sults in a highly entertaining glimpse o f the past in epic pro­portions.

Along with the photographic p e r fe c t io n is m , the costumes look as if they were borrowed from their original owners o f 200 years ago who might be waiting o f f the set to get their clothes back.

The lighting effects are not wasted on the characters’ faces. With the elaborate wigs and in­credible make-up, the tone o f skin and lips expresses nearly as

presents the FABULOUSSUNDAY,

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Page 18: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE EIGHTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12 , 1976

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N .H . quiltsQ U ILTScontinued from page 15big part o f our heritage and very decorative.”

She said that a quilt may cost anywhere from $25 or $50 up to the hundreds depending on how it’s made and the material.

A n exam ple o f “ white on w h ite ” by Ann Anderson o f B rook line, N.H. hung at the front o f the room. Done on a k ing s ize perma-press white sh eet, th e bicentennial quilt took her three years to complete not including four months o f research needed to get detailed drawings o f the statue o f free­dom on the Capitol building and the first typewriter invented. The all hand stitched quilt de­picted everything from the Pil­grims to Lewis and Clark and the steamboat to the invention o f the safety pin in 1849 through two World Wars all the way to Gerald Ford and ending with a big question mark. In the center o f the quilt she stitched the Cap­itol building and a map o f the United States complete with the original roads and the date each state entered the union.

Anderson said, “ I wanted to make a quilt for my country this year. I guess I put everything in it but the kitchen sink.”

She is currently doing another quilt on whaling which she said, “ w ill probably take me five years to do .”

It doesn’t have to take five years, and whether for warmth or decoration, quilting may be old fashioned but it is still very much alive as an art and a hob­by.

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Page 19: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12, 1976 PAGE NINETEEN

Baseball team heads southBy Mike Minigan

On Friday, March 18, Coach Ted Conner will lead eighteen o f his baseball Wildcats on a ten day, nine game swing through Florida in preparation for the u pcom in g Yankee Conference baseball season.

T he W ildcats, who feature* four freshmen in their starting lineup, will open the trip against St. Clair Junior College o f Michi­gan, and Broward Junior Col­lege, both games being played at the B row a rd campus in Ft. Lauderdale.

The Wildcats will also play in The Sunblazers Invitational in Miami from March 22-27.

“ This is the first tournament w e’ve played in on our Florida t r ip , ” said Conner recently. “ W e’re looking forward to it.”

The tentative lineup for the Wildcats this year features cap­tain, and tw o year all New Eng­land catcher Dave Bettencourt.

“ I’m convinced our leader will be Bettencourt,” Conner said. “ Not necessarily in hitting, but in all around field leadership.”

Sophomore Mitch Griffin will be returning at first base, but three freshmen round out the in­field. Jim Neal will be at second, J e ff Whitty at shortstop and John Walker at third.

T h e . outfield will consist o f veteran Ken Billings in left, new man, sophomore Mike Belzil in ce n te r , and fresh m an Tim Gowan in right field. Junior Tim Burke is available, fresh from his . duties on the Wildcat hockey team. He w on ’t be ready for the Florida trip, however.

“ There’s nothing .wrong with having all these freshmen,” Con­ner noted. “ They’re good ball players. It would usually take about three more weeks o f work to get them ready, but most o f them came to fall practice, and they’re just about ready now .”

There is more than one reason for all the changes from last y e a r ’ s team . Infielders Nick Papajohn and Vic Maloney are not out for the team this year, and third baseman Mark Etro hurt his leg playing football, and is lost for the year.

The Wildcat pitching staff is one o f the “ stronger points” o f the team according to the coach. R e tu rn in g are right-handed starter Dean Koulouris, a senior and two year veteran, and le fty , Tom White, a junior who was last year’s E.R.A. leader. Conner is also looking for big contribu­t io n s from newcomers Steve W h o lle y , a sophom ore, and

junior Dave Rider. “ Wholley has the potential to be one o f our b e tte r right-handed pitchers,” Conner said.

W ith senior Steve Margetts coming out o f the bullpen, the Wildcat pitching looks strong. “We need a reliever who can th ro w strikes,” said Conner. “ Steve has that experience.”

The Wildcat schedule includes ten doubleheaders, five each at home and away. Conner added, “ Any team with three top notch starting pitchers has got to be considered lucky. I feel we have fo u r t o p notch prospects in Koulouris, White, Wholley and Rider.”

