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Shi're Weath~R Lonely!iearts arise! Computer dating is• here By Gary Langer UNH · electrical engineering place. to live," says Burnard. · vice could actually become a : student services. "Consider each statement major Jim Burnard. Burnard designed the com­ source of revenue for the student Burnard's questionnaire is carefully, then darken T or F. to Burnard says he and the UNH puter dating service in his spare I activities fund. Bu"rnard says the divided into three sections. one indicate whether.you find it true DEC-10 computer can use these •time with the help of Sp-eech and . service would cost students which provides psychological or false. · questions to provide ,you with a Drama Department Chairman ' "around $4." data, one tc detei:mine general "l. I like to go to parties. ,scientifically compatible date. David Magidson and Kenneth Burnard 'has talked with Vice . interest, and a third for the ap- "6. In social situations, I often · Burnard not only wants to bring · Ring, professor of psychology at Provost for Student Affairs 1 plica11t to indicate his preference feel tense and constrained. computer dating to UNH, he wants the University of Connecticut. Richard Stevens about his idea. for the type of date he (or she) is "20. I think it is important to the service accredited as a student · Burnard says that if he ran the 1 ''He seemed to like it," says Bur­ looking for. learn obedience." organi.7.atiOJl. service -as a private business, : nard, "but this is a .radical thing ; The computer compiles the. in­ No, this is riot a CIA security "This is a suitcase college~ it's rental costs for the computer and for the University. Nobody wants f fqrmation on the questionnaire on clearance questionnaire. Nor is it socially segmented. People from . printing costs for the 73-question i to say yes. They don't want to . an A,B,C rating, with an inten- a job application form' for the Stoke don't know anyone from · form would make the service have to answer to Gov . Thom­ sity scale of one to ten. It then Manchester Union Leader. It is a Williamson. A computer dating unaffordable for most UNH son." Burnard says there is psychological and general in­ service might make the campus a students. As a student "tremendous pressUFe from the terest analysis form designed by sm~ller and more enjoyable ·organization; however, the ser- state" to prevent an expansion of . COMPUTERS. pager Weath~r I Tuesday cloudy 20's Tuesday night: colderJO's .shi're ~\i' e<1nes<1ay: clearing 20's Durham, N.H. More student input called for in MUB . By Tom Eastman timent behind ~he report's The recommendations of the proposals was to get more Memorial Union Student Ac­ student control over the tivities Committee (MUSARC) operation of the MUB. report released F'riday may give " If Stevens ·can implement the students a greater role in the report's recommendations as governance of the Memorial they are now, .. Wolf said, "then Union Building if approved by 1: feel that they will give students Vice Provost for Student Affairs more input." ' Richard Stevens. A major proposal submitted by The committee recommends MUSARC would plac·e the Office the elimination of the Coor­ of Student Activities under the dinator of Student Activities, a joint governance of the Director full-time administrative program of Student Activities and a , advising position presently held Memorial Union Board of Direc­ · by /Jeff Onore. Onore's contract tors. The Vice Provost for runs until June L Student Affairs would have veto In addition, the committee power over the office. The board suggests a student intern be hired would be re~pon s ible for full-time to replace the Coor­ establishing all policy _governing dinator of Student Activities. the programs and , activities Stevens established the seven­ emanating from the <>ft'icc of ~ person, student dominated com­ Student Activities. Well, so much for the January thaw. As everyone waited for it to happen, the weather instead mittee in October and asked it to The 12-memher board would be became colder and colder. Photographed last evening, this Volkswagon deposited 1:>ehind · review the operation of the comprised of: · Kappa Sigma fraternity will need a July heatwave before it~an be freed from its ~omb of'ice and MUB 's Office of . Stud~nt Ac­ --eight undergraduate students... hardpack snow·. Looking ahead, Ws a good thing VW's float. (Nick Novick photo) tivities due to changes in the --one graduate student organization of the UNH --one faculty memtwr Recreation Office in July. Associate Registrar James Mills and Senate discllss· Wolf, chairman of MUSARC, said he believes that the general sen- MUB , page8 restru~turing proposal • By Diane.Breda i ship wouJd be faculty. Mills said his presentation was ID University