In Section 2 In Sports An Associated Collegiate Press Spring UMass Four-Star All-American Newspaper fashion: steamrolls '90s men's lax vintage team page B I page B 12

Non-proltt Urg. FREE U.S. Postage Paid TUESDAY Newark, DE Volume 122, Number 49 250 Student Center, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716 Penmt No. 26 April16, 1996 Greek CWT resident standards throws objects, proposal causes $2,200 unveiled in total damages Accreditation program BY STEFANIE SMALL While university officials could may delay Faculty Assistant Nt''-:s Ediror not release her name, according to Senate pledge ban After being escorted out of the hall residents, the incident occurred building in handcuffs, a Christiana in Room 508. A resident of the West Tower resident was admitted room. Lindsay Harris. was admitted BY KA THERI 'E LACKOVIC St'n/Or Stuff Reporter and released Sunday from the and released from the Chri~tiana Christiana Hospital for cuts to her H ospit al on Sunday. a hospital Interfraternity Council feet, arms and hands resulting from spokeswoman said. President Bill Werde presented an her throwing objects around her The studen t has not been accreditation program - a room and ou t of her fifth floor criminally charged with anything. proposed system for improving window. University Police said. Flatle) said, adding that the maner the overall standards of According to Capt. Jim Flatley. has been turned over to the dean of fraternities and ororities- to th e student b('came ''distraught and students. members of the Greek community dtsorderly" at 12:51 Sunday Tuesday night in Pearson Hall. No one else was reported to be morning. The handcuffs were used Werde , a senior, said he in the room or injured in the as a precaution for her safety and revealed the propo>al to incident, according to Flatley. th e safety of the officers. he said. representatives from the Dean of Students Timothy F. H e said she broke a double­ university"s 19 fraternities and 10 Brooks confirmed that she has not paned glass widow and caused sororiti e> (about 700 people totdl, bet'll criminally charged, but will and will use feedback from tile approximately $2.200 worth of have to go through the university damage to the interior of her room chapters to formulate a fi n al JUdicial S) stem. He said he could and the hallway. The hallway was edition of the proposal. not comment on whether she is at Werde unveiled the also contaminated by blood that the univer~ity now. accreditation program to the police officers tracked out of the Flatley said the room is Greek community at a time when room. There was no reported unlivable at thi time, e~p l aining fraternities and sororities are .., indi cation of why the incident that of the $2.200 damage, about happened. faced with the gradual $ >ee TOWERS page A 7 dismantl ing of the pledge period by the Faculty Senate. The ban. which was passed by the Faculty Senate in 1992 and officially began in the 1994-95 academic year with the restriction of the pledge period to four weeks, will eliminate the pledge period entirely by 1997-98 and deny university rccognitiou to any campus organization with ~ pledge process. Dean of Students Timothy F. Brooks said in two to three weeks the accreditati on program , along with a proposal to delay the THE REVIEW I Alisa Colley pledge ban until the 1998-99 Twelve black, geometrically-shaped figures walked from Main Street down the Mall academic year. will be presented Thursday and Friday afternoons, baffling students, faculty and visitors and stopping to the Student Life Committee of traffic. These figures were a part of " Pedestrians," a walking sculpture exhibit the Faculty Senate, the committee created by artist Yvette Helin. See full story, page 4. THE REVIEW I Dominic Savmi that deals with legi s lation University debaters Jennifer Timko (left) and Bill Werde (right) concerning students on campus. and Oxford debater Ben Ball (center) smirk at an exchange of Werde said al though t iming words in Thursday night's debate. may have differed. th <' accreditation proposal would have been drafted regardless of the Poet speaks a~ CBC pledge ban ...The pro posal is a Oxford, UD students good way to say, ' these a re our standards a nd expectations, ... he 20th anniversary said. debate alien visitation Brooks said he, We rde and the Office of Student Life were BY DEVIN HARNER working on the acc r editati on "An1m al House" character, ·'Eight celebratory luncheon Staff Reporter program long before th e decision years of college down the drain," was m ade to link it with the When the Oxford Debate Team and the games began. BY DAN STEINBERG and they will of~er a better life." Faculty Senate ban. came to Delaware Thursday night. Delaware' · first debater to speak N~w'i Feurures EJiror Giovanni said, describing the the evening took on a formal ai r - The accredit atio n proposal for the pro side. Jason Keely, began The Center for Black Culturt! courage that fi r>t brought African­ makes clear the importance o f the at least u nti I the speakers opened hi ~ argument by casuall y mentioning celebrated its 20th anniversary American students to the university. pledge period for Greek their mouths. The question at hand the reputed UFO crash site. Roswell, Saturday afternoon, but accordi ng to Giovanni justified the continu ed organizati ons: "It is the estimation was whether intelligent ali en life has N.M., and he went on to say that th e renowned poet Nikki Giovanni. the need for black c ultura l ce nt e rs. o f the IFC , P an h e ll e ni c and visited Earth. place was "like the latest episode of center's roots stretch back much saying that •·to be black surely is to Two Oxford students a nd two National Panhellenic Conference 'Friends'" in that "everyone knows farther than two decades. share a color, but to be black is also groups th at the membership intake D e laware students made up each about it.'' "As we sit in this room we' re not to understand a culture." and/or pledge program is e senti al Nikki Giovanni side, and the event was moderated The negative side, again st th e just a dream of 20 years. we're Although Giovanni discussed the by University of Delaware physics to the positive development of possibility of a li en visitati on, omebody's dream of 100 years ago. hi story and future of African chapter membe rs.'· Organization. offered he r graduate stude nt Robert Leamon, responded to th e UFO crash at 200 years ago ... Gi ovanni said American activism. she focused on Broo k s sa id he h o pes the wholehearted support of affirmati ve who hails from Wales. Roswell with the question, " If durin g the CBC's anniversary current issues affecting the Afri can­ Faculty Senate wi ll allow a two­ action and urged her a udi e nce to Any expectation of witnessing they're so intelligent, then why do luncheon at Clayton Hall. American community . especially year tri a l peri od for th e stand firm on thi s issue. tex tbook examples of British they crash?" "Somebody who was a part of us. women, s uc h as health care and accreditation program and then re­ "All we are saying is that if parliamentary procedure were Kee ly talke d of a new a li en who looks like us, who had dreams affirmative action. evaluate the Greek system in affirmative action was good for 200 quickly derailed when Leamon m e tal, s tronger a nd lighter than of us, said. 'one day people that look Giovanni. whose appearance was 1998-99. He said the program years. affirmative acti on is still good ki c ked off the evening with anything that has been di scovered like me will go to [the uni ve rsity). coordinated with the 15th annual shou ld have a po itive effect o n inspi ratio nal words from Bluto yet on th e earth . He said that the and they wi II be able to be educated luncheo n of th e Bl ack Alumni Blutoski , Jo hn Belus hi 's classic both majo r concerns of the see GIOVANNI page All sec OXFORD page All Faculty Senate : academics and long pledge periods. By changing the culture of Greek organizations from a focus on social activity and alcohol to UD Honors program ranks high among the elite academics and service, Brooks said there wdl be le ss chance of hazing and Grtek organizations BY JODY BERWICK curriculum than regular admissions. In keeping with will attract different types of Cop' Eduor their commitment to provide educational Percentages of student s. J.M. Geremia didt;'t make it home for Easter this opportunities consistent with the ability of the 50 students accepted to Professor Robert B . Bennett, year. individual student, many of the larger schools in th e 50 chairman of the S1udent Life The five-hour joumey from Newark back to are a have incorporated honors into their academic Honors programs Committee, declined to comment. Nesconset, N.Y. , seemed coo facilities as a means of supplementing the course load The " Five Star" chapter strenuous a drive co visit his for students who are accepted. 40 Ho'' l n stacks evaluation system. adapted from a family for just one night. The University of Maryland, Virginia Tech and up on ... similar system at Utah State But that doesn 't mean he spent Rutgers University all have comparable programs 30 University, was drafted by Werde Honors . the holiday alone. Instead, he with similar goals and functions as those of the in coordination with Brooks and dined that Sunday evening with University of Delaware. the Office of Student Life. program the family of John Bergman, his Delaware's Honors Program exhibits many of the 20 The proposed draft suggests ------Honors nwth class professor. same qualities as the honors programs at neighboring that individual fraternity and Second in a four­ " The biggest plus of the sc hools, including more personalized learning and sorority chapters be evaluated in part series Honors Program. I find, is high quality faculty. 10 the following five areas each primarily the small classes and Through an interesting blend of small classes of emester: academics, financial the aile/Ilion you get from your professors, ·· Geremia about 20 honors-caliber students taught by selected 0 management , university/ said. "In a school of20,000, I know my professors by experienced faculty, and interaction with other community relations and service, name. and thev know me. I am nor just a number." undergraduates. honors programs at these universities Virginia UD Rutgers U. of campus involvement and the The univer ity's Honors Program is designed for Tech Maryland membership intake and/or pledge students interested in following a more challenging see HONORS page A I 0 see PLEDGE BAN page A2 A2 • THE REVIEW • April 16, 1996 North Korean actions arouse fear in South Korea

BY ROBERT DIPRIZIO difficult task not only because North Korea, influence South Korea's parliamentary international incident, Clinton may be a bit is to be picked up by South Korea, the Special tu The Rtv.ew one of the world's few remaining communist elections which were held April II . more accommodating to their ~terests . United States and Japan. North Korea announced on April 4 that it countries, is a closed society about which A few weeks ago, China held military Moreover, only days before North Korea North Korea could be attempting to would no longer abide by the armistice it detailed information is difficult to get, but exercises off the coast of Taiwan in an scurtled the armistice, it was announced that instigate another crisis in order to demand signed with the United Nations in 1953 also because it is unclear who exactly is in attempt to intimidate voters in Taiwan's Clinton was to meet with South Korea's economic assistance, international bringing the Korean War to an end. The next control of the government and military. presidential elections from voting for the President Kim Young Sam while on his way recognition or food aid as a price for easing three days saw North Korean troops enter the Ever since the death of Kim II Sung, the incumbent. Some think North Korea could to Russia. North Korea may be trying to put tensions. demilitarized zone separating North and undisputed ruler of North Korea, in July of be engaging in copy-cat tactics. itself on the top of that meeting's agenda. But the Clinton administration has wisely South Korea. 1994, his son Kim Jong II has struggled to But this is an unconvincing explanation Another likely motivation behind North played down North Korea's actions, publicly The governments of South Korea and the solidify his succession. His attempt to gain because such tactics are known to benefit the Korea's actions is the increasing economic stating it is concerned with North Korea's United States have condemned the control over the military has been especially ruling party by and agricultural difficulties the country has behavior but emphasizing that there is no transgres ions as reckless and inflammatory, difficult. encouraging voters to been experiencing in the past few years great threat of military conflict. and commanders of the U.N. force The current events could be an attempt by News opt for stability in which have increased tensions within the In short, there is little chanl:e of war overseeing the armistice have stepped up Kim to prove himself to the military government in the country. breaking out on the Korean peninsula as a surveillance of North Korean activities. leadership by thumbing his nose at the Analysis: face of an external Authoritarian governments often respond result of North Korea's recent actions, even South Korean leaders have pledged to repel armistice agreement and forcing the United threat rather than risk to internal difficulties with foreign though there is an increased opportunity for any military attack from the north and have States to negotiate a peace treaty, a long Foreign weake ning adventures. The North Korean leadership accidental conflict as long as North Korea ordered their troops to shoot any North standing desire of the North's. The United government may be attempting to divert attention away continues to send troops into the Korean soldiers crossing into the southern States· has consistently refused to do so Affairs cohesion. from its domestic problems by instigating an demilitarized zone. part of the demilitarized zone. without South Korea's direct involvement, a The results of last international crisis. More troublesome is the uncertainty of Experts insist, however, that there is little condition which the government in Thursday's elections North Korea could also be partaking in the major influential figures in North Korea and chance of an invasion and that Pyongyang's Pyongyang has refused to accept. bear this out. The ruling new Korea Party did kind of brinkmanship it used so well just a their motivations. Official communications actions are largely symbolic. Each incursion On the other hand, Kim Jong II may not better th a n expected and the major couple of years back when it fostered a crisis with the hermit nation are scarce, even more has involved less than 300 troops and lasted be calling the shots. The military could be opposition party did worse. over its nuclear weapons program. so now that it refuses to attend meetings for only a few 'lours. None involved any the driving force behind North Korea's latest A more convincing explanation for why After repeatedly bringing the situation to associated with the armistice agreement. aggressive maneuvers. Furthermore, there actions, which would mean rule of the North Korea has decided to abandon the the brink, Pyongyang was able to secure an How these events play out in the near have been no abnormal troop movements in country is sti ll fractured. This would make it armistice agreement relates to the upcoming agreement from the United States promising future should help determine who rules North Korea which indicate preparations for even more difficult for the United States to U.S. elections. North Korea light-water nuclear reactors North Korea and what drives their behavior. mvaston. determine the motivations behind North Figuring that President Clinton is anxious (from which extracting weapons-grade Still, even if invasion is not the motivation Korean actions and to hold negotiations. to avoid any foreign policy crises in an plutonium is extremely difficult) in exchange Rob DiPrizio is a graduate student getting for North Korean actions, it is important to One possible explanation for recent events election year, North Korean leaders may for international inspection of North Korean his doctorate in lnremational Relations. determine what is. This, however, is a is that North Korean leaders intended to believe that if they present the specter of an nuclear facilities. The bill for these reactors New accreditation Class e-mailing back proposal unveiled to after student prank

Greek community, BY CHAD MOROZ vociferous complaints from Staff R

Campus Calendar Police Reports ELECTRONIC LIBRARY workshops, call 831-8479. INFORMATION SESSION BREAK-IN AT THE CBC A brown-bag lunch information ANNUAL VARIETY SHOW IN parking lot early Saturday backyard of a South Chapel Street session titled "Extending the Limits PEARSO HALL A component stereo rack morning, Flatley said. residence and got stuck in the mud of the Web'' with Kri sten Antelman, The Cultural Programming system was stolen from the Center The driver noticed the car early Sunday morning, according associate librarian, will be held in the Advisory Board will be hosting the for Black Culture early Friday smoking and pulled into the to Newark Police. Class of 1941 Lecture Ro om in th e Annual Variety Show on Friday at morning, according to Capt. Jim parking lot where it c aught fire, The driver was attempting to Morris Library today from noon to I 7:30 p.m. in Pearson Hall. Admission Flatley of University Police. causing $3,000 in damage, Flatley take a short-cut when he got stuck p.m. For information, call 83 1-2432. is $3 in advance and $4 at the door. The stolen stereo, valued at said. and had to be towed out, police Tickets can be purchased at the box $1,140, was discovered to be sa) d. LESBIAN " H E RSTORY" office. For information, call the missing after a custodian noticed P EE P ING TOM O N T H E Police estimated the damage ARCm VES DISCUSSION Center for Black Culture at 831-2991. an unidentified male subject in the L O OSE IN NEW A RK caused to the backyard at $600. There will be a representative from bui !ding, Flatley said. The suspect An unidentified male subject the Lesbian Herstory Archives LA TIN AMERICAN DANCE AND fled the area when the custodian was seen peeping into a university SHOPLIFTER PLA G UES speaking about the organization MUSIC LESSONS yelled to him. Flatley said. student ' s Newark residence ACME SUP E R MARKET tonight in 007 Willard Hall at 7. For 'There will be a Latin American Police are continuing to Saturday, according to Newark A 24-year-old Newark man information, call (410) 658-3072. dance and music presentation at 7 investigate the incident. Police. attempted to steal $26.4 7 worth of p.m. on Thursday April 25 in Pearson The suspect was spotted merchandise from the Acme SPRING CAREER WEEK Auditorium. Dancers from the Latin DON'T LEAVE CAS H I N looking into the basement window Supermarket in Suburban Plaza "Job Search 1996" will take place American Community Center, the YO U R CAR NEXT T IME of the student's house on Sunday afternoon , according to in 120 Memorial Hall today at 3:30 American Ballroom Academy and the A 1994 Ford Explorer was Continental Avenue and fled in a Newark Police. p.m. Hola group will demonstrate various broken into Thursday afternoon in white B MW with a Delaware The suspect concealed a mirror, "Careers in the Arts and dances of the Hispanic World. the Field House parking lol and license plate, police said. toothbrush, Centrum vitamins, AA Humanities: Majors for All Sea ons·· Admission is free. For information, $4,500 in cash was taken from it, Police described the suspect as batteries and cologne in his jacket will be held in 006 Kirkbride Lecture call 831-2758. according to Flatley. a white male in his late 20s with while attempting to leave the store Hall at 6 p.m. There are no suspects at this balding blonde hair. wi thout paying, police said. "Interviewing for Success" will be L IBRAR Y EXHIBIT ION time, Flatley said. held in 110 Memorial Hall tomorrow DISPLAY S HORT-C U T THROU GH - compiled by A ngela A ndriola at 3:30p.m. The exhibition titled "Trade B UR N, BABY BU R N! YARD TUR NS M UDDY "Careers in Sciences: Eyes on the Catalogs in the University of A 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee A 25-year-old Newark man Environment'' will take place Delaware Library" will be on display caught fire in the Field House drove his ve.hicle through the tomorrow at 6 p.m. in 205 Kirkbride in the Morris Library from March 18 Lecture Hall. to July 15. The Exhibition Gallery is A Career Fair will be he ld in the open Monday through Friday from 8 Rodney Room of the Perkins Student a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Tuesdays from Center from I to 5 p.m. Thursday. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For information about any of the - compiled by Stefanie Small April16, 1996 . THE REVIEW. A3 .------World Balloon to get facelift for 24th birthday

News BY JENNIFER LONGDIN value to the bar. of the night , the floor is usually August 20, and customers will notice SttJjf R

FACTION LEADER SEEKS CEASE-FIRE IN LIBERIA

MO ROVIA. Liberia - Roosevelt Johnson, the faction leader who plunged Liberia into a Dining week of renewed warfare, rampage killing and looting and neccessitated evacuations by the U.S. military, called Sunday for an end to a siege of his forces, which are holed up in Hall cholera-ridden barracks and surrounded by rival militias. However, Charles Taylor, leader of one of the besieging factions, insisted that his forces would not stop their assault on the Barclay sticks Training Center Barracks in central Monrovia until "the living body of Mr. J o hnson is brought to court.'' Meanwhile, so ldiers of a Nigerian­ by its . dominated West African peacekeeping force appeared to take control of streets crowded . with many of the 60,000 people left homeless and hungry by nine days of chaos. While • factional fighting raged around the barracks, veal gangs of looters took control of the streets, and , left few shops and buildings untouched and undamaged. BY BEN SULLIVAN The U.S. military flew 30 to 35 Americans Staff Reporter out of Monrovia on Sunday, bringing to I ,643 Despite last month's protests, the the number of foreigners, including Americans, battle to remove veal from the evacuated since Tuesday, the Associated Press Dining Services menu still remains reported. A U.S. Marine amphibious group i~ the primary focus for members of expected here in a week to help with further the Animal Rights Coalition this evacuations, and no more evacuation flights academic year, according to the out of Monrovia were immediately scheduled, organi zation's president. according to the Pentagon. THE REVIEW I A lisa Colley ARC President Jessie Selby, Delaware Chess Champion Paul Powell stood in the middle of a square set of tables for about six hours Saturday whose group is again distributing , INTERNATIONAL INVESTIGATORS and played chess with 40 people simultaneously. literature at dming hall protests and , END TWO-WEEK SEARCH FOR circulating petitions, said if Dining EVIDENCE Services does not remove veal from the menu and permit them to pass , CALISMANI , Bosnia-Herzegovina out literature in dining halls, they International investigators ended a two-week Chess master plays 40 people at once will ask Dining Services "to end the , earch for evidence of war crimes Saturday at requirement of meal plans. since the last of about a dozen sites where they Delaware's Paul Powell spends six hours Saturday with 115 challengers, losing to seven students have no control over what ·believe Bosnian Serb troops executed hundreds they are funding." of Muslims and buried them in mass graves la st Resident Di tri ct Manager o f summer. BY BETH PORTER Phil adelphi a and ew York. Even th ough he lost, C ha rles Dining Services Duane Clark said, The investigative team was scheduled to Swff Reporter Joe Garrison , one of Powell 's Dunagan , II, wa lk ed away wit h a n however, that they mu st consider the return Sunday to The Hague , where the He circled the table for more than five un successful challengers and a former armload of prizes. including aT-shirt opin ion of all the 6,500 stu dents • International War Crime Tribunal for the hours, immersed in th ought, speaking to ~niver s ity employee. was impressed by that read, " I came, I sat. l lost." with meal plans, many of whom , former Yugoslavia is headquartered and where no one. He wou ld stop occasionall y to the chess master's skill. " It was fine - until he took all my enj oy veal. the team will compile and present its findings. study the board and make a move ... " I' ve never encountered a player who men," Dunagan sai d. Veal is still offered every three The evidence is meant to complement Checkmate. can think 30 boards ahead and keep it all Chess Club Vice President Pa ul weeks, he said , and students' testimony from survivors of the massacre of up Delaware Chess Champion Paul memorized," Garrison said. Gardner said chess players shou ld begin consumption of it has not changed to 7,000 men who fled the eastern Bos nian Powell stood in the middle of a square One winner, Borris Kl yashchitsky said learning as earl y as possible. significantly since the last protest. town of Srebrenica when the Serbs overran it set of tab le for about six hours Saturday chess is " not o nl y a game. It is art and "Start them off as soon as they're old Clark said he maintains an open last July. an d played chess with 40 people at once. sport , and a little bit of sc ience." enough to recognize th e pieces;· he said. attitude toward the ARC and their In particular, the evidence should bolster a Of 115 challengers, Powell lost to only Junior Esro Ell erbe. another winner. ·'S how them th e pieces and have th em pro te sts and wi II continue to case against two high-ranking Bosnian Serb seven players. said he wou ld like a chance to chal lenge say th em back to you." co nsider their ideas. officials. military commander Ratko Mladic " You want to cut your losses as much Gardner with hi s full attention. Two winners already have plans for "We have to sati sfy everyone's and political leader Radovan Karadzic. both of as possible.'' Powell said . ''Even if I'd " I'd like to play him agai n. j ust me their chi ldren to learn the game. Ellerbe interest,'' he said . whom have been indicted by The Hague onl y lost six. I still probably would have and him ," said Ellerbe. who said he said he will teach the game to his 6-year­ Because Dining Services tribunal. thought I shou ld have only lost four." thinks he wou ld wi n again if given the o ld daughter. who a lready knows the censored eight of the I 0 brochures The university's Chess Club brings chance. pieces, a nd Kl yas hc hit sky vowed to ARC planned to distribute at last - -U.S., JAPAN SEEK TO BALANCE Powell to Christiana Mall each year to The winners received T-shirts. chess teach hi s 4-ycar-old so n as soon as he is month 's protests, the fight against SECURITY ALLIANCE take on any player up for the chall enge. board s and their choice of a variety of ready. censorship has become another of Powell also plays in competitions in small prizes. the ARC' s causes. TOKYO - The United States and Japan, once "Our question is, what's Dining bitter battlefield foes now turned into major Services trying to hide?'' Selby said. military partner , are bringing new demands to " We are asking that they don ' t a security alliance regarded as the linchpin of censor anyone anymore. Asia's peace and prosperity. News Journal photojournalist takes "They're infringing on the rights When President Clinton and Prime Minister of people to have educational Ryutaro Hashimoto meet this week. they will information. Just by pointing out hail new accord committing Japan to provide students down the path to his career what the university is doing, we will more support services for U.S. troops and try to get people thi nking." compelling the United States to reduce it s BY A GELA AND RI OLA Although he was offered other jobs profession. Protests against the serving of presence in Okinawa. Staff Reporta during hi s time at The News Journal, he Crowe said hi s favorite works were th e veal are scheduled for 4:30 p.m. It's all part of an effort to reaffirm ties and An award-winning photojournalist gave chose to stay in Delaware to prevent taking "environmental portraits" done in Ireland. Thursday in Rodney Dining Hall nudge the lopsided alliance between victor and a presentation Thursday about his hi s three chi ldren out of school. He told students that he enjoyed working on and II a.m. Friday in Russell vanquished into a more equal relationship experiences as a newspaper photographer Crowe gave his res ignation to the these portraits of various people in their Dining Hall, Selby said, reflecting J apan's dramatically changed during a slide presentation of some of his Delaware newspaper in 1990 to begin natural environments much more than Along with the prote'sts, the ARC fortunes and the new realities of the post-Cold best projects to approx im ately SO university freelance work and to focus on a special having to cover crime and murders­ submitted petitions and protest War world. students. photography project in images that are traditionally associated with letters addressing their concerns, Some analysts, fearing Young Turks within Pat Crowe, best known for his book Ireland. newspaper photography. views and goals to several the Japanese military had begun doubting "Delaware Portrait: Photographs From 20 In 1990, 1992 and While in Ireland, Crowe had the chance university faculty members America's long-term commitment to the region Years at The News •J ournal," spoke to the 1994. Crowe traveled to to photograph cloistered nuns, monks, pub yesterday in a formal effort to get and were casting restless eyes at other partners, students in 205 Kirbride Hall about how he Ireland for three to four owners and even gypsy families. information about the poor want Clinton and Hashimoto to use the summit got started and why he still continues to weeks at a time. While Crowe told the audience, "the hardest treatment o f veal calves out to to reaffirm security ties. Others call for a work after 32 years in the business. there, he photographed part of my job is approaching people on the previous ly uninvolved faculty, wholesale review of why the alliance is still Crowe said he was "bit by a photography hundreds of people in street and asking them if I could photograph Selby said. necessary, the best way to deploy U.S. troops bug" as soon as he acquired his first their natural them." He told the students that people were Letters were sent to, among here and how Japan can more actively support photography job at his hometown environment, resulting not always willing to be photographed by a others, directors of Dining Services, I I them. newspaper in Coming, N.Y., in !964. in hi s collection of 500- Crowe stranger for obvious reasons. university P resident David P . I In recent years, the United States has nudged After five years in New York. Crowe "I had to force myself to get out there," I 600 rolls of film Rosell e and the president of I Japan to provide more support ervices, more moved to Delaware and began working for devoted spe cifically to the people of Crowe said, but later learned he could use Delaware Undergraduate Student I I payments for stationing the troops here and the The News Journal. In the 21 years he Ireland. his friendliness to gain the confidence of Congress. I more techno logy. ~ ubject s. I spent as a photographer there, Crowe Crowe had looked forward to this many of hi s prospective Thus far, almost 250 people have I The Clinton-Hashirnoto summit won't come worked on projects such as inner city opportunity all his life because of hi s Realizing that most photographers who signed the petition fo rmed by the I I close to resolving all of the looming security graffiti and rhe horrific conditions of an family 's Irish heritage. "It's the roots of my are just starting out have the same fear, he ARC to stop the serving of veal, and I issues, just as it is unlikely to settle a ll trade elderly home which sparked a $1 million family." he said. remembering the stories said, "if you see a good situation, don' t pass members of the ARC hope to double I problems. But it will represent another s mall campa1gn to improve the home' s about Ireland he heard from his father. it up.' ' th e number of signatures through I I step forward in the long process of adapting the conditions. In between the slide presentation of some Freshman Franca Ottaviana, a protests pl anned this week, Selby I critical alliance to the changing realities of the I In 1975 , Crowe was named Newspaper of hi s published photographs and several of prospective photography major, said, said. I day, officials say. Photographer of the Year, which is those from hi "People of Ireland" portfolio, "[Crowe's] pictures were amazing, and he I According to Selby, "M ore I considered the highest national honor a Crowe fielded students' questions and gave made it seem like photography was second people come up and want to sign the I I - compiled from The Washington Post/Los newspaper photographer can receive. his personal impressions of the photography nature to him ... petition than don't want to." I Angeles Times News Service by Lisa A . I '-- A4 . THE REVIEW . April 16, 1996 Unique art form Student-curated exhibit opens in Wilmington

