-INSIDE­ Calendar_page 5 Women's lacrosse team N otices--page 6 Noted poet Philip Levine demolished Vermont 20- spoke in the Parsons Aud­ 5 Wednesday. See related Editorial-page 16 i tori um last night. See story page 32. ~" Features-page 19 story page 19. Sports___ page 32 The New Hampshire Bulk Rate U.S. Postaqe Paid Vol. 75 No. 44 FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 862-1490 Durham, N.H. Durham NH Permit #30 Students With one-ticket ballot, reject Ethier and Foy cut plans win with 56% By W. Glenn Stevens By Francoise von Trapp write-in line on the ballot. A Student Senate newspaper Deanne Ethi~r and running Senior Debbie _Goodrich said insert to encourage protest of mate, Jeff Foy won the election there should be a write-in place proposed financial aid cuts has for Student Body President and on the ballot even if no write­ . had t-remendous results, officials Vice President yesterday, al­ in candidates exist. say. though they were the only Robideaux said there has The insert, which appeared candidates listed on the ballots. never been a line for write-ins in last Friday's issue of The New Write-in candidates for pres­ on the ballot. He said if students Hampshire, included addresses ident Patrick Campbell, and aren't responsible enough to get of state congressmen and a letter Chris V rountas captured 44 their petitions in on time, they of protest which required only percent of the vote. don't deserve space on the the sender's signature. Only 10 percent of the 10,000 ballot. "We don't condone write­ Bill· Puglisi, chairman of · student population voted in the in candidates," he said. Students for the University election. Bill Robideaux, chair­ "You don't decide to run for Council (SFU) said, "I am very., person of the election commit- - such an important off ice the impressed with the number of tee, attributed the small turnout night before an election," Ro­ students that have responded." to the single-candidate ballot. bideaux said. He said two weeks Senator Warren Rudman's Robideaux said people were were plenty of time to get the office also responded to the not bothering to vote because 200 signatures required. · turnout saying that they were they didn't realize there was any Foy said he thought the stand­ "very impressed as well." competition. He said people ard candidates were hurt more The insert,. which protested who did vote knew there were by the lack of oppositon on the proposed cuts in financial aid write-in candidates. ballot than by the write-ins. He by the Reagan Administration, Senators counting the votes said they seemed to get more is part of a nationwide move­ attributed the small turnout to publicity in the papers. ment to give students from Campbell said he regrets not Deanne Ethier (r) and Jeff Foy won their bid for Student Body general apathy among students, below-average income families and lack of information. They starting his campaign earlier the continued opportunity for President and Vice President this week. (David Drouin photo) said other contributing factors and not choosing a running quality education. were no The New Hampshire mate to help and g,ive him a In a letter to the UNH Stu- with you in mind." made the difference," said Pu­ on Tuesday, and a misprint in more solid ticket. He said he dent Senate office Rudman said, • There is now a proposed glisi. ·he Commuter Advocate which didn't want to choose one just "While the Senate has yet to compromise that the· combined "We may even do better than said the polls closed at 3 p.m. to get on the ticket. begin considering specific fund- family income ceiling for stu­ the $60,000 compromise," he Wednesday. They closed at 6 Campbell said he was pleased ing levels for these programs dent loan recipients be raised said. "I only hope that people p.m. that write-ins had won 44 for fiscal year 1986, you can be from $32,500 to $60,000. that haven't sent the insert in Several students expressed percent of the vote with only rest assured that, when the time "I think that student re­ yet will find last Friday's paper their concern at the lack of a three days of campaigning. comes, I will make my decisions sponses nationwide have really and do it." "It just confirms the bull-­ -- that's going around about students being inactive. 1 think NH college presidents oppose aid cuts ELECTION, page 14

By Ken Fish , Cuts in federal funding of Parking student financial aid would have devastating effects on college students in New Hampshire and design the state's economy, said Walter Peterson, former NH Governor and president of Franklin Pit:rce complete College. · Peterson, along with 13 other - New Hampshire college pres­ By Marc Carroll idents, spoke out a_.gainst Pres­ A parking and transportation ident Ron?ld Reagan's proposed plan developed by Director of aid cuts in a meeting Monday Facilities Services Patrick Miller in Concord. was approved March 20 by three committees representing Uni­ President's Report versity, staff, and students. see page 3 Miller's plan calls for $10 and $40 fees to be paid by University He estimated the nearly · faculty, staff, and students for 12,000 New Hampshire college parking permits next year. students could lose all or part The $10 fee will allow people of their financial aid from cuts Presidents of the 14.New Hampshire colleges and universities met.this week to denounce the Reagan Administration's cuts in student financial aid.(UNH News Bureau photo) to park west of the railroad in financial aid. tracks (in A lot), and to use Paul Dowd, St. Anselm's• present hardships for college "shuttle buses" which will be college public relations director, "With the President's pro­ piled by the presidents, nearly funded by_ students who are $30 million in financial aid will students, according to the paper, said 50 percent of the students posed cuts, these students. would expected~to use the shuttle more be cut. drafted by Brother J aochim attending NH private copeges lose $14,600,000 in financial than faculty and staff. The cut-offs for federal finan­ Froelich, OSB, president of St. come from out-of-state and are aid ...that's an incredible impact The $40 fee will allow people dependent on financial aid for on (NH's) economy," he said. cial aid as proposed for 1986- ·their expenses. In the position paper com- 87 by the Adminsitration would PRESIDENTS, page 22 PARKING, page 11 . PAGE TWO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY.APRIL 12, 1985 Path lights vs. tree: UNH Progress in Progress

By Leigh Hope was introduced to the US in said he's quite certain that this then realized the severity of the The UNH grounds crew in­ 1862, has been recommended is what's happened to the Zel­ situation. He said they didn't stalled two lights along the as a substitute for the American kova. want to do anything to endanger sidewalk in front of Hood House Elm. It is a member of the Elm Ron ,La Voie, assistant mana­ the trees and in the future they this Tuesday and in the process family but does not contract the ger of grounds and roads, said will try to be more careful. dug'. !:' a good portion of the root fatal Dutch Elm Disease which the ground in front of Hood LaVoie said he didn't know structure of a 15 year old Zel- afflicts Elms. House was dug up in order to why the crew thought it was safe kova tree. · Rogers said the roots of a tree 1nstali a . "walk-light system." to dig right next to the tree's "I am furious," said Owen extend four to seven times the He said a trench two feet wide trunk. "We are going to give Rogers, chairman and professor diameter of the leaf canopy and and one to three feet deep was the tree injections and fertalizer of plant science, about the that any digging will result in dug to install the electrical to ma~e sure it lives." damage to ~he tree. _ serious problems for the tree's wiring for two lights on the Rogers said he would know Rogers said the tree is impor­ health. He said that all the walk. in the spring whether or not it tant to the campus because it transport-system roots are close Lavoie said the crew probably will survive. He said there will is part of a continuing tree to the trunk and the feeding should have gone farther around be visible damage to the leaf replacement program. roots are farther out. By cutting the tree but they figured it was canopy and the tree will stand, The Zelkova, which ts of into the transport roots the safe to dig where they did. He but not grow, for three to five Japanese and Korean origin, and feeding· canals are severed. He - years. He said it will probably said they started digging an~ survive, but added that this 1s speculation. Crime is linked to alcohol rrThe crew seemed to show ' Zelkova tree outside Hood By Don Routhier atory director; and UNH grad­ restrictive attitudes toward total disregard for House could be victim of While every state in America uate student John Colby Jr. alcohol seem to correlate with progress in progress. (David has thousands of residents who Strauss was not available for the lower levels of drinking per the tree," Hluska Drouin photo) consume alcohol, the states comment. capita. where the most alcohol is con­ The study showed the rela­ "Cirrhosis of the liver was ·said. He said one sumed are not the states with tionship that crimes, such as also considered in the study crew member said trees' lives. He said this is not the highest number of arrest driving while intoxicated because it is highly related to the price to pay for "Progress rates for alcohol related crimes, (DWI) and disorderly conduct, the number of deaths from to him, rrWell in Progress," refe_rring to the according to a study done by the had with the consumption of alcohol abuse," Linsky said. · there's no leaves name of the construction pro­ UNH Sociology Department. alcohol, Linsky said. The data used by the re­ jects at the University. The study co-authored by Linsky says he did not find searchers comes from UNH' s on it anyway so sociology professor Arnold a one-to-one correspondence State and Regional Indicators Linsky shows that there is a between the percentage of res­ Archive he said. who cares if it Karl Hluska, a plant-science strong relationship between the trictive attitudes toward alcohol - He said the study was "Part dies." major, said he saw the roots numbers of alcohol-related ar­ and the percentage of arrests of a larger series of papers on b~ing dug and ripped up. He said that more than half the roots rests and restrictive attitutes in the average case. __ a sociblogical theory of alcoh­ Rogers said the "exercise ( the toward the use of alcohol. For example, Nevada was the olism." were damaged and tor.n right digging) was totally unnecessary out. "The crew seemed to show The results of the study were state with the greatest number _ The norm theory, one of 3 and could have been avoided by not what the authors expected. of attitudes, yet it is also the state parts of a theory which the study total disregard for the tree," sensitive siting of the trench." Hluska said. He sa.id one crew The data shows more about with the highest number of focused on, dealt with societal He said that UNH is constantly how society is responding to the alcohol-related arrests, he said. measures concerning problems member said to him, "Well trying. ~o increase the number there's,,.no leaves on it anyway consumption of alcohol rather Indications of statewide sales and stresses caused by alcohol of 'trees on campus for teaching, than the drinking behavior says of alcohol and deaths from abuse, he said. . so who cares if it dies." Hluska research, and to make recom­ said he's disgusted at the total Linsky, who wrote the study cirrhosis of the liver ( degen­ "There reaily wasn't any hard mendations for tree growth in along with Murray Strauss, eration of liver tissue) were used disregard for the tree and other NH, but he said, the construc­ living things. UNH Family Research Labor- in the study and showed that ALCOHOL, page 9 tion keeps endangering the NEWS IN BRIEF

Toys in space Amy gets arrested N_H BWJ bill now law

If all goes according to plan, the space shuttle Amy Carter, 17, daughter of former President At 4 p.m. on Tuesday Governor John Sununu Discovery will take off today with an unusual cargo Jimmy Carter, was arrested Monday in an anti­ signed House Bill 20 into law which imposes the of JO toys on board and children will get to see what apartheid demonstration at the ·s·outh African implied consent law on boaters. Refusing to submit happens to a paper airplane, a wind-up mouse, a Embassy in Washington, DC. to a blood alcohol test when apprehended for yoyo, and a slinky in space. Carter was arrested after being refused entry suspicion of boating-while-intoxicated (BWI) is There is a serious purpose behind all this fun. into the embassy and ignoring police instructions a violation and could mean a fine up to $500. , Educators see it as a creative way to teach kids some to move on. By remaining, she broke a law that Conviction of BWI is a misdemeanor and subject basic science concepts and focus attention on the forbids protests within 500 feet of an embassy. to a year in jail and a fine up to $1,000. Sununu space program at the same time. "This is a fundamental wrong being committed," said the state "has acted very responsibly by imposing The shuttle mission will be videotaped and this said Carter, referring to South Africa's apartheid penalities for people who can cause as much damage with other teaching materials will be made available policy. "This is the first hurqle in f ightiog it. When in a boat as they can in a car." to grade schools and junior high schools by NASA. I decided to do it this morning, I called home and Pilot Donald Williams will try some space they said it was OK," she said. juggling, and may set a new record for how many The police refused to discuss Carter's case because objects can be kept "up in the air" at once. she is a juvenile. People arrested earlier have been Club brings livestock The US space program chalks up another first booked, but not charged, and then released. None with "toys in space." · of those arrested have been prosernted. show

The UNH Animal Science Club is sponsoring the Little Royal Livestock Show which will be held Progress at The Equinox this Sunday, April 14, from 10 a.m., to 4 p.m·. at Settlement reached in the UNH Livestock Activity Center. Kevin LaBranche, Keene State College (KSC) There will be horse, sheep, dairy, and beef shows student body president, said Wednesday the situation crew death during the day. Events open to the public include at The Equinox, KSC's student newspaper is milking contests, potato sack races, oxen demon­ progressing. Legal counsel for UNH and David and Rose Marie strations, and the spectacle of an animal science The advisor and editorial board of the paper were Hayes have agreed to a confidentiality order on professor kissing a pig. Alpha Zeta is putting on · charged last week with violating the paper's an out-of-court settlement reached over the death a chicken BBQ during the lunch hours. constitution, sexual discrimination and harassment, of the couple's son in a UNH crew accident two and mismanagement of funds. years ago. LaBranche said, "Both sides said progress was Nineteen-year-old freshman Glenn Hayes Correction made on the constitution towards a remedy of the drowned after trying to swim to shore from a current situation." The paper's operating funds swamped shell, one of six that overturned on April In the Frid~y, April 5 issue of The New Hampshire for the 1985-86 academic year are frozen pending 10, 1983. More than 55 members of the UNH Crew the photograph printed on page 7 with the story an investigation of the charges. -A final decision Club participating in a fund-ra.ising row-a-thon about homophobia was incorrectly captioned. The concerning the future of The Equinox will be reached were dumped in the icy waters of Little and Great photograph pictured was the UNH Internationals on April 23. - Bay. · panelist discussion. "-'.-. .., ~..a,,.-,~~ THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE THREE Haaland reports UNH on the move

