Volume 66 Number 47 'pyjL Tuesday, April 27, 1976 Durham, N.H. DRAC says dorm upkeep too costly

By Richard Mori “Next year we will look at the Students living in dormitories overcharge and see if the room are being overcharged on their rates can be reduced,” he added. room rates because the Physical DRAC‘s recommendations in­ Plant and Operational Main­ clude: tenance Department (PPOM) is --eliminating the square overcharging the Office of Re­ footage formula for determining sidential Life, according to a charges from PPOM to residence study conducted by the Dining hall buildings. and Residence Advisory “The square foot method Committee (DRAC). assumes that work is done in DRAC said that residence proportion to the square footage students were being overcharged of the building, whereas this because of inefficient labor in may not be true,” the report PPOM, overcharging of admini­ stated. strative costs by PPOM, and the -T he 20 percent increase in unfair costs of grounds main­ administrative expenses, which tenance and repairs as reflected DRAC called “exhorbitant” be in residence hall room rates. reduced. DRAC Chairman Bob Millen “Part of the PPOM charge to said he “could not speculate on residential life consists of an ad­ how much the overcharge ministrative fee,” said the re­ amounted to.” port. Because the Office of Re­ “The report is provocative;'’ sidential Life pays a University said Millen., “But DRAC is not idministrative overhead charge going to rush ahead and say that of three percent on its entire this should be changed budget (which includes the immediately. There has to be PPOM administrative charge), negotiations with people like students are paying an admini­ Alan Prince (Vice Provost for strative charge twice. Budget and Administration). It -That the landscaping of re­ was a major step to get the ad­ sidence grounds does not solely The spring brought out leaves on trees, umbrellas and father and son fishing teams this weekend. (Ed ministration to agree that there benefit resident students, but Acker photos) was an overcharge. Now we have the campus of the whole,” said to find out what is the right Millen. method for charging students.” --Elimination of the ineffi­ School job possible Millen said he did not expect ciency of Maintenance Request DRAC’s report to effect next (MR) work. DRAC found a “de- year’s room rates because the finite problem with worker Board of Trustees already passed efficiency ...as evidenced by the Norton may leave that budget at their April 17 meeting. PPOM,page 22 By Ed McGrath tee for the position of assistant Assistant football and hockey principal. coach Robert Norton will be “I’ve been thinking about this leaving UNH for Merrimack Val­ for over a year” said Norton, Senators petition ley High School pending the ap­ “From a professional stand­ proval of the Merrimack School point, I’m looking at the next Board May 10. five, ten, fifteen years.” 1 If approved, Norton will leave “Coaching is a young guy’s $55 mandatory fee UNH at the end of May to work game,” continued Norton, “the at the high school in Penacook, long range opportunities in aca­ sometime dur­ demic administration will be a By Richard Mori University of New Hampshire, ing the summer. better vehicle for the future. Petitions opposing the institu­ Durham, oppose the institution Norton was one of four final­ Robert Norton tion of a $55 mandatory health of a $55 mandatory health fee ists selected by a search commit­ NORTON, page 15 fee beginning next year are being for the academic year circulated by student senators 1976-1977.” this week. The proposed $55 fee would “This $55 fee is an increase in include the addition of two 160 spend a night in line financial burden on the student physicians, three nurses, -one which we can do without,” said liscensed practitioner, one According to Dwight Antilla, Over 300 people picked their Student Body President David ward/clinic, and increased alloca­ By Marion Gordon MUB night manager, 1® people rooms within a half hour. Gard­ Farnham. tions of equipment, supplies, “It’s like buying hockey were lined up in sleeping hags in ner remarked that there had March 16 the Health Services staff development, and increased tickets or signing up for regis­ the corridors by 5:30 a.m., most been more order than in pre­ Advisory Committee had recom­ salary adjustment. tration. You-have to get your having arrived during Sunday vious years. mended to Vice Provost for Stu­ Stevens told the student cau­ body in line early,” said Assis­ evening and the early hours of Congreve Hall filled up im­ dent Affairs Richard Stevens cus on April 19, that they tant Director of Residential Life the morning. mediately. Head Resident Larry that the fee be institued. “should not oppose the pro­ Richard Gardner. Those who arrived before 6‘ 00 Hurwitz said, "I'd almost ratner Stevens said ne would maKe a posed $05 ree unless tney could Gardner was referring to a.m., hoping to be early, were see it go to a lottery. There’s decision on the $55 fee before provide an alternative.” Monday’s long lines for next asked to sign in please on a list simply a physical problem of students left campus this spring. The Advisory Committee sem ester’s room draw. that was already over 150 names lack of prime space, meaning “I think that undergraduate found that the Hood House faci­ Scheduled for 10:00 a.m. to long. They were then given a singles. Physical endurance students as a whole oppose the lities were “grossly inadequate” 3:00 p.m., the procedure applied number on a little yellow slip of shouldn’t be the only deter­ $55 fee,” said Farnham. “The and that new measures would only to people- wishing to change paper. mining factor.” administration should get this have to be undertaken, including residence halls. Changes within Just before 10:00, Gardner be­ According to Hurwitz, the message. I want students to be the proposed $55 fee. halls were completed earlier this gan admitting students by num­ available spaces for women filled heard,” Farnham said that he and week. ber into the Strafford Room. The petition states “we, being ROOM DRAW, page 7 undergraduate students at the HEALTH FEE, page 22 INSIDE

Davis Safari The freshman, sopho­ more and junior classes UNH International stu­ Two former UNH hock­ went on strike and re­ dents turned the Granite ey players are making fused to attend classes State Room into a dark their marks in the World in 1912 until their de­ corner of Africa com­ Hockey Association. mands were finally met. plete with drums, war For the story, see page Find out why it was shields, and “funghi 24. done in a blast from the ripiani”. Join the festivi­ past on page 3. ties in page 19. PA G E TW O TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 Fund raising service will support skiers

By Jerry D’Amico job of pre-identifying pros­ The recently reinstated UNH pects,” added Leberman. “We Ski Team will be receiving finan­ are not sure about exactly how cial assistance from the efforts we will go about raising as we of the UNH Development Pro­ have just been assigned the pro­ gram, according to UNH Presi­ ject for the ski team,” he said. dent Eugene Mills. “We will probably meet with The program, which has been interested individuals and incorrectly referred to as the manufacturers of ski equipment, UNH Fund Raising Service, is re­ particularly those who might sponsible for “raising funds for have individuals in the company every activity having need,” with particular interests in the according to Program Director UNH Ski Team,” he said. Robert W. Leberman. “This will be a big project,” he “We solitict funds from every added, “it will not be done over­ source except the government,” night and will take time and Four of the five horticultural therapy students preparing a plant. They are (1. to r.) Debra Meyer, said T,phprman. “W p idpntifjr and o f f o r t .” Betsy Ogden, Cecil Maxtieid and Carol Savage. (John Hanlon photo) contact the sources and solicit Leberman is optimistic about for funds.” the chances for raising the Leberman said the exact pro­ money needed. UNHplants help mental patients cedure for fund raising varies Leberman was named program with the program or activity director on February 1 this By Matt Vita Horticultural therapy is a new b ackg ro und and listened. We being funded. “We usually look year and is in the process of re­ Every Thursday morning at technique for dealing with have gotten him to respond, and at a number of different corpor­ organizing his office. He works seven-thirty, a group of five mental patients developed at now he waters everyone’s plants. ations and organizations as well closely with UNH Fund Director botany and plant sciences stu­ Kansas State University, accord­ The hospital staff is am azed.” as parents and alumni,” he said. George Bamford, the other dents move their horticultural ing to Maxfield. Each week, the class designs a Success of the efforts varies member of his staff, in his office therapy class to the New Hamp­ “This has psychologically been different project for the patients with the program. “We may in Schofield House. shire State Mental Hospital in proven that mental patients re­ to work with. Some of the pro­ send out 40,000 requests and get The program has recently been Concord. spond to plants,” said Maxfield. jects have been decorating pots, a reply rate of one half of one directing its efforts toward They work with the patients “We haven’t been trained making plant hangers, a kitchen percent, usually a reply of raising funds for the new UNH using their knowledge of plants therapeutically — we think vegetable garden, a terrarium put one-two percent is considered Alumni Center. Leberman also without any previous experience plants,” he said. together by the patients and a normal,” he said. said the School of Engineering in social services or occupational “I was unprepared and a little trip to the Concord Hospital Lists of alumni and companies and the School of Agriculture therapy. scared the first day,” said Meyer. greenhouse. which may be possible contrib­ have been recent recipients of The five students in the class “The patients were so excited “Everything is related to utors are maintained. The lists funds raised by the program. are senior plant science majors though, they wanted to work.” plants and has plants involved,” are developed from alumni “We have raised some money Cecil Maxfield and Betsy Ogden, Meyer told of one man at the said Maxfield. records and contact with com­ for the Alumni Center, ” he junior plant science major Carol hospital who the staff had “ They really enjoy flowers panies which may have interests added, “but we need at least Savage, junior botany major warned the students of because and the colors - they respond to in the particular program being $15,000 more.” He added that funded. Debra Meyer and freshman plant he might be violent. “He never PLANT SCIENCE, page 5 FUND,page 22 science major Bill Gardocki. participated - just stood in the “It is im portant to do a eood On the surface, quiet...

By Vickie Schoonover Prince has traffic duty from registered Peugot. The driver was “A lot of people think Dur­ 4:25-4:40 at the corner of Main a 16 year old girl who had just ham is a quiet town. It is on the and College Road. He waved and gotten her license. The car be­ surface but there’s a lot of stuff signaled and directed.. The girls longed to her father. Following that goes on underneath... smile at him, the men drive by as h er hom e on Mill Road we activity that interests the if he’s a traffic light with found the delinquent father and police,” said Officer Robert arms. A slick silver Camero his other unregistered vehicle. Prince of the University Police. raced right by his upraised arm. Getting back into the cruiser Cruising around the campus “Hey! Pay attention!” yelled Prince told me, “I chewed him with Prince on Friday night I Prince. out. Didn’t give her a summons. found that he was right. And it “I will!” retorted the driver of They go on your license, and was even a relatively quiet Fri­ the Camero. ] that’s no way to start out in a day night, he said. The traffic taken care of, driving career. Justice would not Prince and I got in S-8, one of Prince and I got back into the have been served.” Thank good­ the three University Police cars, Cruiser. Not for long. A girl in ness for cops with a heart. 1 at 4:15 p.m. As we drove around Fairchild kicked her leg through Beware of leaving your car the campus, Prince was constant­ the glass panel of a swinging totally unattended for two ly looking for “things that aren’t door and we went to check on weeks in the Williamson parking normal”. Meanwhile, the two her in Hood House. No biggie, lot. Norman Marsiluis, a resident way let us know how just a small cut. of the Quiet Mini-dorm, did just things were in the rest of Justice is not always served in POLICE, page 5 A UNH-Durham Police cruiser on patrol. (Sue Wiener photo) Durham. a summons. Prince stopped a un­ elsewhere in education

cularly if they thought it might start a around the country. One for the money trend. An audience watched in amusement at Solar heaters California State University in Los Angeles Project Helios, a $125,000 solar water When John Leavenworth, an 1824 as a poet giving a presentation in the nude heating project at San Jose State Univer­ Yale graduate, provided in his will for a Still streaking proceeded to cover himself with mud and sity, is the pilot for what some university scholarship for Yale students bearing the Streaking isn’t dead. That good old all- pull a nylon stocking over his head. He officials hope will become the major Leavenworth name, he didn’t envision American pastime lives on at Purdue Uni­ then harnessed a large statue to his back method of heating not only on that cam­ students of the future being as resource­ versity. Two months ago, 100 naked men and began reciting. pus but on all campuses in the California ful as Joel Hay. of Purdue’s Cary Quad staged their an­ But when he presented a cage contain­ system. Hay, a Yale economics student, noticed nual “Nude Olympics” by sprinting down ing three live rats, poured lighter fluid The idea is the brain child of Auxiliary that Leavenworth’s will doesn’t require the sidewalk outside the dorm. over them and lit them, it got to be a bit Enterprises Manager William Schooler the scholarship recipient to be a descen- The event has been going on for six too much for some people. who worried about the rising fuel costs. dent, only that he bear the Leavenworth years - long before the term streaking be­ This artist was banned from campus He approached the environmental studies name. came a household word and apparently it and the gallery director lost his job. department about using solar heaters on Any student can claim the $1700 per will endure for years to come. A .few days later, a student at CSU- large buildings. year stipend if he is willing to have his Elsewhere, the Dean of Students at the —Long Branch hammered three mice to A study showed the project would be name legally changed to Leavenworth, University of Rochester in Rochester, death during a poetry recital. The student economically feasible. The heater will be concluded Hay. New York performed a “semi-streak” was kicked off campus pending a discip­ designed and built by students this sum­ Since Hay is. a graduate student and the around a campus building after losing a linary hearing. mer. will specifies that only undergrads are bet. The difference between streaking In another instance of art extermina­ The project supervisor said that the eligible, he is hoping to find a freshman dean-style and the real thing is a pair of tion, a University of South Carolina art heater will provide all the hot water for willing to try the scheme and split the boxer shorts. instructor wrung the neck of a live chick­ the three dorms on sunny days and that proceeds fifty-fifty with him. en. When his department chairman angri­ enough water can be stored over a period However, the University has some dis­ ly banned any repeat performances, the of four or five sunny days to last for two cretionary powers in awarding the scho­ Morbid art instructor filed a complaint with the consecutive cloudy days. larship and administrators might balk at Extermination as an art form seems to student senate charging infringement of If the storage tanks are emptied, a gas paying it out under Hay’s scheme, parti­ be catching on in some Universities his academic freedom. water heater automatically takes over. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PA G E T H R E E Farnham opposed to LSC closing in June

By Warren Heilbronner Student President David Farn­ ham told the University Senate yesterday that he was opposed to closing the Learning Skills Center (LSC) June 30. The Resource Task Force Committee recommended last fall that LSC be discontinued as part of a general University bud­ get cut. The Senate’s Education­ al Policy Committee concurred. The Senate defeated a motion March 15 which would have had students share the costs of re­ ______David Farnham______Arthur G. Davis UNH Class of 1912 points to a photo of 15 members of his family who attended the mediation with the University. of deja vu.” The Senate has University. fEd Acker nhoto) In cseoneo, that voto killed tho debated the issue "not once for LSC. Without partial support one hour but many times for from students using it, the many hours.” Administration was not willing Chairman of the English De­ 1912 graduate reveals UNH past to keep the Center. partment Donald Murray said he Senator Greg Scott said, knew what he was voting on. “I By Michael Imsick “To carry out his * strategy, down the steps, the bell clanging “There were a lot of problems wouldn’t want it to go on record with the motion. I think many According to 87 year old Ar­ Bracket had someone start a lit­ overhead, President Gibbs that I voted (March 15) without people were left with ques­ thur G. Davis, the greatest stu­ tle smoke fire Northeast of the caught him and asked him into knowledge” of what the motion tions.” dent strike of UNH’s history oc­ campus. Bracket then climbed his office, demanding an expla­ was about. curred in 1912 during the reign Farnham said he did not think T-hall and rang the fire bell. This nation.” of President William Gibbs. Scott tried to remedy the situ­ sent everyone running towards “I’ll come in tom orrow ,” said he had voted on the fate of the “ In the spring of 1912, Bill ation by submitting a motion the smoke,” said Davis. Bracket, “right now I’m going to LSC, just the funding. Bracket, the president of the which would continue “the func­ Davis was in charge of ringing Newmarket to catch, the train.” Other senators had said they sophmore class thought of a tions of the Learning Skills Cen­ the T-hall bells daily at seven, The remainder of Bracket’s class thought the motion would just unique way to win the frosh vs. ter.” one, and six p.m“Anyone who was secretly boarding the rtrain eliminate Marcia Heiman’s posi­ soph class contest,” said Davis. But the parlimentarian said wanted to ring the bell had to go to Dover.” tion as director of the Center, Victory came to the first class to that because the motion had through my room to get to the Of course, the sophomores not the whole organization. get its president to Boston. De­ already been taken on March 15, bell rope,” said Davis. won the contest but Monday But Geology Professor Cecil feat came if either class presi­ the motion was out of order. “As Bracket was running Schneer said, “I have this feeling dent was captured and retained. DAVIS, page 9 O’Neil elected Caucus chairman Budweiser to sponsor Jim O’Neill, fraternaties sena­ the University Senate on April tor, was elected new Student 12. Caucus Chairperson Sunday spring clean-up day O’Neill said he was opposed to night. The junior- Hotel Administra­ the $55 mandatory health fee becuase it “is not fair to those By Roger P. Rydell tion major will begin his term of away the remnants of winter. students who have blue cross/- Anhauser-Busch, in cooper­ office on May 1. In the past, people within the blue shield and those who are ation with the 1976 College O’Neill was reportedly elected Pitch-In Week, is sponsoring a University community partici­ by one vote on the second ballot military dependents and use pated in the cleanup for the Pease Air Force Base facilities.” May Day cleanup for the week because of a tie on the first bal­ of May 1 through May 7. simple reason it would improve lot. O’Neill, who is. from Yonkers, UNH will join the ranks of the appearance of the landscape O’Neill said his first priority New York, said “the state has an New England colleges and uni­ and display pride in their in­ would be to “increase student obligation to increase aid to versities who enrolled in the stitution, but today Anhauser- government’s credibility among UNH to help the in-state stu­ week-long drive to spruce up the Busch has provided a monetary dents.” students.” area’s campuses. incentive for the “spring clean­ He added that expenses would “We have to legitimize Qiffexis- This is the first time UNH has ers.” probably be rising substantially tance,” he added. “There are a entered the Anhauser-Busch A first prize of $1000 will be next year for all students unless lot of things which are not being Jim O’Neil competition which is offering a awarded to five different uni­ the state appropriates more done now which should.” regional first and second prize versities at the end of the week. money to the University System He had told the Caucus earlier O’Neil, the president of Kappa for the “most improved cam­ The prizes are awarded within during the special session. that “there has been a blatant Sigma fraternity, said he was pus,” but the idea of spring each distributional region of the O’Neill said the Chairman’s job lack of leadership this past looking forward to working with cleaning is a tradition in Anhauser-Busch Company. would be his only extracurricu­ year.” the new senators. Durham. A second prize 'of $500 will lar activity next year. There was a question of who “Though only 20 ran we still B ack in the 1920s, a day also be awarded to five uni­ should lead the Student Caucus have some excellent people,” he “I will not be house presi­ called New Hampshire Day was versities within these districts last fall, O’Neill said. “I think the said. dent,” he said. “The Chairman’s, set aside for a full scale campus The University has already Chairman has to provide a lot of O’Neill said he favored amend­ job will be my primary respon­ “face lift.” Members of the Uni­ started its beautification pro­ the leadership in the Caucus.” ment on pass/fail which passed sibility.” versity staff, faculty and student gram for the spring of 1976 and body combined forces to clear MAY DAY, page 11 You may breathe this newspaper’s remains

By Mftie McLean included in the $40,000 budget. You may breathe the remains The truck dumps the type­ of this newspaper next week. Or writer ribbon, sock, papers and you may read another paper peanut butter jar in an open made from it. shed at the incinerator. The UNH trash goes to two places, trash is burned, the vapor the Durham Incinerator and the “scrubbed” and the remains Recycling Center. drift into the air. When you throw the What’s left is a pile of metal newspaper away with the empty and a small amount of ash. The Coke cans, mediocre exams, a typewriter cartridge and a large used typewriter ribbon, an pile of cans are thrown in a wide empty peanut butter jar and an hole in back of the incinerator. odd sock - it will go in one of A bulldozer ploughs the metal the two directions. into the dirt, forming layer on Most garbage from the Univer­ layer of slowly disintegrating sity goes to'the town incinerator metal. - three truckloads a day. Each UNH makes up about half of truck load carries 11,700 pounds the incinerator’s business, which to the incinerator on Durham is owned by both UNH and Dur­ Point Road, according to Claude ham. Patterson, trucking foreman for Trash that is recycled goes to the UNH Trucking Services. the Recycling Center on Route - The University pays $40,000 a four. Most of the Center’s busi­ year to collect trash five days a ness comes from UNH with only week and take it to be burned, 29 per cent of the refuse coming Patterson said. Recycled trash is TRASH, page 7 A worker at the Town of Durham Incinerator stokes it with inflammables. (Ed Acker photo) picked up separately and is not P A G E F O U R THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 Stepping into spring