BY LAUREN JADELIS and laid out by th e students, said s tudents because they find o ut "The students did an excell ent job Staff Rrponrr makes statement Kate Shoemaker, a junior art and what it 's reall y like to run a setting up. Usually, I have a lot of Students from the University art history major and member of gallery," Chapp said. work pre paring exhibits, but this Gallery's Curatorial the apprenticeship program . Under the program, s he said, time all I had to do was open the Apprentices hip Program are The assorted pieces on display students learn the s tandards and door." through movement sharing their first gallery opening f~ · om the University Gallery practices of the museum field and Stewart added that the people with the city of Wilmington this .:o llection include a male vo lunteer 55 hours for tw o of Wilmington s howed a positive month. antelope Tyi W a ra headpiece semesters wi th the University response to the exhibit as well. 'Pedestrians,' a walking sculpture exhibit Friday's reception he ld at the used in the Bamana c ulture's Gallery. Stewart said during th e week created by a New York City artist, is part Christina Cultural Arts Center, annual/semi-annual initiatio n Chapp also sa id she is happy w he n the art was being set up, allowed the student c urato rs the dance. th e universi ty could s hare its people were stopping at the fine art, part social commentary opportunity to meet with the "We had limited space to work collection with the audience of window outside to see the new Cultural Center visitors. with," said M aggie Mullen , a downtown Wilmington. exhibit. Eight pieces of 20th-century junior c h emistry and a rt M a l ik Stewart, education The CCAC is part of The BY GREGORY SHULAS in the city, people don't usually get African art from the University conservation major, "so we chose director at the CCAC, said, "The Wilmington Arts Commission's Sraff R~porter a chance to know their neighbors, Gal lery wiii be on display at the different s i zed pieces that ex hibit is helping uni vers it y Art Loop, a c ul tural event held Twelve black, geometrically­ and anger becomes an increasingly CCAC until April 25 in an exhibit represented a grea t deal of students see what is going on in the first Friday of each month in shaped figures walked from Main expressed emotion. c urated e ntirel y by the eight cultural influence." Wilmington and at the same time Wilmington . The Art Loop uses Street down the Mall Thursday and Although the exhibit has toured students in the apprenticeship Belina Chapp, director of the helping people in Wilmington to bus transportation to take people Friday afternoons, baffling students, Europe, Asia and North America, program. The exhibit celebrates U ni versity Ga ll ery, said she is see what's going on at the to various cultural stops and faculty and visitors and stopping giving exhibits in cities like the h e ritage of the African very pleased with the work of the university. restaurants who participate in the traffic. Lo ndo n , New York and Tokyo, continent. students. "There is a good partnership loop. The enigmatic gang had ball­ Thursday was Helin's first show at The eight diverse pieces were "The apprenticeship program is between the cultural center and shaped heads and angular black a university. each selected, researched, labeled experiential for the university the university ," Stewart said. clothing. One carried a dog on a Helin said it was a particularly leash, another a two-dimensional, enjoyable performance because she ~ooden little girl. A giant did not have to deal with the public mechanized rat followed them, hostility that occasionally finds it s dodging spectators and running in way into her New York City circles. performances. One minute the group walked in The exhibition on campu~ a complete straight line; the next "Finishing The Course" Thursday was also the first time minute they stood completely Helin has used university students frozen in space, totally cut off from in her production instead of A Seminar on Strategies to help you Generate the "Second the outside world. professionals. These figures were a part of To art major and '·Pedestrian" "Pedestrians," a walking sculpture operator Steve Erikson, the best part Wind" Necessary to Finish Your Course Work exhibit created by New York City was "seein g people who pass each artist Yvene Helin. other every day actually stop and Defined by the arti t as part talk to each other about the art." performing art. part fine art and part Upon viewing the walking art, "ro ro'O social commentary, Helin's strangers stopped in their paths and b. '\b. ' c:,() ''Pedestrians" gave a surreal twist to Monday, April turned to each o ther in a quest to b. "(). c:,'\ the university atmosphere. find out w hat exactly was T he mechanical movements of happening on their typically normal '!> ""' the pedestrians are meant to capture college campus. '!> the routine 9 to 5 experience "It was , but I couldn't 22, 1996 Americans go through every day. look away," freshman Brian Furman " Helin said she chose the people said. fig ures on "walk/don't walk" traffic Sophomore Brian McGrith said. 4:00-5:30 pm lights as her subject medium and "I wanted to find out what it was all o.?"'s ro and society becomes more Erikson said, "There is a lack of dependen t on technology and public art at the university. This '\0~ machines, humans are losi ng fulfills the need." contact with their natural creative Helin's exposition is part of the 205 Kirkbride rhythm." art department's "Visiting Artist"

She said she got most of her program and was funded by the ~ artistic inspiration from living in Office of Women's Affairs and the •'• New York City, where she creates Cultural Activities and Public costumes am! ~~ulptures for Disney Events. Featured Sueaker Suonsors and Broadway shows. She said that Dr. Joseph McRae Mel!ichamp Academic Services Center Center for Teaching Effectiveness is Emeritus Professor of College of Arts and Science Advisement Center Management Science in the College of Arts and Science NUCLEUS Program Local instructors College of Education ASPIRE Program Manderson Graduate School of College of Engineering RISE Program dismiss doubts Business at the College of Human Resources HORIZON Program about young pilots University of Alabama.

BY A DREW P. CHARNIK Aeronautics, an FAA-certified flight Staff Rrpuner school in New Castle. said a person A 7-year-old girl atlempting to can fly at any age as long as a flight fly across country died in a plane in structor is also aboard the plane. crash Thursday. bringing current Marcel Wans leeben, a flight Federal Aviation Administration in structor for Sky Safety. a flight rul es into question. school also in New Castle. said he Rep. J o hn J . Duncan Jr. (R­ would have no problem taking a 7- Seniors.... Tenn.) s tated in a press release year-old student up in a plane. Thursday that he wi ll introduce "Whether th ey're 5 or 25 or 50 legislati on this week that "would not doesn't make a difference," Look who~s coming to the a ll ow children to actually f ly Wansleeben said. "They make the ai rplanes." same mistakes, and the instructor i<: Jessica Dubroff, her father, absolutely responsible." Spring Career Fair on Thursday! Lloyd, and her flight instructor, Joe Seever said because each plane Reid, died shortly after taking off has dual controls. simi lar to those in fro m Cheyenne, Wyo. , on the a driving instructor's car. the J ohn Hancock Financial Services econd leg of their journey. The instructor always has th e ability to ARJAY Telecorn Cessna 177B left the airport in override the student and take control American Express Financial Services Lady Foot Locker inc lement weather and crashed of the plane. MBNA America nearly nose-first into a residential Seni or Matthew Blake, 23. is ATI CommLmications street shortly thereafter. The plane studying for his pi lot's license. The Baseli ne Financial Sernces Mellon Bank was attempting to ci rcle back to the accounting major said flying with an National Tire Wru·ehouse (NTW) airport when it crashed. instructor gives one a feeling that he Caldwell Sra£fu1g Services The cause of the accident is under is completely safe. C hamps Sports New York Life Insurance Company investigati on by the FAA and the It 's " like a ride at the carnival, Northwest Financial, Inc. National T rans portation Safety but you have your hands on the Chimes Men·o, Inc. Board. control," Blake said . If a 7-year-old Choice Middle Schools Program Northwestern Murual Life Current FAA rules state that no child is co mpetent and can Olde Discow1t Stockbroker one below the age of 16 can obtain a understand the lingo and technical Comcast Cellular One student pilot li cense, said Roland aspects of flyin g, he said, there is no Commwuty Interactions, Inc. Patterson Schwartz Heal Estale Herwig, a spokesman for the FAA. problem in taking them up. Pennhur t Meclical Group He said a student must be at least 17 But Duncan, in his press release, CSC Networks years old before becoming a pilot stated, " I think it is a crime that a 7- Delaware Chruter Guarru1tee & Trust Co. P rincess H.oyale certified to fly with passengers and year-old was a ll owed to fly this Professional 1 Access Ltd. without the aid of an instructor. plane. I will do everything I can to Delaware H.iver and Bay Authority Police Dept. This, however, does not prevent ensure that this kind of needless Delaware State Police Prudential Preferred Financial Services younger children from flying with tragedy does not occur in the an instructor. Matthew Seever, a future." Delaine & Touche Consulting Groups/ICS Public Allies flight in s tructor at Dawn Enterprise H.ent-A-Car State F arm Insurru1ce Company Excel Telecommunications, Inc. Thrift Drug, Inc. Expert Software/Swfte Division USMC, Officer Selection Office Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Wachovia Bank Card Sernce Feralloy Corporation-Eastern Division Wilmington Trust Foot Locker (Woolworth Corp.) Ask theiRS G. D. Walger International amorpm. Horizon House/Delaware, Inc Tax questions? Call TeleTa'{, taU-free, for recorded Thl' Spt·ing Cm·eer Fait· will be held Thmsday afternoon (April 18th) information on about 150 tax topics, 24 hours a day. in the Rodney Room, Perkins Student Center. Ft·om l:00-3:00pm, fit ?.:ar:i~~'~7ce 8TeleTax. COME MEET EMPLOYERS TO DISCUSS FULL TIME JOB OPPORTU­ http:l/www.ustreas.gov 1-800-829-4477 NITIES. From 3:00-S:OOpm, interviews will be conducted. •

April 16, 1996 • THE REVIEW • AS Hillel sponsors Speaker: U.S. breaking down gay taboo event to remember .. BY KEVI WHITE Mohr told an audience of about 25 faculty said_ Practices such as these make it clear that Stuff Repmur members and students at Smith Hall Thursday gay rights are needed because gays aren' t The U.S. culture is taking positive strides evening. given the same treatment as other groups, Holocaust horrors toward breaking down the gay taboo, Mohr cited three changes that need to be Mohr said. according to a professor of philosophy from made to break down the gay taboo. People "Gay rights don't take away anything from the University of IllinOIS, Urhana. need to know that gay rights aren't special, other groups," he said _ "Rather, it strengthens BY RANDI L HECHT States, said Rabbi Elize• "Studies have shown that on gay issues people need to openly talk about gay issues them." Other minorities need to realize that Administrative News Editor Sneiderman of Chabad House. people are greatly affected in their opinions and gays need to "adopt broad-gauged politics giving gays rights does not detract from the People a ll over the world and Many orthodox and other very by how other people \\ill ec them.'' Richard directed toward changing the general culture continuing need to protect other minority students here on campus will mourn religious Jews don't take part in D. Mohr said. Because of people's reactions rather than narrow politics focused on specific groups from discrimination. he said. the deaths today of the 6 million Yom Hashoah, because it is "more to gay topiCS. it is "taboo" for straights to talk legislative reform," Mohr said Mohr is the author of "Gay Ideas: Outing Jews killed 51 years ago on Yom of a made-up holiday," Sneiderman about gay issues in public without being The gay community is a legitimate and Other Controversies" and most recently Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance said. "Judaism has a lot to insulted, he said. This ts the reason why the minority, he said. Gay rights should not have ''A More Perfect Union: Why Straight Day_ concentrate on and [Yom Hashoah] straight community is "gay-fearing," Mohr to be special rights. They are just as important America Must Stand Up for Gay Rights.'' "Yom Hashoah is a very somber is against the whole idea of Nissan." said. as the civil rights given to African Americans Mohr is also the founding editor of day and a powerful ttme to mourn Nissan is a celebratory and happy People must openly and freely talk about and women, and they should be accepted just '·Between Men, Between Women: Lesbian for the deaths," said freshman Sara month, he aid. and Jews are not gay issues in public because it will have a the same, according to Mohr. and Gay Studies." This series of books is the Levin, who is working with Hillel supposed to mourn during this time_ dramatic and positive effect on the Gay rights are needed because of policies first of lesbian and gay studies to be published and Delaware Israel Public Affairs Even when people have to mourn, relationships between gays and straights, like the military's "don't ask don't tell," he by the Columbia University Press. Committee to o rganize tonight's such as at funerals, it is more events, which include poetry subdued, he said. readings and speeches at the Hillel "Trad itionally, Judaism has center on West Delaware Avenue. holidays for sadness," he said "The theme of the event is to explaining that many Jews fast remember so there is a lesser chance during summer holidays to mourn of [the Holocaust] happening their losses. again," Levin said. Yom Hashoah was designated a The event will open at 7 p.m. holiday by the Israeli government with readings from the children's near! y I 5 years ago and people all SCPAB presents . book "I Never Thought I'd See over the country have a moment of Another Butterfly,'' a poetry silence at I I a.m. where they stand compilation written by children in at attention, he said. concentration camps during World Historically, the Israeli War II. government wanted the holiday to Following the poetry, Holocaust be held on April I 9 to survivor Sam Kujawski will speak, commemorate the upri ing of the and there will be a reading of Warsaw ghetto in Poland_ But several other poems. because this happened on the first The groups will then have a night of Passover, a time for cand le lighting ceremony and celebration, the government decided speech with a candelabra holding six 10 change the holiday to the 27th with SPECIAL GUESTS ... candles to commemorate th e 6 day of Ni san. million Jews. Although Levin said she believes After the candle li ghting, Levin this year's celebration should not be will speak about the year she spent difficult to observe because there in Israel and how Yom Hashoah is are still many survivors of the celebrated there as compared to the Holocaust alive today, she wonders Tommy Keene & Dishwalla United States where it is not a what will happen many years from national holiday. now. To close the ceremony, a special "There is still an immediate prayer to mourn the losses wi II be lineage," she said. "But when they recited and participants will sing die will the story still be told'l" Israel's national anthem Hillel and DIPAC expect a fairly symbolizing the idea that "all we big turnout for the event tonight, can do is hope," Levin said. Levin said_ Although the majority of The remembrance day, which people present will be Jews, Levin falls on the 27th day of Nissan on said she expects many other the Jewish calendar, is a national religions there as well because the holiday in Israel and a secular and Nat:is persecuted everyone, not only $ 8 Full-Time Undergraduates with UD I.D. less traditional one in the United the Jews_ ,r $ 12 UD Faculty, Staff, & other UD I.D. $ 15 General Public Days of Knights fantasy store holds grand re-opening

BY SHARO DAVIS people could lock the games up and Staff Reporter come back later and play. Corradin Main Street took a trip back in said. time to the Medieval world of Corradin also aid monthly fantasy and a step forward to the tournaments for the card game futuristic world of science fiction for Magic will continue to be held at the Days of Knights grand-reopening store's new location on the last Saturday. Saturday of every month . The Unique entertainment. including tournaments, which attract 60 to 70 a husband and wife band named players from as far away as New Trikki Wicketl that serenaded York, coincide with the fact that customers as they entered. was Days of Knights is Delaware's main brought in to help celebrate the re­ gaming tore, he said. opening of the gaming store, which Opinions varied among those had occupied space in the Newark - attending the grand re -opening, but Mini-Mall for the past I 5 years_ the general atmosphere was positive Once inside, game creators held and upbeat. Senior Frank Morgan, May s, 1996 8:30p.m. workshop demonstrations in the who has been coming to Days of store's gameroom at the back . Knights' gameroom every other day Bacchus Theater explaining the strategies and details for five years, said that although the of new games to interested store is '·farther away, it is bigger." Cool music, Hit poetry, Lots of audiences. In the mid t of the Others attending the re-opening crowd, employees shouted out were not so positive. Shannon coffee ..... names of gift certificate winners and Kalvar of Bear, Del., has been those eligible for a free reading from coming to the store for about two one of the three psychics. years now and prefers the old Be there, hep daddyo, or be With colorful flags and numerous location's cramped quarter and T-shirts hanging from the walls and piles of merchandise to the neatly ceiling, store owner and manager organized shelves of the new store. John Corradin said the new location, Lee McCormick, an employee • (square). across from Happy Harry's drug who has worked at Days of Knights store, ha a more organized and si nce its inception in 1981, said the neater appearance_ response to the grand re-opening so "In general its a cozier feeling," far was great, although he1said he Corradin said. " I think people are believed there might be a slump for going to like it a lot." a few weeks becau e everyone had However, the move farther down to reorient themselves as to the Main Street has left Corradin store's new location. In the end, he wondering how his store will fare. said, he remains optimistic. This will be your baby~ first home. "It's kind of scary because I don't Like McCormick, Corradin is know what the effect is going to be Here~ how to make it a great place to live. confident in the success of the If you ha,·en't ~dld your on my business," he said. "With the store's new location. Galleria and the new Student "At first, [moving] seemed like If you've been thinking family youre an Center, that area was going to be a an unbelievable thing. Anytime about becoming pregnant, hub of activity, so moving away you've been one place for 15 years, from that is not a happy day." you've grown attached, you know the March of Dimes rec­ ' and tissu1 donor, twg~ But for the regular patrons of the all the venders. It's just a very ommends a pre-pregnancy store who come to play the games in comfortable feeling," he said. "But the back room, the move couldn't be check-up. This can help then once I got accustomed to the anything but positive_ With the idea, I kind of was excited about a identify any potential you're not. expansion of the gaming room itself, new place, fixing it up and making it problems, and also help private rooms were added so that look different.'' prevem certain binh Tn l,r an org.1n :'\nrl ri~t(nr tlonnr, r\Tn if.' ou \ r defects. Think ahead for ()rgnn &Tissrte <'!!'''''! c:nrn rtlw1!:!. \ ou rnnc:l 1!'11 .\ n111 l:1mih ,,, ... healthy baby. Contact a ..::o tltt'\ t ,111 t ;ttl"\ fill( \filii dt•t IC:illfl l.t!!'l rnr ,1 :•·•••·•:• The Review's first annual ....."'''''' lllf" ,,,,. \l1nrr _ulJrr dr, l:'i- S I L\ HF. ~ f •••1/11111 11 fill /111flltii1Hl Best of Newark full-color ( 3 0 2) 737-1310 March of Dimes pullout. Coming Friday. ..

A6. THE REVIEW • April 16, 1996

adequate sp~ce for the faculty," undergo renovations. Half of the construction site forme rly Hollo "ell said. " It will make the whole refurbishing will be done this summer accommodated about 60 gold-permit Construction begins on new place work a lillie bit beller overall." and the other half wtll be done the parking spots, three service vehicle 1 The new build11tg will house the following summer. Renovations are spaces, four handicap spots and two, Center for Small Business scheduled to be completed in the fall of motorcycle spaces, said Assistant Development , the Center for Economic 1997 , Hollowell said. Director of Public Services Jim Grimes. MBNA business building Education, the MB A office, 35 faculty The renovations will include the The land on which the new building ofiices and four case-study classrooms, installation of new heating and cooling is being constructed was not initially BY CHRISTA MANALO A $15 million bui lding is being will cover the remaining cost of the which are arranged in au-shape in order systems, an undergraduate lounge, owned by the university, Grimes said. Stuff Report a constructed on the site west of Purnell building. to make class discussion more improved audio-vi ual equipment and According to Grimes, "The land was In a quest for the perfect parking Hall. · The new building will provide more convenient. The office of Kenneth skylights in th e lobby , accordin g to bought some time ago by the uni versity. space, students who unti I recently The building will be named MBNA space for the consistently growing Biederman, dean of the college, will be Hollowell. in order to provide a place to construct a parked in the lot formerly located at the America Hall, in recognition of a $2.5 College of Business and Economics. relocated to MBNA America Hall from A bridge connecting the new new building. For an unknown reason intersection of Amstel Avenue and million donation made by the company Associate Dean Jeff Gillespie said, "We Purnell Hall, Gillespie said. building to Purnell Hall will also be though, the construction was put off. In Orchard Road are sure to don frowns as to the university, Senior Vice President have a tremendous space problem. The building will also include a constructed . This walkway, linking the the meantime, the area was temporarily they drive past the location, which i David t!.ollowell said. Chaplan Tyler, an Faculty members have been sharing three-story atrium with skylights two buildings on the second level , wiJ: designated as a parking lot." now a construction site. However, alumnus of the university, also made a offtces in the basement without creating a lounge area for students, be fully enclosed and equipped with Since the parking lot was small and students of the College of Business and $1 million contribution to fund the windows.'' Hollowell said. heat and air-conditioning. Hollowell only available to gold permit holders, Economics will be sighing with relief. constructi on. Hollowell said. State funds "Thi s new building will provide At the same time the new building is said. Grimes said the change hasn't caused being constru cted, Purnell Hall will The parking lot replaced by the too much of a problem for students.