By W. Glenn Stevens with student poets, he says. and Kris Snow But achievements are by no UNH professors are winning means limited to the teachers awards, students,are smarter, here, according to the report. and programs are growing-fast. Two students' work with com­ This combination, says the puter software m·ay save 1984 UNH Annual Report, Sprague Electric Company over allows the University to con­ $200,000 annually, while two tinue to provide "essential enrolled in the new'lnternation­ knowledge and understanding al Perspectives major will study for our time." language in Leningrad this The report, released from summer, it says. President Gordon Haaland's Newer students-this year's office Wednesday, is a 16-page freshmen-had the highest SAT overview of UNH's status and scores since 1973, the report ~row-th for the po.;')t 12 1nonth;'). !;:!.l}Ti;:; 69 percent graduated in UNH researchers are stud­ the top 20 percent of their high ying everything from the min­ school classes. - ute to the universal, according A poll at the 1984 Freshman to the report, from iron-carrying Camp found that for 67 percent proteins in the chemistry de­ polled, UNH was their first partment to global ecology college choice. studies at the UNH Co.mplex Programs for high school 'Spring into Fitness' sponsored by UNH Health Services in the Granite State Room of the Systems Research Center students are intended to con­ MUB yesterday. (David Drouin phot<:?) (CSRC). tinue the trend. One such pro­ Three of 50 national Kellogg gram, entitled "Search," brings fellows (who each receive sup­ gifted high school juniors and port for three years of work) seniors to UNH for lectures, teach here, the report says; the on everything from robots to Senate.says: no new school awards have allowed professors world hunger, the report says. Gregory Gill, Richard Fite and There is also emphasis on By Robert Arsenault bine. _want to make sure that under­ John Carroll to leave the cam­ University facilities. Conant • Should the school·succeed, graduate students are protected pus, and in some cases the Hall renovation, new phone A new academic honesty lines, and the $15 million re­ policy and the rejection of plans it might hurt the morale and from losing out to the graduate continent, to improve the knowl­ resources of the University students." edge they pass_ on to students. search center all contribute to for the new school of Earth, the "UNH On the Move: Pro­ Oceans and Space headlined the because of its structure. The new Academic Honesty Awards don't keep professors • Given the problems of fed­ policy was approved, however, away from their students, it says: ~ress In Progress" project, Academic Senate meeting on mtended to keep UNH "worthy Monday . . eral research funding and the . its counterpart, the Academic English professor Charles Sim­ The new school, which would overestimation of the numbers Honesty Policy Procedures, was ic' s $224,500-McArthur Foun­ of its name," the report says. be for graduate students, has of graduate students using the dation Fellowship just means But while .the University is he can do more work to share REPORT, page 9 met with resistance from the school, the project may not SENATE, page 24 faculty involved since it was first succeed. brought before the Senate in a • Establishing a new school report com piled by Leonard for research for use mainly by Fiske. graduate students is a major According to a report by the change from traditional prior­ Evolution: just a pool game Ad Hoc Committee, headed by ities of the University. Professor Lawrence Dingman, Before the motion was reject­ By Chris Wagner to monitor the new school there ed, the Senate. moved to change are major problems with the the word "reject" to "consider Evolution is not just a matter_ school as it is presently pro- alternatives" in the committee's of natural selection; there's a posed. .. report because, although this creative force which chooses • The proposal is part of a particular program was inade­ from what works and doesn't response to serious academic quate, they said they wished to work, said Stephen Jay Gould problems, and is inadequate to see the educational opportun­ at the Field House Thursday . solve these problems. ities at UNH get better. "Think of evolution as a game • The proposal fails to make "We favor the new school," of billiards," said Gould, a noted a sound academic case for the said Academic Council Chair­ scientist from Harvard U niver­ mix of programs it would com- person Robin Lans, "but we sity, in the ninth lecture of the Elliott Series on Evolution. "The­ organism is the ball. The cue stick is natural selection. The IFC charges frat table is smooth. Thus, whenever natural selection acts on an organism a directional move­ in hazing incident ment will occur." Gould took this analogy of By Andrea Holbrook suspended from die IFC and the Darwinian evolutionary theory · Sigma Beta Fraternity has IFC will give the University one step further in describing been placed on jeopardy pro­ Judicial Board the recommen­ his theory of "Punctuated Equi­ bation until the end of the 1986 dation that the fraternity lose libruim" which he first pub­ spring semester after being its student organization status. lished in 1972. found guilty by the Intrafrater­ Besides the IFC probation, "Assume the ball is ... a multi­ ni ty Council (IFC) of hazing the fraternity must host a series surfaced cube. Now the orga­ after an incident in March. of campus-wide workshops and nism may move in several The IFC Judicial Committee, discussions on hazing, maintain directions as determined by _which consists of the 12 frater- close contact with the Dean of forces beyond simple natural - nity presidents, the Greek Se­ Students Office to ensure com­ selection." Stephen Jay Gould, proponent of punctuated evolution, addresses nate President, and the IFC pliance with the provisions, and Stating that Darwin was the students in the Field House yesterday.(David Drouin photo) President, found the fraternity maintain contact with the IFC "great scientist and the exem- . guilty of hazing Tuesday night. and Greek Senate to inform the plar for all theories of evolution group effect. Furthermore, the i selection." Hazing, under Caboodle rule two bodies of matters affecting :to follow," Gould highlighted individual struggles of the Civil In fact, "dinosa~rs and mam­ 14.122-7, is harassment by Sigma ,Beta on its pledge pro­ Darwinian theory as he ex- Rights movement "didn't just mals lived on ·the earth at the requiring unnecessary or dif­ gram. plained current thoughts. happen." same time and were it not for ficult work or by requiring Sigma Beta Vice President According to Gould, the prob- The individual choices of the a great cataclysmic event the abusive or da9gerous actions Geikie said, "We've totally lem with Darwin is that he many involved in the movement · din'osaurs would still probably of pledges. revamped our Hell Week: W'e couldn't see. the whole range of were creative. Natural selection rule," Gould said. Like the Durham police, suspecting can't afford to get in trouble and adaptation by just observing the also involves "choosing from weather forces or enhances an open container violation, lose our charter. Once we're isolated life of the Galapogous , among what works and what different activities, so do en­ stopped a rented moving van thrown off campus, there's no Islands. "The only real way to doesn't work," said Gould, vironmental effects forecast the with its back door open. The van way we'll get back on." gain an understanding of evo- · "building from a large inventory survival of an organism. contained several Sigma Beta Greg Nowlin, Sigma Beta's lution is to immerse in the of small, cumulative effects." While itwas probably a large · pledges that had their legs and president, said, "Sigma Be.ta has culture of living things," he said. The variation an organism sweeping event, such as a hands tied and who were been at UNH for 62 years and Gould gave an analogy for undergoes can't be preferential- meteor that wiped out the sprayed with beer. . this is the first incident ohhis evolution, saying that the Civil ly aimed towards adaptation, dinosaurs, within the individual If Sigma Beta· violated its type we've had. The IFC:S de- Rights movement of the sixties said Gould, or else there would organism changes go on daily probation which is limited only involved the individual struggle be no need for natural selection. 'to acts of hazing, they will be HAZING, page 14 · of many which produced a large· "Chance js the raw material for EVOLUTIO~, page 14 PAGE FOUR THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 Engineering graduate courses help NH business High-tech By Catarina de Carvalho industries depend approved the new development. campus" such a program might ational without UNH funding, UNH' s College of Engineer­ on the UNH program to learn not be feasible. He would not he said. ing is directing special courses about the latest developments Melvin said the Center 1s Unless approval for a in Nashua to provide high-tech in technology, said ~elvin. seeking approval for complete specify which groups ·were re­ further expansion is obtained, education to growing businesses graduate programs in the field sponsible, however. Melvin said they will not be able and employees in Nashua of Engineering and Computer Due to the lack of approval, to and Despite the program's success operate a full the Merrimack Science but due to opposition courses are 200 dollars per credit graduate program area. in helping NH businessmen, next year. The program which started UNH officials· have not fully from "appr?priate groups on and must be completely oper- in September consists of grad­ uate level credit courses, non­ credit seminars, and workshops that cater directly to industries' Sculpture coops ready to be wrecked needs. By Julia Barker demolition. the old fire station in early Another building being af­ rrw e're developing The demolition of four U NH "Asbestos board is not co­ February where classes have fected by the demolition is the buildings which contain asbes­ vered by the E.P.A. (Environ­ an ability been held since. Kari Van Station. Denise Cof­ to provide tos will begin next Wednesday mental Protection Agency), but "I have every confidence that fey, assistant Kari Van super­ continuing education to make way for the new science we' re covering it as if it were­ UNH will procede (in handling visor said they had known about building. to be on the safe side," he said. the asbestos) in the safest and the need to move for quite some Jnr professional em­ Director of Facility Planning, "The wodccr3' 3a.fcty i.;1 the 1nu:,t l-'1uft::,:,iuual 1uauue1 pu!)- ployees," Skip Devito said asbestos is not main issue," said Devito, and sible," McConnell said. BOOM!, page 11 bad unless airborn and most of demolition will closely adhere this asbestos is not. to O .S.H.A. (Occupational Donald Melvin, director of :'The vast bulk of what we Safety and Health Administra­ the Nashua Graduate Center have to deal with is hard board tion) and E.P.A. regulations. would O:ot provide the names No actual slaves and we're being very conserva­ Among the buildings being of the businesses involved, tive about it," he said. however. demolished is an Ari Depart­ Some pipes in the buildings ment's studio, which has housed "We're developing an ability for sale. from SAE are insulated with airborn as­ sculptors' work for at least the to provide continuing education By Maureen O'Neil bestos, but Devito said there is past 15 years. "Everything but times. There are no black people for professional employees," no danger and they are carrying The Sigma Alpha Epsilon in the pictures and the word he said. Zais Hall, Kingsbury and Forest out normal procedings for the Park is being torn down," said (SAE) poster advertising its negro isn't used. But the year Devito. The art coops will come slave auction of brothers and of the slave auction list, 1856, down last. pledges this Friday at 3 p.m. has is before the emancipation. STUDY IN EUROPE There are approximately 60 been viewed as discriminatory "There was no mal-intent The University of Louvain (est. 1425) sculpture students right now, to some students and faculty when the poster was made up," Louven, Belgium · said Professor of Art, Mike members. However, the broth­ Michael Burns, SAE president, offers McConnell, but the demolition ers say this was not their intent. said. The top of the ·COMPLETE PROGRAMMES IN hasn't been too inconvenient poster says "We were so excited about for the department. All supplies "Slavery Improves the Condi­ the fund-raising prospects, that PHILOSOPHY tion of Women." and equipment were moved to The bottom we may have overlooked the FOR THE DEGREES OF B.A., M.A., AND has two pictures of black slavery negative implication," he said. Ph.D. The poster was designed by a female art student who is a plus A JUNIOR YEAR ABROAD friend of an SAE brother. The PROGRAMME HAS THE ~LD pictures were taken from · a textbook, according to SAE All Courses Are in English GONEAfADI? brother Mike Ray. "The pictures Tuition is 11,500 Belgium Franks (plus $250) / were splash for the poster," Write To: Secretary English Programmes Burns said. Kardinaal Mercierpiein 2 The SAE brothers will be B-3000 Leuven, Belgium auctioned off as slaves for the highest women bidders. It is a fund raiser for the SAE KULeuven _____ spring parent's day and the electrical system in the house. Associate Dean of Students Resume and Greek System Advisor Wil­ Service our speciality liam Kidder doesn't think the with 2 ways to travel -­ poster is an intentional effort #1-Type 25 sets photo copies to demean either women or $15.00 Economical 8'¢ blacks. But he says he does think $16.00 with permanent memory storage SAE should have used more #2 Typeset 25 sets 8½ X 11 discretion in making the poster. $45.00 Professional self service "Anything making fun of a. certain social situation, people Professionalism & Quality at reasonable prices have to be careful about Typesetting-Business cards, it," letterheads and envelopes Kidder said. "I wedding invitations-offset printing 1 & 2 color. wouldn't have advised using the bottom sec­ · Think Campus Copy tion. It does make connections for all your copy needs with black slavery." our time is quick THE BLOOM COUNTY COWCTION let us prove it. As for the top statement IS, ABOVE ALL ELSE, TASTEFUL about women, Kidder doesn't Campus Copy see anything wrong with it located across Community Market, - T-SHIRTS, BOOKS & STUFFED OPUS DOLLS. because it isn't saying women 47 Main St. Durham, ORDER TODAY! - are being 868-2450. ~f'· sold as slaves. "If SAE THIS ORDER BROUGHT TO YOU B~ were selling their little sisters, the statement would be offen­ The New Hampshire sive," Kidder said. "This way, r · CUPANOSE#DWITHOROER ------, they've just turned it around." · l'lsst_ifldiall silund qu,tity: Kidder thinks the top state­ ' *Seasonal Color Analysis * Custom designed perms Wil-t,.i,._,,_ s M L XL PRICE TOTAL Facials ment is an attempt at a humor­ * Hints I. l'fflguin Wit Tee Shin (aamy btigt) D D D D 9.9~ * of tints haircoloring ous approach * Body waxing * Partial Perming 2. hngllin Wit Jtn,y (white body/black sleries) D D D D 11.95 because it talks about men being ~ * Ear piercing l Bloom County Tee Shin (cmmy btigt) D D D D 9.95 sold. SAE brothers don't see the statement I 4. Bloom County Jmey (whilf body/black lkffls) D D D D 11.95 PLUS S. LGO!t Tails boolc D 5.95 as offensive. They meant the statement to say that women THE 6.1aons for our r- boolc D 6.95 BEST HAIRCUTS IN TOWN!! 7. Smill \iultd Opus Doll D 10.00 ..t are better off with the brothers I I.~ llllled Opus Doll D 18.00 as their slaves. 9.BilldlfutlftShin(silvtr) ,t'b D D D 9.95 "After the women have won I0. Opus Tee Shin (silffl') D D D D 9.95 us ( the brothers) at the auction, II. Don't llbme lle ... lft Shin (black) D D D D 9.95 --- they will have us to clean up Plus $150 per ittm lor pomgt and handling their car or do other things," Nail to: Grand Total UM Opus/ The NH Burns said. 5446 Highway 290 West But the initial impact of the Suite 301 lbme phrase "Slavery Improves the Austin, Texas 78735 Condition 35 Main St. 868-7051 Addms of Women" is not Yisa/ltC seen as funny but Durham walk-in or appt. PhontOrden ~came discrimina­ Gty/Sliitt/Zip ______tory, according 512/892-4870 Allow 4-4 M11b 1ar dtl""J to Women's OPEN 7 DAYS ~------~ SLAVE, page 11 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, -1985 PAGE FIVE Honduran teachers targeted CALEl.\TDAR By Kelly Anderson of the Honduran FRIITAY, April 12 teachers' un­ Cordova ( the current Honduran Teaching school can be a ion, which has been taken over hazardous occupation in Central President's) promises were pure BAGPIPE LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION: Linda Thomp­ by Honduran military forces and demagoguery," America. had he said. . son, Kiltie Pipe Band, Worcester, MA. Bratton Recital Ha11, $1 million of its funds Sabio belongs PCAC, 2 p.m. Juan Ambrosio Sabio, a Hon- placed to a five­ in military-owned banks. member Central , duran teacher, testified about He American continues to teach despite Teachers Tour, SOFTBALL: Women vs. Vermont. Field House. 3 p.m. the violent government repres­ threats to which arrived his life, he said. in Boston Sunday. sion faced daily by educators in "What His UNH is normally exported visit is the tour's THE 11 GALLERY: A preview ~xhibition of gifts to _the his country in a talk in Murkland is news only presen­ annual Channel 11 auction that we are a demo­ tation in New from artists, craftsmen, and antique Hall Monday night. cracy," Sabio said. Hampshire. collectors. New England Center, 4-7 p.m. The speakers originally sche­ Sabio is the former president "But now 'we see that all duled, Luis Ricardo Garcia of WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL: UNH Me!1's Basketball Costa Rica and Miriam Lopez Team vs. Granite State Stainless Steelers. Also Fraternity of Guatemala, were unable to and Sorority vs. Fraternity and Sorority at half time. Lundholm Smith favo.rs leave their countries at the last Gym, 7:30 p.rri. minute. Garcia was taken off his US-bound plane just before RAMONES: MUB Pub, 8 p.m. SOLD OUT. contra funding take-off by Costa Rican officials. FAClJlTY LECTURE SERIES: "Daily The reason given a Life in the S~viet .Hy Kelly Anderson was legal Union (One Day in the Life of Ivan and Natasha as Perceived ------technicality-Sabio had not left by John and Mary)," Aleksandra Fleszar-Mayewski, A group of students, faculty German an official delegate to take over and Russian, Berkshire Room, New England Center 8 p.m. and concerned citizens met with his position Congressman as president of a Robert Smith (R­ teachers' union. .UNH DANCE THEATER NH) in his Dover COMPANY: Annual Concert. office yester­ Sabio said he, too, Johnson Theater, PCAC, 8 p.m. General day to express had prob­ $4; students, concern about lems obtaining permission faculty/staff, alumni and senior citizens, $3. US support of the Contras to in come to the United States. Nicaragua and to urge SATURDAY, him to These were caused not by the APRIL 13 vote against renewed aid to the Honduran rebels government but by TRACK: Men vs. Maine. Cowell Stadium, in the April 23 vote in the North Amerian 12 p.m. Congress. (US) con­ sulate, he said, The congressional holding up his MUSO Film: "Woodstock" and "No Nukes," MUB Pub, 7:30 vote would canceled visa. It and free $14 million was only with 9:30 p.m. Students, $2; Non-students, $5. in military aid help from several to the anti-Sandinista US congress­ forces men that he NICHE COFFEE HOUSE: An entertainment operating was granted per­ alternative in northern N icara­ misison, he said. featuring live entertainment every Saturday evening. Devine gua from Honduras. United States military aid to Ground Floor Lounge, 8 p.m. The 13-member group pres­ Honduras has increased from ented Smith with a 600 UNH DANCE THEATER COMPANY: signa­ $12 million in 1979 to $62.5 Johnson Theater, ture.petition and an information PCAC, 8 p.m. General $4; students, faculty/ staff, alumni million in 1985, despite what and senior citizens, $3. packet including New ~ ork the teacher's Times tour calls "a tre­ and Boston Globe articles mendous increase" and a recent in repression SUNDAY, April 14 Americas Watch by the country's military. report documenting REP. BOB SMITH human Sabio said teachers have been LITTLE ROYAL LIVESTOCK SHOW: UNH students exhibit rights abuses· by the Contras. anthropology a common target for govern­ farm animals. Games, exhibits, contests; chicken Bar-B-O "People are being instructor at tortured UNH, said that ment repression-including at noon. Livestock Activity Center next to horse barns. 10 and murdered and since the Con­ a.m.-4 p my governe­ tras have death threats, attacks on .. m. me nt is directly little popular support their involved. We within homes, and "disappearances." have uo right Nicaragua and are un­ MUSO Film-"It Happened One Night," Strafford to do this as a likely to The inore than 100 Room, country," Faith overthrow the Sandi­ people MUB, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Yost, the group's nista government, who have "disappeared" main spokeswoman, US support in said. · will eventually Honduras "have "I can't lead to an inva­ not gone to MONDAY, April 15 be a guilty bystander. Nicaragua or Cuba, I want sion. as is claimed. to stop tax dollars from Cliff They have disappeared RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: "It's A Spring going towards Wirth, UNH assistant within Fling at the this violence," the country," Sabio 'Bloomin' Blood Drive." Granite State-Room, MUB, 10 a.m.- UNH said. senior James Cox said. He said that 3 p.m. Leigh CONTRAS, page 13 it seemed the Binford, a visiting Contras (US-backed anti­ LACROSSE: Men vs. Massachusetts. Sandinista military Cowell Stadium, 2 p.m. The New Hampshire forces op­ (USPS 379-280) is published and distributed semi­ erating in Nicaragua from weekly throughout the academic year. Our offices are located in R?om Hon­ JAZZ SERIES: Ruhr Braff with the TJS Quartet. Strafford 151 of the Memorial Union Building, UNH, Durham, N.H. 03824. ~usmess duras) have participated in these "Room, MUB, 8 p.m. General, $·3.50; students, $2.50 Office hours: Monday - Friday 10 am - 2 pm. Academic year subscription: "disappearances." $20.00. Third class postage paid at Durham, NH 03824. Advertisers should Sabio will face substantial TUESDAY April 16 check their ads the first day. The New Hampshire will in no case be dangers upon returning to Hon­ responsible for typographical or other errors, but will reprint that pare of an advertisement in which duras, people from the tour and a typographical error appears, if notified RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Granite State Room, MUB, immediately. POSTMASTER: send address changes to The New Hampshire, the UNH Committee on Central 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 151 MUB, UNH, Durham, NH 03824. 10,000 copies printed per issue by Journal Tribune Biddeford, Maine. RISKY BUSINESS, page 9 HUMANITIES LECTURE SERIES: "Romanticism: The Visual Arts." Margot Clark, Department of The Arts. Room 216, Hamilton-Smith Hall, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. . PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM: "Do We Career Planning Know How Others View Us?" David A. Kenny, University Course of Connecticut. Forum Room, Dimond Library, 3:30 p.m. · For Credit FA CUL TY RE CITAL: Christopher Keis, piano. Allusions, Part One, by_John Rogers; Three Bagatelles, Arthur Berger; *A 2 Tonarten, Ross Bauer; and Sonata in A Major (Opus credit Career Planning Course for UNH Undergraduates Postumous), Franz Schubert. Johnson Theater, Paul Arts *Offered for the Fall Semester of 1985-86 Center, 8 p.m. *Learn how to integrate career and educational goals PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION: "Travels of a Weather­ exposed Camera" by Drew Sandborn. Hewitt Hall photo *Freshmen and Sophomores encouraged to enroll gaile_ry, l!NH, Durham. Through April 29. Recital-April 12, 4.30-6.00 pm. *Begin early career planning to aid in choosing a major *Course Title: Carer Planning Course Numbe1: DCE599C *Open to both degree and non-degree undergraduates SPANISH 501: REVIEW * Listed in the Fall '85 Time & Room Schedule under "Division OF SPANISH of Continuing Educationn It is the intention of the Dept. of Spanish and Classics· *Open to both degree and non-degree candidates. to offer five sections annually: three in the Fall, one ------______-_-:_- __ Registration======-=--:..-:..-:.-:..- in the Spring, one in the Summer. ------__ IMPORTANT: Students may register for the Career Planning It is required that you register for the Summer Course through the standard course pre-registration 1985 course by FRIDAY, MAY 24. Also, please farm and procedures. Special students (non-degree) indicate your intention to do so before then to will register through the Division of Continuing the Assistant Education Chair or the Secretary of the Department. PAGE SIX THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 NOTICES Police and Press ACADEMIC · shire Outing Club office, Koom 129, MUB. Final CENTRAL AMERICAN POLITICS COURSE: meeting Wednesday, April 24, NHOC Office, 4 should talk more (Political Science 651) will be offered next fall p.m. semester. This course is not for students who have By Jim Bumpus taken Central American politics previously with CAREER handles themselves "both at Prof. L. Binford or Prof. C. Wirth. MUB INFORMATION TABLE: Sponsored by The New Hampshire Police crime scenes and in day to day CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Career Planning and Placement. Monday, April Chiefs Association met with · relations." WOMEN'S COMMISSION SEEKS NEW 15, Balcony Table, Memorial Un~on, 1:30 to 3:30 media representatives this Tues­ Bre~n and Mosseau agreed MEMBERS: The UNH President's Commission p.m. day in Durham to discuss the· that the rela.tionship between on the Status of Women is seeking new members INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES WORKSHOP: problems of communication the police an~ the press is good. for the Commission beginning June 1985. Respon­ Sponsored by Career Planning and Placement. between the police and the However, recent laws sibilities have include attending bi-weekly meetings, Tuesday, April 16, Forum Room, Library, noon. press. made· communication more and participating in Commission Committee dif- work The panel discussion involved . ficult, said Breen. The police and activities. Membership terms are one to two AFTER LIBERAL ARTS, WHAT?: Sponsored by years. Current openings are for two faculty two representatives from the are hesitant to release evidence Career Planning and Placement. Workshops for press representatives, one operating staff representative, Liberal Arts unae~graduates and two from law enforce­ and make pre-trial statements, to assess their skills, ment. one graduate student, one non-traditional under­ interests, and values. Participate in panel of LA he said.' · graduate student, and two undergraduate students. employers and recent LA graduates. $trengthen The panel was comprised of "Thi$ can cause frustration If interested or for more information, contact the decision making skills for making career/ life John Breen, editor of the Na­ on ·the part of r_eporter·s and Commission at 862-1058 by Friday, April 26. choices. Tuesdays, April 16, 23, and 30, Belknap shua Telegraph; Bob Ward from editors," Breen said. room, Memorial Union, 7 to Q,30 p.m. For \Y!MUR-TV ( ch.9); Deputy At- "The problem .in Nc'V'<' EVENING Ht1.mp­ OF LA TIN AMERICA MUSIC AND · information, call Marge Lawton, 862-2010. torney General Peter Mosseau shire is minimal," Breen said. DANCE: Sponsored by Spanish Club. All are COMPUTER SERVICES and Jack Clohercy of Boston, "I reject the contention that the welcome. Bring a mugJor refreshments. Sunday, Non-credit courses for a nominal fee are listed April 14, Smith Hall International, 3 to 5 p.m. special agent of the Federal t_wo are incompatible," he said. below. Registration is required. Call 862-3527 or Bureau of Investigation. Deputy Attorney stop by Room 2E, Stoke Cluster. General Additional $5 "Whenever there is a lack Mosseau said CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION MEET­ charge for non-US.NH personnel. All courses are of there are many ING: Mondays, Rockingham Room, Memorial held in Stoke Cluster unless otherwise indicated. communication, it's not a prob­ instances when the police and Union, 12:15 to 1 p.m. BEGINNING SAS (VMS) -1, 2: SAS is one of the lem for us (media) or the the press have cooperated for better known statistical packages for use on large agencies (law enforcement)," · the common good. · COMMITTEE ON CENTRAL AMERICA MEET­ computers. This course describes how to access he said. "It's a problem for the "There have been instances ING: Tuesdays, Room 325, Horton, 12:30 p.m. SAS and covers basic SAS commands and concepts. people we both serve." where we've gone off the record · Prerequisites: Beginning VAX/VMS. No statistical Both media representatives . arid they've given us informa- SLIDE SHOW /TALK "FIGHTING WESTERN background is expected, but would be helpful. FOREST FIRES": Sponsored by Forestry Club, and law enforcement officials . tion," he said. Tuesday, April 16 and Thursday, April 18 from agreed that communication "There Tuesday, April 16, Room 109, Pettee Hall, 7 p.m. 10 a.m. was have also been times to noon. Fee is $6. the focus of the CAMPUS GAY ALLIANCE MEETING: LASER .PRINTER DEMONSTRATION: discussion. when ·they have held off on Open to Digital "There was both men and women. New People's orientation Equipment Corporation~. LN03 Laser ~rint~r is great agreement releasing a story so as not to at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 16, Philip J:Iale Ro?m, a fast, quiet, compact, tabletop, letter-quality pn1:1ter oq both sides that we need to impede an investigation." Paul Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. For more mformatton, which prints up to 150 printable characters m a improve the willingness and Ward said television media write to CGA, Room 126, Memorial Union. variety of font styles. It works in a number of DEC ability to communicate," Breen have unique problems. Law operating system environments for both word said. enforcement officials don't un­ SUMMER HORSEBACK RIDING SIGN-UP: processing and graphics software packages. Thurs­ Mosseau said the meeting was derstand that a camera is ne­ Sponsored by Animal Science Department. Open day, April 25, stoke Classroom, 1:30, 2:30 and 3:30 intended to benefit both sides. cessary, he said. to faculty, staff, graduate and under~raduate. Credit p.m. "It's beneficial for law en­ "When you only visit a com­ or non credit. $75 special fee due at sign-up. Tuesday, GENERAL forcement April 16, Light Horse Classroom, to get some insight munity one or two times a year, 8 a,m. See DCE SUMMER JOBS: Sponsored by Office of St~d nt from the summer catalog (non-credit section) for info on 7 press and vice versa," sometimes people get nervous Activities/Job Board. Check out the huge hstmg he said. times or call 862-1171. of summer jobs and uptight," he said. "We can at the Student Job Board, East­ Mosseau West Lounge in the MUB. said he expressd accomodate each other," he said. CATHOLIC STUDENT ORGANIZATION MO­ concerns about the way the press VIE SERIES: "An Officer and a Gentleman." CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED: The Depart­ j ', . . ~ Wednesday, April 17, Catholic Student Center, ment of Recreational sports is looking for people ,------6 Madbury Lane, 7:30 p.m. Free. with specializations in arts and crafts, aquatics; \ · TASk TIP OF THE DAY \ LECTURE & SLIDE PRESENTATION - nature, music, drama, sports and small crafts to CHURCHES IN EASTERN EUROPE INCLUD­ work as counselors at Camp Wildcat, a day camp l When you take an exam, start by reading the directions l ING THE SOVIET UNION: Presented for children age 6 to 11. Camp by Reve­ runs from June 24- \ and loo.king the test rend Christoph Schmauch. Sponsored by N ati~nal August 4, weekdays from ~:30 a.~. to 4 p.m. ~t over before beginning to answer ~ Slavic Honor Society. Reverend Schmauch 1s a the UNH Field House. For mformatton, call Berne \ the questions. ~ minister of the United Church of Christ, executive Donovan, 2-20~ 1...... ~._,,,...,,,,....,....,....,,,,...,...... ,...__....,...... ,...... __...... __...__....__....__...~ ...... director of world Fellowship and a member qf the Europe Committee of the National Council of WUNH FUNDRAISING MARATHON: Fun­ Churches. He has traveled frequently throughout draising events, giveaways, conte~ts, prizes? fun! SUMMER JOBS Eastern Europe. Thursday, April 18, Hillsbo­ Live Ramones in MUB PUB, Friday, April 12; Cape Cod and the islands of Nantucket and Martha's rough/Sullivan Room, Memorial Scruffy the Cat & Cyclones, at Union, 7 p.m. Stone Church, Vineyard have more good Saturday, April 13. 91.3 on your FM Dial. paying jobs open to students "NEW GAMES": Sponsored by New Hampshire and teachers this summer than ever before. Most require Outing Club. Everyone is invited to a day of "N7w LUNCH ON US: Sponsored by Non-traditional no previnus experience. Games" on the lawn between T-Hall and Demeritt. Student Center. Please bring your own beverage. There are no employment fees. You have to play to understand Tuesday, April the games. Dress 30, Underwood House, 17 Rosemary For further info on the many kinds of jobs for play, stay as long as you can, a~d bring a water Lane, noon. For more information, call 862-3647. available bottle if you'd like. Saturday, Apnl 20 from 12:30 and how to apply send a LONG self-addressed to 4 p.m. Sign up outside Room 129, NHOC Office, UNIVERSITY ART GALLERIES: 5 X 5: Contem­ STAMPED envelope today to: MUB or call them at 2-2145. porary Clay. John W. Hatch: 35 years. Through Cape Cod Summer Jobs May 1. Gallery hours: Monday -Friday 10-4, Box WEEKEND BIKING TOUR "RIVERS OF CEN­ Thursday 10-8, Saturday and Sunday 1-5, Closed 594, Room 90 TRAL VERMONT": Sponsored by New Hamp- Friday. Barnstable, MA 02630