Spring’s too cold and the summer­ time is too hot. Yes there are classes to go to and finals are coming up. But today forget them. There’s so much near to enjoy. The sea, mountains and lakes are close. That’s what UNH advertising says and it's true. So... Go canoeing, for an early swim or just walk through College Woods .The mid-semester crunch is over and you still have plenty of time to study for finals, and besides, spring won’t be around again for a year. By the way, John Hanlon took these pictureSo THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PA G E FIV E Morrison is new campus calendar editor-in-chief TUESDAY, April 27 Steven Morrison replaces shops, displays, books for sale, MUB, 10a.m.-4 Michael D’Antonio as editor-in- CHEMISTRY SEMINAR: “ Recent Synthetic p.m. chief of The New Hampshire to ­ Approaches to Prostaglandins,” Roger J. White, day. Morrison was elected by the Chemistry department, Room L103, Parsons Board of Governors of the pa­ Hall, 11 a.m.-noon. DAVIDSON LECTURE SERIES: “Cultural per. Contact and Interaction,” Stephen H. Rhine- Morrison is a former reporter JAZZ CONCERT: Windsor, Connecticut, High smith, President of American Field Service, and news editor for The New School Jazz Band, MUB cafeteria, 11 a.m.- Room 4, Social Science Center, 12:30 p.m. H a m p sh ire . He is presently noon. designing his own major in polit­ ical^ ournalism. UNIVERSITY THEATER MATINEE: “ Sticks EARTH SCIENCES SEMINAR: “ Studies in “The main function of the pa­ and Bones,” Johnson Theater, Paul Arts Cen­ Cambrian Metasediments, East Point,-Nahant, per is to the students,” Morrison ter, 2 p.m. Students $2, general $2.50. said. “We have a responsibility Mass.,” Richard Tollo, Earth Sciences depart­ to the administration, faculty, ment, Room 119, James Hall, 12:15-1:15 p.m. staff, and community as well. MATHEMATICS SEMINAR: “ Riemann Sur­ faces,” Math faculty, Room M316, Kingsbury “The New Hampshire plays a TUESDAY AT LUNCH: “ American Glassware Hall, 2:30-3:30 p.m. role in letting people know what Steve Morrison of the 18th and 19th Century,” slide presenta­ is happening, providing nows and tion by Marion Stocking of Home Extension some entertainment in the form Columbia journalism school at­ of features or the arts.” tests to that. I want to continue Services, Senate-Merrimack Room, MUB, 12:15 DAVIDSON LECTURE SERIES: “ Ethics, Edu­ Morrison has just completed along these lines and improve on p.m. cation and International Management,” an internship at the Newbury- that,” he said. Stephen H. Rhinesmith,,AFS; Stan Davis, Grad­ port (Mass.) Daily News. After UNH, Morrison would WOMEN’S SOFTBALL CLUB: Plymouth uate School .of Business, Harvard; Felix “I learned down at Newbury- like to get into reporting, of State, Lewis Field, 3 p.m. Hertzka, Vice President, Nashua Corporation; port th at The New Hampshire course. He also has ambitions of Richards Auditorium, Murkland Hall, 4 p.m. isn’t much different than a pro­ branching out into free-lance IDEAS IN POLITICS LECTURE: “An Intro­ writing and magazine work. fessional newspaper,” said the duction to the Reading of Huckleberry Finn,” MUB PUB: Rick Bean, DJ, with funk- and bump 19-year-old Morrison. As for The New Hampshire\ he Professor Harry V. Jaffa, Claremont College, music for dancing, 8 p.m. “Down there, you’ve just got wants to “see that the paper Room 210, Social Science Center, 3:30 p.m. to do things faster and more comes out in as professional and often. It’s excellent training,” he as good a manner as possible.” THURSDAY, April 29 said. Morrison has recently chosen WOMEN’S INTERCOLLEGIATE LACROSSE: Morrison would like to see his new staff. He chose Milly Maine, Gorham; Memorial Field, 3:30 p.m. The New Hampshire get into McLean and Janet Prince as THURSDAY AT ONE: Poet Kathleen Fraser more investigative reporting. He managing editors, Doug Cardin DAVIDSON LECTURE SERIES: “ Big Business will read her works, Room 130, Hamilton wants to cover the gubernational as business manager, Matt Vita and National Goals,” Dr. Donald Guertin, Vice Smith Hall, 1 p.m. and presidential elections next and Barbara Hatcher as news President, Exxon Corporation, Iddles Auditor­ fall. editors, Ed Acker as photogra­ ium, Parsons Hall, 4 p.m. uThe New Hampshire over the phy editor, Ed McGrath as DAVIDSON LECTURE SERIES: “ The Ethical sports editor, Casey Holt as arts Principles of German Aid to Developing Count­ last two years has done an excel­ MUSO FILM: “ Hearts and Minds,” Strafford lent job to be what a newspaper editor, and Michelle Morin as cir­ ries,” Dietmar Kreusel, Consul, German Consu­ Room, M UB, 6:30 and 9 p.m. Season pass or should be. Our award from the culation manager. late, Boston, Room 209, McConnell Hall, 4 $.50 at the door. p.m.

INTEGRITY CLUB LECTURE: “Creative Re­ SIGMA XI LECTURE: Annual Banquet and In­ Night lationships,” Carol Whitter and Sharon Renser- itiation of New Members, “ The Current Status house, Room 215, Social Science Center, 8 of Marijuana Research,” Dr. Louis S. Harris, POLICE p.m. continued from page 2 Prince is from Franklin, New Professor and Chairman of Pharmacology, Vir­ Hampshire. He graduated from ginia Commonwealth University, Strafford that and had his tape deck OAK ROOM SERIES: “Through the Eyes of a UNH with a degree in Political Room, MUB, Dinner (for members only) 6 stolen. He reported the incident Photographer,” two photographic films dealing S cience eight years ago. He p.m.; lecture 8 p.m. (open to all). for insurance purposes to Prince with the experiences, philosophies, and works who made out the report. started as a Traffic Aide at UNH of Wynn Bollock, Imogene Cunningham, and “ Of all the places in New four years ago. LAW SCHOOL LECTURE: Discussion by four In 1972 he was sworn in as a Edward Weston, Oak Room, Huddleston Hall, 8 H am pshire, this is where I’d former UNH students on their first year experi­ want to be if I had an accident,” UNH police officer. p.m. “It was a beautiful day,” said ences at four New England law schools, Room said Bill Wood, the dispatcher on 21 5, Social Sciance Center, 7:30 p.m. duty that night. Prince. “I’ll never forget it as MUB PUB FLICKS: Horror Night featuring Bill dispatches for the Durham long as I live. I raised my right “The Dunwich Horror,” Three Stooges, and UNIVERSITY THEATER: “ Sticks and Bones,” Police, University Police, Lee hand and said, ‘I do’,” he more, 8 p.m. Police, University Fire Depart­ laughed. Johnson Theater, Paul Arts Center, 8 p.m. Stu­ dents $2; general $2.50. ment and the Durham Ambu­ WEDNESDAY, April 28 lance Corps. Prince entered the New Hamp­ “We let everybody know shire Police Training Academy at MUB PUB: Special 45 minute demonstration HUMAN SEXUALITY SEMINAR: Information what’s going on,” said Wood. Pease Air Force Base earlier this by Trinidad-Tripoli Steel Band, 9 p.m. on all areas o f human sexuality, film s, w o rk ­ The constant chatter of the year for six years of intensive cruiser’s radio attested to that. It physical and academic training. informed us of a fire at the He graduated third in a class of thirty-seven. dump, an accident on Madbury T H E NEW HAMPSHIRE is published and distributed semi-weekly throughout the academic year. Our Road, an accident on Coe’s Cor­ “My educational background offrtses are located in the Memorial Union Building, Durham, N.H. 03824. Phone 868-7561 or 862-1490. Yearly subscription $7.00. Second class postage paid at Durham, N.H. Printed at Castle Publications in ner, an attempted suicide by helps me a lot--psychology, PKBstow, N.H. and at The Exeter News-Letter Co., Exeter, N.H. Total number of copies printed 10,500. overdose off Mill Road and a gas political science, the human­ station robbery in Dover, besides ities- why people do the things back to Williamson. Some guy incidents we attended to on they do,” said Prince. campus. had come up from behind them Plant therapy A weaving, speeding car went We stopped a few cars for and grabbed each of them. by us in the opposite direction routine violations such as run­ We took them home in the PLANT SCIENCE students with some basic know­ on Williamson Drive. We made a ning a stop sign, a broken tail cruiser where Prince took their continued from page 2 quick u-turn and went after him. light, going the wrong way down names, ages, addresses, birth- ledge of plants. “We’ve been instructed to deal No car in sight but there were a one-way street. One girl looked dafes and a sketchy description that,” said Meyer. “We made two guys and two girls running like she was going to cry, a guy of the molester. He wrote up the corsages on Valentines Day and with the patients as people - and that’s been our greatest success,” toward the mini-dorms. just sat in his seat and looked incident as an assault. G it was one of our biggest success­ sullen, another guy was very “ You can’t just go around es. They liked the colors and said Betsy Ogden. “Stay here,” ordered Prince. friendly and talkative. Prince grabbing girls by their asses,” smells. Have they ever felt unprepared I dutifully sat in the cruiser usually ended the conversation said Prince. “I’ll return tomor­ “One guy never used to be to deal with a dangerous situa­ while he ran after the occupants with, “Thank you and drive safe­ row night to see if I can get a able to decide anything for him­ tion? of the car. Five minutes later he better description when they’ve self. When we worked with the “One day we were locked in a returned with the driver. ly.” calmed down.” flowers, I’d ask him what color ward and an elderly lady began Prince said to the guy, “I Prince said, “You never know By the end of the night, Prince he wanted and he’d say, ‘y ° u to get uptight about us asking don’t like running through the how someone is going to react.” and I had put on 48 miles on the decide, you decide.’ Now he is her to get involved,” said Max- woods at night and maybe trip­ Precisely for that reason, each cruiser’s odometer. We filled the able to make up his own mind.” field. ping and breaking a leg.” time Prince stopped a car he tank with gas and returned to The horticultural therapy class “There are always supposed to called in to the dispatcher. If he the station. was started last year by senior be some staff members from the The guy responded, “We does not call in “All clear” with­ Prince typed up his daily log plant science major Chris Rich, hospital with us all the time,” didn’t think you’d follow us if in five minutes, the dispathcer sheet and the report on the who has since graduated. She said Carol Savage. “They don’t we ran.” sends another cruiser to the assault while I sat and shook in was helped out by a social ser­ let us work with any of the No summons was issued, just scene. time with the passing train. The vices major, Camille Morin. dangerous people, though.” whole building shakes when “They got funding for us this another written warning for “Cops still get killed but at trains pass. Adds a touch of year and made it possible to con­ “ The staff represents some reckless driving. least this way there’s a good hominess to the station. kind of power structure to chance they’ll catch the guy who tinue the program,” said Max- “I like my work because I We went over to Dover in our them,” said Maxfield. did you in,” said Prince. field. “That’s our biggest con­ th in k i t ’s w orthw hile,” said respective cars for a nightcap, cern now -- making sure that it is “They became people to us Around 11:00 two girls called Prince. “I take a lot of pride in the end of a night with a Univer­ continued next year.” and not mental patients,” said .from Gibbs requesting an escort this job.” sity cop. The class is open to any UNH Savage. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PA G E SIX

Pre-Registration for Art Majors notices will take place in room A201, j CLUBS & ORGANIZATIONS main office of the Art Department j GENERAL GAY STUDENTS ORGANIZATION: Meeting to organize April 27 9-4. SAFETY AND ACCIDENT REPORTING SEMINAR: upcoming dance, Thursday, April 29, Room 320, MUB, 7 Conducted by Ann Chapline and Roy Sabean, seminar p.m. covers Workmen’s Compensation benefits, Thursday, Non-Art Majors will register in the ; April 29, Grafton Room, MUB 10-11 a.m. STUDENTS AGAINST NUCLEAR ENERGY: Meeting Tuesday, April 27, Commuter Lounge, 8 p.m. PEP mem­ bers and other interested persons are welcome. GRANITE EDITORIAL POSITIONS: We are currently Paul Arts Center room A 2 18-219 recruiting editors for the following positions; literary, M O R TAR BO ARD: Meeting to decide about advisors and photography, production, senior section; we are also in projects; current addresses, phone numbers and summer 6-8 PM. need of a business manager and an editor-in-chief. For addresses are needed, Monday, May 3, Senate Room, applications or more information come to Room 125, MUB, 4:30-5:30 p.m. MUB. VOLUNTEER PROBATION COUNSELORS: Arelen Ker­ shaw speaks on alcohol use; film “ Chalk Talk," Friday, ACADEMIC April 30, Hillsboro Room, MUB, 7:30-9 p.m. STUDENTS FOR A PARK: Meeting Tuesday, April 27, COMPUTER COURSE, TECO: TECO is a string oriented Commuter Lounge area, MUB, 8 p.m. text editor used to create and edit program and data files, The New Hampshire Thursday, April 29, Room M227, Kingsbury Hall, 1-3 A N G E L FLIG H T : Elections will be held Wednesday, p.m. Non-credit, no charge, pre-register with Computer April 28, ROTC Building. 8:30 p.m. Services, 862-2323. Susan Sliwoski, instructor. STUDENTS FOR RECYCLING: Meeting Thursday, April Sin/onietta 29, Room 320, MUB, 7:30 p.m. May 3. 8pm Johnson Theater LARGE FORMAT PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP: An PHI KAPPA PHI: Annual Banquet and Initiation of New introduction to the techniques of using view cameras, Sat­ Members Friday, April 30, New England Center, for mem- urday, May 1, New England Center, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. hftr<; and thpir OHPC + c Ranrinot at £ n.m ./ “ What'c Doyond «ipton Kum m icr, inso ucLoi ru r more mrormation call 862-1900. the Bicentennial,” slide presentation by Franklin Heald, University Editor, begins at 7:30 p.m.

TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION: Free introductory lecture Thursday, April 29, Room 210, McConnell Hall, CAREER 7:30 p.m.

CAREER P LA N N IN G DROP—IN: Informal discussion RELIGIONS for underclassmen and graduating students about post- -graduation plans, direction. Tuesday, April 27, Career INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Prayer Planning and Placement, Room 203, Huddleston Hall, meetings Monday through Thursday, Room 18, Hamilton 6:30 p.m. LAST ONE OF THE SEMESTER Smith Hall, 5-5:30 p.m. LAW SCHOOL INTERVIEWS Of Prospective Law Students A Representative of the College of Law TIGKETS$3 students in advance $4.50 others and at door MUB Ticket Office 862-2290 10am-4pm UNIVERSITY OF SAN FERNANDO VALLEY will be in Boston from May 17 to May 18, 1976. For appointment contact Leo L. Mann, USFV, 8353 Sepulveda Blvd. Sepulveda, California 91343. Tel. # 213-894-5711. ______TRUTH OF TRUTHS ____ If y o u .... think about the Love thaT The College of Law offers a full-time 3 year day program as well as part-time day exists within your heart, you will and evening programs. experience being loved, which will enable you to love God, others, and yourself, more. The school is fully accredited by the Committee of Bar Examiners of the State Bar As love increases, obedience, which of California and has officially applied for approval by the American Bar is the action o f love, the sa crificin g of your will for God’s will, increases. Association. The schoof c?nnot predict when or if such approval will be obtained. As obedience increases, Union, or One­ ness* approaches...... Thinking of the Lore in your heart, results in Union with God, others, and WE INVITE YOU you rself. to join Slate Gifts marketing team. New company, new Contemplation of the Love within your heart, results in the RECEIVING of the products, new ideas. Part or full time. Excellent for U.N.H. PERFECT KNOWLEDGE o f God, the TRUTH OF TRUTHS'r that cannot be spoken, Students to start part time while in school, full time during that is Love, semester breaks and vacations, part time again upon that is God. returning to school, and a ready made career opportunity In the Name o f Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Amen . I . created upon graduation. Investment of $160.00 required, P.S. Jesus Christ IS God. Lucas^Buz secured by inventory. Seminars will be held Saturday May 8 1976 at 10:00 AM, 2 PM & 7PM at the Holiday Inn, Portsmouth, N.H., in the Conference Room. Ask for Mr. Gerrish.

Chinese and Polynesian Restaurant

TRINIDAD TRIPOLI Chines* Feed it its best STEEL BAND 48 Third Street Dover,NH

Sponsored by A.P.0 Specializing in Teke Out Service

IN CONCERT J U M P UP! Friday, April 30 8 p.m. Saturday, May 1 8 p.m. Granite State Rm. MUB Snively Arena 742-0040 Students in advance-$2.50 Students in advance:$1.50 others and at the door-$3.50 Others & at the door:$2 HOURS OPEN Classical and calypso music Pop, rock music M onday 4:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. TPosday thru Thursday 7 7.30 a.m. to 9:00 p.n

Friday and Saturday 7 7.30 a.m. to 7:30 a.m

Sunday 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PA G E SE V EN

• BRIDAL, BRIDESMAIDS GOWNS • AFTER 5 DRESSES • LORD WEST, AFTER SIX & PALM BEACH TUXEDOS Tux n’ Lace 22 UNION STREET EXETER, N. H. 03833 Tel. 772-4376 - Judy Hodsdon Tel. 772-5261 - Joan Stowell

^>Open Daily 10:00 - 5:00 — Evenings by Appointment Closed Tuesdays & Sundays I Riding Lessons Horses Boarded bythe day, week, and month For m ore i * m h t & information call or visit Students camped at the MUB awaiting room draw. (Wayne King photo) GREEN ACRES STABLES Lining up for rooms DREW/FRESHETT ROAD off Rte. 108 DOVER, N.H. - ______~ 7 4 7 ______

my room .” Freshman business major Jim R O O M D R A W An undeclared freshman who Randazzo objected to the un­ continued from page 1 would not reveal her name said, official list. “It was good organi­ “I came by here at 7:30 last zation but how come everyone Summer session in up much faster than those for night and already there was didn’t know about it before­ men. He said he had offered a line. That’s why we have the hand? One girl started and be­ singles to men waiting in line. He list. We don’t want people came king of the show. I figured Collegetown USA! said that cost might have been a coming in early this morning they’d send you away if you determining factor in the men’s getting ahead of us.” came to stay the night.” You can live where history lived You can have all decisions to choose doubles. the action you want in young/old Boston - theatres, Normally the MUB is locked Suddenly one girl exclaimed, “Those 24 women who got restaurants, museums, music and major league at midnight, but according to “He’s going to go by it!” singles knew what they had to sports You will be close to famous beaches and do and they earned them. It’s Ant ilia, he received clearance Gardner was greeted with a loud historical landmarks of the greater Boston area, now the twenty-fifth one who got from MUB director, Michael round of applause. more exciting than ever in this Bicentennial Year You burned,” said Hurwitz. O’Neill to keep the front doors According to Gardner, he had can learn from a distinguished faculty teaching That twenty-fifth one was open. planned to begin handing out Susan Brown, a sophomore numbers by his own system but graduate and undergraduate courses in Liberal Arts. O’Neill said that the students Business. Law Enforcement and Technology. You'll political science major currently w?re standing in the rain and instead decided to pick up where enjoy learning how inexpensive the tuition, food and living in Stoke. since most planned to stay any­ the old list left off. He insisted board are compared to other universities of equal “I was rather upset,” Brown way he thought it best that they that no one would be allowed to caliber. Both day and evening courses are available said. “I was number 50 on the be let in. He had arranged with sign in friends who were not list and I thought I had a good present. for your convenience. Director of Residential Life, chance. I think there should be “They did what we were going Don't miss out' Registration begins June 7. Classes David Bianco, to have Antilla some priority for upperclassmen. to do, only earlier,” he said. He beginJune21. Send for full details and brochure remain overnight with the stu­ You’re paying all this money; assured everyone that they with the coupon below dents. you should have some choice.” would get a room somewhere. Brown remarked that the Bianco said, “I don’t recall “ There has to be a better number drawing system was a hearing anything about a list.” system,” said Sandy Pollock, a He added that he had always Northeastern a good idea. sophomore pre-vet major. “I’m Freshmen Christie Feist and favored having a lottery for going to be a junior and I have room draw. Meredith Brown began the list no better chance to go where I University ^ *010 1:00 p.m. Sunday afternoon. “It’s always proven to be a want. I also don’t like the $50 Said Brown, “I’ve been here 17 traumatic business but it’s the non-refundable fee. I would have hours. I want to make sure I get best we dould do,” said Bianco. cashed it in already.” Recycling center

TRASH continued from page 3 per. over there.” So the 16 Greek Houses have from townspeople. The fraternities and sororities are a different matter. They dumpsters, like the University, The paper - up to ten tons a “handle their trash separately which are picked up by Great Bay week - is separated into corru­ from the University because Disposal Service, a private com­ gated, mixed and newspaper^ they are private enterprises,” pany. the bottles into colors and the said Gene Leaver, Director of A spokesmanfor that company cans into'tin and aluminum. Physical Plant. As tax-paying said he “had no idea how much The Center piles up 20 to 25 units they can have the town, we pick up from the fraternities tons of material before North pick up their trash. and I wouldn’t divulge that in­ Shore Recycling picks it up and “But if the town picks it up formation anyway.” processes it. The glass is crushed, they must put trash barrels out After the Greek garbage is the cans are shredded, and it is all in the street,” Leaver said. “This picked up it goes to the Durham shipped to dealers who make it means someone has to bring incinerator. It is burned with the back into cans, bottles and pa­ them out, and the cans might tip rest of the University trash. WANTED 1 ad These and are & news P A I D & production workers for positions $ w ith| The New Hampshire. excellent-^ Come to room 151 in the benefits. ^ eet City,y State -...... Zip ..