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Know the Code. 1 800 CALL ATT. That's Your True Choice:v • ------~----~------~------~ Apriii6,1996 .THEREVIEW .A7 Student throws objects out Towers window, hurts herself continued from page A I Safety went up to the fifth floor step into the hallway, they said. with a stretcher, but Stuppy said he A few minutes late r, the $1 ,400 is needed for the clean-up never saw them bring it back witnesses were asked by Public Safety for a first-aid kit to help of the room. downstairs. He said he did see her control the woman's bleeding. Junior Jeff Stuppy, who was taken out in handcuffs. walking o ut of the West Tower Stuppy said he did not think · They said they saw the woman between 12:30 and I a.m., said, "I anyone else was in. the room. "No taken out in handcuffs and heard opened the door, and gla s was one seemed to be trying to stop her screaming. almost falling on my head ." her." Second-floor resident Dana Ball Stuppy said he does not know Several Christiana West fifth­ said she heard glass breaking and then looked out of her window and how she broke the window, but he floor residents said they heard loud saw a television, microwave and saw her lean out and yell smashing sounds, as if someone obscenities. were shattering glass, around 12:30 other things s he could not After that, he said he saw things a.m., but thought nothing of it until distinguish falling. She start falling out of her window. He they saw about five officers run immediately called Public Safety. "I was sort of nervous because I remembered seeing a coffee maker, into their hallway. Three residents of the fifth floor thought of what happened in the stereo speakers, a toaster, :1 other tower last semester," Ball microwave, a television and a lamp said they saw the police knock on said, referring to the September post. the door to Room 508, and a "It was incredible how much was woman in the room said she could incident in w hich a uni versity on the grass," he said, adding that not open the door. Witne.sses said freshman fell to his death from a the woman eventually opened the 13th-floor Towers' window. the glass shattered everywhere. He said he saw blood on the door after police told her they could woman' s feet and hands. Public open it. The student was asked to

t"The

' Germany IS the worl d's largest exporter and a maJor trad e partner for the U.S. and Canada. 9nqume at the ~pen 'i Over two hundred million Europeans speak German as a f1rst second language. --J German also improves the u11derstanding of English ; students of German t"Thutrf!day, c.AptriQ 18th are likely to score higher on co llege entrance exams than others. -v German is an international language in technology, chemistry, medictne.~ 2:00 S:OO pm music, philosophy, and art. I " German ancestry in North America is strong: in the U.S. alone more than Oftea, u'\Ac

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT WITH THE REGISTRAR'S OFFICE New Student Orientation DARE TO BEGIN--GERMAN IS IN! For more information contact the Dept. of Foreign Languages at Full-time 831 - 2592 or 831-6458 . and part-time ·Applications are hours are available at the available Service Desk, for full-time

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Narion:.l lmlitu•~ of MC"nt:tl Ucalth NO DEJE QUE SUS AMIGOS MANEJEN BORRACHOS. Nationalln.nihltf!'$ of Health ;!_ ':'.::-lo:o ~=-;.~~... ":1~ '\.I \Ill l'<~o ... l~w""k!IJ•,.•• oo ..,l'l · ,::•.ou o Natural Law third party preaches conflict-free politics

BY SONNY MISHRA In a C-SPAN interview o n Feb. 9 , the u s ing medicines that have harmful s ide program the party would like to implement is health care," Hagelin said. Sraff Rcponer party's presidential candidate John Hagelin effects cause mo re pr<.'b lems than they the Transcendental Meditation Program, Also on the platform is a call for They have fielded over 200 candidates in said that in California, 50 percent of the solve," he said. which is propagated b y the Maharis hi campaign finance reform by the elimination races nationwide, control no federal and state people who have regi stered to vote under th e According to party literature, their University of Management. of poli tical action committees and special government seats and arc virtually unknown Natural Law Party are college students. "The platform includes prevention oriented health H ~ge lin, a quantum- phys ici l from interest groups from the political process and throughout the United States. growth of the party is really borne of a deep education program$ and preventive natural Harvard, was director of the Institute of promo ting campaign fina nc ing through Yet the Natura l Law Party has a discontent with po litics as usual," Hagelin medicines that have been s hown, by Science, Technology and Public Policy at the public funding. presidential and vice presidential candidate said. extensive research, to cut health care costs by Maharishi University for 12 years before The party's vice-presidential candidate is on the ballot in over 32 states. What the party claims as its main stance is SO percent to 70 percent. helping found the party. While at Maharishi , Mike Tompkins, one of the founders of the The Natural Law Party was founded in to introduce proven solutio ns th at bring "The reason why so many students are he imroduced prevention-oriemed program Natural Law party. Tompkins did simi Jar 1992 and immediate ly began fielding national life into harmony with natural law. supporting the Natural Law party is because to the government. work to Hagelin·s before fo unding the party, candidates for federal, state and local offices. Bob Roth, a spokesman for the party, said our platform is ensuring a healthier future for "The government health debate has including introducing to the government new In 1996, the party's goal is to appear on the it was based on two principles. "The party coming generations," Roth said. nothing to do with health. It has nothing to prevention-oriented programs for critical ballot in all SO states with at least I ,000 believes that violating nature's laws by using The p latform promotes community do with health care, or the coment of health problems. candidate for those offices. hazardous chemical pesticides on soil and development and c rime prevention. One care even. It has to do with the financing of

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• From o two- or four-year co/leg~. Must finance through GJ\fAC Offer subject to change. S~ your participating dealer for qualification details. t Based on normal mamtenonce. See Owner's Manual for limitations.. C. /996 GM Corp. All rights ~erved. *" $13.220 MSRP induding dealer prep and destination charge. Price includes 5 -s~ transmission., air conditioning and ~r spoiler.. Twc; license and other optional equipment extra. Prices h;gher m CA. .MA and NY. Price as of 417196. sub,iect to change. April 16, 1996'. T H E R EVIEW. A9 CCo debates need for reservoir Urban Affairs and BY KATHLEEN MCDONOUGH Dworsky said he has been successful The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, resident, said he and other area residents StujJ R~pona in obtaining funds for this project from the which sponsored the meeting, is currently want this project resolved as soon as Many ew Castle County residents tate, the ew Castle County government conducting environmental studies and possible. He thinks that too much Public Policy prof vo1ced their concerns over a proposal for and the city of Newark. He said more than will make the final decision by July 1998 studying and not enough accomplishment a new reservOir in the northern part of the $1 million has been committed to the as to whether a new reservoir is necessary is the main problem with the study. county at a meeting Thursday night in Water :woo plan as of now. The planning for the Churchman's Marsh area, located "I'm representing my children and Clayton Hall. date for this project runs to the year 2040, in central New Castle County. grandchildren by looking into the future," dies of liver failure The meeting was held to discuss the smce a 50-year permit was filed. Gerard Esposito, director of the Doyle said. ew Castle County water supply plan, Richard Hassel, the lcadmg project Delaware Department of Natural ewark resident John Wharton said he "hu.:h came about after the water shortage t.lircctor behind the Water 2000 Pl an, Resources and Environmental Control. hopes the impact statement will be BY MARK E. JOLLY '· or. Morstai n was a de voted Admuusrrmive Nens £Ja()r ' caused by last summer's drought. e.,plained that the meeting was held to which is helping to fund the study, then resolved in two years and was looking for teacher who cared greatly for each The panel of 12 speakers reprcscntcJ comply w1th the Environmental discussed the state' s role with the EIS. answers. Barry R. Morstain, a 51-year-old s tudent with whom he came in the project management committee. who In fo rmation System, a set of federal The department is also currently ''Who is pushing for us guys that live university professor of the College comact," he said. ·'He spent hours hoped to sway the sJ...ept1cal pubhc and regulations requiring any proposed providing technical information and here and need water?" he asked. of Urban Affairs and Public Policy, working with individual student to spuJ...e m favor ol the con trucuon of a chru1gc to the environment to be analyzed performing field work for the project, According to Dworsky, the turnout of died April 9 from liver failure while ensure their understanding of a nc" reserv01 r. m a detailed impact statement and open to Esposito said. approximately 180 people was at the Southern Che.ster County topic." Bernard Dworsky, administrator of the public t.lebate. Esposito said Gov. Thomas R. Carper surprisingly large. Medical Center. In addition to aiding university : Water Resources Agency for New Castle Hassel said he Willlts to hear from the is committed to the project. Hassel said he and the other speakers Morstain started his time at the graduate students, Mors tain also County, explamet.l that the purpose ol the public since the water supply plan is The microphone was then opened to expect open comments from the public university in 1971 as the worked with a variety of state and re;crvotr is to take advantage of the state's wnsidered a public participation process the public. Approximately 21 people for the next 30 days via mail or telephone. university's director of academic national organizations. frequent rainfall by capturing and holdmg and explained that one more public voiced their opinion. Some were in favor Dworsky said the Water Resources planniug and evaluation and taught A year ago he was the founding the water lor availability during the dry heruing will take place by the fal l of this of the new reservoir, while others Agency has already received feedback graduate courses for the past 20 series editor of "Delaware Public month of the year when water IS deemed year after the fmal t.lraft is published for remained skeptical. from the community since Thursday's years. Affairs Reports," which deals with most necessary. the EIS. Larry Doyle, a New Castle County meeting. Morstain specialized in statistics research on issues important to the and job discrimination and helped s tate. Morstain also served as a create and implement fair testing consulting editor to the "Joumal of procedures for Wilmington fire and Higher Education" from 1977 to police department promotions in 1984. 1986. Morstain also worked with two According to colleagues, organizations related to hi s field: the Morstain was dedicated to helping Imernational Personnel Managemell! his studems, regularly checking on Association a nd the American their progress and offering advice. Society for Public Administration. Joyce Henderson, one of Aside from his work with public Morstain's students, described him policy issue . Morstain was as "a teacher. a motivator and a involved with the Police Athletic friend to all his studenb." League. He also invented the Jeffrey Raffel, director of the computer game '"Micro League public administration program for Baseball,'' which was released in A WINNER OF THE which Mor tain taught, also 1984. complimented the late professor's Morstain is survived by his wife, 1 9 9 5 personable and caring nature. Jeri Metallo. BEST OF DELAWARE TODAY & NEWS JOURNAL READERS POLLS

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A NIW COMIDY -COMPUMINTS OF 1'111 MOUSE. 7-9 p.m. 100 I Kirkbride Hall. Shows: 140 Smith Hall Tickets: $1.00 with UD/ID One paying guest per ID. Tickets sold half an hour' before listed showtimes. Made possible by the We Are Entertainment Comprehensive Student Fee. , A 10. THE R EVIEW • Apri I 16, 1996 UD Honors program competes with elites Package Goods Available :~ continued from page A I Delaware Admissions Committee 3pmto iam considers the following: the level of are designed to enrich the education high school courses taken; the grade of their participants, according to point average for academic courses their directors. only and any trend in grades over the While maintaining a high grade years; SAT scores, recommendations, Happy Hour (S:.12 pm) point average, honors ·students at all writing samples and school activities. While the minimum SAT score Free Domino's Pizza, Fatty Fatty's the schools are also expected to .50¢ Drafts in your Stone Giveaways, $1.00 drafts, $1.50 attend seminars and colloquia and accepted is II 00, the Admissions Balloon Mug and $3.00 Fills MR. Committee has turned down students GRINCH Domestic Bottles & $1.75 Imports receive extens ive advisement in a Any Size Pitcher Till U pm and Micro Brews with scores as high :IS 1580 because variety of fields, rather than being $1.75 One Uquor Rail Drinks HAPPY HOUR PRICES locked into a specific track, officials their high school record was weak, Import Specials $1.00 Shooter Specials GREENGENES . from each university said. they reported in their profile of the till MIDNIGHT One of the advantages every Class of 1999 . The lowest grade All Night FLIP LIKE honors program has to offer its point average accepted is 3.0. WILSON In Concert students is research opportunities, Virginia Tech requires an SAT GRE~ TRAIN ROBBERY said Charles Dudley, director of the score of 1320 and a class ranking in Honors Program at Virginia Tech. the top tenth percentile to be one of April 24th "We are definitely in favor of their 450 chosen honors students out cooperative learning." he said. "I of 1,700 applicants, Dudley said. would recommend the program "We are looking [at students) for a GOD STREET WINE mostly for access to faculty facilities demonstrated depth in a field ," he and university resources. Our said. "For example, we have an IS­ COVER $5.00 students work directly with the year-old entering freshman coming faculty doing research." this fall who is working on his Each of the programs offers master's degree in mathematics while honors housing for its students, but he is earning his undergraduate only Delaware currently requires degree at the same time." freshmen to live in specified The University of Maryland has residence halls. Next year, however, the largest honors program of the Rutgers will incorporate thi s same four uni versll1es researched, requirement. admitting 600 students per year out Several uppercla smen live in the of an applicant pool of I ,500. The freshman Honors residence halls at average SAT score lies around 1320 Delaware as Russell Fellows, where and the average grade point average they serve as sources of information is 3.5, Airozo said. for the underclassmen and as one "But we read the whole folder." he more benefit to honors life. said. 'The small group at the top of Junior Missy Dugan, a fellow in the applicant pool is invited Russell B, explained, 'The best thing automatically. But we also look at ahout the Honors Program is a sense letters of recommendation and •C·~m•n ~ct ,._;'SCS Phish, Dead, Dave, Live, NIN, Alanis of identlly. We build a support activities and 10 see if they wrote a .,-, 'I""~ ..,,. and Thousands MORE! system for each other and provide a very well-argued essay. It's not just common ground for friendships to be done on statistics for most students." • Huge Selection Of Import and Domestic Titles • Live Concerts built.'. According to Airozo, about 85 To countt:1act the extra work piled percent of Maryland's honors on the students at the four students are in-state, greatly • CDS as Low as $5.00 • Tapes • Videos • Stickers • Collectables universities, special events such as contrasting Virginia Tech's claim to trips, picnic~ and educational fame - having students from every programs are ~cheduled specifically state in the nation except A Iaska. $$$ *CASH PAID FOR CDS * $$$ for those involved. Rutgers admitted to selecting Jim Airozo, associate director of students primarily from New Jersey. MaJ) land's program, said there is an Roughly 30 percent of Delaware's underlying principle upon which honors students are in-state; the rest honors programs are founded. of its members are mostly from • Imported Shirts, Vests and " I think one of the best things nearby states. about the Honors Program is that it According to Kathleen Duke, gives students the personal attention associate director of the Delaware Jackets (Up to 50% Off Retail Prices!) of a small liberal arts college within a Honors Program, "Choice is what we big research institution," Airozo said. do better than a lot of good programs. A ociate Director of the Rutgers "A lot of very good honors Honors Program Muffin Lord said programs simply devise an honors • Womens Clothing, Dresses Etc.· that ··one of the ways students cope at track, and everybody gets on board college is to find things to help them and does that," she added. "And I feel like they are in a small place, and think at Delaware we make a real the honors program is one of the strong effort to create lots of different • Scrungies • 7 For $5.00 ways students can find a home." ways of doing honors education." Admission~ to the different honors With the First Year Honors programs depend roughly on the Certificate, Advanced Honors same criteria for each school: high Certificate, Honors Foreign • Contemporary Jewelry, Watches·• school grade point average, SAT Language Certificate, Degree with score~ auu ~urne sort of writing Distinction and an Honors Degree, sample but each school there are several ways to approach an and Accessories : appro:~ches the pool of applicants in a honors education at the University of lightly different way. Delaware. Of the fuur, the most competitive " What we see as our goal is is Rutgers. which requires a helping each individual student Perkins Student Center Apr// ~5rh- ~!Hh minimum SAT score of 1360 and a maximize his or her educati on on this high school rank in the top tenth campus in the way that's absolutely in the Gallery ~Oan1 ro 7pn1 percenti Ie. Lord said. best for him or her, giving them their About 1,500 general applicants own package of experiences,'' she meet these requirements and are then said. invited to apply to honor . of which Even s tudents not accepted as 600 actually do, she added. Honors freshmen can participate fully in the applicants arc judged primarily on program if they can maimain a 3.0. two writing samples. "I would hope we could be useful This year Rutgers :~dm ittcd 225 of in creating opportunities and making the 600 "'ho applied. "We're looking a ll s tudents aware of their for a final cia s of 125.·· Lord opportunities.'' Duke said. explained. She summarized the spirit of the Delaware accepts about I ,250 new program: "Honors offers highly honors freshmen out of the 2,500 motivated students the opportunity to who apply every year, looking for an live and work in an environment that incoming class of 400, according to allows them to gain the most they Senior Associate Director for Honors possibly can from their experience at Admissions Louis Hirsh. The college."

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CLAD 4-20'l·% April 16, 1996 . THE REVIEW • All

Oxford debate rages

continaed from page AI Stonehenge resulted. The second speaker for the negative side, Ben Ball. stated that 1f U.S government was "dumber than " Oliver Stone, the most paranoid a bag of hammers" for not us ing among us," doesn' t thi nk the aliens alien technologies and asserted that pl ayed a part in JFK"s death, then if the British were to discover a new they didn't ever come here. metal from o uter space, "they'd H e says the world is '"a very waste no time incorporating it into s trange place. Take George their cuisine." Williamson for instance, he 's a very The negative response to alien relics was very s imilar to the strange and offensive character. but he's no alien."' negative response to the alien C o ntinuin g hi s ad hominum crashes. " If the ali ens are so smart, attack, Ba ll remarked, 'The aliens Wednesday, April 17, 1996 then why do they leave stuff behind?" arc dreamt up by all of the poor sad lonely bastards like Matt who seek When the negative side took the refuge in Star Trek and excessive 11:00 a.m.-5:00p.m. floor, they began by questioning, "Why is it th at when aliens ravage alcohol.'' He went on to say it is ludicrous to b..:l1evc alien' \Hl uiJ humans, they always choose ugly come to earth ... Any allen wllh an) Perkins Student Center-Rodney Room Texans?" Jennifer Timko, a senior speaking sense would go to Alpha Centauri where all the chicks have six for the negs, asked matter-of-factly, "What alien in his right mind would breasts," Ball said. t Arguing against the resolution. BLOOD BANK come here?'' Student Sponsor: Gamma Sigma Sigma OF DElAWARE/EASTERN SHORE She went on to momentarily lapse Ball stated that the question at hand in he r argument wi th a none-too­ s ho uld n o t be whether or not intelligent life has visited Earth, hut germane discussion of the arms ''in this era of Hootie and The race. Mentioning the classic Stanley Blowfish, docs intelligent life indeed exi~t on our planct·r· Kubrick fi lm, "Dr. Strangelove," Timko said, "The arm s race equals Matt Guy used the pop group, the the penis race , and the chall enge is Monkees, to sum up the pros case in THE RODNEY support of the resoluti on. '"And then to see who can build the biggest and I saw her face. yes, I' m a believer. .. best penis to screw the world." said Guy. When she regained her focus, Timko argued that, as humans, we Guy went on to say aliens alwa) s naturally assume that '" the biz.arre go to a place like New Mexico or . UNDERGROUND Ariz.ona because if they v.cnt to and the horri fie cannot be the result of human activity," so we just blame New York or . nobody the ali ens. 'The human tendency has would notice them. '"They shad up 11 llh fat hlol,.es always been to look up to the sky named Elroy because they can't for explanation of the unknown." hang out with politicians ... Gu) ~a1d said Timko, ''the stars, the heavens. God and now aliens.'" When the negative side used thc1r George Wi lli amson of Oxford, trademark question ... Why would PRESENTS ... "A Night at the Underground" speaking for the pros. asserted that aliens come here. it 's -;o pomtless"l" aliens had to have come to Earth. one more time. Guy repli, tt' the speaker, '·Your mother car11ed )OU " How else can you explain the unexplainable, like mi ssing sock for nine months. wh1ch \\ ·'' pretty FEATURING ACOUSTIC MADNESS sy ndrome . Dan Quayle becoming pointless." vice president, and President Clinton Ben Ball, in his closing argument managing to s moke dope without for the negs. stated yet again "'a liens FROM looo & Roe! inhaling? have no reason to come here. It ' s the "Clearly th e aliens provided him Mau·s girlfriend theor) . E1ery tunc wi th some sort of high-tec h he says did you come. she sa)' no. l h·1J no reason to come.'· sponsored by the Delaware Undergraduate Student Congress (D.U.S.C.) breathing device," Williamson said. Williamson went on to auributc The audience cast their vote-. for the Pyramids, crop circles and the the winner in exiting through Tuesday, April 16 at the Rodr:'ey Underground other great mysteries of the world to designated doors. when the vote was a warped alien seme of humor. ·'The tallied, the resolution 11 a, supported. (downstairs from the Rodney Dining Hall) humans who built •he pyramids The majonty of tho'e in attendance were controiled by a liens , who 111 Newark. belie\ cd 11Helligcnt alien simply found it funny." Williamson life haJ indeed li '>i tetl the planet DOORS OPEN AT 7:00 P.M ., ENTERTAINMENT STARTS AT 9:00 P.M. remarked. earth. The pro s1tle was declared the Tl,' P.'!gative side's response to winner. Williamson's argument was that What was left undet.:idcd was even way back in caveman days, exactly how intelligent that life was people did dumb things. '"They and whether 11 came from outer thought that it would be funny to space or from London. ~~ build a henge," said the negs. and Enjoy Avanti Flavored Cofee, Steak Sandwiches, Pizza, Nikki Giovanni Milkshakes and l~ITYoF V.tJAWARE other great food ... speaks at CBC 20th DINING SERVICES Made to Orderl anniversary lunch

continued from page A I presidential candidatcs. <~rgu111g th ,ll Republit.:an candidatc Bob Dok. years. attlrmat1ve actwn IS still good who received free medical attent1on to help other people become a part for his wounded arm after World of America." s he said, noting that War II, '·has an obli gatiOn 10 vote the benetits white mal es have reaped for universal health care ... from 200 years of segregati on will After attacking the Republican no t be countered unless America effort to c ut health care research. Sen i o-re;-! oleat-e print ,nformabon '·forces people to do the right thing" Giovanni incredulously noted that I requed.__ certificolet- 'IV,th/ \Vithout the mal. (plea toe ci,.,cle one) with affirmative action. people still "sit around and tell me Giovanni, who recently published there's no difference between the Yov,., nome o~ it \Viii oppeor on the ce-rtif•cote onoT' thos-e s-pecial people in youT' live> a compilation of poetry from seven Republican and everyone ebc o. of her previous works. stressed th e there is a difference. and )OU and I importance of political activism and ..,_,,..,.,<>nh. .. Spous-e ... f=T'iend ... f=aculty MembeT'... You,. Local Add"""------have to look at it ," Giovann1 >aid. voting to counter what she called a although she added that her >upport "huge assau lt" on African Am~rican a CeT'titicate ot AppT'eciation [ for the Democrats was .. not about Phone Numbe,._·------progress led by conservatives, both Bill Clinton. because he' s an idiot black a nd white , who Giovanni too." Nome of per~on to be honored o~ 1l will oppeor on certJficote ly ~7.50 OT' ~15.00 called "truly crazy people." Giovanni closed her remarks by "As we stand here in a room like reading ··stardate." a poem that matted ceT'titicate [ Pel"~on·~ relobon to yov ______thi s sayi ng ' here we are.' I say it in tegrates lines from famou~ black again - I hope yo u are belonging to spiritua ls and songs in saluting Pe,.: f=T'iday , May 10 OFf.ce oF Alumn. ond elot.on< among young voters a nd urging essence/ This is a rocket/ Let 's Alumn• ~ oil , Un•v•~·ty oF [).1., ••,.. them to keep up on political issues. ride.'' Giovanni spoke of both Actual s-i-ze: 11" x 8t/?", matted 14" x I( N .... ,.l [)!; IQ716-0>50 De~:~JI n~ ;., Mou tO I ' Panhellenic, IFC, a nd AE¢ present the ..... Philanthropy Volleyball Tournament To Benefit: Chain Sheba Medical Center Saturday, April 27th 8:00am on Harrington Beach SIGN UP All Greek participants wi ll receive Wednesday. April 17th S. points towards Greek Gomes! Greek winners receive on ~ 11 :DOom to 2:00pm H! 122iDI~ !!!!!! Perkins Student Center j.\[1.[!. j.\~~ ~~[!.(G@[MJ~J 6 Players per team $18 per team for further details contact Dina Rosen 837-3253 or lisa Apse! 837-3245 EDITORIAL/LETTERS