University Theater THE UNH DANCE THEATER COMPANY Annual Concert Directed by Larry Robertson, Jean Brown, Gay Nardone Johnson Theater Paul Creative Arts Center University of New Hampshire Durham April 4-6 at 8 p.m. April 10 at 2 p.m. April 11-13 at 8 p.m. Preview: April 3 at 8 p.m. General: $4 UNH Students/Employees/ Alumni and Senior Citizens: $3 Preview: $1 Reservations: (603) 862-2290 _Dinner Theater Package-New England Center Restaurant THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE SEVEN- ·C~annel 11 floods c~used by frozen water pipes

By Karen Holbrook Director of Plant Maintenance mechanical difficulties of some "This is the third time that the current flood will help The New Hampshire Public and Engineering, the problem type." this particular unit has frozen prevent this fr_pm happening Television offices housed in the started with a heating unit The R.G. Vanderwheel com­ up," said Sanders. On December in the future. gener­ MUB have been plagued by which "froze."_ It is suspected, pany has been consulted and is 27 the unit froze and the pipes Ann Ramsey, assistant 11, said recent flooding. On March 19, Sanders said, that the unit froze currently working with the burst, flooding the studios of al manager of Channel during a .water pipes above Channel ll's sometime the night before the University to try and determine Channel 11 and damaging some the burst happened office workers offices broke for the second time burst. t~e cause of the malfunction. equipment. work day, so the up most of the and flooded the newly­ Sanders said no one is certain Sanders said that he is hoping This first accident was caused were able to soak she said, renovated off ices. exactly why the unit froze. He this will help prevent this type by someone leaving a window - water. It is unfortunate, under According to John Sanders, said he, "suspects a series of of incident in the future. open. "The guilty culprit was that the offices ate located never found", he said. all the pipes in the MUB. "This "The pipes are perfect," is no place for a TV station," Sanders said. "This is not any she said. Home toxins need disposal indication of any deterioration "All of the bills for repairs of the MUB." Sanders said he FLOODING, page 9 By Michelle Bolduc hones that findin_g the cause of_ "You can become directly involved in protecting the en­ vironment and frotecting hu­ man health," Bil Evans a State Waste Management official, told an audience Wednesday •• Thru April 19th •• night in Woodruff House (the environmental mini-dorm). The American public needs Fish & Chips Special to be made aware of the dangers of household hazardous wastes and the need for safe disposal 1 w/ beverage of these toxic substances, Evans $1. 99 said. Plus tax A short film produced by the League of Women Voters of Massachusetts said that the very products designed to make life easier for the consume.rs are ////// actually hazardous to our health. Products such as drain clean­ at Oyster-River Seafood ers, oven cleaners, furniture polish, anti-freeze, no-pest Also serving all your strips, paint thinner, lead and oil based paints, and insect sprays are potentially dangerous TAKE-- OUT FAVORITES to humans and the environ­ ment, the film warned. Now ... deep fried fresh in Durham Bill Evans, State Waste Management Official, addresses students 9 _Mad~UJY Rd ..868 _-1 ~ 77 CHEMICALS, page 22 in Woodruff last Wednesday.(Charles Smith Jr., photo)

Stop Monkeying-Around during your years on campus

1Get Into the Swfng of Thingsby-Joining your Hall Government

Positions include: Hall President, Vice President at Secretary, Treasurer, and "It's a Spring Fling other in-hall exec. board positions at Bloomin' Blood Drive" Benefits include dev~loping leadership and communication skills and meeting new and interesting peers. ~ on ~ Elections will be held soon. Check with your dorm officers for r,1ore Monday April 15th through information. April 19th . . Make a difference in your residence hall~ 10-3 MUB -

....: PAGE EIGHT . THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

VOL-UNTEER POSITIONS What is the Government (1985-86 Academic Year) doing to student loans, and - what can students do about UNIVERSITY JUDICIAL BOARD ·t? UNIVERSITY APPEALS BOARD · I • RESIDENTIAL JUDICIAL BOARD JUDICIAL ADVISER Watch STVN's UNIVERSITY TOPICS with special guest Bill Puglisi, Chairman - of Students for the University. applications: .. can be picked up at the Dean of Students Office Monday, 12:30 or at the Student Senate Office Seacoast Lounge, , contact: MUB Laurie Kroos or David Burr Dean of Students Office . 862-2050 For Additional Information

deadline: April 22, 1985

. student television network •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11.u.s.o. · presents in the UNH MUB PUB DOUBLE f EA TURE MOVIE NJ_GHT! ! ! • SA TU RDA Y, APRIL /3th

• • WOOl)STOCK SHOWTIME 7:30pm • • • • • and •

NO NUKES SHOWTIME 9:30am

- Don't Miss Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Crosby, Stills • and Nash, Ario Guthrie, The Who and More!! - Fulltime Undergraduates $2.00 Others $5.00

e MUST BE 18 OR OLDER: UNH ID/PROOF OF AGE REQUIRED • • ' ' .• ·················································································································•··• THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE NINE

-----RISKY BUSINESS-- (continued from page 5) America said. ed by the government in resonse "To become literate means to successful programs in neigh­ more than just learning to read boring Nicarag1=1a, in which a and write. It means becoming few government officials pock­ aware of you-r history," Sabio eted all the funds. said. "(The literacy campaign) only In Honduras, where 60 per­ took place in areas where they cent of the population is illi­ had lost the elections," Sabio terate, history consisists largely said. of "the interests of the big being "Teachers in Honduras want protected at the expense of the peace, and the right to work, poor." he said. land, housing, and tortillas," "An educated people cannot he said. be misled," Sabio said, explain­ "We do· not want the peace ing why te

Cool Aid we listen, we care

Come be a part of Durham/UNff s 6th Annual CROP Walk for Hunger! The ten mile walk will be held April 14, at 1 :00 p.m., starting in front of Wolff House (across the street from Tin Palace).

CROP is the name givef_l to local community hunger education and fund raising events sponsored by Church World Service, an international relief, development, and refugee resettlement agency of more than 30 Protestant and Orthodox communions in the U.S. Nearly 90¢ out of every dollar raised by CROP goes to programs overseas and here at home. Want en help? Call Campus ministry at 862-1165 or the Catholic Student Center at 862-1310.

·Walk or Sponsor a Walker! "',--~b .'i'1'~L,_JJtLL~.Jl'M.. :,U. .,.,J.iU:. ~,,, _:_ JITT@•·--: ~q-; PAGE TEN

THE ARMY ROTC 2-YEAR PROGRAM. UP TO _$1,000 A YEAR PLUS A COMMISSION.

BASIC FACTS Army ROTC Basic Camp Purpose Army ROTC provides military training to qualify students to enroll in advanced officer training at their college campuses. Participation in this training entails no military obligation. _ Location Fort Knox, Ky., 35 miles south of Louisville. Time The camp lasts for approximately 6 weeks. There are several training cycles available during the summer. Training a. Army Histroy, Rok & Mission b. Map Reading/Land Navigation · c. Rifle Marksmanship d. Leadership Techniques e. Physical Training f. Individual & Unit Tactics g. Communication h. _First Aid i. Drill, Parades & Ceremonies j. Military Courtesy & Traditions .&}'._ If you passed up Army ROTC during your first two years of college, you can Approximately $600 plus travel expenses. enroll in our 2---year program before you start your last two. Room & Board Your training will start the summer after your sophomore year at a six-week Lodging and meals are provided. Students will live in open bay barracks. Army ROTC Basic Camp. Scholarships It'll pay off, too. You'll earn over $600 for attending Basic Camp and up to Camp students may compete for 2-year full-tuition college scholarships. $ 1000 a year for your last two years of college. But, more important, you'll be on your way to earning a commission in today's Step Out Of-Camp With Army-which includes the Army Reserve and Army National Guard-while you're An ROTC Scholarship earning a college degree. Last year Army ROTC awarded over 450 scholarships to college students ARMY ROTC. who successfully completed the six week Basic Camp Fort Knox, Kentucky. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. Competition for these scholarships was keen. Winners had to prove that they possessed qualification to become an effective Army officer. Contact: Leadership potential is very important factor to be considered for selection. Major Kevin Campbell. Army ROTC Scholarships provide for tuition·, on campus laboratory Find out about our six-week summer camp fees, student activity fees, health fees, transcript fee, graduation fee, a Call 862-1078 flat rate allowance for books and $100 per month up to ten mon°ths each or visit Zias Hall Room 203. year the scholarship is in effect. Students interested in more information about Army ROTC Scholarships INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE should visit the Professor of Military Science on their campus. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

------PARKIN.G------

to park in areas already desig­ people work," said Bill in ref­ which had a part in approving · Scharff said there were issues No one knew precisely when nated for parking, east of the erence to the $40 fee. · the plan, said the new spaces he felt weren't addressed suf­ the parking plan will be com­ tracks, as well as allow them to "Now, if I want to take the consist mainly of paving the as ficiently by Miller's plan: park­ pletely approved by the univer­ use the Kari-Van. Kari-Van to work, I can't during yet unpaved portions of A lot, ing for the handicapped, park­ sity. Lois Bill, a member of the spring break," said Bill, "I have and probably restriping and ing in front of the Paul Creative Arthur Grant, secretary of the Operating Staff Council (OSC) to pay for a sticker anyway. Why repaving existing parking spa­ Arts Center, and what to do University System, said "a fee which approved the plan and not drive in all the time?" ces east of the tracks. about those who would have to for student parking and other represents University staff paid - Hopefully the $40 parking Scharff called the plan "the pay the fees but hadn't contrib­ fees ... would be recommended hourly, explained the reason · permit that will allow people most positive suggestion that uted to the parking problems. to the Board of Trustees on behind the different fees. to use the Kari-Van would make we've had so far." Bill identified these people April 20 as part of the recom­ Bill said the smaller fee for people use the buses and thereby Neal Kennedy, a member of as third shift (9 p.m. to 4 a.m.) mendations of the Finance and A lot parking would be an eliminate parking problems, the OSC agreed to the consensus University staff and students Budget Committee." incentive to park there. said Bill. among members of committees who arrived after eight a.m. Grant said Vice President of The shuttle would trans port The plan also called for an involved in approving.the plan, Bill said that the OSC found Research and Financial Affairs students and payers of either ·additional 200 parking spaces that the plan was accepted with 8 a.m. to be the most difficult Lennard Fisk, explained yester­ fee to their classes or jobs, and to be built west of the railrnad reservation. time to find parking, and that day to the Board of Trustees the would also be an incentive to tracks, with efforts to find more Kennedy said the Kari-Van the OSC suggested to Miller that purpose of those fees and how those weary of a twenty minute spaces east of the tracks. still won't make a profit under students coming on campus they are related to the Kari-Van. walk, to park in.A lot, said Bill. Thomas Scharff, chairman of rhe proposed plan and that "'if afrer this rime as well as nighc GJ.cuH :)d..lU the boo.rd .13 not "There are times that the the Professional Administrative it hasn't so far, why should it workers should not have to pay ready to comment. Kari-Van just doesn't run when and Technical (PAT) council change_?" the full $40 fee.

\ --BOOM!-- (cominue_d from page 4) Hey Seniors! Only 43 days until graduation!! time now; it shouldn't disrupt the routes and scheduling. The buses will be moved to , what is supposed to be the new 1 · permanent location, said Coffey. "They'd be kept up at the garage building off of Route 4," she said, but a long-term commit­ tment hasn't been made yet. "I imagine they (the build­ ings) will be bulldozered out," said Devito. Asbestos will be bagged before removal. The $12,000,090 science build­ ing project, contracted out to Harvey Construction of Man­ chester, is now underway. "It's very exciting-certain to be a nice addition to the University," said Devito. The projected completion date is August 1986. --SLAVE- (continuea from page 4) Studies Instructor Kare Lincoln. "The message implicit in this poster is anti-feminist and anti­ black, no matter how it is trivilized," Lincoln said. Junior English major Jim O'Laughlin also thinks the poster can be derogatory to women and blacks. "It's obvious it's a joke," O'Laughlin said. "But it's very tongue-in-cheek and sounds demeaning. If they' re trying to get attention, why do it this way? There are too many negative ideas when you first hear it and see the pictures," he said. "The whole thing was pretty innocent," Burns said. "We may have slipped up. We hope people look beyond the discre­ tions of the poster and come to the slave auction. We want it to be a good time." EveryTI calculator comes with

~ ------·--·~ one extra number. , ~ THf YARN BASKET ~ I FBEE IINlfflNG ADVICE ! 1-800-TI-CARES for our customers ~ operations, or service questions, Of course, theres just one KNITTING WORKSHOPS ~ .When you buy a Texas . Instruments calculator you · call us Monday thru Friday catch. It has to be a Texa5 Beginners Workshop j. don't just buy a calculator, ·YOU between 9 am and 4 pm CST, Instruments calculator. But April 14 and 21 l buy Texas Instruments' coin..: and we'll be glad to help. then, if you're as smart as we 1:00pm to 5:00pm I mitment to quality. - . · If your calculator needs think you are, why wouldn't Call or stop by Its a commitment backed repairing, we'll direct you to it be? for details! \ by a fully developed service one of our 46 conveniently NATURAL FIBER YARNS i network that includes the located service centers for an Wools, cottons, silks, mohair, ~ above toll,free number you can immediate exchange. Under blends, ribbon yarn & more ~ TEXAS ♦ call from anyplace in the warranty, it's free. If there's no ~ PATTERNS A-PLENTY i INSTRUMENTS United States. center near you, we'll do it all Creating useful products St. (off Market St.) ~ i 18 Ladd If you have any applications, by mail. and services for you. ~ Portsmouth 431-9301 ~ PAGE TWELVE THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 The Nicl1e Coffeel1ouse An Entertainment Alternative presents April 13th • •

Room 7L Devine Hall 8 p.m. - 12 midnight Free Admission

Funded by PFO

If so, before Pre-Registration and before you get a summer job, come to SPECIAL SERVICES' GRAD SCHOOL · ADVISING WORKSHOP Tues., April 16, 12:30-2 Stoke 35D

In addition, it you are one of the 800 plus UNH students who are first generation college students AND low-income OR have a physical handicap or learning disability, you may be eligible for these additional services and information: -Audio tapes, manuals, and software for preparing for grad school admissions tests -individualized counseling and advising from a Graduate School Mentor -referr al to other on-campus resources

For further information, drop by Richards House, 1st Floor or call 862-3698. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE THIRTEEN