MUB and check it out!!!! Keep pace . keep learning PA G E E IG H T THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 *********************** ***********************

ATTENTION ALL VETERANS May 3, 1976 12:00- 1:00 PM

FLOYD WRIGHT DUNCAN DEWAR ANDY CAREY Hanover Room MUB ^6-10 AM 3 10-3PM 3-7PM Elections will be held for new members to the Veterans Committee. Positions open to represent the following:

Grad Rep, Senior, Junior, JIM WEST CHRIS CHANDLER 7-MIDNITE MIDNITE -6AM Soph, Frosh, D.C.E., and T.S.A.S. These People Entertain You For A Living. • • For additional information contact: And the GREAT MUSIC they play NICK DIZDAR, THE HITS IN STEREO.... (Veterans Coordinator) 24 hours a day before 5:00 at 862-1553 or Bob Jones 868-7405 after 5:00 PM.

*********************** sttreolO O *********************** w JO m m m m m m m Student 5 1 Rentals I ATTENTION FAU 1 Fall Semester i 1976 STUDENTS : Summer Rates 8 8 Available 1 WORK STUDY POSITIONS g Strafford House § OPEN FOR EXPERIENCED 1 i STUDENTS: Singles & Doubles h. A $ P i 2 bed-room Apts, % & at Strafford Manor | Catering Service Personnel 8 Interested??? | Mub Pub 1 6 Inquire at... | Mub Beverage Service | 5 Strafford Corp. A ^ White Enterprises | Interest forms available at MUB | Inc. I Information Desk. Fill out and return; | | also state these jobs as your reference | 47 Main St. {; on your workstudy forms. § $ 8 868-2686 ^ :----- —...... S& THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PA G E N IN E Gibbs was a stubborn damn cuss

DAVIS When Davis graduated from agent during World War I, Davis’ University Theater 1975-76 All American Season presents continued from page 3 Peterborough High School in job was frozen as part of Herbert Bracket was suspended form 1906 he had no ambition to go Hoover’s “Food to win the war classes for the rest of the year. to college. “No one wanted to program.” As a consequence, “Gibbs was a stubborn damn go th en ,” said Davis. Davis never went to war. Nevertheless, Jenny Field, one cuss,” said Davis. In 1947, he was awarded the . i r w M W F by David Rabe • Directed by David J. Magidson After the news of Bracket’s of Davis’ English teachers was alumni meritorious award, and April 22-24 at 8 p.m. • April 28 at 2 p.m. • April 29-May 1 at 8 p.m. punishment broke, the sopho­ insistent. “For two years I avoid­ proclaimed “Mr. UNH” by his Students: $2.00-$2.50 • General: $2.50-$3.00 • Res.: 862-2290 more class went to Gibbs and ed that teacher, then I finally classmates. Dress Rehearsal Preview: April 21 at 8 p.m.: $.50 said, “We’re responsible, act on gave up and came to Durham In 1966, when UNH president Johnson Theater • Paul Arts Center • UNH, Durham us, not Bracket.” The freshmen with $200 in my pocket.” John McConnell was presenting Davis talked of his associations also had a meeting and decided Davis an honory doctor of law with John Kendall and George to back up the sophomores, and degree, McConnell whispered to the juniors soon followed suit. Putnam, namesakes of two UNH Davis, “ this makes me very academic buildings. “Everyone but the seniors happy, Arthur,” “John Kendall was brought up stayed away from classes,” re­ Always very active in alumni by the family of that same called Davis. affairs Davis served the UNH Hearts English teacher,” said Davis. alumni association in a number “Fathers of students, who were “Jenny kept saying, ‘If John can of capacities. When he retired representatives in the legislature, do it, you can.’” Davis followed fro m fun d-raising, and class and M in d s began to put pressure on the in Kendall’s footsteps and ma­ agent coordinating in 1965 he trustees. The trustees called a jored in agriculture. was given a wooden chair with meeting with Gibbs and they “George Putnam was one of “Alumni Worker Extraordinary” asked him to let Bracket return the finest individuals, unselfish, engraved on the backrest. Davis Academy Award- to his classes.” working for other people, that I The strike was successful and laughed when he talked about met in my life,” said Davis, the chair engraving. Best Documentary Bill Bracket came back. “Gibbs “’Put had a great influence on resigned that summer,” said me.” Davis has known every UNH Davis. Davis’ memoirs on Putnam president since William Gibbs and he remarked, “President ‘the definitive film on Davis, who graduated from and Kendall can be read in the UNH in 1912, sat in his recliner University archives, third floor Mills is right down to earth and I America’s involvement in in his apartment on Madbury Lane like him,” : in Dimond Library. Vietnam’ remembering events that took After graduating and prior to Davis said the previous presi­ place when he was a college stu­ working in Cuba, Davis took a dent of UNH, Tom Bonner dent. Davis is bald, with a wrin­ wife, Cecile. “I got married in should have never fought with Tuesday-flpril 27 William Loeb. “ Everybody kled, smiling face and he wore two weeks, on account of the suspendered green pants, a white job in Cuba requiring a married knows you can’t win a pissing contest with a skunk,” said shirt and an attractive bolo tie. man,” said Davis. ’Strafford Room-ITlUB Davis said, “In the fall of 1908 Later Davis returned to New Davis (quoting someone else). when I entered UNH there were Hampshire and worked on Sitting with his numerous 225 students enrolled.” Gypsy Moth control, also teach­ awards and citations Davis said, “I feel embarassed that I’ve been 6:30 and 9:00 50* “ Nesmith Hall, Thompson, ing agriculture and “everything Morrill, Conant, Hewitt (the else no one wanted to teach” at noted so many times and ways.” shops), Hamilton Smith (the Hopkinton High in Contoocook, When Davis got his honorary library), and New Hampshire New Hampshire. It was at Con­ law degree his wife asked him, Film selection for next year Hall (the gym) were the aca­ toocook that Davis met Putnam. “What do you know about demic buildings then,” said Davis also served as a school law?” Davis likes to think the at 5:30 - all invited - at ITIUSO Davis. “Smith Hall (the first principal and later became the LLD stands for love, loyalty and dorm) and the president’s house first county agricultural agent to devotion. “I owe this University were the others.” Merrimack County. As a county all I’ve got,” he said.

WE NEED TALENT! is this where you (earned about any and all talent needed for the facts of life? Best of the aa®3 'tf&aasss m s s b M ay 13 8pm-12 entries:see Mark Piekarski in' rm146 MUB

come to Sexuality Day in the MUB and round out your education Sponsored by the Human Sexuality Center, Hood House and Residence Hal is april 28 10-4:00 EVENINGS IN RESIDENTIAL AREAS PA G E T E N THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976

§¥UDINI§-IACUIiy-§IAII JOIN THE REVIVAL OF ATTENTION THE UNH TRADITION SUMMER SCHOOL NEW EAWPNEIRE DAY § A I M AY 1 STUDENTS “PITCH IN” TO CLEAN UP LITTER. PARTICIPATE IN PLANTING AND The Catering Department will BUILDING PROJECTS. IF^YOU HAVE A PROJECT IN miND OR WOULD be hiring about 50 service LIKE TO PARTICIPATE CALL 2-1420 personnel for Alumni weekend FOR INFORmATION. June 4 & 5 (Friday and C IT O NIW I tttl M BB I CAT IVINI§ W ill INCICCIs Saturday). Intercollegiate Baseball and Lacrosse,

Woodsmen’s competition, Please sign up to work in the Alternative Learning weekend, MUB Catering Office before TRINIDAD TRIPOLI STEEL BAND May 12,1976.

I. Contrary to published reports, next fall: Music 401 section 1 with Professor Donald Steele meets MWF 11:10 - noon in Murkland 110

Section 2 meets TTH 6:40 - 8 at night PCAC M223 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE ELEVEN Spring clean up

MAY DAY concert by the Trinidad Tripoli clean up activities. continued from page 3 Band will be offered Saturday The president of the New night at the MUB for the boasts several accomplishments Hampshire Anhauser Distrib­ students at UNH0 to this point in the semester. utors will be on campus to view “I think everyone will get in­ “We have already installed a and prepare a report for the final volved with the project in one walk-way by Taylor Hall, the be­ judging of the competition. way or another,” said Dozier. ginnings of a park at the In cooperation with the ABC “It will really bring everyone mini-dorm complex, a rest area Radio Network, the Anhauser- by the bookstore, benches and together-faculty, staff and Busch Co. will evaluate the re­ India Print Tops and Scarves steps at the MUB and we have students.” ports and presentations from all The clean up was brought to started clearting up the area in campuses. A winner and cash re­ the middle of the quad,” said Dozier’s attention by Dave cipient will be chosen at the end Tops Values to $7 Hank Dozier, Assistant Director Farnham and Anhauser-Busch of the week. Sales Director Tom Brown. just of the Physical Plant Operations The Executive Board of the Brown approached Farnham Division. Student Government has de­ with the proposition and Farn­ These projects are only part of cided to use any money won ham contacted Dozier. the overall campus-wide clean up from the competition for the Scarves Values to $3 “I thought it was a great proposed for the coming week. proposed construction of a band idea,” said Dozier. “It was a “There are so many things shell at East West Park. coincidence that the date for the just 1.79 planned for the weekend and No schools in New England competition was exactly the following week it’s hard to keep have won the contest to date, c a m p H ay whir*h had been set NEW HOURS Uack,” said Ducicr. “ A lo n g w i t h out Hank Dozier believes UNH aside for so many years for New the baseball and lacrosse games, has a chance. Hampshire Day.” Mon thru Fri 9:30AM 9:30PM there is the 29th Intercollegiate “I think if our energetic The Anhauser-Busch Co. will Woodsmen’s Competition and student body pulls together and Sat 9:30AM 5:30PM provide “Pitch-In” bumper stick­ the Alternative Learning Week­ thinks of the future, we will do a ers and emblems for anyone in­ Sun 1PM end. great job,” said Dozier. “With all volved in the project and will The Alternative Learning the improvements necessary a- supply “Pitch-In” litter bags for Weekend at the University’s Foss round campus, we should have the crusading ecologists. Farm is an event planned by the no trouble finding things to do.” Twenty red, white and blue earner ef Mepiewoed and Central Are. Dean of Students Office to give The time and place for the trash recepticles will be set up a- students an opportunity to clean up kick-off will be decided PMmenth H.H. examine areas of learning out­ round campus during the anve today at a project meeting at the side their major fields. and the University Grounds De­ service building. Along with these activities, a p a rtm e n t will coordinate the

Only 4 more issues left this semester? You’ve got to be kidding!!! HELP! But it’s TRUE!!!

FINAL RING SALE

Weds.,

ALL Thurs. STOCK OTHER UP NOW SERIES AND SAVE April 27 & 28 9-3 PRICES AT BEFORE YOU COMPARABLE LEAVE MUB LOBBY SAVINGS! SCHOOL! OUR ENTIRE SPECIAL TRADE- IN INVENTORY OF LP’S OFFER HIGH SCHOOL RINGS ON SALE! Girls Rings - S i5.00 Mens Rings — $20.00 COLLEGE RINGS Girls Rings - $20.00 Mens Rings — $25.00 The Book Loft Above trade-ins good on these days only towards your official UNH ring. (upstairs at Town & Campus) A deposit of $3.00 is all that’s required. 64 ITIain Street - Durham - 868-9661 Balance not due until rings are delivered. (6-8 weeks) fill ‘F* & m code LP’s $3.99 each SPONSORED BY fill other codes 40% OFF IBflNUFRCTURER’S LIST SENIOR KEY HONOR S0CIE1Y I ★ ★ Sale through Sunday (Bay 2nd ★ ★ PAGE TWELVE THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 editorial We were sincere and we were honest

As this staff finishes its last paper, it’s people’s daily lives. that a full rebate would be given Mini­ were wrong, we printed a correction. time to ask; To the disappointment of many there dorm residents and that some parking All the people who today end their in­ Did Woodward and Bernstein start this was no big investigation this year like the fines would be cut in half. volvement with The New Hampshire w ay? one done about the Unification Church. The candidates for President were all won’t go on to be hot-shot investigators They probably didn’t cover the sale of It’s not that we didn’t look for the covered and issues like tenure, grade in­ or write best sellers, just as all pre-med the UNH Guernsey herd or hot issues like bogeymen. We looked but didn’t find any flation and admissions changes filled the students don’t become world-famous pinball in the MUB. But they did do here. newspaper. heart surgeons. something like those stories. They had to Last fall we reported issues like missing We didn’t keep everyone happy though. Woodward and Bernstein did start this write obituaries and local human interest facilities at the highly touted Mini-dorm's We upset Residence Director David way. But that doesn’t mean success is stories, too. and the ridiculous parking fines every Bianco with our editorials, President covering all the front page stories or un­ For a year we have covered the razing step of the way. Eugene Mills with our photos, the PBC covering government corruption. of a barn, increases in room rates, tuition On the editorial pages we campaigned with our objectivity and many others. This year we’ve learned that accom­ and fees and many other stories that are for cutting the fines and giving refunds to Our goal was to cover UNH as plishments aren’t measured by popular done year after year. the cheated students at the Mini-dorms. thoroughly as students working 50 to 70 opinion but by the satisfaction of doing a Those stories arc done annually because We Kept opinion off the news pages. hours a week could. We made every effort tough job the best we could. We were they are news of real things that influence On December 5, the paper reported to be fair and objective and when we sincere and we were honest.

pedants must once again concen­ trate on teaching those most The Able able (and interested) to learn. We cannot continue teaching courses as though they were To the editor: 3-ring circuses, designed to do “Grade inflation”, you say. no more than keep the students awake. Immediately a host of interest­ ing sociological explanations is Grade inflation cannot be advanced for this phenomenon. cured by playing games with the But the real reason for grade in­ arithmetic of the grade point flation, the one people don’t like average, anymore than economic to talk about, is this: one by inflation can be cured by issuing one, courses at UNH are being new currency. relegated to “gut” status either because the professor has given David Cook in to his students’ cries for “rele­ vance” or because the course is chosen as a requirem ent for a Thanks number of majors. In the former case, enough bellyaching students and an inse­ cure professor can bring about a To the editor: restructuring of the course that So, this is you and your staff’s last paper. The new staff takes results in a pablum curriculum demics, and sports to those who and good luck in the future. mechanics and principles in­ (often accompanied by an infan­ over the production of The New Hampshire starting on Friday’s perused through you? news­ volved and the purposes for tile textbook). In the latter case, paper. Michael Imsick paper. which they were developed. so many students must sign up Overwhelming evidence from for the course, there is so much Throughout the past school Everyone expected The New year you have reported news on Hampshire on Tuesdays and Fri­ both research and personal testi­ heterogeneity in the class make­ mony suggests that though some up, that the teacher feels obli­ dorm build-ups, the Wyman- days. If the papers came in late Body and mind Durkin rematch, parking fine in­ everyone got impatient. I’d take effects of various meditative gated to design a universal curri­ techniques may be general, e.g. culum, a course that will appeal flation and an... eventual reduc­ this as a sign of The New To the editor: tion, mini-dorm furniture prob­ Hampshire's worth. general relaxation, it is simplistic to everyone, offend no one, and In Katie McClare’s article en­ and misleading to treat them as will not tax even the most dull- lems, MUB control, streaking in Not too many students realize titled “Hypnosis: It’s all in your one. witted in the class. the quad, presidential primary the work that goes into each is­ Head,’’ printed in The New In a somewhat less “ socially- candidates, the Farnham victory, sue of your newspaper. Probably Hampshire, April 16,1976, Tom T h e T.M . technique is an conscious” era, teachers catered football play-offs, Garrison Hill only those that are actively in­ Dubois was quoted as saying ancient practice rooted in India’s to the brighter students. As a re­ balcony collapse, the new admis­ volved in The New Hampshire that the Transcendental Medita­ vedic tradition -- an oral tradi­ sult, there was a great deal of at­ sions policy, SAT budgets, pass- offices can appreciate the time tion technique is not “special”. tion of knowledge about human trition. Those who graduated fail restriction, recycling, and dedication needed. Every­ The article also quoted state­ experience which has been knew something; those who women’s center, the murder on one wants their paper though. ments by Tom which implied passed down uniformly for thou­ knew nothing didn’t graduate. Mast road, and what’s on I think that you, Mr. that we can lump T.M. in with sands of years. It is designed to As time went on, this process M ooradian’s mind. Plus you D’Antonio, your Managing Edi­ such diverse techniques as the produce a systematic refinement of selection became known as brought color to the front page tor (Jean) and the News Editors relaxation response, Silva Mind of thought until the subtlest “eliteism” and those who prac­ (even though it was U Conn’s (Scott and Patti) and everyone Control and hypnosis. level of thought is “transcen­ ticed it were called variously band) and initiated a newspaper else associated with the paper These statements although (no ded” and the meditator; experi­ “ eliteists”, “bigots”, “snobs”, magazine supplement. should be congratulated for a job doubt made with the best of in­ ences pure, contentless con­ “racists”. The war for egalitari­ You provided, a forum for con­ well done. I know that it is tentions) tend to ignore the dif­ sciousness. This process of tran­ anism was on and there was no cerned students in your editorial damn hard to work as hard as ferences between the physio­ scending correlated directly with stopping it. pages and brought useful infor­ you have and still survive the logical and psychological effects an integrated physiological res­ If academia is to save itself, mation on entertainment, aca­ academics at UNH. Thank you of these various techniques, the ponse which current research indicates is unique to T.M.. The

