Ashby's Linked to Food Poisoning

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Ashby's Linked to Food Poisoning Our second Mostly cloudy, century NON PROFIT ORG 50 percent chance ole\cellence US POSTAGE of thunderstorms, PAID High in the mid 80s Newark Del Permll No 26 Student Center, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716 F' 5 b 11 1987 Vol. 113 No.1 n., eptem er , Ashby's linked to food poisoning by Molly Gilmore I' II ness, " conc Iu, ded th e~e~r,t "As far as we're concerned, (AS 88), and Doreen Bogdan, werE; d'larr h ea, fever an.d a b- Staff Reporter a summary of an mv~tI~':ltI~n the restaurant has been very who ate with the students and dommal cramps, accordmg to Seventeen people, including conducted ~y the dlvlsl<?n s responsible in correcting the also became ill, are suing the report.. , three university students and B~eau of DIsease Prevention. situation," he added. Ashby's, Accardi said. Patterson sal~ the stude~ts two university employees, who . Sev~nteen of th~ 26 persons According to Robert Ashby, Their lawyer, Brad Schener- symptoms also m~l~ded chills, ate brunch at Ashby's Oyster [mtervle~ed] eatmg ':lny of owner of Ashby's, "Whatever man, is "waiting for confirma- nausea, vomltmg ,~nd House and Restaurant on May the egg dishes ~ecame III ver- [the Board of Health] has ask- tion from the state of headaches. She added, W~ 3 became ill with salmonella sus.noneof~~flvepersonsnot ed us to do, we have done. Delaware on the cause of the eac.h lost at least 1~poun~~ . food poisoning, according to a eatmg eggs. "We were relieved that it salmonella," she said. Silverman explamed, In report released in June by the I?r. ~aul .SllverI?an, an didn't have anything to do with The students decided to sue, the abs~nce of lab data, the Delaware Division of Public epldemlOlo.glst with ~he the seafood." Accardi explained, because conclus~on had to be. ma~e o~ Health. Bureau?f Disease Preve~tlOn, The students, Charlene Ac- "we wen through a lot of pain t~e. baSIS of food histOries, "Only the eating of eggs was emphasized that there IS no cardi (AS 88) Rena DeAngelo and suffering." IIstmgs of the foods eaten by significantly associated with threat to the public health. AS' The 'mary symptom" contmued to page 6 Jones takes Univ. given some duties $1.7 million of provost by Du Pont by Cathleen Fromm Administrative News Editor by Ron Stohler Since becoming president on July 1, Dr Staff Reporter Russel C. Jones took control of the student The uni~ity received a $1.7 million grant fairs budget - a duty once garnered by duPont in June, the largest single corporate vost and Vice President for Academic gift in the university's history. The grant will L. Leon Campbell. provide money to four colleges, according to "What I'm trying to do is rationalize the university officials. the administration works," Jones said QU'LUlJI5 The gift, which is the largest cash grant that he is ' - the s ' presented to any university fundraising drive, will benefit the Colleges of Agricultural Sciences, Arts and Science, Business and Economics, and Engineering. fairs budgeting] duty to the president." "The [duPont] gift showed an increased con­ Prior to Jones' action, Campbell served fidence in the university," said former Presi­ the budgeting and resource manager for dent E. A. Trabant. student affairs and academic affairs According to Dr. Richard E. Heckert, chair­ According to the president, Campbell man and chief executive officer of duPont, the now only be responsible for the academic grant will be paid in five installments beginn­ fairs budget. ing in 1988, in addition to duPont's regular "Over the years, the provost pulled tno,.. tl, ..r financial support to the university. the whole budget for the university," Jones G. Arno Loessner, vice president for univer­ plained. "My management style [says] it is sity advancement, said, "This major gift is the role for the president, not the provost." result of a thoughtful matching of priority needs Campbell could not be reached for at the University of Delaware with the interests but Jones said the provost has been ' of duPont." receptive" to .the changes. The company has donated over $2.2 million Jones said he will now coordinate the in education~l aid over the past ten years, budget process and divide the entire Loessner added. among the five vice presidents. On June 29, Heckert presented a facsimile Mter the budget has been divided, Jones check to former President E.A. Trabant, deans the vice presidents have the authority to from the four colleges and members of the how their portion of the budget should be spent. Board of Trustees. "All I've done is to say that out of the univer- Shin.... bright - University President Russel