Founded in 1882 All-new Greek revue The Greek system, once an outlet for young academics to discuss their lofty ideal among "brothers," seems to have undergone a ScR((..y oAD. I"WE"NT" ~oR ~IDE dra tic change in recent years. I~ CAl<.. Fraternity houses are no longer the beacons of intellectuali sm I • they once were. Instead they are wanna-be atural Lite breweries, ._,, and the modern emphasis fraternities and sororities place on social events is beginning to take its toll on their reputations. With Sigma Kappa kicked off campus for a serious hazing incident and Kappa Alpha brothers narrowly escaping sexual assault charges, the Greek system's image is at an all-time low. ,0 So in comes the ever-lurking pledge ban, a plan in the works for years which would do away with the pledge process completely by I' next fall. If there are no pledges, the Faculty Senate figures, the M£ WANT 1D FLy Greek won't have anyone to haze. I' PLAN£ NO'N A"y . Needle s to say, the Greeks are not happy. And with good reason. o" WAy . IJ This little ban means death to their way of life. Instead of coming .. up with solutions to the problems with the system, our frie ndl y neighborhood bureaucrats made a decision which would, in effect, destroy it. ' And, as we are known to do, The Review boldly condemned this 'I injustice against our Greek friends, and announced our support of allowing the Greeks to work directly with administrators to eradicate their system's ills. And now, with their newly proposed accreditation system waiting in the wings, they have taken our wise counsel and done exactly - that. The rating system- which would rate fraternities and sororities in the area of academics. financial management, university and community relations and service, campus involvement and the pledge program using a point system - may be a beacon of hope LETTERS TO THE EDITOR for the floundering groups. Greeks are insisting the new evaluation system, which is still merely an initial draft. is not a direct result of the pledge ban, but What is Dining Services hiding? merely a "common sense" move toward a better system. In light of Students in the Animal Rights and show, tremendous cruelty being done to word include weakened, worn-out. or run­ the propo a!, however, Dean of Students Timothy Brooks has asked Welfare Coalition have learned about the veal calves. down. When I look o ut of my office on the ban be held off long enough to let the Greeks redeem way veal comes to our plates in the dining A. Did you censor us because the veal Main Street (Elliott Hall) what I see makes themselves. halls. Veal calves, taken from the mothers you serve is not treated the way the flyers me more inclined to use words a long the And it seems this system could provide the vehicle to do just within a day, spend their short lives locked show? If this is the case, no problem -just line of renaissance, burgeoning, that. Simply through its creation, the proposal proves Greeks are in a cage so tight they can' t turn around. help us confirm th at you are not supporting renovations, bustling and even "new,·· finally willing to take responsibility for their own problems and They are not given water to drink; when this cruelty and we'll apologize and go among o th ers. The thrust of the stori es they get thirsty they are forced to eat their home. in side the April 12 issue on pages six and work toward a kinder, gentler community. -liquid gruel so they wi ll gain weight faster. B. Did you censor us because the veal seven is clearly th at something very positive The proposal also represents a move toward fairness. Greek The cage is made of wood without iron you serve is treated in the cruel manner is happening right now on Main Street, organizations will now be evaluated regularly on the basis of a nails. since they wou ld lick the nails to get which the flyers show, and you don't want althoug h the s!Ories were balanced enough folder full of hard facts about their official hazing record, their iron - and the veal industry wants their students to know about it? If you can't even to report that there are some complaints ahd community service projects, their pledge activities, their budget flesh to stay pale. They spend their lives admit to your "customers" the cruelty and concerns. The "something" has been the and their grades, among other things. o longer will reputation anc\ without walking on the grass, without health problems associated with your meals, result of hard work by the local business "· seeing the sun, without their mothers or it is time to stop servi ng them. community, ci ty government, the university rumor rule the Greek universe. They are in for a dose of reality. other animals. To keep these sick animals We hope to create a dialog. Please don't administration and entrepreneur willing to • The regularity vf these checks could, however, be a little more alive, they are fed with an antibiotic oup­ censor student ; answer out question. make an investment in a place that is o ld regular. Once-a-year evaluations are nice, but since we never know passing along all kin ds of chemicals to the e nough to have a very interesting hi story what kind of trouble those rascals could be getting themselves into, people who eat them. The Animal Rights and Welfare Coalition a nd is, and always ha been , a viab-le, twice a year checks could be nicer - since new pledges come in We wanted to share this information with functioning, small town USA Main Streel. ' twice a year. students, many of whom are required to eat "Decrepit" under th e picture is simply the < in the dining halls. We went ''through the Main Street is not decrepit wrong word. Although the proposal doesn' t explicitly take a strong stand on sysoem," asking permission to set up an hazing- it is only addressed once and accounts for only 30 points information table . A pic ture on page one of the April 12 Irene Zych '\ out of 350, allowing an organization who has been investigated for Dining Services censored us. They told issue has a caption that refers to the Arts and Science hazing w receive the top rating of five stars - it may indirectly us we couldn't show 10 of our 12 flyers. "decrepit state of Newark's main strip" City of Newark Council member and discourage an environment in which hazing would take place. Who do they think they are? (Main Street). How the word "decrepit" member of the Board of Directors of the ' An organization whose members' grade point averages measure Well, we have some questions for Dining could be used to describe the area escapes ewark Histori cal Society .. : Services. We are alleging, and our flyers me. My dictionary says the meanings of the ,. up to the univer ity average, that is keeping detailed records of - their pledge activities, beating the streets in the name of the salvation of the human race, and keeping painstakingly accurate books, has a lot less time to pour beer down their pledges' throats and force them to perform sexual acts with farm animals. Picture a world without guns .. But while this propo ed system may be a step in the right direction in the current climate of constant hazing, the Greeks have There's been a lot of talk r.======::;~ monster-truck books. of their confused fathers would disown miles to go before they sleep on this issue. abou t gu n contro l in o u r There wouldn't be any fun- th em. We may want to consider keeping In their effort to prove just how responsible they can be, the country the past few hundred filled recreation c lubs to join guns if this would be th e resull. Greeks may have gone a little too far in chastisin g themselves. The years. Even in the 1780s, like the "Freemen" in Entertainment indu tri es would .go people with white wigs were M ontana. No, they would bankrupt, causing the disintegration of policy, as it is written now, would require all pledges to maintain a a li ttle a nt sy a bo ut the have to come off thei r little Ho llywood. How on earth wo uld Arnold 2.4 GPA to remain in the program. This standard is even tougher overwhelming amoun1 s of farm and have to gel an ac!Ua l Schwarzenegger kill people? Think of it. than the university's and i , in The Review's humble opinion, too clunky rifles that were about job at th e local Arby's. John Wayne would've had to have made a harsh on the poor little pledges. 20 feel long and took well Hunters would probably be a li ving in cons1ru cti on and Clint Eastwood o other organization with as few academic pretensions as the over a day to fire and reload. little upset. No longe r wo uld would be hopelessly mired behind the Greeks have forces its members to maintain GPAs hi gher than the "Jacob," th e white-wigged 218 they be able to outwit a duck drive-thru window a t Arby's with the guy would say to Jacob, Matt Manochio through ski ll and strategy: i.e. Freemen. co n stantl y saying in his university' bare minimum of 2.0. ""olde Barnabus hathe helde sit in a marsh and wait while sandpaper-scratc hed voice, "Go ahead Give your elves a break, Greeks. Grade (at least passable ones) up ye o ldc spirilte shoppe '------~ blowing a kazoo. N o, duck mister, make my apple pie ." '· are a personal matter, and cert::! inl y none of a social organization 's laste nighte wi th e a mu skette and killed and deer pop ul at io ns would boom. And, oh my , Civil War movies would t bu iness. ye o lde owner. Shalle we conside re Airliners would probably crash with more look just like "Braveheart." A bunch of . So, with a few minor exceptions, we giv e our comrades, the banninge gun s?" frequency because flocks o f wayward weird guys runnin' around, sc reaming ar)d .. Greeks, our fu ll support in their new crusade to save themselves. And th at's when it all stan ed. ducks get clogged in the engine. And the chopping heads off. Wait a sec, there Since the Revol uti o nary War, g uns forests of America would be littered with wouldn't have been a Civil War. Qr l: Good luck, guys, because it could be a long haul. hav-e multiplied in America like NHL those jagged deer a ntlers because !hey World Wars or Vi etnam for that matter. ! -K.C. hockey teams . Almost every sta te has wouldn't be hangi ng in bars. Oliver Stone wouldn't be able to m a~e the m in bulk. However, no t every state Those crazy decathlons at the Olympics movies! Except for "The Doors." makes gun-buyi ng a task-free chore. would have to be changed . In stead o f People who make holster would lose I have been do ing a lo t o f in-depth their jobs. Superman would ne ~ d research on this topi c and made up the something to be faster than. Stand-offs 'in Guest Columns following fac1s cause I couldn ' t find the old Wes t would have ended anything conc rete . In s tates like Texas How would America indecisively. How boring. 1 The Review welcomes guest editorial columns from students and other a nd M o ntana, you are is sued a gun at function without action Is this what we want as a society? Ho\v members of the university community, birth or if you s uccessfully ride a bull would America function without action Columns should be 500-750 words in length, and be relevant to the affairs of longer than I 0 seconds in a rodeo. movies or action movies or action figures? Guns are need ~d the university, the nation or the world. - In my home state of New Jersey, gun in the country to produce box office 1 If interested, call Gary Geise at 831-2771, or e-mail to [email protected]. acquisitions aren' t as easy. Put it thi s figures? Guns are revenues and the newest steroid-using way, Ned Beatty had an easier time needed in the country foreigner who can shoot people. These \il-e nego tialing with !he hillbillies in to produce box office the practical uses for guns. Nobody gets The Review "Deliverance" !han New Jersey residents hun in action movies (except for Brandon do negotiating with th e State Police to revenues and the newest Lee, he isn ' t doing too well). We can't buy guns. ban guns. Really, we can' t. EdHor in Chief: Junmy P. Miller Assistant Features Editors: I've seen columnists in !he past drone steroid-using foreigner I do of course realize that histqry Executive Editor: Heather Moore Mochele Besso Managing Features Editors: Matt Manochio on and on with stalistics about how guns who can shoot people would be a lot different without guns. Leanne Milway Assistant News Editors: are great, or how th ey are the scourge of Presidents and prime ministers would ~e Lara Zeises Lisa A. Bartell humanity. I don't intend to do either. I alive because an assassin's bullet Managing News Editors: Stefanie Small Craig L Black Assistant Photography Editors: just want to inform readers what a world running 26 miles, swimming the English wouldn't have crossed their path. Curious Knstm Collins Christine Fuller would be like without guns. Channel with your hands cuffed, and chi ldren would be alive because ttiey Kom Walker Domimc Savini Here's the scenario. You get Eric Idle shooting some ridiculous bull 's eye from wouldn't have their parent's gun to Editorial Editor: Gary Getse Josh Withers Copy Desk Chief: Boll Jaeger Assistant Sports Editors: from Monty Python to walk around with a 500 feet away, you could do something discover, and drive-byes would be ju-st Photography Editor: Ahsa Colley Rob Kalesse big wheelbarrow in ghettos and suburbs gun-free! Like bear wrestling. that. Managing Sports Editors: Kelley Pritchard I; all over America and shout, "Bring out The toy industry would take a drastic Despite the silliness presented in thi s Enc He1sler Copy EdHors: M 1chael Lew1s Robert Annengol Beth Ashby your guns!'' AK-47s and Uzi-9mms will setback. Face it, every action figure on the column, I firmly believe it is my right as a . Art Editor: Moke Wurman Jody Berwick Colleen McCreight come flying out of broken windows and market today is some sort of distorted responsible American to own a gun ' I Entertainment Editor: Peter Bothum Leshe McNaor Ntkki Toscano L Features Editor: Lo a lntrabartola Senior StaiT Reporters: land in the wheelbarrow below. America mutant with names like " Vomit Face" don't own one, and I can' t stress the wo~d News Editors: Oakland Childers Kathy Lackovic is so law-abiding! who have guns to kill the more hideously "responsible'' enough. But there will Kelly Brosnahan loll Cortnght Ad''ertising Director: Tamara L Denlinger There would be dancing and rejoicing distorted mutants with. This would have always be crazy men who gun kids down, Scott Goss Randt Hecht Business l\1anager: Cathenne Hopkmson Mark Jolly Gary Epstein in America reminiscent of the time to stop. Boys would have to start playing people who have a death wish and des{re Vanessa Rothschtld Leo Shane Ill Advertising Graphics Designer: Glenn Stevens Dorothy left Oz to see the wizard and she with "Barbies" and "My Little Ponies." to whack a public officials and there will Dan Steinberg Alyson Zamkoff had thousand s of ecstatic Munchkins This would undoubtedly cause little always, always be action movies. i Assistant Entertainment Editors: Office and Mailing Address: Ketth Wmer 150 Student Center. ewark, DE 19716 thrusting around uncontrollably with joy boys to be more docile by learning how to Enn Ruth Business (302) 831-1397 and euphoria. Oh happiness. do their nails, and deal with the trials and Mart Marwchio is an assistant features Advertostng (302) 831-1398 ews!Ednonal (302) 83 1-277 I Gun stores would have to think of tribulations of a relationship with Ken. editor for The Review. Send £-mail to FAX (302) 8J 1- I 396 somethin g new to sell, possibly country Boys would be calmer from the get-go, heyace@ udel. edu. albums, fishing supplie~ or, how-to-build- the crime rate would go down, and most OPtED April 16, 1996 . THE REVIEW. A13 [Scratching, belching & spitting A pos'tcard portrait from Fla.

: There she is. The most are jerks because they can announces the arrival of that ever­ Crystal's office is in the back of a hero er-sized eyeglasses ~~=:::;;;;;;;;;;;::===::::;-1 prove her point she I beautiful woman in the do anything they want" attractive loogey. And don't forget to large, white Chevy van. It's a nice and pushing back a loose pulls out a few bundles ' world. She's tall and arti cle. I'm far from a expectorate that fine mass of phlegm office with finished wood shelving str<.nd of dirty blond hai r and places them side by 1 s lender, with long, woman's libber. I'm a that you just hacked up. running along the sides. Right now in one clean movement side on the office flo6r. j flowing blond hair and a mere observer, that's all MMMMmmmm!!! I'm telling you­ she's stopped on a job, so there's no of her hand. "I need to It does make for an l smile that could knock -one who likes to stand if that gourmet dinner and tirimisu fourth wall. It's retracted into the always be doing attractive display. · your socks off. She's the back, enjoy the view, and dessert didn't satisfy her appetite, your ceiling. Sometimes it gets so hot something." But as the The Hilton doesn't : girl every guy dreams of, get a good laugh every hocker sure will. Even though she inside her office that after she's been time for school stock "boy-girl carJs,"· : and best of all - she's . now and then. And when probably just swallowed hers - that's driving around for awhile she has to approached, even s he the trad"e name for ' walking straight toward I began my investigation what girls have to do in public - open up the back and wait a few thought she was working cards with sexually j you. Her hips sway Missed Manners on men' s and women's she'll be darned glad that you shared minutes before going in . But not too too much - and she still Commentary explicit pictures. Like gracefully side-to-side; Tanuny Panaia social graces, I got a good yours with her. often, because you get used to the had one son at home - the one of seven people l it's almost as if she's'------' laugh indeed. There is, however, one social faux Florida heat, especially in the St. so she quit her other jobs Todd Frankel (six guys and a girl) walking on air. You I especially have to pas for women that I just don't buy. Petersburg area, where Crystal does and become a postcard L------~ lined up on the beach I catch a whiff of her amazing perfume, laugh when I think about some of the Why in the heck is it okay for guys to most of her business. wholesale.r, profiting between two showing off their backsides, with the , and you melt. All of a sudden, you experiences that I've had with my guy sit around and burp the alphabet, while Crystal is a postcard wholesaler. and three cents on each one sold. caption "Having Fun in Florida: make direct eye contact. And just as friends. Not because I get angry at the the ladies have to get sick to their She sells the postcards to the stores Not a bad racket. But it's tough. Guess Which One's Me?" Or the one you go to say hello - she scratches things they can get away with in public stomachs because they can't release so they can sell them to the tourists. She has to fight to keep her 400 with a woman dressed only in a herself. but because they can do things that their excess air? I'm sorry, but this is And tourists are to Florida as big clients. "As a small business you helmet and boots on a motorbike, : Does this sound like a typical girls just aren't allowed to. one instance where I draw the. line and businesses are to Delaware. She sells need to be constantly signing up new atop "When Riding Always Wear 1 scenario out of your wildest fantasy? A few weeks ago, I was leaving the say, girls, belch away! I'm <> II for the basic postcards for 7-112 cents accounts." she says. " Lots of the Protection." Crystal also runs into I When is the last time you actually saw bars with one of my guy friends, and public belching; I just haven't gotten it each in bundles of fifty. The fancier little shops in St. Pete close within problems with the sex paraphernalia I a beautiful girl reach right down there he excused himself to go to the amended to the "Appropriate Things ones, like the puzzle-postcards or the six months of opening so through no stores she stocks. Sometimes they I and scratch herself? In fact, have you bathroom ... in the parking lot, no less. to do in Public" Constitution yet. But postcard fold-outs, are bundled in fault of my own, I need to keep take offense to one of her postcard • seen any girl do that recently? I And as I stood there shaking my leg it's on my list of things to do, so if tens and go for betwe~n 50-75 cents replacing the closed shops." fold-outs. It was entitled "Little seriously doubt it. The fact is, girls just and ruining my kidney~, it suddenly there's anyone out there who's with each. By the time you and I set our She doesn' t stop to talk. She is Black Book: For Guys Only" with don't have the same freedoms in dawned on me why there's never a me on this one, I could use your sun-bleached eyes up them, they've constantly pulling cardboard boxes naked women and another one for public as guys do. line in the men's bathroom. They all support. been marked-up between 200-400 from th e shelves and removing women. "I don' t know how you feel The whole scratching issue is go outside 1 Girls, on the other hand, Again, I'm not fighting for equal percent. different bundles, all the while about all of this, but they called me something I've wondered about for a have to wait hours in line because it 's rights here. Believe you me, I have no She used to juggle three jobs, checking the list that the Hilton gift sexist. Sexist! Because, I guess, of long time. I understand that just not acceptable for us to "squat'' in intention of hocking up a big loogey, primarily working as an assistant shop manager gave to her. " He likes the homosexuals. Well, I was like "adjusting" needs to be done, but there public 1 But that's not to say that it's scratching myself, or urinating in physical education teacher, "which me. He knows I 've got a good look I just stock these, I don' t make are ways to do this discreetly. That's never been done before. Why do you public (not all at once, anyway). I'm you know doesn't pay very well. selecti on. He knows what I've got them up." what they make pockets and public think they moved the Homecoming simply observing socially acceptable And I am very good at spending and he knows what my competition Crystal is finally done stocking restrooms for! And I understand that tailgates to the middle of a big com habits between the sexes. Wouldn't it money." Then she met a man who has." the Hilton's order. She will fill the every now and then, guys get the most field anyway? be funny to live in a society where offered her a job part-time driving She boasts about her selection of gift store's racks with her colorful irritating itches that have to be dealt At last restroom there were no boundaries to what men around with him while he delivered postcards. On the store racks, it's wares. She's in a rush. But what are with immediately l forgot - girls accommodations for both men and and women could do in public? Then postcards to retailers. That was last important to have a good color the most popular postcards? "The don' t ever have that problem. I have to women ... how nice. again, some guys might not like the Spring and when school let out for scheme. Most cards, especially those ones with dolphins, manatees or any '-tn: totally honest here ... the simple And here's a little bit of advice for idea of their fantasy gid scratching the Summer the owner wanted her to of her competitor at the Hilton, have animal," she calls over her shoulder. truth is, we itch there too! I know it's all of you guys who are planning a herself as she hocks up a big loogey. I try it full-time. She did and made as a green or blue tone to them. It' s all "Plus ones with babies." shocking, but it' s true. nice, romantic dinner to really impress don't know, call me crazy ... much in one summer as she did the water or dolphins. But she mixes it Before you read any further, let's a girl that you like. At some point in whole school year. ''I' m not one of up. She has postcards of ripe oranges Todd Frankel is an ediwrial colwnnist just establish right now that this is not, the evening, be sure to make that Tammv Panaia is an editorial columnist those people that likes not having and stunning beach sunsets, lush for The Review. for The Review. by any means. ~o rne feminist, ··guys heinous sound in your throat that something to do,'" she says adj usting palm leaves and golden beaches. To :;"Why The Review sucks as if your list wasn't long enough already

I got to play "fly on the wall" the Perhaps the most disgruntling that not all of mine make the grade. It recycle. Networking to r.:======::;-, Review was sincere in their paper is that it is put out entirel y by , other day, and watch The Review aspect of The Renew is the staff is a simple matter of doing one's develop more and better efforts, they would try a student . Students make the call as to ... ·eJections for next year's editor in chief. editorial column. Every issue, all of homework. If I am thinking about sources and contacts little harder. They are all what is written about, who writes it. : Xhree people ran for the hotseat, and The Review's staff comes together to writing a pro-choice column, for might be a proactive too quick, when asked, to and how the writing will be done. . .)Vhile none of them performed any vote on a topic and then a stance on example, I will stop by the library. or way of dealing with thi s. point out that they have There is no input on this decision­ ,_oratorical miracles, the election that particular topic. Usually, the staff hop onto the World Wide Web and The staff editorial is invited people in the past, making process from outsiders. That is ,_. process was such that The Review editorial will be based on one of the research some statisti cs on abortion an opportunity for The and all too slow to to say that administrators, Public itself was discussed quite a bit. Each news stories in the current issue. Form that will support my th esis. All too Review to have a recognize why many Safety, Professors, et. al., often are as , candidate gave a five- to I 0-minute a mental picture of a score of people often, The Review doesn' t do this. personality. What people simply wouldn't displeased with The RevieH' as 1 presentation, and then three rounds of loungir.g haphazardly in chairs, and They will sit around and debate, using personality does the feel c0mfortable in The students, and they can' t do much about questions from all the staffers and vehemently debating issues they know expectations and stereotypes as their paper choose to display One-Eyed Though Review office after having it either. , •current editors ensued. little about. As funny as it is to guiding forces . twice a week? That of an their organization scorned, That is my one true complaint about , The Review is often criticized, and imagine, it can be funnier to watch. The general format is that The uninformed complainer. Bill Werde misrepresented, or ignored The Review: It could be .o much more. . J with good reason. They are a group of The problem with this is that it is Review will formulate their criticism Get some facts. on a regular basis. The fact If I had the money and the equipment •. people who, quite often, are writing far too easy for a roomful of journalists and then make some Everyone is entitled to an opinion, but remaim that thr bold majority of that The Review had, I would trive to

