harrrpshire Volume 66 Number 9 Friday, October 3, 1975 Durham, N.H. Bianco won t guarantee rebate Mini-dorm furniture arrives By Betsy Bair directly with the furniture com­ until they have negotiated with pany and negotiations will start the furniture company. The last of the mini-dorm this coming week. David Farnham, of student furniture should have arrived by The mini-dorm students are re­ government, plans on circulating today, and the phones have all questing a rebate because the even more petitions so that all been installed, but according to mini-dorms are just beginning to the mini-dorm residents get a David Bianco, director of resi­ be completed, four weeks after chance to sign it. The petitions dential life, “I don’t guarantee the opening of school. contain a list of grievances stat­ that there will be a rebate from Bianco said Wednesday he ing the inconveniences they’ve the housing office.” would use the petitions signed had to put up with, such as lack Bianco said at the Sept. 21 by the mini-dorm students as of furniture, hot water, tele­ Student Caucus Meeting that ne­ well as any legal action he has to phones, storage space and park­ gotiations would not start until in order to get rebates. ing facilities. all the furniture was in. Joey Baron, head resident of Farnham, vice-president for The furniture has been coming the mini-dorms, said they are budget and administration in the in slowly all this week, and the student government said, “I planning to apply as much pres­ desks were expected to be the think the mini-dorm students de­ sure as necessary. last to arrive. Now that it is all serve some kind of rebate, and “The students are willing to here, the University can start ne­ the residence office is responsi­ ask their parents to write letters gotiations with the furniture ble for it. I’m not interested in to the furniture company, if it company for a rebate. why the process is so slow, I would help at all,” he said Wed­ Bianco has already given his want to hear if they’re going to request for monies to Roger nesday. get a rebate or not.” Knightly, equipment agent for Bianco said, “It is not appro­ Work-study students unloading one of the last loads of furniture the purchasing department. The priate now for a letter cam­ for the mini-dorms. (Michael D’Antonio photo)________________ purchasing department will deal paign.” He said it should wait MINI-DORM, page 8 Candidate Jimmy Carter would end tax loopholes leadership. The leadership must istrative costs more than fifty By Art Miller and Dave Migliori come from the White per cent. We abolished 278 out He said it repeatedly;“I intend House,’’said Carter. of 300 agencies and depart­ to be President, and I don’t in­ Asked what his views are on ments. So I know it is possible tend to lose.” our present anti-trust laws which to run an efficient government.” Jimmy Carter,Presidential can­ guard against monopolies in big Following his speech Carter didate spoke at an informal business, Carter said,“ Our anti­ told a questioner, “some govern­ session in the Strafford room in trust laws need to be enforced to ment jobs should be excluded the MUB last night. give the consumer a break.” He from homosexuals.” Carter said, The former Georgia governor said big business in America is “Because homosexuals might do answered a variety of questions putting a drain on people’s anything to prevent the from the audience of about 150 pocketbooks. revelation of their homosexual­ people. He added that there are too ity, they are more sucseptible to Carter, one of the six many regulatory agencies that blackmail and they should not announced Democratic presi­ cause confusion as to who’s hold jobs requiring top secret dential candidates said the tax supposed to do what and when. clearance.” structure in the United States is Carter said federal bearaucracy is M andatory registration of a “disgrace to the human race. too complicated to be effective. handguns, a comprehensive I’d like to have a simple tax “Out of the 1900 agencies the national health program and the structure with the elimination of government presently has, I’d development of nuclear energy tax loopholes.” cut out 1700 of them,” said were all among the programs Presidential candidate Jimmy Carter. (Ron Goodspeed photo) He said Americans are greatly Carter. supported by Carter. overtaxed, and put the blame on The 51-year-old candidate Congress. “ Congress is incapable of said,“In Georgia we cut admin­ CARTER, page 8 UNH student injured Student found responsible By Michael D’Antonio The incident took place Robert Grant, a UNH stu­ while a large crowd of dorm dent was injured early