President : Eugene The University's current an effort to summarize past crash Mills presented three unicameral senate consists of 30 . discussion and ''to show the possibilities -for the reconstruc­ faculty members, 30 un- senate where we are going.,. Assistant Professor Thomas -Wight Volkswagen caused tion of the University: Senate . dergraduate students, five "I am tending more towards Vi ght and his wife, Dorne, are in , Wight to lose control. Striking yesterday ..at the bi-weekly graduate students, five the third grouping because it is in he intensive care .unit of the the side of the car operated by University Senate meeting. Prnfessional Administrative the direction of most discussion." entworth-DougJass Hospital in Andrew Chen of Arlington, The three possibilities are: · Technical Staff <PAT) members · Mills said he is not singling out over following a four-car pile up Mass., Wight's car was then_ hit --Preservation of the present and 10 administrators. any one grouping. n Route 4 Saturday afternoon. head-on by a car driven by body with a movement. of Mills said the third grouping is Wight's six-year-old son Paul is Bradley Russ of Portsmouth. jurisdiction. Academic matters similar to Political Science n stable condition while three- Durham Police. repo.rted that For a report on yester<Jay 's will be presented to the faculty • Prnfessor Robert Dishman 's ear-old daughter Kerensa has no charges were placed on any caucus. "Student life" matters senate meeting, see page 3. proposal of last semester. Dish­ een released after being admit- operators"' and no motor vehicles will by considered by the student man pr9P,osed that a new ed for observation. · laws were violated. According to caucus. Each group meets· individually Academic Senate be creataj to The UNH animal science pro- the Durham Police's investiga­ --Separate bodies< student in caucus and then collectively deal with academic matters and I 'essor and his family were the tion t MitchelJ was overcautious senate/faculty senate), with a every other Monday to vote on that the Student Caucus be 1 nly passengers injured when a on the. ice and overused her change in jurisdiction. There will policy questions as a group. Un­ changed to a Student Senate to ar driven by Dorothy Mitchell, brakes. be occasional convening of a der the current set-up, students deal with non-academic issues. ·9, 'of Portsmouth fishtailed into Animal Science Department larger body, like the unicameral and faculty have- equal voting Dishman pr~posed that the Vight'sj.ane after braking for ice : Chairman Winthrop Skoglund body, with faculty handling power. · Academic Senate be composed of n the Durham side of the reporteri Professor Wight would academic matters. Mills said last night, "The 40-50 faculty members, 10 ad­ unkcr Creek Bridge. .. be out for weeks and "I wouldn't --An academic senate whi~h three groupings I presented were ministrators and 10 students) at Mitchell'~. collision with the wantto look at the car!" calls for a major shift in member not specific models or guidelines. least two of whom would be ship. Possibly two-thirds or two­ I want to encourage - open thirds plus one of the member- discussion." . PROPoSAL, page 9 INSIDE Crime Festival Div. IA In a nation of in­ Actor from Rhode creasing crime, Dur­ UNll v.resident ham and -UNH were Island College's Etigene l\hlls and able to report a drop-. production of Ugo Athletic Director in semester-break Betti's Crime on Goat Island. One of the five Andv Mooradian at­ crimes compared to frncfed the ~CAA last January. Univer­ . plays to be presented ·during the American crnwention a f.~w sity Police Chief Ron­ weeks back. ald McGowan reports College Theater Fes­ . tival at UNH. ~fooradian has a about the crimes that 1>ro1>osal concerning did occur and what is Division IA football. done about it in a See the story. page 18. · story on p~ge ~· I ttt NtW ttAMl':>ttlKt l.Ut:ilJA 1 ttDKUAK 1 'I, 1 Y JI _- ~ . News Briefs Bonner publicizes Union ·by upgrading hockey team Clev~land investigated · Editor's note-: :Oan Forbus_h_' _game with UNH, Union ~et .a NESCAC is that athletics be kept is a UNH _graduate who. was ·school -record for goal scormg m at a modest level, to the extent of .The New defeating Plattsburgh State 16-L that teams NESCAC US Rep. James Cleveland (R-NH) is under investigation by the : editor~in-chief fr~m sch~ls Justice Department and undisclosed House committees· for his : Hampshire in i973-74~ He has . - Under the circumstances: it is are not permitted to compete ma dealings with agents of the South Korean government. • worked as mannaer• _. of Union understa ndabl e th a t t.h ere ex1s. ts namentsnumber of post-season tour- College's new.s bureau tor on the campus considerable sen- NESCAC .
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