1 .flbout topics with which they are to sit around, and without knowing all recommendations. So grab a seat, if you want people to respect yours, Review staffers are white English answer the needs of an apathetic completely unfamiliar. I recall a line of the facts, or ml'st of the facts, be Review staffers. As a columnist who then base it on some knowledge. majors, and this sad homogeneity campus with an informative, creative, from an argument I had with a former extremely caitical of other h·as watched you fronl .the inside all Perbaps the one aspect where The continues to present itself clearly in the cutting-edge paper. Delaware's Vi ual Review editor: If Review staff organizations. I have sat around and year long. this column is dedicated to Review IS lacking in the saddest of pages of each issue. Communication program is among the members were actually around the watched a poorly informed editorial helping you become a paper that the ways is diversity. When I looked at the Despite these apparent criticisms, best in the country, yet the graphics in campus living life instead of just staff criticize DUSC, the Center fo r masses will no longer love to hate. sea of faces present during the The Review is a paper to be proud of. The Review are uninspired at best. The writing about it, their perspective Black Culture, fraternities, sororities This is my staff editorial for you. election, it looked like a Rush Few schools can boast a paper as Business and Technical Writing would probably be different. The fact and, of course, the university For starters, pay closer attention to Limbaugh audience: white like an technically impressive as ours, and Th e program of the English department o f the matter is that putting out a administration. While many at The your sports writers. They don't wait Alaskan winter. These are the faces Review consistently wins collegiate trains their students in layout, design college paper the size and structure of Review feel that they are fulfilling their for the game to be over, and then call that will be deciding what is news and paper awards for its efforts. and editing, and while there is an The Review takes a lot of time. The journalistic duty by making these players to see what happened. They what is drivel. These are the faces that The people that work to put out two absence of these students in the office, editor and the executive editor each campus-improving recommendations, go, and write about what they just will be sharing their opinions in next issues a week are students, just like the appearance of the paper continues spend an obscene amount of time in they fai I to realize that these watched. Reporters need to involve semester's staff editorials. And these you or me. Contrary to popular belief, to be less than it could probably be. the office. If they are awake and they sometimes faulty and unfounded themselves a bit more in the si tuations faces are far too homogenous. they do not write for the paper ju t to So li sten up, Review. With the aren't at class, then they are at The criticisms have impt~cts on those who about which they are writing. Granted. The Review has tri ed. piss you off. They are learning to election of your new editors, and a Review. · are being scrutinized. The Review can At the risk of sounding like a They have talked to the Black Student become journalists. The atmosphere new staff soon to follow, th e .. ; I am hard-pressed to identify many write a piss-poor staff editorial column radical, I would also suggest writing Union and to the Interfraternity that is bred in The Review office, opportunity for improvement is here. _•students who have no complaints and then quickly forget about it. The about current events. so that students Council and picked themselves up a where student editors and reporters You are among the best and the about The R eview. All student organization that is maligned may then could pick up a copy of The Review couple of columnists. They have work side-by-side into the early brightest -put out a paper that proves '• 'organizations tend to loathe the paper: be left to suffer becau~e of it. and feel like they were reading a notified these organizations that they morning hours, isn't much different it. : the consensus is that The Review is What bothers me the most about newspaper and not a history book. want to "diversify'· and could they from that of any other student •always looking to stir up controversy. this is the fact that I am a columnist. I Reporters need to work harder at please send 'orne writers. But when organization. There is camaraderie, Bill Werde is presidem of the rrhe students that are burned along the know what is involved in writing a finding stories and spend less time history shows a long li st of hurt di ssension and a hell of a lot of laughs. lmetft"Cllemity Council and writes One­ Eyed Thoughts for evety Tuesday's issue. way are given little consideration. good one. and will be the first to admit finding old News Journal stories to feelings and bad relations, if Th e The most impressive aspect of the Send e-mail to shadon·@udel.edu

~~~Water conservation not worth a dam In a suspicious world, trust blossoms spec ie and many waterfowl. ,_ 1 , Over Spring Break I r;:======il Longtail salamander. The In the '90s, the concept of trust makes it big, tho e r.:======:;-1 interrelated. A courteous ·: ~pen t two nights camped natural beauty of the area Extensive dredging would unavoidably might seem to be foreign to many. albums may be worth a and polite individual Is J\ISt outs1de of Smoky would be converted into a alter the mini-ecosystem now in place. There is, of course, an age-old debate lot on the collectors' much more likely to be , f,-1ountain National Park, human-made park. The Water Resources Agency's about whether people are intrinsically market someday. I trusted than someone who a,t the foot of Fontana While it is di sturbing plan takes into consideration the good or bad, but even those who have bought multiple copies of tends towards rudeness. r;>am .. Fontana Dam is an that we would sacrifice county's water needs up to the year faith in human nature take measures to "Dusted'" with hopes that In addition, trust and _. ~:-ve-mspir. mg structure. one of the most pristine 2040, thus projecting almost 50 years protect themselves. There are so many the Blossoms would courtesy are essenti al Its towenng concrete areas left in New Castle into the future. Surely this is wise long­ horror stories repeated on the news make it big, and I got factors in any relationship. ~ facade fi lis the valley, County to such a project, term planning' But what about the year and in conversati ons that no one, it lucky. It amazes me how many 'l ~.a pping huge volumes of reality stares us in the 2041? One reservoir will not solve our would seem, would tru st a total Fast- forward to this people stay in n;water in the winding face: New Castle County's problems. Soon we will need another stranger. month. I mentioned o n Minor Details relationships even though _r~servoi r behind it. At Redemption Song water resources will soon and another. We should not be In the last few months, however, the same mailing list that Patrick Kaser they cannot trust their night, the lights lining its Laura White be unable to meet the addressing problems in the water I've seen indications that trust may be the Gin Blossoms were significant other. Once , rim assert its presence, .______J growing demand. As supply - rather we should be on the rebound in our generation. I coming to UD, and asked trust has been broken, challenging the sparkling Milky Way evidenced by the prolonged drought addressing problems in the water mentioned on an Internet mailing list if there were any readers who wanted repairing rhe damage may take years, ' spread above it. However, despite its last summer, seasonal fluctuations demand. that I had three copies of a rare tickets. Several said yes, so I or may never be done. Doubts will )Jreath-taking size, Fontana Dam is have the potential 10 constitute serious True - science and technology can cassette and would be willing to part purchased tickets for them and told remain, in security will remain, and Ugly, standing stark and bare against emergencies. Water is the foundation lower demand through the with one of them. I took several offers, them they could pay for them when many questions starting in "Wpat if .. . ~ r,ie natural beauty surrounding it. The of our existence. We use it to wash, development of low-flow devices and and agreed to sell it to the highest they arrived for the concert. I can't say " will be asked. , :'Vaters of the wild river which once drink, cook, and even baptize our industrial processes which require less ' . . bidder. As he was in California, I was for sure that these people will come to The trends are contradictory. .c~rved llS path freely through the children. If we take chances with our 1 water. However, serious conservation curious as to how we'd work out the show, that they will repay me; I Individuals with character and virtues , mountains are now prisoner to this water supply, we are gambling with requires a new mindset. As long as we payment, but he preempted discussion know little except their e-mail are respected, yet the average person looming dam, rationed out slowly so as our lives. So it seems that New Castle continue to solve our problems by just by sending a money order for the addresses and names. For some behaves in ways that don 't lead to ~o supply energy to the Tennessee County's decision to lind an additional finding new ways to further extract the agreed-upon amount. strange reason, though, I'm trusti ng garnering respect. Most people want '· V,alley Authority. Fontana Dam is a back-up water source before it is too earth's resources, little attention will be That's kind of astounding to me. them. relationships, whether they be , monument to one of humankind's late is indeed wise. On the other hand, diverted to alternative research. We Consider that all he knew about me Dedicated Gin Blossoms fans friendships or romantic in nature, , victories in its struggle to I contend that once again we are failing f~ mporary need to make reducing our demands a was my e-mail address and my name, aren't Deadheads, but the mailing list where the other person will treat them .w;mtrol nature. ''Tempor~" because if to address the true root of the problem priority. Why do we only impose which I could have lied about. He is called "Strangers We Call Friends," well and with respect. Tolerating ,o11r struggle continues as it has for -once again we are attempting to use water-use restrictions in times of didn't know that I actually had the and the atmosphere of trust might anything less creates an atmosphere ;centuries, it will ultimately fail. We our scientific knowledge to exploit drought? Obviously we are unable to tapes, and he no way to know that I seem somewhat exceptional. But the where one may never be respected. , Gannot solve our problems solely by nature and bail us out of a sticky face the fact that our lifestyles are would send the tape. He had no way to people on the mailing li st are just a Which way wi ll we tum as a society? harnessing science and technology to si tuation. entirely too wasteful. We continue to trace the money, since he sent a subgroup of your average college Which way will you turn as an , tfUTle nature. Nature has its limits; its Certainly, in this day of heightened water our lawns and take daily half­ money order instead of a personal population, representing all types of individual? Ask yourself if you are a ecosystems are fragile and its resources ecological awareness and green hour showers. And ultimately, unless 1 check. He trusted me with no real people, and the experiences don't stranger that could be called a friend. ';

I know what you're thinking. What does a fish know, right? Well, I may not know much, but I do keep my ears open. Like just the other day. I overheard a couple of students talking. Found out that Apple is offering incredibly low campus prices on Macintosh· computers. Found out that a MacNis a really easy way to get up and running on the Internet. I even found out that more students are using a Mac to share ideas on the Internet than any other computer. Boy, what I would give to get Performa· 6214 Power Mac· 75001100 LasetWriter" 41600 PS 8MB/1GB, CD, I') monitor 16MB/ 1GB. CD, 15" monitor $730 I W1th its RISC processor, you can easily out of this stupid castle and Its multimedia capabiUties will With its amazing multimedia pnnt up to 'I pages per mmute. start surfing the Net. show )'OU why the Mac ·IS one capab1lities you can easily ~~ Andw1th its of the most advanced oomput­ bring your work to life. With amazing graphic ers. And with built-in CD-ROM budt-in stereo sound, v1deo capabili ues. it ~.g~ drive, mouse, keyboard and graphics and animation- allows you all the software )'OU'II need, it its whn'Our work wdl never and your work ~-~&makes it easier to brmg f '(~~~~ look or sound the · to make ~ better ..:...:..:...:. __ .c.::.:..,:.~ · work to bfe. _..:.: same again. impressiOn For more infomzalion ~isil liS 011 the ln/er;,e/ a/ hlipJ!bed.info.apple.coml

Save big on a Mac: For further information visit the Technology Solutions Center 002 Smith Hall or call831-8895. For ordering &pick-up visit the Computer Warehouse at the General Services Building, 831-3530.

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Interested in being a senior class officer? Registrations are currently being accepted for those interested in holding one of the following offices: PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER FUNDRAISING OFFICER

Here's Ho\N! Senior Class Officer Application Form *Students must be currently classified as Name Office desired juniors with an expected graduation date Major GPA of May 1997. Local Address *Complete the form or stop by the office Localghone Home Address of Alumni and Univer~ity Relations or Home Phone Student Activities and pick up a form. I *Return form to the office of Alumni and Attatch Uf!. to onE additional [!_agE for thE following Camgus Activities University Relations by April 25. *Look in the REviEw on May 3rd for candidate selection information. *Vote via UD7-VOTE during May 3-9. Other Interests and Exgeriences

*Class officers will be announced during Why do you want to be a senior class officer? Senior Day celebration on May 10 (3-6 ' pm on Old College.) ' Steppers Track scores put on a at Delaware sweaty show Invitational at the Bob page B12 page B3

Tuesday, Aprill6, 1996

Fashion Focus Formal but funky Spring fashion orders up vintage dresses with a side of fun

BY MELISSA MEISEL ular ' 60s sleeveless '·shift'' is also a Srajf Reporter great shape, classically elegant and Flowers. freedom, fresh breezes, quite versatile. fun and formals are all enticing Echoing the sli m line of the dresses aspects of piing. As the season slides are skinny trench jackets. With a slight forward to summer. let us discard con­ flair and knee-length cut, this stream­ fining, stuffy winter gear and don our lined jacket can top off any dress with springtime frocks' And with formal p1zzazz. time arriving, now's your chance to let This season's materials are more your feminine chann shine through liberating than winter's knits and with funky new spring threads. wools. Silk shantung, an iridescent Spring '96 fonnal wear is more silk with a slight linen-like, nubby tex­ than just the little black dress. With ture, has become the base for most the general trend of high fashion lean­ spring ensembles . Satin, lace, nylon ing toward a more eclectic style, this and polyester-blend also lighten the season you - the formal fashion essence of material. seeker- can plunge into a whole new The aesthetic influence of succu­ dimension of fashion. lent warm weather fruits impact upon This season's shapes are offered in the new hot colors. Beyond the prima­ a wide variety. There is literally some­ ry colors lie the "synthetics" -simu­ thing for everyone. Hemlines fall lated neon colors with a toned-down from micro-mini to knee-length to version of '80s fluorescents. Fuschia, floor-sweeping. Re-emerging is the tangerine orange, turquoise and acid tunic dress, a vintage wonder with an green (the exact color of a Sour-Apple open neckline and an A-line cut that Charms Blo-Pop) are a fresh flair in .. ~ flatters figures. Jersey dresses offer contrast to the standard "neutrals" ~ .. the casual-yet-dressy look, offering a (navy. black, and tan). Paint-box pas- . simple tank cut, falling in a straight . line to the feet. The continuously pop- see FASHION page B4

This spring, formal wear is more than just the little black dress. At left: Sandy Bean, a senior, exits with confidence in an acid-green lace shift with a light-blue skinny trench, both from the Salvation Army on Elkton Road. At right, Stacie Czirjak, also a senior, steps out with shine in a turquoise, glitter-knit tank dress, snatched from the racks of the Warehouse in Paramus, N.J. Photos by Christine Fuller. Angry Old Man Joel offers much talk, little music

BY PETER BOTHUM came from curious myself, 'What is days (he never went to class; the clubs were Enurrainment Editor fans who wanted to that musi c say­ open until 4 a.m.) or his brief encounter with : w;ile leaning back into one of the know the background ing? What is the a 15-year-old Whitney Houston, there was "a • ultra-uncomfortable blue chairs at behind his most pop­ emotion that's in little music" too. By the way, Joel is still kick­ the Bob Carpenter Center ular songs. One eager there?'" ing himself for brushing aside Houston - Thursday night, it's a little hard to believe fan wanted to know Joel is current­ who is still one of the premier female pop that rock legend Billy Joel is actually going where the inspiration ly working on si ngers in the world - when she asked to ing !o be here in Newark. for ··scenes From An writing his own a song with him. • Not that there's anythirg wrong with Italian Restaurant," classical music, Yes, Billy Joel did play at the Bob .bive, Weezer, Radiohead. Belly or Lenny offofthe 1977album which he said has Thursday night. For the handful of songs th at Kravitz. Even geezers like Steve Miller and "The Stranger: · came always been hi s he performed in their entirety, Joel shifted Wynonna- who will appear at the Bob this from. first love. He from the metallic-sounding synthesizer to the fl.IOnth- can till put on a decent show. Before revealing recounted prac­ grand piano on the right side of the stage. But Joel is famous. World famous. his source, the 4 7- tici ng Beethoven "She's Got A Way" was ju st as sweet and year-old Joel strolled and other classi­ compelling as it was when it first appeared on See review of Billy Joel's latest, on over to his mas­ cal artists on his 1981 's "Songs In The Attic." "Famous Last a. three-disc boxed set, page B3. sive, souped-up key­ piano while hi s Words;· from Joel's last album "River Of board which mom sat and lis­ Dreams," also rolled and gathered a soulful elicited a barrage of tened in the other momentum with Joel going solo on piano. The esteemed Piano Man was in town as applause from the room. She knew When Joel reached back to the break­ a part of his tiny '·non-concert'' tour of select sold-out Bob - and classical music through "An Innocent Man" for the first colleges. The event, dubbed 'An Evening of launched into each by ear, he said, verse of " Uptown Girl," he had the already Questions and Answers ... and a Little different section of but she couldn't mesmerized crowd in his hands. One audi­ Music,'' offered a sufficient amount of the the collage-like song. tell if he was ence member said she had heard he "could­ first, a surprising lack of the second and a He said it started out playing the right n't and wouldn't perform" th e song written THE REVIEW I Christine Fuller di sappointing dearth of the latter. as the song's upbeat notes or not. for Brinkley, and Joel proved her wrong. He Joel filled most of his three-hour long lec­ middle portion, as "THIS SHIT IS GREAT!" Rock living legend/ part-time classical composer "I would play stretched his worn vocal chords up to the ture with interesting stories and anecdotes "The Ballad of Billy Joel who admitted he got into music to pick up girls ... and it worked. one song a differ- seemingly unreachable key needed for the about touring, writing music and where the Brenda and Eddie.'' "Scenes From An Italian Restaurant" is about ent way every song and then quit j ust before the soprano, • ideas fo r certain songs came from. "'The Ballad of Brenda and Eddie' was writ­ day. She couldn 't tell the difference," he said. reminiscing about all our old heroes." Frankie Yalli-inspired chorus. But before the former Angry Young Man ten about the people who were the hero couple Joel also di sclosed hi songwriting technique '"Who's that?' she would ask. ' Uh, that's But by far the evening's hi ghligh t was the began, he laid down a few house rules: no in high school," Joel said. "I thought the most for the many die-hards on hand. He said he Beethoven again,' I would reply. 'That's the, uh . expected finale of "Piano Man," in which autographs (''I'd prefer shaking someone's important thing in the world was to be like second movement.''' almost always writes the music first. Joel blew away on a strapped-on harmonica hand"), no tapes (''!' m tired of getting them. "And then the process of writing for me is Oh, and besides the numerous tell-all, while pounding o ut the oh-so-memorable sued") and try not to make too many "I went to my high school's 20th year unrevealing stories. like the first time Joel chords. Joel had served the fans at this "non­ listening to the music and try ing to figure out requests ("I used to do that job''). reunion to see what these people looked like. met hi s ex-wife Christie Brinkley (he said hi s concert" with a slice of the live brilliance he what is encoded in the mu~ic," he sa1d. "I ask The majority of the eveni ng's questions The most popular people looked like crap. tongue fell out on the floor) , or hi s high school was once capable of in a real one. • I There's no place like home {pages, that is) BY AMY SEAVEY ing - from soap operas to beer to http://www.ecl.udel.edul-edlow. Staff Reporter photos of you and your friends. "At the beginning, you have a The words "under construction" The World Wide Web is a huge whole bunch of ideas of what you can describe many places around the database and an open forum for the want to do with your page," Edlow university from the Smith free exchange of information and says. "But you only end up doing a Overpass to the Main Street Galleria ideas, and students at the university little bit because you don' t know how - but some students have their own are taking advantage of thi s to display to do some things," like animation, construction sites ... on the Internet. their creativity on the Web. which is the skill Edlow most recent­ Having a homepage can be over­ ly learned. whelming at first, says senior comput­ He likens designing a homepage to er science major Aaron Edlow, adding having a nair for clothing. that his page is constantly under con­ ·'You might have a certain style for struction. He is always adding graph­ awhile and then it changes," he says. These sites, or homepages, are ics, animation and sound to his page "Over time you get a new idea and places on the World Wide Web where as he learns how. His homepage can you add things here or take things any one person, group or corporation be accessed through "Netscape away. Eventually you end up being Pholo llluSiralion by Ayis Pyrros can place information about them­ Navigator," which is available for use happy with it .. . hopefully." lunior Jamie Leader's homepage (http://www.ecl.udel. edu/-leader) includes li nks to a page with selves or anything they find interest- at any on-campus computing site at 'tarot card readings, a list of her favorite Broadway shows and pictures of her with friends. see WEB page 8 4 B2 • THEREV EW . Aprill6, 1996