Editorial Assistant Claudia R. Desfosses Pete Weiss Photographers Ror> Goodspeed Staff Reporters Marion Gordon Vickie Schoonover Dennis Giguere Rich M ori C. Ralph Adler John Hanlon Diana Gingras Elizabeth Grimm W ayne King Jerry D’Amico Crystal Kent Patrick D ’Antonio the M att V ita Kathy Phelan Stewart Berman Reporters Tina Sherman Judi Clark Michele Boucher new Kathy Smith Roger Rydell Copy Editor Lisa Tabak Kafie McClare Lauren Joan Smith Copy Readers Janet Prince hgmpshine Marie Cartier Bob Stevenson Gwen George John Snodgrass G il Hulse Ralph Miller, Dan Herlihy Maureen O’Connell Alexis Kallas Dave Driscoll Brent Macey Sarah Bennett Andy Schachat Dick Casselberry M ark Mans Claudia R. Desfosses. Cynthia Frye Lynn Derrick Editor-in-Chief oiuotuv.a laeipiiN Marilyn Hackett Janet Larson Circulation Manager Anne Garretson Managing Editor Jean MacDonald Arthur R. Miller Scott Murray Productions Associate Nina G ery Business Manager Ed McGrath’ Betsy Bair Susan Murray Productions Staff Lynne HUdon News Editors Scott Fitzsimmons Nancy Rigazio Peter Ringer Nancy Fistere Skip Wohlgesmuth Patti Hart Sharon Lavertu Miliy McLean Doug Cardin Sports Editor Mark Radwan A .R . Erickson Carey Ormsby Cheryl Craaybeek .Helene Silverman Assistant Sports Editor Mike Minigan Typesetters Patti Garrett Advertising Manager Peter Johnson Entertainment Editor David Reed Margie Madfis Linda Clark Joy McGranahan Advertising Associates Marie Clough Photography Editor Ed Acker _ynn Mattucci David Towle Marc Hebert Leon Boole Cindy Palmiotto Casey H olt; Linda Muise Debra Pierce Janice Seeley Bill W h ite Laura McLean Gary Schafer THE NEW HAMSPHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE THIRTEEN process of transcending is neces­ what the state wants for services sary for the development of vis a vis taxes -- before I act. Enlightenment -- one of the Too much emotion and too ;C. Ralph Adler goals of the T.M. program. little reason has gone into study­ Tom also states that in ing our tax problems in New hypnosis,, Silva Mind Control Hampshire, and too many politi­ and the relaxation response, cians have made promises they “The main ingredient is focusing Erasing the slate can’t keep in order to win the your attention in a single direc­ favor of the Manchester Union tion.” This “main ingredient” is Leader. Sunday night was rainy and miserable. It 6. A lw ays be absolutely certain, before you one very important thing which was also exactly four weeks before graduation. register for courses in your last semester, that makes these techniques incap­ Gerard J. Zeiller Four weeks to find a job (a radio report this able of eliciting the process, the all your requirements are taken care of. Uni­ m orning said English majors are in big trouble attention becomes less focused, versity and major requirements. This is within boundaries of space and if they want a job this year). Four weeks to essential. time until the mind expands to Clean shave decide where to point myself, first geographi­ 7. Do not pull false fire alarms, especially in an attention-free, unbounded cally, then professionally. a dorm at night. Many bathrobed people will state. The “main ingredient” of To the editor: For the first time in 21 years, there are hate you if you do this. hypnosis, however, would neces­ Despite the fact that no such sarily keep the mind active, vig­ absolutely no future responsibilities, no ties. policy exists in any hospital, 8. It is foolish and time-consuming to wait ilantly focused and limited It’s all up to me. A clean slate. The world is at restaurant, or military establish­ for most of the elevators at this University. within boundaries, thus prohibi­ my command. ment, despite the fact that no Particularly in a dorm after a Friday or Satur­ ting the natural holistic inte­ I decided to spend the evening touring this such policy exists at Keene or day night, when they are often severely four year territory, despite the dark drizzle. Plymouth, despite the fact that a damaged. grated and balanced response member of the State Board of During the walk, I realized one last responsi­ elicited by the T.M. technique. 9. Keep your room well-lit. A well-lit room Health calls such a policy “ridi­ bility. To those who will be back next year, a I a p p la u d all those things culous,” UNH Food Service wor­ is a must on a rainy day, and especially at which Tom Dubois is doing to kers sporting moustaches must few words of advice and/or information. If night. expand the level of happiness in still wear facial masks. you hit one you already know, skip to the 10. A t least once while y o u ’re here, go to a the UNH community, however, One might conclude that “Food next one. football game on a blustery fall day, and take it should be make clear that on Services has either some superior 1. The big, bright light on Parsons Hall on the basis of research conducted some apples with you. knowledge of the problem of the walkway between Parsons and Kingsbury during the past decade at more facial hair (“germsville” as so 11. If you’ve never been to College Woods, than 200 universities and re­ will not harm you, despite its threatening eloquently stated by Mr. Bianco) be sure you try to get there sometime. College search institutes in different or that their policy is both fana­ buzz. It is there to help you. It is your friend. Woods is most effective freshman and countries including Germany, tical and illogical. 2. No matter how many times you say you England, Holland, Canada, USA, sophomore years. Workers are told that such a will never again drink like you did last night, India, South Africa, and Aus­ policy is needed to maintain san­ 12. There is no short way to get from T you always will. Always. tralia and the basis of the itation in serving its. student cus­ Hall to the MUB. However I would suggest the endorsements and personal testi­ 3. Each dorm has its own particular smell, tomers. But if such a policy is to path by the library and behind Ham Smith, mony of educators, doctors, law­ be consistent one would expect and you will never forget the smell of the simply because it’s prettier. yers, businessmen, organizations, eyebrows to be plucked, arms dorm yo u live in. Especially Christensen. and individuals all over the shaved (or at least, covered) and 13. Keep in touch with your friends. 4. Do not walk around the mini-dorm area world it can be said, that in all perhaps as much concern toward 14. Records are usually cheaper at the Book in the dark. It is filled with lecherous pits, basic respects, in physiological what is already in the food (pre­ Loft, though the selection is more limited. and psychological effects, in servatives, additives, dyes, su­ sidewalks that end abruptly and perilous, 15. The worst puddles on campus accumu­ mechanics and in purpose the gars) as to what might conceiva­ sloping stone walls that appear without warn­ T.M. program is unprecedented bly fall in. late on the sidewalks in front o f Huddleston ing. in modern society and must be One would not expect to be and between Christensen and Philbrook. 5. The best place to go look at stars is in the considered in its own special asked initially to wear the same Avoid those areas if possible during a storm. category. mask three days in a row. fields down by the tennis courts. The football John Dulmage (Sanitary?) Nor would one ex­ field doesn’t work because there are too many Oh, if I learn anything else in the four weeks Dover N.H. pect to now wear masks which lights. that are left, I’ll let you know. cover only the upper lip and pro­ bably don’t contain any hair Taxing that does fall out. Why then does such a policy 21 at 7:00p.m. iiy the formal better yet Farmington . it sometimes gets forgotten or exist? No one doubts the con­ lounge of Smith Hall. To the editor: cern of Food Service manage­ Fridays are not necessarily never known to begin with. The In the April 16 issue of your ment and directors for the stu­ single night nor Saturday couple Nursing profession, however, newspaper, Marshall Cobleigh, Students for night as he seems to think. recognizes the intrinsic value in dents well-being. One can, how­ Community Gardens one of the Governor’s aides, says ever, question the ability of Thursdays are single ladies night intercommunication between that I am “a broad based tax management to respond to rea­ with a break in the price for the those involved with health care candidate supported by the likes sonable requests for change from single lady ($.50 per drink). Mr. delivery. The other 5 depart­ of David Nixon and Walter Peter­ its employees. The failure to re­ Reed “couldn’t help wondering ments within the School of son.” spond with nothing but “ridicu­ Play ball why few people smiled.” Could Health Studies, headed by Dean I would like to point out that lous” policies results only in a it be that Mr. Reed was looking Basil M ott, also deserve equal Mr. Cobleigh, an unsuccessful further straining of manage- To the editor: at his own reflection in the back time. These other departments senatorial candidate of years ment-employee relationships and bar mirror pouting over the fact may also be known only within David Reed’s critique of Flag­ that he just couldn’t score at ago, is simply mouthing the an uncomfortable working envi­ stones discotheque left me, to closed circles. Loeb-Thomson party line. ronment. Flagstones and would be forced Communication Disorders, say the least a bit bewildered In to jerk his hand in the ultimate It ill behooves this Thomson It would seem Food Services the name of responsible journal­ Medical Technology, Occupa­ flunky, who is hanging onto his has so little to lose. They have symbol of male self-satisfaction* tional Therapy, Physical Educa­ ism, I don’t understand why it is when he went home alone. Just job as an aide to the Governor, the respect of their employees to necessarily fashionable for you tion, and Recreation & Parks to­ at Thomson’s pleasure to make gain. a thought.... gether with the Dept, of Nursing pseudo-intellectual reviewers to Sir, I thank you for the little impolite references to David take cheap pot shots at an enter­ all share concerns related to Nixon, a former president of the Michael Vincent bit of dubious publicity you wellness, both physical and emo­ tainment style they either don’t have given us at Flagstones. Mr. state Senate, and to Governor like or understand. In Mr. Reed’s tional, of people. These six masked Food Service worker Reed, you’ve got a lot of class, Peterson. In my mind, Cobleigh case I suspect the latter; (why he departments are very aware of unfortunately all of it’s third. isn’t fit to shine their shoes. can’t even spell discotheque cor­ the rapidity with which the This ediculou attack by rectly). Good luck at the Manchester health care system in the United Union Leader; they’re looking Cobleigh is part and parcel of Gardening Since last June, we at Flag­ States is changing and want you for your kind of talent. Thonson’s plan to campaign for stones have brought to the area to be aware of this also. The first reelection by letting his cronies an alternative to the basic jeans step, accomplished here, is to let Stephen Demarais and flunkies defend him while To the editor: T shirt uniform, prevalent to the you know what exists within our he hides in the governor’s limou­ Are you living here this bar scene in this area. My “non Gen. Mgr. Flagstones own University community in sine with its siren and its blue summer and interested in raising denim capacity” crowd doesn’t the way of programs for educa­ light. your own flowers or vegetables? ting those individuals who, in seem to see anything wrong with Mr. Demarais: Much to the detri­ Like any other human being The University is sponsoring a the coming years, will probably, having a nice comfortable place ment of my budget, I like “good with common sense, I am op­ community garden available to to drink, dance and converse in one way or another, be work­ posed to unnecessary taxes. I all students, staff members, citi­ without having to look like the clothes. ” My point is not that ing to ensure your well-being. wish I could say unequivocally zens and commuters. Salvation Army whom Mr. Reed it’s fun to be grubby, but that I that I will block passage of a If you are interested in parti­ seems to dig. I suggest he con­ feel most comfortable in a club broad-based tax, but I must wait cipating, come to the organiza­ fine his sophmoric, night life where the choice is mine, not Roni Sarausky, Senior, until I see the circumstances -- tional meeting Wednesday, April wanderings to Newmarket or yours. As for your tasteful Dept, of Nursing thought about scoring, I didn’t School of Health Studies realize Flagstones was meant to be a ball park. More power to your capacity crowds. To each his own. D.R. Waste

To the editor: Have you ever thought of the amount of solid waste generated by this campus? The 500 cases Nurse it of soda cans that pass through the machines each week is a neg- ligible part. The problem of .solid waste disposal is a very To the editor: real and current problem every­ I recognize the vital necessity where. Durham has the potential of accurate information and sub­ to progressively deal with this mit this correction to my letter problem through its recycling of April 20, 1976. The Dept, of center. The center has been open Nursing, housed within Eliza­ for two years and is still running beth Demerrit House, is situated at a deficit. Why? Because of on Garrison Avenue, not Gar­ its inability to acquire the vol­ rison Road as printed. ume needed to earn profit, be­ The Dept, of Nursing is one of cause most of the garbage finds six departments within the its way to the incinerator, and School of Health Studies. Since because most people aren’t re­ the Nursing Dept, is, for the pre­ cycling. sent, quite separated (physically) Now that the neighboring from the bulk of the University, towns of New Castle, Lee, PAGE FOURTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976

Greenland, Newmarket, and Rye tion isn’t going to pressure the have mandatory separation of University as a whole to recycle. garbage by every citizen who We have to prove the demand is uses the municipal garbage col­ there in order to pressure them lections, the recycling center to make recycling more accessa- hopes to acquire this volume. ble. Start recycling! It takes lit­ Not only will this help the recyc­ tle time or consideration when (\T ! TH£ &lR ^ ) ling center, it helps the towns compared to wliat is saved. All you also. The individual cost for each have to do is separate metal, u p. the. ^ of these towns to recycle could paper, and glass. Use the barrels be as much as $100,000. Now it set aside in the MUB and dorms. will only cost them about Make three-sectioned containers STARTING To 6LOOM. $1,500. These towns are present­ for your offices or dorm rooms. ly spending between $20,000 to Help create the demand, start $100,000 to dispose of their gar­ counter-reacting the throw away bage (not including the social culture you live in by recycling. cost of sanitary landfills and open-air burning). Mary Arnold The University could benefit Steve Lopilato from the recycling center too. Nabil Boghos Presently most of the Univer­ sity’s garbage finds its way to the incinerator because it isn’t separated. An estimated 65 per­ Nuke cent of this garbage is recyclable. By using the incinerator, the To the editor: University has to pay the cost of As I read April 13th’s edition fuel needed to burn lliat waslc o f The New Hampshire I w a a and the fuel needed to transport very happy to see an article dis­ the waste the three miles to the cussing the nuclear power con­ incinerator (as compared to the troversy. The paper had finally one mile to the recycling cen­ acknowledged it as an issue of ter). More important is the ener­ concern. gy loss from the solid waste it­ Then I reached the editorial.- self. Ninety percent of the energy The first half of the comment mean the collapse of our society. return to investors. Moreover it needed to make aluminum is was understandable. One can not from being taken advantage of? It will mean developing safer, is a monopoly with no competi­ On March 23, 1976, 23 state leg­ recoverable by recycling. Forty take sides on an issue one does cleaner, and more economical tion. The state allows it to be a to sixty percent of energy for not understand. It is also often islators, republicans and demo­ means (note plural) of energy. monopoly for convenience’s crats, along with seven consumer production of paper and glass is difficult to discern fact from fic­ Information about nuclear sake. However, the state has set recovered. tion in such a controversy. protection organizations called energy is available if one just up a public utilities commission for the resignation of all three The University felt the recyc­ Thereafter the editorial em­ takes the time to read it. You’ll to make sure that the company ling center was a great innovative ployed the same tactics it criti­ PUC commissioners. They con­ never have an “objective, un­ does what it is supposed to do tend that the PUC is not repre­ idea when it lent the center cized. emotional” person to decide for and doesn’t get too greedy. senting consumers. They cited $100,000 for construction. This The article attempted to dis­ you. The PUC has established that cases where two of the commis­ funding is ironic when one con­ credit the anti-nuke movement I do not think the issue here is Public Service Company’s profits sioners went out of their way to siders how the University has by making it appear to be a whether or not we need more shall be no more than 14% of movement of unconstruetive testify against a rate reform bill done almost nothing to support energy, but whether or not we capital investment, that is plants before the state legislature. In or even promote their recycling troublemakers. That many in­ put ourselves in control of our and equipment. Can you see fact the secretary of the PUC center, while the neighboring volved in the anti-nuke move­ own future. what a 2 billion dollar plant at stated publicly that the commis­ towns, even Durham itself, have ment have been involved in Seabrook would do for PSC if it sioners would not consider any been environmentally conscious other movements (which may be Eva Silverfine could convince the PUC that one the case of the University fac­ rate reform proposals unless and in realizing the necessity of re­ is needed? What’s 14% of 2 bil­ until the utilities themselves sug­ cycling and self-imposed manda­ tion of the anti-nuke movement) lion? Anyone got a calculator? means the same people are con­ PSC gested it. Imagine that. You tory recycling in their town. So PSC stands to gain trem en­ know what I think personally? Even if not because of cerned with many different dously whether the plant is Now this is just an opinion mind environmental awareness, the issues. They have a social con­ To the editor: More about Seabrook. Let’s needed or not but only if it can . you. I think that PSC and PUC U n iv e rsity should recycle in science. They realize it is indivi­ convince the PUC that the need is duals who institute change. take .a look at what’s in it for are in cahoots! order to at least help the center PSC of NH. Public Service Com­ there. increase its volume (earn more What is this march of progress pany of N.H. is not a “public Well, let’s take a look at the Philip H. Norris profits) so that it can recieve its that people whould sacrifice PUC. Is it doing its job? Is it pro­ their values and freedom for? com pany”. It is a private corpor­ Phairdale no. 5, Mast Rd. cash return quicker. ation concerned with profits and tecting the consumers of NHi Unfortunately the administra­ Stopping nuclear power will not Durham

Wed May 5th 8PM FIELD HOUSE Non-students & at door $7 Tickets: students $5 1 per ID with special guest stars ON SALE NOW No Smoking or Drinking MUB TICKET OFFICE All students welcome! at show _ SCOPE General Meeting Tues. Apr. 11 7pm Belknap Room If you want to work at the concert be sure and attend. We need you. THE NEW HAMSPHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE FIFTEEN

RADIO KING and his Norton may leave COURT of RHYTHM NORTON program ,” Bowes added, “ He Norton said that his decision continued from page 1 has been here a long time and to leave had nothing to do with Jelly Records Presents! Coaching doesn’t offer these experience is a difficult thing to the recent Athletic Commission □ JR0Q1 ‘I’m in the Mood’ by Radio King long term possibilities,” replace.” report. □ JR0O2 ‘Ain’t Nobody’s Business ’ by “One of the inevitable things “Bob’s leaving will put a real “It was strictly a private and Barbara Holliday & James Montgomery in the coaching business is that dent in our program,” said personal decision,” Norton said, most coaches are eventually hockey coach Charlie Holt Sun­ “and I think a well thought out Send$1.25each to Records day afternoon, “Any one fellow fired,” explained Norton, “I decision.” P.O. Box 485 Lex.Ma 021173 imm don’t look forward to achieving is indispensible and I do know “Everyone recognizes the need immediate delivery a goal at the age of 45 and then what he’s meant to us.” to implement the recommenda­ be out on the streets.” “I’ve enjoyed coaching and re­ tions of the report,” he said, Norton came to UNH in 1970 cruiting,” he said, “But I see in­ “We’ve got to cooperate on the and has served as an offensive evitable consequences of never whole thing and maintain a com­ line coach and an assistant hock­ being home when you have a petitive level.” ey coach. His primary responsi­ two year old and a four year “I don’t know what they’re UNISEX bility as assistant hockey coach old.” (the athletic department) go­ Hair Shaping Specialist was recruiting. “During the hockey season I ing to do,” Norton said when We shape your hair EXACTLY “This is the greatest place to don’t get home until nine asked about his replacement. THE WAY YOU WANT IT. coach,” Norton said, “I can’t en­ o’clock, when we’re at home,” “It’s very difficult for any­ vision a better place to coach.” he added. Norton also said that body to be an assistant coach in No scalped look. Specialist in “Bob Norton has done a very since August 14 he has had only two major sports at an institu­ Long Hair. fine job working willi the offen­ three weekends off. tion,” Norton explained, "To 788 Central Ave. Dover, N.H. Separate Areas sive line,” said head football “I don’t feel I can justify it try and do both jobs well and Across from Wentworth Douglas coach Bill Bowes. any longer,” Norton said, “And still be any sort of a father and For M e n & W om en Hospital Phone 742-2289 “ Bob will be missed in our I don’t want to .” husband, I think is im possible.” NOW Complete Scientific Programmability from Hewlett-Packard for $30 less than ever before.