Wed­ residents were walking from Durkin given UNH name list nesday morning near the dormitory to dormitory tion. derstanding among administra­ Mini-Dorms when according cheering. By Tina Sherman A confrontation involving According to UNH officials, a tive offices that the mailing lists to Joey Baron, Head Resident Kevin Moore the head resi­ A student University officials student organization, which may are not to be sold or given to at the Mini-Dorms, he was dent at Stoke Hall, (men’s decline to name, has been found properly acquire the list, got anyone except legitimate struck by a board that had side) was also reported to the responsible for giving a list of one, then didn’t use it and gave campus organizations. When nails sticking out of it. UNH Police early Wednesday UNH students’- names and ad- it to the political campaign. D urkin’s campaign office re- While neither UNH Police clressses to now Senator John There are clo&e to 000 organi­ qucotcd the mailing labels in officials nor tho University morning. Moore said he Durkin’s campaigners for use in zations, departments or individu­ mid-August, they were originally News Bureau could confirm would not comment on the the recent Senate election cam­ als who may rightfully request, denied. or deny the report, Dan incident because “at this paign. obtain and use the list. There Hollister said he first became Sanders, Administrative Assis­ point there is a possibility of After it was discovered the list were no written guidelines to say aware of the “leak” on Septem­ tant at Hood House said, “a civil proceedings and I w ant was used, New Hampshire Gov­ what they did with the lists after ber 8, when he received a phone male was admitted early Wed­ to protect people’s rights.” Moore said the incident was ernor Meldrim Thomson ordered they got them. call from a parent whose fresh­ nesday, treated for punctures in no way related to the the state’s attorney general to in­ According to Peter Hollister, man son had received campaign in the back, and released.” cheering crowd that visited vestigate it to see if there was Director of University relations; Baron said last night, Grant Stoke earlier that night. any ground for prosecu­ there has been an unofficial un­ LIST, page 9 was in good condition. INSIDE Pinball Huskies Robots In last Tuesday’s lec­ Roger Daltry and Elton The UNH football team ture, Arthur C. Clarke John aren’t the only has a conference game predicted some highly ones playing pinball tomorrow. The Wildcats unusual ways of living. these days. UNH has its are traveling to Storrs to We’ll have robots to do own collection of pin­ take on the UConn Hus­ ball wizards. A story kies. Story, page 20. the vacuuming, and and photos appear on meals made out of oil on our tables. A review page 4. of the famous author’s speech is in Entertain­ ment, page 13. Grammar workshop lacking students leges who attended last year. By A m y S.hort The College of Liberal Arts K n o w b o d ie ’s y o u s in g the funds the workshops with $1200 Grammar Workshop. that pays six TA’s. There are “I was very disappointed in also approximately 20 other the response we got. I sent let­ teaching assistants who work on ters to every department chair­ a volunteer basis. man in the Liberal Arts college Allan Spitz, dean of the Col­ and almost all the students who lege of Liberal Arts, said that came in were in the English de­ when department chairmen were partment,” said Tom Carnicelli, asked to identify needs in the English professor and coordina­ fall of 1974, the theme that kept tor of the Hamilton-Smith emerging was that students were Grammar Workshop that started lacking in communication skills. last spring. “There is a rising level of con­ The workshop continues this cern among faculty about the fall in room 140, Monday quality of written and spoken through Thursday, from noon to English in this university. And 3 p.m., and is staffed by three the College of Liberal Arts teaching assistants. Eleven stu­ should not accept the sole re­ dents have used it since Sept. 3, sponsibility. It’s too easy for the 1975. o th er colleges to say “ Hey, they’re Carnicelli and ten teaching as­ not doinef their job in Freshman sistants implemented the Work­ English,” he said. shop, “to provide individual tu­ Last spring, over a ten week torial help for any UNH student period, 180 students showed up. Two students caught “cheek to cheek” during rowdiness that occurred late Tuesday night. Approxi- who has grammatical problems Peggy Mallison, TA and the mately-1,000 students gathered in the quad and walked around campus.
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