Stray TrackS Th e Buzz I G H T Break out the grits; Wright's latest What you really want to know We know, we know. Sometimes The has that down-home country feel Buzz can seem like a gigantic black hole, LOST HIS STING sucking in readers (the few that actual ly Right in the Middle of It country music because it makes her crazy and "it do tune in) and spinning them 'round and He used to be coo!. He used to be Chely Wright drives him wild." 'round . The Buzz can be confusi ng, con­ wild. He was in The Police, man. Polygram Records The next song, "The Love That We Lost," takes a fo unding and even controlling. So what in the world has happened to Rating: t'r~h'f completely different direction by focusing on a We know where you sleep. Sting? Since the fantastic 1985 album long-time married couple who discover they don 't But we here at The Buzz would like to ''Dream of the Blue Turtle ," the pop BY EMILY HAHN have the same relationship they once shared. give our readers a little guide. Think of icons' songwriting quality has been Staff Rqxm~r and Company 5:30. 7 A Famil) Thing 8:30 Ed Okonowiez The style of the book is refreshing. Readers find them: istic and will limit your success. your best at all times . Exe<-u tive Decision 5:45. 8 15 Flirting With Disaster 6. Myst and Lace Publishers selves sitting in on a new paper- tyle interview in which each : 8 Rating: "''f<...'r ~r'C'c wi tness retells their expe riences with the upematural in vivid Taurus (Apr. 20-May 20) Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) detai l. Regal Peoples Plaza 13 (834-8510) Give yo urse lf more time to accom­ You can work we ll with others thi s BY EVA MARQUISEE Readers fee l the uneasiness of the eyewimes es as they (Show umes good through Thurs .. Apnl I I James & 'The Giant Peach I. 4. 7. 935 Flirting With plish routine tasks thi s week because week. Do not hesitate to share your SuiflReponer retell tales that have often been scoffed at by friends and Disasting Las Vegas 7. 9:30 and exciting early in the week. You and thi s should enable you to tape recording proving the allowed you to have out-of­ must make sure to brin g all your tools improve your past performance dra­ lamp that turned itself on and body experiences and predict and be fully prepared. matically. off without help from human future events. would you uti­ hands was real. lize the chair's powers? Or Nor did he try to locate the give the chair to those best dresser which harbors a mir­ prepared to use it, or sell the ror providing such terrifying thing as soon as possible to A. "He was so c;rooked, he could o. "You visions that it nearl y drove avoid others who might wish one co llege student mad. to acquire the chair's power at Okonowicz only records what some people swear to be the any cost? eat soup with a corkscrew." smell like the truth . He does this in all the stories except one, 'The Don't worry, the answers to these questions won 't be too Anniversary Ring," a fictional story in which Okonowicz uses fri ghtening. his own creative talents to fashi on a story of horror and If Stephen King or Clive Barker cause you lO tum all the toasted intrigue. lights on and barricade yourself behind the kitchen door so Many people like the fictional story better than the real you have access to a variety of kitchen knives, don't worry ­ B. "I feel ones, says Okonowicz, and it is apparant why. While real sto­ this book isn't as terrifying as the tales by the previously men­ movie lines cheese sand- ries about supernatural events certainly have a special appeal, tioned masters of the macabre. However, readers looking for the ficti onal story has more than its fair share of suspenseful a thrill houldn't be di sappointed. True stories about the like a used r-· twists as well. supernatural have plenty of appeal. And you never know "Excuse me for not knowing wiches my Unfortunately, the suspenseful twi sts don 't begin right when the hairs on the back of your neck might just stand up pair of c. away. "Possessed" begins somewhat slowly with an introduc­ and start doi ng a shimmy. tion that explains the origins of the tales, but is a bit too long. Another advantage ''Possessed" has over mainstream hor­ about El Salvador - like I'm mother used All of the tales have taken place in the Delmarva Penninsula ror novels is that each tory is more concise. Readers don 't ' pantyhose at area in recent years. have to sift through 50 or 60 pages of deadwood and charac­ Despite the book's slow beginning, readers should quickly ter background before anything real ly interesting happens. a yard sale." ever going to Spain anyway." to bring me." find themselves entangled in a world of strange paranonmal ''Possessed" gets right to the good stuff. happenings and innuendo. Perhaps potential readers should be warned. If you read Haunted headboards go bump in the night. An ancient ·'Possessed." beware! When your eyes leave the last page you I, .. II opisd .. UJ S>Jn8 !tn!UJ ON w I druid chair harboring frightening powers is sought by a host may never be able to see your possessions in the same light. - fUiif.liiJ \um/IUV{Q ., JilWJS ~.J !dllln.-\ illfl '\.fln8 .. Ul Vf"8l-n um·ur'·''S \IS!J)J (:J .•Ji1pUi1.1 /n:liYJ,. 111 HJi1WI'lJ n\llt'.lf 1[ .:sJill{l.l[) illfl .. 111 8u!Uil8 ;1 Jii1U11\f(V

\ April 16, 1996 • THE REVIEW • B3

Far left: Steppers sweat out inten­ sive routines Saturday night at the Bob. Near left: members of Kappa Alpha Psi incorporated canes into their winning step rou­ tine. Photos by Jay Yavonovich. Sweating and stepping to the beat

BY JILL CORTRIGHT by one ~'umnus from each of the university"s It. no us. and at other times saying things like, "The Cit\· \'e\\ .~ J::thtnr black fraternities and sororities. Especially when one member said. "Not Alpha Phi Alpha incorporated more acrobat­ ladies of Z Phi B" or "We rollin' , rollin', Delta Sigma Theta jumped out of an orange According to ad ine Brown. one of the only will we do what we do. but we'll do what ics than the other groups, doing things like flips rollin"' to match the music or beat. pyramid. judges. quality stepping requi res '·precision. you do and we ·11 do it better:· and cartwheels as pan of their routine. Performances by sororities Alpha Kappa Kappa Alpha Psi did a parody of the hard movements. a theme and the ability to The moment that proved this statement cor­ Kappa A lpha Psi took fi rst place for the fra­ Alpha, who acted like models and posed for '·Always Coca-Cola" song. communicate with each other:· rect was when one of the guys collected all the ternities and A lpha Phi Alpha came in second. pictures during one part of their routine, and Ph i Beta Sigma dressed up like the Jackson She ~ays, however. that it is showmanship canes and sat facing the audience. tossing the Senior Anthony Jenkins of Kappa Alpha Psi Sigma Gamma Rho, who also used wooden Five. that sets winning steppers apart from the rest. canes one by one behind hi s back without look­ says hi s fraternity won for the econd year in a canes, followed. Each of the seven hlad. soronties and fra­ The purpose of the event, sponsored by the ing. Members of the fraternity then ran up one row because of origi nality. 'We had a little bit In the sorority category, Zeta Phi Beta were ternities that took pan in the Annual Richard National Pan-Hellenic Council, an organiza­ at a time to catch the canes. ot a single cane of everything." the big winners, while Delta Sigma Theta, who Wil son Step Shov. Saturday mght at the Bob tion of hlack fraternities and sororities, was to hit the ground. These guy;, had obvious!) done The sororities' acts were less flamboyant won the past fo ur years, got second place. had their own gimmick. raise money for the Richard Wilson scholar­ quite a good deal of practice. and original than those of the fraternities, but According to senior Sherjuan Williams, But they also had one common element to ship fund. awarded yearly to an incoming The next group of ;,tcppcrs. Phi Beta Sigma, they sti ll put on a hell of a show. Zeta Phi Beta's was a victory against all odds. their routines: stcpptng. African-American tudent. · made a \Cry dynamic entrance. They walked Delta Sigma Theta began an intense routine "Everything that could possibly go wrong, " It 's not dancing.'' says Aisha Clarke. a '94 The step show, one of many sponsored each on-stage dressed as the Jad.son Five. afros and with three gi rl s bursting ou t of a large orange went wrong," she said. graduate of the university and a fom1cr mem­ year by black fraternities and sororities at col­ all. pyramid. Their outfits were tom two nights prior to ber of Zeta Phi i3eta. Instead. it is ·'a heat. a leges across the country, has taken place annu­ After a brief interlude pretending to perform The steppers then began altemately clap­ the show and they were forced to repair them sound, a trademark." ally for nearly two decades. a song by the Jacbon Five. they removed thetr ping and slapping thei r bodies as they stomped on their own. The lighting was messed up for Stepping •.o.as origmall) practiced hy tribes The fra ternities· acts were dynamic and outfits (and wigs) and began ;,tepping:. their feet to create thei r own beat. After several the performance. And so on. in Africa as a form of celebration and praise well-received, as evidenced by all the clapping The final fraternity. Alpha Phi Alpha. adopt­ minutes of energetic movements, they all froze Williams credits their first place trophy to and served to give each tribe their own identi­ and yel ling from the predominantly African­ ed a much more serious tone. in the .amc formation until one of the girls God, due the prayers they all said before the ty. American crowd as they stepped. One member kept shouting passionately in gave the yell to begin again. show. Junior and Delta Sigma Theta member The members of Kappa Alpha Psi put on an the manner one would expect to lind at a Following a few portions of stepping, the Sandra Jones gives more concrete reasons Sharon Ebanks says that '>!eppi ng is very rhyth­ impressive, dauling routine. incorporating protest of some kind. The words "death,'' mood changed and the girls began dancing to a for their victory: ''Dedication, persevetance mic, with participants creatmg the heat by slap­ red-al)(.i-white-stripe wooden canes. "hope·· and "fear" were mcnttoncd quite often. modem R & B medley. But it was over after and sisterhood." ping their bodies. c lapping and stomping. They spun the canes on their fingers and in but beyond that, the message wa., lost to only a few minutes and the stepping started all But there was more to the Step Show than a Participant in the shov. combined segments mid-mr from invisible strings. The) slapped the unclear vocab. over again. competition and fundraiser; it was also a time of traditional stepping with more modern canes on the ground to make a beat: they tossed One line did stand out though: "The fear Zeta Phi Beta, the next sorority to perform, of bonding and rejoicing for African-American dance moves toR & B music. pun hy umvcr· them to each other. should not exist." integrated canes into a large section of their act, students. On the stage was stepping; in the sity student and OJ Doc B. Some group~ also But pnor to their final impressive stunt with Perhaps the) meant fear of their perfor­ tapping them on the ground and swinging them audience was danci ng, cheering and plenty of included spoken portions or brief comedy rou­ the canes. they took a "commercial break,'' mance, as it was so intense and powerful that it around. huggin'g. tines. drinkmg from bottles of Coke and singing was scary. The steppers jumped and waved They gave a more vocal performance, some­ Perhaps the university should have such But th e e performances were not all in fun; ''1\lway:-; Kappa Alpha Psi'' to the tune of the their arms and stomped violently; their all­ times making sounds one would expect to hear shows more often. the step show was also a competition. judged "Alway' Coca-Cola" jingle. The crowd loved black outlits only made them seem more omi- in a tribal dance, such as hi ssi ng and yelling, Luck is a lady for HTAC's 'Guys and Dolls' BY LEANNE MILWAY other duo is another gambler. Nathan Detroit, trap a husba.nd in the end. Baringer has made this essary and integral to a musical that you will be MamJ).!/11~ Feutun: Etluor brought to life by freshman Britt Saffer, and his role her own. wonderfully di splaying Adelaide's very thankful this talented band is sitting at your The guys roll the dtce with flair in their pin-stripe fiancee for 14 years, the dancer Miss Adelaide, love sicknc~s and bare-ring-linger anxiety. Her feet by the stage comer. suitS and fedoras as the dolls dance in brightly fetchingly portrayed by freshman Brenna Baringer. character's charisma and accent arc catching, and The costumes for this production are lavish and polka-dotted '40s gowns. drav.1ng a sweaty audi­ She can't wait to get mruTicd; he can·t fathom the will leave you rolling in the aisles. fitting, effortlessly tran porting onlookers to a time ence into the musical extravaganta of Harrington thought. In a world of floating crap gan1cs, guys named of mugs and molls. Obvious care was taken in out­ Theatre Arts Company's current production of Sky Masterson is suave and confident. and tall Harry the Horse. Liver Lips fittng the cast, and it pays off at '·Guys and Dolls:· blonde Cover. in a slick black suit and fedora, fits Louie and Big Julc struggle to the best odds. the mold. 111i s dt scnchanted gambler bets for love break even in their bets ;L'i they Where to Find It The choreography is first­ and cml'> up v. ith the mission girl next door - dance and sing in the tradition­ rate, as the cast j umps, leaps ~ : ~,-~~ and spins in the hot air of Y!,.-;....-A.....-, :I ... \\here he he longs. Cover sings ea~ily and confi­ al big mu~i cal numhct ' · And HTAC's "Cuvs and Dolls" . :. : ·' Theatre dently . this production certainly does­ Wolf, practically sweating on Wolf Hall Auditorium ~ Gimpel's Sarah Brown is ti ght on target- sim­ n't lack in those. Though some the people in the front row. ple and sweet as the good girl who discovers how scenes where a few characters April 18 and /9 at 8 p.m.; This intimacy delivers the per­ These are not your average guys and dolls per­ much she likes the nighttime world of sinners. Her spend the time talking seem to April 20 and 21 at 2 p.m. formance into your laps - forming on the stage of Wolf Hall -these charac­ soprano ·voice clearly delivers the songs. as you drag. it is well \\Orth the wait Admission is $5 you want to be up there wi th ters are die-hard gamblers, missionarie.. sinners believe her sexual awakening in "If I Were a Bell" when the btg numbers come the characters, smili ng and and strippers. They knov. how to belt out a tunc and or when she sings to you 'Tvc ever Been in Love up. This show features some of inging. bring the applauding audience to its feet. Before:· the be t student dancers ever Last semester HTAC had to Set on the tiny stage in front of a flashy A man who has been engaged for 14 years and showcased by HTAC. and numbers like ·'Luck be a work in Mitchell Hall, but Wolf is where the com­ Broadway backdrop. this student run and directed not tied the knot has to be a smooth talker, and Lady'' and "Sit Down You're Roc!..in· the Boat'' vir­ pany belongs - even with the limited seating, musical focuses on the tale of tv.o gamblers and Saffer's Natan Detorit has that down pat. His amus­ tually bring the hou ~c down. small backstage area and stu ffy atmosphere. Freshman Clare Gimple and their relationships with two unique women. ing escapades dealing wi th hi s girlfriend, the police The small pit band interprets the brass-ruled Unfortunatly, this musical will be the last perfor­ sophomore Greg Cover in Sky Masterson, played b) sophomore Greg and a dice game, all at the same time. keep the audi­ score by Fr.mk Loesscr. complementing and cal1)'­ mance at this venue fo r a few years as the auditori ­ HTAC's "Guys and Dolls." Cover, is a Sk]'-high better who lands a deal where ence laughing. ing the ~c t ors' voices and dance steps. Last semes­ um goes under construction. But it will have closed he has to take mi ssionary Sarah Brown. perfectl y And then there's Miss Adelaide. She acts like an ter's HTAC production of '·West Side Story" used with a triumphant bang from "Guys and Dolls." Photo by John Chabapw. played by freshman Clare Gimpel, to Havana. 'he airhead, talks funny. dances swell and manages to recorded music, but the fl air of a live band is so nee- This show is one bet you won'tlose.

A Voyage on the River of Dreams a Joel classic ("The Ballad of Billy the Bi lly Joel Kid," which Joel dedicates to his moth­ Columbia Nothing new in Joel's regurgitant boxed set er, who was present for that specifi c Rating: ._7 112 show). The rest are all from "River of the wallet of his fans. 60 minutes of talk that is quick to bore. but they do little to make up for the disc, a compilatio n of li ve songs Dreams." BY 1ATIHEW J. SMITH The set consists o f th ree individual Amid seven audi­ dead air-ti me while recorded at three di fferent shows So, if you're a really devoted fan and Sldff Ph'''t'Kraph~r compact discs: the aforementioned stu­ ence questions. Joel he thinks or looks played in 1994. Now, any of you who have the complete collection of The Billy Joel's recent old out appear­ dio release " River of Dreams,'' a plays five of his up his own lyrics in have seen Joel li ve know that he knows Hassles' (Joel's former band) albums, ance on campus coupled with the high recorded question and answer session songs and an abbre­ a mystical tome how to put on one heck of a show. then you' ll have to buy thi s set simply sales of hi s most recent studio release and a collection of live recordings. viated version of that someone other U nfo rtunatel y, the enthusiasm, to complete your exhausti ve and obses­ ( 1993's "River of Dreams" went gold) Including "River of Dreams" was a The Beatie · than Joel has com­ excitement and fun of his concerts sive collection. If your dollars are burn­ and his subsequent highly succc sful mistake. Since the boxed set was "Golden Slumbers" piled. In addi tion, a doesn't come across in this CD as well ing a hole in your pocket and you want tour of the same name. all show us that re leased only recently (within the past medley. Only die­ particularly annoy­ as it does in Joel's other li ve albums: a costly paper weight, buy this set. But, Joel hasn't lost his popularity among few months). more than likely any hard Joel fans bor­ ing feature of this "Songs From the Attic" and "Kohuept." if your fandom extends to just turning twenty-somethings. Amid younger potential consumer~ already own that dering on obsessive CD is that there is Thi s particular disc is the closest of up the radi o when you hear "Scenes competition like Live. Pearl Jam. particular disc, which in this new col­ coul d truly enjoy only one track. One the set to a lure, and it doesn't fit the From an Italian Restaurant" or "For the Alanis Moris ettc and Ph ish. Joel sti II lection isn't even a numbered collec­ this hour of Joel's 63-minute, 31-sec­ bill. Including a good live CD would Longest Time," then don't bother. manages to cam our attention and tor's item and doesn't include any addi­ nostalgic rumin a­ ond track makes have made the set worth buying, but So, it 's simple: devoti on. tional documentation or rare out-takes. tions. findi ng the sparse this disc is not it. It includes a mere six So the decision to release Joers sec­ The second disc is scarcely more Joel does crack songs and the few songs, only four of which are Joel's (he If you can't sing along ond boxed set seems to be a wise one. impressive. Essentially a '·prototype'' of jokes (t hough comi- L..;...""-"-.;. interesting parts also performs Elton John's "Goodbye To "California Flash,'' but its success relics directly on the the recent "An Evening of Q uestions cal corning from a musician, arcn 't any­ extremely difficult. Ye ll ow Brick Road" and The Beatles' This set doesn't belong amount o f devotion and thickness of and An~we rs ... and a Little Music,'' it 's where near side-splitti ngly hilarious). The originality comes in on the third "A Hard Days Night"), and only one is In your musical cache. 8411 THE REVIEW . Aprill6, 1996 Debating the dangers of technological movie star ressurections f you've had your eye a-lookin', ears a­ heard on his posthumously released Imagine watching "One Flew Over the unsuccessfully. Ihearin' and brain a-thinkin' over the past album, ''King of Hearts." Cuckoo's Nest," only to find that some Imagine a possible outcome if someon.e few years, then you might have noticed a This paved the way for the success of Media pompous movie mogul has altered it so doctored that video tape. The entire wo~ld terribly frightening trend in the mass media. "The Crow" which, several years earlier, that Mac escapes, fully lobed, with could watch as Tom Hanks, Richard Nixori, The dead have been coming back tQ life. would have been doomed to failure after Chief through the water fountain-shat­ Norman Fell, Bela Lugosi, John Lenn011 No, this isn't another article picking on the death of its lead actor, Brandon Lee. Darlings tered window. and Kermit the Frog went to town turning Bob Dole's superlative age or comparing However, with today's technology, a lit- Or, imagine renting one of the most Dan Quayle into a puddle of potato(e) members of the Rolling Stone to stars of tle thing like a fatal gunshot couldn't beloved children's movie of all time, mush. Michael Jackson's 'Thriller" or commenting stop the victim from finishing his fin al BY MAITHEW J. SMITH "The Wizard of Oz," for your kids 10 Are you frightened? Are you afraid that on the career of Florence Henderson. I'm film ... or will it be his final film ? years down the road and watching history can be rewritten right before your talking about real-life dead actors along with The most glaring disrespect of the Dorothy deck Glenda, the good witch, eyes? Do you fear the idea that the history other media stars and their eerie return to our grim reaper was the Oscar-winning "Forrest a clause in their wills stating whether or not when she finds out she had the power to go of the future can be written by the person lives. Gump." Special effects director Robert they'd like to li ve in the celluloid world after home all along. with the best technology? Are you prepared I guess it all started with a Diet Pepsi Zemeckis managed to snatch ex-presidents they' ve left the physical one? Sounds scary, huh? The ability to violate to not believe that everything you see on commercial a few years back in which Paula John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson Imagine this movie of the future, if you the virtue of an actor's tasteful career or the the screen is true? Abdul shook her booty to Elton John's piano from history and plop them into the life of will: a romantic flick that captures the magic sanctity of a classic movie is within the Well, get ready to start doubting wh'!t playing and the trumpeting of late jazz great the fictional Gump, as well as the lives of of the old days. Gene Kelly is a 21-year-old hands of anyone with a multi-media comput­ America's most beloved friend, most reli­ · Louie Armstrong in a bar, as actor millions of viewers. computer hacker whose love interest, played er, some know-how and just a little time. But able baby-sitter and most efficient brai/1 Humphrey Bogart and comic great Groucho So, what does this recent trend mean for by Madonna, is the daughter of a nightclub wait, it gets scarier. atrophic agent shows us - because the Marx looked on. All long deceased, there the future of the entertainment industry? In a owner, played by Elizabeth Montgomery, Remember Rodney King, that man who future is now; and we can' t be sure th