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Think of the HP-2 5 as case you want to note intermediate answers. And don’t forget the best news. The an electronic slide rule And because the keycodes of all prefixed price. The HP-25 was an exceptional value at you can program com­ functions are merged, the 49-step program $195. Right now it’s an out-and-out bargain pletely. The reason: It memory can actually store up to 147 key­ at $165* solves repetitive problems strokes. (How’s that for a memory capacity!) The HP-25.There’s never been a calcu­ easily and quickly. What’s more, you can store numbers in eight lator with this kind of capability at this kind Here’s how. Switch to PRGM. data registers and perform 72 preprogrammed of a low price before, with HP’s name pn it. Enter the keystrokes you need to solve functions and operations (logs, trig, mean And you know what that means. Design, your problem once and then flip the PRGM deviations, rectangular-polar conversions, performance and a back up support system switch to RUN. That’s it. The only thing you summations—you name it). Not to mention you just can’t get anywhere else. have to do for each iteration from then on is RPN logic; fixed decimal, scientific and The HP-25 is almost certainly available enter your variables and press the R/S (Run/ engineering notation; and much, much more. at your college bookstore. If not, call Stop) key. It’s that simple. In fact, if you wanted to know all the 800-538-7922. (In Calif. 800-662-9862) The result: Repetitive problems are no HP-25 ca n do for you it would take a book. toll-free to find out the name of your nearest longer a repetitive problem. But don’t worry, we’ve already written one— dealer. mm But that’s only part of the HP-25 story. 125 pages-worth—just chock full of applica­ HEWLETT ^ PACKARD Here’s more. You can add to, check or edit tions programs and problem solutions. Such Dept. 658F, 19310 Pruneridge Avenue, Cupertino, CA 95014. your programs at will. You can also write one- as Algebra and Number Theory, Numerical Sales and service from 172 offices in 65 countries. 'Suggested retail price, excluding applicable state and local taxes — second interruptions into your program in Methods, Statistics—even Games. In detail. C ontinental U .S ., Alaska &. Hawaii. 616/15 PAGE SIXTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 1 DURHAM CLINIC WHERE ARE YOU LIVING who knows 3 MADBURY ROAD Durham, N.H. THIS FALL? where the time goes .. . RUDOLF HOENE, M.D., Ph.D. HOW ABOUT YOUNG DRIVE? Internal Medicine - Allergy and Rheumatology

BRUCE S. SAMUELS, M.D. Fall and Summer apartments available £:•: Rental for the School Internal Medicine - Rheumatology M Year 1976-77. Find T -1/2 duplex- . j your own roomates. i; MARTIN F. BETTS, M.D., F.R.C.P.(C) Internal Medicine - Cardio-Pulmonary Diseases Two bedroom apts. :• 3 bedroom 1 full bath 2 half baths for 4 persons or one BRIAN L. JOHNSON, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. bedroom apts. for Gynecology CONTACT: 2 persons. :•:$:! Also apartments THE FISCHER AGENCY available for summer. W | Office Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 542 Central Avenue :j:$: Call for appointment jig* 19:00 AM-5:30 PM gi? at 868-2485 ask for •: Telephone: 868-2261 or 742-3664 Dover NH 03820 742-6242 Mr. Karabelas ? classified ads

240 Z Springs: Lower car by lVs For sale: Sleeping bag. Almost new. Furnished room for rent in private, Apt. for sublet from June through inches; drops center of gravity, im­ 100% Dacron 88, Polyester Fiberfill. new home. Available at end of sum­ August with option to rent for the for sale proves handling; retail $120, now $15.00. Call Jane 868-7499. 4/30. mer. Quiet, pleasant, wooded setting. following year. 2-bedroom, living Easy walk to UNH. Reduction in rent $63 (never used) for all four springs. Two 5,60 15” Goodvear VW tires, roon, air conditioned, pool, tennis 664-2157 evenings. 5/4. for child care two evenings per week. courts, washer dryer, on Kari-Van Combo Organ Wurlitzer 7300 single only used a thousand miles, $20 a Kitchen privileges negotiable . A cou­ piece, rims included. Also, VW parts route. Heat, hot water, inc. $180.00 keyboard witn Bogan K-130 ampli­ For sale: 1974 Subaru G.L, Coupe, ple is possible. Call 868-2027. 5/11. plus elec. Call 749-2046 Dover. fier and custom 200 watt speaker ’64-’71. Good, inexpensive repairs. Excellent condition. Low mileage. Call Bill 742-4192 4/26 4 /3 0 . system. Roto-vibe vibrato system in­ 659-2790 evenings. 5/4. Two Bedroom apt. in Newmarket cluded. Steal for $225. or trade for available in June. Kitchen, .living Summer sublet: 2-bedroom furnished good electric piano or whatever. Call 1967 Fiat 850 sports coupe, rebuilt room, large balcony porch off bed­ apartment for 2-3 people. On campus FOR SALE: 1964 Ford Fairlane, 6 engine, good body, needs electrical Rick at 862-2240 or 664-2088. 5/7. good tires, good shape, $100 or best room. Located on Kari-Van route location: 37 Madbury Road, Apt. 7, w ork, $ 20 0 call Berwick and near Stone Church. $150 a CaU 8 6 8 -5 7 1 1 . 5 /4 Sony TC 230 “Stereo Center” reel to offer. CaR 749-3846 4/29 1-207-698-1160 evenings 4/26 month. CaR 659-2721. 5/11. reel tape recorder with amplifier RECORD COLLECTORS, thousands Wanted: 1,2 or preferably 3 people system and speakers. Export model of 7 8’s, all types, at JOHN’S SUMMER SUBLET: Available 4/22 to sublet my apartment from June 1 (50 or 60 hz, 115 or 230 volts). Real RECORDS, at restaurant-rail road to 9/1; 2 bedroom Townhouse; sun- to Sept. 1. Very spacious, with two nice condition, $125. - Call Rick at station, Sanbornville. Open every deck; furnished. Durham — walking bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath, 664-2088 or 862-2240 . 5/7. weekend and most week days. Some roommates distance to campus. Call 868-7155 dining room, and study. Nice loca­ LP’s, B uy Sell. 4 /2 9 between 5 -7 p.m. 5/7 tion—60C Madbury Rd. $75 /mo. per For Sale: 8 ft. Peterson custom built person. Call Donna, 868-7479; 5/4 fiberglass surfcaster rod with Penn Summer Sublet: One more fe­ 710 Spinfisher reel. Used only 3 68 Pontiac Catalina - Low mileage - Escape the great rape, for an alter­ nate way of living. Alpha Gamma male roommate needed for 3-bed­ Dover, 2-bedroom furnished apt. months. Extras included. Need cash runs well - good gas mileage - new room apt. Just for summer. $65/- w/air cond. tennis courts, and swim­ for new freshwater. $40. Call Tom at tires - Call Rick Pope 749-3955. 4/30 Rho, 6 Strafford Ave is now accep­ ming pool. On K-Van route. Avail­ 868-7081. 5/7. ting boarders for Fall of ’76, Room month Utilities included. Own room. $280, Board $300 (15 meal plan) K itchen facilities. Call June able May 15th thru summer. Rent ne­ Cut-offs: Don’t sacrifice your good 868-7499. 5/7. gotiable (cheap). Contact Sandy or Bicycle: Raleigh RRA 12 speed. Rey­ pair of jeans! Come see us and get a Come and see us or Call 862-1306. Lana, Tel: 868-9763 Rm. 109. 5/4 nolds 531 dbl-butted frame, Simplex pair for $2.00. Blue Work Shirts 5 /1 1 . Super L.J. derailleurs, Maillard 700 $2.50. Denim Vests made to order. NEED A ROOM this fall? Live at Newmarket apartment to sublet. hubs, many other features. Weighs Second Coming, Newmarket. Roommate needed male or female Kappa Sigma, best location, best Available June 1. 2-bedrooms, large only 22l/2 lbs. New last August. Ex­ for the summer own room in small house in Newmarket, $50 month plus rates. Call 868-9717 or 2-1288, or living room. $180/month, call Cathy cellent condition. $350 or best offer. For sale: Books - paperbacks, hard­ stop by, ask for an officer. 5/10 or Diane 2-1673, Room 319. or Stop Jim Steffy 2-1652 or 868-9803. 5/7. back, 25 cents to $2.50. Opening util. Call 659-2348. 5/11. by after 6 p.m., 64 Main St., no. 4. soon. “Pages by the Thousands.” Old SUMMER SUBLET: Furnished, one 5 /4______’67 Chevy Impala, good tires, very lit­ Two roommates wanted to share books, records. Jenkins Court, next seven rm. (plus kit. and bath) apt. on bedroom apartment for two (or tle rust, 327 V8, good gas mileage, to Franklin Theater at the old Sun­ three, maybe) in Durham. Corner of Studio apt. to sublet June Sc Ju ly Sc built in stereo system, registered and Kari-Van rte. in Dover next fall. shine — “Pages by the Thousands.” Approx. $350/sem. Want serious stu­ Garrison and Madbury Rd. Available August; pleasant setting in private inspected. A steal at $375. Call Tom 4 /2 6 . May through August. $135/mo. with home, within walking distance of 868-5785. 5/7. dents. Also avail, for summer. Call Jim or John, Rm. 24, 868-9818. utilities. Call Steve 868-7088 or leave campus, $75.00 a month, 868-2745 For Sale - 1968 Saab, 96, V4 Deluxe number. 5/7 after 4:30. 5/4. Martin 12-string guitar for sale. With model. Free wheeling, complete in­ 5 /1 1 . hard case, in excellent condition. Call strumentation. Engine and drive train SUMMER SUBLET: with option to Studio apt. to sublet June-August. 868-2058. 5/11. Female Roommate needed to share 4 in superb condition. Body needs room apartment complete w/ fire­ continue, new studio apartment fur­ Pleasant setting in private home;4 work. 8 track deck included. $400 place. Needed for Spring Semester nished with private sun deck, kitch­ within walking distance of campus; 19 7 2 Suzuki TS 400 perfect call Geoff, in Sawyer Rm, 126. 4/26. en, w/w, electric beat, wooded set­ $75.00 a month; call 868-2745 after mechanical condition, on-off road 77, $65/month 28 .Ba£dad Road. ting in Newmarket — $150.00 water 4:30 p.m. 5/4 bike. 650 or B.O. Newmarket Second Pickings Thrift Shop 31 Contact Debi Clark 868-9812 or and heat included. Call: Dan 10A 659-2745. ask for Dave W. 5/11. G eorge S b Sc Henry Law Ave. Dover. 2-2383. 5/4, Maple St. Apt. 316, 659-2419 5/10 Summer sublet-furn. 1-bedroom apt. O pen T h u r Sc Friday 12:30 - 6p.m, for 1 or 2—downtown Durham. Avail­ DWI: Read Atty. Wm. P. Shea’s Sat 10 acmc to 6 p.m. 749-3890, Bar- Roommate needed to share 7-room Apartment to sublet for Summer able June 1—Call Nance 868-9744. pamphlet “Breathalyzer, What?” on gains galore. 5/7.______house in Dover - immediately (w/op­ “In Durham”. 2-3 people, 2 bed­ 5/4 ______how to help yourself. Send $1.95 to tion to continue through the summer rooms, kitchen, bath-furnished. JU S T w h a t UN H n eed s: A n o t^ e*- r?P* $200/m onth or negotiable. Call Summer sublet—2 bedrooms, kitchen, W.H. Publishing Corp., B or A, E. handling stereo equip,..ent au dis­ and next year). On Kari-Van route, Wakefield, N.H, 5/4. own room, $50/month. For more in­ Elaine or Robin 2-1667. 868-9899, bath, utilities incl. In town, Wood­ count prices, emphasis on musical re­ man Drive. $140 per month. Call production (not “Tweeterelliptical- fo call 749-3696, 4/26. 4 /3 0 . 19 6 4 Falcon V-8, 59,200 miles. 86 2-3319, Andrew, or 868-9844, watt— harmonicwowsensitivity,” al­ Scott 319. 5/7 M echanically excellent condition. though I know specs, also) Durham Male roomate wanted for summer to NEED A ROOM THIS SUMMER? Body badly rusted. Best offer. Don Kappa Sigma - 59 Main St., Audio:, Box 469, Durham or share two bedroom apt, in Dover Newmarket-Large 2-bedroom apart­ Harley, 862-1524. 4/26 868-5631 eves. 4/26 $90/month. Share phone and utili­ very reasonable rates, kitchen privi­ leges, call 868-9717 or 2-1288, ask m ent, 3/4 furnished, free parking, ties, partly furnished Call Peter $180/month, negotiable, heat and For sale: 1974 MGB in excellent con­ 10-speed bicycle — Bottecia frame, Herrick at 742-4128 days, 749-2749 for Bill Cotton or Jim O’Neill. 5/10 dition - 31,000 miles. Best offer. Cali water included, available May 20, fall Compagnollo components. Steve nights, 5/4. ______Sublet this summer: 5 bedroom apt., option. Call 659-2435. 5/7 862-2064 before 4:30 p.m. Evenings, Mayone, Lord 307, 2-1636 or furnished. Arch Sc Silver St. area of 431-6576.4/30 868-9715. 4/29. Dover. Rent very reasonable. Call Manfriend and I have place to share 742-5044. 4/26. Olds. Sta. Wagon for sale: 1970, good on Winnipesaukee, but need another For sale: Lee, 4-acre building plot, couple or single to find place to share condition inside and out, p.s., p.b., 306 ft. front on Route 155, cleared Summer sublet, option to take for radio, tape: deck, air cond., 18 mpg, dwellings much closer to UNH, Write Carol, and wooded. 742-7900 or 522-3610. fall. 2 bedrooms, kitchen, living room Box 173, Durham, NH. 5/4, asking $1 200. 868-9739 or 5/4. dean, only one year old, Madbury 862-1657, ask for Sandy. 4/30 Year round cottage Sivain’s Lake, Road, 3 minute walk to T-Hall, $270, Barrington, Completely renovated in Free furnished room with private LOW PRICE for Sansui 7in, Reel Call 868-5546. 4/26. bath and private entrance in Lee (4 1972 Renault Gordini, 32,000 miles. tape deck, includes 40 tapes. Worth and out. 2-8’ sliding doors overlook­ ing 130’ waterfrontage, cement dock, miles from campus) in exchange for Front wheel drive, new exhaust, new over $500 total. Best offer over Dover apt. to sublet, option to lease. dedicated and loving help with two brakes. Excellent cond., $1600. $275, Call Bill: 868-5402, keep try­ heat $240, taxes $396. moving. 2-bedroom , carpeted, sun porch, little boys aged 5 and 7. Car - a must. 862-2391 from 8-4; 742-5849 after ing 4 /2 6 692-2662. Reduced to$37,500 fumidi- backyard, friendly landlord. On Schedule and hours negotiable. 4 :3 0 .4 /3 0 ed. 5 /1 1 . Kari-Van route. Good for 2 or 3 Would prefer applicant available for people. $160 a month. 749-3565. FOR SALE: Realistic stereo receiver, Let tenants pay your rent, 4 unit apt one year starting June 1. Please call For Sale: Advent 201 tape deck, less 4Va months old, 12 watts/channel 4 /3 0 ______Judy anytime at 659-5559. Or leave than one year old. Biased for Maxell muting, tape monitor, loudness, 2 or house newly renovated, 2 more pos­ message with Linda Hoag at UD and all CR02 tapes. Excellent 4 speakers. $140 or best offer sible if handy. Inc. $8,060.00 re­ Summer sublet, 2-bedroom apt. with 1-332-9000, M-F 8:30-5. 5/7. physical and working condition, 868-9878 or 2-2402, after 6. Ask for duced to $45,000. moving Call air cond., pool, ww carpeting, $275.00. Call 742-8799. 4/30 D ean, 4 /2 4 692-2662. 5/11. $160/month--heat and water in­ Durham House - to sublet June 1 - cluded, on UNH Kari-Van route. August 31, two bedrooms, $165/ 1970 VW bug convertible, body fair, LAND: 22 acres of maturely wooded Wanted to Rent: Professional couple Dover—starting May 15—August 15, month utilities included. All pets OK. electrical system rebuilt, engine re­ land in Lee, Well located with wants to rent house or duplex house with option to keep renting. Call Call 868-5047 after 6 p.m. 5/7. built w/3,000 miles on it. $200 into excellent investm ent potential, in Durham by July 1 - No children 74“.9973. 5/10 ______it — whatever over it. 145 Main St., $37,000 Financing for responsible 942-8630 evenings. 5/11. Apartm ent for rent! Completely Newmarket, Apt. 5. 5/4 individuals. Call Bill Richey: days - Apartm ent to sublet in Webster furnished. On campus, 33 Madbury 269-3500; after 3 p.m. 679-8300, Need a place to stay this summer? House, Durham. For the summer. Rd, Apt. 4„ Also, New 10-speed bike 19 71 Honda CL-350, just overhauled, 4 /2 9 ______Alpha Gamma Rho is now accepting Two bedrooms, 1 to 4 people, rent (Jenuet) for sale. Must sell! Best offer $100 in parts just invested. Excellent boarders for the summer Call negotiable. Call 868-7464. 5/10 applicable. Call 868-5495 for Larry, condition—$450. 1967 Ford Galaxy- Hiking boots: Bass, men’s size 10, 862-1306 5/4. 4 /2 9 , -just inspected—used daily, $250 or worn two times; sold by L.L.Bean for Sublet June-August, $165/month. best offer, Mike Collins, 749-2639. $49; will sell for best offer. Call The one and only! 3 brm, lvrm., big- 2-bedroom, fully fumished-Olde Apartment to sublet for summer. 5/4 Roger at 664-2157 evenings. 5/4. -kit, bathrm. All yours for only Madbury Lane Apts., No. 75. If inter­ Two-bedroom apartment, suitable for $180/month, util. incl. furnished. 10 ested, call 749-0394. 5/10 2 or 3, located in Newmarket, Partial­ For Sale: BSR turntable (Sylvania)- Mag Wheels: Magna Alloy wheels to min walk from T-hall - Bagdad Rd. ly furnished, with sunporch. Right on -$35. Aquarium 20 gallons—$25. fit Austin Healey Sprite, MG Midget, Spacious Webster House apartment Kari-Van route. Only $150/month. Craig Tape Recorder—$8. Studded June 1 - Aug 31. Call Meg, Marion, or and other cars; will take standard or Coddy; 862-1359 or 868-9705. 5/4. available in summer sublet. Enjoy CaU 6 5 9 -2 7 2 1 , 4 /2 6 . snow tire, C-78-14, like new,—$14. larger sized tires. Call Roger at super summer living at a reasonable Call 749-4771. 5/4 664-2157 evenings. 5/4. Magnificent furnished appartment to rate! 2-bedrooms, Madbury Road, Apartment for rent: Two-bedroom sublet, available June 1, in the heart­ Durham. Call Margie, 868-9744. 5/10 apt, available in Somersworth, For sale: Honda 1973 CB 350 Four, For sale: Suzuki 250cc Enduro. 1975 land of snails and adventure. Two $35.00 per week, includes heat, hot very low mileage, excellent condi­ ‘Savage’ model. 950 miles on bike. bedrooms, swimming pool, 3 miles For rent: 1-bedroom apartment in w ater, cable TV, parking, stove, tion, $925. Call Jeff Wilson, Transferrable. Warranty good to Newmarket, large windows, terrific refrig. No pets. Faculty/Staff/Grad- 868-9804. 5/4 from campus, $160/month. Call 12,000 miles. Sell for $900 or best 749-2572. 5/4. for plants. $140/month, call Gary, /Couples. Walt Shackford, 868-5669. offer. 926-6864 (Hampton). 4/29. 862-2732. 5/10 4 /2 6 . 1974 Plymouth Sat ellite in perfect condition, expertly maintained. Durham Apt for rent. 1 bedroom, Ludwig drum set with Avedis Zildjian kit, liv, Bath. $140/month. inc. heat, Newmarket apartment to sublet avail­ For Rent: June-Aug. sublease w/ pos­ Michelin radials, vinyl roof, power cymbals. Bass and snare drums, able .June 1, Bedrooms, large living- brakes and steering, AM-FM radio, air water. Available June 1, 4 Newmar­ sible Sept. rental. Large 3 room apt., mounted and floor toms, 20” ride, ket, Rd. Durham. Call Barbara Soren­ room. $80/month, Call Kathy or kitchen, bedroom, livingroom, bath. conditioned. $2600. 862-1028 after­ 18” crash, and 14” hi-hats. $400 or Diane 2-1673, Room 319 or Stop by noons—772-2940 evenings. 4/30 son 868-2907. 5/4. Excellent for a single person or a cou­ best offer. Call Eric at 868-5046. after 6 p.m., 64 Main St. no, 4.4/29. ple. Also enough room for two single 4-/29; __ Apartment wanted by civil engineer­ people. Large bay windows, hard­ Surfboards: 6’ Weber; 6’8” Design 1; Summer Sublet: furnished 2 bed­ 6’10” G&S can be seen at 15 Myrica ing graduate student for summer and wood floors, very sunny. In an old NEW CONSIGNMENT of jewelers next year. 749-3373. 5/7. room apartment $255/month June Victorian house on Central Ave. in Ave., Rye Beach, or call 964-6074. stones at the art supply store, Among 1-August 31. 28 Bagdad Rd. Walking 5/7______Dover, near Kari-van stop. $160/mo. the stones available are marentzi tur­ Apartment to sublease this summer distance from campus. Call Nancy negotiable. Includes utilities. Apt un­ quoise, opals, fire opals, coral, onyx, Casna 868-9731 or 2-2386. 5/4, For Sale for spring: 1973 Yamaha in Durham from June to Sept. with furnished. Call Susan Bailey at pearls, jade, ivory tigereye, chryso- kitchen and Bath $92.50/month. Call 742-1265 or stop by Hamilton-Smith 175 street and/or trail bike, 5300 colla and many others. These stones miles. Excellent condition, $450.00 Lee McMillen 868-5751, no. 113, 9 Girls: Phi Mu Delta is now accepting 16. 5 /1 0 .______will be available only until the begin­ Woodman Rd., Durham. 5/7. female boarders for the summer, For details call 749-3839 or ning of May. Art supply store is lo­ TWO BEDROOM APT. in Newmar­ 332-3988 after 6, leave message for Comfortable rooms at low rent, Call ket available in June, Includes kit­ cated in the Paul Arts Center, Room Durham apartment to sublet location 862-1298 while they last, 4/29, B ruce. 5/7 A-201. Store hours are8:30 - 12:00 Woodman Ave. For one or two per­ chen, living room and .large balcony porch off bedroom. Located on and 1:00..- 3:30 Mon - Fri, For more sons utilities included. Negotiable Sublet for summer: 3 female room­ Motorcycle, 175 cc Honda, 7,000 ac­ information call 862-2191 4/29 rent for June 1 - Labor Day. Call Ann Kari-van route and near Stone tual miles, excellent condition, 70 - 868-5480 or Cathy 868-5347. 5/7. mates needed. Own rooms, kitchen Church. $150/mo. Call 659-2721. miles per gallon, $400. Call 778-0300 1972 Gran Torino 302 cid. GT Sport facilities, rent negotiaable, utilities in­ 5 /4 after 6 p.m. 4/26. cluded, One of these rooms will be Model 2 door, 3-speed manual trans­ Durham summer sublet two bed­ available for fall. 25 Main, Apt, 9, mission. 1973 Road Runner 440 cid, rooms, semi furnished Woodman Ave LARGE MOBILE HOME 12 X 76 on Durham, Call Mary or Jane, 2 5/8 acres of land, 1-car gar. plus FOR SALE; 1966 Volkswagen Good 3-speed automatic. Both in excellent $160/month includes utilities. Call 868-7499. 4/29, condition 868-5324 condition. Call Kirby 868-9862 4/26 Linda 868-734T. 5/11. tool shed. Call 207-384-5061 South Berwick Maine. 4/26 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE SEVENTEEN WANT TO Fami!ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S WRITE? SICNE CHURCH and 9:10 PG Newmarket NH e.M.LOew’s 436-2605 X#ce«t!%A. Come see ^ D O W N T O W N , PORTSMOUTH j Plot Tues-Wed TURKEY CREEK E.M.i.octv's DOWNTOWN A r t A PORTSMOUTH Steve in Rm. VAV 436-5710 CANYON BAND ROBERT 151 of the Thurs ANDY'S JAZZ BAND g-50 DENIRO Taxi MUB. and • Fri-Sdt BILL mORRISSEY 9 00 Driver R classified ads