“ I like the idea o f a lot o f doubleheaders,” he said. “ I’d love to play every day.”

Summing up UNH’s chances for the season, Conner would not hide behind the youth and inexperience o f the team as an excuse. “ I ’m sure w e’re going to make some mistakes,” he said. “ There is a lot o f pressure on these new players. But I think that our hustle and determin­ation will help make up for a lot o f them. These new players are playing because they’re the best at their positions.

“ But, w e’ll know in a couple o f weeks.”

Footballers ineligibleAccording to Athletic Director

Andrew Mooradian the Univer­sity o f New Hampshire football team has been denied permission to accompany the Yankee Con­ference on their proposed ex­h ib ition trip through Europe scheduled for June 3-17.

The UNH Wildcats had been ruled ineligible earlier this year because o f an NCAA bylaw, w h ich prohibits teams which have participated in post-season competition from travelling and playing overseas. UNH’s trip to the Grantland Rice Bowl in No­vember brought this rule into play.

However, NCAA Executive Di­rector Walter Byas has denied a request for a waiver from this ruling which was issued by the UNH a th le tic hierarchy two weeks ago.

“ We have w ritten to the NCAA council this week asking them to review this decision,” said Mooradian yesterday. “ But I’d say that our chances o f going to Europe are very slim at this point.”

UNH applied for the waiver with the thought that the tip was a c o n fe r e n c e endeavor, whereas the bylaw is designed against specific teams.

“ We thought they would view this trip as a conference pro­ject,” said Mooradian. “ We’ve written again this week, but the NCAA council rarely overrules the Executive Director.”

Final word on this matter is expected in about two weeks.

Planning for the exhibition trip which will include the re­maining five Yankee Conference teams is scheduled to begin in Boston next Monday. The UNH Athletic Director will take part in this meeting with the hope that they will receive a favorable ruling from the NCAA.

(top) Baseball Coach Ted Conner addresses his squad, (bottom) Pitcher Dean Koulouris takes batting practice in the cage. (Dennis Giguere photos)

CLUB SPORTS

Frisbee club victoriousOn Monday March 8, the UNH Ultimate Frisbee Club opened

its spring season with a hard fought 23-22 score over the Maine Skins in the Paul Sweet Oval in the UNH Field House.

The play was physical and fast paced, and was not decided until the closing minutes when the UNH disc team pushed across four goals. The Skins fought back with four goals o f their own, but it was not enough as the clock ran out, with UNH taking the vic­tory.

Harvard 4 UNH 3

M arch 9 , 1 97 6

period 11 5 :4 7 U N H H is lo p -(E d g a r, L u m le y ) 1 8 :4 0 H arvard C a rr-(L e c k ie , S chuste r)

pe riod 2

6 :0 9 U N H C o x -(H is lo p , B u rke )9 :2 8 H arvard N ie la n d - (S w if t , Hughes)16»07 UNM C ro w d e r (O urne)

p eriod 3

3 :3 4 H arvard H o r to n ,-(L is to n )4 :4 9 H arvard B e ll- (C arr, L eck ie )

P etrovekM agnare lli

1411

8 7-2910 9-30

score b y periods

H arvard 1 - 1 - 2 - 4U N H 1 - 2 - 0 - 3

Hockey scoringC. C ox 34 32 66H is lop 23 43 66Edgar 18 26 44L u m le y 9 21 40Fontas 10 21 33B urke 9 24 33R oy 16 16 32G o u ld 13 14 27R. C ox 14 9 23Powers 5 14 19B urns 6 12 18C row der 6 11 17Langw ay 3 13 16n m id o 2 c eFlanagan 4 3 7Harvie 3 4 7L ucke rn 1 4 5N oonan 0 4 4K inn e a le y 0 3 3B lood 0 1 1Surdam 0 1 1M agnare lli 0 1 1

G oa lte nd ing

M agnare lli 21 1 230 504Evans 11 562 2 09Lora nee 2 80 30

Basketball StatisticsName G FG F T TP A V E RB

W. M o rriso n 26 194 42 430 16.5 71S„ Singelais 26 134 61 329 12.7 149M . Graebe 26 85 75 245 9 .4 100P. Laskaris 21 72 38 182 8.7 124R^Gale 21 83 14 180 8 .6 152B .V anD even te r 1 4 0 8 8.0 3K . D ickso n 26 53 37 143 5.5 38B. Pardo 23 39 7 85 3.7 47T . Cavanaugh 25 40 9 89 3.4 69B. D elaney 21 25 9 59 2.8 33T . S m ith 1 1 0 2 2.0 1R„ Layne 23 8 4 20 0.9 15N .J o n e s 15 3 2 10 0.5 2

3.163 .944 .50

Gymnasts at NCAA’sThe UNH Men’s Gymnastics team is participating this weekend

in the NCAA Regional Qualifying Tournament being held on the campus o f Penn State University.