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A slight platform adds a subtle, off­ season's dress wear is vintage with a '90s twist Suite 9 (302) 453-2610 kilter edge to dressy shoes. - you can get the best of both worlds. Now Czirak snagged this simple shift dress and vintage Newark, DE 19711 Dramatic makeup and a sleek hairstyle can party on. divas! purse from the Salvation Army on Elkton Road. also be considered essential to a glamour girl. Web pages abound continued from page B I homcpage, for the Phi !adelphia Wings lacrosse team - because he page an animated photograph of his says he i a big fan. head with a his mouth moving. '·] get people e-mailing me from "I've always had some ideas I've around the country. People out ' in wanted to put out [on the Internet]," California who don't get a lot of Edlow says. His ideas include ·'shar­ information on the Wings look here WIN A FREE CONCERT! ing a little bit about myself through to find information on the playoffs;· my writing: · he says. "Hopefully this summer I'll He says. '"I try to bring a little be adding the history of the Wings to If your school gets the most correct answers, What do you think you know about Playboy? What you don't humor to what I put on my page. J the page." know might surprise you. Playboy is challenging 25 campuses you win the contest-and Playboy will present a FREE LIVE hope so meone crui sing the Net can He has also designed a corporate ac ross the country to find the answers to 50 tricky questions CONCERT on your campus this May with two of the hottest get a laugh at the advice section and page for his father's truck dealership that some of my stories." is linked through his page as well, and that cover more than 40 years of Playboy's history. new bands in the country! Hi s long-term goal behind having has received responses from around the a homepage is to have people read hi s world. It took him about a month to set writing and share hi s experiences - up hts page by working on it periodical­ hi s imagination and dreams with the ly. His page can be reached at http: world, he says. ;;,,,,,, ~ eecis.udel.edul-shipengr. ., ARE YOU UP "I guess the underlying reason for Edlow started what he named the ., a lot of people having their own Hello Project in response to the FOR IT? homepage is to show off," he says. worldwide audience acce sing his r Playmate Carrie Westcott, host of As of now the only way for stu­ page. Playboy TV's music video show "Hot dents at the university to have a "I've gotten various friends to tell Rocks." will MC the event and a1r a homepage is to either be members of me how to say 'Hello' or 'Welcome' select1on of the hottest uncut videos the Association for Computing in their language and I've displayed from some of your favorite artists. 1 Machinery or to work for a professor them on my page,' he says. So far the doing research, says junior computer foreign languages represented are ., BUT FIRST YOU GOTTA ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS. HEY, NOBODY EVER SAID WINNING WOULD BE EASY! science major Dan Shipengrover, Bengali, Chinese. Japanese and 1. What was the pnce of the first issue of Playboy? 2. Why was the first issue of Playboy undated' 3. What was Playboy's original name and why was 1t changed? 4. What was Playboy's who e homepage is on the electrical Arabic. first paid advertisement? 5. Who designed Playboy's Rabbit Head logo and in which 1ssue did it first appear? 6. Name an ~nterest1ng structural feature of the pool in the old Playboy engineering server. He also uses his homepage a a Mans1on. 7. For many years the Playboy Advisor was Illustrated by a well-known artist. Recently, someone new took over. Name both art1sts. 8. In the Apn l 1996 issue, the Playboy Adv1sor There arc guidelines th at must be showcase for the fictional stories he answers a letter from a woman who claims her husband has sex w1th her while he's asleep. In an earlier issue, the Advisor put a name to this practice. What is it called? 9. What year was met in order to maintain an account writes. "I try to have a variety of sto­ the first Braille edition of Playboy published' 10. What endangered an1mal was named after Hugh Hefner and what is its Latin name? 11. Name ten of the IB countnes in which Playboy L has published a foreign edition. 12. Who was the f1rst male celebrity featured on the cove r? 13. Name four of the headliners at the first Playboy Jazz Festival in 1959 and where the Fest1val with the ACM, says junior computer ries - some are heartbreaking and was held. 14. What was the wmning entry in the Playboy Forum's Rel igious Right Name Game? (Hmt: check the April 1996 issue) 15. Who was the 25th Anniversary Playmate? 16. Name science maJor Jaimie Leader. others give you that warm and fuzzy one of the celebrity guests who appeared on the first show of Playboy's Penthouse. 17. Why was the Bunny Beacon turned off in 1973' 18. List six of the 12 artists who were commissioned Members must have a 1esume and feeling," he says. for the magazine's Playmates as Fine Art feature. 19. What quote from Presidential candidate Jimmy Carter's Playboy Interview got him mto a tremendous amount of hot water? 20. Name working hyperlinks on their page. " I hope to get a little more cntt­ live subjects of Alex Haley's Playboy Interviews. 21. What year did Playboy Enterpnses, Inc. go public? 22. Who was the Playmate featured on Playboy's first stock certificate? 23. Where Links arc homepage text or icons a cism than I've gotten," he says. "Most is Playboy Enterprises soon to open a casino? 24. Wh1ch issue of the magazme was skipped due to an overload of work? 25. What was Hugh Hefner's major in college and what umversity user may click on to reach other people look and say, ' Wow! Good did he attend? 26. What publication selected Hugh Hefner as one of the I 000 most influential people of the century? 27. In what year was Hugh Hefner honored with a star on the Hollywood J. Walk of Fame? 28. Playboy magazine exceeded 7 million circulation m what year? 29. What four formerly commun1st countnes now publish Playboy magazine? 30. For how many weeks Internet locations or to view graphics job!' Tho e comments are nice and l did Playboy's The Best of Pamela Anderson VIdeo top the Billboard charts? 31. What celebnty has hosted the Playboy Jazz Fest1val for 15 years? 32. What other country has also hosted or ound. appreciated, but they don't help you the Playboy Jazz Festival? 33. Which Playmate appears on the front of the most Playboy Home Video box covers currently available? 34. Which Playboy videos are hosted by the famous sex Leader's homepage improve." therapist Dr. Ruth Westheim er? 35. Which Playmate hosts the Playboy Video "Women of Color" and when was she Playmate of the Year? 36. What object is hidden on the cover of nearly ( hup:llwwll'.ecl.rtdel. edu/-leader) is The thing that keeps Edlow updat­ every issue of Playboy? 37. What politically conscious arm of Playboy Enterprises has supported such groups as NARAL, Masters & Johnson and The Kinsey Institute ' 38. In 1996, Playboy basic and she updates it during the ing his page weekly is his advice programming launched networks in which two foreign countries? 39. K1m Delaney (NYPD Blue) and Corbin Bernson (LA Law) appear together 1n wh1ch of Playboy's exclusive world premier slower times at her computer site job. page. "(The page] is nothing earth mov1es? (Hint: check March listings on Playboy TV.) 40. Which Interactive CD-ROM features candid and controversial Playboy Interviews with over 380 celebrities' 41. In October 1959, She has general information about shattering, but where there is a radio Hugh Hefner debuted as the host of the hour-long television variety show. Playboy's Penthouse. Why did some Southern television stations refuse to air the program? 42. In 1962 Hugh Hefner herself and links to "things that are icon you can click on it and there is wrote the first in a series of 25 articles that attempted to define what came to be known as "the new morality"-placing the responsibility for social and sexual activities in the hands of indi­ viduals instead of government. What was that series called? 43. On assignment by Playboy, writer Cameron Crowe went underground as a "studenr· to wnte an expose that was later turned interesting to me that I think others music or a sound bite that hopefully into a hit movie with Sean Penn. What was the movie? 44. Wh1ch Playmate featured on the Playboy Web s1te recalls: "One time 1n first grade I took one of my father's Playboys to school and might be interested in ," she says. goes with the advice," he says. I. told the boys they could look if they promised to chase me at recess"? 45. How many times does the Rabbit Head appear on the initial page of the Playboy Web site? 46. Andrew Wellman Some links include pages on Tarot Hi most recent advice, for the was the first undergraduate to win Playboy's College Fiction Contest. His story, The Madison Heights Syndrome, appeared in the October 1989 issue. A longer version was later published by card readings, some of her favorite week of April 7 is, "Simple , baSic Random House, and subsequently made ~nto a movie. What was the name of the movie? 47. What country recently lifted an almost 40-year ban on the sale and distribution of Playboy mag­ Broadway shows, like "Phantom of concepts such as 'Please,' 'Thank azine? 48. What Playmate of the Year now hosts a hit MTV Program, and what is the name of the program? 49. In what nation does Playboy Enterprises have over 300 boutiques selling the Opera" and "Miss Saigon," and you,' and 'Excuse me' will take you Playboy-branded apparel and merchandise? 50. For what spec1al reason is the Hollywood Reporter hononng Hugh Hefner with a special issue on March 28th? pictures of her with friends, like one far in life. Remember them." ' I: in which she is riding an el~phant at Edlow says he keeps updating his I'{' I the zoo. page because, ''The more hits [people I' iij NO MATTER HOW FOR MORE Shipengrover and Edlow have visiting your page] you get, the more ' MANY ANSWERS YOU INFORMATION ON taken to expanding their homepages prestigious it is.'' I to include sites that need weekly Overall, competition between KNOW, WRITE 'EM UP THE CONTEST OR updating. homepages seems to keep the stu­ AND SEND 'EM IN NOW A COMPLETE SET Shipengrover began another page, dents interested in keeping the con­ (TO THE CONTACT OF RULES CALL: that can be accessed through hi s struction going. LISTED BELOW) . THE MORE ENTRIES 1-800-592-2121 RECEIVED, THE BETTER EXT.345 YOUR SCHOOL'S CONT£ST ENDS CHANCE OF WINNING! APRI L 17, 1996. T-h.e Best of h tp://www.playboy.com

PLAYBOY CHALLENGE REPRESENTATIVE Paul 302-831-3497 N·ewark

Read The Review. It's food for your brain. DEADLINES: CLASSIFIED RATES: Mail us your classified! If you prefer to mail us your classified, include: message, dates to appear, PLACE BY: UNIVERSITY (applies to students, faculty and staff- TO APPEAR: your phone number (wi ll be kept confidential), and payment. Call us to 3 p.m. Friday personal use ONLY.) Tue day con finn the cost of the ad if you exceed I 0 words. 3 p.m. Tuesday Friday - $2 for first I 0 words, 30¢ each additional word. Mail to : The Review LOCAL . 250 Student Center CANCELLATIONS AND CORRECTIONS: - $5 for first I 0 words, 30¢ each additional word. Newark, DE 19716 Deadline for changes, corrections and/or cancellations are identical to ad All rates are for one issue. We reser~e the right to request identification for **No classified will be placed w11hou1 pnor paymenl. placement deadlines. un iversity rates. Advertising policy : To ensure I hat your ad appears exaclly as you wan! your readers 10 see il, If you wish to place a display ad. call check ill he firs! day il runs . The Re1iew will no! take responsibilily for any error except for DISPLAY ADVERTISING: 1ne firs! day containing 1he c::rror. The maximumliabilily will be 10 re-run !he ad at no 831-1398. Rates are based on the size of the ad. PHONE#: 831-2771 additional cos!, or a full refund if preferred.

~w BS • April 16, 1996

FOR SALE 4 BDRM HOUSE NEAR $240.00/rnonth + util.; June - June Week Delivery. ow Available CAMPUS, $750/rno plus util. + lease; call 733-0852 PART-TIME HELP WANTED­ PAID MARKETING Direct by Accessing our site on the EUROPE $169. Caribbean/ sec. dep. CALL (610) 255-4930 LANDSCAPING INTERNSHIP!!!!! Full-service. internet. Fully Guaranteed, Great Mexico $189. Be a little flexible AVAIL. JUNE CONSTRUCTION, OFFICE mid-atlantic ad agency needs Pric;es. Corne visit our site and and save$$$ We'll help you beat Roommate NEEDED fo r Fall Sem. WORK 733-7070 marketing/ communications major order your College Class Ring. the airline prices. Destinations Big House on Prospect. Call Anne with cupy writing ellperience and http://www .collegeri ng. inter. net worldwide. AIRHITCHtrn 800- In Rehoboth - Seasonal Apts - 738-8923 excellent written and oral Or phone us at 1-718-443-4260 326-2009 airhitch @netcorn.corn Sleeps 4 o r 6 - ph. 227-1833 or ATTENTION STUDENTS communication skills. 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New Super Single Waterbed and Female Roommate needed for Fall Teach basic conversational English while attending school and during Mattress for sale. $250.00 or best Madison Drive 3 BR townhouse Semester 111 School Lane in Prague, Budapest, or Krakow. summer break. MUST BE 20 offer. For more information call with basement study, central A/C Apartments. Furniture and Bed No teaching certificate or European YEARS OLD & HAVE PHONE & Harrington Theatre Arts Company Li a 731-9690 and washer/dryer. Nicest on Street. Included. Call 368-2971 languages required. Inex pensive TRANSPORTATIO . proudly presents ·'Guys and Dolls·· Available 611 $900/mo. + utilities. Room & Board + other benefits. Call 368-3489 and ask for Larry. April 12.13,18,19 at 8:00 pm and 378-1963 For info. call : (206) 971-3680 ext. April 14, 20, 21 at 2:00pm in 100 1990 VW Cabriolet- Red w/ Black Female Housemates wanted. Share K52911 Wolf Hall - tickets are $5 Top P/Windows. air bag, ac, pull­ house near campus. PERSONALS out radio 8700/ B.O. 2 HOUSES ON MADISON - 4 Call Becky 837-64 14 Call 322-8860 PERSON, WID, WELL MAINT'D, MODELS WANTED. Female STUDENTS' Do you display Arc you a senior graduating in 455-9150 models needed for adult video/ obsessive compulsive behavior? January 1997"7 Want to avoid Two Female Roommates needed print work. Must be 18+. Call 1- The Review would like to profile being locked into a 12-month Oneill Spring Suit Med. like new for 96/97. School Lane. 800-668-4380. s tudents who have obsessive lease·) Want to avoid ubletting, 45. 738-1159 HOUSE TO RENT. Madison Dr. Call 738-2866 compulsive disorders that deal with landlord . and utility bills? Want 3 BR, dishwa-her, large Kitchen, anything usual or unusual. Call to concentrate on interviews and Finished basement. NO PETS. Childcare needed in Kennett Lisa, Michele or Matt at The job preparation? Ltve on campus Furniture for Sale. Good Call TIM at 368-4921 after 5PM or 2 Roommates needed for Haines St. Square home. 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Free w/ Student ID 1988.' Runs well. $250. $820 mo. Avail. June I Summer Subletter needed Ivy Hall Call 378-1 138 $1.75 Bud + Bud Lt. Bottles all BICYCLE, SCHWIN men's 10- Call 368-7657 Apt. $180/mo. +utilities. C. ROMANECKI , thanks for ight speed, 26 in..:h "Sprint." Dropped Call 738-7846 pissing on our couch, The Boyz of handlebars. Suntour gears. $65 WANTED INDIVIDUALS 83 E. Clevel:lnd. We' re gonna get I 368-9826 I Large Room Avail; 1-3 m/f ( I INTERESTED IN EARNINGS ya, your're dead. 45 employers from organizations' in comfortaLic, 3 tight); 2-bdrm at Surnrncr Sublct(s) needed. One WHILE LEARNING TO the Middle Atlantic area who want West Knoll ; Tom, 837-3774 o r Bedrm., free parking, $225 includes OPERATE AND OWN YOUR to hire U.D. graduates will meet FOR RENT tom@> urlel .edu utilities. 731-4050 OWN BUSINESS. FLEXIBLE ANNOUNCEMENTS wnh seniors from all majors at the HOURS 61 0-622-5398 SPRING CAREER FAIR on 4 BR, Madison Dr. Townhouse, ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! Thursday, April 18 from 1-4 in the Washer, Dryer, Remodeled, I yr. C/H Manor Townhouse, 4 persons, Roommate wanted for June, July, GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS Rodney Roo m of the Student lease+ security, $885-925. NC, WID, deck, fenced backyard August. Location: Madison. 3 Wanted - Childcarc, light cleaning. A V AILABLE 1 BILLIO S OF$$$ Center. For more infonnation call Call 368-4424 $820.00 Avail 4/96 o ther girls will room with you. Flexible hours now and for the IN PRIVATE FUNDING. Career Services Center at 831-1232 Rent is $200/mo. + utilities. Call summer. Must be reliable and love QUALIFY IMMEDIATELY. 1- or stop by. 837-6056 ask for Jill or 731-1938 children. Women in Motion 737- 800-AID-2-HELP ( 1-800-243-2435). 3 ROOMS FOR RENT IN LARGE Townho use FOR RENT - I 120 ask for Jcn. 3653 ,HOUSE. 5 MIN. WALK TO Blair Court, Newark August 31st, Need a full-time job after CAMPUS. RENT $190, STARTS 1996 - August 31st, 1997. 3 FREE AIKIDO CLASSES! graduation? Check o ut Spring 6-1-96. CALL 368-3736 Bedroom, I 112 bath, washer/ Roommate needed for Madison Dr. Earn up to $! 0,000 this summer. Monday and Wednesday 8:30pm. Career Week for tips on dryer, $850 Security, $850/mo + June I lease. 738-1223 Manage a profitable local Saturday 6:00pm starting Feb. 12. interviewing, jobs in your major, utilities. Call 378-77 10 after 6 pm advertising/ publishing business. Mat Room, Carpenter Sports resume help and the chance to Madison Dr. Townhome - Washer Call or fax resume to 201-664-623 1 Building. Sponsored by the Aikido interview with 45 companies. + Dryer, four bedroom HELP WANTED (attn: David Contract) Club @ UD. Call Tim @ 837- April 15 through April 19 . For . 737-4399 H, 995-2247 W ROOMMATES 1764 form e information. more information call the Career CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Earn up Services Center at 831-1232 Female roommate needed for fall to $2.000 +/month. World travel. Summer Job Opportunity. Camp : 8 Room House near university in semester in School Lane Seasonal & full-time positions. o Counselors Wanted. Camp ejecta SOPHOMORES: COMPETE great condition $950 733-7026 apartmen ts . Furniture and bed experience necessary. For more - children with diabetes in northern FOR UP TO $ 12,000/Y R FOU D: White cat with yellow included. 368-2971. information call 1-206-97 1-3550 Jersey. Great Camp, great kids, SCHOLARSHIPS . Ask about striped tail and yellow spot on head ext. C529 14 great fun . Reasonable pay. Call Army ROTC summer leadership - near School Lane pts. If yours, HOMES FOR RENT. CITY OF Alana on campus at 837-6009 for training and s<..ho larship please claim 837-3746 NEW ARK. CALL MATT at ONE N/S FEMALE ROOMMATE info and application opportunities. Paid training with 737-8882 NEEDED to share nice & large E. NATIO AL PARKS HIRING ­ noobligation. Call831 -82 13now' Cleveland house with 5 other girls Positions arc now available at Would you like to meet a student for Fall Semester 1996. Rent is National Parks, Forests & Wildlife Great job for college s tude nt s. from another country? Volunteer College Park Townhouse for Rent ; $200/mo. +utilities. Call 837-6110 Preserves. Excellent benefits + Earn $8.50/hr. Close to campus, GRANTS!! SCHOLARSHIPSII! to be a Language Partner today. $850/mo + utili ties, includes or 837 6 106. bonuses' Call: 1-206-971-3620 ext. nexiblc scheduling. Afternoo n + MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN Spend 1-2 Ius./ wk. helping an washer/dryer + off street parking. N52914 evening hours avail. Call 454-8980 FREE FINANCIAL AID. TO international student practice their Call 610-43 1-3473 or 610-436- QUALIFY CALL: 1800-400-0209 conversational English. Help them 8317. Available June I ROOMMATE NEEDED learn abou t your culture and IMMEDIATELY M or F, $175/m, $1750 weekly possible mailing our Need $25?? Runners who run on language while doing activities you Towne Court, CALL RICK circulars. For info call the balls of their feet or whose COLLEGE RINGS - Newest both enjoy. Contact Sharon Scott PRIVATE FURNISHED ROOM @ 454-8104 301-306-1207. ankles roll in too much arc needed styles! Any Coll ege Any Year' 3 at 831-6291 NEAR LIBRARY, A/C, for a 2 hr. motion analysis study. LAUNDRY, SHARE KITCHEN Call Kurt at 831-4646. WITH OTHER STUDENTS. Female Roommate needed for fall $ C R U ISE SHIPS HIRING ! SUMMER: $255/MO OR FALL semester in School Lane Apt. Studen ts Needed! $$$ +Free $295/MO INCLUDES Call 737-6305 Trave l (Caribbean, Europe, Summer $ in T.V., radio, film and UTILITLIES; 764-7640 Hawaii !) Seasonal/ Pennanent, No modeling in ads. Learn how in Exper. Necessary. Gde. 9 19-929- ONE day! Nutz and Boltz of th e 2 Roommates needed to share I 4398 ext. C I 076 Bi z Seminar, May 4. Ho uses for rent near campus. bedroom in East Cleveland house Preregistrati on by April 27 (610) Available June I. 4 tenants. John for next year. Call 369-0934 869-4 191 Bauscher 454-8698 before YPM VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: Males and females, 18 years or older and 2 summer sub1 etters needed. East in good health , wanted to Sales/ Front Desk Position Flexible HOUSES FOR RENT 733-7070 Cleveland. $175 + utilities/month. participate rn c lini cal hours now and Summer. Must Own room for each. phannacological studies employing have fitness background, sci f Call Kathie 456-923 1 marketed and investigational drugs. motiviatcd a nd reliable. Call House for Rent - Walking Di stance Call 215-823-3330 for details. Women in Motion. 737-3652 to U of D 369-8567 Female Roommates wanted for S. College Apartment. June- May. WANTED: 23 STUDENTS. Lose In -home child care for 5-month-old Townhouse - Rental $850 College Call 738-2279 8- 100 lbs . New metaboli s m gi rl I or 2 days a week. Mother Park. Early lease begins June 1st. breakthrough. I lost 15 lbs. in 3 will be working from home. Pike (610) 932-4486 weeks. Guar. Results . $35 cost. 1- Creek area. Pay Negotiable. Call Cool female roommate needed in 800-776-9503. Maria at 302-369-4120 cute house on New London Rd; 86. THE REVIEW. April 16, 1996

~MICHAeL.. WilliAM TELL .....,_ ~500'-'SAN .

HA'/£ ONE).. ~UAft'Row .. .

l DoNI KNoW IT DIDN'T WORt<. lF l'M GoiNG To ~K{; lT TWRoUGW TW{; R{;f. T oF TW{; DON'T WORR_9 N\N{;Tl{;f. ABOUT IT.

8EING PERFECT \SN•T EVERYTH1t.l6.

LET ME 1RY ONE MORE TIME ...

~OJ \(N'D W H OW '/0 v Cfti\J \£ U- A-"B OO\ A­ (:;>1) ....( ~ 1-\ 15 /Z.A-"D /D The N-th Dimension . by Brian Edwards S-(A1/ orJ . 1,2. o .,-A'1/ DN 1 tJK£ f o K£i f' fHE MORE tJNIVERSJTY . WA~HROOMS: M ilS /c. LO/v'6o ICAN I ' / LJK£ •,..JC/5-'7 .5tJf1."{ oF CENTRAL RECEJV/#6.· HEALTH SCIENCE DEPT. .· \ jJ.//ttJK. 1Q M'fS£LF; HLS 'gcr\A-il o~ f'KNtJw'?;

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[1-< /'fPc --TI/AT L-!.51E:N.S JII["(WI{ATifV[/l.. {HA r 15 ) ... 1H£ K'lttfD '(HAT /(££- p~ 11fi..NtNb 1';-tC 12./tl>! o vP wHEN JH£1?£ '$' A ~ vt..t. /1\1 '1'11£ CDIVV(UA-'Tiflf'v' UIIIT!L­ Yo~t :5rlDVTlNb/t-'IE*H orHfl?.. Ae-f..D5S I HE C.--+R.. .. . IIG'/· OotVr Piss oN' M 'f fJAt.,4 oe;, ;1-SSHoL..E- \ .. EMPLOYEE CREDIT UNION: OFFICE OF TilE DEAN OF EA'G/NEERJNG;

C'Mo~ DVDE­ ~E Allv'T NO Ybv tf-roo?/D 1 FRIEND oF ft1/Nf! J..f!J~DY WJ/0'5 B£EAI WHE.V Poo 51FAL­ YovR }'E"ST ~lt=t-.lb'S YeR -,EST fRIEHlJ S/N(e You twz f(fD~ 1 Gl~l;fHA7 AIN'r(OOLI •

OJ/ Yc.~H?, /JJHV "DI ON/ Yo" Jvs-r SI\V so? April 16, 1996. THE REVIEW. 87

~500 X-treme Fun Coll.ege Incentive ! L Available to all College Students! If you're a college student with the ambition to pursue X-treme fun, you can receive a $500 Certificate FOR BOOKS good toward the purchase or lease of any new 1996 or 1997 Toyota.3 Plus 2-Year Free-Ride Toyota Auto Care 1 which includes 24 hour Roadside Assistance, Oil Changes & Inspections. Eligible college graduates also get added incentives including No Money Perkins Student Center Gallery Down financing or a Lease with No Security Deposit required .2

MONDAY-FRIDAY But don't wait...this limited offer ends September 30, 1996! Call our toll-free numtier or visit our web site today to obtain your free $500 X-treme Fun College MAY 13-17 Incentive Certificate. 9:30-5:30 Choose from a wide selection of any new 1996 or 1997 Toyota models including••• SATURDAY• I COROLLA CAMRY --re:n:CEL I MAY 18 I 11:00-3:00 ~< ' MONDAY-FRIDAY•

MAY 20-24 Beyond the elementary Sporty yet pragmatic Dean's List for youthful 9:30-5:30 (FRI. UNTIL 7:00) in Toyota quality. performance. function & styling. @TOYOTA SATURDAY• MAY25 10:00-3:00 New Student Center Campus Shop Rodney Dining Hall

MONDAY- FRIDAY MAY 20-24 9:30-4:00 1-800-GO-TOYOTA . ask for "College" http://www. toyota.comjcollege 1 zWJ2S.,000 Utile Toyota Auto care Term covers the first 5 regularty scheduled 011 CMOQe$ and 1nsoecuons In your Owne• SManual Supplement Aoutme Mamtenance loQ ..; Z ~CUS1omers througlllhe Toyota Motor Credit Corporauon 1) Graduate:Wlthm the next SIX momtts.lrom iU1 accreaned lour·year colleQe. un~. or reolstered nurSing degree program; orad:ate from an aceredrted year college: or be enrolled m an accred1ted oraduate degree prooram In all cases yGll nave one year lrom recetpl of your degree to take advantaoe of the program 2) Acquire a vtnhatlle lOb olfer thiil Will beQm whh.n 120 days of your purchase, wrth a salary suff1C1ent to COller ordmary llvmo exp!Oses and veh1c1e payments 3) Show proof of msurabtllty 4) l"tave no adverse credit hcstory See your cartJCLpaltnQ Toyota ONier lor detailS SUTMiar proQr.!Lm avatlable mAl. Fl. GA_ NC & SC thru Wortd OmnL F•nanctal Corp Not avatlable m HI 3 S500 mcent•ve LS ava•lable Wltl'l any other Toyota offer S1mpty callt-soo-GO-Toyota and ask for ~college· to recewe ygur cert•ltea.te Otler •s valid on the purchase or lease of any new 1996-1997 Toyota vehiCle and ends Septembll 30, 1996 C1996 Toyota Motor Safes, U S.A , Inc

Interested in a career in Advertising? The Review is hir· • • ing for the Fall of I996 for the following positions••••

Advertising Rep. ) Event Spec's Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday ( 4/21 4/22 4/23 4/24 ( Advertising Assistant )

Tune 1:00PM 7:30PM 7:00PM 7:00PM • CS experience in Quarkxpress Graph. is helpful .• • Place Harrington CSB Front CSB Back Pearson Beach and Back Gym Auditorium Gyms Please contact Tamara or Tina, Monday Wednesday or Friday

Event LOOKING BOMBARD- GREEK ARM between 1o:ooam and 3:oopm FIT MENT GOD AND WRESTLING GODDESS at 831•1398 for more informa· tion or•••••

I Event Spec's Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

4/25 4/26 4/27 4/28 Come on over to the Review ~ and fill out an application!

Time 7:30PM 6:00PM 8:00AM 8:00AM

'• Place Carpenter CSB Back Harrington Harrington Pool Gym Beach Beach

' To Be ·~ Event SWIMMING AIR BAND Announced- GREEK -1 Philanthropic GAMES I Tournament ~ ·~ -...! 1 B8. THE REVIEW. April 16, 1996

(..._ __s_P_R_r_N_G __ c_A_R_E_E_R_w_E_E_K_r_s_H_A_P_P_E_N_r_N_G_._' ___,)

TUESDAY. APRIL, 16TH Getting ready for the job fair, 12: 30-1 :00pm. Workshop Room, Raub Hall • Job Search 1996, 3:30-4:30 , 120 Memorial Hall • • Careers in the Arts & Humanities: Majors for All "Seasons ," 6:00-7:30pm, 006 Kirkbride WEDNESDAY. APRIL 17TH • Interviewing for Success, 3:30-4:30pm, 110 Memorial Hall • Careers in the sciences, Eyes on the Environment, 6 : 00-7: 30 pm, 205 Kirkbride I THURSDAY, APRIL 18TH Defense of criminal, traffic or DUI I • Spring Career Fair, Rodney Room, Perkins Student Center charges noise or alcohol violations, 1: 00- 3 : 00pm-Meet employers from 40 companies for discussion of full time jobs I building code/ overcrowding, expungement 3:00-5 : 00pm-interview with employers of criminal records I FRIDAY, APRIL 19TH Alderman's Court/other cour~ Open House at the Career Services Center, 11: 00am02 : 00pm, Raub Hall I MARK D. SISK, Attorney I formerly Newark City Prosecutor 1980-1994 Hughes, Sisk & Glancy, P.A. I 522 Greenhill Avenue Wilmington, DE 19805 I ( 302) 658-5144 I Listing o f areas of practice does not represent official I ._I ______certification as a specialist in •those areas. _ .J DE-CAGE INTERE:.S't MEETING APRIL 16, 1996 . Have you ever: been discriminatef;! against because of your g~nder? Do you believe in equa opport~nitY for women and men? Reasons to 243Return to Long Island Have you ever wished there was something you could do about it? THERE IS. ·The Delaware Coalition for the Advancement of Gender Equality invites you to our first official meeting, 7:30 ·p.m. in Memorial 121. questions, email [email protected]