Large family house on Oyster River ' Moving? Call Bob, I have a V* to n Having trouble finding fabric for Road available to sublet until end of pick-up for light moving jobs. I will quilts or other sewing projects? Try HOW ABOUT IT SENIORS? In a summer. Hal or Virginia Wilkins move anything, but no loads to the our Patchwork Six-Pack---a collection course with friends you’ve studied 447-2159 4/23 ______municipal dump. 749-3955. 5/10. and. . . and worked with for the last three or of small patterns in a rainbow of four years? Don’t graduate without APARTMENT AVAILABLE in “The Happiness of mankind will be colors, cottons, and cotton blends. someway of remembering them. How Dover to sublet for the summer. Op­ realized when women and men Six Va-yard lengths, 45” wide, $5.95 about a class picture? Good idea!! tion to continue lease in the fall. coordinate and advance equally, for postpaid. Sandwich Quilts, Box 107-F, Center Sandwich, N,H, Call A1 Richardson, 742-5732. Also Good location. Call 749-0377 nights, help wanted each is the complement and helpmeet passports, candids, portraits, etc. . . 03227. 5/4, of the other.” Bahai Faith 4/27. 5/4 FOR RENT: Shorefront Kittery Point, Maine beginning Sept 1 to re­ Wanted: Sale and distribution of Wanted: A good home for 2 kittens, Need a creative gift idea? Make a sponsible couple. Furnished 2 bdrm, N.Y. Times. Income realized from 6 wks. old, one black and one tiger, patchwork pillow! We have a kit with And,..Anyone who has gone through rancher, electric heat, fireplace, screen­ commissions, bonus. All expenses ready to go anytime. Call 868-5381. everything you need—all materials, the EST training or anyone familiar pillow and instructions. It’s a tradi­ with EST at all needed for short ed porch, garage. Apply,Ms, Up- paid. Promotion and advertising sup­ 4 /2 6 tional windmill design, available in ham 4905 Primrose Path, Sarasota, plied by N.Y. Times. Early morning interview. General questions. Help! Fla. 33581 4/29 hours required. Call Ms. Jones at Artists—Looking for a place to sell cranberry, moss green or brown com­ Term paper due soon! Call Bethany 742-1562. 4/26. your work? I’m opening a Gallery binations. $10.00 postpaid. Sandwich 868-5547. 4/26. Attractive Durham summer sublet: Store in Lincoln, N.H. and will take Quilts, Box 107-F, Center Sandwich, wooded residential area, short walk Applications now being taken for work on consignment. For more info N.H. 03227. 5/4. to campus, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, summertime employment. Must be call Wayne, 868-5169. 5/10. Wilderness experience for boys or HANG GLIDING LESSONS in Dur­ bath, porch, large living room with 18. Apply in person. Rochester Pizza ham by certified instructor, $20 for 3 rireplace, knotty-pine panelling. Call H u t. 4 /2 6 Moving or graduating? Do you want girls at established and accredited Maine Sailing and canoe camps .Wide hour lesson, glider rental, transporta­ MJ at 868-9711. 5/4, to rid yourself of extra furniture? tion to site. Gliders for sale. Call The­ SOPHOMORES-SUMMER JOBS— 6 Donate or sell it to Cool-Aid for a variety of times, programs and trips specially geared to child’s experience resa in Scott 24. 2-1644 or 868-9767 Durham apartment to sublet — May weeks free room and board, plus pay. small price. Call 862-2293 on or off- 4 /2 6 No experience needed. Must be campus. 5/4 and ability. Please call Bob 659-2098. to August. For 2 or 3 people. Two 5/4.______bedroom, living room, bath, full willing to accept a physical and men­ kitchen, parking area, semi-furnished. tal challenge. Call ROTC Dept.- 30 second walk to campus, $80 per -862-1078. 5/10 month each. Call 868-7329, 5/4, Applications now being taken for 2 Portsmouth residents: If you are live-in tutors/counselors for fall and moving out of an apartment in Ports­ spring semesters at the Dover A Bet­ mouth any time between now and ter Chance Program. Pay: room September, please contact Susan at and board. Call Dick or Alic^Creteau 659-2086 (evenings) or leave a meg- for interview, 742-8260 or 742-9724 Reap Profits sage at 862-1562.’ c/,2. 5/4. after 4 p.m. 5/10 ______REAL ESTATE: licensed individual Apartment to sublet: starting June to work for reputable real estate Inquire at Apt. 52, Olde Madbury company expanding in this area, All Lane Apts, Dover. 5/4, inquiries held in confidence. Call Bill SUMMER SUBLET: furn, 1 bdrm. Richey, evenings at 679-8300, 4/29 through the apt. Kosher for two. 3 min, walk to Ovcxseas Jobs; Asia, Australia, Africa, cam p u s $ 1 65/m o. Call 868-2089 Europe, South America, All occupa­ tions, $600-$2,500 Invaluable experi­ TO SUBLET THIS SUMMER - 2 bed- ences. Details $ .2 5 . International Em room apartment; 22 Madbury Road - ployment Research, Box 3 8 9 3 K 2 , walking distance from campus - start- Seattle, Wa. 98124. 5/10. N ew Ham pshire 86l-577bd; “ t y- ,!300/°'°- C*11 Summer job-Recreation Director/In­ structor to plan and supervise sum­ FOR RENT: summer rental or start mer recreation program (including year lease, available June 1, 2 bed­ arts and crafts, games, sports activi­ room apartment, $160/mo., Westgate ties and instruction). Ability to teach Apts on Rt. 155 Dover, Call tennis is desired, but not mandatory. 749-3846. 4/29 Apply to: Newington Recreation class ads. Committee, c/o Richard Guerette, NEWMARKET APT: Available June Airport Road, S. Newington, N.H. 1, 4 bedrooms, kitchen, living room 0 3 8 0 1 , or call 436-7915. 5/10 and bathroom - $250/mo. includes heat and water. 19 Exeter St. Apt 3 FIGURE MODELS: $15 -$25/hr. •interested Call 6 59-5401 4/29 Plus bonuses to $1500. Experience Apartment Available to sublet for 749-3463?4729 CaU BettV (only 4 more Summer. Olde Madbury Lane Apts, $170 month and electricity. For in­ Earn $250.00 per thousand addres­ formation call 749-2875, 4/29. sing-stuffing envelopes. Information: Send $1.00 plus addressed stamped envelope to Heskey Associates, Box GOING ON SABBATICAL? Respon­ 821EF, Covington, Kentucky. sible, newlywed., student couple issues this semester!!!) 41012, 4/26.______would like to housesit in Durham area for the 1976-77 academic year. Individual(s) to help with house References available. Call Dave Lem­ building in exchange for living space onick. 868-9650 4/26 this summer/upcoming semesters in Barrington, N.H. Doug Walker RFD 1. Box 516A Wells, Me. 04090 or 207-646-9456 after 6:00p.m. 4/26. < r lost & found Application now being taken for 2 live-in tutor/counselors for Fall and pre-paid class ad form Spring semesters at the Dover A Bet­ Reward for return of, or information ter Chance Pr.. pay: room and board, concerning green suede handbag Call Dick or Alice Creteau for inter­ found in Spaulding Life Science view 742-8268 or 742-9724 after b u ild mg 4/15. Contents, silver brush 4:00 P.m. 4/7. TO READ AS FOLLOWS: especially, are important to me. No questions asked. Please return. Winty. 1-679-8616. 4/26. personals Lost—19 74 Laconia High School Class Ring. Initials inside W.G.R. To the staph: thanks for putting up Please contact Bill in 326A Hunter with me while putting out the news Hall. 4-30.______— M.D’A. Found: in the quad Monday 4/12- FREEBEE: Seems we just get started k% /mg Wlth round father tag and 3 i, one to foreign auto. See and before you know it - comes the Claudia rm. 151 MUB. 4/26. time we have to say so long . . . There’s NO ONE I would rather have LOST: Gold UNH ring 1977 en- done it with. All love and respect, the fraved Wayne David Burnett. At Bean.______MUB men’s room Mon. Apr. 5, Please Happy Birthday Les, with love, the 745N93 t0 information or call Space Cadet, PLEASE PRINT MUST BE PREPAID Dandy Sandy, won’t-you please Blaze my saddle. Punchy 4/27. HRST INSERTION: $1.00 for 30 words or less; $.50 for each 15 words extra. Chocolate Chip, one year is finally up services and we have done alot of Happy EACH CONSECUTIVE INSERTION: $.25 Maximim number of runs: 6. Dancing in the streets, see you Aug 7th Love, Forever Bear. 4/27. Two versatile, healthy, hard workers, Telephone numbeis and dates count as one word; hyphenated words count as two. desire summer positions, doing paint­ One thing Linda - “Are you gettin’ ing, yardwork and other in and out- much?” Have a Happy Birthday! L. r jobs. Call evenings, Rickie, 5/4. Mistakes on our part merit one additional run. b o y -2 o lo , 5 /4o IT’S ALMOST TIME! Spinney Lane In­ Counseling for professional individu­ tellectual Society Initiation Rite; Dis­ TO R U N TIMES. als on new techniques for informa­ cussion wil be: Zen and the art of tion, knowledge, or intelligence, gath­ cow riding. Candidate Miles must ering, processing, storing, and re­ pass the test. B.Y.O.C. 868-2469. Make checks payable to: The New Hampshire, Rm. 151. Memorial Union. trieving. Contact Dr. John Miller, 4 /2 7 . Mast Road, Durham Tel. 868-5608, 4/29.______■Hello, I’ve really had it with school and I want to quit. Call Cool Aid or J THE VILLAGE GREEN, landscape drop in 862-2293 on or off-campus. maintenance service: spring clean-up, We are located in the basement of weekly lawn care, rototilling, ferti­ Schofield House, Sun-Thurs, 6 Classified ads MUST be clearly written or typed. We cannot accept responsibility f o>- illecibleads n « m in 0 * lizing, light tree work. Free estimates, p.m.-12 midnite; Fri-Sat, 6 p.m. 8 call Stan Dutton 868-5813 evenings. a.m . 5 /4 4 /2 9 PAGE EIGHTEEN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976

S ' . " I DAVIDSON LECTURE SERIES - 1975/76 WHITTEMORE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS April 26 - April 29

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS LECTURES

“INTERNATIONAL UNDERSTANDING, BUSINESS AND ETHICS”

April 26 “THE MANY FACES OF THE MULTINATIONALS” Leonard Silk, Economics Editor, The New York Times 4 PM Parsons Auditorium

April 27 “BIG BUSINESS AND NATIONAL GOALS”

Dr. Donald Guertin, Vice President, Exxon Corporation 4 PM Parsons Auditorium

April 28 “CULTURAL CONTACT AND INTERACTION”

Stephen H. Rhinesmith, President, American Field Service 12:30 PM Room 4, Social Science Center

“ ETHICS, EDUCATION AND INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT” Panel Stephen H. Rhinesmith, American Field Service Stan Davis, Graduate School Of Business, Harvard ♦ Felix Hertzka, Vice President, Nashua Corporation 4 PM Auditorium, Murkland Hall

April 29 “THE ETHICAL PRINCIPLES OF GERMAN AID TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES” Dr. Dietmar Kreusel, Consul, German Consulate, Boston 4 PM Room 209, McConnell Hall THE NEW HAMSPHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE NINETEEN International dinner goes African

By Laurie Crawford When I stopped in at the Granite State Room early Frid'ay after­ noon, preparations were just beginning for the African Safari Din­ ner. Sponsored by the International Students Association, in cooperation with Hotel Administration, the dinner on Saturday evening entertained and intrigued the more than 400 guests in attendance. Organization got a slow start: the room that afternoon remained its same, block self, with exposed black circles of overhead lights and dots of spots; the floor was scattered with a curious potpourri, including bamboo screens, piles of multi-colored fishnets, and bales of hay. Come Saturday night, however, my comrade and I were escorted over a bridge spanning a New England evergreem-framed pond and into - not the book rush, not David Frye’s political forum - but into a clearing in a tropical African savannah. Although nothing in the room had been completely camoflaged, all decorations were tasteful and distinctive. Murals of sandy beaches and primitive art hung on the walls. Slides of Africa's Ivory Coast reflected off a suspended screen. A grove of palm trees-back- dropped the stage at the west side of the room, and in one corner, a straw-roofed hut disguised a bar. The sharp contrast between white ceiling and black light fixtures was muted by pastel spotlights - pinks, blues, oranges. From the bal­ cony railing hung flags of the African countries. And everywhere were representative African motifs - naturalistic fish and animals, and semi-abstract, geometric symbols. In truth, the dinner was our introduction to African gastronomy, and we couldn’t really imagine quite what the menu would offer. Ah -- hum - it was quite the culinary paradise. African UNH students perform native dances in tribal cloth costumes at the International Student AFRICA, page 21 Association dinner Saturday. (Wayne King photo) Les McCann plays cool blue and hot red

By Katie McClare Jazz artist Les McCann played to a standing-room crowd last night in a MUSO-sponsored concert in the Granite State Room. McCann, backed by drummer Harold Davis, guitarist Miroslaw Kudykowski, and bass player Jimmy Rowser, played a wide selection of songs from his 20-year career. The four musicians played for two-and-a-half hours under cool blue and hot red lights. Most of the pieces began with comfortable, lingering work on the organ and synthesizer by McCann, launching into powerful rhythm from Davis, Rowser, and Kudykowski. McCann, whose style has been compared to Ike and Tina Turner and the late Otis Redding, began with the restrained emotion of “Love in the Beginning”. He continued with “Hustle to Survive,” the stirring title cut from McCann’s 1975 LP of the same name. He then invited members of the audience to “Just turn to whoever’s next to you or behind you, somebody you maybe haven’t met, and say hello to them.” The warm, open-faced musician continued the repertoire with two eloquent and at times melancholy pieces, “Let Your Learning Be Your Eyes”, and “Butterfly”. On the darkened stage with only a single red spotlight focusing on him, McCann sang of the hope that comes with experience, and yet of the sadness of lost youth. “Smile” featured bassist Rowser in a long, gutsy solo in the middle of the instrumental piece. At the end he included a nice bit of improvisation where the instrument swayed with liveliness beneath his fingers. Davis on drums had a number of small solos throughout, punctuating each piece with a rowsing yet unintrusive improv. At the end of “Smile”, his solo lasted close to ten minutes. It could at times have been a bit tedious to the non-jazz zealot. That didn’t apply to this audience. Guitarist Kudykowski looked as though he might have relaxed a bit more. All I’d heard about McCann’s rapport with his audience was true, I found. McCann, whose musical beginnings were in the Shiloh Baptist Church Choir, conducted a 15-minute encore in which he invited the audience to “witness” with the chorus of “Let’s See What Love Can Do.” Throughout the concert he got the enthusiastic audience to clap and sing with him. “Where’s my rhythm section?” he would ask, cupping his hand to his ear. Before viewing McCann and his three musicians I had never had more than average exposure to real jazz. After this, however, I may comply with McCann’s joking request to “Go on out and buy an Les McCann (Pete Acker photo) album.” p r e —view' TUESDAY, APRIL 27 Edward Albee’s play A ll Over failed on Broadway in 1971, but Albee considers it his most enduring and meaningful work. Hearts and Minds plays the MUSO film series at 6:30 and 9 See it on Ch. 11 at 9 with discussion by Albee following. in the Strafford Room, MUB. $.50. See review this section. It’s about a dying man’s family bickering out his last moments.