C. Jones The duPont gift will benefit the following pro- sity staff, the vice presidents have the ~center) marches forward to welcome incoming freshmen dur- .;ontinued to page 13 mg last week's convocation ceremonies. cunw,uea to page 4. Two city noise violations and you're out! by Heidi Shurak ordinance. on the landlords as a result of violation. An arrest can be made if the Staff Reporter "If a landlord doesn't take an increase in complaints by Assistant to Government sound meter reads 10 decibels Student renters in Newark appropriate action he can lose Newark residents concerning Relations Rich Armitage said above the average from the will be evicted after two noise his right to use that property noise. if a tennent is convicted of a home of the person who violations as a result of the for one year and and thereby "We realized that more en- second offense he must begin complained. task force's unanimous vote lose his income," Newark forcement must be put on the legal of telling the tennent The ordinance states that made at the city council Head of Police Division, Larry landlords in order to decrease that he's evicted. violations made between.ll:00 meeting, Monday June 8. Thorton said. noise violations," Demgen Noise meters are used to pm-7:00 pm may result m ar- Landlords and owners must According to Julie Demgen, explained. measure the sound intensity, re~t. Per~ons voilating the s~ipula~e in their lease a por- assistant d~a!l. o~ st~dents, Tena~ts will be fined $50 per explained a police nOise ordmance before that hon WhICh addresses the noise more resposlblhty IS bemg put person m the house for a first spokesperson. co';tinued to page 11 Page 2 • The Review • September 11, 1987 --~--....;..---....;..----.:---------------------------------:- New police chief foresees closer relations with UD Lprl PolI.kl meeting the needS of the public Hogan, who assumed his for­ and the university and work­ mal duties on Aug. 24. City Editor ing for a common goal," he Doug Tuttle, director of For the first time in nearly said. university Public Safety said, two decades, the city of His plans include developing "I think he will improve upon Newark has a new chief of i1 management by objective and continue the cooperative police. William A. Hogan, program and continuing efforts [with the university] formerly of Huntington, West positive communication bet­ and he is familiar with college Va., was appointed to the post ween university and communi­ problems, since he comes follOwing the retirement of ty factions. from a college town." Chief William Brierly. He has met with several "I'm optimistic [about the With the new position, university officials to discuss appointment]," he said, "and Hogan is bringing some fresh objectives and feels "a change is always kind of ex­ ideas and concrete goals that positive spirit" is being pro­ citing. " he wants to accomplish in the jected in the city and univer­ According to·City' Manager university community and the sity relationship. 'THE REVIEWI Eric Russell Carl Luft, Hogan was the best city. "I feel we will work well choice of the 114 applications, William Hogan "What motivates me is with the university," added continued to page 7 We know that a cheap calculator can cost you blood, sweat and time. Investing in a Hewlett-Packard cal­ culator, on the other hand, can save you time arid again. HP calculators not only have better func­ tions. They function better. Without stick­ ing keys and bad connections. Through October 31, you can get the cream of the calcula­ tors at a non-fat price. We're cutting $10 off the HP-12C. That buys you more built­ in functions than any­ one else's financial calculator. And we're giving away a free Advantage Module, a $49 value, with every HP-41 Advanced Scientific calculator you buy. This 12K-byte plug­ in, menu-driven ROM was designed spe­ cially for students. So drop by your campus bookstore and compare HP calcula­ tors with the rest. By midterm, you'll see what a deal this is. 1---------, IADJ.tRJ¥l~ iff611uLE I I with purchase of H P-41. Pur- I I chase must be made between I I August 15, 1987, and October 31. I 1987, See your local H P dealer I for details and official redemp- I I tion form. Rebate or free Mod - I ule will be sent in Ii -8 weeks. I OR $10 OFF AN HP-12C I Flin- HEWLETT L ________ ~ a:~ PACKARD ©1987 Hewlett-Packard Company PC 12703 -------------------------------------------~~mber 11, i987 • The Review · Page 3 Newark chemical plant closes its doors by Dale Rife destroyed their main Control. hydrochloric acid gas and modified - originally schedul- City Editor manufacturing unit was a According to Ka thleen steam mixture was illegaly ed for Sept.
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