STONY BROOK SUMMER SESSION • 243 courses in 45 subjects • Day and evening classes • Low NYS tuition • Register by mail, fax, phone or in person • Live on campus or commute • Two terms: May 28-July 12; JUly 15-Aug.23 For free bulletin, call24 hours (516) 632-7070 Please send me the 1996 Summer Session Bulletin:

Name

State

Te1ep110ne Area of interest

School currently altending Anlicipated year ol graduation An ANEO educator and employer ~STONY BROOK STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Summer Session Office Stony Brook, NY 11794-3730

Sutinner Sessions at the Jersey Shore Here's fC!st-Clct~ll1.0 veL~ef cooL 11\,eW FoY"d OY MeYCt.<.Ytj . frow.. tVie pvesst.tve of scViooli Cj n::ld t.tClh111.0 1-Ms ~11\,cLt.tdes Vie Vi~gVi-perforw..C!V\,ce Mt.tstC!II1.0 1 SESSION I (4 or 6 weeks} How's this for a plan? seV\,~ovs CIV\,d g ve~d stt.tdell\,ts Celli\, g et .f400"" CClLL ~-$?00-321-~53h or v~s~t wr web s~te Classes begin May 15 Take a few classes and CC!SVJ bClcf-<.*" 011\, tV!e pt.tYCVJC!Se OY Lee~se of Cfll\,l:j Clt i-lttp: //wv-;w.ford.cow.. for tVie ft.tLL stort:l. Classes end June 12 or 26 then head for the ..• beach (It's only a mile BECAUSE YouR BRAIN DoEsN'T HAVE WHEELS. SESSION II (12 weeks) ~ Classes begin May 15 away). Housing is •• ~. Classes end August 8 available and we'll SESSION III (4 or 6 weeks) even he! p you get a Classes begin July 1 summer job! Life is Classes end July 29 or Aug. 12 good. C~ll today. GREAT PAY! GREAT HOURS! Undergraduate and Adult Admissions ...... (908) 571-3433 telephone order clerks Graduate Admission ...... (908) 571-3452 Residential Life ...... (908) 571-3465 '' 9 to 1 mornings '' " 5 to 9 eveni ings '' :M:ON:M:OUTH SATURDAY & SUNDAY OK u-NIVERSITY !r call Karen today @ 452 - 0315 !r West Long Branch, New Jersey 07764-1898 • 1 (800) 543-9671 April I 6, I 996. THE REVIEW • B9

SIGMA CHI AND

.,.. THE PANHELLENIC COUNCIL ~;: present .·' .. .',.. . 'J. J' ~:: . . '... ACQUAINTANCE RAPE • ,• • \ FORUM n open 1scuss1on a out t e e 1n1t1ons, conceptions and consequences of acquaintance rape. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18th 8:00 P.M. 130 SMITH

Co-sponsored by the· Pan hellenic Council and the Inter-Fraternity

ttent1on• am pus tu ents (and students planning to live off-campus) Tomorrow night ...

The C ity of Newark, DUSC (Your Student Government} and The University of Delaware Divisions of Student Life are making an effort to enhance the services provided to students v;ho choose to live off-campus. In an effort to assist you with this transition, the city is sponsoring an informational session which we hope will make your off-campus housing experience pleasant and safe. We would like to share with you information concerning the services the city offers and discuss the experiences o f other student living off campus. The meeting w ill include the following topics: '

• Building/Planning Departments: Landlord/tenant disputes; property • Police Department: Crime prevention; crime trends; your personal safety; parking maintenance; number of renters per unit (overcrowding, violations, regulations, limitations; ordinances of the City; pets and animal control regulations; quality of your responsibilities); Unicity bus system ' life issues. ·

• Pub_lic Works Department: Trash and refuse removal; snow removal and other semces.

• Parks and Recreation Department: Parks and recreation programs; part-time employment opportunities; volunteer work; use of city parks and regulations. ,. • Administrative Services: Signing up for city services ; utility bill payments; failure to pay bills (referral to credit agency). Rodney Room Perkins Student Center DATES: April 13 1-2:30 pm, April 17 7:30-9pm B10.THEREV1EW.Aprill6, 1996 REVIEW SPORTS BY THE NUMBERS l\IEN'S LACROSSE BASEBALL CALENDAR Wed. Saturday Sunday Tues. Thur. Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. 2 3 4 F 4116 4/17 4/18 UMass 2 7 0 4 13 Game#! 4/19 4/20 4/21 4/22 Delaware 2 0 3 6 11 Delaware Drexel ab h rbi ab h rbi 1-Home games at the Delaware Diamond Goals: UMass 13 (Bai ley 4, Gl as , 3, Ardi zzone 4 0 I Sperling 4 0 I 0 Kennedy 2, Hoffman I, Costell o I, Coluni o 4 0 Fahy 3 0 0 McKeefrey I, Kell y I) Delaware I I 4 0 I to play Ham mer Doiron 4 0 0 (Lavey 3, Livingston 3, Egan 2, Gately August 4 I I 0 Marchetti 3 0 0 0 the in I, Manion I. O'Brien 1). Eyman 3 0 0 0 Gold 2 0 0 0 Football Jack 3 2 Joyce 2 0 I 0 Assists: UMass 9 (Hoffman 3, Bai ley Trivits 3 0 0 Nieber 2 0 0 0 -Home games at the Delaware Field 2, G lass I, Sussi I, Massey I, Mahony 3 2 0 Helkowski 3 0 0 Soko lowski ). Gi les 0 I 0 0 Ross 3 0 I 0 Pulito 0 0 0 0 Rizzo 0 0 0 0 Shots: UMass 32, Delaware 22. McSheny 2 I I I Shannon 0 0 0 0 Phillips 0 0 0 0 Saves: UMass 5 (Kasselakis). Totals 30 6 9 5 Totals 26 0 6 0 Delaware II (Cooper). Delaware 0001122-6 Lacrosse - Home games at Delaware Field Groundballs: UMass 44, Delaware Drexel 0000000-0 39. Delaware lP H R ER BB SO Penalties: UMass 5 for 4:30. Phillips w (5-1 ) 7 6 0 0 4 7 Delaware 8 for 6:00. Drexel IP H R ER BB SO Rizzo L (4- 1) 6 8 5 4 0 8 jWomen's Lacrosse- Home games at Delaware Field Shannon 0 0 at Princeton "You can shake up Game#2 ~ · the first seven or eight Delaware Drexel 3:30p.m. guys in a can and pour ab h rbi ab h rbi them out," said Joe Mack, WOMEN'S LACROSSE Ardizzone 5 .3 3 3 Sperling 4 1 I I 12 noon assistant general manager Colunio 3 3 2 0 Fahy 4 I 3 I of the Carolina Panthers. Saturday. 4/13 Hammer 5 0 2 4 Doiron 4 0 2 2 jMen's Tennis- Home games at Delaware Field House August 4 0 I Marchetti 4 0 2 0 The other factor is at LaSalle NAC NAC NAC Eyman 4 2 2 0 Gol d 4 0 0 that two of the teams that I 2 F Champion Champion Champions Giles 0 0 O• 0 Joyce 4 0 0 want Nebraska tailback Dela ware 10 6 16 Jack 4 2 I Ross 3 0 0 ships ships at hips at Lawrence Phillips, the UNH 3 4 Mahony 4 0 Miksitz 2 0 0 0 at Ve rmo nt Vermont Verm ont Baltimore Ravens and St. 2:30 p .m . Goals: Delaware 16 (Perry 3, Hunt 3, Duffie 4 Jimenez 0 0 0 0 Louis Rams, have two Trivits 3 I I 0 Helkowski 4 2 2 0 picks in the first round Sullivan 2, Shoemaker 2, Frey I, Kennedy I, Kane I. Vocchiano I. Pulito I 0 0 0 Kapp 0 0 0 trrack - Home meets at Delaware Field House and could trade up. Kuehn I). U H 4 (Long I. Rhodes I. Donovan 0 0 0 0 at Navy Phillips is a risk because Davis I, Catlin 1). Totals 37 13 14 10 Totals 33 4 13 4 at Towson he is on probation for Relay Invitational assaulting his ex-girl­ Assists: Delaware 9 (Frey 3, Hunt 2, Delaware 131 060 2. 13 M eet friend last September. Perry I. Haney I, Boyle I, Kane I). Drexel 0022000- 4 The New York U ' H I (Long 1). Jets, the team with the Delaware IP H R ER BB so I I I I first pick, aren't believed Shots: Delaware 42, UNH 17. Donovan W (4-0) 6 13 4 4 2 I August 0 0 0 to be interested in 0 Phillips. Saves: Delaware 10 (Sebastian), UNH 17 (Hodgkins). Drexel IP H R ER BB so Denotes home game DH · Doubleheader FALDO'S LATE Doiron L (2-2) 4.1 8 9 8 3 4 CHARGE IS WORTH Kapp 2.2 64 4 0 0 REMEMBERING Groundballs: Delaware 39. UN H 25. Nick Faldo had just won his sixth major title, the one he really wasn't sure that he would UD STANDINGS bag here in the dogwoods and the azaleas and the Softball pine trees. T hru games of 4/15 Track Results "I obviously didn't Saturday think it was going to hap­ Sport W L PCT. Sunday, 4/14 pen this week," Faldo Baseball 23 4 .852 said. "This one's an Game#! Women's 4x400 M eter Re lay: Delaware Drexel Tennis 8 3 .727 Delaware, I st, 4: 13.8. amazing one, isn't it?" ab h rbi abr h rbi W. Lax 7 5 .583 Top Delaware Finishe rs at D elaware Faldo overcame a Brosnahan 4 0 I 0 Long 4 0 2 0 six-shot lead going into M. Lax 6 5 .545 Zielinski 2 I 2 0 Mattie 3 0 0 Invitational: Wo m en's Hamme r Throw: Maureen the final day by tourna­ Softball 12 14 .462 Baugher I 0 0 0 PfeiiTer :, 0 I I O' Neill, 1st, 40.86m . ment leader Greg M. Track 0 1 .000 Kayaua 3 0 0 0 Ventura 4 0 0 0 Wo m en 's 200 M eter D ash: Kristen Norman to capture his W. Track 0 1 .000 Rose 3 0 0 0 Pandullo 3 I 3 0 Sing leto n , I st, 26.4. M en's 5000 M eter R un: David third Masters. Dyson 3 0 2 0 Batz 0 0 0 Geesam a n , I st, I 5:49 . 1; Tom Spahr, Lest anyone think Kedersha 0 I 0 0 Chabot 0 0 0 0 Women's 400 Meter D ash : Julie 2 nd, 15 :53.6. TOTALS 56 33 .629 Ballier 2 0 0 0 Baugher 3 I 0 Faldo was nothing more Tavares, I st, I :03.0; Susan Pe t e r ~, Seaman 3 0 I 0 DiBiasi 2 I 2 0 than a bystander to histo­ 3rd, I :04. 1. M en 's 4x400 M e te r Re lay: Delaware , ry, his closing round of 67 Shockley 3 0 0 0 Fernandez 3 0 0 Dowell 0 0 0 0 1st, 3:27.2. was the best of the day. Women's 800 Meter Run: Sarah But it also must be Fargnoli 0 0 0 0 MEN'S TENNIS Totals 24 2 6 0 Totals 26 3 10 2 C owles, I st, 2 :22.3. M e n 's Pole Vault: R ich Bruno , I st, noted that Norman ended with a 6-over-par 78. 4 .42m. Delaware 000 100 1-2 Women's 1500 Mete r Run: Danie lle Norman began the day Drexel 000 1011-3 with a six-shot lead and Saturday, .J/1 3 Doohan, 1st, 5 : 11.3; Jennifer M e n ' Long Jump: G ary Fairchild , Moy niha n , 2nd, 5: 13.3. 1st, 6.35m . needed only to shoot par IP H R " ER SO Morgan State 0 Delaware BB in the final round and he Delawa re 7 Ballier L (6·5) 6.1 10 3 2 0 would have won. Women' s 3000 Meter R un: Tara M e n 's 400 M e ter Dash: C hris Drexel Pointin, 1st, 10:20.8 William s, I st, 5 1. 0. Norman's collapse I st singles · Binnington (D) d. Smith lP H R ER BB SO Chabot W (5-2) may be what fans remem­ 6· 1, 6·0. 2nd singles · Lusti g (D) d 7 6 2 0 0 2 ber, but Faldo hardly Newborn 6-1. 6-2 3rd singles· backed into the thing. Schmidt (D) d. Manning 6-0. 6-0. 4th Gamc#2 Delaware KLEINE COL· singles· Parameswaran (D) d. Bullen Drexel ab h rbi LAPSES ON COURT 6-2, 6-1. 5th singles· Bernstein (D) d. ab h rbi Brosnahan 8 I I 0 Long 7 0 0 0 Joe Kleine, a back­ Newton 6-0, 6·2. I st doubles · Zielinski 4 0 0 0 Mattie 4 0 2 0 up center with the Lustig/Bemstein (D) d. Baugher Pfeiffer Smi th/Newborn 8-3.2nd doubles - 6 0 2 0 6 I 2 0 .Phoenix Suns, collapsed Kayatta 6 0 4 Vent urn 6 0 I 0 on the court moments Binnington/Kosta (D) d. Bullen/Newlon 8·1. Rose 7 0 2 0 Pandullo 7 0 3 I before Sunday after­ Dyson 7 0 3 0 Batz 5 0 0 0 noon's game at the Forum Shockley 0 I 0 0 Chabot 0 0 0 0 and momentarily lost Dowell Sunday 4/14 7 0 2 I Baugh er 3 0 I 0 consciousness, but Pasc 0 0 0 0 DiBiasi 5 0 0 0 seemed in good condition DP!aware 3 Seaman 6 0 0 Fernandez 6 0 0 0 Pidstawski as he headed to a local Vi ll anova .J 5 0 I 0 hospital to spend the Ballier 0 0 0 night for observation, Los 1st singles· Prior (V) d. Binnington 6- F~noli 0 0 0 0 Totals 57 2 16 2 Totals 49 1 9 Angeles Laker team 3. 6-2. 2nd singles· Lustig (D) d. physician Dr. Steve Shallcross 6-3. 6-4. 3rd singks · Delaware 100 000 000 000 01 - 2 Young (V) d. Schmidt 6-2. 6-0. 4th Lombardo said. Drexel 000 010 000 000 00- 1 "Before we put singles · Kosta (D) d. Kennedy 6-2, 6· 2. 5th singles · Campbell (V) d. him in the ambulance, he Delaware 1P H R ER BB SO Parameswaran 6-3, 6-2 . 6th smgles · was fine." Lombardo Pidstawski W (5-4) 14 9 4 said. "He was coherent Bernstein (D) d. Rod I 6-0, 6-0. and very lucid." Drexel IPHRERBBSO 'This i.s the second Chabot L (4-3) 14 16 2 2 3 5 episode for Kleine in about two weeks. The first, in Phoenix, was fol­ lowed by a series of tests that revealed nothing out NHL Standings NBA Standings of the ordinary, according to Lombardo. Eastern Conference Western- Conference Eastern Conference Western Conference Sunday, the 11- year-veteran was lined up As of 411 5 with teammates when he Final Regular-Season Standings passed out during the ATLANTIC W L PCT. MIDWEST W L PCT. national anthem. After ATLA TIC W L T PTS CENTRAL w L T PTS Orlando 56 22 .7 18 San Antonio 57 2 1 .73 1 coming to and spending a Philadelphia 45 24 13 103 Detroit 62 13 7 131 New York 45 33 .577 Utah 52 26 .667 few minutes on the .Y. Ranger 41 27 14 96 Chicago 40 28 14 94 Miami 40 38 .513 Houston 46 32 .590 ground, Kleine, 34. told Florida 41 31 10 92 Toronto 34 36 12 80 Washington 39 39 .500 Denver 34 44 .436 medical personnel he Washington 39 32 II 89 St. Louis 32 34 16 80 Boston 31 48 .392 Minnesota 26 52 .333 could walk off on his Tampa Bay 38 32 12 88 Winnipeg 36 40 6 78 New Jersey 29 49 .372 Dallas 24 54 .308 but they insisted on New Jersey 37 33 12 86 Dallas 26 42 14 67 Philadelphia 16 63 .203 Vancouver 13 65 .167 own. 54 using a stracller. N.Y. Islanders 22 50 10 "'ur biggest con­ ten~ in a situation like NORTHEAST W L T PTS PACIFIC w L T PTS \his Qbvioluily is his car· CENTRAL w L PCT. WEST W L PCT. Pins bu rgh 49 29 4 102 Colorado 47 25 10 104 Chicago 69 9 .885 Seanle 61 17 .782 4i*' status," Lombardo 34 II 79 Boston 40 3 1 II 9 1 Calgary 37 Indiana 49 29 .628 L.A. Lakers 50 28 .641 : said. Montreal 40 32 10 90 Vancouver 32 35 15 79 Cleveland 44 34 .564 Portland 42 36 .538 . Hanford 34 39 9 77 Anaheim 35 39 8 78 44 34 .564 Phoenix 39 39 .500 Buffalo 33 42 7 73 Edmonton 30 44 8 68 Detroit 44 34 .564 Sacramento 36 42 .462 Onawa 18 59 5 4 1 Los Angeles 24 40 18 66 Chari one 40 38 .51 3 Golden State 34 44 .436 San Jose 20 55 7 47 Milwaukee 24 54 .308 L.A. Clippers 29 50 .367 Toronto 20 58 .256 ..

I ;Million-dollar athletes who behave like children f" ~ ~::see what happens when you pay some­ punching him three times. Thank God there are sti II a few players knocking out a referee when they disagree fan, said something that made me think. body who can shoot a basketball or catch a The list goes on, r.:======:::::;-, like Cal Ripkcn and Grant Hill. Almost with a call. As treir bank accounts contin­ "Why do I spend so much time watching fo'otball millions of dollars? They turn into but l won't. nobody will argue that these guys aren't ue to grow, the poor behavior will contin­ all of these guys?" he questioned. obnoxiou , egotistical jerks who think they I am di sgusted perfect role models. They keep the hope of ue. Why do we continue to watch these guys can get away with anything. with professional sportsmanship alive in a world that is The NBA referees are also apparently dominate and control their respecti ve The past month in sports has been athletes who pro­ quickly piraling downward. getting tired of the lack of respect they are s ports? We want to see exceptional athletic ~m~arrassing, maddt!.r)_ing and even sad. ject such a negative But the list these two are on is a small receiving. Consequently, they issued a let­ abilities, not spoi led brats. ick Van Exel ol the Los Angeles image. It seems as one nowadays. What a shame. ter to the NBA requesting a meeting to di s­ Something has to be c hanged in the Lakers elbowed an official for, giving him a if every day there Why do so many athletes today seem to cuss the recent problems. sporting world - in the NBA and NFL in technical foul. Dallas Cowbbys receiver is another player be jerks? Guys who beat their girlfriends Unfortunately, the new generation of particular. The players need to be knocked Michael Irvin wa indicted on -drug charges who is fined, eject­ and guys who allegedly are involved with athletes are not the only ones acting up. off their pedestals, brought back down to after being caught in a motel room with ed, suspended or Can I say some­ drugs are making more money in one sea­ Veteran Laker Magic Johnson, after crit­ earth and learn to e njoy playing the game marijuana. · cocaine and two topless brought up on son than I will ever see in my life. icizing Van Exel for his antics, was ejected instead of the rewards they reap. dancers. Supposedly, when he was con­ criminal charges. thing? One of the biggest problems in profes­ for the first time in eight years after shov­ If all of the professional athletic associ­ fronted by police he said, "Do you know From college sional sports is the gross salaries players ing a referee while arguing a call Sunday. ations dramatically cut salaries, I wonder who I am?" on, athletes are Kelley Pritchard receive. With big salaries come big egos. Come on guys. You're making money, how many of today's athletes would con­ During a game with the New Jersey Nets treated like gods. Call me crazy, but I think it's insane that you're getting attention and fame, you're tinue to play the game because they loved game recently, Chicago Bulls forward They are looked up to, admired, in the Lenny Dykstra makes over $6 million for getting to play the sport you love for a liv­ it. _Dennis Rodman head-butted a referee, spotlight and catered to . No wonder they playing baseball while a teacher usually ing. Why do you have to make fools of Unfortunately, I think I know the screamed obscenities, ripped his jersey off feel like they can do no wrong. averages less than $30,000. yourselves? answer. · and knocked over a water cooler after he Athletes are role models. What is this When these athletes are lined. the prices Think about it. Everybody gets mad at was ejected. saying to young, impressionable kids who may seem astronomical to us common their bosses or co-workers, but we don't Kelley Pritchard is an assistant sports edi­ Jerry Stackhouse of the Philadelphia look up to them? It's saying there is very folks , but it is merely a drop in the bucket head-butt them. Why are athletes different? tor ofThe Review. One on One will rewm 76ers was fined $7,500 for grabbing the little sportsmanship left in the games; very for the likes of Irvin. Stackhouse and It just blows my mind. next week. Utah Jazz's Jeff Hornacek by the neck and little respec .. Rodman. Fines will not keep a player from One of my friends, who is an avid sports Hen men, women score well at Invitational Tennis continued from page B 12 BY CHRISTOPHER YASIEJKO Sraff Repnrrer had the most impressive win. Schmidt, It was n01 unlike a practice Sunday who serves right-handed and plays left­ afternoon at Delaware Mini-Stadium handed, used both hands, his speed and Track. his power to pulverize Mike Manning The Delaware men's and women's 6-0, 6-0. track and field teams fought a gusty wind Sophomore Subash Parameswaran throughout the day. The athletes worked moved up to play in the fourth singles in 'everal events each, preparing in part slot and had no trouble with the differ­ for the upcoming Penn Relays, North ent position. He lost only three games Atlantic Conference Championships and as he defeated Bullen 6-2, 6-1 . IC4As. Last, but not least. Bernstein made In the annual Delaware Invitational. easy work of Newton a t fifth singles. the men's team managed to place second He served big, approached the net and wtth 138.5 points, behind Rhode Island, used strategic tennis to defeat his oppo­ who high-stepped its way to a first place nent 6-0, 6-2. ,finish with 154 points. The women' team LeRoy wants to put the loss to won nine of 18 events in a non-scoring Villanova behind them so they can meet. focus on playing in the NAC tourna­ '·I thought it was a real gutsy perfor­ ment, which begins Friday at Vermont. mance,' ' said Delaware men's coach Jim The men hope to be seeJed in the top :Fischer. "This place is usually really windy. so we put a lot of people in a lot of events, and just had them work hard "We have a real ;today:· good chance of ~------THE REVIEW/ Atisa Colley .~~ (Clockwise from above) Senior Sh~ryl Hall attempts a high ::::"We're on the jump during the Delaware lnvitational.(Right) The Delaware finishing in the I- - women's 4x400 team runs to victory.(Below) Junior Rich ! right track - no Bruno participates in the pole vault, winning the event with top two." I a jump of 14-6. i pun intended." - Kyle Binnington I (51.6) and 4 x 400 meter relay (4: 13.8). - Delauare womcn 1s.traclo..coach Stte ( . . I I three of the draw. Bo ton University, a "I thmk we dtd really well as a team today." lcGrat~·Powell. school at which tennis is a scholarship Hall said. "lt was really hard to go agalnst the sport, is the favorite goin g in.The I wind, and that's a big factor when you're run­ University of Hartford is the defending l • l Behind the Hens were Maryland- ning in outdoor track and field." champ. Baltimore County ( 118 points), Delaware The men also had five winners in junior "We arc probably going to be the ~ta~c (92.5) and West Chester (I 0). Chris Williams in the 400 meters (5 1.0), fresh­ second or third seed going in," I The women's team won its nine events mau David Geesaman in the 5,000 meters Binnington said. ··we have a real' good 'tompeung . agamst. Delaware State, ( 15 :49.1 ), junior Rich Bruno in the pole vault chance of definitely finishing in the top VMBC and West Chester. ( 14-6). freshman Gary Fairchild in the long two. We arc a pretty competitive team." : '"The wind was a real factor," said jump (20-1 0) and the 4 x 400 meter relay Bernstein also fee ls the team will do Delaware women's coach Sue McGrath­ (3:27.2). well this weekend. fowell. "People aren't really hitting their ·'A 101 of people ran a lot of events, and I ''I'm confident that we're going to potential yet, but we're on the right track think it's gonna help us in the long run,'' said play good tennis." Bernstein said. "If r no pun intended.'" senior Jim Tymon. who placed third in the we play good tennis and lose there's i On the women's side, the Hens got vic­ men ·s 400 meter dash (51.5). '"It helps to build not much we can do." tories from sophomore Kristen Singleton your endurance when you mn more than just in the 200 meters (26.4). freshman Julie one event i 11 a meet." !favares in the 400 meters (I :03.0), junior Delaware treated the Invitational as a work­ Sarah Cowles in the 800 meter (2:22.3), out, seizing the opportunity to give several ath­ freshman Danielle Doohan in the 1,500 letes a chance to work in up to four or five tneters (5: 11.3) and junior Tara Pointin in events each. !he 3,000 meters (I 0:20.8). "We try to build our strength in a meet like Lax loses • Delaware also got wins from senior this, so when we get to a meet like Penn Relays ~heryl Hall in the high jump (5-1 3/4), or conferences (NACs) and we're more focused $ophomore Maureen O'Neill in the ham­ on the events we're gonna mn in, we can con­ iner ( 134-1 ), the 4 x I 00 meter relay centrate all our energy into those one or two to UMass events," Tymon said. continued from page B 12

save. The Hens looked like they were in the middle of a hu!!"e comeback. Campus Sporting Briefs When Livingston scored with 1: IS remaining, making the score 13-11, the Softball splits doubleheader tempo of the game reached a fever pitch. we measure However, the UMass defense would vs. Drexel not allow any further goals. uP to the "This time it was the first half," said The Delaware softball team salvaged Egan. "Before, we fe ll apart in the comPetition ••• game two of a twin-biU Saturday against fourth quarter, but this time we came back strong in the fo urth, we just came •Pool-jacuzzi-exercise Drexel, winning 2-1 in 14 innings after losing up short at the end." facilitvetennis courts• game one by a score of 3-2. A turning poi nt in the game came communit}o' clubhouse• The Hens (12-14, 4-2 North Atlantic near th e end of the third when Delaware was handed a one-minute penalr'y, forc­ minutes from 1·95 and Conference) emergeq victorious in the ~ght­ ing them to play a man short. • wilminaton•nearbll cap when junior designated plaY.... Ptfna • . ·~ • Egan responded by stealing the ball · schoolsequiet settina• from a UMass mid fielder and charged at Dyson began the winniD.g rally ijyiiittilig-a the Minutemen net to score his first goal one-out double. Pinch runner sophomore Sue of the game. THE Shockley advanced to third base on a wild "Carey is the man on the field ," said MEADOWS ~ Shillinglaw of the co-captain. "He's just ~ AT ELK CREEK il pitch, and was followed by a single by fresh­ everywhere out there." man leftfielder Kelly Dowell that scored th~ Delaware opened with a 2-1 lead in the first quarter, but the Minutemen winning run. Freshman pitcher Krysta responded with eight unanswered goals. Pidstawski earned the win by with a her­ including three from attack Brendan culean effort, pitching all 14 innings while Glass. "With two good Divis ion I teams surrendering only one earn_ed run. going at it, you can't afford to get in a Drexel triumphed in ~ first game, scor­ ho le like we did," Shillinglaw said. "UMass really came out aggressively." ing the game-win$g tun in the bottom of The lo s may have spoiled the seventh off of Delaware senior pitcher Jen Delaware's chances at an NCAA tourna­ Dallier. Delaware next plays today at nom~ ment berth. "With five losses, we still have an against Towson St. at 2:30. outside shot at the playoffs, but obvious­ ly we have to win the rest of our games." Kalesse The Hens' next game is Sunday at THE REVIEW/ John Chabalko Delaware Stadium against Loyola, Md. Junior midfielder Roger Jordan tries to make an offensive surge at I p.m. during Saturday's 13-11 loss to UMass.