Blazing Saddles at the Franklin, 6:30 and 8:30. $2.50. Fellini fans: La Strada, the Italian director’s 1954 masterpiece of poignant humanism, plays on Ch. 2 at 10:30. A young waif Photographers, see how it’s done.Two films by and about befriends a circus strongman in an unusual relationship and professional photographers run in the Oak Room, Huddleston at 8. a more unusual ending.

It’s Horror Night in the MUB Pub - at last they’re being I HURSDAY, APRIL 29 honest about it - with fright flicks from 8 till closing. Three Sisters, Chekhov’s tale of three city sisters stuck in the country with their dreams stars Lawrence Olivier. At Channel 7 presents a half-hour of Bugs Bunny and Roadrunner classics the Franklin, 6:30 and 9:15. including “ Knighty Knight Bugs” and “ Birds Anonymous” at 8. If you missed The Thomas Crown Affair in 1968, .treat yoursel W.C.Fields snarls at dogs, dames, and children in a double A millionaire (Steve McQueen) heists a bank for fun, and an feature: My Little Chickadee and Never Give a Sucker an Even Break. insurance inspector (Faye Dunaway) tracks him down to the Ch. 56 at 8 and 9:30. - longest kiss in screen history. Filmed in Boston. Ch. 56 at 8.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 Sneak Preview -- The Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band bongs away Classical music is in the in the MUB Pub for 45 tempting minutes at 9. It’s to help Loves and Times of Scaramouche, story of a rogue Don Juan on spring air. See when on sell their Thurs. and Fri. concerts, and it should. the make with Napolean’s Josephine. At the Franklin tonight page 21. only, 6:30 and 8:30. Dying -- not death -- is the topic of a moving PBS special called D ying. Three terminally ill adults discuss their feelings Sticks and Bones, a matinee of the 1972 Tony winner, a black about what it’s like to see the end of life. Ch. 11 at 9. comedy about yellow people in Johnson Theater at 2. Plays nightly Thurs,,, Fri., Sat., at 8, but cheapest on Wed. and Thurs. Ingmar Bergman makes a comedy? In 1955, his Smiles of a Summer Night laid a 19th Century humor base for the Broadway hit Nazis try to kidnap Wonder Woman in a TV special, Ch. 5, 9 at 8. A Little Night Music. See the original on Ch. 2 at 10:30. PAGE TWENTY THE NEW HAMSPHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 Hearts and Minds a searing U.S. indictment At the beginning former De­ Hearts and Minds will be shown pathetic broken bodies of those fense Secretary Clark Clifford by MUSO tonight at 6:30 and who fight. The question ‘Was it explains the development of our 9:00 in the Strafford Room, worth it?’ rs answered all too obsession to extend the notion easily by their looks of bitter­ MUB. of manifest destiny overseas to ness and despair. By Marion Gordon become the number one world The expected purging of guilt It seems a safe, distant century power. Eisenhower pleads the does not happen when we hear ago that desperate, fear-ridden domino theory and Kennedy, Clark Clifford admit that “we Vietnamese stormed the Johnson and Nixon promote the couldn’t have been more American embassy in Saigon as same lies for the same hopeless wrong.” The implicit repentance we were making our not so cause. Watching old faces and of that statement pales next to graceful exit from their country. scenes from the familiar dinner­ the scene of a mourning relative In o u r bitterness and time news coverage brings back trying to crawl into the grave of disillusionment it’s all too easy all the old shame, disbelief and a loved one and the anguished to want to forget that a place disgust. tears of a man standing over the called Vietnam ever existed. We see how average American rubble where he lost his family. Hearts and Minds,> the Academy men were virtually brainwashed Award winner for best docu­ by a distorted idealism to feel The moral duplicity of Gen. Westmoreland’s statement, “Life mentary film of 1975, will not proud of killing “gooks” simply is not as important to the Ori­ let anyone who sees it forget. because they were the enemy. ental,” is enough to make the The film is a triple-decker By some very blunt editing, we most hardened person cringe. We m asterpiece of irony layered see an uncomfortable parallel realize not only the folly but the upon irony, some so outrageous drawn between our excitement criminality of our policy makers as to be incredible. Through ex­ over the aggressive game of foot­ and it seems impossible that any­ haustive research and responsible ball and the excitement of the one should have believed them. photojournalism, director Peter pilot who took pride in dropping Davis and his associates docu­ his bombs on target. You might be inclined to ment not only the war but the With embarassed laughter we laugh at some of the men spout­ political and ideological doc­ see the audacity of American ing military cliches. Don’t. Their trines w hich bred our over- economic exploitation embodied perverted sense of justice is not zealous involvement in a land - in the sign - M ekongFord. We funny, and, in fact, they are not where we didn’t belong. see the sexual exploitation of much different from us at all. I had expected to be assaulted Vietnamese prostitutes by Amer­ Hearts and Minds might bring with a lot of melodramatic ican soldiers and the absurd, im­ back some unpleasant memories b re a st beating and insight mature remark of one: “If my and resurrect some nagging through hindsight. Instead I saw chick at home could see this doubts and questions, but it an intelligent if somewhat now, man.” must be seen. You have the com­ scathing indictment of an entire We see the self-righteous indig­ fort of knowing that the war is era which ought to be seen by all nation of an ex-POW denying over for us, and once the movie Americans whether hawk or the rights of deserters to return is finished you can walk away dove. home with amnesty and then the and forget about it - if you can. A m e rica ’ s

By Casey Holt same class as “Muskrat Love Hideaway is good, but it’s Don’t buy it. Not unless and “Ventura Highway.” in two pieces, one at the end of you’re a confirmed America fan. There is not much to say a- each side. Put the pieces to­ They’ve always been pretty bout the rest of the album.. It’s gether and there’s a real good weak in concert, but great on mediocre. No life to it. Every­ song. But divided it fails. the albums. Now they have a thing is jumbled up, misplaced, “Who Loves You” is so-so, re­ weak album to their credit, too. and bland. fusing to either get up or go Hideaway just isn’t worth the six “Don’t Let It Get You Down” down, and “Jet Boy Blue” tot­ bucks. would be alright for a rowdy ters on the edge of being off party song, but who ever thinks key. “Watership Down” is the only of America for getting rowdy? “She’s A Liar” has nice beat song on the album that is really America is for being with a girl changes and “Letter” is not a worth listening to. It’s the kind or boyfriend, or with a bunch of bad tune, but three songs do not of lilting, , easy tune that people on the way to a burn-out. an album make. Hideaway is America is good at. Put it in the Not for rowdies. nothing to get excited about. Newington Drive-In six-packed, sex-stacked

By David Towle Are all those long-antennaed For instance there’s everyones’ the Cecille B. Demille touch-a bed. Intermission and everyone When you go to the naughty; two-way communicating favorite Dandy playing through tidal wave at the climax of the emerges from their Detroit car- Newington nudie show, the ques­ during the show? tonight. It is the story of a poor scene of Charlton Heston as Moses parting the sea. coons converging on the snack tion which is on everyone’s mind Why is the young policeman at girl from Toledo making it in bar and rest rooms. The police­ is “who goes to the Newing­ the snack bar grinning like he Hollywood. The plot is centered After this, Dandy makes it in the shower, bathtub, and even in man’s smile grows bigger. The ton?” You may find your par­ knows something you should? around her chest as she is passed an ex-jet setters swimming pool parade passes along and every­ ents watching Naughty Co-eds Are the Newington’s tin-foiled around the Hollywood under­ where he teaches her a “trick I one is looking out the corner of and A Hard Man is Good to meatball grinders really like ground. Dandy definitely has a water fettish. The movie opens learned from a Japanese pearl his eyes to see if he can find any­ Find. “mama made”? with a beach side copulation and one he knows. There is an occa­ The clientele varies. Spacious What is going on in the rolling diver.” But don’t worry. Dandy, a vague attempt at artistic cam­ whose dialogue is gruntingly sional UNH student out for white new Olds Cutlasses park house Winnebago parked in the era work trying to correlate the some social voyeurism. I even next to rust-rotted Chevys that back corner? short, eventually finds true love pounding of the waves with the caught a glimpse of an old high couldn’t have made it from any But the real show is in larger- in the arms of a photographer gyrations of the lovers. It lacks school girl we all used to have further than Dover. Souped-up than-living lust upon the screen. who will provide her with a real fantasies about. Dodges could take a close sec­ Then it’s back to the show for ond in the class category but the the prurient stuff. The big ques­ overwhelming favorite is the tion set at the beginning of pickup truck with such extras as Naughty Co-eds is who will be matching camper and gun rack. the first to seduce Professor Dress is casual, usually your Murray? The poor man is on a basic black and white outfit. college field trip with a gaggle of White T-shirt (slightly stained on young females in hot pursuit of chest and underarms), black his knowledge. I hope it is a sur­ pants ending slightly above the prise ending. I was so bored, I ankles to reveal the glowing left. You’ve seen one boob, white socks sandwiched between you’ve seen them all. the black loafers and' pants. A Coming features at the New­ bulging waisteline completes the ington are such cinemographic evening suit. delights as Sex Practices in But not everything is out front Sweden, and Sometime Sweet on or off the screen. There are Susan where the star of the show such suspenseful and unanswered' tells us, “I know what I’m doing questions as: Why do the younger women in the movie, and I just want to go to the Rest Room in packs of convey that feeling to the audi­ ence.” It sounds titillating. three? Is there a reason that everyone In all, the Newington is a sore­ ly hurting show, although the in the men’s room washes their movies play to a packed and six- hands but no one uses the auto­ packed audience. It’s a show that matic dryers? could be beat at home. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE TWENTY-ONE N.H. Sinfonietta to play concert of spring

By Marilyn Hackett D.C. last fall. United Press Inter­ The New Hampshire Sinfoni­ national (UPI) praised that etta, a fully professional orche­ concert as “an imaginative concert stra, based at Manchester’s Palace played with scintillating brilliance.” Theater, will offer a spring con­ According to Keith Polk, UNH cert for the last performance of music teacher and french horn this year’s Blue & White Series in player for the Sinfonietta, only Johnson Theater on May 3 at 8 about half of the orchestra’s p.m. members actually come from The 50-piece orchestra under New Hampshire. James Bolle, conductor of the Four players from New York, Monadnoek Festival for nine two from Montreal, and several summers, will play three pieces free-lance players from Boston intended as a musical celebration comprise approximately half of of spring. the orchestra. “They try to keep The first, Beethoven’s No. 6 or about half of the membership Pastorale Symphony, paints from New Hampshire”, says musical woods and meadows, a Polk. shepherd’s pipe, and a melo­ Bruce Coppock, James dramatic storm. It is thought to Cummings, and James West of Above, Tony Martin plays violin in the New Hampshire Sinfonietta reveal a rare tenderness in Beetnoven. thp TTNH rmisirHppartment also which will annear in Johnson Theater next Monday, May 3 at 8 play, respectively, cello, bas­ p.m. Below, Beth Pearsons, also a member of the Apple Hill Cham­ Mozart’s Symphony No. 39, the soon, and trumpet in the Sin­ ber Players, bows a cello for the Sinfonietta. second piece on the program, is fonietta. a lyrical piece with a simple peasant theme occasionally in­ In fact, secretary of the terrupted with orchestral out­ Cultural Events Committee, Ray bursts. Though the piece retains a Mathson says that the commit­ solemn adagio and a minuet, the tee found out about the Sin­ overall mood is one of tender, fonietta from these people in the smiling grace. music department. The orchestral suite from Cop- This is the Sinfonietta’s second land’s ballet “Appalachian season. Critical acclaim has al­ Spring”, the Sinfoneitta’s third ready been offered by the selection, has its origin in a pio­ Boston Globe and the Nashua neer spring celebration of a new­ Telegraph. ly built Quaker farmhouse in Tickets for the concert are $3 Pennsylvania in the early 1800’s. for students in advance, $4.50 It is a piece of rich harmonies, for the general public and all at hymns, and folk melodies. the door. Reservatons may be The Sinfonietta also played made by calling the MUB ticket “ Appalachian Spring” at the office between 10 a.m. and 4 James Bolle conducts a rehearsal. Kennedy Center in Washington, p.m. Monday through Friday. Bermuda Triangle tales Africa in the MUB AFRICA, continued from page 19 bore Berlitz audience The initial reception (held in the MUB’s formal lounge) was de­ lightfully un-filling (in view of the buffet yet to come). Whilst By Casey Holt 1945. He talked about the fact that sipping punch and nibbling “funghi ripiani” (stuffed mushrooms) The subject is engrossing, the He also stressed that these the UoS„: Coast Guard prints an and Algerian meatballs (Algerian because they contain no pork), we book well written, but Sunday were disappearances, not wrecks, information sheet about the Tri­ chatted with Anne DellaTorre, a Hotel Administration Junior night in the Granite State Room, since there has been wreckage angle which states that it is a DellaTorre explained that the meal was entirely prepared by mem­ Charles Berlitz bored about 150 found in very few places. The mythical area in the first para­ bers of Hotel Administration 403, Institutional Administration, a people. vast majority of disappearances graph, and then gives its coordin­ course which teaches the essentials in quantity cooking. The subject was The Bermuda are accompanied by neither ates in the second. The International House decided the menu for the Safari Dinner, T rian gle, Berlitz’ best-seller floating debris, oil slicks, or con­ The two most interesting based on recipes from the African students. About a week prior to about the mysterious centrations of sharks. points that Berlitz made were the Safari, the Africans met with the hotel students to show them occurrences and disappearances Whether because of the that each time the Navy tests a the basics of the recipes’ preparation. in an area of the Atlantic Ocean, disappointing turn-out or just new airplane in the Triangle, at Neil Porta, professor of Hotel 403, also informed us that all dishes roughly bordered by Bermuda, because he isn’t a dynamic least one of them is lost, and were tested, sometimes twice, just as a dress rehearsal precedes a Puerto Rico, and the southern speaker, Berlitz was dull. All lie that Cunard Line, the Great performance. tip of Florida, in which more did was narrate a list of facts, Britain firm which runs the “Everytime we put on one of these dinners it’s like opening than 100 ships and planes and accompanied by slides, make a Queen Elizabeth II, does not like night.” Porta clarifies, “The course is not restricted to hotel majors. 1,000 people have been lost. few very low-key jokes (which to talk about the events In fact, half of the students are not hotel majors. But this semester’s Berlitz said that these figures bombed), and answer questions surrounding her mysterious loss class is more enthusiastic than any that preceded it, probably be­ were the ones “officially” given after the main presentation. The of power and communications cause three-quarters of them haven’t had previous experience.” when inquiries are made, but the fact that the subject is contro­ while on a cruise through the Porta added that he appreciates having the opportunity to follow an true figure comes closer to one versial was barely enough to hold Triangle two years ago. international theme. plane every two weeks and one attention of many who He also spoke of what may be Then we were escorted to our table in Africa, where our meal ship or yacht every week, since attended. the lost city of Atlantis, various began-cheerfully served, I might add -- with “Red Bean Soup,” other archeological and geologi- legume legacy of the United Republic of Tanzania. The buffet table % cal aspects of the area, and the that followed was decorated with an Africa-shaped cake, bread in siting of numerous cylindrical, the form of a crocodile, and an incredible ice-carved elephant (yes, metallic objects which travel bigger than a breadbox!). underwater at great speed and Several countries were represented in the African delectables: seem to track ships. “Sherbat Robe” (chilled Yogurt and cucumber salad); Tunisia’s During the question period, “Market-Zeitun” (braised beef bits with olives); Liberia’s “Jallof Berlitz spoke of his own exper­ Rice” (moist and steamy chicken and meat in rice); Chad’s “Squash ience with one of these so-called with peanuts” (steamed usmmer squash and munchy nuts); “Yellow USO’s, or Unidentified Sub­ Peach Pickle” from South Africa offered an interesting sweet-sour merged Objects. While on a boat accent. The meal was topped with Dahomey’s “Wonder Dessert,” a with reporters, a psychic, and sweet combination of fruits served with pastry triangles. others interested in the The student presentation following dinner, entitled “The Drums phenomena of the Triangle, he of Africa,” featured seven African students performing traditional and others saw a cylinder in the dances. The participants wore ankle-length wraps of batiked cottons water, pulsating with a greenish and tie-dyed gauze in brown and maize geometries, black-and- light. Then, as they watched, it orange paisley and one in red-white-and-blue stars and stripes. Pulsa^ started up at high speed, moving ting drums, gourd-like morraccas and hollow sticks laid the parallel to the boat’s direction to rhythmic framework for the dancers’ chants, struts and stamps. a p o in t Berlitz estimated as Short bursts of applause accompanied cheers of involvement as the 2,000 yards ahead, and then African students concluded their programme by pulling surprised took off out of the water, diners to join in with the hip-undulation, shoulder-gyrating celebra­ turning orange as it came out tion. and rapidly disappeared. A few more sips of coffee, and a final farewell to Africa. The lecture was informative, My comrade and I re-crossed the bridge back to New England as even though boring, and closed the amplified tunes of Dover’s Spectras electrified the palm grove. as Berlitz once again made the Of notable worth was the speech given by ISA secretary Octave, point that most of the dis­ one of the 24 African students on campus. Octave stressed that co­ appearances occur during operation was the necessary means for African unification. Cooper­ December, January, and ation as was reflected in Saturday night’s dinner. February. But even so, when Ninety-eight International House students, representing 40 'coun­ you make your way to Florida tries, spent more than three months pulling together the ft|fari brainstorm. From there, ISA and Hotel Administration 403§|m- Charles Berlitz, author of The Bermuda Triangle. next spring vacation, don’t swim too far from shore. bined knowledge and talent to produce a truly entertaining aim ed­ ucational evening. PAGE TWENTY-TWO THE NEW HAMSPHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976