------CONTRAS------(continued from page S) Opening Soon political science professor and group for becoming involved, under in Central America. You UNH Committee on Central but that they were showing him can't create a revolution unless ..------.____. II ie d Services---,-. America (CCA) member, ex­ "one side of the story." people want it," UNH graduate pressed doubts about the legi­ He said he thought the San­ Chris Murphy said. Millroad Shopping Plaza, Durham NH timacy of the Contras. dinistas were already Marxist­ Although Smith said there "Instead of associating itself Leninists, intent on exporting was little point in arguing about 868-1011 · with progresssive change, the revolution to other Central the issue, he repeatedly asked Complete Packaging and Shipping US is associating itself with a American nations. the group in a loud voice "Can repressive and atrocious regime As evidence, Smith read from you accept a Marxist-Leninist ome Video Rental of the past. All the top com­ a US State Department docu­ Communist regime in Central manders are former members ment ·titled "Commandante America?" .of Somoza's National Guard," Bayardo Arce's Secret Speech He said he felt very strongly he said. Before the Nicaraguan Socialist about his position in favor of Burt Cohen, from the Sea­ Party," saying it showed clearly aid to the Contras. "If money Help Wanted: Mama Leone's coast Progressive committee, that "there is a communist to the rebels will .prevent com­ voiced concern that in support­ Marxist-Leninist movement munism from taking over Cen­ ing the contras the US is forcing intrenched in Nicaragua." tral America, let's have it," he Mama Leone's, Hampton Beaches BUSIEST Restaurant Nicaragua towards the Soviet "It's a speech by one person, said. is opening for it's 11th season and we need WAITERS, Union. not a policy," Wlirth said about CJiff -Wirth ~~icl ht> was "very WA TTRF.SSF.S, BUS PEOPLE. COOKS and BAR­ "If the Kremlin gives them the document. pleased" with the meeting. "We TENDERS. Come spend the summer with us. Highest "You don't export poverty, had no intention of making an pencils and paper, while we send earnings, great hours and a lot of fun. them bombs and bullets, which political repression, or the instant impact. We see this as way will they go?" he asked. conditions that peasants live a long-term plan," he said. Taking interviews Saturday and Sunday Smith said he respected the April 13th, 14th and 20th, 21st. ·~..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r.,cr..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r1 10 a.m.-2 p.m. I Come join Tanique and j I The Speak Easy for our I I BEACH p ARTY I § . 8 Cooperative ·Alliance For Seacoast Transportation f Wear Your Favorite Summer Attire ~ § *Weekend Getaway Give away I § and many more prizes § ATTENTION COAST/ C'Kari·Van,) PASSENGERS § Friday April, 12th § g._..-o--..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..r✓.x.~ GETTING ON OR OFF THE BUSES IN DOVER AT LOCUST STREET STOPS ) ------·------·------·-----·------~ ~ _, ~ Please note that due to construction work on Locust Street, l'Kari·Van,)_ l. ,.\~ ! Lower Square/Miracle Mile buses will not turn left on Locust Street, I ~~-ud.... I but will continue on Central Avenue with stops at Summer Street and . ~ Prescott Farm_s. The bus will turn left on Hale Street to Locust and continue ~ ~ the regular route. The Miracle Mile/Lower Square bus will reverse ~ ~- the same route. This change will continue untU construction is completed. ~ ~ ! All Natural Fruit Juices ! ~ ~ ·t ~ Gettin.o Around is 1 now featuring: Strawberry/Apple i ~ r sm·ooth Sailing ~ Raspberry Royale 1 Transportation . BuHding • University of New Hampshire ~ Durham, NH 03824 . (603)862-1931 l Apple Crisp ! lAlso: falafel pouches, syrians ! 1 and grinders I m l salads, fruit and desserts I • M.U.S.O. film series presents ... ~ ~ ■ ~ ~ ■ ■ It Happeried One Night i Located between T-Hall, Murkland and ~ ■ I the library. I ■ I Open 10:4~am to 1:30pm ~ Sunday April 14, 1985 ■ . .,,,,,.. ..,...... ,.....,. . ...,,,,,,,...,,...,,..,,._....,..___..~._,.....,..~~.._...... ~~...-..._... ~ ■ 7:00 and 9:30 ■ ·············································~ ■ in the Strafford Room i ROCK BOTTOM RECORDS! ■ • • • in the MUB ■ •: 29 Congress Street Portsmouth N.H. ;• ■ · ■• •• ■ • • ■ fulltime Undergrads: $1.00 : Featuring, ; Others: $2.00 ■ • • ■ :• *"Everybody Wants •; ■ : To Rule The World"; ■ •; and "Sh~ut."• :• ■ • • ■ . This comedy classic with Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert • • is about a Runaway heiress who falls in love with a renegade ■ : $5.95 : ■ • • newspaper reporter. Their misadventures on the road are still as ■ • ■ • hilarious as ever. ■ •; Record and Cassette :• • • I I I I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • la I ■ I ■■ I ■■■■■■ PAGE FOURTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

»#H>#H#4~~H#H~>#H#4~,...... ,...>ff##,4~ ------ELECTION------\ • (continued from page I) Professional married couple wish to .Please contact adopt a newborn. Will pay all Robert Bossie, 440 Hanover St. when people come in contact sophomore Hope Halleck, out what the deadlines are. medical, legal & counseling expenses. Manchester, NH (603) 668-2222 with real issues, they react," proxy for Campbell at the Ethier said she couldn't be­ Campbell said. counting of the votes. lieve what Campbell was saying "Something has to be said Campbell said he ran because about the lack of communica­ when the only name on the he felt issues were being ig­ tions between senators and ballot only claims half the vote," nored. He said he hopes Ethier students. "He doesn't know V rountas said. He said the fact and Foy will take his issues into what he's talking about when that Ethier won with 616 votes consideration and react posi­ it comes to that," she said. on a campus with 10,000 stu­ tively. Senators usually communicate dents shows how detatched the He said he felt the election student senate actions to stu­ Student Senate is from the deadlines hadn't been publicized dents through house councils. student body. enough outside the senate office. 'Tm just glad the election is "It shows that students won't Foy said if a student was inter­ over .. .I'm ready to get down to react.to issues unless they are ested in running, they should business," Foy said. hit in the face with it," said go by the senate office and find WOMEN'S SCREAMS ------EVOLUTION------ARE NOT SILENT ( continued from page 3) which slowly surface through gene," said Gould. That is, the architect~~al by-product of such generations. structure and characteristics of a change. Gould said the changes occur the genetic material may en­ It takes thousands of years as mutations on the order of 50 hance. mutations and variations. for an organism to evolve, said The film The Silent Scream purposefully ma­ percent or more in a population. Just as the circuits of a com­ Gould. "What's more, they only But their effects "are a vast pool puter are capable of either hang around for a mere 26 nipulates the reality of a·bortion by focusing beneath the surface of what ringing up the grocery bill or million years before becoming exclusively on the fetus and by making inaccurate really counts, since they won't facilitating the launch of the naturally 'extinct', moving on a-nd distorted medical claims. It seeks to remove be visible for many genera­ space shuttle, so also may the to the next stage of develop­ tions." genetic material of living or­ ment." women entirely from the issue. It is WOMEN Many of the variations which ganisms be capable of "pro­ "Which means," said Gould who are the victims of rape and incest, WOMEN occur in the process of evolution gramming" different events. smiling, "that humans only have are now being seen as "promot­ Said Gould, "The human about 13 million years left." whose lives are deeply and irrevocably aff~cted ed by the architecture of the brain may after all be the by pregnancy, WOMEN who suffer because a couple did not ~se birth control. ----HAZING---- Rape Myths

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a condominium village *GIGANTIC SELECTION* $67,900 •FAST, FAST SERVICE• FILL OUT THE COUPON BELOW AND MAIL TODAY! sales office on site • open 6 days, 11 am to 5 pm • ~onday by TO: MUSIC BY MAIL-17 WEST 8TH ST., NEW YORK, N.Y. 10011 appointment• (603) 742-8303 • market€:~ ~xclus1vely by Norwood Realty New Homes D1v1s1on ------SEND ME THESE FREE CASSETTE CATALOGS:--- DROCK- .-.----□ SOUL □JAZZ--- CN 1 □ SHOWS AND VOCALS DC&W □ REGGAE □ OLDIES □ LATIN AND SALSA I 1 NAME ______TYPE OF CASSETTE 1 1I PLAYER YOU OWN: 1 .ADDRESS______I I L------. ZIP ------~ THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE FIFTEEN ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ • •i : Pre-Pre-Registration • • •: .: Ad••••••••••••••••.... vising Session .,. • • • • • :• Undeclared S.tudents: : :• ·················•·· :• • • :• F acuity and staff from different departments : : will be available to answer questions about : majors. : : course selection and • • • • •• ••••••••••• ·• .• • • • • •: Hillsborough-Sullivan Room in the : : MUB : • • .• --~ .• • • • ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ • • • • • • • • • i Monday and Tuesday i : April 15th - 16th : : from 12:00 - 12:30 :• • • • • • • .• ...... ~ \ .• • • • ·- • . (2-1494) : : For more info. call Student Senate office • or Senator Kathleen Seger (2-1677) • .• ' \ .• ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥• PAGE SIXTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 Editorial· Irrational rationale

The letter reproduced with nately this letter lacks reasoning. expects to collect any money their own and others' mistakes. this editorial was intended· by In fact it's a compilation of from the fee. Would it not make A student who watches a friend its author to "explain the rati­ administrative 'mumbo jumbo.' sense simply to eliminate the fee, cast adrift through negliget1ce onale" behind the increased fee In the fourth paragraph the since it is something that will will learn. ·for dropping courses. U nfortu- Registrar states that she never never be necessary anyway? Seniors will be particularly · If the aim of the Registrar's vulnerable to this kind of "get Office is to make students more tough" policy but if students have responsible, why not let them not become responsible and suffer the consequences of not organized enough to establish filing add/ drop cards on time? their priorities, it might serve Make them stick the course out them well to spend the extra time With regard to the necessity at the university to complete the of the fee for the "few students course they missed. who simply neglect the add deadlines, it is clear that some Finally, the fifth paragraph sort of encouragement is neces­ of this letter deserves attention. sary to make students comply The reasoning, that because with deadlines. But here again fewer students would end up the consequence of their neglect, paying under the new system, i.e. not being allowed to drop those who did pay could afford courses, is the most effective and to pay more is flawed at best. The appropriate way to ensure that hardship involved in bear.ing a students comply. - burden is only felt by those forced If a student knows that with to carry it. This kind of reasoning a $25 check he can buy his way seems to ir:nply that only those through a petition, he will not students financially well-off will necessarily be any more respon­ be negligent in meeting the sible. If however, a student deadline established. realizes that not meeti-ng the A patronizing and flawed deadline for adding and dropping letter from an administrator at courses will result in no change the University does not make in his schedule, he will make the a ridiculous situation any better. deadline. Nor does it solve the problem. Instead of using meager A serious and straightforward amounts of cash as a meaningless response with a logical approach attempt to enforce policies, the would. Perhaps the Registrar Registrar would do well to could take this idea to the Aca­ establish deadlines, set the cut demic Standards and Advising off date and leave the students Committee as well as t·he Pres­ to make their choices. If they ident's Cabinet and rework the choose to be irresponsible let logic in it. Surely among all of them live with their choice. They the highly educated and profi­ are unlikely to make the same cient people in these prestigious mistake twice. bodies there are some who can This type of policy will be make a policy that i; fair, logical more effective than any other and straightforward. This is a that could be implemented, for fine University and it deserves one reason. Students learn from better than this. Letters

the majority of students," then why did the majority of students vote The __ New-Hampshire Fauske for Davis and Eynon? The state­ Blood drive ment is obviously false. If the JAMES M. MILLARD, Editor-in-Chief statement was true, Davis and Eynon would not currently be KEVIN MORSE, Managing Editor MEG BAKER, Managing Editor To the Editor: To the Editor: KRIS SNOW, News Editor KEN FISH, News Editor Stude·nt Body President and Vice STEVE LANGEVIN, Sports Editor I am writing to express my Spring will really PATRICIA O'DELL, Features Editor President. blossom as our CHARLES SMITH JR., Photo Editor DAVID DR,9UIN, Photo Editor extreme disgust with the Forum "It's a Spring Fling" opens its doors article "The Lessons of '84," which on Monday, April 15th and you BILL PILCHER, Business Manager appeared in the Friday, April 5, The current administration has beautiful ones give a "Spring JED EVANS, Advertising Manager 1985 issue of The New Hampshire. accomplished a great deal. The Bouquet" through Friday April 19th Mr. Fauske's article has no basis shuttle bus, which is scheduled to from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day at in reality. He states the current be installed next year, will help the MUB. Advertlllng Auoclatn Ann 1-'umphrey Diana Frye Catarina DeCarvalho administration "must surely be the alleviate the parking problem. A cancellation of a drive last week Lon Norris Lisa ~·adden Beth Gideon Jen Vornberger most incompetent student admin­ There will be additional lounge Timothy S. Gernhard Peter Crocker Chns Heisenbeg Lisa Sinatra makes this drive even more impor­ Asal. Bualnen Mgr. Gina Cardi Julie Hanauer Marc T. Micciche istration for several years." How­ space available next year, which tant and we are urging regular and Mary Fischer Steph&nie Norton Amy Just Thom Mrozek Clrculatlon Manager Kim Rucc1a Michel Lafantano Mike Fogarty ever he fails to cite one incident will lessen the study space problem. new donors to help us achieve our Doug Ridge Kristin Lilley Jen Locke Neil lngerman of incompetence. Mr. Fauske The voter registration drive was Copy Readers Ellen Neav1tt Nancy Miller Andrea Holbrook goal of 1200 pints! Ged Olson Brenda Byrne Diane Mulline Jim Bumpus charges that Davis and Eynon very succesful. Although the stu­ As I was driving along the other Bart Griffin Photographers Diana Meader James Bacon Scott Colby Bob Arser.ault 8111 Milhos Francoise von Trapp refused to discuss issues. Perhaps dents running for selectman did day, I heard the soul searching Jon Kinson Kim Economos Erika Randmere Technical Supervisors Mr. Fauske was doing too much not win, the voter registration and Edltorlal A.. 1,tanl Karen Hartnett J. Barry Mothes Susan Bowen "We are the World." There was so Donna LaRue Gretchen Hekker Deborah Van Winkle Karla Hoppler talking and not en_ough listening, the student interest in town govern­ much in it that reminded me of our New, Briefs Editor Charles Smith Jr Leigh Hope Typists Andrea Holbrook Dave Sanborn Kim Platt Lori Ellis because the Davis-Eynon platform ment is certainly a productive start. student· friends and applied to the Forum Editors Robin Stieff Catherine Rosenquist Mane Goulet addressed student concerns such William Smith Brook Tart Mike Riley Chris Head responsibility you assume each time. Julie Hanauer Debby Yale MaLreen O'Neil Karla Hoppler as the campus parking problem, You, too, are always eager to do Graphic Manager Production A11i1lan\1 Sue Mudgett Kathy Johnson It is probably for the best that Jill Vranicar Darnel McKelvey Vera Mouradian Jamie McDermott the drop date problem, the study your share for a better life. Your Graphic A11l1lant1 Linda Cox Bill Pilcher Lisa Sinatra the defeated team did not win the Elisa Russell Staff Reporters Suzanne Fortesque Susan Bowen space problem, as well as other Red Cross will again be proud as Susan L Moulton Ed Garland Michelle Bolduc student concerns. election and "returned to their you "Plant Life" for another some­ Marcus Benotti I W Glenn Stevens Chris Felix original occupation, journalism," Sue Slater Reporters Cathy Mccarron If the winners "were elected by where in our small part of our Lynn Johnson Consuelo Congreve Tom Lane a minority interest of because Mr. Fauske desperately ·He1d1 llhngsworth Jed Evans Dan G1ll1s students world. Jarry Stearns Bruce Plumley Steve Claramentaro Karen Holbrook whose aims seldom coincide with, needs the practicP - . . Heidt Ka1ter Annamaria Form1chella Dave Olson Tracy. M. Cronm indeed often contradict, those of Your Durham Red Cross Student Senator Blood Chairwoman THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE SEVENTl:.t.,. University Forum Beyond War: A New Way of Thinking By Pascal Molineaux

"The unleashed power of the atom has changed For the first time, a species has the capability prevented wars, or even slowed down the arms everything sive our modes of thinking and we thus of destroying itself and its life support system. Our race, because mankind has not yet come:to terms drift toward unparalleled catastophe." thinking, however, has not yet caught up with this with the unprecented destructive potential of nuclear Albert Einstein, 1946. reality. In order to survive, we must change our weapons and the newly discovered fragility of life California, 1982, a small group of individuals mode of thinking. This change requires knowledge, on earth. . appalled at an arms race which seemed to go nowhere decision, and action. Russel Scweickart, th~ lunar module pilot for and swallowed greater and greater amounts of scarce According to Carl Sagan (Astronomer, Cornell the Apollo 9 earth orbital flight in March 1969 resources, and deeply moved by Carl Sagan's University), a ."limited" nuclear war with only 5- wrote: "Nuclear Winter" model, decided that a fundamental 10% of the superpowers arsenals being used could "It is so small and so fragile and such a precious change in our "modes of thinking" was essential drastically affect global climate, putting mankind's little spot in that universe that you can block it in the lopg run if mankind was to survive. We have survival in jeopardy. Nuclear war, if it ever was out with your thu.qib, and you realize that on that to move be_yond an old mind set to a new way of · allowed to occur, could well be a holocaust mankind sma:ll spot, that little blue and white thing is thinking. may not survive. every_thing _that means anything to you." In today's world, any war, however far removed, It is an image we have to learn to live with, a very meaningful image. The vital interests of the worl~ of all huµian beings (including yourself!) and all living organisms are at stake here. We are. ~11 worl? citizens, W?Y is it that so many forget it so easily? We are first and foremost citizens of ...... ·, ,,.,.,,,,,., .. -:-·•.·.--···.·...... ·.· ·--··--········--· ...... ,,,,...... i\\' t :'::::: (Jf,,:::: t :i:\ ,,,,/:::: :~1~~~ :::,,,:::, ,,::: :~t:~~~if~i!~~~~~r:trr~~f =~;rz:~~~sf would be no winners, only one earth. We therefore ..no losers. have a common ground ?pon which to build understanding and trust. The image of the earth as a fragile blue * •• and white spot 1. n•i~~,:~i,~~i~f~!1i~~~ti~1;::::::e::::::: in the wide universe, when 50,000 nuclear warheads are poised for destruction, is an image which should and must move us all to action. Beyond War defines the new way of thinking 1:,:1,,_ as: 1:,,':., ,,,:,·,:,i:.:.· ftremendous!:~1~!! destructive ~!~~~?.Tt:~:r~~ii:~t;.r;;tf power that using it against . "We must now identify with all humanity, all an "enemy" could well mean suicide in a slow and ltfe, the whole earth. 'fhis expanded identification r painful way, if the "enemy" does not retaliate, and is the new mode of thinking." This struck home. I am lucky in that I grew up in -ar:i international environment where a passport was Just a _formality, nationality nothing to be proud i ~Ifl:nf g;F1~~i~lA~;1i~i ;1;iII[~!~~1~ of. Born 10 one country, living in another, with \:ll Ino lfongerhoffer any _gua~antee of inchrea~ed s.ecurity. my parents from yet two other countries and now n act t e opposite is true: eac time a new studying in a fifth country, how could I possibly development takes place in the arms race, each identify with only one nation, one set of people? time research comes up with a more "efficient" At school, each of my classmates came from a weapon, the security of all nations decreases. different country, with a different culture and ethnic r:t: Increased spending and research in new weapons background. How could I identify with only a limited sys~ems and fantasmagorical "star wars" defense, part of the greater human family? This would have while the real challenges of the future reach crisis b~en as incoherent for me as identifying myself levels, is not only a vast sink of resources and human with mr mother, ignoring any relationship I might intelligence, not only a vast monument to irration­ have with my father, brothers, cousins, aunts and ality, it is symptomatic of an old way of thinking, uncles, grandparents, friends ... threatening our very survival. An old way of thinking Man is supposed to be intelligent. More so than that has brought us to where we are today. How any other living organism. Sometimes, I can't help high are the superpowers going to build their walls? but wonder. My heart bleeds when I hear mankind How thick? How many more brain cells will have is spending much less to protect itself against all been sacrified to more ghastly weapons before we diseases and natural disasters combined than on forget we all live on the same, small earth? Children "protecting" itself against its own kind (R.L. Sivard, are dying of malnutrition and hunger every second 1980.) Why do both superpowers have, between on this earth, as the walls keep getting higher and them, close to 3 tons of T.N.T.-equivalent of thicker. But are those walls really buying security? explosive power per child, woman and man on For whom? . this earth, more explosive power th~n food? Yet, The superpowers, ignoring the reality of nuclear addicted to an old way of thinking, both continue weapons, continue in a frantic race to outdo, sto~k piling at the rate of 3 nuclear warheads a day, outspend, and outwaste each other, stockpiling while yet more children are dying, imploring for nuclear and conventional weapons beyond any help. reasonable definition of "deterrence." Why are Technology today has made the world so small they so addicted to a race beyond reason and logic, one may see Ethiopian children crying for food blind to the absurdity of their behavior? The United on the T.V. screen, in your lounge, or pick up a Nations, by providing aninternational forumfor phone and speak to. a friend half a world away. The dialogue was intended to prevent war. However a dialogue between nation states defining national security in very narrow, pre-nuclear ways, is bound BEYOND WAR, page 9 to be one of empty words. The U.N. has not