The Wildcats advanced to this Tournament after winning the New England League Championship last Sunday. In that event, the UNH men swept the top three spots in the all-around com pe­tition. Bill McCurdy was first, Pearce Wagner second, and Dick Tremblay was third.

Division 1 match-ups

The semi-finals o f the ECAC Division 1 hockev nlavoffs will take place in the Boston Garden tonight.

At 6:15, Cornell and Brown will face o ff, follow ed by Boston University and Harvard at 9 :30.

The finals and consolation game will be played Saturday night, also at the Boston Garden.

YC All StarsThe University o f Massachusetts Minutemfen placed two men on

the Yankee Conference basketball All-Star team which was an­nounced-earlier this week.

Player o f the Year Jim Towne, and Mike Pyatt were the UMass representatives. Also selected were Paul Wholey from Maine, Tony Hansen o f Connecticut and Stan Wright o f Rhode Island.

Division 2 playoffs

Merrimack and Bowdoin advanced to the finals o f the ECAC Division 2 playoffs with victories over the past week.

Merrimack, paced by Mike R eynold ’s hat trick, broke a 2-2 sec­ond period deadlock, and went on to win 8-2.

Bowdoin defeated second seeded Salem State 4-1, with four different players lighting the lamp.

Top seeded Merrimack will host Bowdoin in the final this Saturday night.

Page 20: Dorms may ask for coed living - UNH Scholars' Repository

PAGE TW ENTY THE NEW HAMPSHIRE F R ID A Y M ARCH 12, 1976

ousted from playoffs . . . againW ildcatsWith seconds left to go, UNH’s

Jamie Hislop and Cliff Cox start­ed to rush up the ice. Hislop tried to hit Cox, who was cut­ting behind the defense, with a pass.

The puck went too far ahead of Cox and slid into the corner. Hislop bowed his head in frustra­tion,

By Ed McGrathWhy did UNH lose Tuesday

night to Harvard? Why for the sixth time in eight years, isn’t UNH playing in Boston Garden? And why didn’t Jamie Hislop and Cliff Cox get a chance to play in the Garden?

One answer might be the jinx many people feel plagues the Wildcats.

Another answer, and one that is probably more accurate, is a goaltender named Brian Petro- vek. Add to this, that Harvard was really up for the game and y ou ’ve got yourself an answer.

“ I’ve never seen the team with more em otion .” said Harvard’s coach Bill Cleary after his team had just won 4-3. “ We were sky high.”

Not only were they sky high, but the Crimson played their best game o f the year.

“ We knew this was the way we had to play,” said Harvard’s cap­tain Kevin Carr.

Despite the fact that Harvard’s forwards did an effective job o f forchecking UNH, the man who was responsible for the Crimson

victory was Petrovek.The junior netminder was fan­

tastic. He showed the sellout crowd and television audience why he was an All-American last year. Petrovek’s quick glove and ability to cover the puck near the crease was too much for the Cats to handle.

Late in the second period and in the final ten minutes o f the game, the Wildcats were in con­trol. But Petrovek allowed but one goal.

Petrovek made a save on Bruce Crowder who was alone in front o f the crease. But Gary Burns passed the rebound to Crowder, who slid the puck o f f Petrovek’s ’ pads and into the net.

That goal made the score 3-2,

UNH . P etrov ek stopped the Wildcats the rest o f the way. But the Wildcats had their chances.

O n ce , during the final ten minutes, Petrovek was caught b eh in d the net. Jon Fontas picked up the loose puck and started to move around the net. It would have been a carbon copy o f Hislop’s goal in the first period. But Fontas got checked, lost the puck, and another op ­portunity went by the board.

The tragic part o f Tuesday’s game is the story o f Hislop and Cox.

They each scored once. In the first period, Hislop caught Petro­vek out o f position and alertly put the puck in the open net. Cox scored on a breakaway with a shot that Petrovek almost saved.

“ I couldn’t help feeling badly fo r C o x and H is lo p ,” said Cleary, commenting on the fact that the pair have never made it past the first round. “ They’re a credit to college hockey, making it the spectacle that it is.”