ROOMS AVAILABLE FOR THE Want to Rent: 4 or 5 bedroom furnished house Health fee SUMMER AT TAU KAPPA EPSILON Sept 76 to June 77 ’ By Responsible Family HEALTH FEE 8 STRAFFORD AVE. In or Near Durham continued from page 1 $ 6 0 ./m o n th CALL 2-1300 Please Call 926-3071 (Hampton) other student government lea­ Afternoons or Evenings_____ ders had “a pretty good idea” of what their alternative plan would be. “But I want to emphasize that thegranite we are open to student sugges­ tions,” he added.“I want to The Granite yearbook is presently accepting applications for a variety of make sure that students do more than sign the petition. I hope editorial positions. they write letters to Dick Stevens and Gene Mills expres­ -EDITOR-IN-CHIEF* -Photography Editor -Production & sing their opinions.” Farnham said it was Student -Business Manager -Literary Editor layout editor Government’s responsibility to synthesize student opinions and all positions are salaried —Senior Section present them to the administra­ Editor tion. “Therefore, I can not com­ As an Editor, The Granite can provide you with the opportunity to pursue your ment about our alternative ideas on the record until after this talent* and organizational abilities in any o f the fo llo w in g areas o f interest: prnrpss had heftn completed.”he said. —non-fiction and expository writing —documentary and creative photography PPOM —business management and accounting PPOM —creative layout and graphic arts design continued from page 1 disproportionate ratio of the As the Editor-In-Chief, The Granite can provide you with the valuable experience cost of contract labor gained from organizing, managing and editing a student publication. ($482,311) to that of parts and supplies ($72,520).” DRAC re­ commended that the ratio should be reduced from the present 6.5/1 to at least 4/1 and Applications may be obtained at our offices, rm. 125 of the MUB. preferably 3/1.” Any undergraduate is welcome to apply. Eugene Leaver, Director of PPOM, said, “the only other way to charge for maintenace work would be on an item by item costing system. This might be more expensive than the present procedure and outweigh the comics benefits to students.” Leaver said that the equal DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau costing of grounds and main­ tenance to all students gets into the question of “who uses the m ANYWAY, JIM , THIS WELL, T D BE HAPPY TO /SONa TERRIFIC DISCUSS IT WITH HER, UNH campus. How can you CANDIDATE, AND ZONKER. TEEL M E -IS charge a commuter the same as a A N Y SUPPORT YOU SHE RUNNING ON THE resident student who spends 24 CAN GIVE HER MOULD / ISSUES OR ON HER hours a day here?” < 3 0 GREATLY ./ CHARACTER? Leaver would not comment on ? APPRECIATED! BOTH! DRAC’s allegation of worker in­ efficiency in PPOM, saying, “DRAC must have access to in­ formation that I don’t have. When I see their data I will comment.” Funds FUND continued from page 2 by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds he is “very optimistic” about the TANK BFNAMARA chances of raising the remaining money. SURE, WE'P LIKE FOR ' BUTTHOSE PRICE*. 7KAREEM WILL ACCEPT Some of the sources which the KAREEM ABPUL-JAS5BAR U/HV, THE ONLYWAV BIPS ONLY FROM CITIES’ program looks to for money in­ WITH AA &MP RATINGS clude alumni and friends of the TO PLAY IN PHOENIX TO RAISE THAT MUCH University, foundations and WHEN HIS OPTION MONEY.. GOLLY, ONLY A OR BETTER.. corporations having in the RUNS OUT BOHP ELECTION... various activities. “We also have the responsi­ bility of processing and channeling the funds we re­ O T f t l ceive,” added Leberman. “We i council"'! have to see that the money goes to the specific program the donor indicates.” t a n i “If the grant is unspecified then the money goes into the % UNH fund and a committee designates where it will go.” “We are also responsible for depositing, acknowledging and State U. by Ken Sheldon recording any grants received,” As T«£ SfuDeiv't MfiA0£R S«T IN THE INTEREST c>F he added. “We also notify the X WftlUT TO THANK X. KUOUJ t h a t 50ME designated recipient of the THE. eo ftR O o f stvoehiTSj x will. conTingE o f YoO Co fUC£AlUS you a ll FOA TO A C T AS STvOEnT TRUSTEE money if there is one.” CHoSfM 6Y our gourrwoR... Leberman said all types of A0OUT NY £ u n t i l g - « a o u a t io / u ^ A5 tt£R.e- THIS moRjvMG-. groups have benefited from the itu O E N l TROSTff. A ? P o in TE 0 ST THE GOVERNOR. fund-raising activities of the Development program. Atu® FfcRMeR / AMO wf\RN cahPAuEN vli YOU'R£. Bean, Malph, Patti, you t o MANftOffl fotk TEACOUS Plant Brain, Claud, GET off MYAH; Trte governor Hack, Cracker, MY AH IHY &ACA°' News nose, Janet, Mill, et al Thank you. An­ other job well done... love beef THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 PAGE TWENTY-THREE Trackm en McGrath is star in BU new sports open meet editor Junior Ed McGrath takes over John Demers of UNH won the for retiring Sports Editor Mark 440 yard run in the Boston Uni­ Radwan, starting today. versity Open Track Meet last McGrath, a Nashua, N.H. na­ Sunday at BU. tive, holds a business and com­ Demers outdistanced all other munications dual major. He has opponents by at least eight yards written for The New Hampshire with a time of 50.5. Com­ since 1973 as a reporter for petition came from nine differ­ women’s sports, men’s gymnas­ ent schools and track clubs from tics and men’s hockey. He has al­ New England. so done numerous feature stor­ Wildcat George Reed placed ies. fourth, in the mile with his best McGrath was the Business time ever of 4:15.1. Manager for The New Hampshire Gary Crossan of UNH grabbed for the past year. He also has fifth in the three-mile competi­ been involved in the sports pro­ tion with a time of 14:26.6, his grams at WUNH radio and hpsf fimp pwr in that pvpnf. Hp WENH-TV. came within two seconds of He is a brother at Sigma Beta qualifying for the New Englands and has been Resident Assistant Meet on May 15. at Stoke Hall for the past two Brad Russ took fifth in the years. high jump with a leap of 5’10”. Mark Lawton of UNH runs evenly with his Bowdoin counterpart The winning jump was 6’2”. in action last week. (Dennis Giguere photo) Brett St. Clair placed fourth in the pole vault competition. Mittmen battle HC today, NU tomorrow

BASEBALL three innings allowing one hit The Wildcats have three continued from page 24 and striking out five. double headers upcoming this UConn took a 1-0 lead in the week. Today, Conner will send rally with a walk. Russ Laribee first inning on a single hit. Graig pitchers Dean Koulouris and singled to left and D’Arminio Pinney led off with a walk and Steve Margetts against Holy scored on a single by Jim Toler. sto le second. He took third Cross in Worcester, Mass. Then White made what UNH when catcher Mike Hennessey’s Wednesday, Northeastern travels coach Ted Conner called “his throw sailed into center field. to Durham in the make-up of only mistake” as Bill Crowley Pinney scored on a sacrifice fly last week’s rain out. Saturday, hit a curve into left field for two by Dave Showalter. the Cats host the Black Bears of runs and the game. UNH tied the game in the Maine in what Conner termed Germano took care of the fourth as with one out Mitch “ our toughest remaining Wildcats in the seventh to tie the Griffin reached on an error and competition.” ; single season UConn win total Jeff Whitty singled. Ken Billings for pitchers with eight. hit a ground ball to the pitcher “We’re improving with every game,” Conner added. “These The Wildcats again got good but Biercevicz’s throw to second one run games .can be killers be­ pitching in the second game. for the force play went into cen­ New sports editor Ed McGrath gets some last minute instruction cause you figure that you could Steve Wholley pitched the dis­ ter field and Griffin came a- from field hockey goalie Debbie Watson. McGrath played in tance, giving up five runs (only round to score. have won them. Our pitching has practice with the women’s field hockey team and wrote a story as been good, but not as consistant two of them earned) on six hits. UConn picked up a run in its The New Hampshire’s Paper Wildcat. as I’d hoped. But he was equalled by the half of the fourth on an error, a Huskie duo of starter Greg single and a sacrifice. They “We’ve beaten Holy Cross our Biercevicz and reliever Jack scored their only two earned last six times out, so I’d like to CLUB SPORTS Taylor who combined, gave up runs in the fifth on singles by think we can beat them. But one unearned run on but three D’Arminio, Laribee and they could take two from us just The UNH weight lifters hosted their first weight-lifting contest hits. Taylor pitched the final Crowley. as easily.” this past Sunday and swept to victory in the event with a whopping 37 points. They far outdistanced the Dartmouth weight lifters who placed second in the five team event with eight points. The UNH lifters won six of eight events with two lifters setting new UNH records. Mark Ciocca bench pressed 270 pounds in the wildcat 148% lb. class for one record, and Tony Sierra benched 305 lbs. on his third lift in the 181% lb. class. UNH 13 HC 6 UConn 4 UNH 3 Ciocca took the honors in his division, and Sierra took his class in which UNH’s Aharon Boghosian placed fifth competing with a PERIOD ONE time UConn AB RHRBI NH-Bryan(Ryan) 8:50 Pinney 3 0 0 0 broken wrist. HC- Larkin(Flahure) 10:14 Showalter 3 0 0 0 D ’A rm in io 2 0 Tom Brakoneclfi won the 198% lb. division for UNH and Drew NH-Leech(Richardson) 11:48 1 1 Laribee 3 1 1 0 Sauchelli captured the 242%2 lb. division. Dino Elder was the only Biercevicz 3 0 1 0 P E R IO D TW O lifter and winner in the super-heavy weight division. Toler 3 1 2 1 HC- Larkin(Cain) 1:55 H uckill 3 0 0 0 NH- Richardson(S. Miller) 2:40 Behind UNH and Dartmouth were the Taste of Iron WLC with Crowley 3 1 3 NH- Richardson(Leech) 7:15 2 Sander 3 0 0 0 seven points, the Upper Valley WLC with five points and Mass. NH- Ryan 13:51 College of Pharmacy with one point. PERIOD THREE UNH NH-S. Miller(Stevenson) 5:35 Burke 4 1 2 1 NH- Ryan 10:03 Gowen 4 0 1 0 NH-Paro 10:12 W holley 3 0 0 0 NH- Richardson(Paro) 11:40 Hennessey 1 0 0 0 NH-Stevenson(Richardson) 14:13 G riffin 3 0 0 1 Season baseball Lento 2 1 1 0 PERIOD FOUR G AB R H RBI E Ave Billings 2 0 2 0 HC- Adams(Von Loescke) 0:45 Billings 16 45 5 14 2 2 .311 W h itty 3 1 1 1 NH- Cameron(Richardson) 10:13 W h itty 17 58 6 15 6 10 .259 Neal 3 0 0 0 HC-Kennedy(Von Loescke) 10:42 Burke 10 31 4 8 4 0 .258 MacDonald 1 0 0 0 NH- Richardson(Bryan) 11:43 Belzil 15 35 7 9 8 4 .257 Bettencourt 9 29 5 7 NH- Petri(Richardson) 12:03 IP RH BB SO 3 2 .241 PITCHING G riffin 17 56 5 13 HC-Von Loescke 13:52 Germano, UConn 7 3 7 1 6 7 4 .232 MacDonald 8 14 2 3 HC-Cain 14:58 W hite, U N H 6 4 8 1 4 1 1 .2 1 4 Go wen 14 34 4 7 0 0 .206 SAVES W holley 15 39 3 8 10 3 .205 Troiano, NH 11 Walker 11 17 3 3 0 8 .176 Ventura, NH 3 UConn 6 UNH 1 Neal 17 48 6 8 3 4 .167 Garrity, HC 16 Lento 11 24 2 4 2 4 .167 UConn AB R H RBI Hennessey 6 13 2 2 0 1 .1 5 4 Pinney 2 2 1 0 Pembroke 7 11 1 1 1 3 .091 Showalter 3 Lacrosse scoring 0 2 2 Koulouris 8 6 0 0 0 4 .0 0 0 D ’A rm in io 3 1 0 0 Rider G A Pts 8 5 0 0 0 1 .000 Laribee 3 1 1 1 Richardson 17 8 25 Copeland 1 2 0 0 0 0 .000 Crowley 3 0 2 1 Bates Bryan 11 9 20 1 2 0 0 0 0 .000 Sander 1 0 O 0 Morrison Ryan 7 12 19 1 2 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0 H uckill 3 1 0 1 Knapton Petri 9 6 15 3 2 0 0 0 v 0 .000 Toler 3 0 0 0 W hite Paro 7 7 14 6 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Lavinge 3 0 0 0 Margetts Leech 6 4 10 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Bagonzi 4 Rys 0 0 0 0 0 .000 UNH Damren Rydell 3 8 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 5 Burke 3 0 1 0 Stevenson 5 2 7 Knapton 2 0 0 0 UNH 17 4 73 55 102 47 53 .216 Moore 2 1 3 Gowen 2 0 0 0 OPP 17 524 144 179 1 24 26 .342 Sierra 3 0 3 G riffin 3 1 0 0 S. M iller 1 2 3 W h itty 3 0 2 0 PITCHING g ip w 1 r er era M artin 2 0 2 Billings 3 0 0 0 Margetts 3 14.2 0 2 6 ' 3 1.84 Kelsey 1 1 2 Hennessey 3 0 0 0 Rider 5 22 0 2 17 11 4 .50 Cameron 1 0 1 Lento 2 0 0 0 W holley 6 27.1 0 4 33 18 5 .93 Wood 0 1 1 Walker 1 0 0 0 W hite 6 27 0 5 32 22 7.33 Balian 0 1 1 Neal 2 0 0 0 Damren 1 2 0 0 2 2 9.00 Koulouris 5 16.2 0 3 25 21 1 1.3 4 GOALTENDING Sa Games Ave PITCHING IP R H BB SO Bagonzi 5 9.1 0 1 16 13 1 2.54 Troiano 126 7 18.0 Biercevicz, UConn 4 1 2 2 5 Sagris 12 2.0 Taylor, UConn 3 0 1 0 5 UNH 17 119.1 0 17 1 44 103 7 .77 Ventura 1 3.0 Wholley, UNH 6 5 6 4 . 1 OPP 17 129 17 0 55 42 2 .9 3 PAGE TWENTY-FOUR THE NEW HAMPSHIRE TUESDAY APRIL 27, 1976 Coppola’s replacement is nam ed

By Mark Radwan Dino Folino, who played foot­ ball at Villanova University and Stickwomen host was a graduate assistant at Ohio State’s football program, has been hired by the UNH Athletic Department to fill the vacancy left by defensive backfield coach UMaine today Skip Coppola. Folino has been involved with After 9-1 victory over Bowdoin football at Ohio State for the past two years. According to UNH head coach Bill Bowes, By Sharon Lavertu Dodie Flaherty constantly out- Folino had varsity responsibili­ -manuevered Bowdoin, while This afternoon at 3:30, the ties in the last season with the keeping good control of the ball. UNH women’s lacrosse team will Buckeves. who were in the run­ face the University of Maine Guals by Yaghjian, Parriah, ning for the National Division and Kathy Sanborn gave their (Portland-Gorham) at Memorial One Championship for the entire team a 4-0 half-time lead. Parrish Field trying for its second vic­ season. tory of the season. scored two more goals but they Despite chilling winds last Fri­ were disallowed. Folino was a safety in college day on its home field, UNH More scoring for UNH at Villanova. He coached high o p en e d its year with a 9-1 came in the last half with a goal school football for two years be­ trouncing of Bowdoin College. by Camille Vincent and a pair fore his appointment at Ohio Bowdoin, meanwhile, has played each by Yaghjian and Parrish. State. UMPG and defeated it 12-1. “Sanborn and Didio played “He has played the kind of Susy Yaghjian lead UNH’s very well in this their first defensive scheme currently used scoring attack with four goals, lacrosse game ever,” said UNH Women’s lacrosse coach Jean Rilling (center) gives some instruc­ here at UNH,” said Bowes yes­ two in each half. Teammate coach Jean Rilling. “Yaghjian tion during last week’s practice. The Wildcats are 1-0 on the terday. “He has valuable experi­ Molly Parrish tallied three1 goals. and Flaherty were outanding in season and host UMaine today at 3:30 on Memorial Field. ence, and will have the same re­ “I couldn’t have done it if our offense. Our defense was so solid (Dennis Giguere photo) sponsibilities as Coppola had.” players weren’t in theright that I was never worried about Now that a defensive backfield places,” commented Yaghjian on Bowdoin.” coach has been found, the Ath­ her performance. “Everyone Bowdoin possessed the ball letic Department must start an­ played excellent. They were more in the last half than in the other search, this time for an exactly where they were sup­ first, but a solid UNH defense offensive line coach. Bob Norton posed to be.” kept thwarting its efforts to get left UNH for an administrative The Wildcats dominated every close to the goal. position. aspect of the game. Their team­ With one minute left, Bowes said the department work was unequalled as they however, Martha Sullivan saved will be accepting applications for passed the ball from one player her Bowdoin teammates from a the offensive line coach position. to another while quickly moving shut-out with a score. downfield. They played alertly, “Usually the tension is high in skillfully dodging their the first game,” Rilling added, opponents. “but the team did better than I UNH started a little shaky, had expected. They showed Raeder and missing several shots on goal. good potential and flashes of But soon Bowdoin had to do all brilliance^ Our accuracy and Gray star it could to defend its goal as the shooting could have improved, Wildcats’ offense applied steady though. It was only about 50 pressure. Marissa Didio and percent.” in the pros

By Mark Radwan Two University of New Hamp­ Win fourth straight shire alumni are showing the country that they can play pro­ fessional hockey. Cap Raeder of the New Wildcats down England Whalers and John Gray of the Phoenix Road Runners have emerged as the stars of their respective teams in the Holy Cross 13-6 World Hockey Association. Gray, a 1972 graduate of By Mark Radwan cats and allowed three goals in UNH, scored 35 goals and assist­ Junior attackman Ed Richard­ the last period. ed on 45 for 80 points, in son scored four goals and Bob Stevenson tallied three leading his team in scoring this assisted on four others to lead goals and one assist for UNH. UNH goalie Steve Troiano makes one of his many saves last week past season. The Road Runners the UNH Lacrosse Team to a The senior attackman has now against MIT. Troiano’s save percentage is 69.2%, which ranks him were recently eliminated from 13-6 victory over Holy Cross, scored seven goals and two as one of the top goaltenders in the country in Division I lacrosse. the WHA playoffs by the San last Saturday in Worcester, Mass. assists on the season, and has (John Hanlon photo) Diego Mariners. Richardson has now tallied 17 been especially sharp lately. He Gray in currently seventh o goals and eight assists (including has scored five goals in his last the all-time UNH scoring lis 13 goals in his last four games) two games. UNH baseball team loses with 145 points. for the season. “The problem we had at the Cap Raeder, a third string goal­ “When people look for him, outset of the season was inex­ again, as UConn feasts ie for the Whalers, has become he’s open,” said UNH coach Art perience,” said Young. He was the star as both the number one Young about Richardson yester­ talking about the 0-3 record the By Mike Minigan put their first two men on base and number two goalies are in­ day. “What’s more impressive is Wildcats had after three games. The UNH baseball team got in the first inning as Tim Burke jured. The playoffs find Raeder the four assists he got. He had The numerous freshman and good pitching last Saturday, and and Tim Gowen singled. Mitch starting in goal. the opportunity to take the sophomore rookies on this team they also hit one of the better Griffin’s ground ball scored In the playoffs against shot, but passed off. He can read made it tough for the Wildcats pitchers in New England. But Burke, giving the Wildcats a 1-0 Indianapolis, Raeder has very well what’s going to to play as a team that early in the Wildcats still came away lead. backboned the Whalers to a 3-2 happen.” the season. winless as the University of The Huskies tied the game in lead in the seven game series. He The Wildcats scored ten of the Now UNH has come on to win Connecticut swept a Yankee the third inning as Bill Crowley has allowed ten goals in five first twelve goals against the the last four games, all con­ Conference doubleheader 4-3 doubled and scored two outs later games for a 2.0 goals against av­ Crusaders of Holy Cross. That vincingly (12-7 over Connect­ and 5-1 in Storrs, Conn. on an error by first baseman erage. In the third game of the barrage included six unanswered icut, 15-9 over Bowdoin, 16-4 The Cats succumbed to a three Griffin. series, Raeder shut-out Indianap­ goals in the third period. over MIT and now 13-6 over run rally in the bottom of the The Cats struck for two runs olis, 3-0. Steve Troiano made 11 saves Holy Cross). sixth inning in the first game, in their half of the fourth. Bill and gave up only three goals in However, the Wildcats didn’t and in the nightcap, the Huskies Lento led off with a double. He Raeder left UNH after his the time he played in goal for play that well against the needed three unearned runs on was bunted over to second by junior year in 1975 to join the UNH. Troiano now ranks in the Crusaders. Young said it “wasn’t four UNH errors to put the game Ken Billings. Jeff Whitty singled professional ranks. He was draft­ top three in the country in save our worst game of the year,” away. to score Lento and Burke singled ed by Montreal of the National percentage. He has stopped 69.2 and said the game “gave every­ Tom White pitched the first Whitty home after a walk to Hockey League and New percent of the shots fired at him one a chance to play.” game for UNH and allowed three catcher Jim MacDonald. England of the WHA. thus far in the season. This Thursday, the stickmen earned runs on eight hits. He was It re m a in e d 3-1 until the In 1974 as a sophomore, Second string goalie Jim Sagris travel to Tufts University. Last opposed by UConn’s Tom bottom of the sixth inning. Tom Raeder won All-American hon­ was injured for the game, so year, Tufts nearly beat UNH, Germano who came into the D’Armonio led off the UConn ors after posting a 2.64 goals a- Geoff Ventura took over the but wound up one goal short, game with a record of 7-1. gainst average, the lowest in the goaltending duties for the Wild- 8-7 here in Durham. UNH came out swinging and BASEBALL, page 23 country.