Acting Up By Kris•Snow

All kids get in trouble, but when Amy One does, of course, have to first something, the way Amy Carter be­ That doesn't m.ean every student should believe Carter does it, she does it right. in something. It's pretty tough liev~s. apartheid is wrong, or UNH head for Washington to m_arch on the If her most recent scrape is .., any to take a risk if the biggest issue in your Coalmon for Peace and Disarmament South African Embassy; it doesn't even life is whether indication, Amy doesn't $top at just to have Captain Crunch members believe nuclear war is wrong, m~an ~hey shoul~ all join CDP. They staying out too late, or forgetting to ar Frosted Flakes for breakfast. Even they c~n take_risks, even get in trouble, might Just pay a lmle attention to kids if clean her room-no, she gets in real it's a more significant decision, like knowrng their motives aren't entriely like Amy Carter, who at 17 did what trouble, the kind more· kids should get whether or not to go out on a wee­ selfish. manywiU never do. I think i will. knight, or whether to drink two into. But how many people out there Amy Carter's arrest hasn't changed pitchers or three, or even whether or believe Amy was protesting apartheid pol­ in somthing strongly enough my outlo~k on life, she simply not to drop a class, the risk really caught icies in front of the South African only to do what Amy did? -Are they willing fl!Y eye with her law-breaking involves the single person taking activity. Embassy in Washington this week, it. to admit how they feel, or do they not But she caught it long enough for me No one else really cares what form feel when she was handcuffed and carted of at all?- I don't really know the to start wondering if I would have done sugar you eat at 7 a.m. or answer; maybe away for getting too close to the how drunk no one does. the same thing when I was her age, you can get, or whether you take embassy. As it turns out, she was 12 A lot of people at UNH are busy. or even if I'd do it now. I think I might­ or 16 credits. The problem is, people released, but that doesn't really matter. They have classes and homework and but I probably wouldn't ask permission What does matter is that Amy took think others really care, and they stall jobs and friends to think about~ But from my father. a chance ( even if she did ask her father's arid they complain, and they act like there must be room in their busy minds permission beforehand) the result could affect the rest of their to think about issues like apartheid because she ·lives. believed in something. · ~nd nuclear wa~, and hopefully there f e-rhaps more people should give _ Take comfort, kids. It won't. is some room 10 their schedules to But when people really believe in display some of what they're thinking. it a trv. Kris Snow has never been arrested PAGE EIGHTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

An entertainment alternative

· prese. . ,nts Lucie Therrien April 13th Room 71 Devine Hall - 8pm-12midnight Free Admission .· Funded by PFO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE NINETEEN Arts & features

i Noted poet speaks: analyzes own·work l -1 By Chris .Fauske . quent identification of his poe­ parent that underneath a rugged There are several ways to try with suffering. "My poems," exterior, both physically and approach the fine art of giving he sai?, "are really lovely. I try spiritually, Levine is a man a poetry reading. Poet Philip ~o write about homely things possessed of much sensitivity Levine who read in Parsons Hall rn a lovely way. People always and passion. last night subscribes to perhaps think they're harsh and gritty. Mekeal McBride, one of the the most effective of all them: That they comment at all is a two poets on the English faculty -· talking around the point. miracle. That's what my mother at UNH, introduced Levine, says." In between, he read a selec­ saying he makes the irrelevant tion of his poetry, mainly from seem relevant and the relevant his forthcoming book Free Will. very immediate. He carried it in unbound proof Levine reinforced this in his form, which "is very valuable. choice of reading. He read from If you put a binding on it, it's rrMy poems are really several shorter poems, "The worth $3.95." lovely. I try to write Present," "On My Own" and Levine began with "The "The Fox," all laced with a White Iris," a moving poem about homely things certain bitter humor, and a long about Detroit, where he grew in a lovely way." poem "A Walk with Tom Jef­ up, and-the perseverance of ferson." The latter is about a nature against various adver­ black man in burnt-out Detroit, sities-most of it inflicted by rather than his more famous rr.an. namesake. Yet with Levine, as with Wheq. he was young, Levine His mother is a tough lady many poets writing today, the wrote about whatever awed who lives in Los Angeles and perfectly turned phrase is him: rain, wind, air. He had a has always been a lousy cook. thing about rain-thought it "The worst cook in Christen­ topped by a few lines barely (if at all) distinguishable from was out to get him. Then he dom," Levine called her. Per­ prose. In a poet as distinguished graduated to food; that was haps this explains his obsession Philip Levine spoke with enthusiasm about his writing last when he was a teenager. with food. Levine responded to the fre- night. He spoke in Iddles Auditorium. (David Drouin photo.) As he talked, it became ap- POET, page 21 Unusual form of mime Challenges audience By W. Glenn Stevens one not well-versed in mime it court restraining o-rder to keep structured language of move­ reads the poe~ "Story of Our could be somewhat confusing. them away. ment created by French artist Lives." Mime, action and poetry are The costumes are colorful and For people that are interested the style of the Portsmouth The first play, "Two Sisters', Decroux. Character and plot are is a play about twin sisters who the sisters' antics are amusing secondary in corporeal mime in mime, the Pontine Move­ Pontine Movement Theatre, at times in this truly colorful ment Theater could.be quite which opens its third and final are infatuated with the same as the actors concentrate on the man. The twins are inseparable play. abstract. enjoyable. For someone who is performance oi the 1984-85 The second play, "When not familair with the art of season on April 18 at 16 Market to the point that they scream The third play," "Story of Our ~lone," follows the transgres­ mime, this could be somewhat Street in Portsmouth. in unison if they are pulled Lives," is a story about a couple apart. Their obsession for this s10n of Pontine's physical cor­ sitting in their living room, dull. Pontine's production' of three poreal mime style. The show runs April 18-21, small plays is diverse and com­ man becomes so out of hand that reading a book which contains . This "corporeal" style, used and April 26-28. Curtain time plex to say the least. For some- the man eventually must get a the story of their lives. m each play, is based on a hi hl The bleakness of their lives is at 8 p.m. with 3 p.m. matinees becomes apparent as they read on Sunday April 21 and Sunday that they begin to act it out. This April 28. play is dramatized while the Tickets may be obtained by heavily synthesized voice of visiting Pontine' s office at the Pontine member Mark Strand market Square studio, or by calling 436-6660. Opposing

The top ten this week according to Billboard magflzine are: 5. Private Dancer, Tina Turner Albums: 6. Like A Virgin, Madonna 1. No Jacket Required, Phil 7. Make It Big, Wham Collins 8. Wheels Are Turning, REO 2. Centerfield, John Fogerty Speed wagon 3. Born In The U.S.A., Bruce 9. Agent Provocateur, Foreigne Springsteen · 10. Reckless, Bryan Adams 4. Beverly Hills Cop, Soundtrack

The top ten according to Singles: ·wuNH: 1. Cult - "Resurrection Joe" LPs: 2. Various - "Starvation"j"Tam 1. Tears 4 Fears - From Tam" The Big Chair 3. Simple Minds - "Brass Band 2. Einsterzend Neubauten - Yu­ in Africa" gang 4. Devo - "Here to Go" (ex­ 3. November Group - Work tended) That Dream 5. Branski Beat - "Why" (ex­ 4. The Blasters - Hardline tended) 5. The Smiths - Meat is Murder 6. Mod Fun - "I Am With You" 6. Yello - Stella 7. West India Company - "Ava 7. Till Tuesday - Voices Carry Maria" 8. Tupelo Chain Sex - Spot The 8. Woofing Cookies - "Mistakes" Difference 9. Christmas - "Invisio Girl" 9. Tones On Tails - Tones On 10. Libertines - "Everybody" Tails Members of the Pontine Movement Theatre rehearse one of their performances~ The theatre· 10. Alison Moyet - Alf group practices corporea! mi_me. · PAGE TWENTY THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 Hit the Floor falls hard, new Thompson a success presents at times songs with Boys Say Go, like the other sex and danger on "Dangerous:" to break." bands on this record, rnntribute hints of the Clash and the The 's stunner, though, "Shock me/Soothe me/Tak~ me Plimsouls, but with a freshness two songs, "Serious Cat" and down/ I give it up to you/In is "Walking Through a Wasted "Do You Wanna Funk?" The that maintains a distinctive Land." Featuring remarkable stress free love." sound that avoids labels. only redeeming factor in these Fairly engaging vocals are lead guitar work from Thomp­ songs is a nice guitar solo by Joe The six songs of Fireworks son along with strong rhythm presented by Judy Lewis and on each have a distinctive flavor, Fagan on "Do You Wanna "Surprised" she tells of her work from , this Funk?" Slightly _reminiscient yet there is that cohesive thread sizzling track never lets up. It's vision of Clubland: running throughout that unifies of Frankie Goes To Hoilywood, It's very complex· another track directed towards both in music and in the photo the effort. All of the songs have his ex-wife as Thompson wond­ I can hardly stand it an unabashed exuberance for on the sleeve, Boys Say Go never Each moment's a mess ers, "Where is the future we approach the challenging nature life, both musically and in lyrical planned?" I'm learning to handle it content, which is best summed that made Frankie a hit in A thousand beers The album's only two slow America. Relying too strongly up in the title track: songs are equally revealing. Crash onto the floor I never knew my dreams could Richard ·1·hompson on the synthesizer to fill in the Another carload Across A Crowded Room "Love In A Faithless Country" sound, the Boys conceivably fly as far as New York City is both peaceful and passionate. Plows through the door I got to chase them 'cos my Polygram could inspire some dancing, but Although I find the words of Last year Richard Thompson As Thompson warns, "Learn never in my house. heart won't let me go the Minks mildly interesting, And jf I c~tch them, then I finc11ly ~truck a deal w-ith a maj9r the w:.iy to melt into ~ crowd/ The J\.lpha Dcup arc a b.i-racial Never catch an eye or dress too 1 still have nothing but con­ know I'll find the real reason record company. For this ac­ band featuring members of both tempt for a dance band that claimed singer-­ loud." . genders. Interesting vocals are I need to open doors I've Also on the gentler side is the employs only synthesizers. never seen before guitarist, the well-deserved provided by Desaray, who also Lacking any punch to inspire signing came at a crucial time. album's last track "Ghosts In fills in with some mildly appeal­ Although appearing naive, the Wind." In a droning voice, foot movement, the Minks, as be assured that Chain Link Thompson hasn't issued a ing distorted guitar, but this is all the bands on the Hit The national release in over 13 years Thompson sings "The tongues not enough to rescue this band Fence has the experience to of the night rack my bones ... the Floor compilation, need to avoid being labeled as pop music and his new record is his first with the cute name from making develop a true spirit of emotion in more than a decade without wind tears through me like a monotonous music. fluff. However, the band does ruin ... " It's the type of song that in order to be considered in the not express the cynicism so his ex-wife Linda performing Although "Symbol of Love" same league as any of the other on it. Their recording partner­ only Thompson and a handfuJ with its quirky nature, alto prevalent among many rock of talented musicians could get bands mentioned above. bands today. ship came to an abrupt end saxaphone and female vocalist BY THOM MROZEK when they divorced last year. away with successfully. Eerie sounds a lot like Romeo Void, This band radiates joy and With Across a Crowded and mysterious yet filled with the Alpha Bettys fail to capture tries to couple this with justi­ Room, Thompson fully capital­ tingling emotion. the emotion and angst over the fications for living life with a izes on this opportunity for the Across A Crowded Room is modern world that Deborah lust: larger listening. His first Po­ a must for any serious rock fan. Iyall & co. manage to achieve Why can't you just try to be lygram release is a startling Albums this fresh and captiviat­ on even their worst offerings. happy collection of nine superb songs, ing shouldn't be taken for "Stare in Style" p~rfectly Go to your sense of life suprisingly consisting of mostly granted. explains this alleged dance band It's a mission to survive revved-up _rockers. This is a BY BILL MILLIOS who, somehow, failed to encour­ In a world where English Romeos die bizarre yet intriguing change ~ age me to even tap my feet. for Thompson whose past was James Straight ahd Belle Boy · . Need no experience at all primarily devoted to Celtic Folk (female) comprise Doppler The lighter songs like "Fire­ music. Effect, whose "Time is Running works" and "Need No Expe­ Foot-stomping cuts like "Lit­ Out" is strongly reminiscient rience" are contrasted with tle Blue Number" and "She of those old American new wave Chain Link Fence musically rougher songs like Twists The Knife Again" could bands, DEVO and the B-52's. Fireworks "This Mourning" and the Clash­ probably find a place in most While trying to capture a world Throbbing Lobster Records like "Next Stop, Please." There FM rock stations. Both are gone out of bounds (" ... we work At the beginning of Chain . is even a song, "Us," similar to classic examples of Thompson's all day and don't get a Link Fence's deb~t Ep, lead the psych-pop bands of L.A. like Green on Red. ability to merge clever yet break/working hard for the city singer_Billy Barrett states, "It's playful lyrics with powerfully and state/ but still it seems that coming back to me/a time when This record will appeal to electrifying music. my life is a mess"), they only I was younger." This line aptly many tastes. Its pop-rock sen­ ~ ~$ hiiF sibilities truly transcend the two More bitter but no less dy­ Various Artists increase my confusion as they phrases the theme of this fun manic is "I Ain't Going To Drag suggest that I go out, have fun and thoroughly enjoyable record distinct, yet often muddled, Hit The Floor musical genres. The picture on My Feet No More." This song Gender Records and avoid being a prisoner. which proves to be a celebration is fueled by the delightful ac­ Great idea. Now, if only they of youth with its idealism and the outer sleeve of this record cordian of Alan Dunn, and could provide the fun music we shameless chasing of dreams. is misleading as Chain Link Hit The Floor is a compila­ Fence is not a 60' s revival group infuriating quick drum pattern tion record featuring four bands need to go out and forget the Roughly falling into the cate­ and Thompson's resentful lyr­ world. gory of power pop, Chain Link or a mod group or a psychedelic from the Boston area. All the outfit. ics, possibly aimed at Linda: bands fall into the category of The most interesting group Fence provides danceable rock, "Biding my time is driving me on this record, although still great vocals by Barrett and very Interesting musically and the new wave of pas­ stimulating in outlook, Chain senseless/ You worked yourself sion/ style/ dance bands current­ sub-standard, is the Minks. catchy musical hooks. right under my defenses/ You Perfectly capturing an attitude In general reminiscient of Link Fence and their first effort ly invading en masse from is well worth checking out. got me in a grip that I can't Britain. embodied in the Euro-disco XTC, especially vocalist Andy shake/ All my feelings are about movement, the Minks equate Partridge, Chain Link Fence also BY THOM MROZEK Celli demands the best as TBS rehearses By Loretta Carney Celli is looking for a specific theatre with a 25 member Board After spending 2 and a half attentively watch while she The room is quiet. A man person for each part and for of Trustees responsible for years in the U.S. Army Signal reads. He takes notes. There are two piles of papers, one on a with a Russian accent strides people who are easy to work contributed income. "Subscrib­ Corps, he worked in New York to the st<1:ge waving his arms and with. Auditions are scheduled ers are the backbone of the designing sets, studying acting fluted table, another on the reads for the part of Kolenklov, five minutes apart for two days, business," Celli says. He is · and stage managing for a small floor. an escaped Russian ballet in­ then he will audition in New worried about percentages. theatre. "New York frightens "That was excellent, thank structor. York for three days. "The crunch comes earlier me now. I never go on the you very much. I don't think I Tom Celli, Artistic Director He is a slender man with dark every year. A snowstorm could subway, but I try to stay in touch. need to see anything else," Celli of Theatre by the Sea, is casting hair, a mustache and beard put us in a deficit," he says. I stand in line in Times Square says. for You Can't Take It With You flecked with grey, expressive Two years ago their income for half-price tickets," he says. "Is she equity?" he asks which opens April 18. eyes and an animated manner. from the National Endowment His career took a different Mroczka. Dressed in a v-neck sweater "That was a good reading, for the Arts was slashed from twist when he met his wife "No, she's not equity," Mrocz­ and jeans with keys dangling · thank you very much for com­ 20 thousand dollars a year to Kathie here in 1969 during ka says. from his back pocket, he sits at ing. We will be in touch," Celli $2,500, but it increased to 9 rehersals for The Fantasticks. Actor's Equity is a profession­ a table carefully evaluating says as he stands up, smiles and thousand last year. Eighty per­ . She is a· set-designer and they al equity house, an actor's union hopeful performers. shakes hands with the per­ cent of their income is through live in Newfields with their two which requires that a theatre can only hire one non-equity Next to him is Associate former. box office receipts. The other children, Angela and Alexp.nder, Producer Paul Mroczka. In the "He did a very good reading," 20 percent is received in con­ a dog, 3 cats and 4 rabbits. player for every 9 members. back of the room observing the · Celli tells Mroczka, "but he is tributed income and federal and Celli' s wife is suffering from The equity house also says drama is Kristen Skala, a UNH not really right for it." state grants. what he calls "burn ·our." "She that if chorus people speak a student studying for literary Final selections are made by Celli, 47, was born in New was absolutely buried this year, line, do a solo, or perform an assistant. "Tom wants me to sit Celli. "Tom has a keen artistic Jersey and earned a BFA degree exhausted. Tired of trying to additional role they must be paid in on these," Skala says. eye and a knack for choosing from Syracuse University where create something out of no­ extra. It is 3:00 p.m. Since 10:00 a.m. plays that are well balanced and he majored in design and studied thing," he says. Theatre by the Sea is further a stream of men and women, will appeal to a wide audience," history of theatre. He spent a Celli greets the woman who required to give actors a choice young and old, have been arriv­ says Sharon Fentiman, Com­ lot of time in the drama depart­ will audition for the part of the of 2 houses within half a mile ing in the downstairs room with pany Manager and Assistant to ment, but had no high school Grand Dutchess with a smile of the theatre. If the cost is more fluorescent lighting wrapped Artistic -Director. experience. "They wouldn't let and a firm handshake. "How than 20% of actor's salaries, the in blue cloth, plaster-covered Budget is a prime consider­ me in, they said I wasn't good long did it take you to drive up theatre has to pay the rest. heating ducts, and a stage with ation in producing a play. Thea­ enough and it hurt, as I re­ here," he asks, taking her picture no scenery or lighting. · tre by the Sea is a non-prof it member." and resume. Mroczka and Celli THEATRE, next page THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 rAGE TVVEN1Y-ONE ------~---THEATRE------

The public expects at least from condominiums above. Be­ one musical a year, says Fenti­ cause they have outgrown space, man, but musicals are very sets must be built outside and costly. "A lot of theatres will brought in through the lobby. have to close because they just Colorful banners wave in the can't survive financially," he lobby where the box office is adds. located. They read Painted According to Fentiman, if the Churches; Agnes of God; A theatre was sold out every night Christmas Carol; The Imaginary it still would not provide enough Invalid; Ain't Misbehavin'. income to produce 7 plays and Theatre by the Sea produces maintain the facility. Because seven plays each season. Celli they are not located in a large has acted in over 75 productions city there is no funding from and directed over 30. "It's the city. challenging and exhausting, but There is an average of 6.5 also rewarding. If you do all the actors for each play allotted for plays you want to do the theatre next season Fentiman said. It would close in a year," he says. means 10 in one play. 8 another. Celli speal

and accomplished as Levine, this uncertain of its place in liter­ res_ults in a certain discomfort; ature. as 1f the message has surplanted the medium. Despite the oppressive heat in Parsons Hall, Levine held the Levine concluded the gener­ crowd's attention and revealed ally well received reading with his strength and depth. That - the title poem of his forthcom­ strength and depth has rightly ing book "Sweet ·Will." Pow­ led him to be regarded as one erfully moving, it too seems of today's leading poets.