For the last four years, UNH has not made it past the opening round o f the ECAC playoffs. Hislop and Cox have been on all those teams.

Cox and Hislop finished the year tied for the team scoring lead with 66 points. Cox scored 34 goals and had 32 assists. Hislop scored 22 goals and regis­tered 42 assists.

Hislop, the senior wing5 also finishes as the all-time leading scorer in UNH’s history with 208 points. Cox is third on the list.

(top) Harvard goalie Brian Petrovek makes one o f his twenty nine saves against the Wildcats, (right) UNH’s Dan Magnarelli foils the C r im so n ’ s B ill H ozack (10). (Dennis Giguere and Michael D ’Antonio photos)

Hoopsters had ups, downsBy Andy Schachat

Isn’t it wonderful when the facts are contradictory and you don ’t know which ones are clos­est to the truth? So it was for the UNH basketball team for the1975-76 season.

On the one hand the facts show an 8-18 record, only two games better than the previous season (6-18). On the other hand the facts show numerous games being decided in the final se­conds and good showings by the Wildcats against the best teams in New England (wins over BC and UConn and close losses toU M a s s a n d I Iu l_ y C i U S S ) r

So which is it, a dismal season o f ten games below .500 or a competive season in which the Wildcats were capable o f beating anyone on the schedule?

Let’s just say it was a nice mixture o f both.

“ I know people don ’t want to hear the maybes and the ifs o f our season and I can understand that,” Head Coach Gerry Friel said recently, “ But you must in­c lu d e th o se factors because those are the facts.”

At the beginning o f the sea­son, Friel set three goals for the team, and feels that one o f them was achieved. “ Our three goals were to have a winning season, finish high in the Yankee Con­ference, and to regain respecta­bility in New England,” Friel sa id , “ T h o u g h we did not achieve those first two goals we feel we accomplished the third.”

Friel is referring to those big w in s o v e r B o s to n C o lle g e (63-61) and UConn (85-82) at home, and those good showings against Holy Cross and UMass on the road. The Wildcats lost to UMass 81-72 and to Holy Cross 71-70.

But there were those contra­dictory facts, losses that proba­bly shouldn’t have been. The same team that battled the pre­viously mentioned teams lost to teams like Brown, BU, and St. Michaels, a division 2 team.

Friel feels that it was injuries that caused this inconsistency. “ We didn’t have our center Rich Gale until the sixth game o f the season, and our forward Pete Laskaris, even though he played, wasn’t healthy until\half the sea­son was gone. With our full team we would have won those games that we lost.”

Assistant Coach Dwight Peters explains it another way. “ We committed ourselves during the pre season to be a running club. W hen Gale and Laskaris got hurt, we didn’t have the person­nel that could rebound and play inside defense that would have en a b led us to run like we wanted.”

Another aspect o f the season, especially during the first half o f the year, was the “ late game col­la p se” . Many games saw the Wildcats play well for 20 or 30 minutes only to lose momentum, and the game, during the last minutes o f action. Again Peters <fjf?els the injuries were a factor.

vVe were forced to bring some

o f our players along quicker than we wanted and they just weren’t ready.”

Perhaps it would be best to look back on the season in three ways, highlights, lowlights, and overall view.

Lowlights: Definitely the first half o f the season, in which the Wildcats had problems believing in themselves. Many games that should have been victories would up as losses. It was also during this stretch that the Wildcats put together a frustrating string o f losses in the final seconds (St. Michaels, Northeastern, BostonU niversity). T h e oth er low lightcam e on February 24. After trailing UConn by ten at the half the Wildcats were blown out o f Storrs, Connecticut, and wound up losing by 45 points.

Highlights: It started on Janu­ary 29th. On that date, the Wild­cats scared the heck out o f UMass, finally losing in the last two minutes. Over the next se­ven games, UNH won four and did it while playing the hardest part o f its schedule. The wins at home against BC and UConn came during this stretch, and greatly impressed the Durham area fo llow ers. The Wildcats were a competitive team during this time.

Overall view:* That depends on your philosophy o f things. “ I lo o k on the positive side o f things,” said Friel, “ With few ex­c e p t io n s we were competitive against a tough schedule (seven g a m e s against p o s t -se a so n teams).”

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Wildcat captain Wayne Morrison drives for two points against Springfield College. The Wildcats finished with an 8-18 mark.