Painting Ch~rches, written by Tina Howe, was presented by Theatre by the Sea earlier this year.

And don 1t forget to go dancing Go cheer the· mens' track team this weekend. There 1s plenty on this Saturday a/terno-on at to choose from --you can dance 12:30. It's their only home meet to the sounds of The Ramones, of the season! Scruffy the Cat and the Cyclones Philip Levine, a noted poet, spoke . or The New Models and Scandal!! in Iddles Auditorium a~ Parsons Hall last night. (David Drouin photo.) PAGE TWENTY-TWO THE NEW HAMPSHtRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

------PRESIDENTS------(continued from page 1) Anselm College .. Summer Day- Camp Counselor Positions The current proposal asks for ·UNH students come from out­ New Hampshire Congressional in Manchester New Hampshire a $32,000_ ceiling on family of-state," he said. "The cuts in Delegation to oppose "these College work-study preferred financial aid could severely harmful measure." combined income, and would Frank Mitchell, Pine Island 4-H Center:- Contact make the students of that family affect us in terms of homoge­ "We've shown that an in­ 2849 Brown Ave, Manchester N.H. 03103 ineligible for Pell Grants, Col­ neity." formed and knowledgeable peo­ Tel: 627-5637 lege Work-Study, Supplemental Dowd said the state economy ple are the only ones which can Educational Opportunity Grants could suffer a loss of more than make our country work," said (SEOG), National Direct Stu­ $910.000,000 in income from Haaland. dent Loans, or Guaranteed Stu­ both in-state and out-of-state Kaspar Marking, University dent Loans. students. · System of New Hampshire Dowd said that although Higher education institutions (USNH) chancellor, who also Spending Y Our Guaranteed Student Loans around the country have ex­ attended the president's meet­ (GSLS) will still be offered by pressed dismay with the Reagan ing, said the US has had_a long . Sumnter banks, many students will face Administration's financial aid tradition of investing in its a greater challenge in trying to ,proposa-ls -. and its apparent people, and because it is now Durhant? get them because he thinks _ apathy towards education. How­ facing increased economic com­ banks will be unwilling to award ever, Haaland said the govern­ petition, should not stop invest­ loans without the necessary ment is taking education too ing now. government backing presently seriously. The Republican Senate lead­ in effect. "They (the government) do ership has offered a compromise . .Frudid1'::, paper ~aid one of not recngni:ze the. value of proposal to thP RPagan Arlmi­ New Hampshire's major indus­ education. I am continually nistratio, but was called sketchy . tries, higher education, would appalled and amazed at the and indefinite by the presidents . suffer severely from the cut_ leadership of our country on Peterson said the comprom­ backs. their attitude towards-educa­ ise had only come about because "Non-resident students bring tion," he said. of media coverage, convern by a lot of money into the state; The position paper called for college presidents, and by peo­ New Hampshire is an importer the defeat of the Administra­ ple speaking throughout the of students," said UNH Pres­ tion's proposals, and asked the country. ident Gordon Haaland. "More than 60 percent of our -CHEMICALS-

NOAM CHOMSKY

of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

~inguistics Lecture - MONDAY, APRIL, 15 3:00pm Spaulding rm. -1 35

~changing Perspectives on the Knowledge and use of Language"

Politics Lecture Monday, April 15 5:00pm Johnson Theater Paul Creative Arts Center A Hemisphere to Ourselves: · Roots of U.S. Policy in Central America

Coming Attraction Event of the Year UNH Basketball T'eam takes on the World Famous Granite State Stainless Steelers -----in Wheelchair Basketball------1/2 time Featuring Sorority/Fraternity vs. Sorority/Fraternity

Sponsored by Handicapped Student Organizations PAGE TWEN1Y-FOUR THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 \

. I -SENATE- COMICS (cominued from page 3) rejected. The new Academic Honesty Policy is far more expansive GARFIELD By JIM DAVIS than the old one and may even overlap with the Caboodle on ('[7 £VEN GO 50 F"AR A5 TO 5AY points such as misrepres­ IT'5 A GREAT 17AY TO BE AWAKE a few entation. "We got about ·50 percent of what we wanted in this policy," said Student Body President · John Davis. The out-of-class work section ( of the policy) originally said that any out-of­ class collaboration was cheating and we were able to restructure that and elaborate on exactly what plagiarism was." "Also," Davis said, "we were able to define what misrepres­ entation was in section D of the policy. They had a list of instan­ DOONESBURY - By GARY TRUDEAU ces of misrepresentation, but no place where it actually came Qut and said what it was." · I've HAP ABOIJTA9MUOI ~ YOIJ'!<.i /,/;AV/NG The Student Senate com- . Pfl£$11R£; lH/S stM9JleR OH,YeAH'? ~ 7116 CAR/88MN HF!, I'Vl3 promised on one section of - A5 I CANSTANI?. I 1HINK. IAIHeR& YOU .. FOl<.T "!06070 FOf

t:Vttor£ 10\l(\~o ~ , oA~····· ~~ tv\51ER _$448 498 R\S-··· 5 -~ A ssE\..S-·· eos\Ofl sR\J ,10((\ ow?.11 ' ( w: A 5(J\ 10\lfl_ ~1. -r1~ . r~ NG-····-11 G~O HIGHWAY 61.5 REVISITED By R JAY ILG & JEFF JAMES

.UNCIL THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE TWENTY-FIVE

Celebrating the 0 Goddess Within -f a workshop in Creative Empowerment • student television network

Karen Smiley, an acclaimed IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOB THE FOLLOWING visual artist, presents a slide COMPENSAm POSfflONS: show/lecture which helps women heal the self-doubt that. comes from being excluded from history books and other forms of scholarship by reclaiming the artistic achievements GENERAL MANAGER of our foremothers_. BUSINESS MANAGER NEWS DIRECTOR OPERATIONS MANAGER PRODUCTION MANA.GER PROGRAMMING DIRECTOR - PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Thurs., April 18 4:00-6:00 p.m. Forum Room - Library PICK 11P APPLICATIONS ON THE WALL OUTSIDE OUR OFFICES - BOOM 110 MOB .

sponsored by: UNH Women's Center DEADLINES:· Wo.men 's Studies Program GENERAL MANAGER: APRIL 16 ALL OTHERS\ APRIL 23

ATTENTI Undeclared .Students in the College of Liberal Arts Pre-Registration for undeclared CLA students will take place at the_Academic Advising Center in Room 111, Murkland Hall, from 9:00 -a.m. to 12 noon and again from 1 :00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Regis~ration is scheduled alphabetically as follows:

A-C will register on April 17th and 18th M-P will register on April 25th and 26th . D-G will register on April 19th and 22nd Q-S will register on April 29th and 30th H-L will register on April 23rd and 24th .T-Z wll register on May 1st. , PAGE TWf:NTY-SIX THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 Classi&ed-- Mark-I'm giad you and I are us-only one SPRINGTIME IS HERE! Get your dog To all ASA members who helped out with · Attention to all those who ordered a 1984 Spending your summer in Durham? A a half months left for me-let's go nuts-I groomed by Thompson School tudents for Accounting Day (last week): GOOD JOB!! Granite. You must pick them up in room Companion is neeed to live in with an love you-your.babe low prices. Call 862-1025 to make an Thanks for everything ... and best of luck 125 MUB by Friday April 19 or they many extremely enjoyable elderely woman in appointment from Mon-Fri 8:30- 4:30. to all members in all that you do! Thanks no longer be available. exchange for salary, room and board. There ADOPTION Professional married couple again-Brenda. will be a car available. Inquire mornings wish to adopt newborn. Will pay all medical, DO YOU HAVE AN OPINION? Why not Julie C.-Happy 22nd Birthday! Hope you in room 319, James Hall. legal and counseling expenses. Please voice it on STVN headline news! Submit Attention to all those who ordered a 1984 have as much fur:i enjoying your b-day as contact Robert Bossie, 440 Hanover St. proposals at room l10 in the MUB. Granite. You must pick them up in room I will have today celebrating mine. MF MINI-DORM FESTIVAL Sat., April 27. LIVE 125 MUB by Friday April 19 or they many ENTERTAINMENT ALL DAY. Manchester, NH (603) _668-2222. Missed a few birthdays? Make up for them Dirk and Ted-Get ready ... we will soon no longer be available. Do you ever notice how some people with unique gift-an excluseve batiked T­ be on a mission of tun and excitement Attention to all those who ordered a 1984 always look well put together? Come learn shirt in summer colors. May 3rd at the Wanted: Student over 18 to serve as dental "unlimited" The J2000 has a full tand of Granite. You must pick them up in room their secret. It's not all looks, it's color. Color lnternaitonal Fiesta. exam patient in Florida during first week gas which we will need to accomplish this 125 MUB by Friday April 19 or they many of June. Free denal care in exchange. For (clue #1) NS and SS no longer be available. analysis will make the differene for you. HAVE YOU TRIED TO GAIN OR MAINTAIN ask details call collect, 603-778-8197 after Color consultant with internationally-known YOUR WEIGHT, OR ADD BULK WITH NO Attractive? Full of character? Send photo Myth: "Only women with bad reputations 6p.m. company coming to campus April 9th and SUCCESS? WE HAVE AN HERBAL/ ALOE and resume to ARISTON Modeling Agency are raped." 10th offering a special student rate of $49 NH 03820. Fact: Reputations have nothing to do with BASED NUTRITIONAL SYSTEM FROM DO YOU FEEL TIRED, SLUGGISH, NEVER PO Box 1724, Dover, per person. Consultations scheduled in it. Rapist's desire is chiefly "control" not CALIFORNIA THAT WILL HELP YOU GAIN , ENOUGH ENERGY TO STUDY? WANT TO groups of two. For an appointment or more COLOR ANALYSIS AND BEAUTY FACIAL­ sex. OR KEEP YOU AT THE WEIGHT YOU BOOST YOUR ENERGY LEVEL WITHOUT information, call Kim at 868-6043. Only $20.00 find out your natural skin tone NEED AND GET HEALTHY WHILE YOU STIMULANTS OR DRUGS? WE HAVE AN $10-$360 weekly/ up mailing circulars! colors, best make up shades, now to color lnternaitonal fashion not in your budbget? . DO IT! 100% MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! HERBAL/ ALOE BASED NUTRITIONAL No bosses/ quotas I Sincerely interested coordinate your wardrobe. Bee happier A change tor the better-Indian style GAIN WEIGHT NOW! ASK ME HOW! CALL FROM CALIFORNIA THAT IS rush self-addressed envelope! Mailers SYSTEM this snrino Fm annointment call 659-2268 batiked T - .:,hirt.:, for low, low price;.:, at the; 9G9- 1-40Z!. SWEEPING THE COUN I RY I HA I WILL AssocIatIon UISt AR-/vEG, F'O BOX 470, or 431-1979. International Fiesta, May 3rd. Need decorations tor a French International HELP YOU SHAKE THAT RUN-DOWN Woodstock, IL 60098. NEED TO LOSE UNWANTED POUNDS? Hi Twinkie! congratulation! You are on your Dinner: glags, posters, artifacts, etc ...Dinner FEELINGI ALL NATURAL PRODUCTS Beachbums! Looking for T-shirt mini WE HAVE AN HERBAL/ ALOE BASED way to tame. Remember always: your is April 13. Please contact Stacy or Chris WILL GIVE YOU AN ENERGY f:!OOST dresses with excrusive designs tor incred­ NUTRITfONAL SYSTEM FROM CALIFOR­ friends. We may not all be blessed with at the Faculty Center. 2-1320 anything _ WHILE YOU GET HEALTH AT THE SAME ible prices? May 3rd at the International NIA YOU CAN LOSE 12-29 LBS A MONTH "bubble butts" and to never become a would be greatly appreciated. TIME! 100% MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! fiesta. BACK GUARANTEE! "barbie doll". Cheers! E. Deadheads - May 3rd. The internatioanl FEEL GREAT_NOW! ASK ME HOWi CALL ON! 100% MONEY LOSE WEIGHT NOW! ASK ME HOW! CALL UNH Women: lJo you need spring cleaning MINI-FEST '85 Saturday, April27. Look fiesta! Batiked shirts in your tavoirtie colors 868-1482. 868-1482. \ or any other chores don? SAE l st Annual tor Signs. MAKE PLANS rignt in time for the Saratoga summer Slave Auction Friday April 12th 3:00 p.m. festival. Come and check it out. Low, low . Do you speak Swedish? I'd like to get \ at SAE Fraternity House .• Do you feel almost right? but...not quite prices! together with someone to learn some Springtime is here' Get your dog groomed pulled together? Add poise and confidence b · b t I th· e Dave by Thompson School Students for low low UNH Women: Need Spring cleaning or any J. Nolan My day is brightened whenever as1cs e ore go over is summ r. through personal development seminars: 2 1739 868 9897 prices. Call 862-1025 to make an appoint­ other chores done? SAE 1st Annual Slave _ Six sessions include physical and social I see you. Your beautiful big eyes and heart _-___o_r __-__ · ______ment Mon-Fri from 8:30 -4 :30 p.m. Auction Friday, April 12th at 3:00 p.m. at poise, and mode preparation. ARISTON warming smile really turn me on. It' sonly Myth: "Any woman could prevent rape if Attention to all those who ordered a 1984 SAE fraternity house. Modeling Agency P.O. Box Dover, logical that I'd want to spend time with you. she wanted to since no woman can be 1724 Granite. You must pick them up in room Your long distance admirer. raped against her will. You can't hit a DO YOU HAVE AN OPINION? Why not I!.:!!...!~~~NH 03820 ------::-::::-::::--=-:::-7=--=:--=:-=-:::--=:-=-::--=--::-:;--=-::-=--=-:;-, 125 MUB by Friday April 19 or they many voice it on STVN headline news! Submit ~.Jlll.lll.l!.JIII.IM..-..ill'..llliA.MliA,ll't.ll"""rYIJ\NW'aNW'al'rlYil"rlY'IJ"fliY'lrN.._.,rr.-.-,it"lil::. moving target." Fact: In 87% of rape cases, the assailant no longer be available. proposals at room 110 in the MUB. either carried a weapon or threatened the UNH Women: How would you like to be Pookie, Happy six months of being en­ victim with death it she resisted him. The spoiled rotten tor 2 hours. Come to the SAE gaged' I love you! Congratulations on the primary reaction of most victims is fear slave auctior:i Friday, Arpil 12th at 3 and job otters too! I'm so happy! Love, Gremlin. for their lives. buy your slave. xxxooo Well, Kris it's another one of those nights: Jen Remember ... it you don't hang out on Meg, Hope you weren't up too late "enjoying a tree with the rest of the monkeys you'll the mind aches and the body is weary but yourself." Your loving never get to play in the junglelll So, when we'll pull through once more. are we going on the safari??? Marj, Kris and Marla here I am, I've lost friend. my brain-not that I ever had one. I miss The time Mary, we'll have to get psyched to have Oh Marvin, I miss you so much'!' Dave and I need a shot of Dr. Ruth. Let's away from you is heart-wrenching. Please a fun weekend. Just think ... studying in the go out tor Karl's tomorrow night. Does the my love (and libe.s on Saturday .. who knows what could be mine forever and ever ... All situation mak,e the man or does the man happen if it gets sunny ... El & KP-Well, more) Bertha make the situation? Andrea girls have tun at homel! SENIORS .. Just think only 43 days until The mouth may be a filthy thing and the graduation1111I cup may be dirtier but my mind is well in is days away and the gutter. Signed your Fellow Editor The end of college Haley's Comet is due to strike ... so be Joe P. Don't ever play under assumed careful. Impressionable Ken names again. They caught you.

-HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOLES

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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN CLASSIFIED Nice 2 BR APT Newmarket Summer for 1985-86. subletters wanted. Furnished two Earn money and work on Fortune 500 On Kari-Van off Three Bedroom House in Lee, on Wheel­ street parking, $450 a bedroom apt. in Durham at the COOPS. Companies' marketing programs on cam­ __A_p_a_rt_me_nt_s_for_R_e_nt_ [ month or $1990 a semester Rent right Pond with private beach and dock, Q] for academic negotiable. Call 868-1116 pus. Part-tjme (flexible) hours each week . living room, dining year includes heat and hot water. Sorry, room 1 ½ baths, large Summer jobs-Program Coordinator (play­ Summer subletters wanted. Furnished two We give references. Call 1-800-243-6679 no pets, please call kitchen. $950/mo heated. Call (603) 868- 868-2281 bedroom apt. ground) Tennis Instructor, summer day in Durham at the COOPS. 1580 days, 868-1303 nights. Will consider Roomate needed-female preferred­ Rent negotiable camp counsellor maintenance laborer, . Call 868-1116 pets and up to six people. Available June nonsmoker-nice room in big apartment swimming instructor, lifegaurd, swimming Summer Sublet: 2 spaces available (fe­ 1, 1985. call Lucinda 7 42-0217 $175 plus utilities pool attendant: $4 .66 to $5.14 per hour. males only) on Main ~Mllc=-~--==:~°'·_11~ ST. Durham apartment. I FURNITURE HONDA CB400F Room tor Rent in Dover Apartment. Close - used furniture for sale. Motorcycle "400-Four" Contact Dover Rec. Dept. at 742-5718. Gorgeous apt. you'd love to live here! Call to Kari-Van Route. Dressers, tables, chairs. $5-$15. Call Lisa Low mileage. Excellent condiiton (new tires, The city of Dover is an equal opportunity $100 per month plus or contact Amy at 18 Main St. Apt 2 868- at 868-2828. new battery), asking $775. Call Bob 659- employer. utilities, $50.00 per month during the 7558. $200 per month. 2596 (evenings) summer for additional information call 749- 1982 Kawasaki 550-L TD Black. Low Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 Summer subletters wanted 1899 . Furnished two mileage. Good condition. $1,700.00. Tel­ FOR SALE: A Classic! 1969 Galaxy 500 children Fri -2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call bedroom apt. in Durham at the COOPS. ephone 742-6756. Ford, 2 door 72,000 miles. $500 or best 749 -1863 between 11 am-1 pm. Summer Sublet-females wanted to sublet Rent negotiable. Call 868-1116 offer-must sell by May. Call Tom at 868- 4 bedroom house on Madbury Road. from 1976 Fiat Spider Convertible. Black with Newmarket Two Newly renovated 5 room 1115 between 5-7 evenings. June through August. $150/mo. plus tan interior. Excellent running condition. apartments $500 mo plus utilities lease utilities (negotiable) call 868-9802 J\sk One owner. $1750.00 firm. Call (207) 676- security references required. Parking '----H-elpw_anted_ . for Cheryl or Suzy II 9024. available April 1st leave message m 659- 3142 Roomate needed-female preferred-non­ Summer job available-summer job avail­ 185 Kneissl Super Star Skis. $150.00 used ,..... able SI IMMi::A ---- ~mokP.r-nirP r c, nm Hampton Beach onc o Co,11 1-U)LISI;- I~ in big :;ip:irtmont c :ill creative chef At a Sucan QS~ 31 gg SJTT!;A Aoaponciblo Roommate needed fall 86 1 female room­ Lucinda 742-0217 $175 plus utilities small elegant cafe. For interview call 926- graduate student will maintain and/or mate needed for fall seemster ONLY. Davis · Write your own professioanl resume with 3542. Summer job available-summer job repair your house while you're away. 26 Court Apts 56 Madbury Rd-spacious and Room for Rent in Dover Apartment. Close easy to follow line by line instruction form. available. years old, single, very handy, non-smoker, quiet. Call 868-5461 ask for Nancy, Terry to Kari-Van Route. $100 per month plus $5.40 each (ch/MO) to SECRETARY, 13 Overseas Jobs-Summer, no pets. Very flexible. For peace of mind or Kim . utilities, $50.00 per month during the yr. round. Europe, Old Landing Rd., Durham, NH 03824 this summer. Call JIM AT: 430-2273 AFTER summer for additional information call 749- South America, Australia, Asia. All fields. Looking for a cheap, fun Ice Cream Lovers Take Note! 3 gallon tubs place to live this 1899 $900-2000 mo. Sight seeing. Free Info. 6P.M. summer? Dover is the a·nswer! $130 per available in 41 flavors for your next Write IJC, PO Box 52-NH, Corona Del Mar, TASk is sponsoring a three-part min­ Roomate needed-female preferrred non­ gathering. Just $11 .00 at the farm. 1 tub month and utilities. Number of people per 92625 smoker-nice room in big apartment 9a. icourse, "Strengthen Your Research Paper room is flexible. Two Kari-Van stops right call yields 40-50 servings. 1 /2 gallons, too. Lucinda 7 42-0217 $175 plus utilities Bartenders & Waitresses Wanted Skill." Part 1-Defining a Topic and Devel­ near the house. We still have two openings. no Green Dream's Udder Place, Rte. 155-A, expenses needeq. Positions available oping a Thesis Statement. Part 2- Call now! Maria or Chantal at 868-1201 Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 now Lee 659-5127. Accessing lnformatin in the children and for summer job. Apply in person Library. Part or Chantal at 7 49-1849 ( or leave a mes­ Fri-2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call Full length Natural Muskrat Coat with between 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. Open hours 6 p.m.­ 3-0rganizing and Writing the Research sage). 7 49-1863 between 11 am-1 pm . Racoon Collar. Excellent condition. til 1 a.m. Size Paper. Thursdays, April 4, 11 & 18, 12:30- 15/ 16. $2000 Sublet-Single apt. with kitchen and bath. Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 .00 or Best Offer. Call after 2:00 Dimond Library, Rm. 13, Floor B. HAWAII-FT. LAUDERDALE-CALIFOR­ Very quiet. Need sublet for June and July. children Fri-2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call 5PM 603-332-9174. NIA-VAIL-ASPEN-BAHAMAS YOU Music Marathon. DJ Service available for $280.00 a month. Call Chris at 868-1527 7 49-1863 between 11 am-1 pm. 7 4 VW Karman Ghia. 100,000 miles, rusty CAN HAVE MONEY TO TRAVEL ANY­ weddings, parties, dances. Call (207) 698- MWF mornings and between 4 and 8 Newmarket Two Newly renovated but reliable. Diehard battery, new clutch, 5 room WHERE YOU LIKE OR BUY ANYTHING 5678. Ask for Keith. weekdays. apartments $500 mo plus new muffler, good tires. $400.00. Call Paul utilities lease YOU WANT - NOW! ARE YOU EARNING evenings. 868-7 4 ADOPTION: Professional married couple Summer Sublet/Fall Option in Dover-2 security references required. Parking WHAT 72. YOU'RE WORTH OR WOULD LIKE wish to adopt newborn. Will pay all medical, bedroom apartment (1 double & single), available April 1st leave message 659- 1970 Ford Van. Bed, TO SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME? stove, heater. No rust, legal and counseling expenses. large 3142 Please livingroom and kitchen, full-bath, 5 WOULD YOU LIKE TO REPRESENT PRO­ runs great. $1400.00 or best offer. Call Andy Room for Rent in Dover Apartment. contact our attorney Mr. Robert Bossie, miles from UNH on Kari-van larg_e front Close 2-2009 days, 224-0587 nights. DUCTS THAT WORK AND YOU CAN BE 440 Hanover St., Manchester, NH (603) lawn, plenty of free parking, $330/month to Kari-Van Route. $100 per month plus PROUD OF? JOIN THOUSANDS OF SUC­ Car Stereo - Clarion 5550R deck, Daytron 668-2222. plus elect-Call after 8:00 p.m. 749-6880 utilities, $50.00 per month during the CESSFUL PEOPLE THAT MAKE ANY­ 30W /channel Amp, Alpine 6001 6x9 ask for Doug or Tom. summer for additional information call 7 49- INCOME TAX - Still not done yet? WHERE FROM AN AVERAGE OF $1,000- speakers. $250. Call Andy 2-2009 1899 days, Professional Income Tax Preparation. Low 2 Roommates needed to share bedroom $25,000 PER MONTH! NO TRAVELING­ 224-0587 nights. rates (start at $5.00) on campus, profes­ in Davis Court Apartment. Rent is $195/mo. Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 NO DOOR TO DOOR- WORD OF MOUTH Ice Cream Lovers take note! 3 gallon tubs sional service. Call 862-3478 Heat and hot water incl. Only 5 min walk children Fri-2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call IS THE KEY! PRODUCTS HAVE A 100% available in 41 flavors for your next to campus. Nonsmokers only. Please 749-1863 between 11 am-1 pm . MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. MAKE MO- · TYPING SERVICE: Retired secretary. gathering. Just $11 .00 at the farm. 1 tub contact Laura or Gina at 868-2966. NEY NOW! ASK ME HOW! CALL 868-1482 Experienced in all types of class papers. Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 yields 40-50 servings. 1 /2 gallons, too. FOR AN INTERVIEW. Will correct spelling and grammar. Located Cape Cod Hyannis-Beach or town. Gals, children Fri-2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call Green Dream's Udder Place, Rte. 155-A, walking distance to campus: Call Anita, rooms with fridge and kitchen privileges 7 49-1863 between 11 am-1 pm. Need a place to live this summer-with Lee 659-5127. 868-7078. double occupancy. Apts, cottages, season FREE ROOM AND BOARD? and a WEEKLY Newmarket Two Newly renovated 5 room For Sale: 1971 Mercury Montego V-8 AC. only. $55 week & up. Call Ed 1-617-778- ALLOWANCE. A companion is needed to Need Decorations for a French Interna­ apartments $500 mo plus utilities lease Hardly any rust. New battery, 6 tires, 2 of 1158 or Ceil 1-617-438-8151. Hurry (keep live with an extremely enjoyable elderly tional Dinner: flags, posters, artifacts etc ... security references required. Parking them brand new. Cheap, reliable trans­ trying.) woman. Light housekeeping duties re­ Dinner is April 13. Please contact Stacy available April 1st leave message 659- portation. Must sell to pay summer tuition. quired. If interested stop by in Rm. 319 or Chris at the Faculty Center. 2-1320. Room for Rent in Dover Apartment. Close 3142 Call 7 42-0082 afternoons James and evenings. to Kari-Van Route. $100 per month plus Hall mornings. Anything would be greatly appreciated. Summer Roomate wanted to share almost 1983 Schwinn Super Sport black 12 speed utilities, $50.00 per month during the Town of Durham Public Works Department Lost ana t-ound new 2 bedroom apt. 2 milesfrom campus. bicycle, 23 inch frame, very low mileage, summer for additional information call 7 49- wants employees to assist in general public Seniors students perferred. Earlier occu­ almost new condition. $300. Telephone LOST: GOLD QUARTZ WATCH AT SMITH 1899 works maintenance and construction pancy possible. For $200 month plus 868-7560. TENNIS COURTS ON SATURDAY, APRIL projects for the summer. Work to begin Faculty Residence available for 85/86 _ut_il1_·ti_es_.______6th! PLEASE CALL BOB AT 862-1696 or in May. Full time employment for the SCIRROCCO! 1975 11 OK, new clutch, Academic Year. Fully furnished restored Newmarket Two Newly renovated 5 room 868-9763 OR LEAVE AT SMITH HALL­ summer. Must be available for the entire AM/FM cassette, good condition, runs colonial, 2 bedrooms, 1 1 /2 baths, living apartments $500 mo plus utilities lease REWARD OFFERED! summe~-May 27th or earlier through . great. Very fun, very dependable. $1500, room, dining room, eat in kitchen, study. security references required. Parking FOUND: Small Cassette August 30th and must be 18 years of age. but will talk. Call Mark 868-7275. carrying case, Wood stoves and oil heat. Perfect for visiting available April 1st leave message 659- brown leather, with Christian and classical $4 .76/hr. Applications available at Town 1980 HONDA CIVIC - hatchback, some faculty, 10 minutes to campus, on Kari- 3~1!..:4!.!::2'------tapes. Call Andrea Ross 868-9828 if it's Office until May 3, 1985. THE TOWN OF surface rust, Van route. $600 per month plus utilities. Responsible adult needed to babysit 2 high mileage, $1500 or best yours. DURHAM IS AN AFFIRMATIVE AC­ offer. (603) 430-9554 Call 659-3537 children Fri-2-11 and Sun 2-12 $70.00 Call TION/EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOY­ Wanted: Small House or Apartment for the - 7 49-1863 between 1978 Suzuki GS 550E, 14,000 11 am-1 pm . ER. miles good 1985-86 year (school) willing to sign long condition. Asking $750.00. Call 742-1747, Durham, furnished single rooms with bath term (up to 3 years) lease. Adult, full time Need a place to live this summer with FREE ask for Steve. _Pers_onals____,J[i] available for female students only. Available UNH Student with one daughter (13) and ROOM AND BOARD? and a WEEKLY for 1985-86 academic year. Private en­ VOLVO 142S, 1971, Good Body (From NC) small, well behaved dog and cat. Willing ALLOWANCE? A companion is needed To Theta Chi Pledges, "Go Nuts trance. Ten minute walk from T-Hall. $850 130,000 miles. $600.00 Call 868-2964 " during to pay substancial security. Must be in to live with an extremely enjoyable, elderly your pledge period! You guys are great. per semester, including utilities. Call 868- evenings. Oyster River School District. (Durham, Lee woman. Light housekeeping duties re­ We're behind you all the way! All of your 2217 quired 197F Subara Station wagon; great con­ or Madbury) call Pat, 659-6821 . If interested, stop by in Rm . 319, support was appreciated. We 'd like to do ATTENTION!!! Want a great mornings dition inside and out; 5-speed, 38 mpg; Wanted to Rent-Room in apartment or place to live . the same for you. Good luck! Love, Theta along with a great roomate? I have a §araged since new; no rust; AM/FM; roof house. Must move by 4/15. Plase call John new SUMMER WORK-STUDY JOBS ON CAM­ Chi Little Sisters. rack; bautiful and dependable. $2,750, or at 659-2044 2 bedroom apartment completely furnished before 8:00 p.m. or 742-2028 PUS. A NUMBER OF SUMMER JOBS WILL UNH MARCHING BAND: It's only 3 miles from campus in Lee. Available best offer. or 1969 VW Beetle, superb time we got days BE AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS ELIGIBLE together again. Anything immediately!! $200 per month condition; garaged, no rust. Beautiful beige. goes as long as Summer housemates wanted. Four plus utilities. FOR WORK-STUDY, AT spaces THE UNH DAIRY $2,00 or best offer. 868-5122. it's black and white. BYOB. TONIGHT. Our available (prefer female) Please con ta cat Cindy Jupp in six-person co-ed, furnished BAR. JOBS INCLUDE WAITING ON GU­ house. Krissy, Janice, Maria and Kimmy 659-6775 or Gale 659-5932 MUST SELL! house (bedrooms partially furnished). Close ESTS AND FAST FOOD COOKING. IDEAL 45 WattWat! Sansui receiv­ er- To Lisa 0. Je t'adore - guess who?! to campus, large yard with garden. Summer Sublet: 2 spaces available (fe­ FOR STUDENTS TAKING SUMMER Technics belt-drive turntable-lyric 25 Watt speakers $160/month includes utilities. Call Peggy males only) on Main ST. Durham apartment. SCHOOL COURSES. GET DETAILS FROM . Equipment new in '84- Wene.~ - want to play war games? I have $225 at 868-1991 Gorgeous apt. you'd love to live here! Call FINANCIAL AID OFFICE, OR CALL DAIRY .00 or best offer. Call 2-2428 or 868- a big red MX missile. Shadow. or contact Amy at 18 Main St. Apt 2 868- BAR MANAGER 9832 evenings and ask for Lori. Summer Sublet-females wanted to sublet AT 862-1006 IN AFTER­ UNH MARCHING BAND: It's time we got 7558. $200 per month. NOON AFTER 4 bedroom h0use on Madbury Road. from 1:30. CAMERAS FOR SALE! All in excellent together again. Anything goes as long as June through Summer subletters wanted. Furnished two condition including instructions. Yashica it's black and white. BYOB. August. $150/mo. plus Earn money and work on Fortune 500 TONIGHT, our bedroom apt. in Durham at the COOPS. FX-3 Supra with 50 mm f /2.0 lens­ house. Krissy, Janice, utilities (negotiable) call 868-9802 Ask Companies' marketing programs on cam­ Maria and Kimmy · Rent negotiable. Call 868-1116 $125.00; Contax 139 Quartz with 50 mm for Cheryl or Suzy pus. Part-time (flexible) hours each week. Tanique is for Guppies. f /1.7 lens-$200.00; Olympus 017-25, Nice 2 BR APT Newmarket for 1985-86. Summer Sublet: 2 spaces available (fe­ We give references. Call 1-800-243-6679. black body only-$200.00. Call Dave at Wench - Come meet me in the bushes. I On Kari-Van off street parking, $450 a males only) on Main ST. Durham apartment. SUMMER RESIDENT CAMP STAFF 749-9311 anytime (leave message on know some really fun games we can play. . month or $1990 a semester Gorgeous apt. you'd love to live here! Call for academic NEEDED: Ecology director, waterfront machine.) Shadow . year includes or contact Amy at 18 Main St. Apt 2 868- heat and hot water. Sorry, director and staff and more. 625-6431 or 7558. $200 per month To Theta Chi Brothers, Thanks for all your no pets, please call 868-2281 . 964-9824. FOUR BEDROOM CAPE, AURAL DIS­ support and help, especially Clutch, Double W~nted: single summer sublet and/or fall Summer sublet with fall option. 1 / 4 mile TRICT, DEAD END STREET. WOOD HEAT SUMMER WORK STUDY JOBS ON CAM­ D, Bobby, New Wave, Little Red, Scotty, residency with kitchen, bath, close walking to T-Hall, wall to wall, 2 rooms-share full APPROX. $400/YR WITH FHW BACKUP. PUS. A NUMBER OF SUMMER JOBS WILL and Albee. The pledge period was a lot distance to classes. Reasonable. Call Perry kitchen and bath, can be 2 singles or 1 EXCELLENT CONDITION. ELEM. BE AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS ELIGIBLE of fun! We're looking forward to helping at 862-9741 or 2-1130 early AM or after double with living room. $240/month per SCHOOL SAME STREET. CLOSE ACCESS - FOR WORK STUDY, AT THE UNH DAIRY to build Theta Chi into all that we want it midnight. room, ideal if you hve a car. Call 868-2915 TO HIGHWAYS AND MALLS. $65,000. Call BAR. JOBS INCLUDE to be. Love, Theta Chi WAITING ON GU­ after S PM 332-9174 Little Sisters. Summer Sublet-Apartment, walking about 5 pm. (Gonic) dis­ ESTS AND FAST FOOD COOKING. IDEAL FLEA MARKET sponsored by the Oyster tance from campus, 2 bed rooms ( 4 Female roomate wanted for summer FOR STUDENTS TAKING SUMMER FOR SALE71 Mercury Montego V-8 A.C. River Educational Workshop. April 13, 9 people), kitchen, livingroom, and bathroom, sublet/fall option for a beautiful, fully SCHOOL COURSES. GET DETAILS FROM Harldly any rust. New battery 6 tires, 2 of a.m. -2 p.m. OYSTER River High School laundry facilities on grounds. Beautiful front furnished 4 bedroom house on Main St. FINANCIAL AID OFFICE, OR CALL DAIRY them brand new. Cheap reliable, trans­ Gym, Coe Drive, Durham. Books. applian­ lawn, perfect for sunbathing $195 per Durham. $180/month ne9otiable. For more BAR MANAGER AT 862-10061N AFTER­ portation: Must sell to pay summer tuition. ces, games, household items, clothes. food. person or best offer. Call Mel at 862-3378. info call Jane at 868-6169 NOON AFTER 1:30 . Call 742-0082 afternoons and evenings. Bargains galore!! PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985

- Cure the "Expressway Blues" at Tweeter's Annual Car Stereo Sale!

The best way to deal with a bad traffic jam is with a great car stereo. And there's no better time to get one than right now-at Tweeter's Annual Car Stereo Sale. All Benzi_Security All Car Speakers Oh sure, lots of stores have car stereo sales. But ftQOI "Benzi Boxes" are Europeandesigned devices that Choose from our large selection of car :.I, /0 allow your cassette receiver to easily slide in and speakers in all sizes, shapes and power names like Alpine, ADS, how many of them offer top * out of your dash. When you're not driving your car, ratings. One-ways, two-ways, three-ways, Boston Acoustics, Kenwood, Nakamichi, Proton and OFF! put your stereo in the trunk! i0% subwoofer systems- they're all on sale. Yamaha-all at guaranteed lowest prices? Plus, Tweeter Top-rated brand names like Alpine, ADS, Boston Acoustics, Kenwood, Nakamichi doubles the length of manufacturers' regular warranties Alpine 8100 programmable, computer-controlled multi-sensor OFF!* and Yamaha - all at prices guaranteed to when we install your car stereo. car alarm system. Many features. Price when purchased and installed be the lowest in the area. with Tweeter stereo system $379 Installed System One: Alpine 7150 cassette receiver with auto­ Alpine 8120 programmable multi-sensor car alarm system with Alpine 7162 cassette receiver with digital push-button tuning, reverse; Boston Acoustics BA704 four-inch full-function remote control. Our best alarm. Price when purchased auto-seek, auto-reverse. Reg. $249 $199 dual-c;:one speakers. $189 and installed with Tweeter stereo system $599 Installed Alpine 7163 cassette receiver with digital tuning, auto-reverse, 16-watt-per-channel amp. Reg. $299 $239 System Two: Kenwood KRC-2000 cassette receiver with Alpine 7164 cassette receiver with digital tuning, Dolby® NR, digital push-button tuning, auto-reverse, AN_RC noise reduction; Car Amplifiers digital clock, pre-amp fader. Reg. $349 $299 Alpine 6216 four-inch two-way spe~~erS: · $249 All Alpine 7165 cassette receiver with advanced digital tuner, Dolby 0, From small power boosters to monstrous four­ B&C NR, digital clock. Reg. $37Q . $329 System Three: Alpine 7162 cassett~ receiver with 15 /0 channel amps, Tweeter's got the pOwer source digital push-butto_n tuning, auto-reverse; Pioneer TS-1011 * fQr your car systerrt Choose from ADS, Alpine, dual-cone front speakers; Pioneer TS-1633 6.5-inch two- OFF'• · 1

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System Six: Kenwood KRC-616 cassette receiver with digi­ om /j,,r&J fie~ a tal tuning, Dolby B&C noise reduction-easily removes from dash· Proton in 22-watt-per-channel amp; Boston Acoustics' IIA704 4-inch dual-cone front speakers; Boston Acou11tlcs 520 Amherst St. Rt. 101-A The Mall of New Hampshire ·The Fox Run Mall C700 two-way flush-mount rear speakers. $669 Nashua, NH 880-7300 Manchester, NH 627-4600 Newington, NH 431-9700 THE NEW ::... HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1985 PAGE TWENTY-NINE Varsity_boats second to lead women's Crew team· By Erika Randmere · waves," said one UNH rower "Northeastern did well be­ also placed second with a time third to second place pulling UNH women's crew team in reference to the conditions cause it was able to handle rough of 5:33 after Radcliffe's finish within three to four boat lengths battled high waves in their first on the Charles River in Boston. water well," said Coach Squad­ of 5:31. of first place MIT at the finish. regatta of the spring season. At The varsity boat rowing eight roni of women's varsity. Accord­ The junior varsity boat rowed "We were concerned with the finish, boats had as much placed second with a time of ing to the coaches the rough with a finishing time of 4:47 waves and with the boat turning as four inches of water in them. · 4:31. Northeastern won in 4:27 water was an extreme factor. placing them after Northeast­ over. There were whitecaps and "We took a t~~ihing in the and MIT finished third in 4:36. The varsity boat rowing four em's first of 4:40 and second I watched the back of the rower place Radcliffe in 4:41. In the in front of me being drenched middle of the junior varsity race with water from waves crashing UNH was stopped going under over the boat. It was like whi­ the bridge bv strong waves. teriver rafting, but when we UNH had only three weeks reached smooth water we pulled of preparation to the six weeks ahead of Radcliffe," said Kac­ of its competitors. "It showed zorowshi. significantly when we came to Boat "A" of novice finished the bridges," said Coach Squad­ fourth with 5 :02 behind Rad­ roni. "We were not prepared cliffe, 4:45; Northeastern, 4:46; to be ready when competition MIT, 4:56. was. That is the key, to meet the UNH women's crew will be competition,·· said :Squadron1. racing on April 20 in Hanover, The women's novice crew NH again~t Dartmouth and boats faired better in compe­ Radcliffe. UNH will be hosting tition with boat "C" winning a regatta on April 21. Compet­ their race against Radcliffe and ing that Sunday will be Lowell, Northeastern. Boat "B" had a Boston rowing club and UNH. slow start in the beginning The regatta will be on Oyster according to rower Karin Kac­ River. zorwshi. UNH came up from Women's·track team takes third

By Bob Arsenault the fifth time. Her throw of The UNH women's track 141'3"' eclipsed her old mark squad finished third out of five of 138'2" and won the event by teams at a meet held this past eight feet. Saturday at the University of One bad note for the women Rhode Island. The University is that they have lost the services of Massachusetts won the meet . of freshman long jumper Ro­ The UNH women's crew team opened its season with a regatta on the Charles River in Boston with 80 points, URI followed chelle Boothroyd. Boothroyd, Saturday. (Erika Randmere photo) with 58, UNH had 49, Holy who captured sixth place in the Cross 34 and Springfield 25. long jump at URI with a leap Leading the way for the of 4.3 7 meters, may be out for ------M.LAX------Wildcats was Kaki Seibert with as long as a month with shin (continued from page 32) a first place finish in the 1500m splints. apd· a second place in the 800m. On this year's team, the area fundamentally," said senior co­ thing the Wildcat's schedule had out for a minimum of two The wind held back the times with the most depth is the captain Brian Byrnes. not allowed much of up to this weeks, dampened the Wildcats a lot as Seibert's times of 4:49 distance events. Exemplifying Byrnes, who is now second point. spirit. and 2:24.4 were well off her this is the fact that UNH ran on the All-Time career assists "They practice with us, so it's But UNH bounced back. personal bests. seven people in the 3000m run­ list after surpassing Steve Glov­ good that they can play whenev­ "I've got to give the kids the Also scoring in two events six more than they ran in any er's mark of 76 earlier this er they can," said Byrnes. credit," said Garber. "They was senior hammer and discus other event. Freshman Dom St. season, tallied one goal and two "It was a good game for the bounced back and played a good thrower Wendy DeCroteau. Pierre was the top finisher with assists in the Holy Cross game: younger guys," echoed Giatrelis. game (against Holy Cross). It's DeCroteau's throw of 101'5" third _place in 10:33. Sarah In doing this, Byrnes becomes "This game was definitely a good to see smiles on their faces. in the discus was good for sixth Garrett (10:47), Pam Egan fifth on UNH's all-time career positive experience coming off They're talking positive and place and her 112'10" effort in (10:51.3) and Maureen Connors points list by surpassing coach the horror show down at looki~~ forward _to the next the four kilogram hammer not ( 11 :03) followed St. Pierre in Garber's mark of 132 career Brown." game. only earned her a second place · fifth, sixth and seventh place. points by two. - In Providence last Saturday, UNH next faces off against finish but also qualified her for "It was a very windy day for - "We're going to have to have the UNH laxmen were handed the Minutemen of UMass Mon­ the New Englands. . everyone," said coach Nancy a fundamentally sound game a 12-6 defeat by the Brown day at Cowell Stadium. Sophomore javelin thrower Krueger, "but we got a good against the big teams," Byrnes Bruins. UMass, a traditional UNH Sandy Richter continued on the competitive effort from eve­ continued. "Today helped us do The game was hardly a show­ rival, will be another tough tear she started last spring by ryone, especially Dom, Kaki, that." case of UNH's talent. Missed game for the Wildcats. Though breaking the javelin record for and Sandy." "This game gave us an oppor­ passes, lost face-offs and ground UNH is the underdog in the tunity to work on things," said balls coupled with Brown's series with an overall record of co-captain Steve Giatrelis. "I successful capitalization on 13-20, UMass enters the game ----HOCKE~---- was pleased; it gets us back on every Wildcat error made for with a 1-3 record, their single

By Carlos_Alvarez At this time, Ward started The UNH Cycling Team was attacking on every climb in able to cop second place out of hopes of dropping some of the 15 teams at Yale on Saturday struggling riders. Thayer also even though they were forced began to attack on the uphill to compete without their entire and the White-Thurston duo women's squad and three of the continued to attack on the men. Fortunately, only one "descent. This tactic was very absence was due to injury-the effective and the break was rest being due to other respOR­ reduced to 18 by the finish of sibilities-and the team should the race. be back to full strength for next weekend's two-race trip to Unfortunately, Froburg was .Rutgers and Drew. Winning at crashed by an exhausted oppo­ Yale this weekend were the nent who failed to negotiate one defending Eastern Champions of the hairpins on the downhill. from Stony Brook ( of SUNY) After all the work done by while third place went to Har­ White, Froburg would have v a1u. Od1t1 ~uuug dtalkugc::1~ been the fic:,l1e:H :,p1iutc1 kft were Cornell, U. Virginia, WPI, for the finish; now he was gone. Drew U. and Princeton. His absence was felt at the end and the top three UNH finish­ · The course consisted of a 3.2 ers were Ward (sixth), Thurston mile circuit on a narrow road (seventh) and White (10th), which twisted and turned up and with Gemmell, Thayer and down a 400 ft. hill. In the B race Pelletier right on their heels. there were 140 starters, which made for very difficult racing The A race had a field of 60, conditions. It was easy to go which was split in half on the faster than the course allowed first lap. Stony Brook, Harvard, on the downhill section and by Princeton, Cornell and UNH midrace more than 15 riders had were the only teams to have at crashed on the six 300 degree least three riders in the lead turns. Other riders were intim­ group. UNH looked very strong idated by the high-speed cor­ with the experienced trio of Bob nering or dropped on the steep Steve Bellefeuille and Campbell, The UNH cycling team finished second at a meet at Yale over the weekend. (Kate Kallmes climb and only 40 riders of the Dave Thibeault well established original 140 managed to finish in the group. Dave Barrows was file photo) the race. less fortunate than his team­ it was impossible to rest on the other hand, had to gamble just hungry pack. Fortunately Bel­ mates and was forced to chase downhill section since utmost to place in the overall points. lefeuille was at the front of the On the first lap of the race, the front-runners by himself concentration was required for pack blocking for him, as was the huge field stayed together almost from start to finish. The the treacherous switchbacks. Just as the 3-man break was the Stony Brook team for their during the climb, but was strung pace was fast at the start and When the break was caught, being reeled in, two riders from rider. Thibeauth held on to his II out on the descent. Brian White never let up till the end of the there were six miles to go; if Stony Brook and Cornell coun­ position and after six miles of i: and Tom Thurston of UNH put 40 mile race. There were a few anyone tried to break away now terattacked. Thibeault went all sheer torture he flashed the I at the finish - I their skiing experience to work early breaks,but the serious ones and he was unsuccessful, he out to bridge up to the two crowd a broad smile I and were clearly the most con­ began at about the midway would never be able to recover riders, but it was the steepest line. Stony Brook got first and r the corners. and he just fourth, Cornell got second and I• fident and agile on point. At this time, two riders in time for the final sprint. The climb of the race t, These two riders were instru­ from WPI managed to get away only team who could comfor­ could not catch them. He UNH got third. Bellefeuille and I· the 25-man with ever­ Campbell placed 14th and -19th i mental in forming and open a 20 second gap. tably - take such a risk was cranked the pedals break group, which had gained Stony Brook, who had tour ything he had left, but three respectively in the final sprint. il half a minute on the field by the Thibeault was poised at the riders in the peloton and the miles later he was still caught end of the first lap. They were front of the pack as usual, but overall race won. UNH, on the in between the break and the only threatened early by a chase on Saturday he was satisfied group which was led by UNH letting the powerful teams from rider John Healy, but the break Stony Brook and Cornell do the was a minute ahead and the field work to catch our neighbors Men's volleyball in fourth separated into a few small from WPI. Soon the WPI riders groups as more and more people were gobbled up by the pack and gave up the futile chase. a new 3-man break was formed. By Jon Kinson of Scott Reid, who served the takes but still handled the Again, Thibeault knew Stony The UNH men's volleyball team's last seven points. Wildcats. If the Wildcats had Besides White and Thurston, Brook would chase them down tbam ended its season last In the next match, the Wild­ taken one game from Nor­ - the following UNH riders were because they did not have a rider weekend at Springfield College cats also took a split with a tough theasten they would have been in the lead pack: Francis Ward, in the break. Instead, the expe­ playing tough in the Divison BC team (15-13, 9-15). In the tied with BC for the final playoff Ben Thayer, Mike Gemmell, rienced rider from UNH posi­ I New England Collegiate Vol­ second game the 'Cats played spot. Having lost both, they Mike Pelletier and Erik Frog­ tioned himself for the imminent leyball League (NECVL). UNH close but l3C showed its quick­ then met Maine with the playoff burg. Since they were not being counterattack which would be tied for fourth in its pool but ness and took off right at the picture already determined. threatened, the UNH cyclists made when the break was had a legitimate shot at the end to win it. UNH lost both games to decided to sit in at the rear of caught. playoffs. With the ten teams After breaking for lunch, Maine, but many of the starters · the group. That is until they participating broken into two UNH met the ultimate winner were rested to give the other sensed that some of the other By this point everyone was pools of five, the teams with the of their pool, Northeastern. players game experience. Even riders were getting tired half more exhausted than normal two best records in each pool UNH had met Northeastern though the Wildcats' final re­ way through the 26 mile race. because the pace was so fast and made the playoffs. earlier in the season, playing cord was 2-6 it was not indic­ UNH started off the tourna­ them close, but it was not that ative of how they had played ment splitting a match with way this time as they lost the that afternoon. Bryant College (9-15, 16-14). first game of the match, 15-3, The Wildcats. did send out a In the second game of the match and the second, 15-13. In the message at this tournament for ----M.TRACK---~ will be moved up to Div­ !. the Wildcats fell behind early second game, Northeastern they I~ (continued from page 31) but rallied behind the serving made many early mental mis- ision I next year and will meet I' these same teams all season l'. · form by winning the 1500m in King home sick, went out and long. They played tough and f 4:06. won the 5000m in 16.04. earned the respect of the Div­ l: Sprinter Brian Gori, no In the sprints, Andre Garron -----W.LAX------ision I schools. As the cliche goes, "there is ri longer running behind school took two seconds, one each in

By Bob Arsenault Ed Damphousse went 19'7" for The men's track team defeat­ third. - ed Springfield College- 84-70 The javelin throwers dom­ Saturday behind some powerful inated their event as junior, showings in the field events. school record holder Todd The hammer throwers, with Schwendenmannand Tom Licht­ senior Bob Connolly taking fi.st man went 1-2 with throws of with a throw of 166'4", swept 207' 10" and 205 '8". Their clos­ A UConn batter tries to check his swing against UNH Tuesday. The Wildcats won 16-10.(Charles their event. Sophomores Ed J/, ~ competition came when the Smith, Jr. photo) McCabe and Dan Heath finished third place finisher from Spring- second and third with throws . field threw 190'. of 155'11" and 133'. McCabe also UNH also had some good won the discus by throwing success on the track against Softball team splits a pair 147' 10" to finish the day as Springfield. After taking some UNH's top point scorer with time off from competitive run­ By Steve Langevin trol was excellent throughout that threat and held Plymouth 9. ning, junior Aaron Lessing A pair of two-out rallies the game as she allowed only St. scoreless for the next four In the long jump, freshman displayed he is back in good carried the UNH women's soft­ one walk while striking out four innings as the Wildcats tried Zack Apgar leaped 20'10" to ball team to its initial win of batters. M. TRACK, page 30 SOFTBALL, page take first place and sophomore the season, Tuesday, a 3-2 come­ "Barb has been consistent 29. from-behind effort over Ply­ lately," said UNH head coach mouth State in the opener of Jane Job. "I've told the pitchers a doubleheader played at Ply­ to just throw strikes, especially mouth. The Wildcats lost the now that our defense is playing second game 9-8 in extra in­ well." nings. In the nightcap it was UNH "We settled down and played that got out on top only to see the type of game we are capable Plymouth St. come from behind of." said sophomore Sue Dacey. to take the lead. "We cut down on our errors." The Wildcats got three runs Trailing 2-0 going into the in the first i[).ning and _three third inning UNH cut the deficit more in the second to open a in half when Ellen Geary 6-0 lead. In the first, UNH smashed a two-out triple and capitalized on a single by Cou­ then scored on a passed ball. ture, a walk and an error for its Then in th.e fifth inning the three runs, while consecutive Wildcats got the tying and singles by Drotos and Lyn eventual winning runs. With Holzman, a double from Bu­ two out UNH's Linda Couture chalski and a sacrifice fly by reached base on an error by · Geary accounted for the second Plymouth St.'s pitcher Bean and inning runs. advanced to second base when In its half of the second inning Geary followed with a single. Plymouth St. erupted for six Heidi Wentrup then loaded the runs, with all the damage com­ bases with a sinjlle of her own, ing after the first two batters setting the stage for senior Lisa had been retired. Three hits, two Buchalski, who responded with errors, two walks and a hit batter a double which knocked in later, the Wildcats found them: Couture and Geary. Wentrup selves in a 6-6 tie. was thrown out trying to go to Plymouth St. continued their third base. offensive onslaught in the third After giving _up two runs in inning getting singles from Oja the first inning on two hits and and Hamilton and a double by two errors UNH pitcher Barb pitcher Deb Carr, which Drotos was in charge the rest . knocked in Oja and Hamilton of the way, allowing only two and forced Job to bring in Cara hits over the last six innings in Sheehan to replace starting The women's softball team split a doubleheader at Plymouth State Tuesday, winning the recording the victory. Her con- pitcher Drotos. Sheehan ended first game 3-2 and losing the second 9-8.(Jim Millard file photo) PAGE THIRTY-TWO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FRIDAY; APRIL 12, 1985 Sports .. Women'S lacrosse team pounds Vermont By Larry Kelly goals and two assists. The University of New ,, UNH held a 6_-3 halftime lead Hampshire women's lacrosse before exploding for seven team capped off a three-game straight goals to open the second stretch in the past week with half. Geromini and Sherer com­ a 20-5 trouncing of Vermont, bined for four goals in a two­ Wednesday, at Memorial Field. minute -span to pace UNH. The Wildcats split two games Sarah Kittredge had three on their southern swing last goals and an assist for the weekend, losing to nationally­ Wildcats, and Suzie Haynes .ranked Maryland, 14-9, and _added. two goals and an assist. bouncing back to beat James Pauline Collins, Sandy Vander­ Madison, 13-4. Heyden and Barb Marois scored .. Realistically, we were look- smgle tallies tor the ·t.ats. ~ ing for a split down south," said Despite the 20 goals scored Head Coach Marisa Didio. by UNH, Vermont goaltender "Southern teams have been Barb Poulin made 19 saves. outside more than we have, and The Maryland game saw the have played more games. I give Tera pins take an 8-1 half time them (UNH) a lot of credit, lead, with Haynes sco~ing the - because it wasn't easy." lone UNH goal. The victory over UVM raises UNH came storming back in UNH'~record to 3-1 for the the second half to come within season. two goals at 10-8, but Maryland Sophomore Karen Geromini iced the game with four goals led the way for UNH against in the final nine minutes. Vermont as she fired home Haynes led UNH with three seven goals and added two goals. Kittredge had two, while assists. Sophomore Ann G. Geromini, Sherer, Marois and Sherer was also a big contributer Vander-Heyden each had one. for the Wildcats, scoring five W.LAX, page 30 Douris to leave

UNH women's lacrosse player Mary Rogers(S) fires a pass as teammate Karen Geromiaj(3) UNH hockey squad . looks on.(Charles Smith, Jr. photo) By Chris Heisenberg Clarke, a WCHA second team Sophomore winger Peter Dou­ all-star, is the only other player r is will forego his final two to commit so far, a-lthough seasons of eligibility in order several more are being consi­ Men's lacrosse dumps Cross to join the Canadian Oly·mpic dered. By J. Mellow Cross, leaving them to choke game. But we had discipline Program. - Boston College's Ken Hodge, Let's face it-the H~ly Cross on a 22-8 defeat. and control_-we hung together Douris will transfer to the - who was born in Windsor, Crusaders had no chance. Five goals each by junior Tom and played like a team." University of Calgary where the Ontario, Providence's Paul Ca­ Coming off six hard, on-:the­ Arrix and sophomore Barry "They're _a Division I team" Olympic program will be based. vallini, North Dakota's Tony road games with _a 2-:-4 record, Fraser paced the Wildcat attack, said Garber, pointing out that The Toronto, Ont. native was­ Ha_rkac, Bob Joyce and Brad the UNH men's lacrosse team while 13 split-duty saves by if Holy Cross .is good enough UNH's leading scorer last year Berry, and Wisconsin's Scott wanted this one; they needed UNH goalies Andy Soma and to be in Division I, "They aren't with 27 goals and 24 assis-ts. Mellanby are others being con­ something to hit. Unfortunately Dave Applefe1d helped support a bad team at all, but that's a The Canadian Olympic pro­ sidered. for Holy Cross, they were it. - the UNH defense. - game we should win. We . gram has been scouting out In other news about UNH, In UNH'shomeopenerTues­ "They (Holy-Cross) are not worked hard. We outmuscled college players for their pro­ day, the Wildcats out-checked, a bad team at all," said UNH them a little bit and didn't let gram. Colorado College's Doug HOCKEY, page 29 out-passed and outran Holy head coach Ted Garber after the them hang on." Yet Holy Cross wasn't a complete p_ushover either. Though UNH opened the scor­ ing just one minute into the first period, Holy Cross' Bill Deehan was able to tally just 21 seconds later. UNH then took a three-goal lead as co-captain Brian Byrnes, Tom Nickerson and Fraser put in one goal each, but the margin was short-lived as two Crusader tallies brought the game to 4- 3. . The Wildcats were able to score three more goals before the clock ran out but two Holy Cross goals endea the quarter 7-5. Yet a two-goal margin was to be the closest the Crusaders would get. In the second quarter, UNH combined their talents for six goals to leave Holy Cross down 13-6 at the half. Although the Crusaders were able to tally one goal in each of the remaining two periods, four Wildcat tallies in the third stanza and five more in the last closed out the game for UNH. "We needed the win," said Garber. "The kids feel good about themselves. They've paid their du·es in practice." "This game helped us a lot UNH netminder Andy Soma(lS) protecting the net against Brown Saturday. UNH lost to Brown 12-6, but rebounded to crush Holy Cross 22-8 Tuesday.(Robin Stieff photo) M.LAX, page 29

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